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Lehigh 186 151 103 29 469 Yale ‘174 1ie 154 138 133 158 461 470 Vanderbilt 164 167 137 132 129 114 EORGE McMANUS 198— 585 142— 419 143— 423 29— 81 - — 512—1514 201 126 177 29 533 SHATTUCKLEADS : - MOTHER-THE AUTO, 2 | McDonell WONT START- | DONT | Miss Lundell WELL-WHY, TELL [ i Suecke~ T AGAINST LEHIGH MATTER WITH T~ N. Bavard Bloedhorn Mrs. Lavenik THE STOVE 1S BUST- ED-WHAT'LL 1DO7? | CANT FIX IT— THERE'S NOTHING THAT MEN DO THAT WOMEN AREN'T SU- PERIOR- THERE ARE WOMEN DOCTOR WELL-DON'T STAND THERE LIKE AN IDIOT= HAVEN'T YOU ANY SENSE? GET A MAN e =X IT— WELL-| GUESS | PUT THAT POLITICAL SPEECH OVER WITH A BANG- 1 HAVE NO DOUBT EVERY WOMAN AT THAT MEETING WILL VOTE FOR ME -| CERTA™N- LY PUT THE MEN IN THEIR PLACE — LAWYERS- S - ORATORS AND MUSICIANS- MEN ARE IN- FERIOR TO WOMEN- IN FACT, MEN ARE BRAINLESS- 174— 522 150— 442 Yale Sweeps Vanderbilt— el Notre Dame Takes Close Match in Elks’ Bowling Curtis Shattuck did the doing, but not the dying, for Dear Old Rutgers, to put the Queensmen over the top in their traditional battle with Lehigh in the first of the con- i ference jousts on the Elks’ maple last evening. Shattuck’s 601 total, tand 215 top game, were approach- S |od only by the 585 and 201, rolled by Fred Henning for the glory of Le- high, during all the evening. In the second bout, Yale had but little trouble in disposing of Van- derbilt, taking .all three games; but in the final mix, Jimmy Bar- ragar, as the lone representative for Lafayette, put up a bitter fight! Totals 4711402 Vukovich Dr. Whitehead Mrs Waugh 135— 466 131— 400 129— 372 430 413 Lafayette 134 197 395—1238 Totals S ] NS ©71936, King Features Syndivatr, Inc, World ights reserved. By Pap TAGOMA FIVE g7 THROWS SCARE Barragar, Jr. Caro Miss Paulsen 152— 483 “164 164 164— 492 “117 117 117— 351 . 415 478 Notre Dame 183 159 142 152 150 146 Daily Sports C Totals 4331326 U.WASHINGTON GOESTOTOPIN Keyser Evans Mrs. White *150— 492 150— 444 147— 443 447—1379 457 Totals 5 SPORT EYENTS Three Great Successes Are Slants Bu PAP’° Back in 1934 Coach Harvey Har- man raised the hopes of Penn- ania’s followers with the band 5f scphomores he put on the grid- | INTO HUSKIES *—Average score. R Waits before conceding the third and de-| Did ciding game of the match to Notre { Dame, by fourteen pins His Shave Washington Cagers Get ! Their First Real Test Drave versus Columbia is the {opening event on tenight's confer- |ence bowling double-header at the K with Susquehanna squaring| BROOKSVILLE, Fla., not bowl. Until Fire’s Out Dec. 12— loff against Erie in the second half Attained During W. P. Tucker reclined in a barber . iron. The youngsters promised great Athletic Year | things. But, just as the dreams of | Penn’s loyal sons seemed about to SEATTLE, Dec. 12.—As the inter- | e realized, something would go collegiate athletic kingdom ends its | wrong and then followed the in- 1936 activities, the crown of glOry | syitable rude awakening. for the king of, the year rests atop | ag sophcmores, th football sins the victory heap of the University,ywere readily forgiver After all, of Washington. |Penn alumni figured, perhaps too When the shadows had fallen On | el was expected of the youns- the Washington stadium Thanks-|cers who were being asked to giving Day, after the Huskies had | jatch their meager experience {rounced Washington State 40-0 t0 a0qinst that of seasoned veterans clinch the Coast conference foot- ball championship, the university had accomplished its third sports success of the year. The victory parade started last March, when Coach Hec Edmund- son led h of Wash- ington Pa basketbail champions to New York to compete in the Olympic the Huskies were in third place, the top ranking ccllege team in the nation. Ancther Sport Parade Then early in April, another parade started on the placid waters | of Lake ashington and did not end | until the University of Washing- ton's eight-oared crew had crossed the finish line in the finals of the Olympic Games 2,000-meter race, emblematic of the world’'s crew championship. Floats in that parade included a clean sweep, frosh, javee, and varsity, over California on Lake ington, another sweep in June, time over the best rowing schools of the natjon in the inter- collegiate regatta at Poughkeepsie, and a sprint race win by the var- sity at Lake Carnegie to qualify as firmed when Penn tossed away op-|confidence in its ability. The Qua- the United States’ eight-oared crew representative in the Olympic Games. Into Rose Bowl To top off the year, the Husky gridiron machine, after losing the opening game of the season to Min- nesota, started to roll up victories over conference opponents which Then the Quakers beat a strongpointment for more than two full| carried them into the Rose Bowl. Wins over Southern California, California, U. C. L. A, Oregon, Oregon State, Washinton State, and Idaho, and a tie game with Stan- Stands and rubbed their eyes in|page in Pennsylvania’s football his- | ford, proved the Huskies' bid for football fame. Regardless of what happens New Year's Day in the Rose Bowl, the archives of sports history will in- clude the name of the University of Washington as the rankin school for the year 1936. S e NO BANANAS SEATTLE, Dec. 12—Executives of produce company officials said they are makine no attempt to move bananas and Japanese orang- es diverted here by rail from Van- couver. HOTEL ZYNDA ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop. Games play-offs. | ; At the completicn of the tourney,! on opposing elevens. Pennsylvania could wait another year—then the fruits of victory would be all the sweeter. As juniors, the story was pretty me. The team allowed seeming. leads to melt away Victory slipped from Penn's grasp after time. The old excuse of perience could hardly be ad- neced again. So, in time-honored | fashion, Coach Harman came in for | his share of criticism. The disap- ment last fall was a s to Pennsylvania's pride. Alumni Moaned In view of what haa happencd in 1934 and had been repeated in 1935, Pennsylvania had little reason ito expect much of the gridiron warriors this year. At least, the sons of the Red and Blue were not ing out on a limb again with pre- dictions as to how the Quakers {were going to mop up in 1936 {While they felt that sooner or later the team, potentially a powerful one, would click, they were not in- ing, clined toward optimism. | In recent games this season Their worst fears seemed con- Pennsylvania has shown plenty of IF THERE )= ISN'T A HOLE' -T'LL MAKE ONE But, in view of what happened on the many occasions when they let victory slip through their fingers some sort of inspiration was lack- | portunity after opportunity aganist kers have come from behind on Yale in the Bowl and lost-to the occasions, and at other times they | Bulldog. |have scored early and protected | Even when Pennsylvania scored their leads with determination |a well-earned victory over Prince-|They know they can win, and they ton, the Penn supporters were not'go about their business with a convinced that the sophomores of confidence born of performance. |34 had at last found themselves.| The sophomores of '34, a disap- |Navy team. On top of that the|seasons, finally found themselves |team went out and soundly thump-|and wound up their careers in a ‘ed Michigan in their intersectional plaze of glory. To them must go |contest while Penn men sat in the the credit for writing a brilliant i’amazement, At last! The day had|tory. Their recent deeds appear all jcome. |the more brilliant following so As one Penn man put it: “I'd many disappointments. give anything to see that team play —— e, — | Yale again this season. I'd bet| e [they'd. Baat ‘em by Hhrée toush- VETERAN NEGRU |downs. They've got what it takes—' |everything they lacked early in | October.” | | Just Plain Football | Pennsylvania has been playinul ’nrlhodox, old-fashioned style foot- | |ball—the same brand the Quakers| 1 |started eut with three seasons ago. "M ontan a. Heayywelghl Is Dropped in Third Round by Spokane Shadow | Their recent success proved that |such football is good enough to! against even the most pro- | win nounced “razzle - dazzle” displays. | Dec. 12 HE 1S ONE / OF THOSE LINE- CRUSHING FULLEACKS WHO CAN BE COUNTED ON, 70 PICK UR A COUPLE | OF YARDS ANY TIME. KAYOS F. SMITH The Quakers have faced a variety of football this season and, once they foun d themselves against SPOKANE, Wash,, Looking tough as ever, “Tiger Jack” | Fox, veteran Spokane negro, knock- |eed out Ford Smith, of Kalispel, Princeton, were well able to cope |with anything tossed their way. i It would seem logical to assume |that the only thing the Penn eleven |lacked in the past was confidence. {Just why this should be is some- (thing that cannot be explained. Montana, in the third round of their bout here last night. Fox weighed 175, and Smith was 41 pounds heavier. for sale at The Empire office. > i CLOTH MADE BY MARTIN, SON & CO. Known the World Over for Fine Materials Sam the Tailor Shabaldak Bldg. qmm i IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl"lllIIIIIIIIIII"IIIIIIIIIIIII|III"IIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllIIIIII||IIIIIIIII|IE Tailored Suits MADE TO MEASURE FOR CHRISTMAS DELIVERY ® New Fabrics ® Latest Shades and Materials now on hand. Back of Moose Hall - Phone 642 S ON ALL THE PROMISE HE SHOWED AS A SOPHOMORE 2P PITTSBURGH TO "HEAD FOR WEST ON WEDNESDAY 'Panthers Will Work Out at ! Albuquerque Instead of i Tucson, to Shake Jinx PITTSBURGH, Pa., Dec. 12—In an attempt to shake the jinx tha !has resulted in losses for the first three Panther grid squads to go to| |the Rose Bowl, this year’s Univer-; ,sity of Pittsburgh team will work | {out on a different campus enroute j west to play the University of | Washington Huskies, than on the former trips. This season’s Tournament, of Roses combatants will leave here Wed- nesday night, will stop for a drill at Albuquerque, New Mexico, and] jwill fininsh training at Lake Arrow- head, California. Previous Pan-| ther squads to make the trip worked out at Tucson, Arizona. FIRST GAME, POLAR BEARS SCHEDULED Dawson-Fairbanks Hockey! Players Meet Ebas Next Tuesday 12.—The Polar Bears, hockey players from Dawson and Fairbanks, who have arrived here for an extensive tour of the States and Canada, will have Cheir first game next Tuesday night meeting the Eba Grocery squad, of the Seattle City Hockey League. Two of the Polar bears have never been outside before. They are Harry Motchman of Wiseman and Phil Anderson of Fairbanks. They are having lots of fun riding on street cars for the first time. - Cornell Declared Communist Center NEW YORK, Dec. 12.—Charges that Cornell University, Ithaca, N Y., was a “center of revolutionary | Communistic propaganda” had been made here today by Senator John |J. McNaboe, chairman of a legis- |lative committee investigating sub- versive activities in New York pub- |lic schools and colleges. | R { kL I Try an Enngace ad, IN (934 ' A1l Righis Reserved by Who will win in the conflict be- tween Capital and Labor is the lec- ture Sunday night by Pastor Wood Seventh-Day at the Church, Sec of 1936-37 Season SEATTLE, Dec. 12.—The Uni- hington Huskies got first real basketball test of the seascn last night in defeating the Wheeler-Osgood Independents of Tacoma, 38 to 23 The Tacomans scared the Huskies plenty by tying the score at the beginning of the second half. The Huskies play the traveling Univer- sity of Michigan quintet here, one week from next Monday, Tuesday 2 and Wednesday. % Brown Bomber Asks Revenge of Schmeling Louis Says He Would: Like to Meet German Be- fore Braddock CLEVELAND, Onhio, Dec. {Joe Louis, who meets Eddie Simms, |local heavyweight, in a milk fund bout here Monday night, said that he would like a fight with Max Schmeling before Jim Braddock, in order to gain revenge for the time 'me Brown Bomber was kayced by Schmeling Adventist and Main adv. DINE! jof the program Last evening's scoring results were Rutgers *186 194 135 106 10 10 525 494 Pullen Shattuck Miss Apland6 Spot 186 192 186— 215— 558 601 Totals chair, being shaved, when the shop caught fire. the blaze. Firemen extinguished Tucker did not move from the chair, and after the fire was out the barber returned and completed the shave. e - Lode ~nd placer focation notices 542 for sale »t The Empire office. The First National Bank JUNEAU [ ] CAPITAL—$50.000 SURPLUS—$75.000 COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGE ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2% Paid on Savings Accounts ; DELICIOUS CHINESE DINNERS DANCE | . PHYLLIS ENERBERG and Her Melody Boys GOOD TIME! CITY CLUB CHINESE DINNERS SENT OUT BEST DANCE FLOOR IN JUNEAU BOOTH SERVICE FOR PARTIES