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t, 5 i o THE DAILY ALAS!(A EMPIRE, MONDAY, DEC. 11, 1939 oz e S TENNESSEE, S0 CALIFORNIA [CARMEGESTLL ARE TO MEET IN ROSE BOWl| AVERAGES, ELKS. the Hizh School lads were defeated, | although they made a valiant fight. | | Bowling averages at the Elks,| as of last Friday night, released Erskine and Feero both (‘r‘lmll’hl today by the ledge pin committee, a basket in the extra period for their team to make the necessar T S v g Y| LOS ANGELES, Cal, Dec. 11 show Claude Carnegie still lead- | \ ing all pinsters with 186, and Mrs, boints for victory ; | Tennessee and Southern California Martin Lavenik still heading wo- JUNEAU HIGH How to make your beau or pappy— Or even good old hubby —happy! |lisle squad when Warner took up | his coaching assignment there in A large crowd turned out for the | 1899, Though he was a star at track ) ol Iwill clash in the 25th censecutive game and was held on its feet yel- ol e | Denny didn’t_excel at football. But ling loudly the last 15 minutes Rose Bowl game at Pasadena on| ) Game Tied af End of Sched- - [ he ioved the game so well that he'd January 1, Director of Athletics an- | | . % ltlwl Drlt’lmn'nflrl.\' !m'"“:ti 11\(‘ s ey hang around the locker rooms, rub M iyt nla " e : 3 ouglas high school defea the ' g _|the players down, and look after men keglers w wre I'm“r 3 Mmlne) Juneau Reserves The undefeated, untied and un- (" injuries. Averages to date are as follows . Following. s Mneups of the first Sc0red Tennsssee team has aceepted Gi Av. | ' Overtime PIGYCd * 4 : ! he invitation. Stick Together ! ames Av v !t¢<||'v| ('untc\'.. Last Saturday afternoon UCLA| That was how it started, and he| C. Carnegie 24 186 | A i s o Bears (20 | " uthern California played to|has worked wth Pop at Pittsburgh,| . Metcalf 6 181 | The most (hrilling basketball game | F. Erskne 12 20 to 0 score | Georgia, Stanford, Temple and San| Mike Ugrin 24 180 » of the currer cason ended in a!F Feero 8 8 ° Southern California’s Trojans|Jose. At Cornell the coach z:utnlongJ H. TIffert 24 178 flurry of baskels Saturday nizht C Stragier 9 McDaniels 4 r & 3 v C i N. Bavard T | were hard at work today in prepar- | Without him 18040 | e Juneau High Sc gym ‘G cklund Hickey 3 JISDRL Fawh . 'y s 23 s in “the Juneau High School gym (_ Vic ation for their Rose Bowl battle When you can overcome the| L. Hudson 23 176 ) when Warner's quintet of Douglas|G Cashel 4 Jones 8, Ly rennessee. | Chief's natural reticence, he'll take| F. Riendeau 21 1713 | defeated, for the first time this year, Substitutions: Warners — Kron- | Tennessee finished the seasonun-| YoU into the field house and show| Doc. Stewart 30 173 [ Juneau High School's Crimson Bear | quist, Savikko; Juneau—Rice, Pow-;m’e'med AREAE sy inasied 500 | you the pads and appliances he's] Shavy Koski 27 1712 | squad, 33 to 20 in a game that re-|ers 7, Miller. [ritte Sovtiarn Californi ' | concocted to protect various injur-; G. Benson b 12 | quired a three-minute overtime per-| Referee: George Willey i el allfornia was un- | They're secrets between the| J. Halm 30 170 1 i R S0 5 defeated and tied twice. | . | iod to decide | " . | trainer and Pop, he says. No oth-| H. VanderLeest 6 168 | The victory gives each team a | The Southern Californians Were |, . pangler knows these exact tricks.| M. 1 ! Elves. 8 s lucky to escape with a tie Satur- gy i ayenik 5 win over the other, and both games gl i Satur- | e many trainers, Denny works, R. Duckworth 8 167 | were c105e 1y uncontested, the high a( ers "‘j“_|“j" n UCLA drove to the one-|pis psychology hard. He constant-| L. Holmquist 18 166 | team defeating Warner's at Doug- e i the final moments. [y watches the boys on the field.| Doc, Council 7 165 | las last week, 32 to 31 . | Southern California halted the|ynows how to handle each one to| R. Kaufmann 30 164 ; Saturday’s contest was a See-Saw drive, however, and the game end- | get the most out of him. Problems' Mrs. Lavenik 24 163 | affair from the opening whistle to| e ea fed in a scoreless deadlock. that a player is backward about j Hendricks 21 162 the close | The Trojans made thelr OWn | jaying before the coach are oftel o Shattuck 7 162 Tt Irah quater. srded 15t 11} | scoring bid in the first quarter but | threshed out with the trainer. | g steriing n 161 N e n COUSINLY COMPLAINT: favoring Warners, and the Douglas | : quarterback Grenville Lansdale| “Football is harder today than it g’ Henning 23 160 I would awf'ly like to kill a i i Island quintet also led their adver- l a n s fummbled as he crossed the goal'used to be,” Denny says. “The old g V“rkm_;h A Wadki 6r Gao it Udlds witha: I like Cousin Conrad fine, : arics at the half time. 19 to 17. | line and UCLA took possession of [timers like to think their game Was & pogn M4 15 What present to this dear relation Except when he sits down to dioe Soare e £ |the bai. tough, but it wasn't as tough as the p' coon R Glikriatdss ai lnviabions Then he seems to squirm and shruy R S r ot 5 Tt HArtes ANE e : On the other western bowl fronts, |open game. Tackling is more deadly. 5 it 1 A 3 Can be be a jitterbug? High School five became very busy (Jr@€N Bay Eleven National efticials of Denver's Celery Bowl|You really have to protect a man g s - ARER L | Ch % 0 N were looking today for an oppon- | more. A ‘B“\;{“" j: :’l(f g e - : } urke p 56 ampions vver New ent for Gonzaga University and T don't see any great difference 2 A # Eat Out 'l'oday! p » San Jose State and Colorado Mines |in the physical setup of boys now M. I. Taylor LR York G”dders loomed as opponents for a pros- |and forty years ago, but the players L. Hutching £ pective Prune Bowl game. today take better care of themselves. :‘s-mfi‘““‘““ ;: 15’2 heg e g [ . Shaw 2 ! MILWAUKEE, Wis.. Dec. 11—The ST S ';;':’dv';;r’l:‘[mg,m Jose. J. Thibodeau 30 154 | ::,'1',: “‘l dB:';q:(““r‘]te:,’:l’ns:::,'j‘aidk:sz u |, Denny is serving the highest scor- Do¢. Blanton 18 181 ol ‘atlank e e New - VOVE o ern rl ling team in the country and he's E. Reynolds 6 150 | Giants, both professional football BIOUG B8 Ko it ] st 6 Al o K et it | “I certainly like to win,” he says. R. Ward 18 149 National Haokohll ehaniplonshin | used to like fo win even if the M. Benedict gl Tric iy e’k Tinyan e ame oug er {boys were hurt, but nct now, I pro- B. Davlin TR T B ARROW RECOMMENDS: WILEON GETS AT SEAT fafe o Arowt oF B0 HEtns J |tect the boys.” frermn AR A There's no finer uncle-tickler than Arrow OF TROUBLE: 7 At 60 the Chief is in prime phys- Mrs. Dufresne 12 147 i i hi o - . 1 F. T 2 147 shirts—finc whites, or patterned shirts Givs Caniad sone Wills dorts. Thoy Ripive Wasidt Alls Dot Mot ‘ical condition and boasts that he . Fagerson 2 months ahesd of the rest of the nation some !son shorts. They N pmannd . Erpive Wans Ads A a s ’a l n e r‘has never smoked, drunk or chewed. ~ Mrs. Petrich 2 146 s oy A have more room In the seat and have S T i bl s e s But he realizes that he and Coach Mrs. Kaufmann 21 U6 i criylles All“dntoeapliHE St ARGE no creeping chafing center seams. Warner are getting along in years. ~ R. Kimball 45 145 | shrinkage less than 1%! $2 and up Canforized-Shrunk. “We've been everywhere else ‘to- R. Hermann 21 145 Shorts, 65¢ up Tops, 50c up ’ 3 J » a IT'S TIME TO By SAM JACKSON gether,” he says. “When the time P. Kegal 19 144 | AP Feature Service Writer comes I guess well meet in the A, Duncan 24 143 CHANGE YOUR SAN JOSE, Cal, Dec. 11.—For 40 Happy Hunting Ground.” Mrs, Sperling 21 143 \ ) years a faithful shadow has been - | R. Stott Bkl . { =z THINNED - OUT folloving Fop Warner from college [ Do, Williaras 8 14 (o to college, an hey say he's had | R. Darnell 6 140 : 1 LUBRICANTS! quite a bit to do with the veteran ARMSIRONG { “A punham £ 10 = coach’s success on the gridiron. I | P. Bloedhorn 2% 139 | | He's a full-blooded Indian of the Ny ‘ | J. Ramsa; 27 37 & g ' co""ons “uron Oneida tribe, named Wallace Den- o Ensony a1 i“ . : l BB':AT ny but usually referred to as M‘lfl ¥ Biirtord 18 135 DAUGHTER'S FACE IS RED: I LUBRICATION COMPANY | “Chiet” He's Warners trainer. | g |l LR, Tal JohE T Shh ¥ 00 1ho e SISTER LOVES BROTHER: !"““~’~“““"””’_’,” o oeoeeos Denny was a member of the Car- F. Foster St 1% 138 It cost me every ceat I had. Walter is my favorite brother, SISO R S ST % w I l l F I G HI R. Hurley 2 130 Here’s what hurts—1 cannot bear it— Perhaps because 1 have no othet | Mrs, Davlin 24 120 | Father never seems v wear il Can I make him debonair : i | Dorothy Green a1 129 | With the pittance I can spare? T Ch e R | Mrs, Duncan 21 129 Tw i i . K. Nasi 18 1 | el {1wo i ampions, in ke ] Doc. Whitehead 21 12 spective Ranks, on Char- | jane Boszan . ' _' P ‘, - h' { R. Huntoon 6 126 ] rogram Ioni W. Overby 3 128 - | ¥ g o g | w. wilson 4 125 | | CLEVELAND, Ohio, Dec. 11— (": Sf']‘:égu_, 23 i:; | |Henry Armstrong, welterweight ] 8 | e A # Annabelle Simpson 21 109 champion, is pronounced in great Chi; fleld 3 100 shape for his ten round title bout B fipe:; 5 8 tonight with Jimmy Garrison, on the o 1% bl 3 Cleveland News Christmas Charity, ~Mrs. Overby B Fund program. | Mrs. Duckworth 21 8 | ¥ Al Hostak, middlewelght cham- “Hausoz . | WILSON TO THE RESCUE: WILSON HITS A BULL'S EYE: . ays- pion from Seattle, meets Eric See-| Pl oS Redeem yourself, gal. Give him Wilson Outside of a compléte repaint job, nothing ® Ilig‘ young German from New York, | ties this time—they've got the same will pep up Walter's appearance like a ' e in a scheduled 15 rounder H AIDA QUIN'I'E'I' } styling that made Wilson shirts world- nice Wilson handkerchief in his breast Cut Your I | famous. . They're wrinkle-resistant, pocket. Generously sized, neatly stitched, { ! IAKES BEAII“G | long-wearing, and only. . $1 and $1.50 masculine colors 25¢ up | | DRY WASHERS Time> -Ivo BE SEI.E IED [ 0" lv"" (A"Al Come in today—and mane your selections from these and many other as low as E | Arrow and Wilson shirts, ties, handkerchiefs, and underwéar 1 SRS .| 8120 " FORSHRINE GAME v cuer e reumes to s Other Washers | Government wharf moorings Satur- | B M B E H R E N n as low as day night after a three-day cruise . . » SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Dec. 11. —Coach Bahe Hollingberry of Washington State has arrived in San FPrancisco to select Western | players for the annual Shrine East |and West all-star game in San 59 e Coast Guard beat are army Francisco New Year's day. |at Chilkoot, however, 28-17. | | Coaches Andy Kerr of Colgate e e e e | and Bernie Bierman of Minnesota have already chosen nineteen of LA ] . iy Missionary Meeting, (et e e o Tomorrow Atermoon CONSTANT READER the twenty-two players to repre- of Oregon State and then announce to Haines and SRagway. | The Haida basketball squad met two defeats in three tries on the| trip, losing to a Haines team, 27-19 | and to a Skagway Eagles squad, 30~ QUALITY SINCE 1887 $59.95 ® Super Spin Basket Dry- er-Damp dries clothes quickly while second tub is washing. ® G. E. Activator—Gentle positive washing action cleans your clothes. Washes everything from dainty garments to heavy blankets safely and thoroughly. sent the ® Quiet Washing Action—You can barely hear it operate. W For Fast Service Call the HOPKINSILLE, Ky.. Dec ) ! SaveRsOr neriae the western players for the an-| A meeting of the Interdenomina- | ® G. E. Guarantee. nual c'assie. tional Missionary Society will be held | W. T. Cooper came in with his check | #4 ; | ey Gl tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock in|for a year’s subscription and the| ". - w“ D li | ATTENTION MASONS the auditorium of the ‘Methodist staff of the Hopkinsville New Era y e very A l k E l = S'ated Communication of Mt |Church and all members are inyit- knew the newspaper's Slst birthday | a s a e e tr l c ! Juner 1 Todee Monday evening at|ed to be present. as a daily was being observed for- | MOVING “— mally. The paper might have over- in charge of Mrs. R. B. Lesher. looked the anniversary had it not - been for Cooper. He has paid for ELEVEN foreign corporations re- his subscription on the same date L] 7-20 wi'h dinner at 6:30 in the| The program for the day will be l i g ll t & P 0 we l. C 0 mp a n y Tem)p'e. Annual roll call and elec- General Hauling tion of officers. Big attendance ex- lpECIed. J. W. LEIVERS, 'asnl:y ;ecexved permits to oper- ;\:e{sa;ince the paper was founded | POLLY AND HER PALS T e T By CLIFF STERRETT =~ DAILY TRIPS | TO ALL POINTS OUT 1 STPOSE ou GALS BIN GALAVANTIN' { | WHY, PEGGY, HERE, MADE GLACIER HIGHWAY TEN. PERFECT PUTTS AT THE EIGHTH HOLE/ AND 1 DON'T SEE WHY You OBJECT TO GIRLS ON_ THE COURSE, OLD CROSS-PATCH Authorized Delivery for The Daily Alaska Empire { { $1.25 PER MONTH | (No Delivery Fee) For Immediate Service CALL 374 HI-WAY DELIVERY