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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, SEPT. 21, COMEDY, DRAMA ARE COMBINED, Qhow Place of Juneau vt s o | CAPITOL PIGTURE: Sequel to Thm Man’ Writ- ten by Dashiell Hammett With Fine Characters The mixture of comedy and drama whiech W. S. Van Dyke unfailingly injects into a mystery picture is I’IWHHH Loy GFTER THE || 7 /1’//1 /77/?/7 i IAME ST[WAF'I ELISSA i AN D | JOSEPH % CALLEIA £ JESSIE g RALPH s' “After the Thin Man,” the Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer film, which opened Sunday at the Capitol Theatre with | William Powell and Myrna Loy in the starring roles Sequel to that memorable master- piece of cinema myster The Thin Men,” this was written by the same author, Dashiell Hammett, and sur- rounds the inimitable s with a | sparkling cast of favoritees, includ- ing James Stew: Elissa Landi, Joseph Calleia, Jessie Ralph and Asia, the remarkable wire-haired terrier of “The Thin Man.” Latest” News PREVIEW TONIGHT THRILLS AND ROMANCE IN THE SKIES! ,FLYING HOSTESS' iAx11((~ of scouting data. A Universal Picture It was not planned that way, for Phelan sent Abe Shper back to Towa | City last fall to scout the Hawkeyes u WASHINGTUN |and Shper brought back luminous grammed for Phelan. land lengthy reports on the Iowa |team. The set-up looked fine. But when Ossie Solem resigned as ‘Imm coach after the '36 campaign land Irl Tubbs stepped into the |Hawkeye coaching job, all Shper's Huskies Are Unable to Get TipS on What to Ex- ‘ The Husky coach figures it would ~ be a waste of timie, even dangerous pect from Easterners [t follow closely Shper's scouting e [report on Towa, for the Hawkeycs the cannot be expected to do their foot- ball chores under Tubbs as they did that Shper learned about and dia- 1dbors went for virtually naught. ‘Tubbs brought a new system of ‘:-m(-hmg to Towa. New formations, | new strategy replaced the things Next Satur in Seattle, University of Washington Huskies will meet Towa in the opening foot- | under Solem. gall game of the season. The Se-; “It is just a tough break, ')\l[‘ attle bunch has not been able to Shper’s trip to Iowa City to watch! get a positive slant on their oppo- Iowa in action and his work there nents as the following dope, by, is now no more than waste motion,”| Varnell, in the Seattle Daily Times, said Phelan. “We will just have tol intimates: take the Towa team at face value of No Pacific Coast Conference foot-|a Big Ten Conference team and | ball team will meet a rival outfit plan to meet whaever offense Tubbs this season without the benefit of [prepares. For we cannot drill for gcouting reports on its opponent. |it ahead of time. But Jimmy Phelan’s University| “I said after we played Minnesota ! of Washington Huskies will face an|last fall without having scouted intersectional rival, the Umvemty Bernie Bierman's team that never, of Iowa, in the opening game of the again would the Huskies face an| Husky schedule without the assist- intersectional rival without first The First National Bank TUNEAU CAPITAL—$50.000 SURPLUS—$100.000 [ COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2% Paid on Savings Acramt | T = HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Effort Made for the Comfort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE ‘ in connection AIR SERVICE INFORMATION Remember!!! If your "Daily Alaska Empire” has not been delivered By 6:00 P. M. PHONE 226 A copy will be sent you IMMED- IATELY by SPECIAL CARRIER. [GIANTS, CUBS, CLASH TODAY, GREAT SERIES Square Off - for Cotites Which May Delermme N.L. Championship (By Associated Press) The eyes of the baseball centers today on Wrigley world Field evident again in his latest effort,{where the Cubs and Giants squared | game series expected National League off for a three to determine the championship The series is generally conceded to be the Cubs last stand. They are now two and one-half games behind | the pace-setting Giants. The Cubs must win at least two| games out of the three to return to a fair chance to emerge on top before the season closes. Including today's tilt, the have 13 games remaining to Cubs the | Bnbs Duno Store Heiress, 1{_‘41 n; Bmk in l’ublu I ye Giants 16 games. Should the Giants win but of the remaining games, have to win nine out of the thirteen to tie the Giants. Larry French, dependable south- paw, is manager Grimes selection for pitching today and Harry Gum- bert, righthander, had ‘the Giants’ mound nomination. GAMES MOND/ National League Brooklyn 4; Chicago 5. New York 10; St. Louis 3 Only games scheduled American League Detroit 0; New York 5. St. Louis 8, 5; Boston 6, 7. Only games scheduled. STANDING OF CLUBS Won Lost National League Won Lot New York 85 53 Chicago 84 57 St. Louis 5 66 Pittsburgh %65 Boston K 70 Brooklyn 61 80 Cincinnati 55 84 Philadelphia 55 85 American League Won Lost New York 94 45 Detroit 83 57 Chicago 8 62 Boston 2 64 Cleveland 4 66 ‘Washington 67 3 Philadelphia 47 91 St. Louis 42 99 having scouted tnat team. But it is not working out the way I planned. We scouted Towa, but, under a new ' coach, those reports now become useless; so here we are again, through no fault of our own, com- ing up to an intersection battle, with no data on our opponent. Tough luck, I'd say.” B Huskies Cleanest Team During 1936 According to the 1936 season re- port of Herb Dana, University of Washington Huskies committed fewer rule infractions last season than any other team in the conference. | Second to the Huskies on Dana’s Washington | list of team fouls was State College. Dana’s report was not based un guesswork but on the reports sent| in by officials following each game. Dana’s office prepared a blank for each official in each game dur- the confefence season. After- each contest each official tabulated | the fouls called, against which team and for what infractions of the| rules. Thus the commissioner was able to total the reports at the end of the season and knew definitely how | many times a team was penalized | === for offside, holding, clipping or any| " (other rule break. In announcing the result of the| team performance for the 1936 sea- son, which gave Washington the lowest number of infractions, Dana paid a tribute to the coaching of Jimmy Phelan who, although he developed a P. C. C. championship | wa: outfit, also developed a team that was too busy playing good football —most of the time—to waste time and effort breaking rules. Naturally, where the human ele- half | the Cubs | commissioner | of football officials for the Pacific | Coast Conference, Jimmy Phelan’s | 1937. BRUNSWICK BEAT ~ (OLUMBIA L. GO IN GOOD GAME Three l)rfnnd:‘rs Bowl Over 500 Halm Makes | Record W|lh 550 J ‘!Coli.\’rmn Show Stars Errol YOUNG STARS HAVE LEAD IN ‘GREEN LIGHT' COLISEUM 'ONIGHT LAST TIME Flynn and Anita Louise Hearts Torn The Brunswick five met their| “Green Light,” best-selling novel Asunder b enemy on their own alleys last night |for two years, and now translated by a Guitty | ERROL FLYNN and routed the Columbia Lumber |to the screen a Cosmopolitan pro- Secret! ... Company by a score of 24 3.|duction, ends its run tonight at the ANITA lflUlS[ G. Galao and G. Baroumes bowled [Coliseum Theatre. ver 500 and their teammates helped| Errol fiynn, the young Irish star GFEEN llGHI them out with good high assist {who made such a sensational suc- J. Halm of the Lumber five rolled cess with his starring role WARCARET LINDSAY + Sir CEDRIC NARDWICKE the h score of the night in the|"Captain Blood,” and followed it Water AbetHenryO il Afrank Borzage Prod'a Commercial League tourney when|with another smash hit in “The A CosRCemmAgN he knocked out 550. Althouth his|{Charge of the Light Brigade,” has |a did good work against|the role of Dr. Newell Paige, a young PLU {the pi it was not sufficient to surgeon who sacrifices his career to SELECTED |beat the alley defenders {save that of an older doctor v FOY YRy A FEYETR TG ; Tonight the Arctics play the Unit-] Co-starred with him is the love= l.;’%‘llf‘”%v:()l\'lllr”ll‘(l)‘i'{l[‘\\ |ed Food |ly Anita Louise as Phyllis Dexter, s 4 et odned Last nights scores foilow: |for whose mother's death Paige has Brunswick |assumed the blame. The two meet| S5 |E. Galao 190 193 158 At the home of Francis Ogilvie|of Juneau, Skagway, Haines and { |T. Dibotr 156 149 161— 466 | (played by Margaret Lin 'v‘““. soldiers, | |H. Poole 145 146 168— 459 |nurse who devotes her life to Paige,! The Juneau Rifle and Pistol Club, | HEIRESS TO PRINC PRINCESS TO RENO \I)ln:t‘.n\ 141 159 175— 475 |and fall instantly in love. But when' fostering the rifle sport, has virtu= Barbara Hutton, whe inherited It wasw't long, though, before |G. Baroumes . 167 161 178— 506|Phyllis finds out who he is she re= glly completed arrangements for ; a $25,000,000 dime-store for- rumors got around that the | —_— - fuses to see him again. installing' an’ indoor range at the | tune at 5, ended the national Prince’s devotion to polo would | Totals 799 1788 840—2427 g TR Southeast Alaska Fair building and | game of speculating on whom cost him his wife. To prove | Columbia Lumber | ehis - wonld > BN “sccommpantion | she would marry when, not everything was jake, Babs gave [C. Rands 150 160 137 u"eau l Uu not only for local shooters but for | 21, she w d to Prince a $10,000 y in Par e |G. Schmidt 147 127 157 ] cmpetitive matches with utgoide | Alexis Maviva she rumors. Soon |J. Halm 154 208 188 poae. oo June, 1 she eno (above, with A Clark 172 122 15 e the ch her lawyer) for a divorce Carnegie 155 143 155 | . i | f - Tears ' average AT THE HOTELS | “es anned Oct. = | : L i s i DIVORCEE TO COU s The day after she dropped Alexis, Babs was married to Count Court | Haughwiltz Reventlow of Denmark. They fled to she said, | can gangsters. On Febru 1936, a son l because of fear of Ame was born to the Haughwitz-Revent! England. The three, plus Babs’ after she’came out of seclusion last year ws in @ germ-proof in at left, are room father shown shortly COUNTESS TO DUC 5S Before Lance (their son) was a year old, were off having fun again. In Egypt Babs studied Arabic and got a sun tan. Next they were back in England for the coronation, then | on to Venice to play with the Duke and Duchess of Wind The | feur are shown there together, the Count and Countiess on the left. | And that's Babs’ story up to now. | lindividu or team can be pericet,| )+ E ROLFE WILL | MAKE HOME, JUNEAU| {but to have been the nearest perfect Rolfe of Sacramento, Cali- arrived on the Northland to make his future home in JYIH":IIli | He is the father of Mrs. John Na IMRS' R' M' STOFT IS terstad of Auk Bay and of Walter HONORED AT PARTY woite, operator at ki In honor of Mrs. R. M. Stoft, sis-| RS i, N ter of Mrs. J. P. Williams, a party RUCTION TIMBERS s given last evening by Mrs. Alice FOR SCHOOL ARE HERE Coughlin and Mrs, Larry McKech- —_— nie, at the home of the latter. The Evelyn Berg docked here this Three tables of bridge were in morning, bringing 51 tons of ma- the Count and Countess |of all conference teams was an ac- complishment for Husky coaches and players alike. J. E | fornia, CON X-RAY COMPANY MAN ARRIVES IN JUNEAU| H. H. Howell of the Standard X- Ray Sales Company of ar- rived in Juneau on the Northland to do a bit of repair work on the \y machine at the Juneau Medi- and Surgical Clinic. Mr. Howell is the second represen- ive of the Standard X-Ray Sales | Company to be in Juneau this sum- mer. da H. K. Hoviland spent several here a few months ago. Mr. Ho- plans to return to Seattle on Northland Thursday. - Empire ciassifieds results, The for | | | TS \ George J. Lee, Juacau; J, 8. Cul- Event May Be Forerunner yerison. : bel n, Kodiak; Em. Tillman, Hoo~ J of Olhr‘r Contests Dur- nah; Melvin Rose, Louis Stone, \ Barney Gr Petersburg; H. A. ing Wml(l Monlh% {Gerstman, Seattle; ‘H. C. Carter, Seattle; Mrs. M. E. Halvorson; W. Tentative plans for a rifle shoot H, Carswell, Ketchikan; Jerie Day, at Haines Orvtober 2 between the Juneau Juneau Ethel Smith, S. Silverstein and wife, Juneau; Mr. and Mrs. Syvert Koland, Jack Wade, Alaska; Stan- ley Zuern, Portland; George Dale, Juneau; Barbara Demidoff, Ko- diak; H. Boyle, H. H. Howell, Seat- tle; H. C. Nunan, Willilam H. Cas- well, Ketchikan; Chet Johnson. e Empire classifieds pay. |Juneau Rifle and Pistcl Club and a soldier team from Chilkoot have been made it was reported today, and it may be the forerunner of g series of other events during the winter, The soldiers have disc {Juneau sportsmen the pc la bowling series, and possibility some basketball competition with 'the idea of a league being formed sed with ibility of NEW M Swift; :250-3000 Savage; Super !play during the evenir following | terjals, mostly heavy timbers, for the which refreshments were served ! new Dou hool. 5 | | 1 A GENTLEMAN TO || THAT'S His UNDERSTAND oL RE SEE YOU-AND HE || NAME- BUT WHO RUINED MY FINE - - USSIN- AN = i N SEND HIM IN- CEL ?T TO KEEP AN APPOINT— BRINGING UP FATHER WINCHEST, Big Game Rifles New Velocities More Power Super Accurac Winchester Model 70 Staynless Non-Mercuric Car- tridges: .22 Win. Hornet; Super Speed .220 Win. Roberts; 270 Win.; 7 mm. Mauser; .30 Gov’t.’06; 300 H. & H. Magnum; .375 H. & H. Magnum. IESTER REPEATING ARMS CO., Dept. ODEL 70 TRADE MARK Your Choice in the World’s Newest aml m Bolt-Actions e AllNG yduk choice in a new Winchester M,dfl 9 Rifle trieans really getting your picl oF e nine" Rewest; most ‘improved and in- disputably unequalled big game rifles that the world can offer you. It means, too, your choice of over two dozen loads. Shown Here Model 70 Standard Grade New ultra-high-velocity small bores with ex- tremely flat trajectories. New ultra-high-power magnums with abundant sock in one of their heavy cartridges to stop the toughest brown bear or grizzly in Alaska. Whether it is for eagles, seals, wolves, deer, sheep, caribou, moose, bears' of any species, in these new, world-beating rifles you find the gun and cartridge combination that you personally want. Your dealer will be glad to show you his Model 70 Winchesters. See them now. For cata- log folder with full details, ballistics, a score of illustrations, see your dealer, or write to Speed .257 Win, N, NEW HAV MbNT WITH YOU JUg BECAUSE YOU WER WILLING TO LEND HIM SOME MONEY—, DISGRACE TO AL SOCIET Y- | SHALL REPORT THE WHOLE PROCEDURE TO THE NEWSPAPER — YOUR TRICK WAS A WOW- IF THAT GITS IN THE PAPER- I'M SUNK, FORGIV 'ro DGo AT TO DO? (8