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. A. J. CRONIN ALSO LATEST NEWS OF THE DAY perrmger ' MovingUp Into (lass Enters 20-game Win Circle| —Cards Closing on Reds (By Associated Press) Paul Derringer, entering the charmed 20-game victory circle, minimized seven Chicago Cubs' hits that gave the Cincinnati Reds a vic- tory Sunday. Derringer was never in danger. The St. Louis Cardinals gained a half game on the Reds, however, by taking both ends of a doubleheader from Pittsburgh and cutting the lead of the Reds to three games and marking up their sixth successive win. Dodgers Move Up A victory over the Giants Sunday moved the Dodgers within half a game of the third-place Chicago bunch. Yanks Stertch Lead The Yankees stretched their latest | win streak to eight games by sweep- ing a doubleheader from the Wash- ington Senators Sunday. All the runs of the champions in the first game were bunched in the second inning. Rookie Shows Stuff Rookie Ted Williams slammed out | two homers, two triples and one single to lead the Boston Red’Sox to a double victory over the Ath- letics. Tigers Split The Detroit Tigers paraded five pitchers to the mound in the second game of the doubleheader Sunday With Chicago, but the White Sox pounded them for 16 hits. Detroit took the nightcap after losing the gpener. hlig ey - DR. STEVES, CHIROPODIST, Makes Arch Appliances to measure. Office, 10 Valentine Bldg., Phone 'R‘_‘ } ‘;’RS"E_‘S bILHEATERS] Evanoil is a new kind of oil fieater — utterly different, revolutionary! From lower ‘grills in the heater, Evanoil pours forth-a stream of glor- ious, active warmth that blankets the floors, reaches into corners, makes rooms warm as toast all ever! Silent “Synchro - Float™ Fan recireulates the air volume in average size home every few minutes. Clean, carefree, low - cost heat. In- stant heat control. Smartly styled models for heating up to six rooms. Convenient time payments. See. it demonstrated } Parsons Eleciric Co. 140 So, Seward Phone 161 | Pittsburgh From the novelby ANGEI.S ARE ' (LOSING Up ONRAINIERS LosAngeles TakesDouble- header as Seatle Los- | es Twin Games (By Associated Press) | | The big bats of Los Angeles blasted out a pair of wins Sunday | over Portland to keep the Angels ‘,in the pennant race as the Seattle Rainiers dropped a doubleheader to the San Francisco Seals, also still in the race by virtue of five straight victories over the Rainiers. The Angels collected 30 hits. San Diego defeated Oakland twice Sunday to win the series, six games to two. | Sacramento won o doubleheader from Hollywood, Tony Freitas al- lowing only five scattered hits in the first game. He pitched his 21st vic- tory. GAMES SUNDAY Pacific Coast League | Los Angeles 11, 11; Portland 9, 3. San Diego 5, 7; Oakland 0, 5. Sacramento 2, 6; Hollywood 0, 5. National League Cincinnati 7; Chicago 2. St. Louis 9, 11; Pittsburgh 3, 4. New York 4; Brooklyn 8. Philadelphia-Boston, rain: American League Washington 3, 2; New York 4, 6. Boston 10, 5; Philadelphia 7, 1. Chicago 1, 11; Detroit 5, 9. Cleveland 15, 4; St. Louis 5, 5. | Second game 12 innings. GAMES SATURDAY Pacific Coast League San Diego 3, 8; Oakland 0, 1. Sacramento 3, 6; Hollywood 4, 1. San Francisco 14; Seattle 6. Los Angeles 6; Portland 9. National League St. Louis 12; Pittsburgh 2. Philadelphia 2; Boston 1. New York 3; Brooklyn 8. Cincinnati 2; Chicago 3. American League Cleveland 9; St. Louis 8. Washington 2; New York 5. Boston 1; Philadelphia 2. Chicago-Detroit, postponed. STANDING. . OF CLUBS (Official to- date): Pacific Coast League Won Lost 98 69 93 76 90 % 85 84 81 88 kg 92 72 91 .14 95 Nlflonll League Won Lost 8 50 76 54 72 62 . 69 60 65 62 59 T Pet. Seattle 587 Los Angeles San Francisco Sacramento | San Diego | Hollywood Portland | Oakland 545 | 503 479 456 442 438 Pet. 609 | 585 537 535 520 454 Cincinnati Chicago Brooklyn New York . MORE TRATNING — MORE MONEY Many men are earning more money today because they acquired more training by spare-time study of IC.S. Courses. Choose your Subject! Architecture Accounting Advertising Air Conditioning. ... Aviation Engisies Building Contracting Cartooning Drafting : Chemistry Diesel and Gas- lntlnet Electriesf Engineering Highway & @ivil Engingering High Schoel Subjects Mechanical Engineering S Sign Painting and Show Cards Refrigeration Traffic Management H. J. WAUGH, Representative International Correspondence Schools Baranof Hotel Phone | this film at its .550 | £ ~THE-DAILY-ALASKA-EMPIRE, MONDAY, SEPT. 11, 1939.- A. J. CRONIN NOVEL PLAYS AT CAPITOL Robert Donfid’ Rosalind: Russell Co-starred in "The Citadel” “The Citadel,” based on the novel by Dr. A. J. Cronin, has been |brought to the screen in a notable pk‘turo and is now at the Capitol. Metro- Goldwyn- Mayer produced British studio in Denham, England, with Robert Do- nat and Rosalind Russell in the leading roles. A cast of more than one hundred players appears in {known English players Ralnh P - {ardson, Rex Harrison, Emlyn Wil liams and Penelope Dudley-Ward. The dramatic story of a young and. obscure physician in the Welsh collieries is revealed on the screen wnh all the emotional power of Cronin’s outstanding novel. A whole village was reconstructed for one | sequence and the depths of a coal mine are shown in. another. When the mine collapses, Donat descends into the pit in one of the most thrill- | ing scenes filmed. The surgeon’s fight to retain his | ethical code, his love for the school- mistress. and their marriage, fol- |lowed by their struggles together .in adversity and wealth, form a work rich combine to in emotional | power and dramatic intensity. King Vidor's direction comes close to per- fection, Boston 56 mn Philadelphia 41 86 American League Won Lost 96 38 8 55 6 58 72 61 70 63 59 ki 4 86 36 96 445 .323 Pect. 16 .586 567 541 526 New York Boston Chicago Cleveland Detroit ‘Washington Philadelphia St. Louis JOE HUNT UPSETS .353 NET WORLD SUNDAY| FOREST HILLS, N. Y., Sept. 11. —Midshipman Joe Hunt of Anna-| polis upset the tennis world Sun-! day when he put the Australian! San Francisco B 5; Seattle 6, 4. payjc cup team man Jack Craw-| ford out of the national singles championship at Forest Hills. The scores were 6-1, 3-6, 4-6, 6-1, 7-5. NO CHARITY CINCINNATI, Sept. 11. — Paul | Derringer, ace moundsman for the Cincinnati Reds, recently pitched walking a man. Then Paul walked two men in the game that broke his streak. DOUBLE FEATURE MANHATTAN, Kan, Sept. 11.— | The Kansas State-Kansas Univer- sity football game originally sched- uled for Saturday, November 3, was moved up one day so that persons |in Lawrence for the national corn- husking bee could see flle'fltlw LUNCH 'rbmmw on' AND'CABBAGE —at the BARANOF [ | 434 | 273 | 49 2/3 consecutive innings without‘ Training Is (osily Says Joe May Make_S’;m'e Extra Money Gefting Ready | for Pastor Bout | By DALE STAFFORD DETROIT, Sept. 11.~Being Lhe heavyweight boxing champion of the | world: is expensive—take it from Joe Louis, the present title holder—and: while the crown is worth: thousands of dollars there are plenty of “in- cidentals” that cut into-the pile of cash received for a bout. At the moment Louis and his man- | port, principal among them the well- | 8gers, John Roxborough: and Julian | Black, are preparing to open train-| ing quarters at suburban Northville for the champion’s fight with Bob Pastor, the former New York Uni-| versity football player, at Detroit | on September 20. Because Louis is | a Detroiter and has never fought in | his home town since gaining: the| title, Roxborough. believes that for! the first time the gate receipts at| the camp will at least equal lhe‘ training costs of the champion. “The most money we ever took ln at a training camp was $6,200 abt Pompton Lakes, N. J, says Rox-' borough. “Our expenses there ran | over $15,000. | Roxborough has set up a tenta- tive budget of $15,500 for the opera=| tion of the Northville camp. How | can that much money be spent in | 27 days of training? Here is the breakdown, as furnished by Rox- | borough: | ,(1) 81,200 for sparring parmers‘ who get $25 a day. { (2) $1,600 for groceries and meats | (how those sparring partners eat!). ! (3) $500' for rent, telephone, etc., for an estate to house the camp staff of approximately 20 persons, | 4) $7,000 for wages of the chef, | his assistant, a secretary and other, camp employees. (5) The balance goes for liability | insurance, purchase of a ring, box-| ing equipment and other inciden- | tals. ¢ Admission prices to Louis’ work= outs will vary from 50 cents on the first five days of the week to $1.10| on Saturdays and Sundays. { ¥ Lol TWO SEAPLANES. ¢/ ¢ BUSY ON SUNDAY, Pilot John Amundsen flew for| four and a half hours on a' photo- |graphy charter for the Forest Ser-] |vice yesterday, while = Shell Sim-| mons made two flights: to- island {points for the only seaplane acti~ |vity out of Juneau on Sunday. , | Amundsen flew Harry Sperling, | | Assistant Regional. Forester, over Tracy Arm, Taku Glacier and Gla- cier Bay. while Sperling took pho- tographs:. { Simmons. flew Sunday morning to| Pelican - with Bill ‘Donimey and George Sommerville, picking up Eu-i gene Dawson for Sitka at Pelican. At Chichagof, Simmons picked up | ‘Mr and Mrs. Ed Anderson for Sitka, }Mr.s. Anderson roundtripping, and | on return, brought in Jack: Little~ page, Mike McKailick, from Chicha- !gof, and' Ed' England and' Raymond | Rugzick from Hirst. On returning to Juneau, Sim- mons then went out to' Angoon with |Andrew Delaney, Willie Jim and Corey Starr, stopping at Lake Kath- leen on the retwrn: te bring in Pete TUREY WIRnS BABY GIRL BORN IO A-bouncing baby girl arrived Sat- | urdey afternoon: at St. Ann's’ Hos- pital. for Mn..and Mrs. Ralph Wag- gonar. The lttle miss. weighed 7| pounds 2 counces- at: birth. The: baby. has: been named Rum Irene; and according to’ her grand- parents, the Rev., and Mrs. David ‘Waggoner, bothsshe and her mother |are in the best :of -health. P e | ATTENTION. OES. Home-coming dinner for . Eastery | stars_and itheir ‘eseorts; Tuesday, & | p.m. Regular meeting 8 p.m. LILLIAN G. WATSON, Becretary. adv.” o o o 4 "R"“’"""" Chinese and American Dishes at Their Best! Daily € rossmord Puzzle ACROSS Be uhsuccess- i Tree trunk Flow back ). English queen Sollitlon of Saturday’s Puzzle 10. Meteorologi- cal instru- ment . Support: for a coffin . Vandals 3. Kind of cheese . Old French verse form . Channel throt which met- al is- poured into a mold . Say further . In this place 18, Pitchers ), Report Chronicles Gotton tabric . Re 26. Body joints . For example: abbr. . Uncle:” Sootch Tumultuous disorders Plgpen . Note of the scalo Division of jong poem Bntry in an account . Approachies | Saye Hereditary class of so- clety in In- Nonmetical language . Siamese coins . Yale . Grand or noble . Fish eggs . Spirit Siberian river . Be mistaken . Suspend Bind, wrap, or draw tightly English letter | Female sand: pipers . Metric land measures . One who names for office . Taking a roundabout course . Negative . Buildings for athletic training: collog. . Not cooked through . More precipl- tous . Feline ani- mals 3 . Bronoun - . Ethereal sal 2. Lll(-rnr) frag- foward ments 38 T r Be_concerned . Arrange bee forehand ., Old musical . Very strong . Room for action: ool- 0q. . Drum majors® caps . Probabilities’ Boy . Type measure . Oleoresin note . Feminine nume 45. Headplece . Expression of inquiry Juneau's Greatest Show Value LAST: TIMES TONIGHT Warner Baxler—l-'ui&e Bartholomew in ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON'S “KIDNAPPED” with ARLEEN WHELAN- TOMORROW ONLY POPULAR REQUEST BRINGS'BACK TO JUNEAU:——- “"ALEXANDER'S RAGTIME BAND” with TYRONE POWER-——ALICE FAYE—DON AMECHE JWNEG AND _ODFRAT£| nAm{ FORBES Anytime You're Hungry Day or Night THE ROYAL CAFE Is the Piace 1o Eat! S dJuss i g i % o ZdEEn e flll%fllll%fllll ‘Moose fo Pay /$100,000 fo Ban "Didafors” It will cost the Loyal Order of Moose approximately $100,000 to eliminate the word “dictator” from its documents and rituals, according to advices received by Moose in Juneau. The National Moose Convention held at Philadelphia voted to drop the word “dictator” from its rituals and as a title for its officials, an- | nouncing that world events have brought the title “into disrepute.” The title of dictator as used in the; Moose. organization meant “pre- siding officer.” The convention elected Fred W. Sabel, Aurora, Ill., banker, first su- preme governor under the title change. Other- officers, nominated and elected from the floor, are Bert W. Johnson, Chicago, supreme jun- ior governor; Francis J. Clohessy, | Waverly, N. J., supreme prelate, and Lawrence Grove, Glevland, supreme treasurer. ————————r ATTENTION TAX PAYERS Taxes are due. They will become delinquent September 15 unless the First Installment is paid on or before that date. If paid in full you are entitled to a two percent discount. Please ,pay early and avoid the rush. Office of the City Clerk will remain open during the noon hour from Monday to Friday, inclusive. H. J. TURNER, adv. City Clerk. STEVENSON'S FAMED | NOVEL FEATURED AT COLISEUM THEATRE From the world'’s great stories | come one of the greatest motion pic- tures and “Kidnapped,” which Ro- bert Louis Stevenson considered his best, is now showing at the Coli- seum. With the typical lavish hand that |'ear-marks all the 20th Century-Fox productions whieh come under the watchful eye of Darryl F. Zanuck, “Kidnapped” brings an- array of fine motion picture thrills to the screen in a romantic adventure story. Warner Baxter portrays in all his swashbuckling, vigorous best, the never-to-be-forgotten Alan Breck, fugitive clansman of the highlands. And Freddie Bartholomew, a size or two' larger than .when he last ap- peared so brilllantly on the screen, gives a fine performance to the role of David Balfour, the boy hero of the piece. The movie takes liberty with the original script in intreducing a “heart interest” to the life of Alan Breck. But this reviewer is willing ito concede that even Robert Louis Stevenson might have rewritten his story had he known Arleen Whalen, DON'T SLEEP WHEN GAS PRESSES HEART If you can't eat or sleep Because gas bloats you up try Adlerika. One dose usually ~relieves . pressure on heart from stomach gas due to constigation. Adlerika cleans out BOTH bowels. Butler-Mauro Drug Co., in Douglas by Guy's Drug Store. —NOT The nomination inated: IT'S TIME TO CHANGE YOUR THINNED - OUT VICE PRESIDENT ICE!- Juneau Mine and Mill Workers Union, Local No. 203, will hold its regular meet- ing on Monday, September llth, at the Union Hall, 7 P. M. sharp, of oificérs for the en- suing year and several more very impori- ant matters will be taken up. . The following officers are to be nom- SECRETARY-TREASURER RECORDING SECRETARY CONDUCTOR WARDEN ONE TRUSTEE THREE GRIEVANCE COMMITTEE MEN ALL MEMBERS REQUESTED T0 ATTEND! By The Daily Alaska | BROADCAST YOUR SAVINGS .. . | ARE INSURED, ARE W ) | AVAILABLE AND E ER RETURNS' | ALASKA m& ' Savings and Loaw Assn. | il JOINT FEATURE SERVICE ON THE AIRI Empire and KINY 6 days every week at 8:15 a.m. 12:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 9:45 p.m of Ji TELEPH 3 Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Coons. HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Sept. 11.—Here I'd been thinking all the time that a good movie story was just a good movie story, and along came Jeff Lazarus to break it all down in terms of “gross tonnage.” The expression has no reference, as you might think, to the mass production methods of this big movie industry. It refers, despite its materialistic ring, to the elements that go into- artistic. as well as purely commercial films. First, though, you ought to know Jeff Lazarus. He's a vigor- ous, dynamic, clear-talking young producer who has come into the limelight lately with pictures like “Cafe Society,” “Give Me & Sajlor,” “St. Louis Blues,” “Ride a Crooked Mile” and. his latest, “My Love for Yours” He used to be studio story editor, one of the best. As a producer, therefore, he has one of the best story minds in town. “Gross tonnage” came up during a quick lunch—Jeff is as harried and hurried for time as most fellows who really work at their jobs—and it came up in a discussion of the relative merjts of short story and novel as “picture material.” It's an old ides *. hereabouts that a good short story is the logical material for movie. That, says Jeff unequivocally, is just “a lot of gunk.” (¥ may define “gunk” any way you like—it's Jeff’s word so far as know.) . " “The silent, pictures, yes—they were short stories,” he said. “But for a talking film a short story is shart on gross tonnage. Gross tonnage? That's how I like to weigh a picture possibility, “Hm, does the story have a group of 1nt.eresung characters? THat 73 The redeption ct‘urflMng hostessess give tHoughtful guests who g brlng“gtfu of delfclous ' ‘Candlés. LHM‘ wmnu ons make Ty ?l nusy. 3‘”’"' ds{? y" CHOCOI-M’I' afl VAN DUYN CHOCOLATE SHOPS St “Becond. doea it have interesting munuom? A movie M fl a series of situations. A brilliant director like Greg, LaGavs. take as few as two or three situations, and work them a his own way, with sidelights and yarlations, to make ture, . But. most directors need a,number of W “Then there’s ‘color,” J.helieve people like to have | supply them vieariously with things they ordinarily. don't haye Just as any man would like to face. danger as bravely ”m Cooper, does, or look at battle as nonchalantly as the hm of John, Ford’s movies, T believe audiences want the M}yfi their own. lives lack. |, ie s tepind “Plenty of hcldenw. ‘too. The more a swry is crunme‘ '“b munlngful or amusing or dramatic incidents, the better material it is fer pietures: b g “And if a story has the benefit of a colorful lmnd bestd’e't all these things, it’s just about right for a successful mt\um h colorful legend I mean any background long. cels 2 s0 that the average audience, can read uy.o it all that ” read before. ‘Lives of a Bengak Lanw for, ins , Was & picture, but. it didn’t hurt that most pepple knew ka m and his Fuzzy-Wugzies before they entered the theatre.” Exnmnle of. fipg “‘gross umw; in, Jeff Lazarus’s. % ; all the novels of Lioyd,C. Douglas. * < defe ,,m Amwhmnwodwvhmmndpfimuwfiy Happened One Night” was made from “Night Bus™ ff Illil- tains that it's still a matter of “gross tonnage.” The director, in that. case Frapk Capra, or the writers have to fill ont fitwm weight.