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F e RO ENDS TONIGH’!" The Story of @ Waman Who teyed Unwisely-. .l and too-well Y. Claire Trevor Lawrence Tierney Walter Slezak --p v L » Carlgon l.alesl News FEATURE at 8—10:10 TOMORROW! Fhyllis CALVERT ¥ Robert HUTTON Ella RAINES Eddic ALBERT ' TIME OUT OF MIvD From the Novel RACHEL FIELD e OF WEST GETS START ROUNDUP OF SPORT NEWS By HUGH FULLERTON, JR. VIRGINIA BEACH, Va:, April 19.‘ —I{P—Since there’s a good chunk of mileage. beteween this resort and any Major League baseball cities, this iooks like a good spot to indulge in the sports writers’ spring pastime of picking the pennant-winners. Any fans ‘who object to the selections can't throw brickbats this year. At that, its fairly safe this time Te- cause this observer, on the basis ot early spring observations, is obliged to string along with the majority in picking the Yankees and Cardinals. The Yanks look like a better club than the 1947 world champs, espec- ially in pitching, while the impres- sion gained at Sarasota was that Joe McCarthy may have a fine col- lection of players for the Red Sox but he hasn't got a ball team yet. There's some temptation to choose the other Boston club, principally because of Billy Southworth’s lead: ership, but there are too many “ifs” attached to the Braves. We'll stick with St. Louis as a sounder, more experienced club, Admittedly stabbing in the dark on some second division clubs and those that trained in the west, here's our order of the finish. American League: New York, Boston, Cleve- land, Detroit, Philadelphia, Wash- ington, Chicago, St. Louis. And you can lump the last three. National: St. Louis, Boston, Brooklyn, New York, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Chicago. S e Wantads boring ' quick results. FRED R. WOLF Electrical Contractur Fouse Wiring OUR SPECIALTY Box 2135 Black 379 Brownie's Liquor Store Phone 103 139 So. Franklin P. O. Box 259 Bader Accounting Service RUTH BADER Accounting—Tax Reports Secretarial 3 Valentine Bldg., Telephone 919 H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVI'S OVERALLS for Boys Widest Selection of LIQUORS PHONE 399 MONDAY APRIL |9 I948 "BORN T0 KILL," DRAMATIC BILL, NOW AT CAPITOL Replete with drama, RKO Radio's | tense drama, “Born To Kill” proved tself an arresting piece of screen | fare when it opened yesterday at the ‘Capitol Theatre. Ciaire Trevor, Lawrence Tierney and Walter Slezak co-star in the | wbsorbing tale of ruthlessness and | etritution. Miss Trevor is a heart- | ess divorcee whose intentions of marrying for money are jolted when | ‘he encounters Tierney, an under- | world character who has just com- mitted a dual killing and plans te ide out in San Francisco. The killer fascinates her, but when she introduces him to her wealthy step-sister a serids of gripping emo- tional situations build up. Relent- lessly and inevitably, their affair plunges the principals into a tre- mendously tragic crisis. The film is | one of unusual power. 5K DOPE Juneau Ski Clubbers are willing | to admit that Spring is some dis- [tance off with six feet of snow at | the Douglas ditch and up to 20 feet n the ski bowl. | About 20 skiers topped the ridge |above the ski bowl Sunday to run down through the practice giant slalom course set for that purpose.| | The course begins on top 0f the | ; righest peak of the ski bowl and |ends at the valley floor or a vertical | drop estimated to be near 1,200 feet. Skiers found several inches of new snow on top of a good base making conditions perfect for touring and; | pen running. Exact racing time and details for the giant slalom will be announced "atcr this weeek. All persons inter- |ested in attending the skiers infor- |mal banquet at the Country Clut | Sunday evening are requested to get in touch with Neil Taylor. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE | The Western International League {opened the season Saturday and |two days: Games Sunday Yakima, 11-2; Victoria, 2-7. Salem, 4-5; Tacoma, 1-4. Wenatchee, 8-16; Spokane, 1-19. Bremerton, 2-1; Vancouver, 0-4. | Games Saturday Yakima, 10; Victoria, 6. Wenatchee, 12; Spokane, 5. Other games postponed, rain. GIRL SCOUT TROOP | 10 T0 BROADCAST ; ON KINY TONIGHT The JWC Community Center | broadeast scheduled tonight at 8:15 o'clock over KINY will have as guests Mrs, Cecil Casler and her Girl Bcout Troop No. 10. Mrs. Casler will speak on Girl Scouting in Ju- |neau. Mrs. E. P. Chester will intro- |duce the guests. All Girl Scouts of the Channel area are urged to listen in at the specified time. ——————— M. E. IS WEDDED MAN - Bernard J. Kosinski, Managing Editor of the Anchorage Daily Times, and Patricia Margaret Reil- {1y, employed in the City Hall, ‘were married at Anchorage April 15 and are taking a honeymoon trip to Seattle, San Francisco and Palm Springs. {here are the results of games for| Three Clubs, BigLeagues, Starf Season (By The Associated Press) Major League baseball teams | knuckle down to serious business to- | day with both the National and Am- | erican Leagues opening their 1948 | baseball seasons. | The cry “play ball” will sound at| Washington, Boston and Cincinnati with 125,000 fans expected to witness the proceedings. The world champion New York Yankees, picked by the experts to win their second straight American League pennant, will begin defense of their laurels at Washington. A crowd of 31,000—including Pres- ident Harry 8. Truman who will toss out the first ball-—is expected to watch the New York-Washington battle. Following are manager’s com- ments: American League | Bucky Harris, Yankees: “I think {we have enough to win again, but we must beat the Red Sox. They are | voing to be good all season. They" vel got great power.” Joe McCarthy, Red Sox: overall picture, I'd say, ory. I'm glad Mickey Harris has shown no signs of trouble with his arm. Johnny Pesky has come along | ine at third base. Steve O'Neill, Tigers: “The Tigers and Red Sox are the teams to beat. I figure we will be in the race all the way.” National League Lev Durocher, Dodgers: “Our club is faster than last year and is {stronger on the bench. This could} be a vital factor in the race, Glant power and an improved Boston Club present real threats.” Eddie Dyer, Cardinals: “The Car- dinals are stronger than last year, I believe, I look for a four team |race with Brocklyn, Boston and New “The | York supplying the strongest oppo- sition.” Billy Southworth, Braves: “There jare three teams to beat, the Cardin- als, Dodgers and Giants.” | STIKINE STAMPEDERS TOP WRANGELL STARS . IN SPEEDY CONTEST WRANGELL, Alaska, April 19.— More than 300 spectators watched ! the Stikine Stampeders trounce the i Wrangell All Stars of 1922 by an 8 to 5 score Friday night. The Al Stars, none of whom had played nor practiced in more than 20 years, threw in seven men during the last quarter of the game which Lloyds of London recently refused to in- sure. The house was brought down be- tween the halves by a comedy skit of the Shootin’ of Dan McGrew and a wrestling match - between 256 pound Harry Forman and 180 pour- Orrie Harris. - TO RAISE CHICKENS C. A. Wilder, resident of Peters- burg for the past seven years, where he published the weekly Press, has left for Vashon Island, near Seattle, where he plans to raise chickens. ADVERTISING interest. Quoted from: A STATEMENT OF ADVERTISING PRINCIPLES BY OF AMERICA o Good Advertisi the consumer and help him to buy more intelligently. It uses only testimonials 2: Good Advertisi avoiding misstatement of facts as well as possible deceptlon through implication or omission. no claims whicl full and without further qualifi- cation. of competent witnesses. 3: Good Advertising conforms to the . generally = accepted good taste. "It ance on the basis of the merits of the product or service advertised rather than by the disparagement of competing goods. It tries to avoid practices that annoying. 4: Good Advertising recognizes both its economic responsibility to help re- duce distribution costs and its social respensibility in serving the public o EDITOR and PUBLISHE The Fourth Estate FEDERATION ng aims to inform ng tells the truth, It makes h cannot be met in standards of seeks public accept- are offensive or R yand 4 to 3. | he is satisfac-| ° SEALS ARE PRESSED BY ANGELS NOW 'D-IE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Sporlanefs Here is a sports over the weekend LAWRENC Tex.—Charles Fon-| ville, Michigan, battered the world ‘shot put record with a 58 foot % lnch hea and Harrison Dillard, | | Baldwin-Wallace, bettered the world 'BASEBALL MEETING ‘AI ELKS BUILDING """ TOMORROW EVENING - vie entertainment, your dish s wait- | M. P. Mullnne\ Prc:idvm of the | Gastineau Channel Baseball League, urges all managers, players and any persons interested in Juneau base- 120-yard I hurdle mark with a|ball to attend the scheduled meet- |13.6 perfc as features of|jng (omorrow night at 8 o'clock in Kansas re the upstairs portion of the Elks o pocin | Luilding. ROCH R, N. Y.—Minneapolis| i addition to ironing out numer- Lakers defeated the Rochester ROy=|ous pre-season rough spots, the meet als 75-65 to win the National Bas-|js proposed to modity any league ketbnll League championship. ‘rule, which seem necessary, Mul= {laney asks that all attending have (By The Associated Press) VIRGINIA BEACH, Va—A team|a thorough understanding of the San Francisco's Seals were bml\aaplmn: d by Gene Sarazen dofume(hrungvmb rules so that discussion in the van of the Pacific Coast|® ‘;“"l‘] led by 1""“““ Hagen, § ;“‘xdlmn be expedited et AR SruRy. -threl he one-day Cavalier Specia League D! ay, t S ‘match Rule Eight: No player shall piay weeks after the season opened, but Billy Kelly’s Los Angeles club is het in pursuit, only a half game behind. An overflow crowd of 23474 watched San Francisco and San Diego divide a double-header yes-| terday. The Seals took the open- | er 7-3. But San Diego took an! 8-5 decision in the second In Portland, the Beavers won double bill from Hollywood, 7 to 2,| A tremendous home run by first sacker Fenton Mole in the sixth was the payoff in the nighteap. | ANNAPOLIS, Md.—Navy' defeated |with any other SODA SPRINGS, Calif.—George | {Macomber, won the 1948 running of | shall ot team unless he is a memeber of that team, and players be traded by managers the precipitious Sugar Bowl Silver unless it is satisfactory to the play- | Belt downhill tournament, His win-|er himself, to the Executive Board ning time was 1:28 jand to the managers of teams not | involved. Rule: Nine: At the end of each | Princeton and Columbia eight- —oared | season, each team manager shall o varsity | Oakland split a twin bill with cellar-dwelling Seattle. Seattle took first, 5 to 1 Oakland the other, 6 to 1. Oakland took the | series, four games to three. Kewpie Barrett, who had won three games, wulea to make it four for Seattle n the nightcap but he left the game in the sixth after giving up three runs and seven hits, Los Angeles and Sacramento split their double bill, the Sacs tak- ing the first, 4 to 0, and then bowing, 4 to 3. SATURDAY’S GAMES Portland 5-0; Hollywood 4-1. San Francisco 8; San Diego 6. Sacramento 11; Los Angeies 5. Seattle 3; Oakland STANDING OF THE CLUBS Pacific Coast League Team w L Pet. San Francisco 10 6 626 _os Angeles . 12 9 571 Portland 1 8 .556 3an Diego 1 9 550 Oakland 10 10 .500 Sacramento .. 7 9 438 Hollywood A ) 412 Seattle 6 12 333 ————.———-———— * IN SOAP BOX DERBY The Rotary Club at Petersburg has unanimously voted to sponsor a Soap Box Derby to be held early in' the summer, the winner to come to Juneau to compete in the derby here. A 0 AR Sixteen additional classrooms are needed for the elementary school system at Anchorage, according to information given the School Board by Supt. C. C. Caldwell. The teaching staff would also be in- creased from 172 to 90. shells over two miles 9:03.1 PHILADELPHIA—Penn beat Rut- gers by five lengths on the Schuyl- kill in mile and 5-16 race. mysubmlt a player's list to the Exe- utive Board of ten names that :hall consist of that team's roster for the following season. Players lnsmed on these lists shall not be !eligible to play on other teams un- HEMPSTEAD, N, YU, S, Navy léss they qualify as stated under wresters won the team championship | in the ling meet with 15 points, SEATTLE—One new west meet record was set here Saturday as the “iversity of Washington downed | Oregon State College 88 1-3 to £ 2-3 in their northern division coast conference track inaugural. Jack Hensey, Washington half- miler; raced the 880-yards in 1:55.7. 70 better the 1:55.6 standard set by Gene Swanzey of Washington 1943. NEW YORK-—Knockdown (55.10) won $25,000 added Excelsior Handi- cap at Jamaica, Mile and sixteenth National AAU senior wrest- | | week prior to the first game of the | season, in} rule eight. Team managers may solicit other players until a date one at which time each team manager must submit a player Hst to the Executive Board giving .full roster at that time. All player lists | referred to in this rule shall contain the name and most effective position (of each player. After said date, one week prior to the first game of the season, the cxecutive board shall have the authority to assign any and all plavers to various teams. the {Any suggestions relative to |akove rulings are invited at the slon tomorrow night. | Another point to be discussed at the mpeet will be the installation of | time was 1:45. Crowd: 50,583; handle & 10 foot fence, proposed by O, R. | | } $3,156,12" SAN MATEO, Calif. — Matosta ' (410) won $10,000 added Hayward Morrison Handicap at Bay Meadows in 1:10 4-5 for six furlongs. It was jocke;; Johnny fZongden's 2,995th victory. Crowd: 29,380 (track record) handle: $1,272,588( meet record). AR SIS A HIGH SCHOOL BO PROVES ACE HURLE WILBUR, Wash., April 19.—(P— Dick Aubertin, ace hurler of the wilbur High School baseball team, rested his arm today as he waited for new fields to conquer. In two times out last week, turned in no-hit, againgt, Creston and Davenport Pre; 's. Against the latter nine, Aubertin struck out 20 tatters. he The experis go overboard (4 o o 0/ This time 15 Huason the only car you step down into!” ' no run games| ,Cleveland, to equalize the home run ldistances for right and left fields. ;Clevel:\ml has a drawing of the plan which he will take to the meet- | ing. Education, will be at the meeting to discuss a letter he has received from Ben Evans, Director of Recreation |for the Department of Parks in ;Seame The letter concerns the setedvled visit to Juneau around the latter part of June by the win- ner of the tgen-age “strike throw- ing” contest' held in Seattle. Dr. Ryan will elaborate on the coxres~7 | pondence and the possibility of ha,v- | ing the visiting boy stage an exhibi-‘ uon with Juneau toen-agers when here Any persons interested in pluyml( Lall this year are urged to contact Mullaney or Cleveland at the Hkb Club, - e WASHINGTON —(#—The wmu House is reservation No. 1 of the U. 8. National Capital Parks. N auto-wise Detroit editor writes, “Hudson . . . will still market after the buyers’ market returns!” A Cleveland motor-car writer, “The public is in for a thrill!”} From a auto editor’s column, hit the jackpot!” And so it goes — right arou; Men who have “seen everything” mobiles go for the New Hudson. It is the only American-built motor car you step down into when cutermg, not up on! This new development brings you sensa- tional advantages — among them, newly streamlined beauty that would otherwise be impractical. Dr. James Ryan, Commissioner of “Hudson has really This new kind of motor car is only five feet from ground to top, yet by stepping down, you get more head room and roomier scats than in any other mass-produced car built today—and there's good road clearance, too! Because you step down, Hudson's new, all steel Monobilt body-and-frame* completely COMEDY FEATURE AT 20TH CENTURY it's laughter you're after in mo- !ing for you at the 20th Century Theatre, where “Cross My Heart” i now showing. A Paramount picture co-starring | Betty Hutton and Sonny Tufts, “Cross My Heart” is a barrel of fun from opening flicker to fade-out Betty has never been in better form, nor has Sonny. They pool their comedy talents excellently, and are ably supported by Michael Chekhov, Ruth Donnelly, Rhys Willlams, Howard Freeman, among others. | Chekhov will be remembered for h fine performance as the old profes- sor friend of Ingrid Bergman in “Spellbound.” | The story of “Cross My Heart” concerns itself with the dilemma of a chronic liar whose biggest whopper involves her in more trouble than even she can handle. 1 e | GRTHERN EXPOSURE" i OVER KINY THIS NIGHT A radio program recorded in Al- aska and produced in New York i will be heard on KINY-CBS at; 8:30 o'clock tonight. Titled “Our Northern Exposure,” it is made up of the volces of Alaskan in all | walks of life: sourdoughs, miners, farmers, merchants, fishermen and soldiers. Their remarks on the | Territory’s present and future were | tape-recorded In the interior early | this year by a CBS special staft headed by Joe Wershba, Columbia | news editor. The group even plan- ned to fly over the North Pole, kut their B-29 was forced to turn| Lack when a motor caught fire. Once they had obtained the pro- gram's raw material, Wershba and his crew returned to New York where it was assimilated into 30 dramatic minutes to demonstrate | to Americans the important place Alaska pccupws in the Western 'GR LENTURY Last Times Tomghl SHOWS at 7:25 Befl Hutlon Sonnl[Tl'lFfS / / 7 Betty Sings 3 Song Hits! A Paramount Picture D 1 B - b 08 1 S Py b oy g s e o il g by Charie Schoon - Based 0 4 Play by Locss Vormewd wnd Goerges B PLUS Selected Shori Subjects Air Express NEWS Hemisphere today. Seldom has a topical program taken production men so far from Columbia’s New York headquarters. e VFW AUX MEEZ The Ladies Auxiliary to the Vet- terans of Foreign Wars will hold a regular monthly business meet- ing tomorrow night at the home of - Mrs. John McCormick, 436 West Twelfth Street. All members are requested to be present as a full year's activities will be planned. BLENDED WHISKEY, 86 PROOF, 65% GRAIN be in a sellers’ added safety. San Francisco Hudson’s new, lower nd the nation! n auto- to you now! Hudson Detroit 14. Scnznnnv known and enjoyed throughout the g? world SCHENLEY INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION Empire State Building + New York, U.S5.A. NEUTRAL SPIRITS encircles you, even outside the rear wheels, with a rugged, box-steel foundation frame —and this brings you a new measure of You ride within this frame—cradled between axles—not on top of a f me as in the past. center of gravity and rugged basic structure give this car delight- ful roadability —a hug-the-road way of going, especially on curves, that is so safe, 50 serene, so smooth, you’ve known before! it is unlike anything Sce the new motor car the experts cheer. The nearest Hudson dealer will show it Motor Car Company, *Trade-mark and patents pending SEE THIS AUTOMOTIVE TRIUMPH AT THE HUDSON DEALER NEAREST YOU! COWLING CO. R. W. 115 Front Street Phone 57