Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1949 AR RO : t SHOWPLALE oF Cfusead, TONIGHT AND THURSDAY Tired businessmen are her public! How could Linda know her husband was the most tired of them all! eo©00co0000 e 900 o She Was with Elyse KNOX John HUBBARD Marie WILSON ce0 00060 & A A THIS SECOND FEATURE axasition srase THE WAY . TOABOY'S " HEART IS | THROUGH nonn'fnsnu u“fEL nonAu mms hfivsn" at 7:07—f “LINDA” at 8:23—10:52 1 Plus LATE NEWS For Estimates on that New Basement, House or Fireplace—PHONE 416—Evenings We have enough PUMICE and CONCRETE Y BLOCKS for several houses | EARL CRASS AND SON » Refresh... Add Zest To The Hour Play £i¢ fi‘e'slh‘(/ \,/m/; JVIA w]lt\[ reshed Travel 1\’«‘})‘1‘5’1&’(1 Work )'(‘\IIL‘L/ JOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THZ COCA-COLA COMPANY BY JUNEAU COLD STORAGE COMPANY g R ek ;- © 1949, The Coca-Cola Company | COAST LEAGUE : | |"lllml|||||||||||||"|||||||||H""|||"|||||||||m|m||||||"""|"||||||||||||||||||||| YOm0 Sookane |C. Kerstetter, CAPITOL THEATRE ' SHOWS 2 FEATURES - STARTING TONIGHT ‘There are two features opening at the Capitol Theatre tonight. With a plot involving a lady |authar who joins up with a bur»‘ |lesque troupe to get material for| her new novel, “Linda Be Good,” | |bright new comedy with a bur-| |lesque background, is one of the| | features. | Elyse Knox is starred in the title role as the young lady who takes advantages of her husband's absence on a business trip to join: {the burlesque. John Hubbard is the! husband who accompanies his boss ito the theatre one night and dis- |covers his wife entertaining on the [rum\ay Marie Wilson, blonde and |curvacious, completes the starring| trio as the burlesque queen who| treaks Miss Knox into the bur- lesque business. | “My Dog Rusty” is the other bill. | Here'’s a story to stir the hearts jof kids of all ages as it poignantly | reveals the drama inherent in a boy’s growing pains. Danny Mitchell {1Donaldson) experiences some of! |the troubles of boyhood and at| |times it seems that his only trueE |friend is his dog, Rusty. But every-| {thing rights itself in the end with| Danny taking a long stride for-| |ward on the road to yeung man- hood in learning one of life’s bit- | terest. lessons. \ | | | SCHEDULE TODAY (By the Associated Press) Early in the Pacific Coast League season the so-called dopesters used |to ask: “What's holding Holly- |wood up?” | Now, the question is asked thusly: |“Who’s going to pull Hollywood |down?” Ignored in pre-season selections, the Stars climbed quickly to the top | |of the league and stayed there. | They are now 10 games in front| |of second-place Sacramento. | All teams were idle Tuesday fol- {lowing Monday’s annual All-Star | game. ! Wednesday's schedule brings {Portland to Los Angeles, Hollywood |to Sacramento, <Seattle to San ‘Frnncisco and Oakland to Snn‘ Diego. WIL BASEBALL Final scores of games played !last night in the WIL follows: Tacoma 9; Bremerton 1. Salem 2; Wenatchee 1 Jn.mgs) Vancouver 6; Victoria 5. At in-{ 15 ABOARD PNA'S - TUESDAY FLIGHTS | Pacific Northern Airlines carried | 15 passengers on flights in and out of Juneau Airport yesterday as follows: From Anchorage: George Seale, W. E. Walsh, Capt. Paul Fisher, R. L. Reed, R. H. Kinney, M. M Flint, From Cordova: Davenport. From Yakutat: ‘To Anchorage: Mary Sim, W. E. F. A. Hefner Mr. and Mrs. V. Daniel Vrooman, Morris Peterson, O. F. Benecke Tom Verhoef. To Cordova: Ike Alhadeff. SCHWINN BIKES av MAGSEN’S Then money is needed IF YOU are absent in- definitely from your job as a result of an accident, who loses? YOU DO! You can make up for loss of earnings while un- able to do your work, with Accident Insurance. Ask this agency to tell you more about it. Shattuck Agency Seward Street Juneau Phone 249 |Manager R@y Says Fans icurve. Joost hit it with the end THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-—JUNEAU, ALASKA League has won only four of the ALL-STAR GAME | OUTSLOPPED WAS Sloppv IS “It was the sloppiest played b game ever played,” vounteered Joe Gordon, Cleveland's second base spoRI op'“lo";.flar. “but they just outslopped us.’ | In all, the Nationals committed five miscues, a record for an All- Star game, The Americans made one. A total of 42 players got in the {2ame, 22 for the Nationals. South- worth used seven pitchers, New- Should Never Select PIayefS fOf comes' combe getting plastered with the defeat. Cincinnati's Ewell Black- well, St Louis’ Red Munger, BROO:;)L;%E R."":‘llcm;ffl_ — |Brooklyn's Preacher Roe and the = {2 y N New York Yankees' Vic Raschi were ranch Rickey, among many Na-|,, ., oo unscored upon. Each tional Leaguers writhing under the| .. only one inning, except | humiliation of his circuit's latest who allowed 0“;' hit and setback by American League All- three in three innings. Stars, 11-7, tcday laid the blame on the fans' doorstep. i Rickey, head of the Brooklyn Dodgers, in whose Ebbets Field the latest nightmare for the Nrmcmfl.l Leaguers took place, said “it seems to me that the nationwide fans voting idea is not the best one. s of Detroit, one ot four credited with the victory. he game was marred by twe howers, one of which halted the jame for 13 minutes. The Americans accumulated 13 hits, received five bases on balls and ot two more runners on base via errors, The Nationals collected 12 nits, were presented with eight walks and a hit batsman, but left 1 dozen stranded. FIGHT DOPE Results of fights last night are: At Syracuse, N.Y.—Willie Pep. 128, Hartford, Conn. outpointed Jean Mougin, 135, France 10 (non- title) At Los Angeles—Rudy Garcia, 127, Las Angeles, outpointed Jimmy the “I may be wrong in that,” he added, “but I am sure of this, how- ever. The manager should not be forced to start with the fans' top selections—and play them for three innings. He should be privileged t start anybody he sees fit and use him as long as he desires. Rickey said after the first three amateurish innings, the game was played in a smcother fashion be- cause the managers were running things. SLOPPY INNING In the sloppily-played first in- ning the National League infield {fell apart and permitted the op-|Savala, 127, San Francisco, 10. posmon to score four unearned; At Jacksonville, Fla. — Danny runs. That eventually was the mar- | Ruggerio, 161, New York, stopped gin of defeat. The Nationals got tack two runs in their half of the inning when Stan Musial followed Jawkie Rob- inson’s double with a home run over the right field screen. They made it 4-3 in the second and only Ted Williamy' sensational back- handed catch of Don Newcombe's fly prevented the Nationals from having a big inning. The Nationals’ third inning attack produced two ;runs and put them in front for the {first and only time in the game. | Gene Hardison, 160, Norfolk, Va. 3 At Washington—Beau Jack vs Eddie Giosa bout postponed to to- night (Wednesday). GOLF SEATTLE, July 13—(®—A three- under-par 70 stacked on his record- smashing 66 of the previous day vesterday gave Seattle’s Harry Givan medalist honors at the end of qualifying rounds in the Pacitic Northwest Golf Association tour- nament. Jack Wetland of Everett and Eli Bariteau of San Jose, Calif, were isecond with 142s. DECISIVE PLAY The Americans regained the lead in the fourth,. capitalizing on Eddie Joost’s freak single which both managers—Billy Southworth of the National and Lou Boudreau match play today, leading up to the agreed later was the decisive play/ title round Saturday. of the game, - e With runners on second and third and two out, Newcombe apparently had Joost fooled on a low outside of his bat and sent a twisting m.uel looper to first. But the ball had “English” on it and it hopped| crazily off Gil Hodges' bare right hand and rolled into short right. Both runners scored to put the Americans ahead 6-5. TWO RUN HOMER The Nationals never caught up, although Ralph Kiner later blasted a two run homer off Philadelphia’s Lou Brissie. By that time Ameri- cans had tallied two more on Joe DiMaggio's two run double off Bos- ton's Vern Bickford. They added three more in the seventh against the Cardinals’ Howie Pollet to ice the game, Although happy over the out- come, Boudreau agreed with the majority of the 32,577 fans who paid $79,225.02—all of which goes to the players pension fund—that it was one of the shabbiest played games since the All-Star competi- tion tegan in 1933. The National CAPITAL CITY American League hurlers, BIG MOMENTS OF ALL - STAR GAME By HUGH FULLERTON, JR. BROOKLYN, July 13—(®-Nearly every All-Star Baseball Game, every World Series, has its big moment of drama and excitement —something the spectators remem bér and discuss for years . . . The| 1949 All-Star game had its big| moments, too, but they were high comedy instead of drama . .. But what else could you expect in| Brooklyn??? . . . There was Johnny | Mize failing to come up with Eddie | Kazak's low throw in the first in- ning, a play that meant four runs | and the inevitable comment: “Of course the error is on Kazak they decided its unfair to -make | Mize bend over.” There was Willard Marshall playing tag with the ball by the center field wall or the fourth error that tied the All-Star game record; he just| couldn't find the handle on it.| And Roy Campanella had the same sort of trouble for error No. 5'. . When the starting lineup was and Gampanella behind the plate, Thirty-two golfers square off in|' it made five Dodgers in the lineup —Newcombe, Reese and Jackie Robinson were the others. It was the “Brooklyn against the World game all over again. SEGAR 1S VEECKSED Charley Segar, the National League publicitor, refused to offer an alibi for that fourth straight defeat. . . “We've played 16 games so far, in all the parks,” he ex- plained. “Next year the All-Stai game is going to Chicago, where 1l started. We're going to do like Bill Veeck did in Cleveland; call the first 16 exhibitions, stage a grand opening and then well begin counting them.” . . . “Yeah," ex- claimed a listener. “You even had to get that idea from the Ameri- can League.” Pinehurst, N.C.. was founded as a winter resort in 1895 by a Bos ton man, James W. Tufts. I\ Dr. John Montgomery D. C. | | GENERAL PRACTICE : HOUSE CALLS | Phone ROLLER RINK NOW OPEN! Monday, Wednesday and Friday Tio10P. M. 25¢ Admission Sponsored by the ROLLER RINK CLEARANC STURDY N 0 R GE BEAUTIFUL Refrigerators and Deep Freezers APARTMENT SIZE 6 Cubie Foot < REFRIGERATOR STANDARD 8 Cubic Foot . REFRIGERATOR UPRIGHT TYPE 6 Cubic Foot DEEP FREEZE NOW ONLY NOW ONLY NOW i? ONLY See Them Today at — Was $230.00 $189.50 Was $298.00 §209.50 B i Was $352.50 §259.50 Alaska Electronies 307 SEWARD STREET PHONE 62 ARE RELATED NOW| like | | M-G-M's changed to put Gil Hodges on first | "BOYS' RANCH" IS FEATURE TONIGHT Can city kids adapt themselves to | rancu life? Can youngsters whose playgrounds have been al- leys and city streets feel at home on the wide plains of Texas? . . . ‘an homeless waifs whose only ani- mal friends have been mongrel dogs learn to rope a horse, raise prize cattle, bring up a litter of pigs? . See the answer at the 20th Century Theatre in “Boys Ranch,” M-G-M's stirring drama of the regeneration of a group ol | juvenile delinquents on a Texas ranch! Human interesr, excitement, com- edy and adventure are the ingre- dients of this thought-provoking drama enacted by a fine cast ol youngsters and adults lovable Jackie “Butch” Jenkins-— James} | Craig — Skippy Homelere — Darryl Patrick. “discovery"! Hickman —and Dorothy latest Some snake, can go three years without food because of their low energy requirements for simple body maintenance ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS The Fairbanks School District, an independent school district corpora- tion, acting by and through the President and Clerk of the Board of Directors, will receive sealed bids at the office of the Superintendent of Schools, Fairbanks School Building Fairbanks, Alaska, until 8:00 o'clock P.M,, August 15, 1949, at which time sald bids will be publicly opened. Said bids are to be for the con- struction of a new high school build- ing and civic center according to plans and specifications heretofore orepared by Manley & Mayer, Archi- tects, Anchorage, Alaska, which plans and specifications may be seen and examined in the office of the Superintendent of Schools in ‘the Fairbanks Public School Building, Fairbanks, Alaska, or copies thereof may be obtained from the architects upon deposit of $50.00. Prospective bidders are hereby directed to read carefully and consider the plans and specifications and to visit the site of the work so that they may thor- oughly familiarize themselves with the conditions, particularly the dif- ficulties, existing at the site; no consideration will be given to any claim that a bid was made without full comprehension of the conditions to be encountered. Thé Board of Directors of the Fairbanks School District reserves the right to reject any and all bids. DATED at Fairbanks, Alaska, this Tth day of July, 1949, FAIRBANKS SCHOOL DISTRICT By FRANK CONWAY Clerk of the Board of Directors. First publication, July 12, 1949. Last publication, August 2, 1949. the s-t feels like ““a back are satin Lastex that at the rib line. AT 20TH CENTURY | &% PAGE THREE TI0"CENTURY LAST TIMES TONITE { o S i flnflo‘ by ROY ROWLAND Produced by ROBERT SISK PLUS Cariocn and Sports NEWS by AIR DOORS SHOW OPEN STARTS 7:00 7:20 and 9:30 R Follow the Cahs to ROSS' OASIS in Douglas for a Good Time MIRACLE SERIES Popular Piano Instruction and Accordian PHONE 667 - The average rainfall of the Mo- jave Desert is five to six inches & year and the temperature there in summer frequently reaches 120 degrees, Back Again, and So Welcome! Weiine Bra r-e-t-c-h-a-b-l-e bra that second skin”’ Once you've worn A'lure you wonder how you ever got along without it! No other bra has its miraculous quality of seeming to breathe with the body. That’s because the under-bust section is satin Lastex that stretches up and down — while the sides and stretches around the body. Yet for all this free-as-air comfort, A’'lure has won- derful controlling power. It molds and holds in youth- ful uplift contours—and it stays anchored comfortably Alphabet-styled in B cup for average bust. enp for the large bust. *Trade Mark Reg. U. 8. Pat. Off .