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TITTIPTEPR i £ § FLER = 3B pmsgaeTT BT R A T T NPT I s FE PR ESERERREAIALY SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1949 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA - PAGE THREE A REPUBLIC PRODUCTION face = wesaa Here Tomorrew Doors Open 1:30 Continuous 1 Shows RS DT ETEEREEES TR P PR R LR TP EREETE, B BT EERT PEFTTEFE T ZEREEEEESL! Complete Shows 1:35-3:18-5:24-7:34-9:44 Feature Starts 1:42-3:48-5:54-8:04-10:14 AREREEEREENIE 2RERL IIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllll|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllUIIII||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHiI Here's the LAUGHS YOI;'VG been waiting for! ENDS TONIGHT SHOCKING!? SCANDALOUS!? SENSATIONAL? g . .. but everybody loves Julia when Julia misbehaves! A new and naughty Greer and _a thrilling, willing Walter in M-G-M's PETER LAWFORD- ELIZABETH TAYLOR LUGILE WATSON . MARY BOLAND - REGINALD OWEN A SHOWPLALE oF APITUL iTHIS DOUBLE HELPING OF g BEAUTIFUL COLORHITSIS : MAKING CROWDS HAPPY! "THE FABULOUS JOE" in the B2EMEFRTIRENE i carmivaL n CINECOLOR SHE’S PIDgg S comedy hit of the year! TaFEEEEND SRENE sEERETEINR RSN szazass CESAR ROMERD NIGEL BRUCE TEREREARRETEEE And Look—who’s here! TOM and JERRY in “Qld Rockin’ Chair Tom” Sport Reel—Late News SITKA BISHOP WILL CONDUCT SERVICES IN ORTHODOX CHURCH Bishop John Zlobiu o: the Sitka | “Russian Orthodox church will con- " duct services in the Orthodox church here tonight and tomorrow morning. Bishop Zlobin is stopping here for the weekend enroute from a conference of bishops held the first weekend in July at a Russian Orthodox monastery in Penn- sylvania. He acted as the Alaskan delegate at the conference. All members of the Orthodox | church are invited to attend serv- ices tonight at 7 p.m. and tomor- |row at 10 am. with the Bishop| conducting. AT BARANOF gery SEESEENERENEAE \FEATURE "JULIA MISBEHAVES” AT CAPITOL SUNDAY “Julia Misbehaves,” opening Sun- day at the Capitol Theatre, co- stars Greer Garson and Walter Pid- geon for the fifth time, and also marks the first all-out comedy role in Miss Garson’s spectacular screer = | career. Previous Garson-Pidgeon suc- cesses were “Blossoms in the Dust,” ‘Mrs. Miniver,” “Madame Curie,” =|and “Mrs. Parkington.” The new picture, based on Mar- Sharp’s best-seller novel, ‘The Nutmeg Tree,” tells the hilar- ious story of a London music hall girl who crashes high society, with such adventures on the way as joining an acrobatic troupe (wait until you see the dignitied Miss Garson on a high trapeze in tights!) and hoodwinking an elderly roue in a gambling casino episode. Other highlights are Miss Garson's bubble bath, her encounter with a picnicking bear, and her dunking in a lake! The new picture was directed by Jack Conway, whose last was the Gable hit, “The Hucksters,” and was produced by Everett Riskin, responsible for such earlier comedy successes as “Theodora Goes Wild"” and “The Awful Truth.” In support of the Garson-Pidgeon combine are Peter Lawford, Eliza- | beth Taylor, Cesar Romero, Lucile ‘Watson, Nigel Bruce, Mary Boland and Reginald Owen. HOT TOURNAMENT, . TOLEDO GOLF PLAY = : | By FRITZ HOWELL July 23—R—| TOLEDO, Ohio, Masters and PGA Champion Sam Snead and dapper Dick Metz, his partner, looked natural today atop |the $15000 Inverness Four-Ball | standings as the battle of birdies banged into the fourth of seven “ | rounds. The terrific twosome owed a tip ,.72 one over par, !ll!llllll!"l!l!l!"l‘.’li of the hat to Freddie Haas and :' Dave Douglas, however, for the lat- ter pair mussed up the 6558-yard Inverness layout with a best ball in yesterday's #|third round to drop a four-down = | decision to the leaders. ‘The 72 was the poorest round in 12 years of Inverness matches, not a birdie being scored by the Haas- | Douglas duo. The Snead-Metz per- formance wasn't too hot, the win- ning 68 score being bested by every other team in the tourney except the victims. Haas and Douglas had a tough day, losing both of yesterday's matches by four holes, one with a 67 to Lloyd Mangrum and Johnny Palmer. The Snead-Metz pair is 20 under | par, and has scored 20 birdies, in wmnxng its three matches. How- ever, Mangrum-Palmer and the | Bob Hamilton-Chick Harbert two- |some have counted 26 birdies each and are 26 under par, but are dead- = locked in second place, four points off the pace. | Dr. Cary Middlecoff, National = Open Champion, and partner Jim Ferrier, the Australian-born former PGA champ, have matched the 20- kirdie, 20-under par performance |of the leaders, but are 11 points | back in sixth place with a minus | three ratlng LEADERS IN B. B. Leaders in baseball, games of Friday are: NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting. — Robinson, Brooklyn, 355; Marshall, New York, .331. Runs Batted In — Robinson, Brooklyn, 72; Hodges, Brooklyn, 69. Home Runs— Kiner, Pittsburgh, 26; Gordon, New York and Sauer, Chicago, 19. through Pitching — Chambers, Pittsburgh, 6-1, .857; Sewell, Pittsburgh, 5-1, AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting—Kell, Detroit, .345; Di- Maggio, Boston, .343. Runs Batted In—Stephens, Bos- ton, 97; Williams, Boston, 94. Home Runs — Stephens, Boston, 24; williams, Boston, 23. Pitching—Reynolds, New York, 10-1, 909; Kuzava, Chicago, 6-1, 857, Afghanistan became a political entity in 1947, previously having Mrs. George Thorson of Fair- banks is at the Baranof. been a cluster of small states un- der various rules. CHILKOOT MOTORSHIP LINES 1949 Schedule of Sailings Serving— JUNEAU HAINES SKAGWAY and the ALASKA HIGHWAY Lv. Connects with all Canadian Pacific Sailings at Skagway CARO TRANSFER COMPANY Agent Juneau, Alaska Lv. Haines ..Monday 9 a.m. Lv. Tee Harbor ... Tuesday 9 am. Friday 7 am. Friday 4 pm. SKAGWAY/HAINES Haines .........Sunday am. Lv. Skagway .. pm. ‘Wednesday a.m. ‘Wednesday p.m. (Time of departure is dependent on time of tide) CHILKOOT, HAINES, ALASKA Steve Larsson Homer Manager ———M/V CHILKOOT JUNEAU/HAINES LEGION WINS OVER MOOSE11T0 2 IN GAME LAST NIGH SCORE BY INN!NGS 1 0— 0— .24 Legion Moose . 1048 ¢ $ %% 1 0101 z‘ coocwm 6 3 0 With 11 runs off 11 hits, th: Legion won over the Moose last night 11 to 2. In the first inning, three runs came in for the Legion on Rolli-| son’s homer over center field fence. Nielsen and Krause were on bases on balls. Sheppard went in for Bradford as pitcher and three of the next four at bat were outs. One | went the strike out route, one flied out and the other out at first on the throw. In the second inning, four more Legion runs rolled in with Terrell | scoring on the throw in from Niel- | sen’s single. Rollison’s double bag- | ger over centerfield scored Krause and Nielsen Rollison “stole third and came home after Cope’s out at first. The Moose's first score came in their share of the second when Phelps, first man up, homered one next two up were out at first and the third man struck out. Only one man tallied for the Le- gion in the fourth after a 2zero third. Nielsen got on by Magorty fumbling his grounder, went to second on a wild pitch and home on Rollison’s two bagger into cen- ter. A repeat on the single score came up for the Moose in the fourth, Forsythe got on by an in- field hit, to sécond on a wild pitch and home when Terrell fumbled Miller’s fly. The last three scores for the Le- gion were made in the sixth by errors. Krause got to first on a fumbled grounder and went to sec- ond on Nielsen’s infield hit. When Krause attempted to steal third, Vuille missed Selmer’s flip letting in Krause and Nielsen went to third. A two bagger by Cope brought Nielsen home. Metcalfe scored from second on the throw in when Pasquan singled to center lison 2, Cope 1, Phelps 1, Sheppard 1; home runs: Rollison, Phelps; left on bases: Legion 7, Moose 5; double plays: Krause to Rollison to Cope, Pas- quan to Cope; wild pitches: Krause | 1, Sheppard 1; first on errors: Le- gion 4; first on balls, off Bradford 2, off Krause 1; struck out: by Sheppard 2, by Krause 9; stolen bases: Legion 3; umpires: Krause, Sr., Snow. There will be no game Sunday with the All-Star team traveling to Sitka for a doubleheader. Next most of the season, into the ditch over center. The field. | Magorty to Selmer.) ‘Tuesday Xughts seven inning game' at 6:30 o'clock is between the Elks and Moose. LEAGUE STANDINGS W L Pet Elks 5 0 1000 Legmx\ 5 3 .62 0o 7 000 RAINIERS SHADE BEAVERS TO WIN BY SCORE OF 6-5 By GRAHAM BERRY The big double-play question bat- ting around the Pacific Coast League today is: what's happened to Hollywood and Sacramento? The movietown lads, far in front sutfered their seventh trimming in nine starts |last night. They've dropped four of their five games in the current series with Los Angeles, the loop's cellar club. On the other hand, the Sacra- mento Solons, among the tail- enders most of the way this year, scored their 15th win in their last| 17 starts last night. The Solons have a firm hold on second place— | only four and a half games back of first place Hollywood. In their latest go, the Angels 16 safeties to win 10-3. Six Angel tallies materialized after two outs in the fourth frame, three on Don Carlsen went the route with a seven-hitter. Sacramento trimmed San Diego 10-3, with Max West's 34th circuil smash good for two of the loser’s runs. The Solons scored six times in the first frames on three singles, three doubles and a hit batter. Orv Grove was the winning hurler. Seattle snapped a three-game los- ing streak to shade Portland 6-5, Tony York's long double scoring Heinz Becker with the winning run in the final frame. York starred at the plate, collecting a homer and a brace of singles besides his jdouble in five trips. The Beavers still lead the series, three to two. Oakland broke a 4-4 deadlock by erupting for nine runs in the eighth to whip San Francisco 13-4. STANDINGS OF THE CLUBS Pacific Coast League BOX SCORE W L Pt Legion AB R H PO A = gollywood 70 50 583 Krause, p ......4 3 0 0 1 Olgacramento 63 52 548 Nielsen, 3b ......4 4 2 1 0 0 Ogkland .. % 58 508 Rollison, 1b 52 3 4 1 0 geattle "6 60 500 Cope, ¢ . -4 0 111 0 Digan piego . 59 59 500 Metcalfe, ss .....4 1 1 4 1 1lpoang 58 59 496 Pasquan, 2b ... 4 0 2 1 2 0lgay Prancisco 52 66 441 Kristan, cf .4 0 1 0 0 0|4 angeles 68 422 Hagerup, 1f 400000 Terrell, rf .4 11002 National League ______ W L Pct Totals 37111121 5 3 Brooklyn 53 34 609 Moose AB R H PO A E St. Louis 52 36 591 Magorty, 1b .4 0 0 8 1 ! Boston ... 48 41 539 Selmer, ¢ ... 3 0 0 3 0 0 Philadelphia .. 46 42 523 McClellan, If 3 01 10 0 New York 43 42 .506 *McNiel 0 0 0 1 0 0Pittsburgh 40 46 465 Forsythe, ss 311 3 5 2 Cincinnati . 34 52 395 Phelps, 2b 3 1 2 2 2 3 Chicago .33 56 371 Miller, rf .3 00100 Craig, cf 300100 American League ¢ Vuille, 3b . 200 11 3 W L Pct **Croken .1 0 0 0 0 0'New York . 56 31 644 Bradford, p .......0 0 0 0 0 0 Cleveland .. 50 36 581 ***Sheppard 2 01 01 0 Boston . .41 40 540 —————— | Philadelphia 47 43 522 Totals 27 2 52110 9 Detroit .47 43 522 “for McClellan in the sixth. Chicago .3 50 438 **for Vuille in the seventh. Washington 34 50 405 ***for Bradford in the first. St. Louis 30 57 345 SUMMARY—Two base hits: Rol- HOSPITAL NOTES Admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday were Mrs. Sam Dapce- vich, Kenneth Axelson Jr., and j Karl Makinen. Discharged were Mrs. George Ev- erest and baby boy, and Dorothy Peterson. Discharged from the Govern- ment Hospital was Mabel Stoltz. SEATTLE VISITORS At the Baranof from Seattle are V. C. Bingham, William C. Nelson and C. R. Graham. Your best bet for quick when you most need i, You HAve It When You Neeo b LG press/ o+« fast, dependable service by Alaska Coastal, ot low, economical rates. Your letter or wire te your merchant, requesting delivery by Air Ex- press, assures you of having your merchandise delivery s Alr Express ALASKA TRANSFER CO. Agent Skagway, Alaska IllflSKw - % % EUIES pounced on three Star hurlers for! Clarence Maddern’s 11th homer. | "GIVE MY REGARD TO BRCADWAY" IS AT 20TH CENTURY “Give My Regards to Broadway,”| the new Twentieth Century-Fox| Technicolor musical opening tonight | at the 20th Century Theatre, brings | to the screen the warm, nostalgic| and lively story of a grand (some | called them “zany”) family of troupers who just wouldn't di when vaudeville did. Starring Dan Dailey, who scored a sensation in “Mother Wore Tights,” the unusua! story with music features an out standing supporting cast headed b Charles Winninger, Nancy Guild, | Charlie Ruggles and Fay Bainter. | The picture, garnished with sing- | ing and dancing (and fancy jugg- ling thrown in for a good measure,) | blends poignant drama and high- | hearted humor with unusual ro- mance as it unfolds its saga of a| tamily that carried Broadway with it wherever it went. “Give My Regards to Broadway is the story of “Albert The Great & Family” who perisisted in living —and hoping—in the golden era o. vaudeville, although vaudeville was dead, and movies obviously here to stay. MOVIE PALOOKA IS DECLARED DAD OF | 6-YEAR-OLD TWINS 'WORCES<ER, Mass., July 23—® | —Big Joe Kirkwood, Jr., the punch- ing Joe Palooka movie hero, has been judged the father of illegiti- mate twin sons born six years ago to a pretty movie cashier. | District Judge Walter D. Allen made the ruling against the 28- year-old film player on a charge brought by Miss Florence G. Hep- penstell, 26, of Worcester. The finding came after lobby | conferences had delayed the start of the hearing. Mrs. Maybelle Fellows Murphy, counsel for Miss Heppenstell, said a ‘“satisfactory” cash settlement was made for the support of the twins. She did not reveal the | amount, BATTING AVERAGES FOR THIRTY GAMES Batting averages in t..e Juneau Baseball League for players who have teen in 30 games or more, arg as follows: Name AB H Ave Snow 64 26 406 Cantillon 62 24 .387 Selmer 52 18 346 Hazlett ... 51 17 333 McClellan 49 16 321 Walker 25 8 320 Houston ... 54 16 294 E. Nielsen . 59 17 .288 Palmer 68 19 279 Schy 16 276 Cope 16 267 Miller 30 8 267 Phelps ... 38 10 263 J. Magorty . 45 1 244 Allred 58 14 241 Home Runs——Snow, 8; Cantillon 2; Walker, 2; Nielson, Allred, Kris- ten, Pasquan, Phelps, Guy, Hollo- way, McClellan, one each. Two Base Hits—Cantillon 6; Mc- Clellan 6; Cope 4; Palmer 4; Snow 4; Nielsen 3; Houston 3; Selmer 3, Kristan 3. ‘Three Base Hits—Snow 3; Craig 2; J. Magorty, Forsythe, Allred, Schy, one each. The Monroe Doctrine was an- nounced by President James Mon- roe in his message to Congress in 1823. FIRE SALE! WHEN Fire strikes, will you be selling your place for % or '3 of what it’s worth? That CAN happen if you’re ignoring insurance protection. Fire may force you to sell at cut-rate prices. Don’t let that happen! Put your insurance protec- tion in our hands NOW. Shattuck Agency Seward Street Juneau Phone 249 COUPLENTURY DOORS OPEN SHOW STARTS STARTS s TONITE "2 SUNDAY and MONDAY "a Little Singing, a Little Dancing, and Lots of Happiness!” ROADWAY Say “hello” to the gr:;ndosf family of troupers who ever headlined in happiness! “DAN DAILEY (Give my Regard to Bl()d(lwa\ TECHNICOLOR TR NANCY GUILD CHARLIE RUGGLES FAY BAINTER Oieced by LLOVD BAGON roduced by WALTER MOROSCD ‘with Barbara Lawrence + Jane Nigh « Charles Russell Sig Ruman ¢ Howard Freeman * Herbert Anderson AL JOLSON says ‘A swell Technicolor picture! Unti you see it, YOU AIN'T SEEN NOTHIN’, FOLKS!” oo e Pl“s LN ] Cartoon == Sports == News SUNDAY MATINEE DOORS ADULTS SHOW OPEN 5 o ( STARTS 1:45 2:15 One Showing Only Alaska Sales and Service Agency for HOBART | FRIEDRICH Food Machinery | Refrigeration BOB TANDY BROS. BILL Display Rom 296 S. Franklin——Box 511—Phone 971 SAVINGS INSURED TO $5000 An Unusually SAFE and ATTRACTIVE INVESTMENT Insured savings accounts here offer to individuals, m-mel. mlnon, guardians, credit unions, and orpmunons a conservative, profitable, non-flucm investment in a mutual associa- tion nguhmfby faw. Accounts are insured to $5,000. We offer a liberal return on munu, compounded semi-annually, We have never paid Vo ik Alaska Federal Savings & Loan Association OF JUNEAU 119 Seward Street Juneau, Alaska SAVINGS INSURED TO $5000