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MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1949 ENDS TFOMORROW HE'SAM WE¥ PAGE THREE TI0"[ENTURY LAST TIMES TONITE TIRRERRRRRNERAE DON’T MISS THIS ONE THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE--JUNEAU, ALASKA Pose for Iseup RED SKELTON IN FAST COMEDY AT CAPITOL THEATRE | Red Skelton, who last gave you his version of the Fuller Brush Man, now shows you what he can do with a Civil War spy! This new i+ Skelton metamorphosis takes place ion the Capitol’s screen in M-G-M's COAST HOCKEY LEAGUE (By the Associated Press) in today. Seattle’s Ironmen again are un- Actually, all that talk is the re- disputed leaders of the Northern|sult: of short memories and poor Division Pacific Coast Hockey|hindsight. We're a lot saner than League. we used to be, according to Twen- They beat the Los Angeles Mon- |tieth Century-Fox researchers who archs 5-3 last night to go two)have delved into the years between points in the standings ahead ux|mza and 1936 for “You Were Meant the idle New Westminster Royals!For Me the new romantic drama \‘\'lm pulled into a tie Saturday. i co-starring Jeanne Crain and Dan | Rudy Filion, Seattle center, wid- Dailey, now at the 20th Century SHOWPLALE or Lfusrteads APITUL; LAUGHING AT THIS FOR ME’ SHOWING AT 20TH CENTURY What with bobby-socked swoon- ers, bubble-gum blowers, and hop- 'ped up hot rods, there’'s a lot of iwou WERE MEANT i talk about the crazy world we live howling comedy, “A Southern Yan-| kee,” and if you don't think a Civil | War patriot can te both a South- | srner and a Yankee you haven't een Aubrey Filmore, as portrayed iy Skelton in an aisle-rolling plot of slapstick merriment. Aubrey starts his spying for the Union’s Secret Service in a strictly MIRTH-QUAKE! HE’'S A MAD, MAD THING! | i 7oA RIOTOUS REBEL ON AN UPROARIOUS RAMPAGE! ARLENE DAHL GEORGE COULOURIS Complete Shows ® Feature at * 7:18-9:30 7:55-10:07 This Is America MGM Color FASCINATING! UNBELIEVABLE! 5 RTOON “WONDER HOUSE" | iare nEws Plumbing © Healing ~ 0OilBurners _ Telephone-319 Nighis-Hed 730 Harri Machine Shop, Inc. Your Deposits . ARE SAFE 3UY and HOLD UNITED STATES 3 SAVINGS BONDS [‘H‘E management of this 10k is pledged to conserva- 8 operation. The safety | tors’ funds is our rimary consideration. In b the bank is a mem- :@“}efleral Deposit Insur- B¢ Corporation, which in- gach of our depositors ;zn loss to a maximum of 5,000, DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED " FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASEA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION imateur gtatus. He is a bellhop in + St. Louls hotel and his first coup s to mistake an innocent doctor | and his satchel for the infamous Jonfederate spy, the Gray Spider, | and his suitcase of explosives. This | masterstroke of stratagem does not | endear him to the North's Secret Service authorities and it is up to| Aubrey to redeem himselt. In a uniform one-half of which is Union, | the other half Confederate, Aubrey braves the enemy lines, wins the| love of an unsuspecting Southerni zirl, places false information in the | hands of a Confederate general,; land executes deeds of preposterous | daring until his is finally uncov-| evered and forced to flee both Southern bloodhounds and femi- nine wiles. FOOTBALL . SCORES actress Sarah Churchill, pose for the flower-decked home of Alfred | York by plane “for a litle bit of | s British society photographer Antony Beauchamp and his bride, a closeup after their marriage in W. Jones at Sea Island, Ga. The auburn-haired daughter of Winston Churchill, Britain’s war-time Prime Minister, and her new husband are scheduled to leave for New honeymooning.” (# Wirephoto.. Here are scores of leading foot- ball games played on the Pacific Coast and elsewhere not mentioned in other sporting news today: SUNDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 41, St (Calif.) 14. Santa Clara 27, Loyola (Los An-| | geles) 19. SATURDAY SCORES California 21, Washington 7. Southern California 40, Oregon| NINE TEAMS IN RUNNING IN FOOTBALL (By the Associated Press) Mary’s| 13. | | "yoLa 21, Washington State 20. | Stanford 27, Oregon State 7. | Idaho 47, Montana 19. ‘Washington Mrosh 59, i Frosh 13. Nine teams held the thinning| |line of major unbeaten-untied col- Oregon |lege football forces today, but the | casualty rate is getting terrific. Western Washington 20, Whit-| The season may be lucky to | worth 7. ;:-qu(‘nzc through with as many per- Central Washington 14, Briush]f(‘m. elevens as last year when Columbia 13. Michigan, California and Clemson Puget Sound 27, Willamette 0. |alone closed out with spotless Louisiana State 13, North Caro-|escutcheons. California and Clem- lina 7. ‘son fell later in bowl games. Texas Christian 33, Mississippi 27‘ Notre Dame and Army, the coun- Pepperdine 16, Portland 13. ‘tl'y's two top-ranking powers, ap- Florida A&M 58, Xavier 13. {pear good bets to survive the last College of Pacific 62, San Diego six weeks of wrangling without State 14. mishap and fourth-place Oklahoma | Arizona State (Flagstaff) 20, may extend its string. | Redlands 20 (tie). | But the other untarnished teams | Montana State 28, North Dakota | —California, Cornell, Baylor, Penn- State 7. isylvania. Boston U, and Virginia— Whittier 54, Occidental 6. have rough seass ahead. California Aggies 14, Southern FOUR TEAMS FUMBLE Oregon 13. Four teams with nothing but big, | fat victories took a tumble Satur- iday in the most violent reversal ot pRo-FoomAll form this season. | North Carolina, Minnesota, Ken- tucky and Pittsburgh went down with a thump that jarred budding Lowl hopes. North Carolina was stunned by Louisiana State in a night game at Baton Rouge, 13-7. The Tar Heels' brilliant All America star, Charley (Choo Choo) Justice, was held with a tight rein by stubborn defensive play. MINNESOTA TRIMMED Minnesota’s Gophers, already eyc- { Final scores of pro football | games over the weekend are as | follows: | New York Yankees 24, San Fran- | cisco 3. Chicago Colts 7. Buffalo Bills 17, Los Angeles Dons | | 14. | NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE Yesterday’s Games Philadelphia 49, Washington 14.| Pittsburgh 24, New York Bull- | dogs 13. | New York Giants 35 | Bears 28. Detroit 24, Chicago Cardinals 7. Los Angeles 35, Green Bay 7. | Hornett 17, Baltimore| by Michigan’s defending national champions who bounded back from i two straight defeats on the strong play of Chuck Ortmann to win, 14-7. Bear Bryant's Kentucky, riding a Chicago five-game winning streak, lost to Southern Methodist, 20-7, with Kyle Rote furnishing the SMU spark in the absence of flu-ridden Doak Walker. Pittsburgh, with its supporters beginning to dream of & return to that old position of prestige, slip- ped up against a fired-up Indiana team, which broke an 11-game los- ing the Rose Bowl, were trimmed| Notre Dame, idle last week, gets back in action Saturday against an up-and-down Navy at Baltimore. It's Navy's time to be up again but' this is just one tough stop for the Irish schedule. ARMY IN PLAY Army, which overwhelmed Co- lumbia 63-6, should.enjoy another touchdown parade against Virginia Military Institute. Unbeaten Penn entertains Pittsburgh in one of the East’s top attractions. - Michigan will meet Illinois at Champaign in a game that should help unravel the confused Western Conference race. Illinois is un- beaten in the Big Ten, has lost only to Missouri. The best games in the Eouth send Mississippi State against Tu- lane, Tennessee against North Ca- rolina and Duke against Georgia Tech. Texas at Southern Metho- dist is the Southwest headliner. In'other surprises Saturday, Iowa topped Northwestern, 28-21; Rice beat out Texas, 17-15, on Froggie Williams' last gasp field goal; Mem- phis State whipped Kansas State, 21-14, and Kansas toppled Okin- homa A. and M. 55-14. Baylor remained unbeaten, the unheralded “dark horse” of the wide open country, by defeating Texas A. and M., 21-0. Boston U. was victor over New York U., 38-0. Virginia trounced Virginia Mili- tary, 32-13. Luke Sewe_ll Will Manage (incl Reds CINCINNATI, Oct. 24—(P—Luke Sewell, who led the St. Louis Browns out of baseball's wilder- ness, today had shouldered the task of trying to do the same thing for the Cincinnati Reds. Sewell, a veteran major league catcher, yesterday was/named man- ager of the Reds for 1950 and 1951, succeeding Bucky Walters, who was relieved of his duties in the last week of the 1949 season. Sewell was |a coach under Walters during the past season. Sewell directed the Browns to their one and only American | WSC ALMOST DOES ened his lead in the league s(‘()rm\,;' 1ace with four points on a goal} and three assists. He now has 17 points. | The Portland Penguins defeated {Los Angeles 6 to 4 Saturday night despite Bill McCracken's two first | beriod goals for the losers. | The New Westminster Royals} overpowered the Tacoma Rockets 7 to 2, in a game marked by only three penalties. PAUL RICHARDS NEW | |SEATTLE BALL BOSS: SEATTLE, Oct. 24—(®—The “Mir- acle Man” is taking over Seattle baseball, : Paul Richards, who has had three pennant winners in eight years as a baseball manager, ended the weeks-long search for a successor to Jo Jo White Saturday night by inking a contract to manage the Seattle Rainiers, ) The contract is for two years.| Salary terms were not divulged. | Richards, who started in base- ball as a pitcher-infielder with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1926, is best known as a catcher with the Detroit ; Tigers, Philadelphia Athletics and New York Giants. As a manager, he pulled down two pennants during a five-year span with Atlanta in the Southern Asso- ciation and piloted Buffalo home in front in the International circuit this past season. In a telephone interview from his home in Waxahachie, Tex., last night, Richards told the Post- Intelligencer he favors a running) team. | IT-BUT LOSE 21-20 TO UCLA INVADERS, PULLMAN, Wash, Oct. 24—(P— Washington State College bowed 27-20 to TUCLA’s rose-smelling Bruins Saturday, but there were few unhappy alumni in the Cougai homecoming crowd of approxi- mately 20,500 fans, For the Cougars came close to| upsetting the vaunted invaders,| taking the lead twice in the ball| game before falling victim to a 30- | vard end-around play that set u the winning touchdown. WSC went ahead 14-0 in the first | quarter, 1 The border-line Rio Grande Riv- | er has been known to change it,s‘ course 5o quickly that farmers whoi thought they lived in Mexico awoke | to find themselves in Texas. | Theatre. The picture provides a nostalgic look into the past on the order of “Margie,” and in so doing, brings out some of the crazy things we did ourselves when we were younger, and may serve to soften our con- demnation of 1049 youngsters who aren’'t nearly as wild as some people make them out to be. JEANNE RAIN RACE CAR TURNS OVER, KILLS 11 AT ARGENTINE TRACK BUENOS AIRESF, Argentina, Oct. 24—(M—A careening race car killed its driver and 10 spectators yester- day during the running of a 500- mile auto race at Rafaela in Santa: Fe province. Eight other pcrsnns' were injured. The driver, Italo Bizio, an Ar- gentine, was leading a field of 25 when a steering link apparently broke and threw his car into a spin, He was traveling about 90 miles an hour. ALASKA 11 WHOPS CALIFORNIA FOES HAMILTON AIR FORCE BASE, | Calif.,, Oct. 24—(M—The Elmendorf Air Force base football squad, fmm; s s v | IS o o H:fi{xlzon got its lone tally when | Buus B“m There are some 3,000 islands in| Nms BY Aln e Banmn groun SETS THE PACE FOR PLEASURE! #O” KENTUCKY L STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY! ‘ | TSEAR LEVANT . ARBAR LAWRENGE Directed by Produced by LLOYD BACON « FRED KOHLMAR CENTURY-FOX DOORS OPEN 7:00 SHOW STARTS 7:15 and 9:30 CNINNUNERNAANSANSROISRRNCEEIINLTAND] nny Brook | NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION, NEW YORK o 86 PROOF ) SUNLAMPS for health SPECIAL SALE ing streak to prevail, 48-14. League pennant in 1944. (While They Last!) Regular $64.50 “Su” Kraft” ULTRA VIOLET LAMPS Complete with Automatic Timer NOW $32.50 Just plug into any convenient outlet and enjoy the beneficial ultra-violet rays so necessary for good health . . . They are recommended for respiratory ailments and skin conditioning. Now at the— Alaska Eledric Light and Power Co. 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