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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1951 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA PAGE THREE STARTS TOMORROW Doors Open 1:30 p.m. M-G-M tells you all about the loves and laughs in her life!! A four-star cast that's SHOWS at 1:35-3:33-5:31-7:32-9:33 FEATURE at 2:03-4:00-6:00-8:00-10:00 © ADDED- all for fun Pete Smi Hurry! Ends Tonite! “T11 Ocean Drive” FILMED UNDER POLICE PROTECTION! T th Specialty M-G-M Color Cartoon NOTICE LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Sepiember 22 DANCING 'TILL 2:00 A.M. 0 l L Diesel and Stove PRINTED METER SERVICE— DAY or vent: IPHONE 707 Foster’s Transfer & Storage Warehouse - 9th and Capitol € SAVINGS INSURED TO $10,000 SAVINGS tell many a | ’3—Guys Named ; Bcehind every new business venture, new home, i career or other project, there’s usually a program of saving. It's the best way to make your plans succeed. Open your account with'any amount and build up savings here for a special purpose of your own! Savings are insured to $10,000. We have never paid LESS than on Savings Alaska Federal Savings & Loan Association ; OF JUNEAU » SAVINGS INSURED TO $10,000 Mike' Coming Sunday, Capitol The career and extra-curriculsr romantic activities of an airline stewardess form the novel and zaging subject of M-G-M'’s “Three Guys Named Mike,” coming Sundsy o the Capitol "Theatre. Jane Wyman is cast as the pic-| ture’s appealing heroine, with tie three guys named Mike played re- spectively by Van Johnson as a shy graduate research student in chem- istry. Howard Keel as a virile Am- erican Airlines pilot, and Barry Sullivan as a suave advertising ex- ecutive. In a fast-moving narrative punc- tuated with sparkling diologue and| infectious humor, the story depicts Miss Wyman’s rigorous training s an airline stewardess, her prelim- inary blunders after she graduates from the training school and gets her first job on the plane piloted by Keel, and the subsequent career in which she proves herself not only a knowing and efficient sky-riding hostess but also the apple of the eye of the pilot, the chemistry researcher and the successful ad man. It takes a spectacular free-for-all, no-holds-barred fight upon the part of the trio of male suitors before Miss Wyman can decide which she wants as her partner for life and we think it only fair to let the spectator follow the outcome for himself to be adept at handling any emergency that can occur among passengers in an airplane—including that of keep- ing away the inevitable “wolves.” FLOOR SHOWS starting 919-1t 5 Floor Shows nightly, 11 pm. Cpuntry Club. Football }Roundup NEW YORK, Sept. 22—{®-£Foot- | ball, which has been easing into the | nation’s sports picture for several weeks, presents a country-wide ‘ysclmdulc today that would do credit | to a mid-season Saturday. Heading the card is the clash of |t | Aus . And if that is not enough to whet ms—Kentucky and ciashes as Southern Georgia Tech, North Carolina- North Carolina State, Oregon State- Michigan State, Fordham-Missouri, | Duke-South Carolina and out on the Southern Oalifornia - Washington State, and Stanford-Oregon. To go with the top intersectional and sectional contests the shedule offers such other standout games as: Arkansas at Oklahoma A and M; Duke vs. South Carolina at Colum- bia; Montana vs. Washington at Seattle; Utah vs. Arizona at Phoe- nix; Idaho vs. Wyoming at Laramie. HIGHWAY OPENED George M. Tapley, chief of op- erations for the Alaska Road Com- mission, has announced that the Richardson Highway has now been opened to all traffic from Valdez to Fairbanks. The highway had been closed a few days due to heavy rains which washed out a cilvert at Mile 9 out of Valdez and damaged the road in Keystone Canyon, — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — Red Hot Comedy Team fo Be Seen At 20th Century That red hot comedy team of Dean Martin Jeddy Lewis will bring their 1 bited capering to the screen of the 20th Century Theatre Sunday when Paramount's “That's s up shop. Last seen in 1al comedy sugcess “At The Army,” Jerry and checked out of the bar- acks and into the dormitory for a hilarious try at college life. These versatile exponents of mer- riment, music and mayhem have top-drawer assistantce in this howl- ing account of life on the campus. Actress Ruth Hussey, temptress Marion Marshall, songstress Polly Bergen and a very funny fellow named Eddie Mayehoff lend their assorted talents in a side-splitting demonstration of what happens a burly ex-football hero gets piece is J Jerry. His eyes burn, his feet hurt and he gets allergies from just breathing. Jarring Jack Jack- son, his very All-American father, wants him to put down his pills, pick up a football, and bull his way through the line. Jarring Jack talks the coach into putting his boy on the squad, and room mate Dean, the husky back- field star who's throwing the cam- pus lasses for a loss, does his best putty into a football player. But nothing happens until a torrid co- ed gets hold of Jerry. Then he warms to athletics, and becomes one of the strangest football heroes that ever scampered down a gridiron. DA A Yankée;, Indians Close, Flag Race, In Amer. League By the Associated Press The New York Yankees, gunning for their third straight American League pennant, sported a one and one-half game lead today over the Cleveland Indians—their margin since Aug. 1. ‘With the schedule rapidly running out; Casey Stengel's Bronx Bombers belted the Red Sox at Boston yester- day, 5-1, while the Indians were fumbling a game to the Tigers in Detroit, 7 to 6. The same four clubs hook up in the same locality this afternoon and Sunday, when the final week of the hectic:season. begins. For the Yankees, the “magic num- two of last New Year's Day bowl| Texas—at | the appetite of the college gridiron | | fan, there are such other major | Methodist- | | west coast, California-Santa Clara, | ber” is 6. New York has eight games remaining—seven of them with the Red Sox. If the Yankees can win six, Cleveland could cop all five of its remaining contests, but still would wind up in second place. The Red Sox are five games back, hang- | ing .on ' the mathematical edge of elimination. Meanwhile in the National League, |,the Brooklyn Dodgers were clubbed |'by the Philadelphia Phillies at Eb- | bets Field, 9 to 6, as Robin Roberts | hung up his 21st victory of the year. The defeat left the front-running | Dodgers four games ahead of the idle New York Giants. Brooklyn has nine more games to play, the Giants seven. The Bums can clinch the flag with five victor- |ies, even if the Giants win all seven. Apparently the Yankee and Dodg- er front offices are fully expecting a 10 cents subway series, for both have put world series tickets on sale. League Standings By the Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE W, L Pet New York 92 54 630 Cleveland 92 57 617 Boston 86 58 .597 Chicago 7 70 524 Detroit 69° 78 469 | Philadelphia 65 82 442 | Washington 57 88 393 | St. Louis 47 98 324 | NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet Brooklyn 92 53 .34 New York 89 58 .605 St. Louis 7 10 524 Boston 73 72 503 Philadelphia 71 76 483 Cincinnati 73 84 429 | Pittsburgh 61 86 415 Chicago 60 87 408 Eaaue Leaders By the Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting (based on 350 times at bat) —Fain; Philadelphia, .348; Williams, Boston, .323, Runs batted in—Williams, Bosten |and Zernial, Philadelphia, 124. Home runs—~Zernial, Philadelphia, 32; Williams, Boston, 30. Pitching (based on 10 decisions) | —Kinder, Boston, 11-2, .846; Feller, | Cleveland, 22-8, 733; Martin, Phila- delphia, 11-4, NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting—Musial, St. Louis, .357; Ashburn, Philadelphia, .342. Runs batted in—Irvin, New York, | 111; Gordon, Boston, 106. | Home runs—Kiner, Pittsburgh, 41; Hodges, Brooklyn, 39. | Ppitching—Roe, Brooklyn, 21-2, 913; Maglie, New York, 21-6, .778. to help mold this gangling mass of | largest | 1 OCENTURY THEATRE ~ WHERE HITS ARE A HABIT! ENDS | Charles | TONITEé” SHOW FEATURE STARTS AT 7:20-9:30 7:42-9:52 MOTION PICTURE! w ROBERT NEWTON ALEC GUINNESS KAY WALSH HENRY STEFHENSON JOHN HOWARD DAVIES TS LAUGH TIME WITH THE SHOW THAT IS SWEEPING THE WHOLE NATION! ICSNEW...BIG... end a “FUNHIT” + Here is DEAN MARTIN and JERRY LEWIS' Latest Smash Comedy . . . A Picture Guaranieed to Lay You in the Aisles with LAUGHTER SUN. —— MON. — TUE. —— WED. SUNDAY MATINEE SHOW STARTS Doors Open 1:30 7:25 - 9:30 Show Starts 2:00 };EQT—U 3;53“ {e’i Making the Passes! @g Fumbling! and JERRY There's a rumpus on the campus when these cut-ups go all-out for knowledge! with RUTH MARION POLLY - EDDIE ToM A9 pes — an HUSSEY — MARSHALL — BERGEN — ..., MAYEHOFF—IOY, SITKA, 1CY STRATTS AND__ —_—t CHATHAM STAAITS POINTS