The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 19, 1946, Page 5

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total 241.491. 1045 mtal' CENTRAL ALASKA Copper River—Reds 45,306, kings 'MERRY COMEDY 7§MMON PACK 1S ON SCREEN AS T et oA CAPITOL'S BILL NEAR MILLION it s 1 2,795, NTuw snovwll'g: | Up‘llnl e William Sound—Reds 6,675, | ! Fred McMurra ast is your kings 317, ks 236,334, chums 55,- STRICTLY FOR | s o e = o SHORT OF 45 oo vei 588 S L UGHIS' |“Pardon My Past,” a Mutual pro- 1945 total 649,612, L ‘ > Inlet+Reds 95514, kings pinks 54,092, chums 27,675, 33,151; total 227,034; 1945) duction currently starring him and e Cook Marguerite Chapman, Akim Tamir-|, Alaska’s total salmon pack for 16,602, off, Rita Johnson, Harry Daven- the rtion of the season ending coh port and” Douglass Dumbrille fea- August 10, is 852,261 cases behind total 248,624 teured at the Capitol Theatre. the 1945 ceason, with the Chignik| Kodiak—Reds 58,362, kings 80, i 5 ,/area showing the only increase over pings 421,732, chums 23879, cohoes |_Loved by a girl he'd never seen’ jast year 2,164; total 506217; 1945 total 615, k |Pursued by a wife he'd never mar-\ Reported packs for - 1946, with 217 | |ried! Stalked by a killer he'd nev-'comparative totals for 1945, Chignik—Reds 170,941, kings 290, ler been introduced to! Its the pinks 20,326, chums 21,213, cohoes merriest down-to-mirth comedy % SOUTHEASY ALASKA 516: total 122,286; 1945 total 47,306. !that ever sent your spirits soaring' Ketchikan District—Reds 11.033,|" s i peninsula—Reds 44.761,| a king. | skyhigh. It's the promise of 256, cohoes | pinks 50,476, chums kings 658, pinks 86,800, chums 75, ,rare good time i 13,277, total 101,570; /934 * cohoes 12,176; total 220,329 i The screenplay was written by E. 1945 total 271,170 ‘94:,) total 273,794. | Felto nand Karl Kamb from the West Coast—Reds 2,653, kings 2,, Total for ‘Cenlml Alaska—Reds | story by Patterson McNutt dl\d pmk 2,006 1-2, chums 854, cohoes|322128, kings 24,948, pinks 828,800,/ Harlan Ware. Leslie Fenton dire fotal 9882 1-2; 1945 total| chums 204115, cohoes 61914; total| ted as well as produced the 1,1(- NOC‘ 1.441.905: 1945 total 1,914,366, " | ture. Boi ol yrangell-Petersburg—Reds 4,544, WESTERN ALASKA kings 158, pinks 11,693, chums 2212, Port Moller (final)—Reds 44,240, 2; total 22,139; 1945 to- kings 405, chums 2,469, cohoes 25; B |total 47,139; 1945 total 62,600 | stern—Reds 3921, kings 89, Bristol Bay (final)—Reds 602,704, I H d pinks 834, chums 8,453, cohoes 1,991, kings 4,650, pinks 4,039, chums 34, S onore total 15288; 1945 total 54,874. 479, cohoes 1,453; total 647,325; 1945 | Western—Reds 10,434 1-2, kings|total 641,953 | At Lun(heon 13412, pinks 1816, chums 4B90S| Total Western Aluska_Reds 45 cohoes 2,123: total 61,716 1-2: 944, kings 5,055, pinks 4,039, chums| :Matron of Juneau Chapter No. 7, iOrder of Eastern Star, was honor 1045 total 105,320, 36,938, cohoes 1478; total 694,464; i [ | Icy Straits—Reds 5254, kings 58,/1945 total 704,553. | ! r . Thomas, Past Worth: 8 | fy bas. . O Thomps, Past WOTHM | ks 1084 ‘chtims 17,77, cohoes SRR 2.414; total 26,584; 1945 total 69,58L.| moratc for Alaska— Reds 1,010,- Ghest at ‘a luncheon given Batur-i. Yekutat—Reds 8897, kings 349,808 1-2, kings 31,621 1-2, pinks 900, | day afternoon in the Iris Room by Pinks 48, chums 3, cohoes 14; totalingy 1.3, chums 343513 1-2, cohoes |the other Past Matrons ‘of the %311 1045 fotal 1844, 91,110; total 2377.850; 1945 total ! Toials for 8. B. Alaska—Reds|g s ;. SReper. 41736 1-2, kings 1618 1 SR Mrs. Thomas, who will be leaving G’ el e 1. P“] o | !soon for the States, was presented ° - el R with a gift. Also complimented was Mrs. Dora Sweeney, Supreme Sub- MARGUERITE CHAPMAN AKIM TAMIROFF WILLIAM DEMAREST Fmplro Wam Adas br ng resul | U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU | Deputy for the Order of Rainbow JUNEAU, ALASKA !for Girls in the States of Wash- WEATHER BULLETIN of DATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M.. 120TH MERIDIAN TIME lington, Idaho, and Territors Alaska, who is leaving tomorrow for Max. temp. | TODAY Spokane to attend the Grand last | temp. temp. Precip. 4:30am. ' Assembly there. Station 24 hrs.* | Lowest 4:30am. 24hrs. Weather at Anchorage 64 45 52 02 Cloudy | Gueses present wers the Mes- g o i 3 dames Marie Thomas, Dora Sween- paipe) 65 44 s, ‘GV Annetta Naghel, Pearl Burford, oorqova 58 47 48 19 Rain Mae Williams, Mildred Martin, n,geon 65 42 42 03 Pt. Cloudy ) Flizabeth Nordling, Manice Sut- Edmonton 79 45 51 0 Clear | PLus_nonald n“ck ton, Gladys Stabler, Florence Oak- paiipanis 64 38 38 0 Pt. Cloudy| es, Janice MacSpadden, Lynna Hol- Haines 53 49 49 03 Cloudy s5d GOORY 1o NQBANE o Jilandjand ‘Alice Brown, | Juneau Long 49 41 Trace Rain E . ; bt 5 | 4 01 Cloud, LATEST ‘News of the Day’ | aodern styled electric heaters. joerenncan » Ao it ’ Mt Home Beautiful. Kotzebue 51 50 W T TR e ~ McGrath 67 40 0 Nome 53 1 40 Northway 62 | 4 42 0 Pt. Cloudy Petersburg 59 46 49 Trace Cloudy | Portland 93 | 60 61 0 Clear Prince George i | 38 48 0 ! Clear | Prince Rupert 68 | 41 0 | Seattle 85 | 64 0 Sitka 68 | 49 50 .03 Cloudy Whitehorse 56 42 44 .05 Cloudy | Yakutat 53 48 48 04 Pt. Cloudy | *—(4:30 a. m. yesterday to 4:30 a. m. today) | WEATHER SYNOPSIS: A ridge of high pressure extends from the | Yukon Territory to northern Alberta this morning. A low pressure trough | extends from the interior valleys of California to Washington State und a weak low pressure center is moving slowly northnortheastward into the | | Gulf of Alaska. The temperatures were above normal over the southern | portion of Southeast Alaska yesterday but continued below normal ove: | the northern and central portions. Rain has fallen during the past 24 | hours at scattered stations over the interior of Canada and over the | | southeastern and northwestern portions of Alaska. i MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN i Reports from Marine Stations at 12:30 P. M. today 14 WIND Height of Waves 4 SICKS Station Weather Temp. Dir.and Vel. (Sea Condition) | | Cape Decision Cloudy 55 E 6 1 foot | cape spencer . Rain 50 ESE 26 calm | a”fl‘lry | Eidred Rock Cloudy 54 Calm 3 Zero Five Finger Light Cloudy 54 NNE 4 Calm | Guard Island . Clear 54 Calm pr Zero | Lincoln Rock Pt. Cloudy 61 SSW 3 Zero ! Point Retreat . Rain 55 Calm Zero [ | MARINE FORECAST FOR PERIOD ENDING TUESDAY EVE- | NING: Protected waters of Southeast Alaska and outside waters, Dixon | | Entrance to Cape Decision—variakle winds under 15 miles per hour. Out- | 3 side waters, Cape Decision to Yakutat—southeasterly winds 15 miles per | hour becoming southerly under 15 miles per hour tonight. Rain or rain | showers with variable cloudiness. | Trough low pressure interior valleys, California to Washington State. | | Low pressure center—29.80 inches—56 degrees north, 147 degrees west, | movmg northnortheastward. ‘ SICKS’ SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO. Since 1878 E. G. Sick, Pres. Hot Track Trolley! PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 19.—Mary | Dymek, 16, was shot last night —/ by a street car. ‘The girl was walking near an intersection with three friends when a trolley passed. They heard a shot, Mary screamed and slump- 'ed to the sidewalk. Detective Henry Demordy said the | girl was wounded in the right foot Investigating, he found .22 calibre | bullets lying on the car tracks. | — e, | | ARRESTS ARE MADE The following arrests are record- ed in the U. S. Marshal's office: | Frances Lilliam Smith arrested in| | Wrangell on a white slave charge | and released on a $3,500 bond, and | George B. Powell in Anchorage| charged with issuing bad checks| and ‘released ‘Saturday on bond. Kay Laird was taken into cus- tody in lieu of bond in Ketchikan on Saturday as a material witness for the government. ——————— } MAYME RECK TO INTERIOR | Miss Mayme Reck left Saturday jafternon by PAA for Fairbanks | {where she will visit her sister, Mrs. ZBen, Green until October 1. | She will return in time to meet ‘her father, John Reck when he re- {turns to Juneau. Mr. Reek has been attending the Sourdough Conven- tion in San Francisco and from there will leave for Chicago to at- itend a banker’s convention. ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER (0. JUNEAU and DOUGLAS, ALASKA Cheerful Distributors of Friendly Dependable 24-Hour Electric Service and Retailersof Generai Electric, Hot Point, Bendix and Kelvinator Products and operate A First Class Repair Shop Manned by Skilled Mechanics Telephone Service . . . No. 616, Juneau, Office No. 6 7 'lHE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNI:AU ALL\SKA 'MANY ANS STATIONS {meat |shipment to isolated stations in the in a war of nerves. |meat will be delivered to Nome {ment of freight for stations in the corner had been turned in Pa {and possibly .Adak after wi 'Seward, Skagway, Sitka and Juneay, |8k {follows {son to disembark at Point Barrow jenroute to Savoonga; Mr. Frank Dougherty to Nome enroute |bert Reed and son as teachers to |North Star here. PAGE FIVE TO0"CENTURY NORTH STAR IS HERE pALESIINE WITH SUPPLIES FOR OFFENSIVE unday the public consciousness by reason DOROTHY LAMOUR IS IN STAR ROLE AT 20TH CENTURY ——— m DOTTY'S DARING ANSWER TO TODAY'S GREATEST LOVE PROBLEM! In port from 8:30 o'clock day morning until 1 o'clock | - morning was the Alaska Native a of its simple sincerity and warm {Service boat North Star, on its an- . . appeal. Such a pictu oual i _Nationwide Movement “mouncs “a medar o Jue in Nome August 25, the ship . § which last plays tonight at the is m:kl annual trip for ship- Fails Is Still Tense Century Theatre and stars Dorothy ment of supplies for stations north 4 ‘Lamour and Arturo Cordova ? {of Kotzebue. She will not stop at n HOIY l.and | with J. Carrol Naish in a leading ‘ sl |Kotzebue either northbound or character role k it southbound. Stopping at Dutch| HATFA. Palestine, Aug. 19. — A | This is more than a love story D"‘“”“J R iy North Star will take on oil and Jewish grou were humor and pathos subtly interwov-, v.nAm those two ports ing today failed to en. It is, beyond that, the story of o Peramovat's According to Fred Geeslin, Ad-|pgierialize by early evening, and the hopes and aspirations of the ‘ |ministrative_Officer of the Alaska o comparative quiet settled down little people of the world as typi- ’“\ l" l' I"" |Native Service In Juneau, the SUp-| .o, g gtill tense Holy Land after fied by the “paisanc” of southern L ply ship will make her first freight| "y, upled weekend. California. Though not a war pic- & discharges at Kivalina, Point Hope, ture it brings home the sacrifice ) {Point Lay, Wainwright and Point| The only unusual incident up to this war has demanded of many Barrow. From Barrow she will re- 4 pm. was another “operation humble American families. The — turn to Nome and to Nunivak Is- scram” at the Jerusalem postoffice film, therefore, is one of the most ]DH” I“’]B \' land to pick up frozen reindeer which was evacuated for 40 minutes passionate pleas for a democratic WEECHEULULE £k The next stop in her schedul- when an anonymous telephone call way of life yet presented to screen r(‘! itinerary is Unalaska where she warned the place was to be bombed. audiences. will pick p late freight for re-!This rapidly was becoming routine | - 70 CARROL TAISH Mikhail: Rasumny « Frank McHugh D Bering Sea. This freight has been shipped to Unalaska by commercial carriers for final delivery by the North Star Stations in the Dio- medes as well as on St. Lawrence Island will be visited A return trip to Unimak Bay will be made after which some of the reindeer| garried out by the military W gai] Mrs I:rank. Ma'er Best Short Subjecls Gives Dinner Party usalem in which passersby were | Latest News A di> ner party was given by Mrs g, Irgun Zvai Aleutian: tine's The North Star will call at Atka ch she chain to {will travel along the Douglas Boat Shop NEW CONSTRUCTION and R¥PAIR JOBS FREE ESTIMATE Phone Douglas 192 where reindeer meat and supplies will be discharged for Alaska Na- tive Service Stations. From Juneau will proceed to Seattle. It is xpected that her present trip will be completed before December 1 Pascenger: aboard the North Star returning to stations were as Mrs. Viva Craig Williams ——— e aker to- | Thers are about 2,000 axpayers night on the lto Nome: Mr. and Mrs. George Wil- League over KINY. He will go on censed physicians in the U. S. to- Alaska more li- the air at 7 o'clock. jday than in 1944. and Mrs. S to Golovin as teachers; Mr. and Mrs. Arlowe Martin to Nome en- route to Selowik; Mr. and Mrs. Al- Everything Sporting Goods Phone 829 | Gambell and Miss Jeannette Stew- art, who is making the entire trip. Miss Birdi* McNeal boarded the stopped at road blocks for exam- | the report that plans had been in- | tercepted for a coordinated upris- |gp.ank Maier last evening at her LAST TIME TONIGHT Leumi and Haganah 8 Those who were present for the The next stop will include a re-| British army sources denied such | g ot wove sntertained later In the RS ater in t! - v Shaces has completed the delivery of €Ver. | Cruskts’ were e At MGy XD, S & 'I' reight and has taken on all the| The central calm since yesterday |gmith Markus Russell, Dorothy on's a ol l_n' Dutch Harbor to pick up a reship-|Jewish leaders to predict that a 'yarearet Femmer, Men's and Bog's i NS Box 1465 Phone 677 terrorism might be on the down- grade here. don around Haifa’s port area fol- . Ann's Hospital admitted Steve lowing yesterday’s disorders in cmmm. Harold Stjern and Myron to scuttle the transport carrying | the weekend. Dismissed from St. Ann’s were NIGHT Perry and Mrs. Joe Dumloa and ~m ; o — s e baby. Grilles, Sheck Absorbers, Knee missions and a MILLION OTHER PARTS Seattle Auto Wrecking Co. 1950—1st Avenue South ination of their papers gave rise to B IEY e St On home on the Glacier Highway. | QSN turn trip to Unalaska. After she & plan had been discovered, how- evening by games and movies, reindeer meat, she will return to encouraged some of the moderate Thibodeau, Mary Sperling and Across from Coliseum Theatre turbulent history and that 0 OTES British troops held - rigid cor- H p"Al H which illegal immigrants attempted C. Patterson for medical care over .- — Mrs, Richard Peter, Mrs, Leonard New—Used—Rebuilt Action Units, Motors, Trans- We Mail and Ship Promptly Seattle, Wash. SPORT .GENTER rew DODGE “SMOOTHEST CAR AFLOAT™ ouble Protection * X * Protect Your Present (ar lnvestment In addition to insured safety and comfort the Double Protection program gives your present car a hig Protect Your Salety amd Comlor( From one end of the country to the other Dodge Dealers are now giving their friends and customers Double Protection. This means that while new car production remains behind demand and schedule, every new Dodge buyer gets insured safety and comfort in the old car he is driving now. er value when your time comes to turn it in, It stands to reason that if your old car is in good condition we can allow you more than if you permit its qualities to run down. It means that old engines, brakes, ignition, wheels Bring in your old car today. Let us give it a and tires are carefully checked, adjusted and repaired so that there may be no risk—of either safety or comfort while waiting for the new car. complete inspection and adjustment. Then you'll know where you stand, you'll have peace of mind, you’ll be money ahead. protectio” poudis . THANK YOU FOR WAITING NEW DODGE & PLYMOUTH CARS—DODGE JOB-RATED TRUCKS R. W. COWLING CO. - - 115Front Street

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