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"™ PAGE FIVE TUNEAU, ALASKA 1 'TRACY, KATHARINE 'HEPBURN IN COMEDY AT 20TH CENTURY by ath- FRIDAY, A THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE 'DOUBLE FEATURE ' BILL AT WEEKEND, CAPITOL THEATRE | The Capitol Theatre is offering a double feature bill this weekend, one a gay musical comedy “Beat the PRIL 2, 1948 j Starts [20MENTORY g oitoiieg SHOWS AT 7:25 - 9:30 You haven't seen love till you see Tracy and Katy in this rollick- ing romantic romp! By the author of “The Philadelphia Story”! | An outstanding cast, headed co-stars Spencer Tracy erine Hepturn and tiied-and-trve comvdy exg s Band,” and the cther crime melo- drame, “Criminal ‘Court.” Lucille Ball, Keenan Wynn and Fe- £ A young band leader under the . lix Bressart, has been brought to- . stress of circumstances turns vo- !gether by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to cal teacher, only to find himself in| |provide one of the most mirthful 7 bilarious complication in RKO Ra- | [gHeN Ot the . season 1 WO e 5 z 2 ; dio’s musical laugh-rict. “Beéat "‘ei Love,” which opens t 1t at the AR LR P k) ) Bani.” Frances Langford stars, with | | 20th Century Theatre as the week- WAL Ralph Edwards, Phillip Terry and| oie| |end feature Vy Wf) Gene Krupa and bis band featured. Based on the play by Philip Barry 3 Tarry portrays the band leader, | author of “The Philadelphia Story," ‘ - hose father accepta $1000 from |the next attraction is the story of : a former pupil to train her daughter {a scientist-inventor (Tracy) and a -G- .| for opera. Terry's high-powered girl (Miss Hepburn) both ¢f whom HILABIOUS: M-G-M STAR-HITY manager, played by Edwards, pre-! {shun love. Each has different r2a- «n LUCILLE BALL KEENAN WYNN - CARL ESMOND PATRICIA MORISON « FELIX BRESSART Based on the Play by Philip Barry Produced by LAWRENCE A. WEINGARTEN i Isons for rejecting love, and both are determined to stay away trom it Employed by the Goyernment to perfact a new high-altitude oxygen vails upon the reluctant Terry to tackle the job. Terry's efforts at| teaching Miss Langford result in un- | forseen complications especially| where Miss Langford, who lives in| Terry's hcuse, and has for a chaper- cn Edwards’ wife posing as Terry's. A riotous climax fins Miss Lang- ford in love with Te: and starring with the band as vocalist. Hailed as an outstanding, sus- penseful melodrama, RKO Radio's| e “Criminal Court” stars Tom CONWaY| T, The Editor, Daily Alaska Em- and Martha O'Driscoll in & gripping | pire: In reply to your editorial story of political corruption in a b"‘:pubhhhed in March 25th, issue ti- clty. {tled “Indiam Claims”, T would like Brilliant defense atlorney Steve!i, siate that members of The Alas- Barnes, in a campaign to clean up|y, Native Brotherhood are well the city, is running for district at-|gware of their potential political torney. Vic Wright, night club cun-;powm. to which you referred, also er, operating under the corrupt city they are sorrowfully aware that in RARE PERFUME FLASK _ A new addition to his collection of rare jewelry—an antique Persian perfume holder of {mask for fliers. Tracy sets up his carved silver, crystal and gems—is shown to Mrs. Walter Thornton | workshop in the basement of M by Picter de Witt of New York. | Hepburn's Washington home, hir- ing out as caretaker. Soon Tracy en Play by Donald Ogden Stewart cted by HAROLD S. BUCQUET + AN M-G-M PICTURE Plus CARTOON—Air Express NEWS S i COMMUNICATION ' SCROPTIMIST CLUBIS 10 SPONSOR YOUTH MOVEMENT, JUNEAY " == The .’\‘m‘(Jp!lmi.\'(’(;lub held moir‘iANNUAl ju“lon PROM first meeting of the month yester-| 'I'o BE HH.D TONIGHI TRl IN HIGH SCHOOL GYM ifinds that she can be of great as- sistance as he puzzles over his in- vention. . | { | | | TCLUBIS | | and the upshot is a start- by Miss Hepburn that ‘without love. Hilarious is the word for the re- sulting segmence of events. RALPH EDWARDS M. €. OF “TRUTH OR CONEQUENCES™ e et “2LL FEATURE | Ereakfast in the home of Mis. Edna day noon on the Terrace of the Bub- ble Room. Several business matters % government, trumps up a briberylyne interests of commerce and the were qiscussed and further plans L “l:\‘L!l“lF:II; (“L:f;\ ;t:ltfi“\)r;::m\lfl:\\mt(.‘ma-ns scheme lfll llm‘xg::f tl)(; for the Youth Movement the club| The Juneau iigh Scheol gym has SERVI(ES SUNDAY to ntL(’l\duncll\ u.ff;\hs P gun, 1t 13 RosusHtly discl sed ahd mtgfc hberurn)»‘uf »l urxl ves ‘m‘u is sponsoring were made. The \'outl\,te?" completely transformed for the ATTENTION MOOSE B e Brencntiy.” Steews | helr posterity is of little or 1o €on-| Movement for the Teen Agers of Ju- (annual- Junior Prom tonight, at 9 A corporate Communion Servlce| 4 N, MOOS firikrioes; | GRoi (Gle, Ainger ol sequence. Ineau was adopted several months|o'clock. for the women of the Holy Trinity| Members of Loyal Order of the night club, is discovered with the | Throughout the years, with thelago and has just recently rcm‘hed[ The decorating committee has Church will be held Sunday morn-| Mcose and Women of the Mooge. gun in her hand. |advancement of our so called ci-|the complete formation for practice,|changed the gym into a sparkling ing, April 4 at 8 c'c'ack in the church | There will be a wedding held *V Steve tells his story, but is laugh- vilization, the Indian, with mixed| The club voted to write to mem- |fairy land with the aid of a few mir- at Feurth and Gold }durm',' the Masquerade Ball, Sat., 4 ed at, and Georgla s[ands trial .rhe‘cxrouons of bewilderment, _relubt‘bor.- of the French Soroptimist Club {rers and Elue s. The Queen’s' pic service will be followed by a' April 3. Members invited. 851 3t My {1ial goes badly for Georgia until|tance and despair, has stood silently |in Paris and it will probably be injcast!> is of pink and blue and will R « om MARTHA Robert Stev *L o hntiady {rpiration |8side and submitted to the trans- | the form of round robin letters. |be lighted inside with tiny lghts. # B Plans for the coming Soroptimist|Stancing beside the castle is the I | gressions and injustices which the! {whiteman has perpetrated against|{Ciub card party to be held in the | Queen’s throne and the orchestra | him. Here, within a government|Parish Hall of the Holy Trinity |stand. |founded upoi the principles of Li- | Church April 7 wers completed. It At 11 o'clock the grand march will [ berty, Justice, and Equality, where-|will te open to the public and there take place and will be followed by ;in all men are created equal, he has | will be several door prizes. Further the entrance of the Queen and her stolidly endeavored to endure undldmpls will be announced at a later'attendants, She will be crowned by |exist despite the exploitation tojdate |the Junior Class President Miss {which he has been constantly and It was also voted that at the club’s | Alic2 Jean Davis. After the “Queen’s irvlcntlessly subjected. next meeting on April 15 guests will |cake” has been cut refreshments will To those who reiterate that the|be Senior and Alumni gir: of the Ju- |be served and the dancing will cqn- | | tinue until 11:45 o'cloc GORWRY - 9’BRISCOLL - Armstrong SATURDAY MATINEE — 1:30 P. M. Added — "Lost Cily of ihe Jungle” nd, in a sensational climax, cracks the cace wide open. g i MRS. MARTHA BREDVIK 44 YEARS RESIDENT, | Mus. h itka left | g v s zen e neau High Scheol. TALK MONDAY ON JWC | iclis vie an Armerican for a e | ook e i o ihing| Euch member vas reminded that| bt ‘ pROGRAM OVER KINY months vacation to her home IOW“itherew, may T ask; is your obser- eV Thursday evening the Sor p‘:vfw MDIES’ AUXI[MRY i | [ in Norway. Mrs. Bredvik came to the |vation of humanity so distorted, | timist Club will assist in the m X- JOINT INSTALLATION TO BE FREIGET Refrigeration SERVICE to ALASKA Regular sailings from Seattle For COMrORT and SERVICE i United States in 1904 and two years ¢, plind that you may sincerely rdy survey now being held in the| 1 basendent. of the Methodist Church| nN::l:ilo‘:;. G e NIW. Maurice Powers, Scout Executive l‘]‘&i"l('fig‘tek;o;h‘;g;‘;":flmy [fl;‘g sss'ltelxe-\'c, and steadfastly mmm.:\ln,!:c| st K ey # WASHINGTON C nge a Forum of | n S n she met her fu- | that the Indian can, or will be ac-|between the hours of 7 and § o'clock., v ~nahj vm:,:“' Scout activities on the Juneau Wo- |ture hustand and they weie m‘u”edi(‘emed within the social and in-| M - g TONIG“I AT 8 0 (I.OCK‘ and Tacoma, W“Shmglon Managing Habit! men’s Club program neéxt ' Monday|in 1910. Mr. Bredvik was the oWner|qystrial circles of your community? | 4 | The Veterans of ¥oreizn Wars and | Director night at 7 o'clock. Mrs. Edward P. of the Sitka Mercantile Store until | yy)| you deny that he is the ncum‘ElDER HENDERSHOT |the Ladies Auxiliary to the VFW| For Bales and Information ALASKANS FEEL AT HOME | Chester, Jr,, Club President, will in- his death in 1945, Mrs. Bredvik stab- |o¢ aiscrimination, or that' he shall [ will hola a joint ivstallation of 1048 at troduce the program. This is a|ed that this is the first time she has ever pe allowed to forget that he |officers tonight at 8 o'clock in the | CONSULT broadcast which is part of a s of teen back to her native land since |y o member of the “one class of | E ADDRESS | post club rcoms on Seward Street.| 15-minute community center pro- she came to America. lour citizens” as you referred to him ms under the direction of Mrs.| Mrs. Bredvik is the mouner of five in your ediforial? Elton Engsirom, club publicity chair- |children, three boys and two girls.| 1, the second paragraph you sta- |Four of the children live in Seattl2|teq that the stubborn insistence of HERE SAT. EVENING Tth-Day All members of both organizations are urged to attend this ceremony./ After the installation cemmuny‘ there will be a social in the club’ Alaska Transportation Company GASTINEAU HOTEL P. 0. Box 61—Phnne 879 o man. JOHN DOOLINS LEAVE D - |and one son lives with her in Sitka | ¢ ad won them The Adventist Church [room, The installation ceremony is FOR MERCER ISLAND ATTENTION MOOS |and will mansgethe store during | .::,‘:l?fo,,c,l“,‘.fls,d;m i Soutn. | invites the public to a meeting in the |cnly for the members of both or- Juneau, Alaska Mr. and Mrs. John Doolin left Members of Loyal Order of her absence. She will visit with the'costern Alaska cities who would church on Second and Main at 8|ganizations. yesterday for Mercer Island, near | Mocse and Women of the Moose. children in Seattle until April 20|pqco penefited from such an in- Pan. Saturday April 3 { x ST i S Seattle, where they will visit MrS.| There will be a wedding held When she will board a plane for|gystry can you reveal any instanct This occasion is the visit of the guest speaker Elder Vernon E. Hen- | Sat., New York. On May 5 she will again |y which the Indians have derived board the PAA plane for !:‘.ngland“my cembance of affection or con- and will arrive in Oslo, NOrway, gideation from the whiteman in Genuine Levi's, now available at|May - _ goneral? Perhaps the sorrowful Casler’s. 840 t¢| She will visit her family in Lister|pygny of the Navaho people is a <= . |and Oslo and for the first time meet | ;ining example of this love {her husband’s family. | which you refer Mrs. Bredvik has been planning| this trip for a year and today she| !was thrilled and happy to be going home for that long planned visit. Pan American had some difficulty in getting the confirmation of her |reservations in Europe but all was | |cleared a few days ago and Mrs. Bredvik is on her way. Pan American presented Mrs. Bredvik with a beautiful corsage of white carnations and the personnel were all smiles when the little old lady graciously thanked them for |their assistance in arranging the 6,- 500 mile journey by air. B R i ONE-TIME DANCE HALL GIRL FROM | * DAWSON MARRIED VANCOUVER, Wash., April 2— during the Masquerade Ball, April 3. Members invited. 851 3t o — — Doolin’s mother, Mrs. Carol Swan- son, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kear- . Jr. Doolin is employed by Pan American in -:aeau and plans to be gone for severai weeks. dershot of Walla Walla, Wash. He| has traveled in many lands and for | 20 years was a mission educator in| Eritish Malaya. From 1938-1940 he| was a Senior Air Raid Warden in| |the ecity of Singapore. He knows| from experience the terrible destruc-! I do not wonder that the Alaska tion that can be wrought Ly the| Native Brotherhood has elected | enemies’ bombs. | members of their kind to the Hous¢' Elder Handershot was for qui lof Territorial Representatives, for|years mission director in Sarawak, | regrettable as it may be, ingralious|Borneo. He has traveled extensively as they may seem, can you blamein the Dutch East Indies and Suum,-l |them for declining to appreciate em Asia and is considered an au-| |the type of affection and tender-thority on Malaya language and cul- | | ness which the whitemem would 50 ture, He is the author of three au-| lavishlly bestow upon them? ! thoritative books on the Malayul Now, despite the 1acu that the language. admission must reveal my shame,| During the war just passed he was it may astound you to learn that head of the Indonesian Division "!f whiteman, who many years|the office of War Information inj of thel San Francisco, and was in charge| pulp mills to the Puget Sound area, of all government broadcasts to Mpl-! 1 shall refrain from extensive elu-|aya and the East Indies. Durmg| cidation upon the subject and con- |these years he was also official lec~ cede that this industry @id, and |turer for the Office of War Infor- | yet does, employ some few hundred mation. He is still closely -|ssociatedE of wage slaves, who, no doubt, have |With the State Department | accumulated vast and COMING TO JUNEAU FRIDAY EVENING APRIL 16, 1948 Plumbing © Heafing Oil Burners Telephone-319 Nights-Red 730 ' Harri Machine Shop, Inc. I am a |ago witnessed the coming NORTHLAND SAILINGS FROM SEATTLE for Ketehikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau, Haines, Skagway and Sitka) . 8. 8. ALASKA THURSDAYS, APRIL 8 and 22 HENRY GREEN — AGENT 9 Canada’s substantial | Elder Hendershot is the Dean of] 4 o “ wealth from their weary labors. | Theology at the Walla Walla College Fflre"“)st Fem‘ ' However, often have I wondered | of Seventh-Day Adventist. | what has become of my many child-| Preceding the guest speaker’s talk | | /P—Kate Rockwell Matson is a bride today. Obviously happy, the one-time dance hall girl from Dawson City exchanged marriage vows yesterday with W. L. Van Duren, 71, in the courthouse chambers of Justice Fred O. Bowman. It was the [ SRR UISEE SR S L NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION CD.. S15s Sorenssty ird venture into mat- |Portland Police Chief James Flem- ing and Mrs. Fleming, long-time friends of the bride, and attended by (. J. EHRENDREICH hood friends of the Squaxin tribe there will be music starting at 7:30 = el and the many other Indians who o'clock. f | Cflncert P'“".st dwelt happily in that land of their| rightful heritage—those who de-| pended upon the fishing, clam dig- ging, and oyster culture for their| humble but contented existence | ‘Why were their homes, abandoned | and sacrificed to the elements, why! did we see the skeletons of their How long may a nation dedicated to Christianity, Faith, and Unity of endure within an atmosphere brotherly love toward tlieir fellow the! R - | HOOKUP TONIGHTT0 | DEDICATE KFRBNOW | "OPENING, FAIRBANKS Angther miiestone in Alaska com-| mercial radio broadcasting will be! broadcasting schedule today. ] William J. Wagner, owner-mana-| ger has arranged for a temporary various points together. The com-| JOAN rimony for Kate, now 68. boats lying forlornly upon Bader Accounting Service Van Duren, a Bend accountant,|beaches where a death shroud of |achieved tonight when points in the| B Wnie's liqu‘)l’ S'OW . !said he had waited a long time for |decaying fish netting veiled their|confinental United States and Alas-| 1 RUTH BADER her—had fallen in love with her 18|naked ribs, and waved in feeble Ka will be linked for a program com-| nkli ssing ind?| g ne f a new So. Accounting—Tax Reports years before. mockery to the passing wind wme_moxaung the opening o Frisfe 192180 Ge 2 7 se:"f_“-h,l o The Chamter of Commerce held |Surely it could not have been due Fairbanks station, KFRB. This new, P. O. Box 259 a reception for the couple after the |to excessive polution of those boun- ' Alaska Broadcasting Company out- 3 Valentine Blag, Telophane 019 ceremony which was witnessed by |tiful and beautiful waters. ilet In the interior city began its : rngln In('ZthOLE almost all the workers in the court-|class distinction, color discrimi a-{n;uwork so that various polrnux;s of | i Electrical Contractor Certified Public Accountant house offices, tion, money-power, and greed, when the program will emanate from A h 20 h c Th ‘ Fouse Wiring st dideallacom sk oy Jeft nere for a trip to south-|shall the Indian. the Negro. and|Washington, D, C, Seattle, Wash. | ppearmg at the 20t enhl!'y eaire TY TELEPHONE RED 481 ern Oregon and will live at Bend. all those impoverished gain [ree-jand Ketchikan, Juneau, Anchorage, = OUR SPECIAL ——————— — dom from the shackles' of oppres-|and Fairbanks. North of Seattle the Box 2135 Biack 379 RAINBOW GIRLS ARE Sion, enabling them to cherish with- | facilities of the Alaska Communica- | in their hearts a sincere and|tions System will be used to tie the| AuspiCES' GEOBGE Bnos. H' s GRA l ES 'o MEH SA"IRDAY men” plete program will be heard on KINY | . ' il " The Cothing Yan , . o AR o JUNEAU CONCERT ASSOCIATION Widest Selection of C 2 Raiubow Girls will have a regular Sitka, Alaska|10:30 thls evening. | uQU“Rs HOME OF meeting Saturday afternoon at 2 B i | ———.e————— | FLORSHEIM SHOES o'clock in the Scottish Rite Temple. FROM CORDOVA 4 REBEKAH DRILL TEAM | PHONE 399 All members are requested to be in| Mrs. C. A. Ovaft of Cordova is| Party at Mrs. Ed Shaffer's Fri- attendance, staying at the Baranof Hotel ) day “night 851 1t