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- ., WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1948 SHOWPLALF or ICAPITUL I Henry Fonda - BARBARA BEL GEDDES Broadway’s Brilliant Young Star in Her Screen Debut Vincent PRICE Ann DVORAK e PLUS * “BORDER WITHOUT BAYONETS” ; PETE SMITH LATE NEWS FEATURE AT 7:50 — 10:10 LT SIXTY-SIX DEPART f ,to Pelican: Marie McCaddon, James Paddock, Gitson Young, John Olaf- BY ALASKA COASTAL 7,7 pnd B o | | To Skagway: Mrs. Eide, G. Funnel and R. C. Funnel and Agnes and Charles Milton; to Haines: Tom Morgan and wife; to Rodman Bay: Sixty-six poosous ieit and 46 ar- rived with Alaska Coastal flights vesterday as follows: ‘ . . | O. Colby and wife and W. H. Smith. From Sitka: L. by, an- | " 1,53, Colby, Paul Ran-| " " poursion Inlet: 8. Wilson, dell and wife, Joe Eisenstien and! i o " wife, R. C. Funnel and George Clark; | betet Johnson, wife and children, wife and child s < 4 | Frank McKinley, from Lake Florence: ice and C.| 4 xRigeiandis {and M. R. Moore; to Hoonah: Pat Rice: . s Daniels, Mrs. L. Kane and Mrs. Ras- From Haines: J. S. Hoffman, L., . g Shéllon, Corrine Sheldon and Dr,|Mussell; to Ketchikan: Ernle White- Albrecht | head and Frank Metcalf; to Peters- From Skagway: V. Beaumont, A,‘;t‘“‘"gi RE“ _"““y"' H. Goddard and wife and Dr. C. L. | A 5 Polley. i SIX FROM SOUTH BEND From Pelican: Don Milnes and Eertha Raatikainen, Olatf Winther, Indiana, are and Bruno Linquist; from Hoonah: | Baranof Hotel. R. Clifton, William Dick, Mrs. Larry | Taylor, Emil Johnson, George Har- Lee, Jessie McKinley and James | rison, Robert B. Acker, Dr. L. L. Austin; from Tenakee: R. F. Gil- Frank and Louis Frank more; from Hood Bay: D. W. Alex- | - ander; from Taku Lodge: Jim Rus- | HERE FROM CANADA tad and H. J. Moore. Visiting here from Prince Ru- To Bitka: The Sitka baseball c]ub‘j pert, Mrs. IM. Richards is regis- Orden Phillips and Mrs. F. Bigley; | tered at the Baranof Hotel. registered at the They are John L. P C. J. EHRENDREICH — C. P. A. BUSINESS COUNSELLOR Accounting Systems Taxes Phone 351 Room 3—Shattuck Bldg. NORTHLAND SAILINGS FROM SEATTLE for Ketchikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Junesu, Haines, Skagway and Sitks) S. S. ALASKA — THURSDAYS, JULY 15 and 29 UP-TOWN TICKET OFFICE < (Ground Floor—Olympic Hotel Bldg.) 417 University Street—Seattle, Wash. HENRY GREEN — AGENT Six visitors from South Bend, IS FEATURE BILL AT CAPITOL THEATRE Offering one of the most unusual love stories to have been filmed in many years, “The Long Night,” a Hakim-Litvak production, stars Henry Fonda, Barbara Bel Geddes, Vincent Price and Ann Dvorak. Many months in production, this tensely dramatic motion picture in- troduces to film audiences the Broadway acting sensation, Barbara Bel Geddes. This feature opens at th Capitol Theatre tonight. Photographed against a back- ground of a town of the Pennsyl- |vania-Ohio steel area, “The Long Night,” an RKO Radio release, com- bines tender romance and keen suspense with turbulent realism. Henry Fondia portrays a steel worker who falls in love with a beautiful young girl, only to find and baffling influence upon her. This rival is played by Vincent Price, and he is somewhat reminis- cent of the classic Svengali char- acter. Ann Dvorak interprets Price’s shapely vaudeville assistant who is consistently unlucky in love. The story is told mostly in re- trospect, ty the mental images of Fonda while he is seen barricaded in his third floor room undergoing a spectacular police siege. (FORMER JUNEAU MAN PROMOTED, BARGE LINE J. E. Kearney, former man, has been promoted to Seattle has been announced by T. A. Thronston, traffic manager of the a common carrier. Kearney has been serving as booking agent for Alaska Freight Express since the concern instituted ;service from Puget Sound to Seward ilast Dcember. Born in Juneau, Kearney is the son of John E. Kearney, wellknown Juneau ship- | ping executive, and was graduated Seattle since 1937, he has been with both Alaskan and Hawaiian shippings firms. From 1942 to 1945, he served in the merchant marine on Alaska and Pacific runs. He was on the Liber- ty ship Mary E. Kinney in the first merchant convoy to enter the Phil- ippines on D-plus-2 while liberation battles were in progress. Kearney and his wife reside at 2417 41st N., in Seattle, with their children Carolyn, 6, and Michael, 20 months. e — SITKA VISITORS Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ruddell and Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Eisenstein of Sitka are registered at the Baranof Hotel. Juneau | agent for Alaska Freight Express, it| barge line serving the Territory as| LINEUPS FOR BiG GAME SELECTED BY CHICAGO. July 7P Start- ing lineups, chosen by fans in a ! three-week poll for the All-Star baseball game in St. Louis next Tuesday, includes players from six National and five American league clubs. A record of 4,107,893 fans return- ed their selections during the bal- | loting which ended midnight Mon- | day. The poll, conducted by The Chicago Tribune and 452 other | newspapers and radfo stations, showed Ted Williams of the Bos- |ton Red Sox as the greatest in- | dividual vote-getter with a total {of 1556,784. | The lineup choices are for ev- rery position except pitcher. The | rival managers, Bucky Harris of the Yankees and Leo Durocher of that an older man has & strange|(he Brooklyn Dodgers, will name)game. |their own mound staffs. But the | pilots must use the fans’ lineups l‘lur at least the first three innings jof the game. | The two managers will also pick | Sacramento arose to smite Seattle, s el TOUR, CONVENTION {(he remainder of the 25-player squads. Here are the fans' lineups: | National League Pos. | Mize, New York 1b | Stanky, Bostdn 2h | Pafko, Chicago . 3 | Reese, Brooklyn s { Musial, St. Lquis .. 1 { Ashburn, Philgdelphia ef | Slaughter, St. {Louls rt Cooper, New ¥York ¢ American League Pos. i McQuinn, New York 1b Gordon, Cleveland 2b | Kell, Detroit 3b | Boudreau, Cleveland ss Williams, Bostoh i | Joe DiMaggio, New York .. cf Mullin, Detroit .. rf | Rosar, Philadelphia c | The voting included: . Centerfield — Ashburn, Philadel- | phia, 1112,787; Thomson, New | York, 1054,236; Jeffcoat, Chicago, 959,845. Richie Ashburn is second in the from high school in Juneau. INn National League batting averages| | this week, with 361, and leads in Ibase stealing with 21 thefts. | — - — 'CLEVELAND SIGNS i' UP NEGRO PLAYE CLEVELAND, July T7—®—The Cleveland Indians announce the signing of 39-year-old Leroy (Sat- Ithel) Paige, recognized as one of the “greats” in Negro baseball. | Tribe Manager Lou Boureau said | he would be in uniform tonight. e — HERE FROM. YAKUTAT | Mrs, Mark A. Graham and son are staying at the Baranof Hotel. ARE BUY and HOLD UNITED SAVINGS BONDS Your Deposits < — SAFE STATES HE management of this bank 1s pledged to conserva- tive operation. The safety addition the bank is & mem- ber of Federal Deposit In- surance Corporation, which insures each of our deposit- ors against loss to & maxi- mum of $5,000. POSITS IN_THIS BANK ARE INSURED THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE . B.B.FANSIN POllt SEALS HOLD GAME LEAD, P.C. LEAGUE; RAINIERS LOSE OUT By BILL BECKER Hugh's on second, and that's the big reason San Francisco again held a one-game lead today in the hot Coast League race. Hugh Luby, a San Francisco fix- I ture and one of the loop’s steadiest performers for a half-dozen sea- sons, came through with a two- run double last night to account for all the scoring in the Seals’ 2-0 win over Oakland. Luby's timely blow gave south- paw Cliff Melton the nod over Oak | righthander Charley Gassaway. Homer-king Jack Graham clouted another pair—Nos. 37 and 38—to pace San Diego’'s Padres to a 15-2 slaughter of Portland. It was the eighth time this season Gra- ham has hit two home runs in a (He smacked three once.) ! The Los Angeles Angels bowed, | 4-3, to Hollywood on Rugger Ardi- zola's five-hit pitching. In a comedy of errors, last-place | 12-9, seven miscues, the weird pastime. Seattle's Bill Ramsey bagged four Hits, includ- |ing three doubles. i The Rainiers contributed STANDING OF CLUBS National League Team: 5 kv L Pt | Boston .....n...... 43 30 583 {8t. Louis 38 32 542 Pittsburgh 31 32 536 New York .. 3 35 493 | Philadelphia 3% 38 486 Brooklyn 32 35 478 | cincinnati 33 39 458 Chicago 30 41 423 i ' American League { Team: W L Pet | Cleveland ... 42 26 618 + Philadelphia 4% 29 608 New York 41 30 STT Boston . 36 32 529 | Detroit .... 34 31 4N | Washington 32 39 451 ( St. Louis 26 42 382 i Chicago 23 44 343 Pacific Coast League | Team: W L Pet !san Francisco 56 40 , Oakland 57 43 570 "San Diego 55 43 561 jLos Angeles 54 44 551 | Seattle 47 46 505 Hollywood 4 52 458 | Portland 38 56 404 | { Sacramento 33 60 Channel League Team: W L Pet Moose - 2 818 Elks 1 6 538 1 Legion 6 6 500 { Douglas 2 10 167 SITKA BASEBALL TEAM | HOLDS DINNER PARTY | The 8itka baseball team, win- | ners of the Sitka-Juneau holiday, series here, were guests of hohor "nt a dinper party at the Salmon | Creek Country Club Monday. Attending were Mark Davis, Roc- key Gutierrez, Rodney Dangerfield, Frank Price, Carl H. Karpstein, Cecil C. McClain, R. E. Noah, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. McCracken, C. D. Shainer, Manager; Don McGraw, { Hugh Pace, Jim Calvin, Art Robi- son, Fred Easley and Gary Paxton, bat boy. — e FROM ANCHORAGE Among the Anchorage guests at the Baranof Hotel are Maj. T. T. Popovich, 57th Fighter Group; Lt. William King, Maj. 2. S. Kuey, 1st Lt. M. E. Brinegar. and S-Sgt. Gaylen D. Hall. B /ORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION (0. SERYING SOUTHIA AlasKa DIPIND You'll meet your friends when you travel the Alaska Line. Relax.. enjoy the magnificenr scenery and comfortable accommodations as you sail “outside’ THE FINEST FOOD Elegantly prepared and expertly served ro ~om- pletely satisfy your fancy. SAILINGS ARE FREQUENT Sailings EVERY SUNDAY for KETCHIKAN and SEATTLE S. S. BARANOF DUE SOUTH JULY 11 Sailings EVERY TUESDAY for CORDOYA. VALDEZ and SEWARD §. S. ALEUTIAN — JULY 13 ALASKA STEAMSHIP COMPANY Serving All Alaska ALRSKA_ FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASKA MEMBER PEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION OG8RI i S WA T A M BTGRP | W - S0 Sy W= A IS (e ROUTE OF THE RIRLINES N Juneau Fool Clinic Rm. 14, Shattuck Bldg. PHONE: BLUE 379 By Appeintment Only ' DELIGHTFUL FILM " 15 BEING SHOWN - AT20TH CENTURY In “Her Highness and the Bell- boy,” which is now showing at the 20th Century Theatre, Metro- Gold- ! wyn-Mayer has given us one ot the most delightful films of the season. It is an ingratiating blend of com- |edy, tantasy and human drama. “Her Highness and the Bellboy" !co-stars no less a trio than Hedy iLamarr, Robert Walker and June I Allyson. It is the heart-glowing story 4of a tellboy who accidentally meets, yand falls in love with, a princess, ,and through a series of highly hu- !morous circumstances imagines she is in love with him too. Miss Ally- ison, as Walker's bed-ridden girl friend, watches in silent agony as her own romance is shattered by the {royal “intruder.” 'WHITES BACK HOME (AFTER SIX WEEKS | Altert White and wlie, Mrs, Mar-| |garet E. White, Repuhligm National | Committeewoman from Alaska, re- ;turned home to Juneau on the Prin- cess Louise after an absence of six weeks in which they visited San Francisco, Los Angeles, New Orleans, |New York City and spent 10 days in Philadelphia. They returned west via the Canadian Rockies to Van- couver. White states that as far as ine Alaska opposition contest, headed by R. E. Robertson and Cash Cole lof Juneau and John Clawson of An- |chorage, was concerned, the National {Committee required only 10 minu- tes to dispose ot it and the same ‘;ume was occupied by the Credentials | committee in making a decision fa- vorable “to our delegation.” ! “The regular Republican Party of Alaska,” said White, “was composed of a delegation of Henry Benson, ot Juneau, J. C. Morris of Anchorage, {Mrs. Jane Dorsh ot Fairbanks, W. |W. Laws of Nome, Senator Gunnar !Engelbreath of ~Anchorage, Hal Johnson of Skagway, E. E. Engstrom ; h and Mrs, L. C. Gill, both of Juneau. {National Committeman, E. A. Ras-| muson and Mrs. White, were also in {attendance. All had the pleasure of inearly an hour's visit with Gov. {Thomas E. Dewey.” | Mrs. White was guest of honor at; | many social_functions including one |ty Mrs. Worthington Scranton, of {Scranton, Pa., at Strawberry Man- |sion; Joseph Pew, millionaire oil man, Carrol Reece, Chairman of the ‘Republican National Committee, |Senator Mason Owelett of Phila- |delphia and Gov. Warren of Cali- ifornia and others. Commenting on the Republican \convention, White said: “We are jgreatly pleased with the nominees; and I predict an overwhelming vic- ! {tory. Gov. Dewey will make the igreatest house cleaning in the Fed- ' ‘eral government the country has ever seen. | “I have been honored several times | in my life but the best was at Philadelphia, In 1944 I was con- nected with Dewey's preconvention campaign for his nomination at Chicago and again at Philadelphia I was in the preconvention headquar- ters with nine others, eight from New York State. I was the only out- sider. I consider this a great honor, a representative from Alaska chosen on the managers lineup. Herbert Brownell, Russell Sprague and Ed- ward Jackele were prominent in the | campaign work for Dewey. I have never seen such cooperation. Gov. Dewey made a big sweep in New York state and he will do the same in the government when elected. It is my opinion Dewey will make & great President and he and Gov. Warren will carry every state west of the Mississippi.” ———e> —— FROM SAN FRANCISCO Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Kenton of San Francisco are in Juneau, among the guests at the Baranof Hotel. Famous for and Sparkling Come as o Visit the Club ; for an EVENING of RELAXTAION and REFRESHMENT THE BOYS WILL PLAY YOUR “SPECIAL REQUEST” NUMBERS o OPEN ALL NIGHT '} FINAL WEEK of the PLA-MOR Hollywood TRIO Salmon Creek Country Club ) at the Fine Foods Entertainment You Are [OMENTURY ¢ on1eHT Complete Shows at 7:23 - 9:30 cviHer Highness Mand the Beliboy A ROYAL COMMAND TO LOJE! = PAGE THREE ¥ AR ) YQ\QY,WN &Nfi NL:(%Q“, MOTORSHIP YAKOBI Operating to Petersburg, Port Alexander and way pojnts. LEAVING JUNEAU EVERY TUESDAY MORNING MAIL, FREIGHT AND PASSENGER SERVICE Freight accepted at Northland Dock until Noon Monday One of the most scenic routes in Southeastern Alaska. For reserva- tions contact Captain on boat at Boat Harbor or leave message at Harbor Market, Phone No. 352 ... TRAVELLERS CHEQUES jJean be purchased from any Canadian Pacific Agent ycanbe cashed anvwhere in the United States or Canada You can buy Canadian Pacific Express Travellers Cheques in U. S. Currency, quickly, easi from any Cana- dian Pacific agent . . . if they are lost or stolen, before being countersigned, their full value will‘ be refunded. They can be used just like money—you don’t have to g0 to a bank to cash them. Any shop, restaurant, hotel, railway office will give you full value for them. No ex- change rate, Your signature is your identification. For full information see Mr. D. H. E. MacLean, Canadian Pacific agent, Juneau, Alaska. TRAVELLERS CHEQUES A GRAND OLD cANADIAN NAME - PRODUCED IN THE U.S.A. Under the Direct Supervisien of Our Expert Canadian CORBY'’S is o light, sociable blend. It is our sincere belief you'll enjoy its smooth, satisfy- ing mellowness. Next time ask for CORBY'S..a fine whiskey. 86 PROOF 3. BARCLAY & CO, LIMITED, n Neutral Spirits PEORIA, ILLINOIS