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THE DAILY ALASKA E.MPIRL JUNEAU ALASKA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1948 IT’S NOT THE ELECTION THAT'S ON EVERYBODY'S LIPS; IS “GREEN DOLPHIN ST.” THE MOST THRILLING SHOW JUNEAU HAS SEEN IN YEARS! LAST CALL' LEAVES TONITE! b AT LAST ITS THRILLS ARE ON THE SCREEN! FEATURE 7:24—10:07 " First Two Games WORLD SERIES You've heard it on the air. now SEE it on our screen! also MIAMI HURRICANE! —TOMORROW — “STORK BITES MAN” jmmmmm=..SCREAM IN THE DARK” IN FROM WESTWARD Robert Henning, e C o e e e vo 0o SUN RISE-SETS OCTOBER :3 e | hunting trip. He Sun rises at 7:28 am. ® ithe Juneau Hotel. Sun scts at ° | ——— - — e e o o d " Writes dry— you never need a blotter! 4 - Supmcfizwmz% “II'-VIII'IN." .. dries up to 3 times faster than ordinary inks! SUPER-PERMANINCE . . . || times more resistant to fading, on average, than U. S. Government standards require. * SUPER-BRILLIANCE. . . colors up to 60% more brilliant than other inks. 1357-€ PARKER QUINK The only ink containing SOLV-X «..cleans your pen as it writes! Prices: Quink 25¢ and 35¢, Superchrome 50¢ THE PARKER PEN COMPANY, Janesville, Wis,, U. S. A Atue 45 16 have died, 3 are wealthy, A! .ge 35 5 have died, 10 are wealthy, At a¢e 25 i b &..c 1ot LT llundxedmen Omfile oi life—healthy, |40 have moder- ate means, 35 have saved | nothing. resources, . « but the picture’s brighter today! ‘When the above figures were printed some years ago, there wasn’t much the average man could do to change this gloomy picture. Mo tried his level best to set money aside. And some- times he succeeded. But more often he failed. He put it off. He made excuses. He made New Year’s resolu- tions to save—and quietly broke them. ‘You can see above how he ended up. But, today, there is a system of saving that’s human. who, came in | from the Westward last week, is e |back in Juneau following a short is staying at WANT ADS BRING RESULTS! 10 areingood cir- | 65 are _self-sup- cumstances, orting, but l:mhout any 16 are no longer self -support- 5,000 PLAYERS IN 'DOLPHIN STREET" FISHERIES MEN TO DISCUSS JAPANESE Carol Bnce Young BAND CONCERT IN TEEP‘ IContralto, Is o Give NOW AT CAPITOL| FISHING PROBLEMS |Concert, Wednesday Setting a new record for spec- taculey film-making, M-G-M’s film- | ization of “Green Dolphin Street,” \now being shown at the Capitol | Theatre, reveals the following fig- ures: The picture required 145 sets. It was filmed on eleven of Metro's thirty sound stages on a total of 445,600 square feet of stage space. It's outdoor sets, including lo- cation site cleared in virgin wil- derness in Northern California and the huge Maori village and Channel Island seaport s built near the studio, totaled more than 200 acres in size. The number of persons appearing before the cameras totaled 5,000. These included the picture’s stars, Lana Turner, Van Heflin, Donna Reed and Richard Hart, and the featured players, Frank Morgan, Zdmund Gwenn, Dame May Whitty, Reginald Owen and Gladys Cooper. e F&WS OFFICIALS T0 ATTEND HEARINGS IN SEATTLE NEXT WEEK George Tielts, Supervisor of Fisheries for the Alaska Fish and wildlife Service will leave tomor- row to attend the Seattle hearings on the proposed regulations for the 1949 season. Clarence Rhode, Director of the Fish and Wildlife Service will leave on Saturday for Seattle. The meetings are. sche- duled for October 18 and 19. Rhode will bring back a Cessna airplane which will be used this winter for wolf and coyote con- trel in the Interior. The plane will be based at Anchorage and will be used to hunt down preda- tory animals this winter. Lhe Cessna is being transferred to the Alaska Fish and Wildlife Service by one of their agencies in the States, who will receive a Grumman in return. - SGT. RODENBERG SOUTH Sgt. Eddie Rodenburg, of the ACS, has flown south to Seattle via PAA to enter a Government eletype school. He will be absent several months. -—eo>—— SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — President Truman will make a campaign ad- dress here tonight. - Polls close at 7 pm — Vote! Japanese |being conducted in waters far be- Pacific fishery problems—and par- ticularly those arising out of Japan- ese efforts to extend their opera- tions once more throughout the whole of that sea—-will assemble the Pacific Fisheries Conference in San Francisco Octoter 21 and 22 The conference is composed of accradited delegates from organiza- tions of American f.shery produc+ [ including labor union pera- to associations and fis ves= sel owners groups. Its chairman is Captain Miller Freeman, Seattle, pullisker of Pacific Fisherman, who announced that the meeting would be attended by Dr. W. M. Chap- man, special assistant for lisheries in the Department of State; and Cengressman Thor Tolletson, chair- man of the House subcommittee on fisheries, and members of his com- mittee Assembling of the conference fol- lows by only a few days the an- pounceiment from Washington that the waters of the Trust Territories of the Pacific will be thrown open to the fishermen of all nations; and the disclosure in the press that fisheries operations are set for them by In Tokyo re- yond the limits General MacArthur. cently an officer of MacArthur's ieadquarters said: “Japan's pres- ent fleet of trawlers and tuna boats is greater in tonnage than that of prewar years.” Delegates are expected at the con- ference from the Territories of Ha- wali and Alaska and the three Pa- cific states. S e SALVATION ARMY ASKS SCANDINAVIANS TO SPECIAL SERVICES All Sandinavians are invited ‘to attend a Scandinavian evangelis- tic service Wednesday evening, 7:30 c'clock, at the Salvation Army Hall, Willoughby Avenue. Captain John Stava of Stavan- ger, Norway, now in charge of the Salvation Army work in Sitka, and who visited in Norway a year ago, will give the message of the meeting. ST. LOUIS — The Post-Dispatch announced today it favors the elec~ tion of Thomas E. Dewey as Presi- dent. A Gentleman's Whiskey- from Kentucky NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORP., NEW YORK o 5 Atue 55 20 have died, 1 very wealthy, 3 areingoodcir- cumstances, 46 are self-sup- porting, but without ing by 54 are d means, upon 30 i dqfilndent relnuves or charity forsup- port., nature-proof! That system .is At qe 65 36 have died, 1 very wealthy, 3 are wealthy, 6 self -sup) GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS At age 75 63 dead, of :;fimeéo’m no estate, 3 are wealthy, ort- ildren, relatives or charityforsup- ' have mfiaenz means to de- fray funeral buying U. S. Savings Bonds — automatically. It has worked for millions. It can work for you. Some get them through Payroll Savings—the Bond “installment-buying” plan. Others, through the Bond- A-Month Plan at their bank. Either way, you get $4 back at maturity for every $3 mvesta'd. You own the world’s safest investment. And you enjoy security for which many a man above would have given his right arm. How about signing up today? Automatic saving is sure saving—U. S. Savings Bonds This is an official U. S. Treasury advertis yment—prepared under auspices of Treasury Department and Advertising Council. Carol Brice, billiant young N contralto, will appear in cor t tomerrow evening at 8:30 o'clock in the 20th Century Theatre. Miss Brice is one of the most outstand- ing artists ever to appear in Ju- neau and sponsored by the Ju- neau Concert Association Olin Downes, music critic New York Times, wrote of Miss Brice: “Her voice is fresh and warm in all its registers, and t singer showed herself a musici of intelligence and taste was like the gor asly €o! band against the orchestral and choral sonox When Miss Brice appeare isoloist with the San Francisco 1 Symphony, the San Francisco New stated: “Not since the advent of Marian Anderson upon the loca musical scene has any contralto scored so sensational a this city as did Carol Brice when she made the first of three ap- pearances as guest artist with the iSan Francisco Symphony. And certainly no singer of any type has sung more magnificently, more superbly or, dmore thrillingly in our presence than Miss Brice last night.” Miss Brice and her brother, lJm.«l)mn who is her accompanist, are due to arrive in Juneau today — e {CANDIDATES SPEAK | ON ELECTION EVE A small but interested audience turned out on the eve of the Ielectlon to hear candidates give statements of policy at an open meeting called by the Juneau Pro- visional League of Voters Ilast of the Approximately 65 persons were on {hand to hear the candidates for the House and Senate. Delegate E. L. Bartlett and candidate Highway Engineer Frank Metcalf Presiding at the open forum were Mrs. Leslie Avrit and Mrs, Ernest Gruening. SR A FROM KETCHIKAN W. T. Stewart of Ketchikan registered at the Juneau Hotel. i torium. to you. R. 115 Front Street Club s committ Land organi. debut in ® of mus dia * ento a Persian Marke! wh to toe m Jomposer of night at the Grade School Audi- t for 'g office under No tedious “break-in” period is neces- sary for new Dodge owners. With Dodge you can drive at a brisk pace right from the start. Dodge actually “speed-proofs your engine . . . gives cylinder walls a protective oil-absorbing coating that guards against damage during the criti- cal “break-in” miles. This process is exclusive with Dodge at no extra cost AGER FLIRTS NOVEMBER NOW ' WITH DICK HAYMES UNDER REHEARAL AT 20TH CENTURY Carnival in stars sical, hich spC Leaded by concert will be rmances give purpose of augr fiinds 1ally to flirt with idol of millions of p the ch is now Bar- Dick - DIFFERENTIAL IS TO BE HIGHLIGHT OF NFFE MEET, WEDS. wipds and status quo of the for Federal Employees in the T ory will be the highlight of . the meeting of the National Fed- Federal Employees, which will be held on Wednesday noon in the Gold Room of the Hotel sperling will lead the dis- and reports‘on the action to date ¢ read. Dele- Bartl The . eration of cugsion taken gate Calliet 101 Ostrow, one" of meeting. s ever wr A P o be offered JENS SATRE DIES rt Song Overtu an - colorful “In a " Jens Satr Song” “RIff ong,” the beautiful n addition to his work wellknown Al away In Se Satre and his ing in Seattle pas years, left yesterday via Alrways for Seattle funeral <o " p.m. ntains Mr John Pan American to “In a ~ attend the In a Chinese Polls close at 7 Vote! differen- | will special " . PAGE FIVE IO ENTUR, ENDS TONIGHT Shaws at 7:20-9:30 BTARS! STHRS! STARS! AND Sohas o s/{(@, S TECHMICOLOR Starring DICK HAYMES VER-ELLEN CESAR ROMERO 5, CELESTE HOLM oirected by GREGORY RATOFF produced by WILLIAM A, BACHER PIUS— Comedy . . . Cartoon Air Express NEWS Cntury o Fiestal NGR'H‘II AND SATLINGS LT Steamers tied 'up at nsula is be- Public Survey the direction of Lyle Joi mes, Cadastral Engineer. 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