The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 16, 1949, Page 5

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THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1949 ENDS TONIGHT "SAXON CHABRM" ROBERT MONTGOMERY SUSAN HAYWARD Complete Shows 7:25—9:30 Feature 7:59—10:04 SHOWPLALE or Lfresread CAPITHL IT STARTS TOMORROW FOR FIVE BiIG DAYS The Most Amazin§ Western Ever Filmed! Tellmg the Thrilling Saturday Evening Post Story of the Famous CHISHOLM TRAIL Bumnc IN ITS ACTION- THUNDERING IN ITS DRAMA— STIRRING IN THE SWEEP OF ITS MAGNIFICENT PRODUCTION .. . YES-, N 25 YEARS ONLY THREE. "COVERED WAGON" "CIMARRON" and no HOWARD HAWKS' GREAT PRODUCTION ing bullets against flaming arrows as blood-mad savages riding the ring of death! The Feud Vengeance ding in the fury of a desperate fight to the finish! & % JOHN WAYNE MONTGOMERY CLIFT Walter Brennan—Joanne Dru in a role you'll never forget! “PART TIME PAL” (Metro Cartoon) Air Express News Complete Shows 7:05-9:34 Feature 7:23-9:52 was. the halibut landing from the Rainier skippered by Ed Skaret 200 small at 13, 600 mediums at 18, 100 large at 17, and 2,800 pounds ’ Split between the Alaska Coast Fisheries and Engstrom Brothers was the landing from the Nordby skippered by Nels Lee bought as TODAY'S LANDINGS OF FISH 34,900 POUNDS SAXON CHARM' AT ' CAPITOL THEATRE FOR LAST TIMES are Outstanding performances coupled with a humorous, moving story to give theatre-goers w | one of the year's genuinely enter- | taining pictures in Universal-Inter- | national's “The Saxon Charm,” |now at the Capitol Theatre. ward, John Payne and Audrey Tot. Wakeman s best-selling novel of v.he | same title. The story concerns al | mythical New York' theatrical pro- \mus‘r who is such a confirmed sgomaniac that he attempts to re- m.\k' to his own pattern every cerson with whom he has any deal- | ings. Eventually he is thwarted through the love and loyalty dis- played by the wife of a successful | novelist who wants to become a; | playwright and thus falls under the | producer’s wicked spell. I | One of the oldest, authentic ranch houses in Arizona was used | for exterior scenes in Howard Hawks' “Red River,” the spectacu- lar Western that was filmed in Elgin, Arizona, near the Mexican | torder. Built in 1860, the ranch house portrays perfectly the period in which the film is laid, both be-| fore and after the Civil War. | United Artists is releasing “Red River,” which co-stars John Wayne, Montgomery Clift, Walter Brennan and Joanne Dru. This feature! opens at the Capitol tomorrow for | a five day run. ALASKA COASTAL CARRIES 79 ON TRIPS YESTERDAY With 44 passengers leaving and 35 arriving, Alaska Coastal Airlines carried a total of 79 on flights| yesterday as follows: For Tenakee: H. Flaresco. For Ketchikan:* Mr. and Mrs.| L. O. Lukan, Emily ximpson. For Petersburg: J. H. Dupiante, | Major Eric Newbould, K. C. Alien. For Tulsequah: J. R. McKenna, | M. Ethier, T. Skomsal, E. Monahen, A. Ayles, A. D. Harding, A. Ander- | |son, A. C. Dahlquist, J. Dawson, | | 4. Curley, C. Watts, B. C. Ross, |, Oshway, Q. Brin, T. J. Ritchie, G. F. Webster, J. A. Phillips. For Pelican: C. McGrail, Mrs. Kimberly, Mrs. Johnson. For Hoonah: J. Daniels, Mrs. Ordonia. ! For Funter Bay: H. Hargraves.! For Haines: D. Peterson, S.! | J. E. Carter. | For Devil's Paw: George Toole, | R. Widrig. | For Twin Glacier Lake: G. Matt- | hews, Ralph Widrig, Fred Ayers,| | Fred Melberg. From Sitka: Mr. Grover, Dick | Avrit, Mrs. Ben Miller, H. 8. Hem- mingsen, Kay Ferney, James Fer- ney, M. C. McDonald, Rozert Reed. From Angoon: Annie Esmino, Linda Peterson, Dorothy Peterson. | From Tulsequah: R. Beay, J. Holowsky, Mr. Towllemiell, Alec | Benton, Bert McLean, D. Osborne, S. Lymchym, W. Gunther, C. Wil- liams, Annie Williams, Jimmy Wil- | Hams. From Hoonah: Amy Knudson,| | Mrs. Eliza Lawrence. From Pelican: James Kohl, Mrs. | follows: 2,000 pounds of small at of cod at 7.5 oents for la; i i Three boats made landings of |14 cents, 24,000 pounds of mediums |4 cents for small. A, z;l}]lllm;)i;; ;Z;zsx;stan, g 34,900, pounds of halibut and 9800 | &t 18 cents, 8,000 pounds of 1ar€ | Bought by (Engstrom brothers | From Petersburg: William Wood pounds of cod today with ‘prices at 17 cents. 3 jwas the halibut landing of 500! Paul Jackson . : the same as ymv.erday | Going to Alaska Caa«' anene&]emau at 12, 1,000 mediums at 18,| From w:-Angell: Chris Chris- ————— e e i s AT G 5C0 large at 17, and 7,000 pounds | tiansen. of cod going at 8 cents for large From Haines: Lynn Hollist, Ed and 4 cents for small from the|Koenig. Valiant skippered by Floyd Eper-| From Skagway: Oscar Selmer. son. Wi - s, JEANNE BUTTS HERE FROM COLLEGE; HAS GUEST FOR SUMMER Miss Jeanne Butts returned from the University of Washington on board the Baranof to spend the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Butts. Accompanying Miss Butts was Miss Joanne Callow of Olympia, Wash.,, who plans to spenid the summer in Juneau with the Butts family.w Both students will be juniors next fall. 2+ KAYSER Can Make Indiana’s state motto is “The | Crossroads of America.” I"CURLEY" CONOLES GETS 44-POUND SALMON LAST NIGHT ON ALASKA PLUG After several years of fisherman’s endeavor, B. C. (Curley) Conoles hit the jackpot last night in Bar- low Cove by catching a 44 pound, 42 inch salmon on an Alaska Plug. Fishing was done from A. R. Sea- ton’s boat, the Clippper. The Alas- ka Plug is manufactured by the Alaska Tackle Co., and is evailable at the Thomas Hardware and Quil- |ico's Sports Center. a Tree — full of such beautiful | briefs and panties! G, M. V. BEA JUNE 29: And what a crop of smart : looking underthings they are. In. lovely blossom colors. Hoonah, JUNE 22: Hoonah, b Tenakee, 8w nOSIERY ° GLOVES ». U,Nl’l.lflllg, Crerrr e Sailing Schedule CHCOMBER J. W. McKINLEY Tenakee, Chatham, - Angoon, Sitka. Gustavus, Pelican, Angoon, Hood Bay, b Saook Bay. Loads Every Wednesday at Juneau City Dock | after arrival of weekly ship from Suttle THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE fast- | | Robert Montgomery, Susan Hay-| ?fcr are co-starred in this fascinat- s H‘{., screen adaptation of Frederic| | schools at Mt. Edgecumbe, |T. pickell, W. McRae, J. Komar,y iJohmon, H. Hoffner, R. E. Boyd,} JUNEAU, ALASKA C(CNDITIONS GOOD IN CHAIN VILLAGES | REPORTS EDU(MOR Summer programs at Alaska Na- | tive Service villages in the West- {ward are in full swing, Martin N 18 Holm, supervisor of education, ANS, reports follewing his return | from an eleven-day supervisory trip on the Aleutian Chain. i Holm flew to Cold Bay, traveled y mail boat to King Cove, Belkot- Akutan, Unalaska, Nikolski, and flew back to Juneau by plane from Unalaska | He reports finding conditions at | ANS stations very satisfactory, with | ‘\ulu.u\ busy working at the can- | neries and the Pribilof Islands. ‘T(.\(I\(‘I\ and other personnel are active in summer programs, with ‘Al\s leadership and development ot ' scheol and community programs in | full operation | These programs were particularly | cutstanding at Akutan, Holm re-| l1:nrls, citing the construction of a! Pelton wheel on a hillside creek | to power a generator for home and | street lighting. New streets have been built and water piped to the village. In addition to a full class- : . rcom schedule, Mr.%and Mrs. Pen-! tacost, teacher and special assist- ant, serve as year-around ndvlsnrs' in the village, encouraging lesder-' ship through the school program and their community work. They also care for the school dispen- sary, operate the radio, report on welfare needs and do many other things required in isolated com-| munities. Mr. and Mrs. Dieringer ai Nikol- ski had just completed their stan- dard school year of 180 days and | were giving full time to community work and building maintenance. The King Cove teacher was assist- ing that community with plans for incorporation as a second-class town. These pregrams are lyplcal of the activities in other ANS com- munity schools. | Mr. Holm was able (o inspect supplies arriving for the coming year, and especially those delivered | by the North Star. Of particular interest is that approximately 60 cases of United States Department of . Agriculture surplus commodmesI and war surplus foods were being delivered for each school for the ANS nutrition program. They are being distributed to all Alaska ANS; schools totaling 140 day school} room-units, and the boarding ‘White Mountain and Wrangell. r. Holm’s observations, as well as reports from over 80 ANS schools hroufhout the Territory, indicate | that the school lunch is one of the most important activities of the ANS program. Results show not only improved health for school children but better food habits and a wiser spending of food bud- gets by the mothers. A well-nour- ished child is a healthy child— nnd a better pupil. The school nutrition program be- comes a community program as mothers volunteer their services in, helping in the preparation and serving of the daily meal. School girls learn the essentials of food preparttion, bread baking, getting practical home economics exper- ience. GENERAL STEESE | 10 REVISIT ALASKA On his fiist visit in a number‘ of years to the Territory he helped ! develop, Gen. James G. Steese will! sail from Seattle June 22. Gen. Steese was President of the Alaska Road Commission |named for, him. Going directly to the Westward, | Gen. John R. Noyes, Alaska Road Com- missioner, and together they will g0 over some of Alaska's roads be- fore coming to Juneau. The general will be here, south- kcund, early in July. FROM HAINES Ed Koenig of Haines is a guest at the Gastineau, ! finding board to arbitrate the 47- from ¢ {1620 to 1927, and the Steese High-|: way from' Fairbanks to Circle is|: Steese will be met by Col.|* IN"ROAD T0 RID' AT 20TH CENTURY ARE THREE STARS Those hilarious Bing Crosby and Bob Hope, have again hit the road for Paramount, and their ‘latest excursion is the prize picnic of their many riotous adventures. The new Bing and Eob laugh, “Road to Rio,” is at the 20th Century Theatre with luscious | Dorothy Lamour again with the daffy duo and again pro- viding the most qiverting detour inu their whacky wanderings. Further embellishing this comedy hit are the Andrews Sisters and | the Wiere Brothers, the former adding to the film's melodic mo- ments and the zany male trio to| its madness. Then, too, there are| four brand new song hits. Crosby solos on “But Beautiful,” teams up with Hope on “Apalachi- cola, Fla,” rounds out a quartet with the Andrews Sisters swinging | “You Don't Have to Know the Lan- guage,” then turns over the vocal cheres to Miss Lamour who goes| it alone with the novelty number, » “Experience.” Down on their luck, clarinetist | Crosby and trumpet player Hope hit the “Road to Rio” when one of their crazy money-making schemes wrecks a carnival. They stow away on a luxury liner bound for the land of coffee, romance and | the samba. There they run into| Dotothy Lamour, prevent her sui-| cide and become involved in {trange doings of her aunt, who is| obviously up to no good. Before | the film runs its cemic course there's an awiul lot of laughter in Brazil. | ISTRIKE IN HAWAII | NARROWING DOWN HONOLULU, June gap between Hawail 16—{P—The | waterfront lator and management has nar- rcwed in the past 24 hours. First, Governor Ingram M. Stainback namped a five man fact- day-old strike. The employers ac- cepted the Governor’s action, Then today, the union said it would end the strike immediately if;the em- ployers would agree to accept reccmmendations of the board. However, the union proposal would be the same as arbitration—| a move the employers have resisted | since the strike started May 1. | The union offer has two other stipulations. It proposed that allI union employeés return to work | without discrimination at 1 o'clock | this afternoon. And it .buggested‘ that the fact finding be carried | cut, “judicially in public hearings.” CLARK TU SEATTLE Superintendent of Schools Edwin C. Clark left for Seattle yester- day by PAA to spend two weeks | stateside. The state flower of Kansas the sunflower. is AUDITOR CHECKS UP, SWITCHES TO CALVERT Francis H. Dowd* compared brands. “Calvert Reserve always makes a milder, befter-tasting drink.” *of Durham, Conn. CALVERT RESERVE Blended Whiskey ! ~86.8 Proof—65% Grain Neutral Spirits. Ol! vert Distillers Corp., New York City < et ~ ARE SAVINGS BONDS THE management of this bank is pledged to conserva- tive operation. The safety of depositors’ funds is our primary consideration. In addition the bank is a mem- ber of Federal Deposit Insur- ance Corporation, which in- sures each of our depositors against loss to a maximum of $5,000. MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT Your Deposits BUY and HOLD UNITED STATES FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASKA SAFE DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED highwaymen, | | b ¥ | trave- co-starred | § ! the | i INSURANCE CORPORATION ™ PAGE FIVE CENTURY DOORS OPEN at 7:00 TONITE FRIDAY SHOW STARTS 7:20 and 9:30 and Take a Good-Will Tour {o Sunny Rio .. . With America’s Favorite Trio! of Latins from SONDERGAARD FAVLEN e A AN COMEDY Imagine Bing and Beb as a couple eement our good neighbor pelicy . . . til they meet Lamour . . . @ nice gir! from a bad neighborhood! JOE HcDOM!ES rtland . . . out te Produced by DANEL DARE Directed by Problem... What does Dad want? It must be something real nice — and still fit our budget. WHY PERCY'S — of course! Ican find every- thing Dad wants in PER- CY'S large Father's Day Gift Selections. Dad’s Happy . . . Father’s Day Gifls at PERCY’S

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