The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 13, 1949, Page 3

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SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 1949 EASILY — The Finest Deanna Durbin Picture In a Long Time! DEANNA EDMOND DURBIN - O'BRIEN EOR THE LOVE OF MARY £ with JEFFREY LYNN » DON TAYLOR FEATURE at 1:52 — 3:58 6:04 — 8:13 10:22 EXTRA!? Analyzing a great prob- lem we all must lick! TS 15 AMERICA P n AV IORAELD & _TIDMORROW FOR 1 HOUR AN 46 MINUTES YOU WILL THRILL TO ONE OF THE MOST POWERFUL MOTICN PICTURES OF OUR TIME! B e EVERYTHING HE SAW. .. HE WANTED— DOORS OPEN 1:30 Complete Shows 2:05 — 4:34 7:03 — 9:32 Feature Starts 2:47 — 5:16 7:45 — 10:14 | i EVERYTHING HE WANTED.. .. HE TOOK | MONEY...POWER | SPORTSCOPE— “Ladles in W IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII‘IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII BUDDY RICH WERE HIS GODS! c/ ucumm « ous HAYWARD o [YNN AN D HOUSE “PLUTO’S L GREENSTREH LATEST n Air Express G” AIR STEWARDESS CRASH HEROINE; 21 ESCAPE FIRE PORTLAND, Me., Aug. 13. ® A pretty and plucky stewardess was heroine of a Northeast Airliner crash from which 27 persons escap- ed safely last night. Miss Patricia Donnell2n, 23, of North Quincy, Mass., a rookie at her job, calmly herded the passen- gers out a rear door—a scant two minutes before the plane was en- veloped in flames on Portland Municipal Airport. The new $400,000 Convair—from New York and Boston—was a total loss. Capt. Roderick Cot, 40, of Mel- rose, Mass., the pilot, said the pro- pellers of the twin-engined plane accidentally reversed 15 or 20 feet above the runway “and we started to plop-straight down. “Then our landing gear collaps- ed and the sparks began to fly.” ILLINOIS VISITOR Mr. and Mrs. imland Doyle of Herniry, Illinols, are guests at the Baranof Hotel, | Prince George Sails At 11:30 for Skagway; 1 Passenger Disembarks Docking yesterday afternoon at 15:30 ¢'clock from Vancouver and sailing last night at 11:30 o'clock for Skagway, the T.S.S. Prince George had one passenger disem- was carried. The Prince George will dock at 7 o'clock Monday morning from Skagway and sail for Vancouver at 9:30 o'clock. Mas- ter of the cruiser is Capt. E. B. Caldwell with A. H. Robson, chiet purser. From Phillips. ‘Vancouver: Benjamin DAUGHTER FOR SCHROETERS A baby girl was born shortly af- ter midnight this morning to Mr. and Mrs. Walter Schroeter at St. Ann’s Hospital. The infant weigh- ed 8 pounds. The couple has one other child, a girl. Mr. Schroeter is employed at the U. S. Weather Bureau. Not responsible for any debts of The Scandinavian Hotel on or be- fore.Aug. 15, 1949. (71 3v) THOMAS R. SMYTH. barking. A full list of passengers; BPWC WILL HEAR STERLING SEARS be the speaker at the meeting of the Business and Professional Wo- men’s Club Monday noon on the Baranof Terrace, according to Mrs. Helen Ehrendreich, president. Guests of members are -welcome to attend the meeting. Final arrangements will be made Monday for ers of the Channel area in Septem- ber. The reception, an - annual | BPW event, has become a popular feature of ~the beginning of the school year and provides an op- portunity for teachers to meet the Juneau public. A special order of business Mon- day will be action by the club on the Executive Board’s plan to pre- sent Maxim Shapiro, pianist, ‘n concert during October. FISH LANDINGS Making the only landing this morning was the Dixon (Emil Sam- uelson) with 12,000 pounds of hhck cod. ATMONDAY MEET Sterling Sears, rew Superinten- dent of Juneau public Schools, will ’I‘IHE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA T0P CAST IN "RUTHLESS" AT CAPITOL THEATRE An intimate story of the private life of an unscrupulous industrialist who tries to-use some of his shady business tactics in affairs of the heart, will be revealed at the Capi- tol Theatre starting Sunday when Producing Artists' “Ruthless” be- gins an extended engagement. The stand-out cdst’is headed by six of Hollywood's brightest stars—2ach- ary Scott, Louis Hayward, Diana Lynn, Sydney Greenstreet, Lucill | Bremer and Martha Vickers. The supporting cast is headed by Dennis Hoey, Edith Barrett and Raymond . &air. HAS EVIL PERSONALITY “Ruthless” tells the story of a man, played by Zachary Scott, destined from childhood by per- sonality to make his way up in the world—with no thought of the price, either to himself or to those he uses, 8s he climbs the ladder to infamous success. Double-billing “Who’s Delin- quent?” and “For the Love of Mary” will end a two-day run to- night at the Capitol. 83 Carried on Alaska (o;slal (Friday Flights A total of 83 passengers were carried on Friday’'s flights by Alaska terport, 36 and 34 arriving. Outgoing passengers were: For Ketchikan: Cyril Zuboff. For Petersburg: L. Colby, Mrs. Eldar Lee and child, W. C. Arnold, Tony Schwamm. For Sitka: Leo Jackman, W. A. Williams, J. V. Driesffche, Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Jones and Jean, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Grimes, Mrs. Gerry Marsh, Bert Proctor, Byrdie McNeil, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Levin. For Tenakee: Albert Jones, L. H. Clark, Phil Carmichael. For Haines: Betty Tapley, Johnson, Ed Koenig. departing Elsa For Skagway: Grace Russo, L. W. Williams. For Taku: M. G. Marcus. For Tulsequah: Lee Lucas, Scorety, J. A. Brown. For Chatham: Dr. Philip Moore, Albert Petersen. For Todd: Mr. and Mrs. Ray- mond Antioquia, Marjory Ingalls. Outgoing passengers were: From Chatham: John Likeness, Albert Peterson, Tom Hjort, Grover Wilson, Marjory Ingalls. M. onovich, Ronald McEachern. From Taku Lodge: Mr. and Mrs. R. Doyal, M. G. Marcus. From Skagway: Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Undsworth, Willie Andrews. | From Haines: Richard Merrel, Harold E. Gallant. From Sitka: Maurice Powers, Tracy Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs, Brooks, Ruth Brooks, E. Marin, E. Kajander, Mrs. Olaf Peterson and | child, George Peterson, Janice Jor- | genson, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Grimes, | Mrs. Gerald Marsh. | From Tenakee: Maud Asp. From Petersburg: John Easley, Lowell Colby. ‘Garden Club Meets . Tuesday Afternoon The Juneau Garden Club will | meet at the home of Mrs. CIliff \Tisdale, 606 Ninth Street, Tuesday | afternoon at 1:30 with Mrs. Charles (w Carter as co-hostess. Mrs. Ww. J. Walker will present a talk Fall.” Coastal Airlines with 13 carried in- | From Tulsequah: George Stry-| nalka, Ray Evanson, Robert Radon-, on “Cleaning Up The Garden For; Only Two Flights Remain for British Woman Globe Circler HALIFAX, N. S, Aug. 13—®— A pretty British housewife neared | the end of a globe-circling flight| today after piloting her little plane | from Labrador to Greenland in de- fiance of Canadian air regulations. Mrs. Richarda Morrow-Tait, 26, made the 700-mile flig*® with heri navigator yesterday. Only two more | overwater hops—f{rom Greenland ‘o Iceland to Britain—stand in lhe" way of fulfilling her dream of be- ing the first woman to pilot a single engined plane around the world. Canadian = aviation authorities, who had forbidden the trans-Atlan- tic 1ilight as unsate for single- engined civillan planes, had ordered Mrs. Morrow-Tait to fly back to| Bangor, Me. She took off at 7 a. m. (EST) vesterday, ostensibly for Bangor, then changed course and landed six and one-half hours later ut Bluie West One, the U. S. air base| in Southern Greenland. Waiting in England for the world flier are her husband and two- | vear-old daughter. She saw thenv last on Aug. 18 1948, when she took | off on her eastward trip. Shé had hard luck most of the +way. Her little plane hit a ditch in Marseilles, France, and had en- gine trouble "at Calcutta, Indiu.‘ Last November the plane crashed | | troduced to American audiences. "T0 THE VICTOR” FILMED IN PARIS | AT 20TH CENTURY Warner Btos. again strike new dramatic. fields in their suspense- ful film, “To The Victor,” open- | ing tonight at the 20th Cenuu\w Theatre for the week-end run. | Director Delmer Daves headed al troupe of Warner stars direct from Burbank ' to Paris for exterior shots. Part of the excitement is filmed right on the Omaha beach- heaq in Normandy. This startling background provides an unusual setting for one of the screen's strongest dramas evér to te filmed. In addition to the thrilling story, Viveca Lindfors, Warner Bros. new continental find, is dlso in- Pacific Norlhern (arries 20 on Flights Yesterday Yesterday's flights of: Pacific Northern Airlines carried a total of 20 passengers with nine arriving and 11 departing. l From Anchorage passengers were: L. Minard, W. Matthews, Alec Didrickson, Charles Didrickson, Mr. Clancy, G. V. Oblisk, Mr. Malquist, near the Alaska Highway, 235 miles southeast of Fairbanks. She worked all winter as a wait- | ress and singer in a Fnirbanks} night club, borrowed another planei and resumed her trip this summer, | MOOSE DELEGATES LEAVE TODAY FOR | NATL. CONVENTION Enroute to San Francisco to at-| tend the national convention of| the Moose organizations August 14 to 18 are Grant Baldwin, Mrs, Ger- tie Berggren and Leonard Evans, according to Walter Hermanson, | Secretary of the Moose Club. y Grant Baldwin is delegate from the Legion of the Moose, Mrs. Berggren represents the Women of the Moose, and Mr. Evans, who leaves by Pan American today, rep- | resents the Moose Lodge. President Truman Plans Big Travel Schedule in Fufure WASHINGTON, Aug. 13—(®—- The widely. traveled man in the ‘White House is planning to outdo himself in the next few weeks. President Truman has scheduled four out of town speaking engage- ments, starting with a talk to the | Veterans of Foreign Wars at Miami, Fla, Aug. 22. | He will speak next to the Ameri- can Legion at Philadelphia, Aug. 29. Then he’ll do an “iron man’ stunt on Labor Day, Sept. 5. He iplans to speak at both Pittsburgh, | Pa.—at noon—and in Des Moines, Iowa, late in the afternoon. The President has traveled more {than 125,000 miles since he entered ! the White House April 12, 1945. | WORK AT MARINA SHOP i f | Work completed at the Marina Shop includes a valve grind and engine tuneup on the Sunmore (John Winther, jr), a new fresh water pump on Larry Fitzpatrick’s ‘Ruby, an engine tuneup on the Re- liance (Albert Greenwald), a gear | overhaul on Lt. Applegate’s Steel- vcran cruiser, a salt water bypass on the engine and new rocker arms and shafts on the Alsek owned by F. H. Erickson of Seattle. BLOCKS for e For Estimates on that New Basement, House or Fireplace—PHONE 416—Evenings We have enough PUMICE and CONCRETE EARL CRASS AND SON several houses |W. A Thompson D. B. Styles, Mrs. Brownell. To Cordova: H. Adams, C. Da- vis. To Anchorage: Neil Haun, Carl Stanton, J. P. Bauer, Joe Thomas, J. C. Groag, Jim Sorokzikoff, Mar-' ian Waterbury, George Waterbury, HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. Sadie Bagrsn was admitted to St. Ann's Hospital yesterday. Discharged from St. Ann's were Mrs. Arthur Walther and baby girl, Jesse Mundine, Jerry Moore, Clarence Beauchene, Mrs. Francis Sterling. Discharged from the Government Hospital were Frank Peters, Lols | and Merle Jack. FROM LOS ANGELES ! Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Unsworth of Los Angeles are at the Baranof. Matilda s coming. 2 3t FAIRBANKS le‘lIHORSI JUNEAU KETCHIKAN SEATTLE jhts in Swift, convenient flig! big 4-engine Clippers. You' enjoy .ury comfort, expert service — a8 & guest of Pan Americsn, wnrld'- most ex- 'ollenud airline. Ask for dotails and reservati BARANOF HOTEL Phone 106 PN Al{!mxfl _ Honto ATBWAYS of theTyng Cippers T . PROSTATE Gland Sufferers ARE YOU TROUBLED WITH Lame Back, Nerves Debility, Leg Paips, Kidney and Blad- der Troubles, Constipation, Despondency, . - Sleeplessness, Loss of Strength? ‘These are some of the allments assoclated with * Prostate ‘Trouhle. Many men suffer from these and other physical short- e reception for teach- | Alaska Coastal Alrfines enables you o ~through your local ticket agent—your omange passage 0 the States on Pam American, and then to any spot on the globel And for you who buy tickets In Shka, Hoonah, Tenakes, Skagwoy, Haines ond similar communities, ACA reserves a special block of seats 30 that its passengers share equal priority with thoss who by tickels in nmsu%t% Junsaul “- % % e CRIRYASS comings without knowing they are frequently caused by the Prostate Gland. No Drugs! No Operations! Free Consultation Don't miss this opportunity to talk over your troubles with Dr. Montgomery and get his personal advicé in your own case after a thorough examina- tion. CALL 477 for your appointment DR. JOHN M. MONTGOMERY, D.C. Main and Front Sts. Juneau, Alaska Qi =~ PAGE THREBR B LN TURY HERE'S a Picture that Captures Romance and Excitement on a scale so Glorious that it's hard to describe.. . . SEE IT FOR SURE! Youw’re Sure to Love 118 A New Kinp OF SCREEN EXCITEMERT FROM WARNER BROS. DENNIS ==:Z=VIVECA MORGAN - lINDFORS ‘TO THE VICTOR GOES THIS WOMAN!" ddate VICTOR FRANCEN- BRUCE BENNETT DOROTHV MkLONE ‘cinEcTED TOM.DANDREA - nELMER DAVES + JERRY WALD DOORS OPEN 7:00 -« SHOW STARTS 7:20 and 9:30 CARTOON LATE NEWS MATINEE SUNDAY DOORS Adults SHOW OPEN 50¢ STARTS 1:45 One Showing Only 2:15 SAVINGS INSURED TO $5000 STEADY HIS FIRST STEP wlTH o o 0 S | ‘ Your baby’s first word . . . and that first step . . . are important events. So is the first dollar thax goes into a child’s own savings account. We're proud to include in our large “family of savers™ many boys and girls who have had insured savings accounts almost from birth. Let savings grow with your youngster in an insured savings account here. . We have never paid LESS than 2%% on Savings ¥ Alaska Federal Savings & Loan Association OF JUNEAU 119 Seward Street Juneau, Alaska o SAVINGY INS D TO $5000

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