The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 5, 1949, Page 5

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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, SHOWPLALE oF . STAMEYROEES bt .l:;;: “;x:.::;l:y"b'vl Iy mmo:| - THOEREN Director of Photogr “‘. WAL Producedby JERRY BRESLER - Dire Complete Shows 7:20— 1949 urnea, Ernst OBERT " A.S.C y MICHAELGORDON 0 * Feature 7:556—10:05 PATHE ) Defense Chiefs Go to Sea WARNER ) NEWS ) Davis Jailed Leaders of Episcopal Church Meet in Paris Tomorrow! THE WORLD-RENOWNED STAGE PLAY... UNFORGETTABLY ON THE SCREEN! CoLUNBIA PICTURES THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA | STARRED IN FILM, ~ NEED OF BETTER IN FEATURE NOW | BRAND NEW FIRST-RUN HIT! e starring PAULETTE GO0DARD Wilam Bishop Jobn Ieland Oscar Homolka * anonenicx GAWFORD {Scnw Play by Philip Yordan and Arthur Laurents - Based upon the play, “Anna Lucasta”, by Philip Yordan A SECURITY PICTURES PRODUCTION - Dicected by IRVING RAPPER - Produced by PHILIP YORDAN DOUGLAS NEWS PUSICH RE-ELECTEv MAYOR Mike Pusich was re-elected May- or of Douglas in yesterday’s mu-, nicipal election. Out of 80 votes! cast, the Mayor who ran unopposed, | received 79, votes. There were no. names written in whatsoever, show- ing the communities faith in their | present administration. This is' Mayor Mike’s third term to that' office, and he previously was Fire Chief for a great number of years. Of the four candidates running | for the three offices on the City | Couneil, Wm. Dore, operator of the Channel Bus Lines, received the| highest number of votes, 69. Rex A.| Hermann was re-elected to the; Council with 66 votes and Milford | Marshall was elected to the Coun-| cil with 64 votes. E. Guerin receiv- ed 26 votes. New Councilman Dore is a veter- an who purchased a run-down bus Company, and in the past several years has purchased all new buses and equipment operating on tne | Douglas and Glacier Highway. He| has also erected new garage build- ings and is a young Progressive. He has two. children. i Rex Hermann, incumbent council- | man, has just completed a three year term on the Council, and has demonstrated his ability. He is on the staft of Felix Toner,! surveyor and assessor. He has three boys in this family. Milford Marshall is a veteran,; with this his first entry into any politics. He has two children and, recently purchased his home here., thereby being again elected to the Independent School District, Board of Directors, for a five year term. Ordinance No. 25, giving a 20 year franchise to the Juneau Doug- |las Telephone Co., passed with 60 votes in favor and 8 against. Judges sitting at yesterday’s elec- tion were John G. Johnson, John Mills and August Aalto. Clerks were Mrs. Glenn Franklin and Mrs. J. B. Carlyle. Only 80 votes were cast where 152 votes were cast in last year's Territorial election, showing only about half of the eligible voters turned out to par- ticipate. MRS. PUTNAM VISI™S Mrs. R. J. Putnam arrived on the Baranof from the states to visit her son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Estes. Mrs, Putnam visited the family here last year for several months and will again stay indef- initely. Her home is at Canby, Oregon. RETURNS HOME William Devon came home last Monday afternoon from a summer’s job with the road construction con- tractors out of Fairbanks. Ac- companied here by a friend with whom he worked during the sum- mer, they have taken an apartment in the Baroumes. REV. PORTER ARRIVES Douglas has a resident fuli-time minister with the arrival of the Rev. J. P. Porter on the Baranof. }This is the first resident minister to be established in Douglas since the years previous to the fire of 1937. He is taking over the pastor- ate of the Douglas Community He is with the Alaska Electric Light and Power Company. For School Board member, Wm. Hixson, highway resident, ran un-| opposed and received 79 votes in! the City and six Highway votes, Methodist Church, coming here from Brevard College at Brevard, N. C. A parsonage has been made ready for the minister and his wife, Alice, and 3% year. old daughter Barbara Ann, with the purchase re- Your Deposits ARE BUY and HOLD UNITED SAFE STATES SAVINGS BONDS TBE 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 2 maximum of $5,000. one DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASKA MEMBER FED®RAL DEFOSIT InSURANCE CORPORATION ‘cenuy of the former Grant home by the Board of Misisons. Honoring the minister and his family, a reception is to be held at the Church Friday evening, be- ginning at 7:30 o'clock, at which time everyone is invited to meet the family. During the evening both slides and movies of interest to Douglas people will be shown. Rev. Porter’s first sermon will be next Sunday with the program to be an- nounced later. R. E. (BOb) SCOTT DIES OF PNEUMONiIA Word has eea received here of | the death last month at Salem, Oregon, R. E. (Bob) Scott, of ! pneumonia “Scotty,” as he was popularly known, was a well known barber here, and for a time also owned and fished the troller Minnie W. half of most crude oil refinery emerges @os Nearly entering a | gasoline. " HOSPITAL NOTES Randy Akagi, James Herbert ant Gus Nielsen were admitted to St. Ann’s hospital yesterday. Mrs. Kenneth Millard, Arthur Hackwood, Mrs. Oscar Olsen and Laby boy and Carroll Mayedo were discharged from St. Ann’s. t Annie Klaney of Klukwan, Mur- ray Clayton of Haines, Sally Lay- ton of Juneau and Mrs. Johnny Albert of Angoon were admitted to the Government hospital resterday. ATTENTION FIONEERS AND AUXILIARY MEMBERS All members planning to go to the unveiling of the Prospector’s Statue at Sitka on Oct. 18, are asked to call Chas. W. Carter, phone 136. 316 3t | MUSICIANS PRUTECTIVE UNION Local No. 672 — AF.L. Hall Special Meeting 7 p. m. THURSDAY. 16 2t "...Be BOTILED UNDER AUTHORITY OF JUNEAU COLD Get The Message Refreshed Be Refreshed THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY STORAGE CO. © 1949, The Coca-Cola Company & FREDRIC MARCH IS CAPITOL THEATRE Fredric March, twice Academy award winner, will be seen in one f his most moving and dramatic roles in “An Act of Murder,” Uni- ersal-International picture at the “apitol Theatre for tonight only. March enacts a Pennsylvania udge who becomes a defendant in vis own courthouse, charged with the the killing of his wife. Highlights of the production in-| clude scenes of the second honey- moon of March and Miss Eldridge after 20 years of marriage, the ro- mance of O'Brien and Miss Brooks, courtroom battles of March and O'Brien who enacts a criminal law- iver, and -the surprise climax of March’s murder trial. Stanley Ridges appears as a noted brain surgeon. Other notales in the cast give equally convincing performances. The picture is based on the novel, “The Mills of God,” by Ernst Lothar. The screenplay is by Michael Blankfort and Robert Thoeren. | JUNEAU CITY BAND PRACTICE MONDAYS | The Juneau City band, for the |next several weeks at least, will hold rehearsals on Monday eve- nings instead of Tuesdays. This ¥as | decided last night when it was an- {nounced that the coming basket- ball season and other events would take place on Tuesdays and many |of the bandsmen are involved. H HAINES GUEST i Mrs. Mae Clayton of Haines is stopping at the Gastineau Hotel. MIKE'S PLACE IS OPEN! . MIKE'S PLACE opens again TONIGHT 5 p.m. for those fine juicy steaks and delicious fried Chickens. Come on over. 1 ©6 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o r | KIWANIS STRESS | . FREIGHT SERVICE Five members of the Kiwanis Club, including two Past Presidents, were named tod: as a nominating | committee to select suitable mem- | Cers for next 's ofticers. The club held its weekly meeting in the | Gold Room of the Bar { Hotel. President Charles H. McClellan named Gene Vuille, Ed Shaffer, | Past President, and Bob Schellen-~ Lerger, John Griffin and Dr. John M. Montgomery. The committee has to nominate, with a two week period following before election is held, November 9. The early elec- tion allows the new officers oppor- tunity to form their committees and inaugurate programs before they take office January 1. The need of more dependable shipping for Southeast Alaska was rointed out, with President Mc- Clellan reading a letter to be sent to Gov. Ernest Gruening. McClel- lan said he would enlist the support of every service club in Alaska to 2et behind the move, such as was done in last year’s non-Communist affidavit move. Air freight now is needed to supply the needs of Juneau busi- three weeks ness men, and with it going up to (14 cents a pound on October 1, a hardship will i:e worked on every- one in the community, McClellan pointed out. A dependable weekly service is needed, he said, particular'y for perishables and other foodstuffs. | Advertisements in all Kiwanis ,magazines are running for sale of | custom-made moccasins, made to Icrder by the natives, with either ¢ iKlwanis emblem or a totemic em- blem emblazoned upon them. Kiwanis International is taking note of National Newspaper Week, ' October 1 to 8, by inviting report- ers, editors and publishers through- ,out -the nation to meetings designed to draw attention to importance of ‘main!ainlng freedom of the press. FROM WRANGELL Mrs. J. M. Steear of Wrangell is stopping at the Baranof Hotel. 1 | 1 i DYNAMITE ACTION AT 201H CENTURY For dynamite action, w;n-nrr]\ Bros.' exciting “Each Dawn I Die" ! co-starring James Cagney and| George Raft, is big league enter- tainment, and this attraction is at the 20th Century Theatre for last showing tonight Political racketeering and scan- dal, embellished with k prisoni drama, highlights this story from! the front-pages. Jane Evyan, George Bancroft, tanley Ridges, Victor Jory, Willard | tobertson and Thurston Hall are rominent in the cast. William {eighley directed this production. ‘Each Dawn I Die"” is from a Jerome Odlum novel of the same itle, and the screen-play 1s by Norman Reilly Raine and Warren Juff. SHELLWORTH HERE Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Shellworth, | former residents of Haines and Juneau, are here for a visit with their son-in-law and daughter, Mr.I and Mrs. Robert Davlin, and their new granddaughter. Since leaving Juneau, they have made their home in Wheeler, Ore- | gon. They arrived Sunday on lhr'| steamer Princess Louise. | RUMMAC SALE Friday, October 8, at Lutheran Jhurch, beginning 10 a. m. 16 3t LUNCHEON SALE By Missionary Society of the femorial Church in the Recreation {all, Wednesday afternoon, 1 to , LAST ™ PAGE FIVE TI0"CENTURY TIMES TONITE DOORS OPEN 7:00 SHOW STARTS, 7:20 and 9:30 ' 315 1t ¥ ELLIS Al R LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN via Petershurg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg Convenient afternoon departures, at 2:30 P. M. . FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 i L] 1 “Hmmm! Nice OLKS take a look at those bumper- guard grilles — built as a unit and proof against “locking horns” — and say 1” They sweep their eyes over tapering 1 fenders, with a | for me!” They eye-meas suggestion of jet power in their after contours—and say, “That’s ure windshields that are 48% bigger and rear windows with 56% more area—and know without being told they can see the road up closer, both fore and aft. So they say—“That’s for me—IF! “What does it cost me to get this handy- sized dandy wil ever found on th the roomiest interiors a Buick Special? “What do I pay for high-compression, high-pressure Fireball power from a big Buick straight-eight engine? “What'’s the tag on that swell Buick ride, with coil springing, extra-wide rims, seats between the axles and all that? “And what about Dynaflow Drive— When better antomobiles are bullt BUICK will build them understand I can have that at extra cost —how much?” Well, sir, the news is good. Plenty good. Because this honey’s priced well under your’ expectations. It’'s a straight-eight that’s priced under a lot of sixes—over the years your investment will be no more than for any other car. So better not stop with looking. Better price it too—delivered a t your door. Your Buick dealer will give you the figures, even demonstrate. After which you'll do as others are doing —vyou’ll get a firm order in. TEN-STRIKE® Only Buick SPECIAL has all these Features? TRAFFIC-HANDY SIZE « MORE ROOM FOR THE MONEY ¢ DYNAFLOW DRIVE optional at extracost « JET-LUINE STYLING » NON-LOCKING BUMPER-GUARD GRILLES « HIGH-PRES- SURE FIREBALL STRAIGHT-EIGHT ENGINE « COIL SPRINGING ALL AROUND « LOW-PRESSURE TIRES ON SAFETY-RIDE RIMS + GREATER VISIBILTY FORE AND ING LUGGAGE ULDS AFT « SELF-LOCK- STEADY-RIDING TORQUE-TUBE DRIVE « THREE SMART MODELS WITH BODY BY FISHER " spectt G Tune in HENRY J. TAI YLOR, ABC Network, every Mondoy CONNORS MOTOR CO. South Franklin Street PHONE 121

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