The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 17, 1949, Page 3

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IMONDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1949 L We just can't think o describe the THRILLS in S s S S e STA KATHRYN GRAYS .ETHEL BARRYMORE- keeNAN wyYNN J. CARROL NAISH THOMAS GOMEZ - MARJORIE REYNOLDS and introducing Kathryn Grayson’s new sweetheart .., MARID Hoar the new love hit, Know A METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER PICTURE EXT ITOM & JERRY'S Academy Award Cartoon “CAT CONCERTO" [~ PLEASE COME EARLY Complete Shows 7:20—9:30 Feature start e Ask your neighbor about it— ‘The MOST IMPORTANT event in Juneau TODAY! Tomorrow is the LAST DAY!? f any more words o tore for YOU? RRING ON-JOSE ITURI » JULES MUNSHIN LANZA RA? . | | s 7T:45—9:55 | (A HERE ARE STARS | - SAT. .GRID GAMES i BY ASSOCIATED PRESS ‘Al Dugoff, George Washington U fullback—scored all four GW touch- d , including one from kickoff from behind own goal, as team de- feated Virginia Tech, 24-14. illy Boren, Utah—ran Kickoft 100 yards for touchdown, scored | another from scrimmage with 80- yard run, but Utah lost to Denver, 20018, | t:rry Courtre, Notre Dame— Irish rout Tulane, 46-7, by col first three touchdowns.in 10i il Stephenson, Army muhack—l scared four touchdowns as Army de- fested Harvard, 54-14. I 2 k Brunk, California—just oft} injared list, he made a 102-yard: t own run for winning marker | over Southern California, which d 16-10,, ley Justice, North Carolina— three touchdowns in 28-14 over Wake Forest. . rge Thomas, Oklahoma—click- i ed”for four touchdowns in helping to beat Kansas, 48-26. Woodley Lewis, Oregon—unfurled af102-yard kick-off return as Ore- gon defeated Colorado, 42-14. piibai | APPLEGATE RETURNS }.Aeut. . Delbert P. Applegate, officer in charge of the Juneau sta- tipn of ACS, returned yesterday vlui Pan American Airways from a: month’s vacation in Idaho. He was accompanied by his wife andj daughter Susan. | ! ) | SPEEDING FINE SET | Leonard Palmer today paid $28 for, speeding on Willoughby Avenue.! He was stopped by police Saturday night ' after being clocked at 34; m},\lu per hour. i HOSPITAL NOTES Eleven persons were admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital over the week | end. A. B. Phillips, Fred Carillo, Mrs. George James, Mrs. Carmen Buckner and Thomas Scugra were admitted Saturday. 1 Charles W. Bland, Ronnie Ken- miur, Santos L. Llorin, George Bry- son, John Forbythe and Mrs. Oscar Selmer were admitted yesterday. Yvonne Poole and Warren Smith were discharged from St. Ann’s Saturday. Lawrence Marvin of Hoonah was admitted to the Government Hos- pital over the week end. "MIDNIGHT KISS" IS NEW SONG HIT, CAPITOL THEATRE| That delictious combination of song, romance and down-to-earth humor for which producer Joe Pas- ternack (Anchors Aweigh,” “Three Daring Daughters,” “A Date With Judy™) is noted, azain is estatlish- ed in his newest M-G-M Techni- color musical love stary, “That Midnight Kiss,” now showing at the Capitol Theatre. Due to his success at filming mu- sical confections that have some- thing to offer every member of the family, from Grandpa down to Ju- nior, Pasternak seems to have the pick of M-G-M talent. This time he has chosen lilting-voiced Kath- ryn Grayson and the personable new singing “find,” Mario Lanza, as his tuneful romantic leads; Jose Iturbi, who in several previous films has proved himself as adept a com- adian as he is a wizard on the piano keys; Keenan Winn for more laughs and the distinguished Ethel Barry- more to give stature to his story’s dramatic moments. Never one to stint at talent, his cast also includes fetching Marjorie Reynolds, such veteran actors as J. Carol Naish and Thomas Gomez; that funniest of funny butlers, Ar- thur Treacher; and Jules Munshin, who ran away with many of the comedy moments in “Easter Parade” and “Take Me Out to The Ball Game.” They all get together in a divert- ing story of a singing truck driver (Lanza) who falls in love with a Philadelphia debutante (Miss Gray- son) and who ultimately proves his voice to be of opera calibre. PACIFIC NCRTHERN TAKES 36, WEEKND Pacific Northern Airlines carried 36 passengers in and out of Juneau over the week end. Seventeen were listed as arrivals and 19 left. They were: From Anchorage: George Mc- Laughlin, Danny Murphy, Cather- ine Murphy, Gordon Graham, Ted Coburn, Charles Davis, Mrs. Charl- es Davis, R. Lundquist. G. 8. Newhouse, G. B. Kelly, E. D. McMahon, Wesley Williams, J. Swan, John Johnson, Mrs. Adel Johnson, Dr. Phillip Moore, G. A. Shephard. To Cordova—E. C. Baker. To Anchorage—Mrs. Robert Cun- ningham, Paul Wangler, Mary Sny- der, Mrs. Wayne Smallwood and infant, Glenn Leach, Mrs. Hal Fair- hurst, Indal Bertmussen, Henry Horstdaniel. R. H. Knublach, C. H. Keil, Dor- othy Eaton and infant, David Leask, Roy A. Brobeck, Malcolm Denard, M. W. Kelly, Ralph Moore. APPROPRIATION FOR DREDGING BOAT HARBOR WAITS FOR PRESIDENI; The Civil Functions Appropria- tions Bill now hkefore the Presi- dent for signature contains $30,000, for maintenance dredging of the Juneau small boat harbor. This is revealed in a message to Mayor Maino Hendrickson from Delegate E. L. (Bob) Bartlett. Mayor Hendrickson said this morning that the appropriation grew out of a survey made by Army En- gineers who were in Juneau doing a preliminary inspection of the problem of a new small boat har- bor. ‘We asked them to take a look at our present boat harbor. They found several shallow places near floats that needed to be dredged out,” Hendrickson said. { CAR CHECK-UP FOR SITKA Lt. Emmett Botelho of the Alaska Highway Patrol left for Sitka today to carry out an automobile check- up. The check-up will be conduct- ed the same as the one just com- pleted in Juneau. Your Deposits ARE BUY and HOLD UNITED STATES SAVINGS BONDS TBE management of this bank is pledged to conserva- tive operation. The safety of depositurs’ funds is our 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 & maxiraum of FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASEA l MEMBER PEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION SAFE ot DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED THE DAILY ALASKA EM COAST HOCKEY LEAGUE BY ASSOCIATED PRESS Seattle is undisputed leader to-}also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30| day of the Pacific Coast Hockey eague’s northern division. The Ironmen came from behind last night to tie the Vancouver Canucks 4-4 and move ahead by one point of the idle Westminster Royals with whom they bad shared the lead. Seattle was trailing 4-1 midway inj the second period Lefore Ken Simp- son’s high backhander got them back into contention The San Francisco Shamrocks tied up the southern division lead Saturday night by blanking the league leading San Diego Skyhawks 5-0. Each team now has won two games and lost one. The Los Angeles Monarchs banged in three goals in the final ten min- utes to defeat the Fresno Falcons 4-2. Portland beat Vancouver 7-3; Ta- coma nosed Victoria 4-3 and New Westminster beat Seattle 3-1. BUCKY HARRIS MAY MANAGE SENATORS BY TONY ATELLA WASHINGTON, Oct. 17—@— Bucky Harris may tell Clark Grif- fith this week whether he wants to manage the Washington Senators baseball team. Griffith, who holds controlling in- terest in the American League team, has talked to Harris about the situa- tion. “I talked to Bucky when I pur- chased outfielder Ivan Noren from Hollywood of the West Coast Lea- gue,” Griffith said last night. “On Harris’s recommendation I bought Noren.” It was in the course of the con- versation, Griffith said, that he asked Harris who piloted the Sen- ators to a world’s championship back in 1924, if he “was hooked up for next year.” “Bucky replied, ‘no’ but that he wanted to speak to me in Washing- ton on the subject. This is as far as we have gone.” FILM "FISHING IN ALASKA" SHOWING BY SOROPTIMISTS The Soroptimist Club is present- ing the film “Fishing in Alaska” on Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. in the Methodist Church. This film was made in the Iliam- na Lake region of Alaska, and stars several well known Alaskans. It takes the spectator by plane to the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes, and to the Brooks River where camp was made Ly those taking the film, There are plenty of action shots Sl of salmon, bear, and moose. The! second film shown will be “Wild Wings” from the collection of the Fish and Wildlife Department. In the intermission between the showing of these two films, Mr. Warren Houston will present the ambulance fund, telling of the need for this public service. A free will offering will be taken for the pur- chase of an ambulance. The public is invited to this eve- ning which is both entertaining and informational. SON FOR SELMERS Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Selmer of Skagway became the parents of a baby boy yesterday morning. The | child, born at St. Ann’s Hospital, weighed 6 pounds, 15 ounces at birth. jreleased by the Weather Bureal, | Bethel .. PIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA CONDITIONS OF WEATHER ALASKAPTS. Weather conditions and temper- | atures at various Alaska points | am, 120th Meridian Time, ana at Juneau, follow: | Anchorage 33—Cloudy ‘ Barrow 35—Drizzle | 43—Rain | 40—Cloudy | 6—Clear 20—Cloudy | 16—Cloudy | 23—Fog | 23—Clear | 36—Clear | 44—Rain | loudy | -Cloudy 37 —R}lh\‘ 15—Cloudy 27—Clear | 39—Partly Cloudy | 21—Clear 43—Partly Cloudy Cordova Dawson Edmonton Fairbanks Havre ... Juneau Airport Annette Island | Kodiak Kotzebue McGrath Nome . Northway Petersburg .. Portland Prince George Seattle .. Huskies Down | Splints; 40-0 (ard_DeleaI' BY JACK HEWINS SEATTLE, Oct. 17.—(M—The mer- ry men of Marchmont Schwartz| were gone today from the scene of massacre, leaving Washington only | the aching memories of its 40-0 football defeat Saturday at the| hands and feet of Stanford. Aching is the word. Three Wash- ington backs and two linemen were racked up on the injury hook. Big Jack Seth, Washington’s best Roland Kirkby and Hugh McElhen- ny aggravated old hurts and had to retire. Linemen Bill Burnett and | George Bayer took sidelining | knocks. ! | A crowd of 33,500 saw Washington | lose its fourth straight start—its ,second in Pacific Coast Conference play. | Coach Schwartz and his Stantord | Cardinals piled up a three-touch- down lead in the first half, fousit off Washington’s terrific third quarter bid to get back in the ball game and then rolled up three more counters in the final stanza. IN SEATTLE STREET, OUTWITS ROBBER | | SEATTLE, Oct. 17.—(P—Howard iCA ‘Thompson, 33, visitor from Fair- banks, Alaska, was accosted by a lrobber and a girl accomplice on a downtown street Saturday night. Police said Thompson aimed an| accurate kick at the robber's pis- tol, booting the weapon to the street. The woman retrieved the gun, call- ed “Let's go, Honey,” to her dis- armed partner in crime, and they jumped into an automobile and fled. | TEEN AGE CLUB DIRECTOR GOES EAST ON VACATION | Zach Gordon, director of the lo- cal Teen Age Club, left via Pan American Sunday for Pennsylvania | to visit his mother and to transact some business for the Club. He expects to be gone between three and four weeks. While he is away, the club will | be operated on weekends under the Psupervision of Denny Merritt, as-| sisted by several of the ladies of |Juneau. The “Community Center | night” for adults on Tuesday will be conducted as usual each week. the Excursion Inlet Wreckers Announces the arrival of one SCOW LOAD of USED Building Plywood - Celotex — Doors Windows - Dimension Lumber Kimsul Insulation - Sash and Moulding - Plumbing Fixtures Electrical Fixtures and other Miscell At the Foot Materials aneous Items of 8th Street line cruncher, cracked a collar bone. | 7. ALASKAN ACCOSTED - §53 PAGE THREE (RO TBALL|GRIPPING FiLM 15 |t FeoLze TI0 reNTORY NOW ON SCREEN | LAST Final scores of football games played over the weekend are as fol- lows: A melodrama of gripping interest and sustained suspense is at the| 20th Century Theatre. It is “The Stanford 40; Washington 0. Imperfect Lady,” the Paramount Washington State 35; Idaho 13.{fjlm co-starring Ray Milland and | Oregon State 63; Montana 14. |Teresa Wright and featuring an ex- T 0 N l E Oregon 42; Colorado 14. ceptionally fine supporting cast that | . ‘ College of Idaho 33; Eastern Ore-|includes Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Vir- | | gon College 25. zinia Field, Anthony Quinn, Reg- Lewis & Clark 20; Lintield 2. }inalda Owen, Melcille Cooper and Pacific University 33; Whitmanighys Williams. “The Imperfect Lady” is set in| Victorian England, but its story sould just as easily happen today. | Today, as then, a woman’s reputa- || tion is a fragile thing and when, as | in “The Imperfect Lady,” it is|| caught in an embarrassing net of circumstantial evidence against her, || the chances are she would stand just as much condemned. “Imperfect Lady” is a gripping melodrama with a thrilling finish. | i 2 27 Eastern Washington 27; Whit- worth 20. Pacific Lutheran 25; St. Martin's 20. Western Washington 21; British Columbia 6. Southern Oregon College 55; Ore- gon Tech (Klamath Falls) 14. College of Pacific 75; Portland University 20. Puget Sound Jayvees T; Lawton 0. Washington Staté Frosh 51; Mon~ tana Frosh 0. Maine 12; Connecticut 12. Ambherst 19; Colby 6. Washington (St. Louis) 12; West- ern Michigan 0. Minnesota 27; Ohio State 0. Michigan State 42; Willlam & Mary 13. Dartmouth 27; Colgate 13. Duquesne 40, Holy Cross 14. 1 il |‘1 Fort 1 | ¥ R . PRO FOOTBALL | Final scores of pro football games || over the weekend are as follows: ALL- AMERICA CONFERENCE San Francisco 51; Buffalo 7. | New York Yankees 24; Baltimore Sonpesgecd with SIR CEDRIC HARDWICKE REGINALD OWEN * ANTHONY QUINN A Paramount Picture 21. Chicago Bears 38; Philadelphia 21. Army 54, Harvard 14. NATIONAL. FOOTBALL LEAGUE North Carolina, 28; Wake F‘orcstl Chicago Cardinals 39; Green Bay 4. t17. Penn 27; Columbia 7. | Los Angeles 21; Detroit 10. | Duke 14; North Carolina State 13. Washington 38; New. York Bull- Cornell 48; Yale 14. dogs 14. i Iowa State 18; Kansas State 18. Pittsburgh 21; New York Glantsw Notre Dame 46; Tulane 7. 17. Wisconsin 48; Navy 13. Towa 35; Indiana 9. Missouri 27; Illinois 20. Franklin and Marshall 14; negie Tech 14. Western Maryland 39; Washing- ton College (Md.) 6. Coast Guard 21; Kingspoint 14. Williams 33; Bowdoin 0. Lehigh 33; Gettysturg 20. Virginia 27, Washington and Lee 1 DOGCRS OPEN 7:00 SHOW STARTS | 7:15 and 9:30 o AR RO " EYES EXAMINED LENSES PRESCRIBED DR. D. D. MARQUARDT OPTOMETRIST 8econd and Franklin PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTS SAND POINT GUESTS Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Johnson of Sand Point are guests at the Bar- || anof Hotel. Car- / Juneau Princeton 27; Brown 14. Nebraska 7; Penn State 22. Massachusetts 32; Rhode Island 12 H Pittsburgh 35; Miami (Ohio) 26. Georgia Tech 35; Auburn 21. Northwestern 21; Michigan 20. Alabama 7; Tennessee 7. Syracuse 21; Rufgers 9. Fordham 33; Scranton 13. Cincinnati 19; Mississippi State 0. Virginia Military 14; Richmond 0. Wyoming 27; Utah State 0. George Washington 24; Virginia Polytechnic 14. Texas 27; Arkansas 14. Oklahoma 48; Kansas 26. Texas Christian 28; Texas Aggies Alr express means immediate delivery te youl Simply write or wire your favorite shop ‘or your business house, requesting that your merchandise be shipped by Alr Express, and Alaska Coastal speeds It to you In a matter of hoursi Dependable serv- Ico at lowest rates by Air Express. & @ 9 nmsmgam‘ s ewing Southeastern P-TA MEETS TONIGHT IN BUSINESS SESSION At 8 o'clock tonight, the Par- ent-Teacher Association will hold its first Lusiness meeting of the school year in the High School Auditorium. Committees for the coming year will be announced. Miss Margaret Maland, Juneau school teacher who returned this fall after a year’s absence in Nor- way, will tell the group of her ex- periences. SCHWINN BICYCLES at Madsen’s. SUNLAMPS for health SPECIAL SALE (While They Last!) Regular $64.50 ““Sun Kraft”’ ~ ULTRA VIOLET LAMPS Complele with Automatic Timer NOW 8$32.50 Just plug into any convenient outlet and enjoy the beneficial ultra-violet rays so necessary for good health . . . They are recommended for respiratory ailments and skin conditioning. Now at the— Alaska Eledric Light and Power Co. crrrrrrrrrrerrrrrerrrered

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