Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1949 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA M= PAGE FIVE ,'MADAME BOVARY' {THRILL STORY IS /| FEATURE SUNDAY, | SCREENED TONIGHT (111 il III|II|llIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIlII T A “Madame Bovary,” M-G-M's| “I Walk Alone,” the new Hal Wal- e X R g G 7:00 X opayr \SEERRT . % ;; CAPITOL THEATRE ~ AT 20TH CENTURY LE LENTURY siov'strens 7:15 and 3:30 b T T T AR e e U 5‘ eagerly-awaited filmization of Gus- lis production for Paramount which I Opening EXTRA! g tave Flaubert's story of the c@le-‘;rt:wes tonight aththe 1230“‘ Centu; f {trated Emma Bovary, comes to the eatre with co-stars Burt Lancas Tomorrow SHOWPRLALE oF (77 (127777 CIKR%OI:{)N 0| Capitol Theatre Sunday with one|ter and Lizabeth Scott, tells the|Z g 5\'11 the year's distinguished film | suspenseful story of a unique | SUHDAY plus ©|casts. And, by the way, this fea- double-cross perpetrated upon a| e NEW ISSUE %|ture is not recommended for|man who wouldn't take it lyin | children. down. In twenty-four exciting hours s d d Nl d en . R c s ! £ Dw{s.lgp 144 Wa;llér‘sasthe % With Jennifer Jones in the tme the vicious double-cross is avenged | lln ay an 0“ ay 3 {role, the impressive production also|in a way that is said to Le tops in|= j{stars such top personalities as|movie thrills. g I . 1 @ | James Mason, Van Heflin and Louis| Word is that Charles Schnee has| = He Feu f01’ i e E I e ‘This Npiéfll‘ll‘e LIFE “agaZIne s PICiure of."‘e-week’ %!Jourdnn and introduces to Ameri- scrip:jed a story loaded with puse-|: . is can screen audiences the Swedish|pounding situations, and preview RECOMMENDED NOW ON OUR SCREEN World .If You Want to Pump a Guy for 1 For almost one hundred years|cellent cast, under Byron Ha: Children. ‘Madame Bovary” has been an all-|effective direction, has extr 14 The most daring|every gasp of excitement in it. They have singled out for commen- dation, in addition to the star Kirk Douglas, Wendell Corey and | & {time best-seller. |and controversial novel of its day }hz\s remained from generation to| zeneration on everyone's “must; read” list, a position it still occu- Kristine Miller. | pies today. No author since Flau-| Lancaster, now firmly established ] |bert has written with such com-|as one of the screen’s most mag- passion of a woman's abandoned |netic personalities, said to be in pursuit of love and of the three his best rough-and-romantic form men who loved her—each in hls,ln “I Walk Alone.” As Frankle Ma- own way. dison, an ex-bootlegger who returns In securing Jennifer Jones for|from a long prison stretch only to the role of the fascinating Emma|Le double-crossed by an old “pal |Bovary, M-G-M scored a major|he has the sort of two- fisted role triumph. that catapulted him to Hollywood | James Mason's portrayal of the!heights. | author, Flaubert, is a labor of love| Violent physical aection, Lanca: 5 |on the part of this brilliant English |ter's main forte, is spotlighted in | actor. three reportedly vivid episodes in|w Van Heflin enacts the part ofjthe film. The fight scene, in which | Charles Bovary; Louis Jourdan is Burt is unmercifully beaten up, has iseen as the romantic and aristo-| been called one of the most reali cratic Rodolphe; Christopher Kent |tic and bruising battles ever filmed. has the role of the young lawyer,|It has also been said that Lanca: {Leon. Others in the large cast in- ter's tarehanded capture and un- clude the veteran character actor|arming of double-crossing Kirk | Gene Lockhart as the chemist, Ho-/Douglas, in a fight in the dark, mais; Frank Allenby as L'Heureux, builds to a maximum of suspense, and Gladys Cooper as Madame and that the running gun duel Dupuis. ,and climactic car crash in a hi- Jack\ng scene add much to the ‘drama CLAIMS DUE FOR TROUBLE, "eour MINER THINKS‘ BIG JOINT EVENT ‘ Final plans are being made for 6 Day-and-Date With the Rest of the Nation! % IF YOU WERE MADAME BOVARY AND MARRIED TO A BOGR! The world's most daring love story told just as frankly as in the famed French novel! YOnce you use thnt ‘gun...you'll have a gun in your hand the rest of your life —and that’s not for me...J like you too much 1 MGM presents JENNIFER JONES VAN HEFLIN LOUIS JOURDAN CHRISTOPHER KENT Gene LOCKHART + Frank ALLENBY Gladys COOPER JAMES MASON GUSTAVE FMUBERT ’flu AUTHOR IEAnEREEEAsRERERARARL (Continued from Page 1) ‘Lhe Armistice Day Dance by the R { Joint committee of the Legion and The big operators will come in and the VFW to be held Nov. 11. |get any big haul there's to be had*| Music will be furnished by Chuck Lost Royalties Werner and the largest dance band Glass said he learned the hard Of the season, consisting of six | pleces. Maestro Werner promises | fikw\fix‘mww\@*w‘“v&‘mm“WV”“’“”“‘“’”W"WW AR FRRRRRRRR |until 1941 worked them only enougti ' Peculiar humor. Reveille for the| {to maintain his claim while Ne' festivities is set for 9 p.m. with the ‘worked elsewhere to earn enough Elks ballroom Leing designated as Z Complete Shows 1:35-3:18-5:28-7:41-9:54 Feature Starts 1:44-3:54-6:04-8:17-10:30 SOOOOSOOOOOONCOOOOOCOOOERCOONDOE QOO OO ROCCCEEOCE OO TOOOOEOCLOONC # AIEEEERINIEIRINSEIRANNRERE RAREERRNLLE PHOTOGRAPHER PUBLISHES SONG' CINCINNATI—(®— For 15 years, Harry Carlson: took photographs— with a dream in his heart, and a song in his trunk. The MGM recording company bought the tune ! “I Thought I Was Dreaming,” af- ster listening ‘to an arrdngement by Francis Craig, a renowned songster himself. Carlson, a successful portrait pho- tographer, said the tune and words for the song came to him 15 years - ago while he was sleeping. Craig, then a rising young orchestra lead- er, and writer of many song hits —among them “Near You’—intro- duced it at the time on a radio “Hits' of Tomorrow” program. l Not .more than 150 copies of the) song were sold:( It went into the! trunk. There it stayed until Carl- son went to Nashville, Tenn,, a few months ago to visit his old friend, Craig. Craig said the current musical trend was for “sweet music,” and | he decided to dust off Carlson‘sl dream. The sale to the recording company followed. The photo- grapher-songwriter is not closing up his studio, but he is digging . down into. that old trunk again. “Why, through the years, as a hobby, I have picked out about 50 songs, with words and music,” Carlson said. CHINESE UNION MEN MAKE POLAND TOUR WARSAW, Poland—(®—A delega- tion of 30 Chinese trade unions leaders is .touring Poland inspect- ing reconstruction projects and con- ferring with Polish trade unionists. The group, headed by Liu Ni Yi, deputy chairman of the World Fed- eraton” of Trade Unions, came here from Bucharest. Scroen Play by ROBERT ARDREY Based on the Novel by GUSTAVE FLAUBERT Directed by VINCENTE MINNELLI Produced by PANDRO S. BERMAN The MARCH OF TIME presents ‘“Watchdogs of the Mail” THE INSIDE STORY of how your postoffice operates. WORKERS ON TACOMA BRIDGE BUSY SPINNING SUSPENSION cuu:s ON TACOMA NARROWS BRIDGE are Harry A. Enos (left) and Henry M. Christian. The men are working from a temporary spinning tower 60 feet above the 507 foot main fowers jutting up from the waters of Puget Sound. (Intemalmnul Soundphoto) 6 eeveereecrecT oot BRI RRRRRRARRRS CHRISTMAS in SCANDINAVIA! A Luxurious D.C.4 (C.A.A. Certificated Trans-Atlantic Air Line) Leaves Seattle Dec. 17 for Oslo—Stockholm Returns Jan. 15th or 20th Special $620 round irip! Reservations before December 1st Wire or write immediately for details. DAVID J. WEST 1404 East 42nd, Seattle 5, Wash. Phone — Ev. 1935 | pay royalties up to the time BID FROM MUSEUMS ‘to buy dredging equipment. | In 1941, he said, he leased his claims to be worked by a dredging ceive royalties.. He said the firm successfully maintained later that it didn't have to pay royalties on gold taken from a navigable stream. He said he took the contest to court | and lost his appeal, although the | court compelled the company to' of the decision. ‘The same thing will happen to these prospectors,” he predicted. “If there’s a real strike, the little guy’s going to get lost in the shuf- ifle. The law makes a gold strike ‘No Man’s Land’.” NET FREE ZPICTURES LONDON —(®— Six British mu- seums bid $168,000 for paintings by artist and poet Willlam Blake them for nothing. A secret clause in the will of the late Graham Robertson, Lon- don playwright who collected Blake's works, specified that “in- stitutions serving the public should have free the works for which they were prepared to pay considerablé sums.” The sale of Robertson’s collection of paintings by the 19th Century artist brought a total of $246,396. Those not taken by museums and art galleries were bought by private collectors. company. He said he was to re- at an art auction and then got| |the Bivouac area. Ticksts for the dance are available from any VF: /, {or Legion members, and at all the/ local watering spots. Intermission entertainment is being planned by the committee with the acts (o be announced later. u|unnniuunfinunn BIRIEEEREENEERS;TUNERENENASERERNRRNEAT SHN IRRRINR NN NN AR NN AR RN I TR AR IRENE: ———ee T L e e KRISTINE Mll.lER CEORGE RIGALD - MARG uwaflm WIKE MAZURKI - MICKEY KNOX - Dt by BYRON HASKIN Screeaplay by Charles Schuee 4/ Adaptation by Robert Smith and Jobn Bright b..« wpon an original play +'Beggars Ars Coming To Town'' by Theodore Reeves by Oscar Svrlu- A Paramount Picture TH SKI CLUB'IS T0 SAW| FIREW00D; WORKERS NEEDED FOR SUNDAY| MATINEE SUNDAY DOORS ADULTS SHOW OPEN 50‘ STARTS PLUS Popeye Cartoon : LATE NEWS by AIR _Michigan - Minnesola 1:45 ; 2:15 Foothall Upset " ONE SHOWING ONLY IIIIIIIII|I|II|II|IIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIlIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIII||IIIIIIIIIfi A request for willing workers was placed today by Neil Taylor, Ski Club President, for volunteers to|= gather and saw timber for the sec- ond cabin in the ski area on Doug- las Island, beginning at 8 a.m. to- morrow. Volunteers will breakfast at that hour at the Baranof Hotel, he said, | and will take off immediately for the trail. The timber has been felled and limbed already by the Forest Service, and all that remains is to gather and saw it into con- venient lengths for the coming sea- son, he declared. Bill Manthey of the Lemon Creek S8and and Gravel Company has loaned a power saw for the work. ‘Taylor emphasized necessity of getting the work done as soon as possible, so the wood will remain dry to add to skiiers’ comfort dur- ing the coming ski times. Hot dogs and coffee will be ,furnished. Snake Pit — Back Page Snake Pit — Back Page TONIGHT Eagles Hallowe’en Dance 10 P. M. Everybody Welcome Admission $1.00 plus tax