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ESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1950 9 Shows at 7:19—9:30 ® Feature 7:57—10:08 ENDS TONIGHT! [ e ONE OF THE GRAND L"I' OF ALL COMEDIES! N ! | L o Claudette Colbert — Fred MacMurray | “FAMILY HONEYMOON*? Tomorrow and Thursday M. G. M.'S SHOCKER OF A DRAMA! Directed by FRED ZINNEMAN who directed the Prize Winning “The Search” coming to this theatre soon! JANET LEIGH Mary ASTOR - Phyllis THAXTER Field Goal Wins lor Ohio - Over California by 14-17; | Thrilling Rose Bowl Game 1 By BOB MYERS ! Rose Bowl. He was the man who kicked the extra point against Michigan for a 7-7 tie and cinched the Buckeye trip to the bowl. BAD BREAKS Behind tnat kick were more than the usual amount of thrills and excitements, of spectacular efforts ,and tad breaks for both teams. PASADENA, Calif,, Jan. Ohio State’s victorious football i team flies home today, the ban- | ners of the Btg Ten flying high for the fourth straight year. California’s Golden Bears point | | for Berkeley, beaten but not dis- graced after their second joust with the Big Ten in the Rose Bowl.\ california scored first on the And a record crowd_of 100,963 | heels of a beautiful 55-yard pass p football fans relaxed after one of| pay from Quarterback Bob Celeri v the tighest, best games in the his- |, Frank Brunk. This was in the tory of the Tournament of Roses. | secong quarter. The score was 17 to 14, and it| ohjo tied the count at 7-7 in came on a field goal with one|ihe thirq when Halfback Vic Jano- minute and 55 seconds left in the} y;., intercepted a Cal pass, stop- game—the first time a field gogl ping a scoring thrust and :semng had decided the issue in the big|the Bucks into motion to score bowL_ | from the Bear 33. Brightest star of numerous heroic| opjo State went ahead, 13-7 on | warriors was Ohio State’s right end | 5 plocked punt that fell into the Jim Hague, whose deadly right {00t | Buckeye hands on the California won the game. six. BOOT BREAKS TIE They won the game on Hague's il His boot broke the 14-14 dead- | field goal after Celeri on a poor ! lock; broke the heart of a fighting | pass from center was forced to California eleven and its legion of | punt the ball while running. He supporters in the tense, packed|did it with his left foot, the ball stadium; gave the Big Ten its|fizzled out on the play and the fourth consecutive win in Big Ten- | field goal came four plays later. Pacific coast conference series and | Largest ground gainer was Buck- avenged a 28-0 shellacking a Cali- | eye fullback, 214-pound Fred Mor- fornia “wonder team” gave Ohio|rison, who made 113 of the team's State«in this same fixture on New | total of 221 yards rushing. Year’s Day of 1921. Coach Lynn Waldorf of Califor- The kick came with dramatic|nia had no alibis. “The coast is impact from the 17% line mark. creeping up,” he said. “Last time it i Hague thus goes down as the|was only six points—when North- player whose foot kicked Ohio State | western beat us in the final min- L into and successfully through the utes.” 3—P— Yov Have It WHEN You N;eph' Your best bet for quick delivery ks Alr Express o« . fast, dependable service by Alaska Coastal, ot low, economical rates. Your letter or wire te your merchant, requesting delivery by Alr Ex- press, assures you of having your merchandise when you mest need it | “w % » (amynss lszpitol ‘Theatre tonight for { final showing. |seen as a college-town widow with | observes rather dryly, | than no honeymoon at all.” REAL COMEDY IS NOW ON SCREEN, CAPITOL THEATRE| Claudette Colbert and Fred Mac- Murray, teamed for the seventh time, have done it again in the “Family Honeymoon,” an all time movie laugh comedy and at the the The basic idea of this hilarious screenplay is simple. Miss Colbert, three children, marries MacMurray, who portrays a botany und horti- culture professor. On the day of their wedding, the spinster baty sit- ter who was to have custody of the children during the honeymoon breaks her leg. Nobody wants to take care of the little imps so the newlyweds have to take them along to Grand Canyon on a family honeymoon which, as MacMurray “Is better A honeymoon with a personnel of five is bound to be full of fireworks and in this case they start explod- | ing at the film's outset, when the two small boys desert the train and are the objects of a hectic cross- country pursuit which winds up with the honeymooning couple shar- | |ing the beds and board of a farm THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE--JUNEAU, ALASKA Father Time Warms Up U. ALASKA WINS OVER LADD MENI FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Jan. 3—® —A field goal kicked from 35 yards out ended a two-year scoring famine here yesterday and gave the University of Alaska a 3-0 win over the Ladd Air Force Base Fliers in the second annual Ice Bowl foot- ball game. Leo Helsby ciding points ‘n 10 inches third quarter. The score was the first made in cold-air classic. Last year's in- augural ended in a scoreless tie. The thermometer hovered at 10 aZove during the clash in contrast to last year's subzero temperature. A trophy, donated by Austin E. Lathrop, wealtty Alaskan busi- nessman and industrialist, went to the winner. In contrast to the 1949 game's sukzero temperatures, today's con- test was played in mild 10 above weather. The “heat wave” brought out several dogs who several times ) leaped into the scrimmage. One kicked the game-de- from a cleared spot of snow during the couple who have six children ot black mongrel, in particular, per- their own. I sisted in playing tackle for the RS P SN Fliers More than 1,000 parka-clad spec- i tators packed the bleachers, whose seats were warmed by airpla: heaters. A 35-piece band enter- SEATTLE, Jan. 3 — @ — The; ltahwd from a heated tent. Bowl Queen Susie Williams made Seattle Ramblers really rambled yesterday, marking up a 33-0 foot- her entrance between halves in a ball decision over a benumbed Ha- Brines produced in conjunction with oil are anh important source of iodine. dog sled drawn by nine Alaskan Huskies, Among the dignitaries te- fore whom she rode were Gov. Ernest Gruening, a guest of the University, and Brig Gen. Frank Armstrong, Commanding General of the Alaska Air Command. waii Aloha eleven in the city's' ASKETBALL Queen City Bowl game. The host eleven was just too hot l§‘ fi““w and the weather too cold for the| s ————————— invaders who reached as far as the Seattle 32-yard line only once INi pere gre final scores of basket- | the game. ban ga,me; played last night: ia 74, Oregon 62. ERDELATZ IS OFFERED |17yt = | Cornell 39, Brown 32. JOB AT ACADEMY AS| Sucucsne 5o, rutsers ss. LIU 69, Muhlenberg 58. HEAD GRID COA(H North Carolina 55, Maryland 53. nlnuim]le 74, Tennessee 63. IBoang Green 175, Brigham Young SAN F‘RANCISCO Jan. 3—A— 50. | Eddie Erdlatz says he has been of-|Jowa 62, Utah State 58. |fered the pest of head football | Wisconsin 59, Illinois 50. | coach of the U.S. Naval Academy. Loyola (Chicago) 58, Utah 52. | He said he will fly to Annapolis | Kentucky 57, Arkansas 53. tonight to talk over the deal under| Southeastern Louisiana 68, Spring which he would succeed George; Hill (Ala) 67 (overtime) Sauer, who resigned last week. Denver 54, Wyoming 41. Erdlatz is assistant coach now of | Hamline 79, Honolulu All-Stars 46. Athe San Franclsco Forty-Niners ol the All-Amerita Conference. e conference recently merged with JUNE Au woM A“'S the National Pro Football icague. | | FIGHT DOPE | CLUB WILL MEET — TOMORROW P. M. Results of fights last night are as follows: At Chicago — Sylvester Perkins,| The regular monthly meeting of 165, Chicago outpointed Clinton|the Juneau Woman’s Club will be Bacon, 171, Chicago (8). held in.the penthouse of the Al- At Baltimore — Sammy Angott,)aska Electric Light and Power | 1432, Washington, Pa., drew withicompany on Wednesday afternoon, Sonny Boy West, 139%, Washing-|January 4 at 1:30 o'clock. Among ton (10). the items of business will be the fcomplzuon of plans for the Ba®e Sale to be held at the Sears Roe- HOCKEY GAMB buck office on Friday afternoon of this week under the chairman- ship of Mrs. E. P. Chester. _(By the Associated Press) Announcement of the program Victoria will try for two in a|for the social meeting on January row over Vancouver tonight on the|1g will also be made. The subject latter's ice in a Northern Division|for (resentation for the social Pacific Coast hockey league contest. | meeting will be given by the past Victoria’s Cougars dumped theofficers of the Alaska Federation Canucks from Vancouver, 4 to 2,|with Mrs. M. O. Johnson as chair- last night. man. In the only other game sched-| Reports will be given at the uled tonight, third-place Los An-|business meeting by Mrs. Leonard geles takes on the second place San|Evans on the Christmas activities Diego Skyhawks in San Diego in|of the -Club which included assisting a southern division encounter. the Girl Scouts in their stationery gift packets by providing the stamps, as well as the traditional gifts to the inmates of both hos- pitals, We wish to thank all of you nice people of Juneau for the most pleasant and enjoyable stay we have had any- where. We are not leaving Alaska for good, and hope 1o see you all again in the very near future. Thank you again and may God bless each and every one of you. HARRY and TONI WHAM | was | Knowles, Richard Webb and song- | letter-writing kid sister | singing spice-of-life | romances, and report has it that | the plot provieds many laugh-pro- COMEDY SET T0 MUSIC IS BILL AT 20TH CENTURY Paramount's gay, young comed music, “Isn't it Romantic opens tonight at the 20th Century Theatre with co-stars Veronica Lake, Mona Freeman, Billy Dcl Wolfe, and Mary Hatcher, sup- ported by Roland Culver, Patric stress Pearl Bailey Veronica, Mona (the precocious, | of “Dear (the lovely, “Variety Girl”) rortrays sisters who live in a small Indiana town with the problem father (Roland Culver). The story | revolves around their dlIhcu]Les‘ with him and with their respective Ruth”) and Mary voking situation set to thoroughly delightful music, including “Miss Julie July,” “Wond'rin’ When" and ‘Isn't It Romantic.” [ KCA BRINGS 4770 JUNEAU; 23 LEAVE In spite of winter weather, the i Jlmmy Dunnu, well prnvided with al | Alaska Coastal Airlines took 23 pas- sengers irom Juneau to points in V‘Soulht'nsl Alaska and brought 47 | passengers to Juneau over the long | noliday weekend. Passengers were: | To Tenakee: William L. Smith; | to Sitka: Bishop John Zlotin, Bill | Wirth, Bob Carsan, Frank Howard, | Vivian Rhoades, the Rev. Sweeney, |and W. L. Burkland; to Hoonah: ments of Father Time, was toasted by the beauties of New York's Copacobana night club in a dress rehearsal for demise of 1949 and birth of 1950. (® erephotn ROUNDUP OF BOWL GAMES ON MONDAY By WILL GRIMSLEY NEW YORK, Jan. 3—(®—The loudest din rising from the scat- tered bowls today came from the LaSalle 80, Western Kentucky 69. hhrcrav.s of fire-up Oklahomans chal- lenging Notre Dame's position as the nation’s No. 1 college football team. “Who is this Notre Dame?” “Give us another vote.” These were the cries from the Sugar Bowl at New Orleans where Oklahoma’s big, fast T-wizards humbled Louisiana State, 35-0, for the most impressive victory of the day. Ohio State, Rice, Santa Clara and Maryland nailed down - historic triumphs on other fronts but none with the awesome finality of Bud Wilkinson’s Sooners, who were rated second behind the fighting Irish in the final Associated Press poll. The Oklahomans stretched their winning streak to 21 games in run- ning roughshod over the bare- legged boys from the bayous who upset three conference champions in the course of an erratic cam- paign. Ohio State provided the most thrilling finish of the dey. A 17-14 conquest of favored California in} the Rose Bowl on a clock-cheating field goal, and joined with Santa Clara in registering the major up- sets. WILDCATS THROTTLFE Santa Clara, throwing an “iron fensive units in the land, throttled Orange Bowl at Miami. Kentucky was a 5% point favorite. Rice, the pride of the Southwest measured up to its No. 5 national ranking with a great display of power that smothered North Caro- lina and the Tar Heels' celebrated man” line at one of the best de-| Kentucky's Wildeats, 21-13, in the | Charlie Justice, 27-13, in the Cotton Bowl at Dallas. Maryland, a one-point underdog, blunted Missouri’s vaunted attack | with stout line play and won the Gator Bowl feature at Jacksonville, 120-17. | Clote to a half a million fans swarmed into bulging saucers from Tampa to Tokyo to watch the post- season football activities. IN PASADENA | The largest crowd, a FKose Bowl srecord turnout of 100,963, jammed the vast arena in Pasadena to see the Big Ten maintain a four-year ! jinx over the Pacific coast, against all prevailing odds. In other games. won over - Georgetown, - 33-20, in Texas Western Wofford, 19-6, in the Cigar Bowl; the U. S. Air Force triumphed over Army's All-Stars, 18-14, in the Rice Bowl at Tokyo; McMurry whipped Missouri Valley, 19-13, in the Ole- ander Bowl; Prairie View topped Fisk University, 27-6, in the Prairie View Bowl; Stanford downed Ha- waii, 74-20, in the Pineapple Bowl at Hawaii; and St. Vincent downed Emory and Henry, 7-6, in the Tan- gerine Bowl. affairs, the Ice Bowl game at Fair- banks, Alaska, was played in ten inches of snow and 10-below-zero temperature. The University of Alaska won, 3-0, over Ladd Air Base on a field goal. SULLY SHIPS SOUTH; GOES TO MARKET 10 SEEK SUPER VALUES | Leaving Juneau aboard Alaska i Steamship Company’s vessel Bar- anof, Henry Sully, furniture de- ! partment executive of the Juneau Young Hardware Company, shipped south for Seattle Sumnday evening, on his spring furniture buying trip. | While away he expects to attend | the annual spring furniture show in Seattle the latter part of Jan- uary. He will visit factories and !mills in Tacoma and Portland be- |for returning to Juneau late Janu- ary or early February. Yakuiat $30.00 Homer $87.00 *Plu Connections at Anch Piciric VORIt ZNSNEEIREENTCIrnaREl i LOW —FARES JUNEAU 10% Reduction on Round Trip Daily Scheduled Flights Anchorage — Cordova — Kodiak Homer — Yakutat and Westward Points |the Sun Bowl; Florida State beat | | In contrast to these mild-weather Mike Dollinter. To Gustavus: Lyle Bieber; to Seymour Canal: Joe Trucano and Ray Westfall; to Wrangell: Pat Becker; to Skagway: Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Bethell, Jean Bethell, F. Stine, Jack Thompson, and Mr. Sagorsky. To Tulsequah: Bob Flatt and D. R. Hilken; to Haines: Mrs. E Koenig and T. Knudsen, From Angoon: James Klushkan and Mike Dollinter; from Tenakee: Bob Akervick; from Sitka: Ronald Austin, Frank Williams, Shirley St. Clair, Alice Williams, Ralph Austin, R. McKinley, Harvey Martin, Ken- neth Austin, Dave Ramsay, Mrs. | Engleman, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander, | Ain Gramer, R. Roberterson, Miss Nicolia, Mr. Poland, Mr. and Mrs. Hadley, W. Walton, Ed Mercado, Margaret Mercado, Mrs. Stevens, Tony Cribar, Dick Campbell, Al Speer, Ruby Speer, Ralph Young, Donald Vent, and Lief Jensen. From Gustavus: Glen Parker; from Hoonah: Mike Dollinter; from Ketchikan: Eddie Carter; from Wrangell: Alice Traner; from Tul- sequah: J. Stevenson, J. Kingsbury, J. Robinson, and F. Jurich. From Skagway: Mr. and Mrs. George Hooker, W. E. Feero Jr, Jean Clayton, J. Jacquot, Marie Riley, and Isabel Miller. Business meeting, Juneau Wo- man’s Club, Alaska Electric Light and Power Penthouse, Wednesday, January 4, at 1:30 pm. 91-1t — PAGE THREE TI0[ENTURY STARTS TONITE and WEDNESDAY (Y8 in 2 whirl- ?fwmw ..in Paramount’s gny musical story of youth.in.lovel DOORS OPEN 7:00 4+ SHOW STARTS 7:20 and 9:30 THANKS To the many friends who con- tributed to the Christmas pleasure of the Native children, we wish to extend our thanks on their be- half. 91-1t ALASKA NATIVE BROTHER- HOOD, by Jake Cropley, President. BAKE SALE Juneau Woman’s Club, at Sears Roebuck Office, Friday January 6. 91-3t Cordova$ 53.50° Kodiak $105.00 s Tax / orage for all Interior Tickets and Reservations BARANOF HOTEL Phone 716 Lie 1IRTIVES IN( il Now omy G-E SUNLAMP Keep that Summer - tan look | Mbw.-?bdmlflldlduddcmfldaa" Ass'n. Alaska Eleetrie Light and Power Co.. Cheerful Dispensers of Friendly Dependable 24-Hour Electrical Service } —d