The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 6, 1950, Page 5

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PAGE FIVE [ AR TIOMENTURY " oo and Shows at 7:25 and 9:30 ' THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA BOY SCOUTS GIVE [COMMUNITY EVENTS ENTERTAINMENTTO | . -o%. SUNDAY VISITORS TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1950, e S S TONIGHT and Wednesday Only SHOWPLALE orF TENSION-PACKED FEATURE TONIGHT AT 20TH CENTURY 1|"THE GIRL FROM MANHATTAN" IS CAPITOL'S BILL TODAY At 6 p.m.—Rotary picnic. At 8 p.m.-—<4merican Legion Aux- iliary meeting in Dugout. 1 | WEDNESDAY - usteal At 8 pm.-Odd Fellows meet in / N Attraction tonight at the Capitol | IOOF Hall With Burgess Meredith and Eng- ‘/‘ EYTYTEN | | Theatre is Benedict Bogeaus's “The | Many parents and friends visited June 7 land's newest screen sensation, Y i = IS Girl From Manhattan,” a gay com- |th¢ Fagle River Scout Camp last | At noon—Kiwanis Club, Baranot. |Kieron Moore, in leading roles, Sunday to witness Scouting in ac- tion and the Court of Honor, going to the camp by car, boat and plane.| At noon | Mrs. Wallace Volz, Mrs. Pherson,| Baranof |Dr. Bessonnette and Mr. and MIS.| At noon | “Mine Own Executioner,” an Alex- ander Korda production released by Twentieth Century-Fox, opens to- inight at the 20th Century Theatre | The excitement-packed story of a At 8 p.m—Elks Lodge. June 8 Chamber edy starring George Montgomery, When a man Charles Laughton and Dorothy La- mour in her first sarong-less film. The cast also features a quintet of Commerce, The delicious story of - confesses... Lutheran Ladies Aid to Amenca s most hEautlfUl of top-drawer comedians: Ernest| d Truex, Hugh Herbert, William | €3lhoun, all of Sitka, came viat Jeave church for monthly meet-|modern romance, unfolded With P | model . . . and 3 men Frawley, Constaice Collier and Sara | 10%k8 Coastal, landing on thel ing at Newman cabin, Lena Beach. | penetrating frankness against an l LOVE _ Allgood. |beach at the Eagle River Camp, t0} A¢ §:30 p.m.—Baseball game be- | unusual background of mounting wholed a model hfe! This warm, chuckling tale of an |SPend the afternoon with theirf tyeen Coast Guard and Moose. ‘| suspense. “Mine Own Executioneer’ ex-All American fullback minister |S°P 8nd their friends. At 6:30 p.m —Juneau Rifle and Pis- |is said to provide some of the most SOMEONE i G A special feature of the after-{ () cjyp at Mendenhall range. | absorbing and dramatic moments whose first assignment involves not | ¥ - By winning. the. trust and conu_;:{nnnflovlv‘z: a campfire and Court Maurice F. Powers, dence of his congregation but also| 5 i e T s ot the TnbiedIbly| L couk Baecutive, and, Camps i 2 2 ~ |or, introduced men present w0 tangled affairs of his landlord and | } el struments - PUISNORE * chalhmaR - -of had been instrumental in helping the | . g ‘ 4 to get the camp in good shape for church’s building comthittee’ plus R!lhi.s Season. The boys, led b9 D renewed high school romance With|p g . dqder, Field Scout Executive. NeWh York’s most famous model | song several very catchy songs for muc }117 the distress of his BISNOP. | tpe ~ appreciative visitors. Patrol was written by Howard EStabrook jeqgers introduced members of their and directed by Alfred E. Green. pgtols to the visitors and several _ Montgomery plays the new min-|g. ;s were presented for the en- ister. Laughton is his Bishop “"d[jovment of the crowd. Dorothy Lamour, the ohfldNood): ope Bagle Patrol, with ‘Tommy sweetheart who has made g00d S |ggghen of Douglas as Patrol Lead- a model. Ernest Truex is cast 8s|e. cave Johan the Flaming Ar- her uncle, the mixed-up boarding| oy patrol with Kenneth McGee house keeper while Hugh Herbert .o patrol Leader, gave a skit on and Constance Collier are among|gagting, The Frontier Patrol with June 11 !of the screen year. At 12 noon—Cars leave Federal| In what is said to be his most Building for Auk Bay recreation | interesting role to date, Burgess ground for annual Shrine picnic. | Meredith i= seen as Felix Milne, & June 12 | lay-psychiatrist who, though happily At noon—Lions Club, Baranof. | married, is irresistibly drawn to an- At 8 p.m.—American Legion, Dug-folher woman with results that lead out i"’“ tragic consequences- in the lives ‘of still another couple, as well as ELSE... AND YET I NEED You!” ...what should GAYEST COMEDY SINCE *ROAD a woman do? | altering the entire course of his own | life and career. drama is set when Adam Lucian THOSE wHo wAN’I (Kieron Moore), an ex-pilot who ’GOOD "EwSl oulv;he is filled with a strange urge to | to Milne for treatment, and the lat- | ter throws himself into the problem | Ap BOSS HIIS AI | The tempo of the suspenseful is stricken with spells during which ! murder his young wife, is brought SPOKANE, Wash,, June 6—®—A . with his usual intensity and devo- BURGESS MEREDITH | | | | Shows at 7:28—9:30 Feature starts 8:05 — 10:05 SCOTTGIVEN |CONGRESS KEY POSTON - ARMS JOB WASHINGTON, June 6—(®—Maj. Gen, Stanley L. Scott, former Army commander in Alaska, was picked today for a key post in the foreign arms program. The Defense Department said he is being assigned as director of the office of military assistance in secretary Johnson's office. As such, he will help plan and carry out the program of rearming this coun- try's allies. Scott succeeds Maj. Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer, who is expected to take command of an airborne div- ision. Lemnitzer's exact assign- went was not disclosed. Scott’s transfer from Alaska to the secretary’s office was announ- ced April 4 but it had not been revealed what his new duties would be. He has been working with Lemnitzer for several weeks. v Scott is a native of New Albany, Ind. During World War II he was Chief of Staff of the Persian Gulf Command. Before that he served as district and division engineer in various locations throughout the southwestern United States. MRS. GEORGE BALL VISITING IN JUNEAU Mrs. George Ball, who with her husband . owns and operates the Diamond B ranch at Telegraph Creek, B. C, is in Juneau, a guést at the Baranof Hotel for a few days. The Balls make a specialty of big game hunting parties and run a dude ranch for tourists. Mrs. Ball reports a bty season ahead and sdid that the new river boat, which 'is being built by Capt. Al Ritchie of * Wrangell far Stikine River travel, is being launched to- day by the Campbell-House ship- yard at Wrangell. It will accom- modate 12 passengers, » Sale of Pottery, China and Glassware 40% Discount Sale Ends June Tth ALAS K P\U‘EQI'FF[) ; HUGH HERBERT \\ WILLIAM FRAWLEY - ERNEST TRuEX e WEX AND JINX IN THE U.S. THIS IS AMERICA S e R ] committee’s fraud. MARCH OF DIMES NETS $8,288 WITH FAIRBANKS NOT IN i ] | | ! A total of $8288.42 has been col- {lected throughout Alaska for the | March of Dimes campaign, it was |announced today by Secretary of Alaska, Lew M. Williams. This total, by far the highest jever collected in the Territory sinice | the inaugaration of the campaign during the mid-1930's, does not in- clude Fairbanks, which has not yet reported in Of the grand total, half the sGm MEN ASK DISARMAMENT CONFERENCE BY UN WASHINGTON, June 6—M—Sev- |en senators and four represent- ted Nations call an immediate Cls- armament conference; The 11 lawmakers offered a res- olution which would pledge the iatives proposed today that the Ufmi-) i_sq,mm goes ' to the National lFoundation for Infantile Paralysis, ‘wn.h headquarters in Warm Sprimgs, | Ga.,, where the late President | Franklin D. Roosevelt fought his .way back to health after being stricken with polio. ! _The remaining money remains im Alaska, and may be donated or yused ‘in any way that is seen fit . by the community making the col- lection. Some of the funds haive !already been given to the Alaska Crippled Children’s Association. I In former years the money re- maining here has been given to 'the health department, and other The Bear Patrol with Kenney Kado as Patrol Leader, presented the iDen!lst, the Husky Patrol from | Sitka with Wally Volz as Patrol | Leader gave a skit on Patience and {the Penguin Patrol, Bert Strom, | Patrol Leader, also from | Sitka gave Digging Hole. Court of Honor The following awards were made at the Court of Honor, presided lover by the Rev. Sam McPhetres, Gast:neau District Advancement Chairman: Tenderfoot pins were presented to Dick Burnett and Don- ald Leege of Troop 609, Bob Peter- son of Troop 23; Second Class award went to Curtis Gordon of | Troop 613; First Class awards were presented to Ernest Polley of Troop 613, Sandy Blanton of Troop 23, Greg Ripley of Troop 641. Greg- ory Ripke, Explorer Post 713, was presented with Star - Scout Award and the highest award of the day, that of Life Scout, was presented to John Hogins by Henry Harmon. Merit badges were received by Tbm Cashen, John Hogins, Ernie Kron- |quist, David Hill, Sandy Blanton, Wally Volz, Bert Strom, Gregory Ripke, Art McKinnon and Eddie Dull. 4 Ten Scouts who were at caimp either as visitors or campers, were |introduced to the assembled aud- jence. These boys were part of those who will leave next week from Juneau to particiate in the Second National Jamboree at Val- Addressing a Utah-Idaho AP meeting, Starzel said critics had “elected to confuse the trees with the forests.” These critics, he said, suggested that the press and radio sift out the bad news. This, he said, would make propagandists of reporters. “Americans have always prided themselves on being tough and re- silent,” said Starzel. “We can take| shocks and blows, dig in and move! forward. 'We might prefer good news, but we want to know when-| ever the news is bad.” | LIBERAL PARTY IN | JAPAN WINS, POLLS TOKYO, June 6——Prime Min-| ister Shigeru Yoshida's liberal | party rode a general pro-occupation ; ticket to: a strong victory in Sun-| day’s House of Councillors elec- tion. Still incomplete returns showcd‘ the liberals had won a pluraiity! in the upper house that probably will stand. i ‘Withvenly 22 seats still in doubt the liberals had obtained 46 seats.| The social Democrats had 30, (e, independents 16, the Green Wind |party nine, Democrats nine, farfn icooperative two and the Commu- nists and farm labor parties one each. “» | The charges grew out of {recent dispute between the unffn institutions having to do with ill- nesses of children, Juneau's share in the total was United Stetes to turn over to tue U. N, for peace developments the; funds that would be saved in the; ley Forge, Pennsylvania. | The government has announced Closing campfire songs were given Iy plan to outlaw the Communist by the boys and the camp buglers,| harty The Communists, angered next five years by any workable aisarmament agreement. Asserting that “the prospect of the hydrogen bomb propels the peoples of the earth into danger above and beyond anything hercfo- fore conceived by gnan,” the restl- ution asked for a peace crusade. Signers were Senators McMahotn (D-Conn.), Magnuson ¢‘D-Wash.), Fulbright (D-Ark.), Morse (R-Ox Sparkman (D-Ala,), Gillette (D Towa), and Hendrickson (R-NJ), and Reps. Price (D-IIL); Tenry Jackson (D-Wash.), Eaton (R-K¥), and Cole (R-NY), SHUDSHIFTS RETURN FROM VACATION IN STAT:S Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Shudshift returned home aboard the Aleu- tian after five weeks vacation M the states. They went to Detroit and took delivery of a new car then dilve to California. Shudshift is em- ployed at the 'Alagka Steamship company and Mrs. Shudshit is on the staff of the Alaska Com- munications System. FROM CRAIG ©O. C. ‘Hopkins of Craig is stop- ping at the Gastineau Hotel. $960.22, of which balf remains ,the city for use here. i Although he hasn’t had time yet Ito figure details on the big dona- | tions, Williams said that last year ‘Alaska‘s per capita donation was ;more than 35 cents, greater than ‘any other portion of the United iStates. Total amount collected Ithen was $7,894.10. .| With Fairbanks yet to report, I williams believed the figure would Ithis year go well over $1,000 more ltlmn contributed last year. E M T e SV i HOME FROM VACATION i After a three weeks visit with :friends and relatives in Seattle, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Riendeau, pioneer Juneau residents, returned thome on the Aleutian, They re- iport having had a nice vacation with weather in . Seattle ‘“rather warm.” ! WEBB-DYER Jack L. Webb,.Juneau cab’ driver, and Ruth Dyer, also of Juneau, filed an application for a marriage li- cense yesterday afternoon before U. 1 8. Commissioner Gordon Gray. ! TACOMANS VISIT John = McDonnell and . Kermit, ITwedt. both of Tacoma, Wash., are stopping at the Gastineau Hotel. MOTHERS REACH FOR IT WITH CONFIDENCE Gary Hedges, Bill Glafke, and Greg Ripley, brought the ceremony to an end. After the campfire, the | visitors watched |ming and doing activities. A treat of the afternoon was ice cream for all the boys presentéd to them by the fathers of Don Able and Jack Hermle. The Eagle River Camp is now on its second week, which will in- clude cook outs, day hikes into the surrounding country. The camp will end its 1950 session on next Satur- day, June 10. the various camp SEATTLEITES HERE | Among Seattleites registered at | the Baranof Hotel are Ellen Cun- ningham, Martin Stangvik, Haaken Rogers, F. E. Gleason, Guy R. Roff, Richard C. Adams and Hallett D. Boles. RS 7400 S GALLOWAY HERE J. M. Galloway of Anchorage is stopping at the Baranof Hotel. hreatened to bullets.” indication by the plan, have iretaliate with “hum: ! There has been no the boys swim-!from the government what efiect| the plan to outlaw the Reds would {have on any that might be re- turned to office. 1 The Communists entered 50 can- ,didates, three of them incumbents. iThe present liberal total when combined with the party’s holdover :uf 23 seats gives it 69 members in the upper house. The Green Wind society bucked General Douglas MacArthur on a tax and reform bill. Their defeat in the election was taken as a | rebuke by voters exercising their war bern governmental voice. FROM TULSEQUAH | Among Tulsequah, B.C., residents stopping at the Baranof Hotel are Mr. and Mrs. P. Badyk and Mrs. M. Kristianson, with Julia and Karen. HAINES VISITOR Frank Schnabel of Haines is at the Gastineau Hotel. Homer - Yakutat $30.00. Homer $87.00. 2 10% Reduction Connections at Anch: 11011 1¢ Vot *Plus Tax Pk Daily Scheduled Flighs to: - Anchorage - Cordova - Kodiak Yakutat Same Low Fares from Juneau fo: Cordova $53.50- Kodiak $105.00. on Round Trip orage for all Interior and Westward Points Tickets and Reservations BARANOF HOTEL Phone 716 1Y AIRTINES INC his zanier boarders. Sara Allgood Byteh Hogins as Patrol Leader| weeding of the bad news from the, E plays the Bishop's long-time house-|gaye the “Jackass.” The Mohickn |good was labeled “Pollyanish” Sat-| tion to the curing of warped minds. keeper and William Frawley is the p,tyo] Gary Hedges as Patral | urday by Frank J. Starzel, General with and K‘ERON MOORE involuntary revealer of the building eader, gave the Window Wiger.| Manager of the Assoclated Press. DULCIE GRAY + CHRISTINE NORDEN « BARBARA WHITE Directed by ANTHONY KIMMINS » Produced by ANTHONY KIMMINS and JACK KITCHIN From the Novel by Nigel Belchin * An Alexander Korda Producticn % Released by 20th Cehtury-Fox i ANSWERS TO STALIN MARCH OF TIME - MUSICAL CARTOON LATEST WORLDWIDE NEWS VIA AIR 'HEARING, UNFAIR " LABOR CHARGES, UP IN SEATTLE SEATTLE, June 6—(P—A hearing of unfair labor charges against two |locals of the CIO—International Longshoremen’s and Warehouse- Imen's Union was opened foday by ELLIS AIR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN - via Pelershurg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg Convenient afternoon departures, at 2:30 P. M. FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 |the National Labor Relations Board and the Alaska salmon industry and was based on a picketing of the Alaska Steamship Company, The company was not involved directly in the dispute, and the pickets were withdrawn when Al- aska steam refused to accept sal- mon industry cargo. CRASH KILLS TWO OF ICE FOLLIES TROUPE| BEND, Ore, June 6—M—A car carrying three members of the Ice Follies cast crashed . into .a rock pile shortly before dawn Monday, killing a dancer and a singer, and | injuring another member of the | troupe. Charles Davidson, who had trouped with Shipstad’s and John- son’s Ice Follies for many years and | who starred in the opening ballet | sequence of this year’s show, was killed instantly. So was Jeanne Crystal, a vocalist. Nancy MacKenzie, a member of the skating circus, was seriously hurt. The three were driving from Port- land to San Francisco. They were the car's only oceupants. 'KENTUCKY STRAIGHT -/, BOURBIN - / WHISKEY! Su?l'fw Brook WNATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION, NEW YORK, N.Y.. « .86 PROOF) . Songs with a Personality by Vinginia MWathews "Mistress of Madern Melody'’ Rhumbas- Schottisches - Polkas - Charlestons 0ld Time Melodies and Hit Parade Tunes ' foeoees Delicious Seafood Prepdared by : Our New Chef Prawns.. $250 Halibut - $200 Oysters--- 250 Salmon... 2.00 —— includes —— Hot Biscuits and Honey . . . Salad French Fries . . . Coffee or Tea — Dinners al 6 p. m. S The New Country Club

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