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R 10, 1950 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA PAGE FIVE TUESDAY, OCTOB SHOWPLALE o CAbITUL THE WONDER SHOW FOR EVERYONE IN THE FAMILY! ON OUR SCREEN WORLD SERIES! YANKS FRANK MORGAK - RAY BOLGER take first two BERT LAHR - JACK HALEY ‘ AN M-G-M MASTERPIECE REPRINT games \ | ... DY GARLAND RASCHI pitches a ! two-hitter. SHOW 7:'.21 FEATU. T — 9:30 TOM and JERRY "Love That Pup” A DI MAGGIO Home Run. RE at REYNOLDS beats ROBERTS in thrill- packed game. s TIME YOU KNEW!? See it TOMORROW!? ‘IHREE FISHERMEN || ARE REPORTED LOST JAI.(}NG LOWER COAST! SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 10—(®— | Three fishermen were reported lost | from two boats, and a third fishing | vessel may have sunk in heavy seas | off the Golden Gate last night. i The sea along the coast was run- ning high although the weather was sunny, calm and clear. The fishing craft Attu, out of Se-| | attle, arrived heré today after two | men were swept into the sea. They | were Ben Lowell and Magnar Lowell, | | | ; | | | | | | 3 | | brother and son of skipper Alf | Lowell of Seattle, who, the Coast Guard reported, was unhurt but distraught by the tragedy. About the same time, the Lively, | a Seattle boat, docked and the two | | crewmen reported the owner, Arnie | | Dahl of Seattle, had disappeared | | during the night. ECASEY STENGEL IS REHIRED AS | { YANKEE MANAGER | NEW YORK, Oct. 10—(P—Casey Stengel, winner of two world base- | ball championships in as many years, was rehired today as Man- ager of the New York Yankees for two years. The terms were not dis- closed. | There have been estimates his' | salary would be anywhere ' from : | $65,000 to $80,000 a year. JEFF CHANDLER . ppg RAN| e ||| stensel came back o the big DALL .Q’. : leagues, Oct. 1948, replacing Bucky EAU DENNIs TS | O'KEEFE . ] GALE MAR!GR‘E RAMB | Harris on a two year contract. STOCKHOLDER IN ST. LOUIS BROWNS NEW YORK, Oct. 10—®—The St. Louis Browns, who a few months ago were dabbling with a psychiatrist, welcomed a Metropolitan Opera star into the organization today. Blonde Helen Traubel said she’d always loved the Browns and so she bought a “nice chunk” of stock “mostly to satisfy a sentimental urge.” Bill Dewitt, President of the ball club, confirmed the new member of the front office family and said he hoped Miss Traubel would sing “the Star Spangled Banner” at the opening game next year. Neither would confirm the amount of the stock. The singer merely said, “It's a nice chunk.” WED. and THU. ONLY' NOW at A.E.L.&P. New lamp bulb beautifies fixtures like these! Bright light directed UP from this part of bulb Polls close at 8 tonight. Vote. Downward light softened by tinted enamel coating here ARE [ T winasmese ot o bank is pledged to conscrva tive operation. The safety of depositors’ funds is our primary consideration. In addition, the bank is 2 mem- ber of Federal Deposi Insur- ance Corporation,which in- sures cach of our depasitors against loss to a maximum of $10,000. General Electric H0-GA Bulbs o 40¢ Alaska Flectrie Light and Power Co. | Wizard of Oz” | screened will want to see it again | tumes "WIZARD OF 01" ENDS CAPITOL SHOWING TONIGHT “The Nearly everyone who saw at the Capital Theatre tonight. Anyone who did not see the pic- ture will want to see Judy Garland |as Dorothy, Frank Morgan as Doc- \m irn showing today at the Gross | X | tor Marvel, Billie Burke as Glinda, |20th Century Theatre. | TR TS 5 the Singer Midgets as the Munch-| La Medina is the old part of the! & $ 5 { kins. There are lavish sequences in the Emerald City. The scenes and cos- follow the stories, dear to the hearts of young people for two or three generations The “Wizard of Oz” leaves the Capitol after performances tonight Coming to the theatre tomorrow will be “Abandoned,” Universal- | International picture with Dennis O’Keefe and Gale Storm in the lead- | “Abandoned” is a drama | “baby-selling” racket. The | | story is that of a newspaperman who | ¢ ing roles. of the “breaks” the racket and the girl ‘whu helps him in his endeavor. It is said to be an exciting picture. | '(RACK CANADIAN UNITS ARE TO JO'N FORCES IN KOREA FORT LEWIS, Wash., Oct. 10—(® —Housekeeping units of a special Canadian brigade assigned to United Nations forces in the Far East { busied themselves with preparations today for arrival of the main body of troops. The housekeepers — electricians, carpenters, plumbers and office workers—arrived yesterday and im- mediately took up quarters after parading past a reviewing line. They numbered more than 100 men. The main body, a self-contained fighting unit of brigade size (ap- proximately 4,000 to 5,000 men) will arrive but as yet at a secret date. An announcement, from Ottawa said |the troops would be sent to the | Orient in mid-November. The Canadians are using Fort Lewis because no bases in Canada | are large enough to assemble a force of that size. Final training will be overseas at a still undeter- mined site. Represented in the special bri- gade are such well-known outfits as the Royal Canadian regiment from | Ontario; the Princess Patricia’s Ca- i nadian Light Infantry from Al- berta; the Royal 22nd Regiment from Quebec, and the Royal Ca- nadian Horse Artillery from Mani- toba. RECORD CATCH IS SCOOPED UP BY SARDINE FISHERS SAN PEDRO, Calif., Oct. 10—#— After spending the weekend un- loading fish, this city’s sardine fleet today claimed a new world’s record for tonnage brought into port on a single day. The mark: Saturday’s 10,390 tons. Figures announced by the US. Fish and Game Division, disclosed that the old record—9218 tons at Monterey, Calif., Sept. 25, 1945—has been eclipsed. The previous Pedro high was 8990 tons unloaded Oct. 1, 1946. The big hauls are due to unusunlly heavy run: FOOTBALL PASSES GIVEN ATTENTION BERKELEY, Calif., Oct. 10—7— Passes, used little and futilely by California in subduing Pennsylvania, come in for renewed attention as the U.C. gridders work for Satur- day’s coast conference game Wwith usc. Coach Lynn Waldorf, pointing for a severe test, indicated the Bears' successful running attack is what kept them out of the air last week. Your Depeosits SAFE BUY and HOLD UNITED STATES SAVINGS BONDS DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASKA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION when it was first | Frank Baum | BERGMAN-BOGART | ARE STARS, 20TH'S | "(ASABlAN(A" NOW! The Biggest Stars in Their Biggesl HIT! Lfi@% [ENTURY s ai 7:20-9:30 Features Start at 7:45-9:55 La Medina, the mysterious vice- fested North African sector is | the setting for Warner Brothers un- forgettable hit, “Casablanca,” star- ring Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid| Bergman which opens a special re- | Moorish city which is enclosed by n\ | high wall with its back to the At- | ic. Underground leaders (mm; 1 parts of Europe hid out in this "a during the turbulent days of World War Two. Hollywood re-, created this area of Casablanca in| close detail. Rick’s Cafe, presided‘ | over by Humphrey Bogart, is the | headquarters for those. refugees | trying to get visas to escape. In-| trigue runs riot in this atmosphere. Paul Henried, Claude Rains, Syd- Greenstreet, Peter Lorre and 7. Sakall are all in the cast which makes “Casablanca” as ex- citing a picture as has come to the 20th Century for some days. | Jack 0"Connor Tells BPWC Members Of Grayling Projed! Jack O’Connor, president of ie| Territorial Sportsmen’s Association, | will no doubt have a lot of appli- READY, ROTARY HEARS cation’s for membership from Busi- i | ness and Professional Women fol-| Sixteen hundred books have been lewing his talk to the club Monday | selected and purchased by the Sea: ncon in the Baranof Terrace Room, | Roebuck Foundation, for the Rotary- The details of planting grayling | sponsored circulating library for 20 in Auk and Younz Lakes, a project | towns in Southeast Alaska, Frank of the Sportsmen’s association, were | Heintzleman reported at a regular plained to the women. How the | Rotary luncheon meeting today. 2 grayling from Lake McDonald | Special packing cases have been urvived the red tape necessary in|built he said, and he requested making the transfer from their | assistants for packing and shipping | home in Canada to the lakes near |the books. | Juneau is due to the patience of | Betty McCormick of the Juneau- "\h'. O’Connor and the Fish and Douglas Concert Association gave a wildlife Service people who worked . brief talk on the organization and with him. urged support of the project. She | The Sportsmen’s Association has pointed out that other Southeast | appropriated $2500 for the planting Alaska towns were ahead of Juneau of prayling in southeast Alaskan in ticket sales. lakes—wherever the water is the| Floyd Guertin, chairman of the | proper temperature—and $500 has ' party committee, announced that all been spent this year to bring the arrangements were completed for sports fish into the Juneau area,|the Rotary party for Friday night Mr. O'Connor said. | at the Baranof Hotel. There wasn't a woman pre:\eml‘ Lorin T. Oldroyd from Fairbanks who will forget Mr. O'Connor's was a visiting Rotarian. Guests were recipe for boiled grayling: First' Glen Wilder of Anchorage, Dele- cover the kettle with a layer of | gate E. L. Bartlett, Birger Matinson | ney [‘fim-fim‘sfififi‘f{fl;fih WHAL B. WALLIS »eon MICHAEL CuTiZ Scroen Play by Julius J. and Philip G. Epstein and Howard Koch From a Play by Murray Burnett and Joan Alicon » Music by Max Steiner Academy Award Winner! WARNER BROS. RE-RELEASE (IR(UlMING lIBRARY PIumbmg @ lieafing il Burners Telephone Blue 737 Nights-Red 730 Harri Machine Shop, Inc. 5 12th and E Street Fares Reduced One Way 98.00 Reund Trip 113.40. 176.40. 144.00. 188.10. 206.10. Anchorage Kodiak Homer 80.00. Naknek A:B. 104.50. Naknek Village 114.50. | bacon, Iullcw] with L]hinly sliced | of Seattle, K. B. Hanna of Seattle, b i e Pl iy onicn, then the grayling cut in Howard Lyng of Nome, Mrs. Mc- ) » o ) Iritrabitrns o 0} & nanp anl | chunks and boiled slowly. “MIners | Gormick and Capt. Melvin Johnson lofi Red“e"mn on Round Trip in the interior live on grayling|of the Junmeau ACS office who is Plus Tax I much of the time, and beiled gray- | ling is superior to baked or fried,” Next weeks program on “Rotary the sportsman said. | Foundations” will be in charge of Mr. O'Connor was introduced 0 Bj) Ellis and Ralph Mize. the club by Mrs, Lucille Stine, pro- to become a new member, 5 Daily Flights — Passengers, Mail and Air Cargo Connections at Anchorage for all Interior | g';‘;‘n‘llc‘:)‘::?:: G T Ju“uw_i Polls close at 8 tonight. Vote.| and Westward Points ; Douglas Concert Association drlch PRI | for membership was urged by Mis.| S ¢ * ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ © ¢ 0 Tickets and Reservations John McCormicK and by President Kate Smith, who presided at the|2 ~TIPE TABLE o BARANOF HOTEL meeting. | Phone 716 Mrs. Smith announced that lho}. MAY 0"“_"" 1 L4 7 | next luncheor. mesting will e ® High tide 1:22 am, 1781t. o | october 30. kd I,«_)'.\‘ tide 17:24 am,, -06 ft. ® The BPW tea for Juneau school |® High tide 1:32 pm.,, 195 ft. ® ) ’ 5 teachers and newly arrived business | ® LW tide 7:53 p.m., -26 ft. ® Pacrric Noritit RA women in town, will ke October 18/@ © o o o o o o o o o |in the Masonic Temple and will| take the place of the meeting next | week. The United Nations banquet Oct- | ober 24, in which Business and Pro- | fessional Women will join other | civic groups, will substitute lor the | October 23 mecting of the club, tie | president announced. Guests at the Monday were Florence Hibbard, Wilma Carlton and Gertru zel whose hostess was Mrs. Harris. luncheon guest of Wet- Lillian | W. E. RICHMOND HERE W. E. Richmond, Vice President of the Northern Commercial Co. in Seattle, was in Juneau briefly. He | left today for Whitehorse, Fairbanks and Anchorage on a business trip for the company. “For Better Appearance” CALL | e..for BUD and BUDWEISER mean the same thing-the world's most famous beer. [ There'’s nothing like it...abso- lutely nothing. Budweise LAGER BEER BREWED, AGED AND BOTTLED BY ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC....ST. LOUIS, MO., U.S.A: TRIANGLE CLEANERS | S0X8