The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 14, 1950, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1950 M-6-M PICTURE AT THE CAPITOL HAS FINE CAST Marcia Davenport’s “East Side, ‘Wesl Side,” brings to the Capitol Theatre for the last times tonight ‘nn interesting cast to play an in- | teresting story. | In the featured roles are Barbara | Stanwyck, James Mason, Van Hef- {lin, Ava Gardner, Cyd Charisse, | Gale Sondergaard, Tom Powers and | their director is Mervyn LeRoy. This exciting best-seller novel is an intimate drama of glamorous people and their romantic lives in the heart of New York. The story is of beautiful Isabel Lorrison, played by Ava Gardner, who is in love with socialite Brandon Bourne (James Mason) whose wife is Barbara Stanwyck. Van Heflin is war hero Mark Dwyer, former East Side policeman whom Barbara has idolized since childhood. There is drama and murder in the mixed- up story of interesting and g orous persons told against a b: ground of “East Side, West Side,” of New York. Showings tonight will be the last performances of this Metro-Gold- wyn-Mayer feature. WELL BABY, HEALTH CONFERENCE WILL BE HELD ON THURSDAY BT TR E Movies Are Your Cheapest And Best Entertainment T' Shows at 7:05-9:35 ® Feature 7:42-10:12 R TR WHERE LOVE KNOWS | NO BOUNDARIES! | ¢ EAST SIDE. WEST SIDE " o CYD CHARISSE - NANCY DAVIS _ T TR VY WE PROMISED YOU GOUD, BIG Piciures! Ta!’g nnow comes the f a long line of movie entertainment ill be enjoyed ¢ CAPITOL THEA s 1 e MOVIE "MUST"! next one sm TRE. your. | All mothers are reminded of the ! weekly Well Baby and Child Health Conference held Thursday after- {noons from 1 to 4 at the Juneau | Public Health Center 318 Main Mothers may phone 218 for FLAM'NG’ an h?;;i ntment. A!l: mothers of pre-school age children are cor- FEARLESS § | aiz1iy invited to attend. DRAMA OF At the conference, the baby will | be weighed, measured and exam- FIERY Jlinea by the health nurses. One EMOTION! | may discuss the child care prob- ——— lems a be on the 4 prope ng and care. of the A well b The purpcse of these CLARENCE } | conferences are’ for healith super- BROWN vision and not to take the place Production of the doctor's instructions There is a play corner with toys jand takble and chairs for the older ldren to play with while mother tending to baby. The Health Center has available literature which may contain help- (ful information for the mother of the baby, pre-school age or school age child. These booklets deal with a wide assortment of problems, including food and feed- ing, training the child an behavior problems. Parents may inquire about these when they take their ! (hildren te clinic, or drop in and inquire about them at the Health Center at any time. | Mothers with young children | who are new arrivals to Juneau ;zu'e invited to participate in the | vices offered by the Juneau | Putlic Health Center. Phone or tdrop in, the Public Health Nurses | will be glad to help mothers. M-G-M Picture is “Superior . . . ranks with THE BEST in a long time . .. GENU- INE REALIS) tension from the open- ing scene continues throughout . hould hold any audience in its spell from beginning to end . . . Superb pic- ture.” —Showmen’s Trade Review. 'BABY GIRL IS BORN HER SATURDAY T0 MARTINSENS A baby girl arrived for Mr. and | Mrs. J. L. Martinsen of Peters- | burg, Alaska, at St. Ann’s hsopital | Saturday morning at 9:02 o'clock. { The little girl who has been | | | | named Linda Jeanne weighed 6 pounds, 7 ounces. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. John C. Martinsen of the s ACHIEVEMENT PINS (PAUL KINCH DROWNS 2o e o vomn B | | The proud father flew to Juneau IN SEYMOUR (A“Al to be present at the birth of his - child, and returned Monday to Word has been relayed to U. S.|the family home in Petersburg. | Coast Guard headquarters hers | —_— The annual Achievement Day|that Paul Kinch of Douglas has| HARMON GETS HIS DEER program for the Auk Bay 4-H Club | been ed in Seymour Canal| One of the succesful deer hunters was held on Sunday afterncon at|near d. He was a crew | was Hank Harmon who bagged a the home of Ann Coe, daugk of | member of the motor vessel Wand- | four-peint buck at Bingham Cove AWARDED AT AUK BAY 4-H (LUB MEET and Mrs. Lloyd Coe. A erer, captained by Sandy Stevens. on Yakobi Island. Enroute back to 1 ir a talk by Jean| No other particulars have been Juneau, Harmon who was hunting on the backeround of 4-H|recelved. | with Gudie Winthers from the Rose Lee Jekill read a poem and Maureen 2 It was requested that a Coast|Elsie D, stopped at Idaho Inlet Guard vessel be sent for the body | where they reported good duck and $last night were 18 passeng THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA MEMBERSHIP 'DRIVE MADE BY SKI CLUB colm Hardy, President of the Ju- membership drive was launched learn to ski are requested to join in the ski club’s activities for the com- ing season. Hundreds of skiers have learned | to ski with the Juneau Ski Club during the past 15 years, state to learn to ski should contact club | officials. Juneau has the finest ski- | ing facilities of any town in Alaska | right at her back door. A full program benefitting the skiing community is being planned by the Ski Club. Committees in- clude: Ski Instruction, Social, Out- door, Tournament and Racing, Ski| Patrol, Publicity, Junior Skiing Photography. The Juneau Ski Club is the oldest in Alaska, and was started in 1935 by an enthusiastic group of Juneau | ! mountaineers who recognized the| need for an organized ski club. By the weight of a number of skiers banded together the Ski Club has been able to obtain improvements ilities which benefit the en- tire skiing community. ‘The new Ski Club President, Mal- colm Hardy, is District Ranger for the U.S. Forest Service, and came to Juneau from the Mount Hood National Forest where he worked with recreation and skiing at famous Mount Hoed. iMMUNIZATION CLINIC IS SET FOR TOMORROW with babies or small who have not received their immunization y invited to attend the immunization clinic to be| d Parents children or are cordi. monthly completed held at the Public Health Center, 318 Main Street, tomorrow morn- ing at 10 o'clock. Dr. J. W. Gibson will be in| charge of the clinic, assisted by | Public Health Nur Immunizations against smallpox, | tetanus, diptheria and whooping | cough are given, and all interested | ) persons are invited to attend.| Booster shots for diphtheria, tet.| anus, whooping cough are given al. | so, and parents should inquire at] thé Health Center, phone 218, for i information as to whether their child needs one. |ald Burrus, 18 DISEMBARK LAST NIGHT FROM DENALI WITH 4 EMBARKING the Denali s Disembarking from nd pm, ship embarking were four at 10 sailing time, Master of the is Capt. Ben Aspen. Passenger service by the Alaska Steamship Company had been interrupted since early October over secur! & screening procedure of the Coast | Guard. | Arriving from Seattle were: Mr. | and Mrs. Robert H. Bean, Melvin R. Berger, Mrs. G. G. Brown, Mrs, Don Caban, Mrs. William Geddes, John R. James, Sue Kennedy, Mr and Mrs. John Lowell, Mr. E. L. Metcalf, C. Hellene Price, Phoebe L. Sheets, Henry A. Su- pine. From Ketchikan were: P.J. Gil- more, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Wil- liams, Departing for Sitka was 9gt. Leon P. Johnson. For Seward: Linda Frasch, Spiers, L, P. Petrie. M. EASTERN STAR Annua! Roll Call night, Juneau Chapter No. 7, Tuesday, November 114, 8 o'clock. Al members are| | requested to be present. { 656-31 #5766, fkl%, depieting; 8 SgH because the weather was too Yough |goose shooting. Bud Brown of Al-! Alice ‘Brown, Secretar; 4-H club mecting, using a flan-for the Wanderer to make port.|aska Coastal Airlines hunted with) nelgraph to illustrate the yro-|The U. . Commissioner has been | the party for a few days. SCHWINN BIKES AT MADS cedures. advised. 1 B — HBPRE [ SE WS = The following members were | awarded fiist ye ement | pins, Jean Elljs, Jekill, Rose Lee Jekill, ACCA MEETING 1S | - 1 The regular meeting of the Ju- | neau-Douglas chapter of the Al- aska Crippled Children’s Associa- Avery an pins are awarded on completing all as: nents for the year, filing a n ive of their | ¢ion will be held Wednesday, Nov- club year with the Home EXIEN-|ember 15, at 8 p.m. in the pent- nd exhibiting at the ] pouse of the Alaska Electric Light and Power Company. There will be Memb also accepted a report on the annual member- Clubk Charter at the meet ship drive which is being con- charter is awarded when the or-|ducted during the month of Nov- ganization has completed the 10|ember. requirements for an Alaska Stand- ot ard Club. Refreshments were served by the eclub members tc their mothers heir leaders, Mrs, Willis Avery Mrs. Chet Ellis. DENNY GREEN BACK' Denny Green, son of Mr. and .Mrs. Henry Green, returned to Jju. |- neau Sunday. He has been visiting with relatives in the states. and LOUISVILLE, s FROM DILLINGHAM Walter Noden and Richard Os- terhaus of Dillingham are regis- tered at the Hotel Juneau, Sewing machines for rent at the White Sewing Machire Center. 642-tf KENTUCKY Bz et Li The cdll is for Kentucky Straight Bourbon (CaBIN STILL Straight from Kentucky 4 Years Old : 42 KENTUCKY TRAIGHT neau Ski Club, as the 15th annual s Hardy, and anyone who would like ¢ (OMMURICATION The following has been received by The Empire: An open letter to the City Coun- cil, Juneau, Alaska: On the morning of November 9 two-alarm fire ravaged some lildings on Franklin Street. Though these buildings were very old and seemingly in not too good a bu The support of organized skiing condition it was a tragedy that they |novel of a man was strongly urged today by Mal- | were burned, for in their destruc- honor forces him to take the blame PIDGEON-KERR TOP' "IF WINTER COMES" CAST, 20TH CENTURY For acting at its very best, you will have to turn to “If Winter Comes,” M-G-M's richly effective adaptation of A. S. M. Hutchinson whose code of tion two children were killed. As far | for another man’s mis-conduct dispensed by the radio or newspaper, been avoided. Although the responsibility for the children’s death may be laid to their | gripping wing been locked in their room who his tragedy: 1. Why did this hotel have only t, when most public meeting- places or rooming-houses must have more than one exit? 2. Has any qualified official in- spected buildings in this city to dis- ’ cover if they are adequately pro- tected against fire? 3. Can the causes of the many fires which have occurred in Ju- neau in the past year and a lm][lx\hnp Angela be laid only to an unfortunate chain of circumstances? anyone can deduce from the news | New skiers and persons desiring | this frightful tragedy might have | ese questions will oceur to thnse;(h.- Gro: consider even disinterestedly | villificatior e, employer even though it meal at the hands of his wi and neighbors. Four of the outstanding performances are compressed in this picture, which will be today and Wednesd: 20th Centur; Deborah Kerr, the English actre is the woman whose fine sensibili- | ties prevent her from renouncing ar | antipathetic husband for an ideal listig writer. | Walter Pidgeon the caught up in a web of incriminating recumstances when he befriend | Effie Bright,, a young girl who ha |gotten herself into trouble, turn in the most forceful and dramatic characterization of his entire career Landsbury, as hi ipretty, jealous and misunderstand |ing wife, adds another brilliant por year's | shown as writer 4. Or are the people of the City of |(rait to her gallery of “heavies.” Juneau to blame for the deaths of | these two young boys and the trag- | work of Janet Leig edies of the other fires, because of | the role of the ili- Last, but far from least, is the gh, who brings tc ated Effie Bright their indifference, carelessness or /s compassion and tenderness that callousness? The volunteer firemen of Juneau !, player of so limited and Douglas have performed the services in a competent and reur—j but they have too| many counts against them when | whici | burned November 9 are allowed to | stand uninspected and uuprmccted.g For (s 1kt 30 vaATS on era. e We as a city must take upon OUI''anyqa) pazaar of the Martha Societ shoulders the responsibility for dis-yas peen as certain as November less manner, buildings such as those which occur so repeatedly. asters Perhaps we can make our ¢y ON€ | their perfection in handwork and to be proud of, by insisting on ade- | delicious home-made pastries, quate fire prevention through ilnndj“m have. mAny |ordinances requiring a high mini- {sae peginning at 7:30 pm. Friday mum standard of fire safety, rigid j, yho Northern Light Presbyterian enforcement of such ordinances, and | cpureh basement, H a thorough safety education pro- gram for all people in the area. Until we of Juneau can accept the responsibility for fire prevention, our city will be one to be avoided instead of admired. (signed) Betty Hammond, P. O. Box 2221. JWC MEETING WILL BE HELD TOMORROW The monthly soclal-program meeting of the Juneau Woman'’s Club will be held at 1:30 tomorrow afternoon at the home of Mrs. Don- 705 Twelfth Street. Mrs. C. E. Albrecht will be the chairman of the hostess committee for the dessert luncheon which will precede the program. Mrs. Frances Paul will discuss “The Pros and Cons of the Com- munity Chest,” a topic of timely interest to Juneau people, and Mrs. Mildred R. Hermann will report on the GFWC Board Meeting which | she recently attended in Washing- ton, D.C. Mrs. Hermann is a mem- ber of one of the standing com- mittees of the General Federation, the Convention Program Commit- tee of 1950-52. FROM SITKA Sidney W. Beavers of Sitka is stopping at the Baranof Hotel. SALES and SERVICE CHRISTENSEN BROS. 909 12th Phone Green 279 Collins & Geddes PLUMBING & HEATING First Class Work—All Work Guaranteed Kensington Bldg. (At City Float) P. O. Box 258 Phone 1039 B9 | \ { | | be {is nothing less than remarkable ir ANNUAL NGV. BAZAAR FR,, MADTHA SOCIETY | These ladies have been noted for They the of these at i Mrs. J. W. Leivers, the general | chairman, urges the public to fin- |ish their dinner with desserts which | will be served continuously at this | sale. Candy, greeting cards, aprons, dolls, pillow cases and knit nndl crocheted wear for Christmas gifts will be available. FOR STARS TONIGHT The annual roll call of the East- Star is one event of import- tonight. The roll call will! held in the Sdottish Rite Temple and the meeting is cnllet‘.l for 8 o'clock with every Eastern Star in the city urged to attend | or send in announcement. ern ence ‘;ANNUM ROLL CALL , IGES PAGE FIVE FOR rox BEST ' ENTERTAINMENT | v Check Your Newest and Largest Theatre o LENTURY Features 7:50-10:00 Shows 7:20-9:30 Starls Tonight EVERYBODY'S PICTURE! And ¢ Wonderful News for the Millions Who Cherish (he Thrilling Story Told in the ALL-TIME BEST-SELLER! Now Brought to the Sereen! 1T Deborah KERR ANGELA LANSBURY L) inte MGM Picture JANET LEIGH BINNIE BARNES DAME MAY WHITTY PLUS PETE SMITH TOM AND JERRY EXTRA! DEBORAH KERR VOTED BEST ACTRESS OF THE YEAR! —N. Y. Film Critics.. Directed by the man who gave you “GREEN DOT,PHIN STREET” | ‘ You HAve It Waen You N;so Ir LG Yeur best bet tor quick dellvery h Alr Exy..em « .. fast, dependable service by Alaska Coastal, «t low, economical rates. Your letter or wire te your mershant, requesting delivery by Al Exe press, assures you of having your merchandise when you most need i « a » <§Zw.4 There is no substitute for Newspager Advertising! | ( * You are Invited -to Drive the Worlds - Most Modern Car % ‘mlqm Drive the bi highway CHRI than 25 miles to the gallon at average iu. Twin Beds, ORE YOU DECIDE, TAKE AN AIRFLYTE RIDE—IN THE WORLD'S MOST MODERN CAR One of the world’s greatest road per- formers. Recentl fiuh Ambll:::- dor averaged 95,3 miles per hour for 712 miles in official competition. Compare it, drive Here's your finest value in fine cars. CoME 1N and drive the 1951 Nash Airflyte. Discover how Airflyte Construction brings you new safe- ty,economy and performance, with luxurious roominess. See why Nash has a postwar sales gain 5 times as great as the average of the indus- try, Be doubly happy with the next car you buy. Before you decide, take an Airflyte ride—in the world’s most modern car. g raomy car that goes more Like the Ambassador Matic Drive, Airliner The THE AMBAS 1 Modern Ca SADOR - THE STATESMAN THE RAMBLER A Wor Nash Molors, Division Nash-Kelvinator Corp., Detroit, Mich: STENSEN BROS. 909 12th Sireet, Junean :

Other pages from this issue: