The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 15, 1951, Page 5

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5 PAGE FIVRE I'E DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA On a Luxury Flight t o THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 19: ENDS TONITE exciré RTETTR fostasightring. HUNIIIA 1 fast-as-lightning behind-the-scenes story of professional foothall players! RKO presents "EASY LIVING" iS DIFFERENT MOVIE, CAPITOL THEATRE Most football pictures consist chiefly of gridiron action building up to a climax in which the hero makes a 99-yard run for the win- ning touchdown in the last 10 sec- onds of play. “Easy Living” is different RKO Radio offering at the Capitol Theatre, smartly subordinates i gridiron scenes to delving priv life problems of the players on | crack professional team, and in ! doing has come up with an absorb- |ing and thoroughly realistic human | drama. | The central character is | team’s star halfback, married | an extravagant and ambitiou | whose hopes for his future | blasted when he loses out on a co!- lege coaching position he had count- | ed on and when he also le his football days are num cause of a serious heart ail His efforts to patch up his tal difficulties and adjust hi to meet the new condition vate the story. Victor Mature | traying the role, does plendid ! job of it. Co-starred with him ar Lucille Ball as the team’s se g deeply interested in him, Liz | Scott as his wife, Sonny his best friend, and Lioyd as manager-coach. All five ! turn in solid performanc |INTERESTING TALK | ABOUT VIOLETS AT | GARDEN CLUB MEET Mrs. Alice Thorne gave a talk on African Violets at the Juneau Gar-| den Club Wednesday afternoon ! which was full of interest and in- formation for the many African Violet enthu s in the club. Mrs. horne has more than 70 varieties nd 700 plants on the enclosed porch of her home and has been| asked to contribute a series of| articles on growing African Violet in Alaska to the African Viole Magazine, She tcuched upon the; history and original locale of the, flow soil, water and tempera- ture conditions, propagation and ct control and was able to an- many questions on variety | of problems encountered in grow- iing the plants and bringing them «to bloom Mrs. Ray Renshaw presided over shoit business session before the | | program. Mrs. Helen Hixson chair- man of the program committee, distributed the new Yearbooks which are a delight to ilower lovers. Regret was expressed over the loss of Mrs. J. P. Porter due to her removal to Metlakatla and | Mrs. le HKunter, Jr., was ap- pointed Vice President for the re- | mainder of the yeat in her place Norbery Ottke has t N f the Wild flower and Bird and note paper. Other speakers on the projram were Mrs., Maxcine Willlams who tcld of her visit to the Poulsho Garden Club where she showed her Alaskan flower and Mis. Harry Stenchouse %yho gave time-| ly hints on garden preparations for this season of the year. TONIGHT and FRIDAY 3 L20"LENTURY DOORS OPEN SHOWS AT 7:00 7:20 and 9:30 DEEP SEA THRILLS! THEY THRIVE ON DANGER ...ASHORE OR ¢ SHOWPRLALE oF 9 Shows at 7:30—9:30 ® Feature at 8:08—10:09 B PAUL STEWART o JACK PAAR » and THE LOS ANGELES RAMS Produced by Robert Sparks + Directed by Jacques Tourncur + Scrcen Ploy by Charles Schaoe TOMORROW and SATURDAY! He Deciared a Recess n in Favor of Romance \ 9 bt N ALS Starls Saturday— BUILT FOR TARTOC BETTY GRABLE in "WARBASH AVENUE" T o s rew— o) ars | | who are older, wiser and have been | purned by homecom: candle which grew dim in their window Unless you've got an engagement | ring or a reasonable facsimile | thereof (some definite token | esteem and affection) don’t count on that man too much. Even then the gentlemen are opportu: | selfish, gn engagement ring would ; be considered small lcss by them if | they wished to satisfy their desires in another direction. Any girl who gives a pledge boy who 1s going abroad f risk of losing him and should prepared for the shock. Even if you feel you could never love another and your heart is perma- SOTHERN # Alexander ey b KNOX ; [FLORENCE BATES SHARYN MOFFETT MYRNA DELL In the top photo all passengers relax in deep pile lounge seats, or can go below to the cocktail lounge while flying direct from New York to London or Paris. On the overnight flights to either capital, delicious meals and complimentary cocktails are served enroute at no additional cost. Winter rates, now in effect, offer a substantial saving. Thousands of people wait for the first couple of months of any year to visit Paris, London or other European cities. The photo shows a capacity crowd on a Pan American World Airways “Strato” Clipper enroute direct to Paris, while the lower photo shows how berths are made up. A crew of nine men and gi fly the clipper and serve the passengers. This flight which leaves New York in the late afternoon and arrives in London or Paris the next morning, represents the last word in airborne luxury. | o of Pioneers the hos- Carr and cof . George Sundborg, sisted by Mrs. Pat rved a delicious dessert | fee before the pr n. Guests |included Mrs. Clarice L. Zeusler LIVING 1N ALASKA | s uroep By Tosi. DEFENSEU. 5. of Kodiak, Mrs. P. A. Kolander of | Seal Beach, California, Mrs. J. L. Beason and Mrs. J. A. Herdlick of Juneau. World War II{ shoulders, if it should happen. stated that he is in full agreement | by Cupid as| If on the of your reunion | With Delegate Bartlett's representa- s back home,|you still care for each other, you,tions that cost-of-living surveys} of whom d husbands | will be singularly fortunate, in- | should be undertaken as soon as were available and on the!deed. Youth is like a searchnm‘l’%““)l” throughout Alaska. spet. While there might have been | wina . it Goesn't mean to ,_,Q‘l The Secretar views were ex- a few girls who were ru | fickle. | pressed in a recent letter in re- RI their anxiety to get a man signed| 1f you've known your young mansponse to Delegate Bartlett’s long- | ! up on that marriage certmcate,“m,. a long time, and think that!'standing recommendation that a I few people ever blame a woman | marriage is the only solution, dis- | COst-of-living study and a labor who is told from childhood that|cyss it with your parents and then | market analysis in Alaska be made her ultimate security lies only in | don't h(‘,\ltat.c if they approve. Asil)“i“' to the passage of a resolution marriage. | one girl said recently: introduced by Delegate Bartlett on | IR Men have many more marriar;(hl “My boy friend and I deci:led}th” subject. able years than do women; some- | to treat his sojourn in the Army The Delegate's resolution fil how their wrinkles and paunches|gs <ort of a separation which could | troduced in the 8lst Congr Go not count, so why feel SOITY | happen if he'd gone away to col- ! reintroduced on January 3 of this AND*— TIM HOLT in ‘‘RUSTLERS t se! 1, 1851 P Wilkls fe 0dd Fellows Hall, 6:30 P. M. Call 174 or Black 790 for Resexvations SURVEY ON COST OF nef annoyed by his evasive re 1By 8 lack of en | sponding witk love are not So the average girl who lost her beau via the foreign market suffered a great deal | of mulmlll:n;mjll;, :\x‘.‘(llfliL\::ilin.v,-(L\‘ nently captivated by your fighting s i ;:rl‘o" Lll]{)[‘]‘\k'x‘l Romeo, have an understanding with & it Va < | him that you both will date others, | so that the blame of cooled aff that' boys in| tions will not rest on one person o | 1 Grand Fglos Bang | i orre en in T EE @ News Features So your b friend h ar Lots of girls had found that * confronted with the pro few lonely years, while {ils his mil; young girls (ur be dating boy > to 5 R | | | who thought they Some the were were many who might service du Just as their lady sed lov L DON KNUDSEN. presents Two Alaska Films VOICE OF THE PRIBILOFS and MONROE, Wis., Feb. 15—(P—Air | defense of the United States is an “almost insoluble problem,” says Gen, Nathan F. Twining, vice chief of the Air Force. Long-range bombing within an attacking ene nation offers the best “and perhaps only opportunity to strike a decisive blow,” he said in a speech last night. Incressed range, speed and alti- tude of modern airplanes were cited | by the general as causes for in- sing difficulty of defense against air atteck. er 18) of milit: should npt age on before the boy goes ally these little left-af sit around the house st at the departed one’s picture. They spend their time writing mushy letters, poetry and drooly love notes. They give up other boys even though they are too y to be promised to a you couple of thousand miles away. Lots of who followed TOKYO, Feb. 14 —(P —Japan's fishing industry is facing a serious economic crisis, William C. Her- rington, chief of the Occupation Fisheries Division, said today. Japan’s fishermen want to fish over wider areas and they want this more financing. s authorizes pattern d the last w precious ¥ only to {ind their loved one took unto b a bride in another country. Many a boy wanting to a girl heartbreak took a ate his mail-fr] with girl back home. If she was SRARREREGRARR 4 14 NNV NN NNNN NN asted mself spare year or more after his marriage to termin- the art, she probably got the pitch or was RoNoNo N NN oo NN NN NN NN NN MOOSE LOBG Valentine Dance and Basket Social . SATURDAY FEB. 17 AWARDS FOR THOSE IN COSTUME FOR MOOSE MEMBERS AND G for them? They sometimes the little woman when her waistline expands or crows feet appear under her eyelids. It is not the time to feel sorry about the ultimate chances of your departing soldier to marry some- one else, if you should change your pl Take the advice of girls RO COONNOONCOOS UESTS have | jege. We are going to get married no qualms, either, about divorcing | now, and save the allewance I am entitled to as a wife, for furniture TOKYO, | Tonegawa hea I‘zmd a down payment on a house.” Feb. was viest 15. —{M—Keishi not one to let snowfall in 15 years keep him from his job. The 15-year-old copy boy in the Associat running. Keishi ed st Press Tokyo | went to the railroad station at 7 {am. as usual The trains were not arted walking. He reached the office seven hours and 20 minutes later—just in time to turn around and go home. By then, trains were running. Century Club 4 Yr. Old Straight Bourbon SPECIAL Bureau | i year in the 82nd Cong fthe Bureau of Labor | report periodically on labor condi- | tions in Alaska, with particular re- ference to wages, working condi- ticns, hours of work, productivity industrial relations and employment rand job opportunities in various + industries, prices modities and the the larger of living in towns. Additionally, the { reports, which would be made to Congres o less than once ever two years, 1d also relate to hous- ing and other conditions affecting the welfare of labor in Alaska. “We are making plans,” Secretary Tobin has informed Delegate Bart- lett, “to collect price information in Alaska in the next few weeks to satisfy emergency needs. Assum- ing that funds are made available to us (we have none for this pur- pose), we planning to make a co are in seve cities in the Territory in the lage spring, and to reinstitute a full-scale index program. I am now asking for these funds and hope that we can go forward with this program.” N R. E. Buschmann io Face Trial, Charge Income Tax Evasion: Statistics to | for principal com- | more complete cost of living survey | Twining spoke at a Chamber of Commerce dinner in his home city. After discussing the effectiveness of the atom bomb which can be | carried by American long-range Herrington turned thumbs down on both. He said neither would help, He came up with his own five-point program. He blamed turrent troubles on (1) a 40 per cent increase in the { bombers, he said: “Long-range bombardment is a arfare through which | our superior of skills and weapons |can be brought to bear against | the sources of enemy strength any- | where in the world.” | The Air Force official said this | striking power would not be against enemy populati but against in- stallations which make it possible ! for the enemy to produce weapons. | “Modern industrial plants cannot | be divided and scattered without | destroying the efficiency of pro- Lcoshmg and assembly S0 necessary {in mass production,” he said. | Of the Korean war, Twining said there has been “very little real air warfare” because the Air Force has avoided attacking the enemy’s prin- cipal bases and source of supply in Manchuria. ¥ | method of ] LAST - DITCH FIGHT STAVES OFF DEATH number of fishermen since the war — to 1,500,000 or 2,000,000, (2) a shortage of sardines and herring and (3) increased operating costs. He said reopening pre-war fishing areas now closed to the Japanese would do little good. His own program: cut down over- fishing, develop sound conservation regulations, establish strong agen- cies to enforce regulations, improve quality and cut costs, and establish a sound financing program. Japans fishing fleet exceeds 1,- 185,000 gross tons. This is cousid- erably larger than it was before the war. A soapy solution made by pound- ing and soaking roots of the yucca plant is used by the Indians of New Mexico for ceremonial ablutio LAKE GEORGE BREAK-UP in color with sound recorded on location Narrator—FRANK BRINK Photographer—DON KNUDSEN ELKS HALL Thursday a»d Friday-Feh. 15 ard 16 2 SHOWS—T7:15 and 9 P. M. ADMISSION: Adults $1.00; Children 50¢ ——— Plus Tax Sponsored by JUNEAU LIONS CLUB Alwuys so welcome 7 WAR CRIMINALS| LANDSBERG, Germany, Feb. 15¢ —(— A last-ditch fight for life in a Federal District Court in Wash- ington today staved off the sched- | uled hanging of seven German war criminals at a U. S. prison here. Col. W. R. Graham, prison com- mandant, said that as long as the U. 8. Court considers a habeas cor- pus action filed by an attorney for the seven condemned men, the exe- cutions will be stayed. The seven-former SS officers and concentration camp officials accused of the murder of thousands of ci- vilians during the World War II— ! originally were to have gone to the gallows Tuesday night. The hanging was put off until last night, then postponed again because of the men's legal struggle. The U. S. Court denied a habeas corpus writ on Tuesday. Yesterday Attorney Warren MaGree filed an appeal in Washington appealing this decision, $4.50 Lol FIFT) Feb. 15. — (M—Seattle Fisherie: ccutive Robert E.| Buschmann will face trial in Tacoma April 4 on two counts of income tax evasion. Buschmann, 37, has pleaded. in- nocent for failure to file income tax returns in 1946 and 1947, Assist- ant U. S. Attorrney Harry Sager reported. The government reports his 1946 income as $44,455.81 and his 1947 income as $12,587.71. The indicted man is a partner in the West Coast Salmon Co. f Seattle and Alaska. SEATTL . $4.45 a5h Get Your Supply in NOW and SAVE . @cto $1.00 a FIFTH! Beforethe Tax Ruise = VERY BEST IN LIQUORS - WINES — BEER — | BILLRAY'S STORE STORE th)ne 36 wmmme JUNECHU === Box 1589 LOOT CAUSES TROUBLE mE WAU, Sudan—(P—A Dinka tribes- man, impersonating a policeman, °d a member of the Jur tribe sing hashish, a forbidden narcotic. The Jur paid the Dinka $2.80 to let him ge, but protested and started a fight when the Dinka demanded the hashish as well. A real policeman came along and ar- rested both, your family, yourself. Y BOTILED UNDER AUTHORITY U THE -COLA COMPANY B | JUNEAU COLD STORAGE COMPANY Copyright 19,1, The Coca-Cola Co. i —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY—

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