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'HURSDAY, MAY 31, 1951 Everybody for seeing "THE HAPPY YEARS” NeW COMES ANOTHER HIT in Color by TECHNICOLOR! 000 DEUGHTS! s Jickie GLEASON - Lois ANDREWS - rius COMEDY CARTOON SPORTS NE MR., MRS. H. DAWES SOUTH ON VACATION; GRADUATION AT WS(l SHOWS FEATURE ——— 8:05-10:15 |at the Washington State College of the Juneau Business and Profes.- | where their daughter, Mrs. Rdath sional Women’s Club, is happy to ™% THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE--JUNEAU, ALASKA #&an | "DESERT HAWK" IS ~ OPENING TONIGHT, CAPITOL THEATRE “The Desert Hawk" is the feature tonight at the Capitol Theatre and | here is a short synopsis of the story. The adventurous phase in the life of Omar (Richard Greene), the Teheran blacksmith, comes when- ever he assumes his dual role as ne Desert Hawk, protector of the poor against the wicked Prince Mu- rad (George MacReady.) To keep Princess Shaharazade (Yvonne De Carlo) from marrying Murad, The Desert Hawk, disguised as the Prince, weds her himself. She is kidnapped through the plot- ting of the angry Murad and taken to the torture chambers of his mur- dering accomplice, Kikar (Carl Es- mond), in Teheran. The Desert Hawk, discovering _his, leads his small group of fol- .owers in an assault on the palace ind rescues the.Princess who fin. ally realizes, despite her early mgcl over being tricked into marriage, chat she owes' her life, allegiance and love to Omar. DR. NELSON JOINS HEALTH DEPARTMENT Dr. Catherine Nelson has arrived | in Juneau en route to Holy Cross where she will join the Al Health department’s M/V Yu Health. Dr. Nelson is to be ph; cian in charge of the floating clin- ic’s work on the Yukon river this ummer. Dr. Nelsen, who has her medical ! practice in Seattle, has visited in Alaska many times and says she is happier | “COLLEGE CAPER' Inmnufie-lnmlul show in which MANY DOCTORS FLY THROUGH TO MEETING AT KETCHIKAN TODAY Twenty arrived from the west- ward Tuesday and Wednesday on PNA and 32 were outbound. Eight passengers connected here for Cor- dova from PAA. From Anchorage: Dr. and Mrs. | is looking forward with interest to work here this summer. She plans to leave Juneau ! for Anchorage 1 Holy Cross. l Dr. Nelson took the pre-medical training at Pennsylvania State Col-| lege and her medical work at Tem- ple Univers Medical School in| i hmlphm engaged in med- ical practice the east 1or some fore ing to Seattle two| i | ASS IN JUNEAU, YEAR, CALIFORNIA ~ | Mrs. B. R. Glass, Juneau resident ior many years, arrived . here last| week and will remain until she! completes the sc%: of her home.' The Glasses left Juneau about a year ago and are caretakers for: the ranch of the millionaire George Washington Bakers, Jr., near Los tos. It is a delightful location and, though the family hopes sometime to return to Juneau, they are en- joying their present home. ‘\ Mr. and Mrs. Al Cooley (Mrs. Cooley was Adrienne Glass) are living in the Lakewood section of| Los Angeles and Mr. Cooley is with the navy at Long Beach in civu service. With thewr two children, the Cooleys spent Mother’s Day with the Glasses in Los Gatos and with them for the celebration were four generations on both sides of the famil | | Mrs. Glass, aer c TINY” AFTE Gear MACREADY - Ruck UDSON DOORS OPEN 7:00 P. M. 7:20- 9:30 who was a member Prouty, is graduating June 3. She have arrived has majored in art. in town in time to be a guest at convention banquets. Bemre returning home in about hree weeks the Dawes will visit| COL. J. R. NOYES next week | NEW FAMILY | GOES TO INTERIOR | |several points in the Northwest.} Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dawes Dawes is with the U. S. Veterans Col. John R. Noyes, commissioner sailed south on the Baranof on at vacation trip. They will go to Pullman, Wash-{ ington, to commencement exercises Administration. |for the Alaska Road Commission, |flew to Anchorage Sunday on an inspection trip of westward and in- Margaret Price of Haines is stop- terior road and bridge projects in ping at the Gastineau Hotel. The MAMZELLE SHOP | 310 S. Franklin — Open 10:00 a. m. to 10:00 p. m. WASHABLE RAYON PRINT DRESSES Sizes 12 to 48 GABARDINE SLACKS, Sizes 10 to 40 .. Grey — Brown — Navy — Black his department. He will be gone about three weeks. Fritz, Dr. deh Smith, A. Miller, Dr ., B. Badrian, Dr. ¢ I : Mrs. Romig, M — Nancy Bastian, University of Chicago co-ed, performs on the trapeze in “A Midnight Fantasy,”, students annually participate.’ MRS, SCHENITZ IS NEW ASSESTANT (% MUSEUM STAFF Helen A. Schenitz arrived in teau Monday from Kodiak to be librarian at the Territor- eum and Library, E. L. thahn, curator, announced to- day M Schenitz arrives here with RE ey Danett Ruth Cari- on, Dr tors are going to a chikan. From Cordova E. l“'.‘t-lh, M. Reese, B. Borseth, A. muelson. To Anchorage: M. W. McLamb, Vera Hansel, Dorot. y Whitney, G. Low Els Dr. L. S Thorne, Jmm Mulll;'m. C. J. Quis- W. O. Fensler, David Harris, Ruth McCrew, W. B. Fairfield, G Q. Stevens, William D. Burk, Mor- ris Lawrence, Don Sparling, Helen B. Brown, Lucy Pllard. To Cordova: W. K. Sheldon, C Ostrom. To Yakutat: T. S. Batchelder William Brown, Samuel Dick. meeting at Ket- | Holland, O.! IS MOVING TO JUNEAU Jack Hudert with his wife nnd] six children are due to arrive this week from Nome, Alaska to make their home in Juneau. Hudert, who has been District Engineer for the Alaska Road Com- mission in Nome for the past four yem:. is being transferred here to be Construction Engineer in the Operations Division. The family will fly down via Pan American Airways and have pur- ed tne Dapcevich home on Star Hill STYLE REVIEW ON The women who ettended the win- ter and spring sewing workshops will show their completed garments | in a style review at the grade| school auditorium, 2 p.m. Saturday, | June 2nd. The review will be &| part of a skit which will be pre-| sented by several of the workshop | members. i FOURTH OF JULY COMMITTEE TO MEET On Thursday evening at 7:30 a ‘shcvn but important meeting of the Central Committee for the Fourth of July celebration, will be held in the lobby of the Baranof Hotel. All members are urged to be pres- ent. SOUARE BDANCE NITE! "RIDAY, JUNE FIRST, is the date for the first square dance of the summer series, to be held starting at 8:30 P.M. at the Parish Hail, on the FIRST, THIRD, and FIFTH FRI- DAYS of EACH MONTH. ALL Gastineai Channel SQUARE DANCERS are urged to come and join in the fun. The Foikateers and Taku Travelers are especially welcome. Lively Music by Al Trace REFRESHMENTS In addition to the skit Miss Price,' Home Demonstration Agent, says the program will consist of a short film on “Filleting and Freczing Fish." She states that she will have for distribution two very good| “Fish-Dried, Frozen, Pic-! bulletins, kled, Salted and Smoked;” and “Common Edible Wild Plants.” The public is invited to stcend the meeting. Refreshments will be| served. ANOTHER JIRP ARRIVES Richard Zoerb, JIRP (Juneau| Icecap Research Project) from Gol. den, Colo. arrived here Monday on Pan American. He is slopping at the Hotel Juneau | Teachers' College in St. SATURDAY AFTERNOON! high recommendations and a long list of achievements, Rus:ian-born, she Lradunte(l from Petersburg, Russia, in 1916 with a B.S. degree. 1 In 1917 she received her M: A. from | St. Petershurg University. From 1921 to 1922 Mrs. Shenitz attended Sor- bonne University in Paris, France, finishing with 2 BS.S.P.S. degree and then attended the School of Lib; Service at Columbia Uni- versity, graduating with a B.S.L.S. From August 1943 to April 1944 she worked as senior reviser at the New York Public Library in the reference department and then en- listed in the Women’s Army Corps where she served as an interpreter: ind educational specialist, research analyst and librarian. She was as- signed to the Army’s permafrost project in interior Alaska and Ed- monton, Canada. Later she was sent to Tokyo, Japan, as an inter- preter and Russian consultant in Army Intelligence. Since May of 1948 she has been head librarian at the Naval Oper- tions Base Library, U. S. Navy, Kodiak, Alaska. Mrs. Shenitz speaks six languages fluently, French, Russian, Polish, Ukranian, White Russian and Eng- lish, of German, Bulgarian, Croatian and Czech. Serbian, | J. Meredith, and has a working knowledge ' 35 IN, 12 OUT ON DENALI MONDAY Thirty five passengers arrived on the Denali northbound Monday with 12 embarking for the west- ward. Master of the ship is Capt. Ben Aspen with A. H. Banwell, chief purser. Disembarking from Seattle: Mrs. Beggs, Lenore Barbat, Albert N. Bell, Mrs. Ada Bell and child; Larry A. Day, Mrs. Max Dorman, Albert Erickson, Elsie Geolotte, Mrs, M. Harigel, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Joose, Mrs. Kenneth Kihlman. Mr. and Mrs. James H. Larson, Jom Curtis Le Fever, Mrs. Fay Nel- on, Mr. and Mrs, F. P. Obee, Mrs, fortuna Odell and two children; Mrs. Henry Roden, Helen A. Schen- .tz, Marion Sullivan, Mr. and Mrs ©. R. Vidi and daughter; Phyllis WValker. From Ketchikan: Annie Atluk, Clara Williams, Donald Kinkle, Mr and Mrs. Hans Berg. Embarking for Sitka: Kohl. For Seward: Mr. and Mrs. Marian Tom Moore, Pat Moore, Fay Moore, Miss | Barbara Hitch, Elizabeth Reynolds, Mrs. K. King, Don M. Lindberg, Charles Hammond. For Valdez: James M. Camp, B. I. Barlow. 24 IN, 8 OUT ON PRINCESS LOUISE Arriving on the Princess Tuesday were 24 passenge: ight embarking for Skagway. The ! ship arrives from Skagway Friday norning at 7 sailing southbound wo hours later at 9. Disermbarking irom eie: Mrs. A. Argetsinger, Carter, Mr. and Mirs. J Mrs, E. Eastman, W. J. M. Hawthorne, E, U. Keller, Miss J. Moor michael, A. E. Swing Jurick, Lee Wah, G. Mussio, 5. J. 5. Menevin, 9. D Paplinski, F. Roy, 'T. V. E. Warren, 9. L. Louise Vancouver ’\ll R Fensler, Hunwer, O , J. D. Car- Fabb, Phillips, W. J. Riccnie, Webster. cmuarking for Skagway: Mrs. C. C. Staples, John Miss Maggie, Art Tunley, Miss Car- ol Cooper, Miss M. ncly, wulean weach. Mr. and KENI MAN HERE A. G. Hiebert of the Radio Sta- tion KENI at Anchorage, arrived here Monday on PNA and stopped | overnight at the Baranof Hotel. He then went to Taku Lodge. TIDE TABLE June 1 Low tide 6:00 am. 01 ft. High tide 12:20 p.m. 139 ft. Low tide 5:53 p.m. 3.7 ft. with ! Jones, PAGE FIVE "TASK FORCE" IS NOW ON SCREEN AT 20TH CENTURY Coincident with the scheduled op- erations, a cast and crew of 120 boarded the U.S.S. Antietam, a Navy carrier, for the filming of scenes for Warner Bros' “Task Force”, now on the screen at the 20th Century Theatre. The first unit and cast operated in the Pacific for approximately 30 days. Other photographic units were dispatched to Hawaii, Midway, Guam, the Panama Canal Zono, and elsewhere. | Stars Gary Cooper, Wayne Mor- ris, and Walter Brennan, Director Delmar Daves, and other members of the company sailed from the Na- val Air Station, San Diego. “Task Force' 1is the story of \aval carler aviation and the de ci.pment of carcier alr warfare o il to the present, with em- asis on the imporiant part car- .-L.unched pianes played 1 iDlLg tue bactle of Facllic during World War IL «ho dcalued cast ancluces Jane vatt, Bruce Bennett, John iua Jack Holt, James Holaen w.au i€ sunuon, THEATRS « WHERE HITS ARE A HARIT DOORS OPEN—T7:00 Nothing Ever Like It! Nothing You Ever Liked More! uie DELEGATES FROM | 23 (OUNTRIES 70 | - STUDY BPR METHGDS H. A. Steddart, division enzineer of the Bureau of Public Roads, ’ml(l today that about fifty admin- | | istrators and engineers from the | | highway departments of some 23| intries have arrived in Wash- D. C., this week to 1 1 course highway, practi the United St conducted by the Bureau of Public Roads, U partment of Commerce. The tarted this week and will continue through September 7 | PR ihe course was formally opened 9:47 by Commissioner Thomas H. Mac- | ; WQ v Lonald of the BPR. Various states | TWS via AIR wiil Le visited by the delegates for | ailed studies of highway admin- on, research, I:I'um\l{m, con- ATTENTION TOURISTS and maintenance. | Por an intimate acquaintance Delegates are from all over the with 8. E. Alaska on the mailboat world | Yakobi for a 600 mile 4-day scenie 'vnv Sallings once a week, de- nn'm‘rz Wmlucsday a.m. with Jane Wyatt Wayaio Merris - Walter Brenan Color sequences by TECHNICOLOR A WARNGS 85O PICTURE S. De- course Fealure at and — de 150 Lructior ! —EMPILE WANY ADS PAY- L Aok || i e e 7t S | MEETING TONIGHT | Velerans of Foreign Wars C. I 0. Hall - 8 o'Clock ALL VISITING V. F. W. MEMBERS ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO {\T’I‘END James Burnette, Commander Frank Drouin, Adjutant e 1D ) DD ge. “anil o Mrs. Shenitz is glad to be in Ju- | neau. Although she has lived in or visited nearly every country in the world, Alaska is her choice for per- { manent residence. 92 TRAVEL ON ALASKA COASTAL i Alaska Coastal Airlines carried MONDAY l‘lIGHTS| |a total of 92 passengers on flights Monday with 21 on departing and 37 arriving. Departing for Haines: Brooks Hanford, Grant Lowry, Bonny Mc- Rae, Louise Cranston, W. Johnson, Watson Katzeek, Larry Lindstrom; | for Skagway: D. H. Sparling; for {Point Retreat: Mrs. A. O. Yates. For Sitka: Mary Ann Gehring, Ann Morris, Eileen Jones, Molly Moser, Helen Nolte, John Bratset, C. Davis, Mrs. Barbara Michael, B. Mien, H. A. Schultz, Victor Mis- kin, Mr. Bona; for Ketchikan: gene Williams, Tom Hansen; | for Gambier Bay: John L. Root; for Wrangell: Hall Conley; for Hoon- ah: Mr. and Mrs. William Lee, Ruth Jackson, Mr. Coleman; for Tena- kee: W. H. Schwind, Mrs. E. Jack; for Exocursion Inlet: Ronald Yex- ley; for Hawk Inlet: Bert Jensen; for Angoon: Loraine Singer. Arriving from Hoonah: D. Wil- liams, Jr,; from Angoon: Mr. Cole- man, Harvey Scott; from Tenakee: Duin Alston; from Ketchikan: Mar- caret Price; from Wrangell: W. Simpson; from Petersburg: Delia sarff, Mrs. Still, Mrs. Thommow- From Sitka: G. Federeff, M. Lawrence, Mrs. Rusch, Dr. Phillips, Lou Toehin, C. Varnell, Dr. Mich- eal:cn, Joe Fasano, Mrs. M. Zam- ora, R. Kearns, Mr. Bona, Bill Wyers; from Tenakee: R. E. Isto; from Taku Lodge: J. McLean, J. Ro:s, J. Gordon. From Skagway: E. K. Malenk- asky, 8. E. Thorpe, Jeanette Ami- dan; from Haines: Hazel Englund, 1" Behrends, D. L. Roberts, Max «diff, Henry Peters; from Tulse- th H. Gilegerkh, R. Hawkes, Howard Burke, Gaston Casavant. - RUMMAGE SALE Trinity Church basement 10 to friday, June 1. 822-2t interport, 34; Host of the ° ~ highways BOTILED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANV BY JUNEAU COLD STORAGE CO. © 1951, The Coco:Cola Compony, » This Is America’s Defense Bond Pledge To back up OUR men and women in uniform by helping to keep AMERICA financially strong BOND(S) totaling §.... 3 will make the purchase at: « + » 1do hereby PLEDGE to buy EXTRA DEFENSE .. (in addition to any Bonds I now am buying). (Please indicate—Name of bank and address, post office or branch, or other issuing ageat) THIS PLEDGE is MY answer to my Nation’s call for support in this national emergency. Name ’ — Addres Phone. Zone— State. Sfihnh"flm! Dll.n-Bondj It i llniw for s not jmake good yo 1o your new: Sl gl o fimmuom sell Detense aona as'a communi