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—— MONDAY, JUNE 11, 1951 SHOWPLALE or %mmi CapiTdi A N o w ’ ENDS - TUES. SHOWS at 7:20 — 9:30 FEATURE 7:50 — 10:00 GREATEST AUTO RACE THRILL ROMANCE EVER MADE! | 034 SR WYk . 455" -G’ roaring romance of a rocing roughneck | NOT RESPONSIBLE not be responsible for any ntracted by Verina Mae also kno as “Pee Wee" nette. Signed John A. Cur 823-6t JACK & JILL DAY NU RY Fre s_hooi children accepted for daily care. Nutritious meals served. Facil for afternorn naps. Ea closed yard for safe outdoor play. Full time nurse in attendance, rate $2.50 per day. Phone 982, Mrs. L. M. Dunlap. 824-12t R TS Tk MR ST IF in tfown or in the " Sticks™ CALL Glacier Cab [FessEssssssssssssssssssassee Please Remember The Limited Engagement @ of 2 Days (4 COMPLETE PERFORMANCES) WILL ALLOW ONLY 2,400 JUNEAUITES THE OPPORTUNITY OF SEEING AND HEARING WHAT HAPPENED AT 8:30 P. M. ALL QVER THE WORLD! Make Your Plans NOW TO ATTEND THE CAPITOL THEATRE EITHER WEDNESDAY OR THURSDAY — AND COME EARLY SO YOU CAN BE ONE OF THE FORTUNATE PERSONS TO EXPERIENCE AN ENTERTAIN MENT THAT MAY OPEN A NEW AND BETTER LIFE FOR YOU! MG-M preseats = g8 @ WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY @ CAPITOL THEATRE “What's this ‘integration’ they're attacking you for?” One of the complaints that a certain minority in this country is now making about big companies like Standard Oil Company of California is that they practice “integration”. This word is made to | -|if | kodachrome winter scene of Juneau. sound so evil that you may wonder what it means as it’s used in this case. The fact is that integration is commen in American businesses both large and small. They use it as a natural part of their system of increasing efficiency, cutting costs and improving products. Integration doesn’t make a good com- pany bad. To understand integration at a glance. look at this payallel: When the fisherman cleans his own fish, he has become an integrated business. So, too, Standard. Like him, we work to put the product into the form you want. We refine the crude oil we produce—turn it into gasoline, lubricants, chemicals. This is the practice of integration. A fisherman takes his boat onto the ocean and makes his catch. Standard discovers oil and brings it up out of the ground. If both then sell to some- body else—the fisherman to a buyer at wharfside, and Standard to a buyer at the well—there’s no integration. Suppose each takes the next step... And if the fisherman then sells his product through a store of his own, he completes his inte- gration. Standard does it, too, through Company- owned stations (about 1 in 7 stations where Chevron gasolines are sold). Integration helps companies do better for you and the nation. 1If the fisherman now carries his cleaned catch to the market-place, he is further integrated, for he is now also in the transportation business... as is Standard when we operate our own pipelines and tankers to carry oil from well to refinery, or refined products to areas where they’ll be used. I’d Like to Know . . . Many people write to Standard asking pertinent questions about the Company. We answer all letters individually, but some points seem of general interest. We take this way of discussing them for everyone. If you have a question, we urge you to write in carc of:: “I’'p LIKE To KNow,” 225 Bush Street, San Francisco 20. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA plans akead to serve you better ==4] "TO PLEASE LADY" NOW ON SCREEN, CAPITOL THEATRE The roaring excitement of midget auto-racing and daredevil stunts in n auto thrill circus, climaxed by the 500-mile classic race of the reg- ular-sized speedsters at Indianapolis, | | furnishes the background for “To }anle and Barbara Stanwyck to ‘.he Capitol Theatre. |l champ and Stanwyck in the role of |il |a feminine columnist and radio com- ¢ | mentator, the picture unfolds &n unusual romance against the thri'l ‘ of the auto-racing world. The pic- ture was filmed largely on location at race tracks throughout the coun-; | try. . lmcm?fivm ' HONORS RYAN ON DEPARTURE The office staff of the Territor- ial Department of Education hon- lored Dr. and Mrs. James Ryan, and {son Denny, with a picnic on the 1beach out Glacier highway Satur- day afternoon. The Ryan family is {leaving shortly for the states on la vacation and upon their return |abolit August 1, will go to Fair- {banks where Dr. Ryan will be su- | perintendent of schools. He resigned as Commissicner of Education {some time ago, effective as of July 1. He will be succeeded by Evereit ‘R. Erickson, now deputy commis- |sioner of education. As a farewell present Dr. Ryan s presented with an enlarged Those present besides the honor guests were: Everett R. Erickscn, Mrs. Dorothy Novatney, new deputy commissioner |of education; Mrs. Dorothy Clem, |Ada Winther, Phyllis Lesher and daughter, Violet Dapcevich, Har- iriett Maurstad, Janet James, Mer- {ion Cass, Aileen Kronquist, Bobbie Goodwin. o} From the office of the Federal |Survey Fund, which is associated | with the Department of Education {were the Rev. and Mrs. Herbert Hil- lerman and family; Mr. and Mrs. { Robert Isaac, Mrs. and A .N. Eide |and son. | Mrs. Pauline Washington, for the office of Teachers’ Retirement was present as were the following. in- .| vited guests: Mr. and Mrs. James Drake, Dr. and Mrs. William White- afl | Please a Lady,” whic¢h brings Clark|, With Gable as the auto-racing head and family. Mrs. Drake re- tired a few years ago as deputy! | Commissioner of Education and Dr.| | Whitehead is a member of the| Territorial Board of Education. FOURTH OF JULY QUEEN | CONTEST STARTS WED. | A meeting of the Fourth of July central committee will be held at 8 p.m. Thursday night at the Bar- anof Hotel at which time O. R. Cleveland, chairman, hopes to have all details of the celebration worked out. The queen contest will be laun- ched Wednesday, Cleveland said to- day. Tickets are being printed for a Plymouth sedan and all organi- zations sponsoring queen contest- ants will receive ten per cent on tickets sold. WOMEN VOTERS WIN UP MEETINGS. THIS WEEK UNTIL AUTUMN is the treat in store for the mem- end their meetingz for the summer with the 12:30 p.m. group holding a regwiar meeting in the Terrace Room at the Baranof Hotel tomor- row. Mrs. Mildred Hermann will speak on the Hoover Report. The 1:30 group will also meet to- morrow in the Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. Penthouse, and the Thursday evenirig section will meet at the home of Mrs. Frank Metcalf. Meetings will be resumed in the fall and the radio program will be continued through this month, Mrs. Charles Burdick said today. * HOSPITAL NOTES Admitted to St. Ann's hospital Saturday were John T. Brockway, Mrs. Arvo Wahto; admitted Sunday were Axel Iverson, Mrs. Jerry Pow- ers; discharged Saturday were Ce- cilia Doogan, Geraldine Vavalis; dis- charged Sunday were Hazel Pugh Mrs. Pauline Sanders, Mrs. Edwin Roberts. Admitted to the Government hos- pital Sunday was Buster Bennett, Petersburg, There were no dis- charges. Born at the Government hospital to Mrs. Lawrence Cook, Juneau, Sat- urday at 8:27 p.m., a boy weighing 8 pounds 9'2 ounces. | BACK FROM COLLEGE Returning from college Saturday via PAA plane were Carol Jean MacDonald, Keith Weiss and Lyle Roland from Washington State, and Bill Keep from Oregon State. SALVATION ARMY DRIVE ON TODAY i No guns we! d today al(hough“ an army was on the march in Ju- | neau, i Today marked the opening (lny: in the one week annual campaign to raise funds for the Salvation Army and its work in the Juneau | area. Campaign chairman R. M.| Akervick's crews were on the streets | ning business | for their | fund. In the G. E. Cleve- e of fund raising. 1 I last through i the committee hopes | 000 by that time in or- itinue the needed mission Jf the Salvation Army | During the past year, over 9,000 men used the 1acilities of the Red nield Reaamn Room on South -ranklin streev which is operated y the Salvation Army. This was sust one phase of the many activ ues carried on in the Juneau area .y the Salvation Army. 15 OUT; 28 ARRIVE 15 THROUGH ON PNA contact Jer to c Fifteen flew to the westward over ! the weekend on Pacific Northern| Airlines and 28 arrived here. Going to Anchorage were: D. D, ! Spillane, Neil Millar, Arnold Lake, | Mrs. M. W. Kelly, Mr. and Mfs. | . Martha Cushing, C. J. [Eh- | rendreich, Capt. and Mrs. S. B.! Eggers. | Fifteen went through from Seat- a copy of a text book “An Anth- people and friends who have gone tle to Cordova and five went to Cordova from here: T. J. Williams, | A. Murie, L. Caywood, E. Holmes, | Cavle, Sweden, which contains Mrs. ! con, Joseph Jr. Don Donaldson. From Cordova: Art Streeter, L.| Utness, L. G. Foster, E. H. Cowan, M.. and Mrs. Sam Smith, | From Anchorage: Bjarne Olsen,| Harry See, Col. Noyes, L. Miller,| Gladys Day, Mrs. Robert Atwood | and Elaine, A. Beane, A. Huff, A.| lelfer, A. McMullen, A. Roehl, A. Sanders, A. Jones, A. Batcheleder, | A. Nobaun, A. Dubine, A. Carpenter, | A. Shieko, A. Goodenough, A. Ja- cobson. JUNEAU GARDEN (LUB MEETING WEDNESDAY Personally conducted trips thru some of the show gardens in Juneau The League of Women Voters will bers of the Juneau Garden Club Wednesday afternoon, June 13. Mrs. Vernon Harris assisted by Mrs. Devinney will be hostess at a dessert luncheon at 1:30 preced- ing the business session. i |GLACIER STUDIES WILL CONTINUE ON MALASPINA FIELD Project “Snow Cornice,” glacier research by the Arctic Institute of | North America, will be underway for the season in a few days, Wal- ter Wood, said here today. Studies will continue on the Seward-Mal- asping glacier system in the St.| Elias Mountains near the Alaska- Yukon border out of Yakutat. These were started in 1948, and continued in 1949 and 1950. Some of the riddles locked in the ice that the project seeks to solve are giaciers as a barometer to climatic variation, their influ- ence on air pressure and winds, as flood control and water supply, and | the mechanics of ice flow. As the development of the North continues, glacier and ice engin- eering may become a profession as it relates to road building, construc- | tion of railroads, navigation, min- ing and other enterprises, Wood said. Work will be concentrated on the Malaspina glacier this year, where- as previous Investigations were centered almost entirely on the up- per reaches of the Seward glacier. Some of the interesting data ob- tained last year was measuring the thickness of the ice by radar. A depth of 1975 feet was recorded at one point. Twenty-five scientific papers have already been written by various members of the expeditions and it is hoped that these may contribute to both applied and pure science. 4-H BOYS, GIRLS 10 MEET TUESDAY P. M. Boys and girls between the ages of 10 and 20 who wish to belong to a 4-H Club during the summer should meet at the Red Cross and ixtension Office in the Shattuck | ouilding at 2 o'clock Tuesday after- | noon June 11. | Miss Price, District Home Dem- | onstration Agent, reports that the| clubs that are organized are very| active and are making good progress in completing their projects. The | clubs plan to take part in the 4th| of July celebration, and there will also be recreational activities plan- ned for the summer. | —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY~ 1 S THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA ™) "JUNE BRIDE" IS REAL COMEDY HIT AT 20TH CENTURY “June Bride” is a real comedy hit! Bette Davis laughs and laugh loud and long with Robert Mont- gomery in this new Warner Bros.) film which is at the 20th Ceatuvry Theatre tonight for final shnwlnn.l It's a new Bette, trim and siyli:h, you see in “June Bride,” and with| Bob opposite her in one of his mn\t{ charming flippant roles, the result is a treat of evceptional proportions. Bette plays a successful magazin?® editor, one who hires and fires with ease. Bob comes back into her lif2 after a European assignment, and is put on her staff. This creates a problem, as the two still go for each other in a way. When the stafl moves into Crestville, Indiana to build up their special June feature their affair takes on added ze: The film abounds with situation all on the strictly humorous side MRS. DRAKE'S POEM 1S USED N SWEDE FOR ENGLISH STLDY Mrs. Marie Drake, weliknown Alaska educator, has been signally honored in the curriculum of the public schools in Sweden. | Dr. Dorothy Novatney, education supervisor in theTerritorial Depart- ment of Education, has received Anglo-Saxon Song by Gosta Ahlstrand cf ology of compiled | Drake’s poem, “Alaska’s Flag.” The ‘¢ pecially the Coast Guard boys in Look is used by Swedish students ' in their study oi the English lang- | uage. About a year ago Gosta Ahl- strand wrote the Territorial De- partment of Education asking for a poem typifying Alaska and Dr. Novatney submitted Mrs. Drake's piece. In the book it leads the American section of folk-lore poems and is headed by a drawing of u| ian Alaskan dog team. Mrs. Drake, until her retirement in 1945, was deputy Commissioner of Education for the Territory. She is the author of a book on Alaska wildflowers and has also written a history of Alaska, which is used as a reference in the Territorial Department of Education. MAJOR ROUNTREE CALLED TO ACTIVE putY IN AlASKAi | Major Ellery Rountree of Juneau | has been called to active duty with the Corps of Engineers and has orders to report to Fort Richard- son. He left Saturday aboard the Aleutian and will leave his family here until he has a permanent station. Rountree recently returned from Belvoire, Va., where he completed | an advanced engineers course at an | army school and had been with the | Alaska Public Works office here | for two weeks before receiving his orders. Previously he had been with the Alaska Road Commission for three years. He came to Juneau from Washington, D. C. He started in the Army as a private in 1924 and has a total of 15 years service to his credit. During the last war he spent four years in the European theatre of operations. 400 AT PICNIC Despite rainy weather more than 400 showed up yesterday afternoon at the Auk Bay recreation area to attend the Shrine picnic, between 12 and 4 o'clock. Following a huge picnic lunch of ham, turkey and other goddies the youngsters en- Jjoyed pony rides. PAGE FIVE 20:CENTURY THEATRE + WHERE HITS ARE A HABIT! LAST TIMES TONICAT _,—-—W‘, Doors Open—7:00 Complete Shows 7:20 — 9:30 . Bette DAVIS Robert MONTGOMERY with FAY SPORTLIGHT atest News ALSO - TOMORROW ==~ -- SPECIAL ENUAGEMENT — The Most Exciting Adventure Since " COMMUNICATION far out of their way, in their ef-| forts to recover the body of our | I wish to thank CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank all the good Editor, The Empire: Dear Sir: Where were our men (?) Saturs day when the American Red Cross {aeir endless and hopeless search, | Was accepting blood for our service- ned, " | men in Korea? It is my under;tand- i F. Stevens Si. and family, | ing that three out of four blood 832-1¢ | do.aiors were women. T l Guod bless our womenfolks, sineere.y, (Signed) EOB DR ~EMPIRE WANT AD5 PAY— l MAN. MEETING. TONIGHT The American Legion al 8 o'Clock IN THE LEGION DUGOUT Visiting Veterans Invited VERNON P. HARRIS, Post Commander JOHN GARCIA, Adjutan o in-a Happy Profession! Many excellent jobs are waiting for thoroughly trained | beauty operators. Prepare NOW for a career that brings HAPPINESS to others as well as to yourself. WRITE FOR FREE BOOKLET 'MARY STONE ‘' Beauty School of Distinction 209 Union Seattle, Wn. Baseball and Coke \ DRINK Ctely | BOTILED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY “Coke” is @ registered trode-mark.” JUNEAU COLD STORAGE COMPANY s ; 3 © 1951, THE COCA-COLA CORPANY ™