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SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 1951 SHOWPLALE oF OPENING TOMORROW (Sundayatl:30 p.m.) Blazing Ouidocr Co ' DOROTHY HALONE -_FURflEST TUCKER FRANK FAYLEN - GEGRGE MACREADY CONTINUDT ! Shows y Feature 1 { ENDS TONIGHT! Johnny WEISSMULLER in “CAPTIVE GIRL” —— and — “COWBOY AND THE PRIZEFIGHTER” lor Film THE RAW AND RUGGED STORY OF NEVADA'S TERRITORY! Lawless No-Man's Land in the Westward Rush For Gold! Candi¢ Microphone — Musical and Celor Cartoon — Latest ws of Day RED CROSS CHAPTER | MEETING ON TUESDAY A i # June 21 The annual meeting of the Am can Red Cross, which was held | High tide 5:10 am. 162 Wednesday, June 20, will be con-|Low tide 11:42 am. -1.0 tinued Tuesday, June 26, for the | High tide 6:13 pm. 158 purpose of electing officers ior the | - coming' year. The meeting will be | dune 2% held in the Red Cross office of | Low tide 12:17 am.’ 32 the Shattuck Building at 8 p. m. | High tide 6:10 am. 146 This is a Chapter mesting, and | LOW tide L g gl High tide 7:07 pm. 155 | all persons who contributed $1 or | more to the Red Cross fund cam- | paign are cordially invited at nt-l tend—in fact, it is their privilege. | 1342, Distin. | Phone 982. 836-1: —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— e JACK & JILL DAY NURSERY Jack and Jill Day Nursery open, Mrs. L. M. Dunlap. —==1 LULA FAIRBANKS IS i GIVEN HONORARY | | MASTER'S DEGREE ft.; Miss Lulu Fairbanks, as well- 1t own in Alaska as in Seattle re she is associate editor of the ka Weekly, was given an hon- fl.{orary dezree of Master of Educa- fi. | tion June 16 at the Michigan State ft | Normal College at Ypsilanti, from which she received her bachelor’s |degree in 1913. Back home in her native state to visit relatives and friends from school days, Miss Fairbanks was an honor guest at her college’s annual 2t alumni banquet. Annual MOOSE PICNIC AUKE BAY RECREATION CENTER SUNDAY - JUNE %4 Busses will leave Moose Ledge at 12:00 o'clock, noon RALLY DANCE Moose Lodge SUNDAY-JUNE 24 9:60 p.m. fo 1:00 a.m. Public Invited Admission and July 4th Ticket $1.00 Joyce Hope Candidate of Juneau Moose Lodge Juneau Fillipino Community In her former home town of /Saline, Michigan, she was one of | the seven of the nine members of her 1906 high school graduation class who attended an alumni din- ner June 9. Miss Fairbanks is one of the per- sons who proves the rule that the busier one is, the more one can ac- complish. She is active in half a dozen clubs; among them the Busi- | ness and Professional Women's | Club of which she was first Wash- | ington state president. She is vice! president of the Associate Women | of the Washington Athletic Club, a member of the board of the Foun- | dation for International Sourdough'| Reunion Group, an honorary mem- | ber of the Fairbanks (Alaska) ! Chamber of Commerce; active in | the National Federation of News- paper Women and the National League of American Pen Women. She was chosen woman of the year in the State of Washington by the BPW a year or so 8go. Her interests include active par- ticipation in the affairs of Inter-| national House on the University of Washington campus. HOSPITAL NOTES Admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital Friday were Dave Newman, Joseph | Fiederer, Johnson Sumdum, Arthur Hutchinson, Robert Johnson, | charged were Mrs. Anthony Thom- ,as and baby girl; baby Jerry Under- | hill, | Born at St. Ann’s Hospital to | Mrs. John A. Lowell at 5:40 Sat- urday morning ,a boy weighing 6 | pounds 11 ounces. | Admitted to the Government hos- pital was Agnes Jacobs, Haines. There were no discharges: CARSON HERE | W. A. Carson, president of the i Carson Construction Co. from Hel- | ena Montana arrived here yesterday in his private plane, an Avion. He is accompanied by C. M. Cart- wright, a life insurance man, and J Howard Retz, a mortician. They | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA ™3 PRGN AR N G S NP A0 VSt 8 ACTION FEATURE '"THE NEVADAN" AT left Helena Thursday ‘morning. Hotgl, They are stopping at the Baranof!the responsibilities of ...4government and that alumni of the | g —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY~ CAPITOL THEATRE A bullet-hot story of lawless Ne-| The pa can history vada, seething with the human |contain n rious chapters that backwash of the California gold [have been immortalized in motion rush, is told in Randolph Scott's | pictures now, one of the most new outdoor drama in Cinecolor, | thrilling but least-known episodes “The Nevadan,” which. is coming|in our cot ulent past Sunday to the Capitol Theatre. comes roaring to th cen in Para- Supporting the Western star in|mount’s mighty olor drama, the Columbia release are Dorothy|“The E 1 the Hawk,” which Malone, Forrest Tucker, Frank Fay- len, George Macready, Charle [ Theatre | Kemper, Jeff Corey, Tom Power Starring Payne, Rhonda | and Jack O'Mahcney. i nis O'Keefe, mo} Claimed as the great action star: et against the flaming | greatest adventur drama, “Tht nd ! Nevadan” tells its rip-roaring tal of the rugged Nevada Territol the days when a killer was Scott is seen as a Federal Ma on a hazardous mission to recover looted gold. Story and cen play by George W. George d George F. Slavin were direcied by Gordon Douglas MRS. DAVIS HERE Mrs. Charles J. Davis of Anchor- age who is active in American Le- g Auxiliary afiairs, is stayingat Baranof Hotel. : the BOSTON-BORN FAM giraffe, leans shakily on mother’s Brother “Mr. Boston” a$ right was Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey circus in Boston Garden. THRILLER OPENS TONIGHT AS BILL AT 10TH CENTURY opens tonight at the 20th Century Civil War. Dur- | f Mexico and fro prepared to launch an with the intention | le and the H two m rving the Confed- ent their per- time of peril t a plot | an soil | - a loyal govi a es to defe Ame the ar f a foreign power. nvasion of ILY — Gloria, 12-hour-old foreleg as she views world at POLETNAMEDTO | ~ ACC AS MEMBER, | FOURTH DIVISION Alvin Polet, appeinted the of Nome, has been Fourth Division member of the Aeronautic and Communications Commission, ac- cording to announcement made by Gov. Ernest Gruening. He succeed: Frank Barr who resigned upon as suming the office of United States Marshal in that division. Polet is the son of Antonio Po- let, long-time resident of Nome, and well known throughout Alaska in pioneer and business circles, and the late Mrs. Polet. He was born in Nome in 1909; attended Nome grammar school and high school, graduating in 1927. He attended the University of Washington for two years then entered the University of Alaska, from which he was grad- | uated in 1932 with a degree of Bachelor of Science in Business Administration. From 1932 to 1940, Alvin Polet worked in his father’s store in Nome as office manager, became interest- ed in aviation and was made office G.|manager of the Alaska Star Air- | Crisman, Mrs. David Tanner; dis- | lines in Nome in 1940. In 1944 he was transferred to Fairbanks as station manager for Alaska Airlines which position he held until 1947. At that time he was invited by Pan | American Airways to become its District Traffic and Sales Manager, a position he has held ever since. | Polet served two terms on the city council and one as mayor of Nome. He is a Mason, a Shriner, a member of the Elks and of the Pioneers of Alaska. For two years he was president of the Alumni Association of the University of Alaska. In 1933 he married Mary Louis Meals of Valdez. In announcing Polet’s appoint- | ment, Governor Gruening expressed gratification that Alaskan-born cit- izens were increasingly taking on territorial born in Boston five years earlier. University of Alaska were obtaining more and more recognition in di- verse fields of private and public administration. Neal Foster, of N Carr, of Anchorage, both of whom | I e served since March 28, 1949, | have been reappointed to the Al- aska Aeronautics and Communica- | tions Commission from the Second and Third Divisions respectively. | Sheldon Simmons, of Juneau, is the | fourth member of the Commission. | 50 TRAVELERS FLY | PACIFIC NORTHERN AIRLINES FRIDAY Fifty persons flew with Pacific | Northern Airlines Friday with 13| arrivals from the westward, 17 out- bound and 20 through from Seattle to Cordova. From Anchorage: William Neimi, B. King, Thor Sunberg, Al Tonges, Jacob Kameroff, B. Ballard. From Cordova: Mrs. Florence Os- borne and Marjorie From Yakutat: G. W. Hilsinger, \Robert J. Sommers, Wayne Purtilar, E. D. Wright. To Anchorage: Nellie Smith, Lewis | | Banders, Ruth Smith, Roscoe Sparks, | Betty Willikins, Les Wingard, Lt. | Robert Becker, Richard Cowen, Clark McHuron, George Comole. To Cordova: Merle Inman, E. W. |Johnson, Mary Johnson, Mrs. J Johnson. { To Yakutat: James Kretschmer, | Tom Dyer, C. H. Sampson. |HOME ON ALEUTIAN | | FROM VACATION TRIP | | | Miss Eleanor Kobel, stenographer | {in the Alaska Development Board | office, is due home on the Aleutian from @& vacation trip to Seattle. In Seattle she was met by her parents who drove west from Illin- ois to be with her during her week’s Evening Shows Complete Shows 7:21 & 9:30 Doors Open One Doors Open 7:00 SAGA. PAGE FIVB 0:CENTURY THEATRE » WHERE HITS ARE A HABIT! Matinee Sunday 1:30 - Show at 2:00 Showing Only CECEY [ Ripped Boldly from the True Pages of our Nation's Greatest n v Starring JOHN PAYNE RHONDA FLEMING DENNIS O'KEEFE THOMAS GOMEZ - FRED CLARK FRANK FAYLEN hapter ... Adventure in Flaming Technicolor The proposed “Diaper Derby” to nominate permanent officers j"DIAPER DERBY" IS PLANNED, AUK BAY There’ll be a “Diaper Derby” as well as a salmon derby this year if plans of Auk Bay Provisional Unit No. 25, The American Legion Auxiliary, materialize | Friday night, wives of Auk Bay Legionnaires met at the home of | Mrs. Bill Stilley on the Loop Road to organize an Auxiliary Unit in | conjunction with the recently form- | ed Auk Bay Legion Post. Mrs, C.| C. Mosher was selected as acting | President and Mrs. Stilley was nam- | came about in discussions of ways and means to belp the men raise money for their projected Lezion Community Building at Auk Bay. It was decided to establish a child nursery service at Auk Bay during the three day Golden North Sal- mon Derby here next month. Aux- illary membkers will operate the nursery, feeding and taking care of small children while parents take part in the annual fishing classic. Further details will be announced later. Other future plans for the Aux- iliary include a jam and jelly sale at a date to be set. Eleven Auk Bay women attended ed acting Secretary until the Unit | Friday night's second meeting of | is formally organized in September.'the group. Comm ittees were named ' and draft & constitution and hy- laws for the organization. Regular meetings will be held on.the third Fridays of each month at the home of Floyd Ogden on the Eagle River Hignway. FROM YAKUTAT C .W. Purtilar of Yakutat is stop- ping at the Hotel Juneau for a few days. ATTENTION TOURISTS For an intimate acquaintance with S. E. Alaska with the mallboat Yakobi for a 600 mile 4 day scenic voyage. Sallings once a week. De- parts Wednesday am. 816-tf —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— IH ome, and Jack | |stay there, SEARS ORDER OFFICE SEARS GRADUATE CORSETIERE Miss Morgan’s appearance is alwoys o welcome event ot Sears Order Office—she gives such expert, professional advice in such @ worm, friendly way. | We are proud to present her to our friends ond | customers. { ‘We hope you'll drop in during Miss Morgon’s stay with us. You will enjoy talking with her personally, ond she will gladly recommend the proper type Charmode foundation garment for you. FRL-TUES., JUNE 22, 23, 25, 26 Sears, Roebuck and Co. 200 Seward St. Juneau Phone 233 Hours 9:00 - 6:00 THE RIGHT WAY