The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 18, 1951, Page 3

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)

c SHOWPLALE or APITUL HURRY! fured —TIM HOLT in “MASKED R \ll)l' RS” ENDS TONIGHT! , S AMAZING ALASKAN THRILLS! A IRCTIC FURY S 2nd Hi Starts SUNDAY “I'was a nice girl-wasn't [ ? “MY FOOLISH fl" with Robert Keith « Kent Smith + Lois Wheeler " |Tense Drama of ‘Human Emofions 'Af Capitol Sunday | Heralded as one of the most un- | usual romantic dramas ever to reach | the screen, “My Foolish Heart,” | Samuel Goldwyn’s production for RKO Radio, stars Dana Andrews | and Susan Hayward in the story of a wife who married just after she | discovers that she is to have a | child by another man. | The play opens tomorrow at the Capitol Theatre. After about seven years, the mar- riage hits the rocks. As Miss Hay- ward is preparing to leave with her child, she finds an old evening gown which brings back poignant mem- ories of her boarding school ro- mance with a young GI (Andrews), and his untimely death before they {can be married. In desperation, she inveigles her school room-mate’s | fiance (Kent Smith) into an imme- | diate marriage, with nobody any | her child. However, this emotional tangle ends on a note of future | adjustment. Co-featured with Smith are Lois Wheeler as Miss Hayward’s room- mate, Jessie Royce Landis and Robert Keith as Miss Hayward's par- ients, and Gigi Perreau as the child. Mark Robson directed, and the screenplay was written by Julius J. and Philip G. Epstein, based on J. D. Salinger's original story in The New Yorker. Browne Leaves fo Study Ketchikan 'Housing Problems In response to a request from Alaska Development Board, Ralph | Browne, assistant general mana- :';er, left for that city Thursday. | 'The council had written the | board asking aid in planning and meeting housing and other prob- the construction of the new $40,- 000000 pulp mill to be stajed there soon. Browne will work with various agencies in the First City compil- ing a report. He will Prince Rupert to interview offi- cials there to see how similar problems were handied with es- tablishment of the Columbia CL]- lulose Co., Ltd. Columbia Cellulose is a pulp |plant of the same capacity of | production as the Ketchikan Pulp | and Paper Company will be. days. Adling Director of the Ketchikan City Council to the ! lems which confront the city with | also visit | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Indians, Yanks Both Sit on Top By the Associated Press Hold on folks. Will Harridge’s American League wheel is spinning toward another coin-tossing finish. With Cleveland and New York straining in an exact first place tie, let's take a look at the schedule for the final six weeks of the sea- son. The edge, if any, tips slightly in favor of the Yankees who play 22 sof their last 40 in Yankee Stadium. Cleveland divides its final 40 on a 20-20 basis and Boston, four games back, faces an uphill pull with only 16 at home and 24 away. Nine big games between Boston and New York may give the Cleve- land club the breathing space it needs. While the Red Sox and Yanks knock off one another in late September, the Tribe could slide home free. Cleveland plays only 16 games with the other first division clubs A v Y S n the wiser regarding the parentage of | 1o, e, YO gy 17 with the upper crust. Chicago, nine full games off the pace, still has seven dates with the Indians, their victims of yesterday. The White Sox, now an outsider in the four-club race, stung Cleveland twice, 7-1 and 8-3. When the Yank: knocked off Philadelphia, 3-2, in a night game, Cleveland’s lead had disappeared. The Stubby Overmire-Tommy Byrne trade the Yanks made in June paid its second dividend in two days. Byrne, pitching for St. Louis, ended a 13-game Cleveland win streak Thursday. Last night Overmire won his first for New York by going the route against the A's with an eight-hitter. Bos- ton hung in close by scoring three in the 12th to top Washington, 7-4. Detroit shaded St. Louis, 5-4. Leo Durocher’s New York Giants blew a little more life into their National League hopes by thumping the Phils, 8-5, to cut Brooklyn's lead to nine games. The Dodgers split a pair in Boston, winning the opener, 3-1 for Carl Erskine but losing to Johnny Sain in the sec- ond, 4-3. Stan Musial's 28th homer in the ninth gave St. Louis a 2-1 nod over Cincinnati in a duel between Max Lanier and Herm Wehmeier. Pitts- burg’s Mel Queen set down Chicago with three hits, 8-3. Leagque Standings By the Associated Press NATIONAL LEAGUE w | Brooklyn 3 New York 66 Philadelphia Browne will be gone about 10 |St. Louis Boston | Cincinnati Chicago | Pittsburgh AMERICAN LEAGUE {Two Juneau Visitors \visitor in Juneau, will be one of { the honored guests, and Miss Anna ;| vision of public health nursing with Scenes Featured |In 20th Film Authenticity of ’ | From the great library of film which Twentieth Century-Fox made in Borneo on the actual sites of the prison camps where “Three Came Home,” now at the 20th Cen- | tury Theatre, takes place, studio, staffs constructed exact duplicates ! of those camps and the various| other buil s designated in Agnes | Newton ith’s autobiographical | novel from which the film is taken Mrs. Keith, a victim of the Japs, during war, is played by Clau-| dette Colbert i principal buildings, hing and Berhala pri- son s were reconstructed exactly as they were in Borneo ac- | cording to Mrs. Keith's description matched by the location films the| studio made. A rubber pl:\n(allon‘ with seven buildings, including aj rubber-cure factory, plus the large scale off-the-ground structures typ- ical of Borneo also were built. About 21,000 square feet of tule matting, made by Indians at Cala- patria near the Colorado river, wers used to roof the buildings. More than $50,000 was spent on one set, for the sake of authenticity, essen- tial to the spirit of the picture. On the spot selected for the Bor- nea villages, prison camps and fac- tories, Twentieth Century-Fox re- moved an oil well which had been pumping pn the studio lot for thirty years. Duplicates of the main pri- son camp at Kuching were erected in three spots on the studio lot: in the “meat”; in a big hollow on the studio north lot covering twenty acres; and again on one of the in- door stages. Dorothy Whnney to Be Hostess for Sandakan’s and the K There will be two guests of honor when Miss Dorothy Whitney enter- tains Monday afternoon at the home of Dr. Karola Reitlinger in the Wickersham residence. Elizabeth Bixler, dean of the nurs- ing school of Yale University, a Heisler, of Washington, D.C,, who is repiacing Miss Whitney during a leave of absence will be the other. Miss Whitney, director of the di- the Alaska Health Department, is leaving next week for a ten month course at John Hopkins university. | Hours for the tea Monday will be between 4 and 6 p.m. Angels’ Manager - PAGE THREE EXTRA STARTS TONIGHT Darryl F. Zanuck pr DOORS OPF STARTS FEATURE 7:41 - 9:53 SHOW LOCAL BOY IN NEWS-LE ROY WEST shown "WEIGHING IN" at Akron’s National Soap Box Derby 7:00 EN 7 T: I‘ 9:3 SUNDAY MATINEE DOORS OPEN 1:30 SHOW STARTS 2:00 ents shattering new experience for youl This 1s one woman’s true personal experience! Told the way it happened... Great as the love that lived through it all! Directed by JEAN NEGULESCO ...the man who gave you “*Johnny Belinda"'! CARTOON LATE WORLD NEWS DARRYL F. ZANUCK presents a shattering new experience for you! fl°hree (Came glome " CLAUDETTE COLBERT wn Patric Knowles- Florence Desmond- Sessue Hayakawa oy JEAN NEGULESCO + Prssss v NUNNALLY JOHNSON Screen Play by Nunnally Johnson.* Based on the Beok by Agnas Newton Keith . v Z‘IJIEEIIIUR!.' THEATRE « WHERE HITS ARE A HABIT! Nursing Assumes Post {With Health Deparfment WORLD NEWS VIA AIR EXPRESS Pet. 632 632 CARTOON COMEDY Wears Skippers' IN TECHNICOLOR Cleveland | New York College All-Stars WIL Games CONTINUOUS SHOWINGS SUNDAY! SHOWS FEATURE STARTS 1: START 1:34—38:10—5:15—7:20—9:30 34—3:39—5:44—7:49—9 :59 There is no substitute for Newspaper l_\dvertisingi | ONLY ONE QUALITY - THE BEST Vancouver Lumber Co. (1931) Limited Knotty White Pine Red Cedar Shingles Red Cedar Shakes Processed Send for Color Chart Write Vancouver, British Columbia BARTENDERS Sunday, August19th UNION Local No. 369 SPECIAL MEETING [ Stating that she was “fulfilling a longtime desire to come to Alaska,” Miss Anna Heisler arrived in Juneau this week to become acting director of nursing for the Alaska Depart- ment of Health during the absence of Miss Dorothy Whitney. Miss Whitney, nursing director for Johns Hopkins School of Pub- lic Health and Hygiene to obtain the degree of master of public health before returning next fall. Miss Heisler has been assistant director of the division of public health nursing in the U. S. Public Health Service in Washington, D. C., for the past six years. Also arriving in Juneau this week were three other nurses. Miss Gert- rude Kunz left her work as educa- tion director of the St. Louis Visit- ing Nurses Association to become assistant nursing director for the department. She will have her head- quarters in Anchorage and will go there after becoming acquainted with department work here. Miss Anne Poore, senior public health nurse, has arrived to join the department’s field nursing staff. Miss Poore comes from the mid-west and has been director of nursing services in county health depart- ments in Nebraska and Missouri. Miss Josephine Haws is enroute to Fairbanks where she will be dis- trict nursing supervisor fof the department’s northernmost field nursing services. Miss Hawes has been territorial supervisor for an insurance company since 1948 and prior to that was nursing educa- tional director in the New Orleans health department. e Hospifal Nofes Admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital Friday were Mrs. Fannie Connor, Mrs. Harry Good, -Oscar Carlson, Renee Blood; dismissed were Mrs. Leo Whistler, T. Ness, B. Glafke, M. Hahn. Three births were recorded at St. Ann’s Hospital Friday. Born to Mrs. Bernard Henninger of Yakutat at 8:45 a.m., a girl weigh- ing 7 pounds; to Mrs. Joseph Milligan at 6:35 p.m., a boy weighing 7 pounds 3 ounces; to Mrs. Bernard Eldridge of Juneau at 8 p.m., a boy weighing 7 pounds 8 ounces. Admitted to the Government Hospital Priday was Margaret Johnson of Juneau; dismissed were Mabel Keller and Rachel Jimmie both of Juneau. . since 1945, leaves in mid-September | | Detroit | Philadelphia 596 553 4T3 416 385 312 Boston Chicago ‘Washington St. Louis PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE W L Pet Seattle 86 601 Hollywood 80 559 Los Angeles 510 Portland .500 Oakland 489 Sacramento 458 San Diego 455 San Francisco 424 Pan American Hauls Record Number of Passengers fo Alaska SEATTLE, Aug. 18 — (® — Pan American World Airways reported today that in July, for the second straight month, it carried more pas- sengers on its Alaska routes than in any month in its 19 years of northern service. It reported the 7,018 passengers was a 47 percent gain over July 1950. There were 38 extra flights to handle the record traffic. i — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — Baffing Crown By the Associated Press For whatever it's worth, Star Hack of the Los Angeles Angels reigns today as managerial batting champion of the Pacific Coast league. The Seraph skipper wrested the crown last night from its longtime proprietor, Lefty O'Doul, prominent San Francisco tavern keeper, bon vivant, and man about town whose hitting prowess on this occasion was even worse than his team’s, which is pretty bad. Anyway, Hack did the job by col- lecting five hits out of 10 fair balls in a contest which preceded last night's game at Los Angeles. O'Doul got only oge safety. Adding further humility, Hack's Angels then went out and trounced the Seals, 5-1, to extend their winning streak to six games and establish an interesting motif for their weekend engagement with the first place Seattle Rainiers. The Rainiers lead by six games now, bowing last night to Sacra- mento, 6-3, while the second place Hollywoods were crushing Oakland, 11-4. Sacramento’s triumph ended an eight game drought and pushed the club back into sixth place as San Diego absorbed a 10-0 goose egging at the hands of the Portland Beav- ers. UNPARDONABLE SIN What Is It2 Who Commits It? * HEAR THIS MESSAGE 8°00 o’Clock-Sunday Evening Bethel Assembly of God Church Wm. L. Andrews, Acting Pastor Whipped in Pigskin Opener, 3310 0 CHICAGO, Aug. 18—{(M—Word was out that old age was seeping into the marrow of the Cleveland Browns and the 1951 National Foot~ ball league season would see them | knocked from the pinnacle. The Browns are still the team to | beat. They're a long way from being turned out to pasture. With the gusto and vigor of col- | lege kids, the amazing Browns sand- bagged the collegiate All-Stars 33-0 last night to open the football sea- son officially before 92,180 fans in Soldier Field. An estimated 50 million more saw the game on television. Gross re- ceipts amounted to $428,000, includ- ing video and radio rights, for the Chicago Tribune Charities, Inc. By the Associated Press At El Paso, Tex. — Westbury Bascom, 173, St. Louis, outpointed Watson “Tiger” Jones, 173, Los An- geles, 10. At Long Beach, N.Y. | Beau, 159'4, Norwalk, Conn., pointed Johnny Noel, 157%, | York, 10. At Hollywood, Calif. — Fabela Chavez, 126, Los Angeles, awarded decision over Baby Face Gutierrez, 125, San Diego, 9. (Referee awarded fight to Chavez after he was butted — Jimmy out- New by Gutierrez in ninth). secand THIS will be the kitchen NO, SHE I8N'T RUSHING THINGS: “The time to provide for appliance out- lets is when you first plan your home. DON'T “SHORT-CIRCUIT" your- self by having too few circuits. Avoid blowing out fuses. Inadequate wiring from the start will result in expensive alterations later. , SEE YOUR ARCHITECT and elec-' contractor about the wiring that will service sppiiances you have now — and those you hope to have in the future. Have enough circuits! Have _ enoughconvenienceoutletaand switches. * —and locate them convenientlyl ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT and POWER COMPANY [Faz=eaz= By the Associated Press Tacoma 20-9, Wenatchee 8-13. Salem 7, Yakima 0. Spokane 13, Tri-City 1. Vancouver 11, Victoria 1. CANADIAN EKOLITE DEPTH SOUNDERS MADSEN Cycle & Fishing Supply He’s Under Cover! HOW about you? Disaster may take a big bite out of your pocketbook! Do you have well-designed protection against financial loss to fire, theft, accident or other perils? Don’t let arouble “put the bite on you”. Call on us for strong insurance. Shattuck Ageney Phone 249 Seward Street JUNEAU

Other pages from this issue: