The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 27, 1951, Page 5

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P MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1951 SHOWPLALE o CabiTdiA TODAY & TUES. FEATURES COLBERT! make her own brand of love o L 1 g CARTO0H COMEDY || PETE SMITH WORLD NEWS EVENTS In "Bride for Sale’ At Capitol Theatre Getting a husband by statistics sparks the unique theme of Crest Productions’ starring vehicle for Claudette Cclbert, Robert Young, and George Brent, “Bride for Sale,” 10w playing at thie Capitol Theatre. In this romantic comedy, Miss Colbert portrays the trimly efficient manager of a big income tax firm, who has decided it is time for her to ma Her prospective groom must be wealthy, and to find him she ses through the private boss, Brent, tries to ampaign by getting his b2l Young, to te 1 her But the counter-plan n't work out as sched d, and the outcome provides plenty of fun uregoers. Max Baer, us Schilling and Charles Arnt e featured in the production, di d by Willi D. Russell and d buted by KO Radio. Wii Games By the Associated Press >m 8, Spokane 7. '] , Tacoma 2-8. Tri-City 0-1. tchee 2-5, Vancouver 0-8. Saturday's Results Spokane 7-3, Salem 3-5. Vancouver 5, Wenatchee 3. Yakima 4, Victoria 1. Tacoma 7, Tri-City 2. . . . AUGUST 28 ° . ° ® Low tide 5: . e High tide 12 ° ‘e Low tide 5:4 ° e High tide 11:42 pm, 143 fi. e a ® e 00 0 0 00 0 o DR. TED OBERMAN opTOM ETRIST OFFicE 81 ALASKA PHONE JUNEAU, {Romance a Triangle [Susan Williams Becomes Bride of Edwin Coonjohn Before the light of candles and a flower-decked fireplace, Miss Susan Ann Williams became the bride of 1 Mr. Edwin Coonjohn Saturday eve- ning. U.S. Commissioner Gordon Gray pronounced the vows. A few ‘I('lnsv friends and the bride’s family attended the ceremony which took place at the home of Mrs. Bess Chamberlain on Gold Belt Avenue. i The bride wore a blue voile dress with white floral design, ballet IImn:h. a white corsage and white flowers in her hair. Her maid of yhonor, Miss Helen Angerman, who came up from Wrangell for the oc- casion, was in orchid taffeta, ballet carnations. The groom had as his Mr. Richard Zagars, a classmate of the couple at the University of Alaska. b Following the wedding a reception was held attended by many friends of the family. Mrs. M. L. Mac- Spadden served the wedding cake, jafter the traditional first cut by the bride and groom. Mesdames K. G. Merritt and Bess Chamberlain !poured, and Lew Williams, Jr, brother of the bride, served punch. Miss Patricia Chamberlain had charge of the guest book. Mr. and Mrs. Coonjohn are leav- ting this week for Fairbanks where they will complete their senior year at the University of Alaska. iWhite House Vofed General Conirol on Foreign Aid Funds | WASHINGTON, Aug. 25 — (P — | ators voted today to give the White House general control over would be settled by the President himself, an individual he desig nates for that job or by a three member advisory board which he would name. Slogk up BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY JUNEAU COLD STORAGE COMPANY " is o registered trade-mark. wifl; Coke ... ~ © 1951, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY 008 2008, IUNEAY ALAIKAPIK 1GHT_$¢H COASTAL AIRLINE! s ~W“7}VLA JUNE |\, I‘ll‘ w SITKA, 1CY STRATTS AND'_ T CHATHAM STRAITS POINTS . =~ SLQUINCE OF STOPS VARIABLE {®-3T0P mar ot oMITTED 1F_TRAFIE WP DOES NOT WARRANT - K= ARRIVAL TIME VARIADL! 3 STHORDAYS Qoex length, and her flowers were white best man | the new $7,499,000,000 foreign aid | program. Rejecting a House-approved pro- posal to turn the program over to A SE te mutual writy agen- jcy. the Senate Foreign Rela s i and Armed Services committee vo- ted 19" to 1 to divide authority among the Pentagon, State Depart- ment and the Economic Coopera- | tion Administration (ECA). Any policy dispute, however, ‘ be provided f THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA - Adress Becomes Nun i i in Los Angeles. as “Baby Jane.” Miss Quigley, now School Bells Will Ring on Sept. 4; 15 New Teachers School bells soon will be ringing in Juneau and any similarity of feelings they inspire in mothers and purpils will be purely coinci- {dental. Opening day is Sept. 4 with classe | beginning at 8:45 a.m., and running through a full day’s schedule, Sterl- ing S. Sears, superintendent of | schools, said today . Two new positions have been add- ed.to the teaching staff, one addi- tional third grade teacher and the other xth grade teacher. Sears aid a part-time teacher will still} - children who are tg-St. Ant's a total of 49 for faculty. a i onfingg pital. This make: the Juneau schools Fifteen new teachers will begin their first year on the Juneau schools' staff. They are: rt- Miss Beverly Nelton, kinderg en, who received her education at the College of St. Catherine, St Paul, Minn. Her home is Balsam Lake, Wis. For the past several years she has taught in Aspen, Colo. Miss Betty Zumwinkel will teach the fourth section of the first grade. She is from Denver, Colo., and re- ceived a B.A. from the University of Denver, Her mother is a former | Juneau teacher. A new teacher for the fourth sec- tion of grade three is Miss Helena Downs of Berwick, Maine. She holds a B.S. from State Teachers' College in Gorham, Maine and has had teac] expérience in that state Mrs. Virginia Dobyns, sixth grade. is from Redwood City, Calif. She re- ceived her training at Humbolt State Teachers’ College, Calif. Another| new sixth grade instructor is Ed- mund Jones, Jr., a graduate of Okla- homa City University with a B.A. He and his wife and two-year-old daughter are driving to Juneau via the Alaska Highway. Mrs. Dorothy Cash will be a new | teacher of the eighth grade. Shel has a B.A. from Eastern State Col- lege at Cheney, Wash. A graduate of the Allen Memorial Hospital Lutheran School of Nurs- ing at Waterloo, Towa, will be school nurse. She is Miss Joan Troester, who also attended Towa State Teach- ers Colle and has had additional nursing experience at Denver Gen- eral Hospital. New leader and director of the school band will be Herman Kuhl- man, who holds both a Bachelor’s and Master's degree from the Man- hattan School of Music. He also studied at Columbia University. In 1941 and 1942 he worked in Alaska on the Pribilof Islands and at Dutch Harbor, He and Mrs. Kuhlman will | live at the Alder Terrace apart-| ments. Three new charge of the hi department. They are: | Miss Juanite Cantor, who will| teach English and Journalism imd‘I who received a B.S. from Murray | State Teachers College of Kentucky and did graduate work at the Uni- versity of Mississippi the past sum- mer. Merton Haynes, English and Dramatics, a graduate of North- | west Missouri Teachers College, who has done graduate work at the Un- iversity of Towa and Colorado State. Miss Pauline Grise will teach the freshman English class and be in charge of the school annual. She has a B.A. from the University of Massa- chusetts and has been teaching the past four years in Glasgow, Mont. In high scijool mathematics Miss Mary Zehntner and Percy Schmel- teachers will be in | h school English Movie Actress Juanita Quigley (left) talks with Mother Mary Viator after she became Sister Quentin Rita of the Catholic Daughters of Mary and Joveph in a ceremony at St. Paul the Apostle’s Church She will study Canon law for two years, then will become a teacher in the Catholic primary grades. (P Wirephoto. |is the only former m,‘.m--m:mc';; zer are new instructors. Miss Zehnt- ner has a B.A. from Montana State PAGE FIVE 20:LCENTURY. THEATRE «+ WHERE HITS ARE A HABIT! LAST o DAY Defense Department ‘Approves Aluminum "Plants in Northwest WASHINGTON, Aug. 27—®—The| | Defense Production Administration | (DPA) has approved a $46,000,000 loan to the Harvey Machine Co., to finance construction of two new aluminum plants in the northwest, under Secretary of Interior Rich- ard D. Searles sald today. Harvey has applied for a $46,000,- ; 000 loan. Of this, $34,000,000 is to go for construction of a three-pot al- uminum plant near Kalispell, Mont. The remaining $12,000,000 is to be | used to finance an alumina plant north of Seattle, Wash. Alumina, us- | ually derived from bauxite, is used | to make aluminum 1331n,3 Out on 'Alaska Safurday Thirty three arrived on the Alaska northbound Saturday with three| | embarking. | Disembarking from Seattle: John E. Benson, Billy Beyers, Dr. Eliza- * | beth Bishop, Sgt. M. W. Braudrick, | Lt Col. and Mrs. Oscar E. Cutting, | Mrs. M. Detlofsen, Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Floyd, Mr, and Mrs. E. E. Gunst, and daughter; Jeannette Houston, Mrs. Myrtle Hyde and son; Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Mierzejewski and son; | Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Moody, Mr. and | Mrs. Bernard E. Park and daughter; | Mrs. Willis Reed, Sterling B. Sears, | Miss Doris Tianen. | From Ketchikan: Herb Coleman, | Mrs. V. Hulse, M. Lachman, Mr, jand Mrs, A. Nelson and child; J. [ Christenson. ~| Embarking for Seward: Clarence | Bumgarner, C. S. Dorrel. | For Valdez: Joseph Grove. Show Starts 7:18-9:30 .. Feature Starts 8:07-10:19 THE BIGGEST PARADE OF LAUGHS | | | | comiNNe _courin CALVET - TOWNSEND - DEMAREST 20, was a child movie star, known Bankrupkf Looms, Warn Wage Board industrial Men | WASHINGTON, Aug. 27 — (B —| Guy Spellman of Seattle, is reg- istred at the Baranof Hotel. 1 | FROM SEATTLE | | Jockeying among economic groups to keep abreast of each other is leading toward ‘“national bank- | ruptcy” in the opinion of indus- | try members of the wage stak 1 tion board. ! Their grim warning of skyrock- | eting inflation came yesterday as | the government’s living-cost index hit a new all-time high and a na- | tion wide food chain, Safeway | Stores, Inc., moved to get higher price ceilings on key grocery items. The wage board’s industry members went along with the board’s labor and public mem- Lo hn wpproving —a- reguiation - allowing employers to give auto- | matic pay raises when living costs climb. L The industry members said the | ruling was necessary because far-| mers, manufacturers, distributors | and retailers now generally all get | upward revisions in prices as the | economy changes, by various "c'»-‘l calation” techniques such as the'| operation of parity for the farmer. College. She will also serve as se- cretary in the office of Leslie B. Avrit, High school principal. Schmel- zer holds a M.A. from the Univer- sity of Colorado and a AB. from Peru State College in Nebraska. He | and Mrs. Schmelzer are driving to| Juneau over the Alaska Highway. Miss Peggy J. Orvis will be in| charge of girls' physical eéducation | and some history classes. She is a graduate of Northwestern Univer- ity with a BS. degree. She was counsellor at a girls' camp in Wis- consin the past summer. Advisor for the high school ski| club and industrial arts tecaheri will be Ellis B. Bibb who holds R} B.S. from Stout Institute in Menom- onie, Wis. Last year’s teachers returning to | their jobs are: } Mrs, T. J. Selby, kindergarten, at | the Church of Christ recreational | room; Mrs. Dale BelcheM Miss Avis | Aamot, and Mrs. Lilla Mae Eflskln,*‘ first grade; Miss Juanita Wllson,I Dorothy McLeod, Mrs. Rose O.| Druxman and Miss Ethel Murphy, | second grade. Returning to the third grade are| Misses Alberta Murphy, Genevieve | Mayberry and Mrs. Florence Saun-| ders. Fourth grade, Mrs. Marion Williamson, Mrs. Helen Webster and Miss Margaret Maland. Fifth grade, Mrs, Margaret Berlin, Miss Rosa- | lind Hermes and Mrs. Edna Borigo. | sixth grade, Miss Elma Olson. Sev- enth grade, Ralph Wright and Charles De Boer. Eighth grade, Miss Katherine Elle In the high school Miss Marjorie Iverson will again direct the choral music and Max Lewis is returning as | art teacher. Miss Marjorie Tillotson | teacher returning this y A. N. Eide will again head the science de- partment and Mrs. Edythe Walker will begin hér second year in home| economics. | Mrs. Myrtle Phillips retumns o her position teaching Latin and| Spanish classes and as library sup- again ervisor. Arnold Soley will have charge of boys’ phy cation and some history classe: Amanda Cook will again teach com- mercial work. Sterling S. Sears begins his third | year as superintendent of schools| and Leslie B. Avrit returns as high| school principal. T. Floyd Dryden will be elementary school principal Secretary to Sears will be Margue-| rite Shaw who filled that position| last year, Post Office Box 2511 -

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