The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 22, 1951, Page 3

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1951 ‘I‘hoa'ro Tedqyl : ENDS TON!GHT' Two Dynamic Stars in a Human Drama of High Excitement! GLENN FORD Broderick Crawford 2 in “CONVITTED" Shows 7:25—9:30 Feature 7:54—9:56 e ——————— TOMORROW the long-awaited return engagement CAETIE JENNFER ‘OLBERT JONES COTTEl' TEMPLE 3 WOOLLEY UL ROBERT BARRYMORE - WALKER ar MADISON inceYou, Went Away c suwpflzilin unea a [(3 ]Ford, Crawford — EMPIRE WANT ADS P‘\Y — isals. | 5SIar in Feature | Now af Capitel “Convicted,” Columbia's high- tension drama behind grim prison | walls, ending tonight at the Capitol Theatre. Glenn Ford and Broderick Craw-| ford, the Academy Award winner of “All the King's Men,” are co- starred. Millard Mitchell has the | top-suy g role, while the rest |of the fe..ared cast includes Dor- othy Malone, Carl Benton Reid, Frank Faylen and Will Geer. The hard-hitting film tells a powerful story of the making of a | convict of his love for the daughter of the warden and how | he is trapped between the code of the convict and the code of the law. Ford enacts the part of the con- vict, Crawford is the two-fisted warden, Miss Malone is the war- | den’s daughter, and the others are assorted prisoners and a guard. David O. Selznick’s epic of the home front during the last war, “Since You Went Away,” returns to the Capitol screen for a three day run starting tomorrow. Among the eight stars who will be seen are Claudette Colbert, Jennifer | Jones, Joseph Cotten, ang Lionel Barrymore. Infection Causes iDewey fo Take Rest ALBANY, NY, Oct. 22—P—A virus infection has forced Governor | Thomas E. Dewey to cancel all en- | gagements for the next few days. Hospital Notes Admitted to St. Ann's hospital | saturday were Emilie Cwik, Simon | Peter Moe, Jack Lund, Mrs. Ennis | Whitaker; admitted Sunday were | Bdward Casey, Mrs. William Jack- son, Patrick J. Paul, Mrs. Charles| Lesher; dismissed Saturday were | Willjam Paul Jr., May George, | Susan Bartlett, C. Bostich, Marsha | Totland, Inga Totland; dismissed Sunday were Mrs. Gilbert Bixby and | baby boy; Mrs. Paul Demmert, Mrs. | Eugene Lockridge and baby girl; Mrs. Emilie Cwik. | Born at St. Ann’s hospital to Mrs. Jack Hendrickson Saturday ‘wre twin boys. The first boy was born at 5:15 p.m. and weighed 6 pounds 8 ounces with the second boy born at 5:55 p.m. and weighed 5 pounds 15 ounces. Admitted to the Government hos- pital Sunday was Martha Kookesh |of Angoon. There were no dismis- ot MEETING TDNIGHT at 8:00 o’clock in the Dugout The American Legion Visiting Veterans Invited SAXON HEATH SNOW Post Comnrander | WILLIAM M. LIDDLE Adjutant-Finance Officer PO ! “HERB” S. ROWLAND Alaska Manager Baranof Hotel-Juneau Telephone 419 Life Insurance-Annuities a reputation for service and integrity | Cannamela | the United States. Boudreau Is New Manager of Red Sox | BOSTON, Oct. 22—#—The Red Sox appointed a new manager to- | day — Lou Boudreau, who for so| many American League seasons was a nuisance to the Boston team. Boudreau, who joined the Sox last | spring after his release as Cleveland | manager, succeeds Steve O'Neill for whom he once played. Boudreau, now 34-years-old, was signed to a two-year contract. O'Neill, who was a coach at Cleveland when Boudreau led the Indians to the world championship in 1948, will continue ir the Sox organization’s farm system, it was announced. Southern. Calif. Back and Lineman Shine in Vidory SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 22—(P— Southern California’s Trojans un- loosed top candidates for both back and lineman of the week in their smashing 21 to 14 upset of Cali- fornia, the nation’s No. 1 college football team in last week’s AP poll. Trojan Pat Cannamela, 205 pound guard-linebacker from New London, Conn., outshone California’s All- America Les Richter in the same position Saturday. And one of his smashing tackles brought charges of unnecessary , roughness that quickly were denied. Frank Gifford, 196 pound tailback from Bakersfield, Calif., sparked Southern Cal from a 0-14 halftime deficit to a well-earned victory. Cannamela’s terrific play aroused some sports writers to charge the Trojans deliberately ‘“got” Cal's backfield ace, John Olszewski. “Johnny O.—who totalled 269 yards against Washington State a week earlier — went out early with a lame ankle. Some fans and writers charged the ankle was twisted deliberately. Olszewski came back briefly in the second period. He tried again in the second half. He raced 26 yards — then went out with torn knee ligaments after a Cannamela tackle. Olszewski himself was a said “that tremendous player.” British Golfers Arrive; Exped fo Beat Americans NEW YORK, Oct. 22—{®—Arthur Lacey, the non-playing captain of | the British Ryder Cup golf team, knows how it feels to beat the Americans — and he thinks it can he done again this year. Lacey led his ten operatives off the Queen Mary yesterday and wasted little time in predicting that the Britains could win the interna- tional matches scheduled for Pine- hurst, N.C., on Nov. 2 and 4. The British have captured the cup only twice in eight meetings with The first in a series of card parties by the Sons of Norway will be held October 25 at 8 p.m. in the Moose Hall. Prizes are to be awarded and re- freshments will be served. All mem- bers of the organization are urged to attend. INTRODUCING NEW FALL AND WINTER Ladies’ and Men's Suits and Topcoals Made-to-Your-Individual- Measurements Your choice from over 100 all-wool fabrics. Values to . $90.00—for a limited time ONLY $60.00 CALL BLACK 940 After 6 P.M. Sunday all day Be prepared... buy Coke by the case BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY JUNEAU COLD STORAGE COMPANY | Scored three touchdow: John Estes . D. McMullin THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JU Stars of Foothall | By the Associated Press Football stars of the week are: Ollie Matson, San Francisco — s, two on runs of 94 and 90 yards in beating | Fordham, 32-26. Chet Cornog, Pennsylvania — Set up three touchdowns and passed for | fourth, gained 126 yards rushing in 28-13 victory over Columbia. Mitch Price, Columbia.— Broke three Columbia passing records by completing 23 of 40 passes for 271 yards against Penn. Frank Gifford, Southern Califor- nia — Scored touchdown on 69-yard | run, threw touchdown pass and kicked three extra points in upset 21-14 win over California. & Ray McKown, Texas Christian — Scored two touchdowns, set up an- other in 20-14 victory over Texas A. land M. Larry Isbell, Baylor — Completed 13 of 18 passes, two for touchdowns, and scored a third touchdown in 40-20 win over Texas Tech. Dan Drake, Rice — Completed four of eight passes for 142 yards and three touchdowns in 28-7 vic- tory. over Southern Methodist. Buck McPhail, Oklahoma Gained 215 yards in 20 carries for new Oklahoma individual yardage record in 33-21 wid over Kansas. Babe Parilli, Kentucky — Passed for four touchdowns in 85-13 vic- tory over Villanova. Bowling News The Friday Night Mixed Bowling | League started the evening with| Caro Transfer taking the le:\;:ue\ leading Home Grocery 3-1. Harry Race Druggist improved ‘its stand- ing by trimming Country Club 4-0. Florence Holmquist was high with 582. C. Oldham turned in a 471. In the second canto, Glacier Cab led Capitol Theater home 4-0, Ross’ Oasis and Butler-Mauro Drugs split | two each. Peggy Lee led with 478, Jackie Porter 471 and C. Rudolph rolled 461. Due to mechanical dif- ficulties, all games scheduled for alleys 3 and 4 had to be plnyed} Sunday afternoon. Team and individual scores fol- low: Home Grocery A. Sorenson 133 116 M. Davlin 119 143 P. Taylor 105 113 I. Fitzpatrick 97 129 P. Fitzpatrick 134 148 Totals 588 649 Caro Transfer Ike Cahail 185 200 M. Mallory 92 85 P, Morgan 104 127 K. Morgan 134 144 C. Oldham 161 145 Totals 676 701 164— | 144— 125— 126— 152— 711—1948 150— 10— 103— 130— 408 165— 471 6182195 535 247 334 Capito! Theatre 101 119 143 90 120 109 113 105 87 131 564 554 Glacier Cab 136 134 105 95 110 139 124 94 181 145 656 607 125— 345 90— 323 | 145— 374 118— 336 | 156— 374 634—1752 J. Rusher ‘T. Heyder C. MacLean L. Jones J. Marsh Totals 128— 398 105— 305 1256— 374 132— 350 152— 478 642—1905 E. Cowan J. Crosby A. Burns J. Franken P. Lee Totals Harry Race Druggist F. Holmquist 156 181 145— 482 8. Jones 111+101 94— 306 E. Gray 106 115 132— 353 M. Sowan 125 122 116— 363 L. Holmquist 175 148 125— 448 Totals 673 667 612—1952 Country Club / 141 131 97 101 153 144 13 13 126 132 630 621 Ross’ Oasis 148 114 139 129 80 107 96 117 187— 459 86— 284 100— 397 107— 333 124— 382 604—1855 . Becker . Winther . Winther . Levasseur Totals 157— 419 145— 413 126— 323 184— 377 . Mills . Mills . Kessner . Rudolph . Rudolph 116 189 156— 461 Totals 589 656 748—1993 Butler-Mauro Drugs P. Matheny 112 110 115— 337 J. Porter 162 187 122— 471 M. Doyle 97 109 107— 313 114 151 139— 404 130 168 145— 443 615 725 628—1968 J. Alexander Totals { fornia EAU, ALASKA U. of W. Still Has Slim Bowl Hopes; Saturday fo Tell By the Associated Press The University of Washington stood as the lone contender for the Rose Bowl in the northern division of the Pacific Coast conference to- day and it lay its slim hopes on the line Saturday in Seattle against anml‘: contender, the Stanford State College virtually of the race Saturday e Beavers fell 26-13 under a f Washington State College With the win, the WSC Cou- gars mped themselves the team to beat for northern division honors. Barring an upset, Southern Cali~ seemed headed for the Rose Bowl after taking California 21-14. The Trojans have aquly two con- ference games left, these against UCLA and unbeaten Stanford. But Stanford has five conference games to go, including such opposition as still mighty California, Washington State and OregonState. The whole picture will be cleared Nov. 10 when Stanford and USC collide. Meanwhile, Washington looked like no pushover for Stanford after holding Tllinois to a 27-20 victory, n the closing minutes on -down, 14-yard pass. Coach Howie Odell said after the game: “I'm not sure we didn't play the Big Ten champions.” Washington State gets a breather Saturday at Oregon, which lost its third straight conference game last woekum to UCLA 41-0. Oregon State meets California at Berkeley. USC meets Texas Christian at Los Ange in an intersectional. Idaho, which beat San Jose 40-7, and UCLA has open dates this Saturday. It w a rough-tough game at Seattle Saturday, dominated by Illi- nois in the first half and by Wash- ington in tying it 20-20 in the sec- ond half — until the Illini suddenly came back to life just when it counted. They took to the air for a series of passes for the winning drive | touchdown. At Corvallis, the passing combo of quarterback Bob Burkhart and end Ed Barker paved the way for the WSC victory. Burkhart twice found Barker for long touchdown passes and the two set up another score in the third quarter. Oregon suffered its fourth defeat in five games at the hands of UCLA. Ore- gon held the Bruins scoreless in the ' first quarter but the Uclans rolled over six tallies for a 41-0 score before the slaughter ended. The Idaho Vandals walloped San Jose State 40-7. Glen Christian, Idaho halfback from Talent, Ore., scomdd three times to spark the at- tack.' President Plans fo Take Trip in November WASHINGTON, Oct. 22 — (B — The White House said today Presi- dent Truman tentatively plans to leave Washington Nov. 8 for a visit to the Naval Air Station at Key West, Fla. FROM FAIRBANKS Alex Miller, of Fairbanks, guest at the Baranof Hotel. is a Forrest E. Kerby, of Anchorage, is a guest at the Baranof. Juneau Drug Co. Phone 33 - Box 1151 Mail Orders Filled Promptly Safer Cough Relief When new drugs or old fail to stop your cough or chest cold don’t dehy. Creomulsion contains only safe, help- goesnghttomm!onhehoubhh axdnmmmhnmdhmlnw.wn- Graranteed 1o By druum uaran to please you or refundamylz}nomuhwn metenofmymmmotum CREOMULSION have been requesting. sorted sizes and colors THE MAMZFELLE SHOP 310 S. Franklin Street——Phone 463——Juneau SPECIAL: 1 rack Rayon Gabardine Suits NOW HERE: The new shipment of slacks you $14.98 Fine quality in as- BLOUSES to match on sale at ONLY . Hootball Scores | By the Associated Press 1 | Scores of leading football games over the weekend are: { Illinois 27, Washington 20. Southern Cal 21, Galifornia 14. Stanford 21, Santa Clara 14. Wash. State 26, Ore. State 13. Idaho 40, San Jose State 7. Montana 38, Montana State 0. British Columbia 13, East. Ore. 8. | Lewis and Clark 41, Willamette 12. Western Washington 19, College of Puget Sound 0. UCLA 41, Oregon 0. Pacific Lutheran 39, East. Wash. 0. Linfield 6, Pacific U. 0. Southern Oregon 14, Chico State 6. Col. of Idaho 45, San Franeisco State 19. Wyoming 20, Brigham Young 20 (tie) Colorado A. and M. 20, Utah State 20 (tie). | Utah 17, Denver 14. Tex. Christian 20,Tex. A. and M. 14. Oklahoma 33, Kansas 21. Okla. A. and M. 27, Drake 14, Baylor 40, Texas Tech 20. Arkansas 16, Texas 14. | Rice 28, Southern Methodist 7. Ark. A. and M. 36, Bishop 0. Towa State 21, Missouri 14. Northwestern 16, Navy 7. Colorado 20, Kansas State 7. Bradley 34, New Mexico A. and M. 6 Michigan 21, Towa 0. ‘Wisconsin 31, Purdue 7. Notre Dame 33, Pittsburgh 0. Minnesota 39, Nebraska 20. Indiana 32, Ohio State 10. William and Mary 85, N. Carolina « State 23. Florida 33, Vanderbilt 13. LSU 17, Georgia 0. Kentucky 35, Villanova 13. Mississippi 25, Tulane 6. Maryland 14, North Carolina 7. Virginia 34, VMI 14. Duke 55, VPI 6. Georgia Tech 27, Auburn 7. San Francisco 32, Fordham 26. Penn 28, Columbia 13. Princeton 60, Lafayette 7. Carnegie Tech 39, Allegheny 0. 'Dear Wife' Good Laughing Bill At 20th Century Paramount’s “Dear Wife,” star- ring William Holden, Joan Caulfield, Billy DeWolfe, Mona Freeman and Edward Arnold, and now at the 20th Century Theatre, might well carry a subtitle reading: ‘“The fur- ther adventures of ‘Dear Ruth'.” For this new comedy is a sequel to that stage and screen hit of a few seasons back and is even fun- nier, according to preview reports. Each of the stars portrays the same role he or she played in “Dear Ruth” except that the very beauti- ful Miss Caulfield is seen as Hol- den’s spouse rather than his girl friend. But Billy DeWolfe remains the hilariously prissy banker, Miss Freeman the scatterbrained teen- ager apd Edward Arnold the nomi- nal head of an unpredictable family, Said to be one of the year's most delightful comedies, “Dear Wife" was directed by Richard Haydn who has a bit role in the picture. A well-known character actor, Haydn made his directorial debut with the successful “Miss Tatlock’s Millions.” Arleen Whelan and Mary Phillips are featured in “Dear Wife.” (oastal Steamer Down in Storm; Crew of 6 Drown STRAITHES, England, Oct, 22— (P—A small coastal steamer found- | ered in the storm-lashed North Sea | today and her crew of six was be~ lieved drowned. Thr “Pandora”—203-ton vessel, | sank only four miles off shore. Her | distress signals were seen but gales prevented the launching of life- boats. | PAGE THREE mum WHERE MITS ARE A MABIT TONITE and TUESDAY Show starts 7:18—9:30 Feature at 7:59—10:11 T'S THAT “DEAR RUTH" GANG / Qunnier than Eve 0[4’/” WIHIW H[} DEN JOAN CAULFIELD BILLY DE- WOLFE EOWARD ARNOLD MONA FREEMA MARY PHILIPS RUMMAGE SALE i Rummage Sale! 10:30 a.m. WedAK nesday gt Northern Light Presby- terian urch. DR. TED OBERMAN CPTOMETRIST 20TH CENTURY THEATR® BLPG. 2ND FLoOR PHONK: OFFiCY 61 JUNEBAU, ALASKA ® Pan American is your best way to get around Alaska. The big four-engine Clippers* fly every day of the week from Fairbanks, Juncau and Ketchi- kan to Seattle. Two Clipper flights weekly from Whitehorse and Nome. And when you fly Pan American, It’s yours when you fly Pan American D whether it be Inside Alaska or Out- side, you have no travel worries. Pan American handles all arrangements through to your final destination... makes your reservations, sees to your tickets. It’s the convenient, carefree way to travel. Just call... BARANOF HOTEL — Phone 106 2w Aurrrcan Worto AIRWAYS WORLD'S MOST EXPERIENCED AIRLINE Miss Return Engagement Lois for 2 weeks at the Starting Tuesday Johnson will appear every nigh NEW COUNTRY CLUB Music lovers will be glad to hear her popular piano numbers again in a nightly program featuring, also, Drummer and Vocalist MISS ANITA PORTER REMEMBER: We are still serving the Finest Foods in the Gastineau Channel Area every night starting at Six.

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