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TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1946 STAR'S OWN FILM OQUTFIT PRODUCED CURRENT PICTURE S . | Fred MacMurray's “Pardon My THIS SWELL SHOW past,” a Mutual Production for TOMORROW COMES THE TOPS IN RHYTHMIC REVELRY! Columbia currently showing at the {Capitol Theatre will close its run tonight Fred recently founded Mutual Productions with Leslie Fenton and his first independent film is “Pardon My Past,” a ENDS TONIGHT comedy ed with Marguerite Chapman as |the feminine lead and Akim Tam- iroff, William Demarest, Rita John- son, Harry Davenport and Douglass | Dumbrille in featured roles -, PNA PASSENGERS SPIRITS SKY- Pacific Northern yesterday with Captain Claude Ferguson, First Officer Tony Gom- ez and Stewardess Louise Leitner, and the following passengers From Anchorage: A. J. Runquist, Carl O. Songer, Clara Walther, Steve Zuanich, ia Wolcott, Card Myers, Harvey Smith, Mr. Mrs. R. Zettle and two children, and Mark Jensen. To Yakutat: Mar Complete Shows 7:25—9:30 Feature starts 8:00—10:05 n Arrgall; to Cordova: Trcvor Davis; to Anchor- ~|age: Joe Rossetti, Clairo Reffner, Wiley, Llovd O'Roarke, Ivorn i~ HAINES " SKAGWAY " MONDAY | i, 12, "3, 2, 10 P.M. Lee, Joe Morris and N. J. Pouch Leaves for st 7 Phonograph ~ Records. Home SITKA and Wayporis every Wednesday 6 P.M. || zeauticn PASSENGERS, FREIGHT and MAIL Among babies, whooping cough is fatal in one case out of ten. ’ DIFFERENT SKINS | NEED DIFFERENT FOUNDATIONS ‘ That is why Monteil created Beauty Balm and ’fifi A Sensitone Lotion—the one for dry or normal skins, * the other for those who like a lighter foundation. " Either will keep you beautifully powdered without that powdery look, diffusing your rouge into subtle color echoes of your own complexion. Becuty Balm in white, bronzé and muted rose. Sensitone \ Lotion in natural, sun tan and muted rose. -mwgfl,& .a L — L4 % 5% " Womens Avvanes ¢ : “It's the Nicest Store In Town" Baranof Hotel Building ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER (0. JUNEAU and DOUGLAS, ALASKA Cheerful Disfrihuiors of Friendly Dependable i 24-Hour Electric Service and Reiaile}s of General Eleciric, Hot Point, Bendix | | and Kelvinator Products \! . and operate A First Class Repair Shop Manned by Skilled Mechanics Telephone Service . . . No. 616, Juneau, Office No. 6 venture | ¢ |which Fenton directed and produc- | Airlines arrived | and | |ALASKA OPA IS OPTIMISTIC ON | Alaska OPA Director Mildred R.| Hermann is back in Juneau after a trip to Washington, D. C., where she participated in conferences with Regional and National OPA offi- !cials. Tmportant decisions were reached at these meetings on mat- s pertaining to OPA operations in Alaska and the other territories under the new Congressional Act y which renewed price and rent con- trels until June 30. 1947. “As a result of the conlerences the Alaska OPA now has the gen- eral framework upon which our op- erations for the ensuing ten months |must be built,” Mrs. Hermann stat- Evd “Primarily, of course, our func- {tion is one of orderly decontrol. This would have been true had the original Act been extended without | the substantial amendments it now !contains. But of course the tempo of decontrol has been considerably |accelerated, and our procedure in this field must be established ac- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—)UNEAU, ALASKA PRICE OUTLOOK | investigations at the University of |regarding the possibilities of quick- these reases to a level wher IA ' AI k they will not precipitate anotner| ANSWEIS 10 AlASKA round of demands for wage increas- p bl w'" ( es or touch off any serious mcia-| PTODICMS W1 Lome, tionary spirals. Our confidence of| D I I H S new Act leaves us a very large ! measure of controls in spite of its (Continued from Page One) restriction In the field of raw materials,|the assured stage are railroad car {ferries to be operated by Foss Tug and Barge Company between Prince Rupert and Kotchikan to carry out the First City's fish pro- services and rents our authority is practically unchanged. And in the field of food gommodities and agri- cultural products, where the prin-| Cipal restrictions are o be found, duction. That cervice could be ex- we still have a very large measure Vit i:‘;l‘):;l‘ nlm:\!:"”“,. T of control. Moreover the Decontrol| i Boand’s mower to rostore et som |, (Of Alaska Development Board trols as are warranted today, m-.fi:f:"‘:‘fi:‘r“ 'ffi;:“ ”\""‘ ”V“"\“\:“\'“j;: gether with the improving SUpPIY | o ayoceaie F picture, should relieve a great deal!* = S0S A i s R oo jpects. Clark replied that concen- b1 % . ‘tn\uun so far has beon upon tim- ber usage because the need in the [States is most acute for forest pro- |ducts. He cited that all that's now |needed to re a wood treating |plant in Southeast Alaska is Alaska |Railroad tie contracts. Clark generally agreed with a SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, Aug. 20.|prior witness, Alaska Salmon In- —Rexford G. Tugwell, who resigned |qustry Manager W. C. Arnold, that as Governor of this island June 30,|there are big obstacles to extend- has been appointed chief of a new- ing the operating seasons of can- ly created center of social science neriss, but he was more optimistic REX TUGWELL IN NEW POS O TONIGHT and WEDNESDAY Yes, we mean {he ous, delightful story of the girl who hopped a fast fiyer to Florida with some fast Florida flyers. What! You havent § | cording to the definite directions| Puerto Rico at a salary as yet un-freezing fish and development of and prohibitions of the new Act it- | determined |small cold storage plants. The | self Tugwell, who arrived here by|shellfish industry already is pro- i “Living costs will go up. We plane Saturday, will simultaneously jgressing, he said, though prejudice | might as well face it. This will be discharge his duties as a professor against otter trawling is a bar to | partly due to mandatory decontrols of political science at the Unive: im-\-c]u].)m;.: usage of ground fish. land to price increases which we sity of Chicago. | Tourists, Clark placed next to can expect under the terms of the - St i Ithe fisheries in future rank of im- {Act and economic pressures of the RUMMAGE SALE | portance of Alaska industries ! present,” said Mrs. Hermann. “But| Methcdist Church, Friday 11 am.| AROKIGINAL /DY AIMS | we are optimistic that we can hold {— | U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, W H JUNEAU, ALASKA | WEATHER BULLETIN DATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M.. 120TH MERIDIAN TIME (353-t3) THER BUREAU “ Max. temp. | TODAY i last | temp. temp. Precip. 4:30am. | Station 24 hrs.* | Lowest 4:30am. 24h Weather at ! Anchorage 64 | 42 44 0 Clear | Barrow 38 32 38 01 Rain i Bethel 64 51 . | Cordova 64 48 50 33 Cloudy | Dawson 63 41 42 0 Cloudy | Edmonton 7 51 56 0 Cloudy Fairbanks 67 38 40 0 Clear | Haines 56 | 48 51 33 Rain | Juneau <00 T 56 04 Rain Juneau Airport 57 6 50 04 Rain Ketchikan 68 52 54 [ Cloudy Kotzebue - 40 42 25 Rain ! McGrath 58 40 46 0 Pt. Cloudy +Nome 4*% | 3 38 1.60 Pt. Cloudy Northway o 42 44 Trace Pt. Cloudy Petershurg 61 | 48 53 0 Cloudy Portland ‘ 93 ] 60 62 Trace Cloudy Prince George 83 40 41 0 Clear Prince Rupert ! 50 51 0 Clear Seattle 88 [ o0 59 Trace Cloudy Sitka 81 |0 60 04 Rain Whitehorse . 59 | 44 49 02 Rain Yakutat 56 20 52 94 Rain *—(4:30 a. m. yesterday to 4:30 a. m. votaxy” WEATHER SYNOPSIS: The low pressure arca & ihe Guli of Alaska has deepened during the past 24 hours and a new low cemver 3 i) northeastward toward the Gulf of Alaska this morning. A trough ot lo: pressure extends from the CcloraGo River to eastern Washington and Oregon and a ridge of high pressure extends frcm the southern Yukon Territory southward across British Columbia to a high pressure center located about 1,000 miles west of the California coast. Temperatures con- tinued above normal over the south portion of Southeast Alaska yesterday but were below normal over the north portion. Rain has fallen during the past 24 hours along the coast from Southeast Alaska to Kodiak I and over the northwestern portion of Alaska and at scattered points over the northwestern United States and central and western Canada. Thund- erstorms were reported at a few places over the interior of Washington and Oregon last night. MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN Reports from Marine Stations at 12:30 P. M. today WIND Height of Waves Station Weather Temp. Dir.and Vel. (Sea Condition) Cape Decision Rain 56 SSE 20 1 foot Cape Spencer Rain 54 ENE 14 2 feet Eldred Rack Rain 53 . Five Linger Light Rain 58 S 18 & % Guard Island Cloudy 59 SE 10 Zero Lincoln Rock Cloudy 59 SW 28 3 feet Point Retreat Rain 56 SSE 10 18&00t MARINE FORECAST FOR PERIOD ENDING WEDNESDAY AFTER- NOON: Protected waters of Southeast Alaska—southeasterly winds 20 to 25 miles per hour. Outside waters, Dixon Entrance to Yakutat—southerly to southeasterly winds 20 to 25 miles per hour. Rain Low pressure center—59 degrees north, 145 degrees west and second low pressure center—29.40 inches degrees north, 148 degrees west, ymoving northnortheastward. | There is Always One ‘Among all products there is always one that leads in public esteem. Only unfailing and unvarying quality can build such leadership. Among beers— *in the west it's Rainier.” Always ask for it by name. [ x SICKS' SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO. Since 1878 * E.G. Sick, Pres. 'WASHINGTON'S OLDEST INDUSTRIAL INSTITUTION | Disributed hroughout Alaska by Odom & Co. heard it? Well, get a load of... | Considerable testimony throughout the afternoon regarding aboriginal claims as the number one deter- |rent to industrial development in |Southeast Alaska was climaxed by | William L. Paul Jr.’s reply to Assis- |tant Secretary of the Interior Gard- ner. Gardner had asked the Sec- retary of the Alaska Native Broth- (erhood which the natives desire ititle to the lands involved in their claims or compensation for them “We want money,” was Paul's un- equivocal answer. Earlier, Paul had staied the chiet Indian need is a wider scope for in- | come-getting, to bring,better liv- ing conditions to the low-earning groups in the smaller communities. He suggested expansion of govern- ment credit facilities, to permit In- 'dian towns to establish cold stora A Parsmount Picture dorring CLAUDETTE Wiiten and Dicected by PRESTON STURGES «.and how! plants, small saw milis or boat 7 i shops. : First to testify at the afternoon, BEST FAST 3 hearing was John Wicse, Regional IN EH AIR Representative, International Fish- ORT [[”’””y EXPRESS ermen and Allied Workers (CIO). e o Sl He listed seven factors he charged || SUBJECTS NEWS with spelling trouble for Alaska’s 'y R B Mo ot 11111111 LA LRV b them was point number four, ] |wherein he compared the competi- lays, Mr. Faulk.or cited Forest Ser- At that brice session, the Secre- tive positions of fish foods and vice timber lease provisions. Leas2s tary heard from Commissioner of : farm preducts—the latter actually are commonly for sars and pro- Health C. Earl Albrecht, who % cubsidized. He asked no limitation vide for arbitrary revision of tim- stressed need of an Arctic Health | of Fedoral aid to farmers, but did ber prices at five-year inter Institute to gather facts currently N declare that Alaska's fisheries will with no appeal beyond the Secre- under study only in Siberia; from Le “behind the eignt ball without tary of Agriculture, There should Rivers, on hangovers from lL 5 equal assistanc be al to the Courts, he main- land policies and the need for joint action of the several interests con- cernad to get aboriginal claims be- fore the courts; from Commissioner of Education James C. Ryan on proposed tuition payments for na- tive children in Territorial schools: and from Commissioner of Minecs ith the topic teined, asking Secrctary Krug's in- vas Juneau tervention i Other speakers during the after- n—all held rigidly to exact time ytments by Moderator Charles W Carter—included: Dealing exc: . of aboriginal clal attorney R. E. Robertson, who b for immediate Congressional ac- tion to extinguish all native claim: to lands and waters, with a court specified to which their claim; Attorney General Ralph J. Rivers, A s lcould be presented for compensa- 16 support of any progressive|B. D. Stewart upon the need for ition, He asked the Interior De-|legislation to improve the Ilabor | spurring prospecting interest. Stew- art listed more and better mineral must partment’s support for such a mea- situation; Harold Mayo, Veterans of | sure. |Foreign Wars, citing Alaska living |Maps as a k| Attorney H. L. Faulkner criticiz- |cests as too high to permit on-the-| Secretary Krug and bis official B lsa administration of land laws asijob ning undgr VA allowanc party was tc depart from Juneau a barrier, specifically to mines de- Val Pcor, of Douglas, stressing the at 8:30 o' k this morning. T_hc , velopment. He declared the sit- cross-Channel city's boat harbor Secretary’s s hedule called for him | |uation is particularly acute with nceds; Curtis Shattuck, on land to fly to Sitka in a PBY, hold a | 1egard.to the National Forest areas, controls; and Thomas J. Moore and | brief hearing there, then stop again ¥ :wher: Interior Department action Julius Heinemann of the AFL. ! briefly at Hydaburg enroute to s |is secondary to the Forest Service's Heinemann called for organized, Ketchikan. The party is to stay | making return of lands to the cooperative settler groups. | overnight at Ketchikan and after public domain. He advised a law| TERRITORIAL OFFICIALS HEARD hearings there during the fore- change to make Fores Service| Making an even heavier-than- part of tomorrow, leave in the af- elimination from the National For-|scheduled day for Secretary Krug ternoon for a visit at Metlakatla be- |ests conclusive action for patent.iwas a ¢ cond interval with Terri- | fore boarding a plane at Annette 3 As a major obstacle to develop-"luriul officials, sandwiched in be-ilsl‘md airport, which will land ment — such as pulp milis —tween luncheon and the afternoon Secretary Krug in Eeattle tomor- which require enormous capital out- | hearing. s, |row night. i | TR Y Q | i & Now Read ow Ready... ] k! To Serve the Public 4 CONCRETE, Inc. Will furnish promptly upon request, at your door, or at your job, in their two-cubic-yard ROLLO-MIXER } CONCRETE According fo Your Requirements g q . Made with Mendenhall Glacier Pit Run aggregate . . ! 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