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WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 1951 A LADY WITHOUT TONIGHT A AND THURSDAY IO CAPITOL THEATRE “A Lady Without Passport” brings Hedy Lamarr and John Ho- |diak to the Capitol screen in a story of love, adventure and pul-\ sating action which starts in New York City, shifts to Havana, Cuba, land culminates in an electrifying [( ase climax in the depths of the | Florida Everglades. | Taking as its fictional premise |the drama behind the smuggling into the United States of illegal immigrants, the story presents Miss lnlm\n as thelovely European Mar- muno Lorress, desperately trying to gain entry into this country from Cuba, with Hodiak cast as Pete Karezag, the immigration inspector who {irst pursues the girl in line |of duty, then becomes entangled for more personal reasons. Their first encounter at the Gulfstream Cafe in Havana, headquarters of the smuggling ring, Pete's wily im- personation of a Hungarian refu- gee, his subsequent exposure and gun fight with the nefarious Pai- | inov, leader of the racketeers, lead- |ing up' to the tensely gripping chase |climax, which takes place in the {depth of the Florida . Everglades, makes for a romantic adventure drama o1 unflagging interest. | As the seductive Marianne, Hedy \Lflmdrr has a role tailored to her {glamorous personality and gives | complete credulence to the part of |the girl driven to desperate ex- |tremes in her endeavor to find a hm\en without benefit of passport. JAMES CRAIG « GEORGE MACREADY. SHOWS 3 8:10 - 10:15 —-—“’”“" HOGHE get S . s s Aunvrul portrayal to the role of the fore proceeding over the bridge, i FROM SALEM, ORE. !immigration inspector, with excel- 5 =1 s Rige, El . |lent supporting work contributed was announced today by the office Dean Lyman and A. Pearce of| . X e % - g |by James Craig as Pete’s chief. of the Highway Patrol Salem, Ore, are at the Gastineau| > " . Speed limit on the bridge will be | hotel. George Macready as the “heavy \m-l miles per hour, while: painting | |Steven Geray as the “Frenchman,” s going .‘ te i void ‘,;:.,H,,_' acel land Bruce Cowling as the pilot o x:h RN R s {who meets his death in an attempt AR |to smuggle his airplane passengers linto the States TAKU FISHING CLOSES 6 A, M. EACH SATURDAY Richard Shuman, fisheries man- | agement supervisor of the Fish and wildlife Service, announced today that until further notice the week- ily closed fishing period on " Taku |river will be from 6 a.m. Saturday juntil 6 am. Monday. Heretofore, |closure time started at 6 p.m, Saturdays. Reason given was the increased number of boats which are fishing in the area. HEDY AND HODIAK IN A HAVANA HOTSPOT! HEDY JOHN <« LAMARR-HODIAK ¢ ADY WITHOUT PASSPORTY M.G:M THRILI € Lured by her exotic beauty, he braved his way through the Havana underworld, a smuggler's suicide plane, and into an Everglade ambush! DRIVERS WARNED OF STOP SIGNS DOUGLAS BRIDG Stop signs were posted yesterday afterndo; each end of the Doug- las bridge and drivers will be re- quired to come to a full stop be- | AMY HAMILTON !EAVING Hamuten rker, July 12 is leavin nday on the Aicutian after many years in Alaska, most o adis High tide 33 pm. 153 It |n~( \mp at Seattle. | { Mrs. Amy r 2.8 ft.} 119 ft tide tide 19 am :09 a.m. Low High Jacohson Upholstery | Phone 907 . Juneau LUCILLE'S BEAUTY SALON invites THELMA MCIVER for a Free lluir Set Tomorrow. LUCILLE’S FEATURES Scalp Treatments - Facials - l’vrman(-nt Waving Opposite Light Co. Phone 492 e el Will continue in business until further notice. WAIEN ER°S | FISHING GEAR 406 S. Franklin — Phone 473 FISH LOCKERS MEAT FISH - LOCKERS - MEAT - FISH - LOCKERS - MEAT - FISH - MEAT LOCKER SERVICE 24 HOURS DAYS A WEEK uneau Cold Storage MEAT ARND FISH MARKET JAKIE SAYS: No one has money to throw away these days. That’s why more and more Thrifty Meat Shoppers are buying their meats at our market. When vou compare Our Quality and Low Prices you’ll find that you always Save Meney by shopping with us. So join the happy crowd of Thrifty Meat Shoppers and save money evervday at the Juneau Cold Storage Meat & Fish Market. JAKIE STCRE HOURS 8:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. DAILY NOW OPEN FISH - LOCKERS - MEAT - FISH - LOCKERS - MEAT - FISH - LOCKERS - MEAT - FISH - LOCKERS - MEAT HINI0T - HSId - LV - SHIAI0T - HSH Yours w2 dN THE ROAST PREFERRED BY MOST BONELESS ROLLED RUMP only 99¢ Ib. FRESH GROUND 1009, PURE BEEF GROUND BEEF A CHICKEN DINNER ALWAYS A WINNER Pan Ready Fryers only §9¢ Ib. > only 59 Ib. Select Pork - Rib and Loin Ends Pork Loins only 53¢ Ib. Swift’s Lean and Appetizing BACON - only §ic b Lean, Meaty Ribs of Beef Cut from Young Tender Beef Short Ribs cnly 49¢ Ib. Round Steak enly 39¢ Ib- SEFA FOOD JUST ARRIVED JUNEAU'S OWN Fresh Salmon ® Fresh Halibut DUNGENESS FRESH CRAB oenly RYe each VIN - SYINI0T - HSIJ - LVINW - SHINDO0T - HSII - L FI y SH - LOCKERS - MEAT - FISH - LOCKERS - MEAT - FISH - LOCKERS - MEAT - FISH MEATl w» THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUN !filled the radiator AU, ALASKA PICNIC HONORS PASSPORT' COMES| H. STONEHOUSE | ON' RETIREMENT|. Harry 1 who retired June 30 as master mechanic at the Bureau of Public Roads equipment depot after of service, was honor guest cnic given by the road depar at Auk Bay last Sunday Stoneho wrist wat A. Stoddart the pres Mr long hxn n 31 years b a s presented with a rewell gift. Hugh division engineer, made Stonehouse have of Juneau and have been ac in civic and social life of the community. They have been prominent in American Legion and An an Legion Auxiliary af- fairs through the years and Mrs. Stonehouse is one of the leaders of the J 1w Garden Club. The S ouses will leave Ju- neau sometime in August and, after a trip through the interior of Al- aska, followed by a motor trip to Penns where they will visit Mrs, € ehouse’s mother, they will return to the west coast to see their daughter Their indefinite 21 JUNEAU KIDS INVOLVED IN CAR DEMOLITION Twenty-two Juneau juveniles and their parents have spent two hot, uncomfortable afternoons with As- sistant Police Chief Frank Cava- naugh and City Magistrate P. O. Eastaugh, although no charges have been filed The youngsters ranging from 4 to 13 years of age have admitted ly demolishiiig a carry- ident ne plans for the future are to comple all truck belonging to Dale Oxu'r- Iman. The vandalism o Thursday, Friday and the ball park where Osterman left his truck the night of the Fourth when he was unable to start it. With hammers, wrenches and screw drivers the children smashed instrument panel, and carburetor, with sand, sand and oil in the gas tank and otherwise ruined the car. They did this after they had pushed it around the ball park, giving little girfls a ride. A mechanic estimated it would cagk $600. to make the vehicle run again. Osterman, who is 17, had bought the truck second-hand and |spent time and money to fix it up. No estimate was given on his in- vestnient in the car. In an effort to settle the matter out of court, the parents and child- ren met with officials Monday and Tuesday afternoons. Osterman was not present at yesterday's meeting. Two parents were appointed to meet with Osterman in an attempt the windows, broke the battery ito reach a settlement which is to be prorated among the families of the children involved. Holm Misses Fatal Airline Crash in Colorado Recently A strike and a decision not to re-make a two-months-old reser- vation he had cancelled, kept Mar- tin N. B. Holm, Alaska Native Ser- vice education specialist, off the ill-fated United Air Lines plane that crashed near Fort Collins, Colo. on June 30. Holm had made reservations over two months ago to fly from Salt Lake City to Denver on the doom- ed flight. But because of the ‘air lines strike, he cancelled his reservations aboard the plane and flew by Fron- tier Airlines into Denver. Just af- ter he was notified that Frontier had an opening on its Denver flight, the strike was called off and the fatal flight opened for reser- vations. Rather than change his reserva- tion again, he traveled on Frontier. Holm had been at Brigham City, Utah at the Intermountain Sum- mer Schoo] teaching and assigning teachers for various Alaska POStS as part of his work with the Al- aska Native Service. Holm returned Saturday to Juneau by Pan Ameri- can World Airways. GAME CALLED LAST NIGHT BY SHORTAGE OF MOOSE PLAYERS The game between the Moos and Elks last night was called be- cause the Moose did not field a ful team, “Since this game was not the reg ularly scheduled one, it does not count s a forfeiture,” said Ray G Day, president of the Gastineal Channel Baseball League. The next regularly Coast Guard playing the Moose. —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— put | scheduled game in the secongd half of play is Thursday evening at 6:30 with the - 52 IN; 35 OUT | ON PAA MONDAY [ Pan American World Airways carried 87 passengers Monday with arrivals and 35 departu From ‘Seattle: Judy Barney, J. Borseth, Steven and K. Crouch, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dexter and James, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Gra- ham, Marie Holst, Mrs. R. Walke and Sandra, Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Wootten, H. H. Smith, W. Ahrens- | ield, Doris Cui, James Tennison, Iris Smith with Karen and Douglas, | Denny Warren, Howard Graham, | Clinton Stockley, Mary Ann Ashby, Mabel Barthell, Jack Brown, John | Featherstone, L. Grove, Clifford | and Hope Haynes, Mrs. R. Merrill, Mrs. B. Osborne, Mrs. John derland, Allison Tharp, O. Tuttle, Jacob and Sharen Tysling, James Orme. From Fairbanks: Mr. and Mrs Hal Adkinson, Glen Franklin and child, Ralph Rivers, Virgil Baker, Mrs. C. A. Carlson, Mr. and Mrg C. M. La Timor, Susan Williams, Richard Zagers, Mr. and Mrs. Jay G. Larson. To Seattle: Cmdr. Erle Cocke, Jr., C. Sheffield, William Helenick, In- ga Thompson, David Devoe, Mr. and Mrs. Felix Toner, Fred Tur- pin, C s Vanhosen, Mrs. Rob- ert Walsh and son Larry, E. Wyd- ner, Harold Sommers, Mae Suhrib- jer, Ed Burkeimer, Harry Abel, H. Mayo, Mrs. Frank Wright, Mrs. L. Newman, Ina Shennett. To Ketchikan: Mrs. R. Hall, Knutson, George Nace. To Annette: Hans Berg, B. John- son, Sig Olson. To Fairbanks: | Son- | H. Mrs. Kelly, Wil- liam Humphries, Bardley Barrows, Eleanore Croam, H. Oliver, Louis Berg, N. R. Pace, Alton Shimm, Olaf - Tilberg. WHITE TO ATTEND WESTERN REPUBLICAN MEET IN SEATTLE Albert White, general counsel of | the Republican party of Alaska has been advised that a meeting will be held in Seattle, October 1 and 16. of the 11 western states of Repub- lican leaders of those states. Mrs. White, Republican national committeewoman for Alaska and | White have accepted the invitation | to attend the conference. At the con- clusion of the meeting Mr. and Mrs. White will leave for San Francisco to attend a meeting of the Republi- jcan National Committee which meets in that city. This meeting has been usually held in Washington, D.C., but this time has come west. . “The national pictur said White, ‘“us far as the Republicans are con- ivmncd looks between Eisenhower and Taft. If the former is not a candidate Taft will easily be nom- inated, otherwise it will be a strug- gle. “The Southern group of the Dem- ocratic party now threatens to run a third party ticket and this threat is of greater proportion than the last Dixiecrat movement.” 37 FROM SOUTH, Pan Americah World Airways brought 37 passengers to Juneau yesterday and took 20 south. From Seattle: Clifford Betts, M. Castellano, R. C. Hensley, B. E. Jones, Leona McKinnon, F. Neill, Floyd Volk, Bill Wilson, D. Bas- ket, Freeman Butler, Carmen Finch, George Michaud, Capt. G. McLane, Albert Swiss, O. P. Thomas, Rich- ard Westwongy Rose Williams, S. Stacy, Elsie ar!d Carl Bade, Bobby Bolan, Holda Cowan, Ray Frank, Rachel George, Alma Hasbrouck, William and Arden Martin, Ivan Olane, Carl Peterson, Forrest Rey- nolds, Jr. and Sr., Mr. and Mrs. J. Paterson, Dorothy and Susan Enz- ler. From Annette: Thomas Winters, J. B. Warrack. To Seattle: Fritz Jensen, Iver Arnesen, Marie Eetter, F. C. Wuil- mette, O. Tooley, A. Bennett; Mr. and Mrs. Simpson MacKinnon, M. W. Bean, Mr. and Mrs. Wurster and Emily, Marylou Cooper, O. Clem- ens, J. Earl Jackman, Mr. and Mrs. Henrik Valle, Mr. and Mrs. Frank McConaghy, Mrs. Myrtle Kelsey and son Robert, Robert and Edith Losee, M. Paplinski, T. 8. Morri- son, Herb Hilscher, George Bur- lach. To Kctchikan William Stebbins, FROM GOOSE COYE Fred Emerson of Goose Cove It at the Baranof hotel. PARK MAN HERE Frank L. Ahern of the National Park Service from Washington, D.C. is stopping at the Baranof hutel WAKE P YOUR LIVER BILE— Without Calomel—And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go ‘The liver should pour out about 2 pints of bile juice into your digestive tract every day. If this bile L nul lu'ln‘ freely, your food may not digest. just decay in the digestive sty s tlonts up your stomach. You | et constipated. X You feel sour, and world looks punk. It takes ti mild, gentle c-mn Little Liver Pills to get these 2 pints of ing freely to make you feel “up and up. « package soday. ive in making bile flow freely. Ask for C: ’s Little Liver Pilis, 37¢ | Cesare DAYS OF BORGIAS EXCITING FILM FARE AT 201H CENTURY One of the most outrageous sis- ter-brother combinations ever to} candalize society Lucretia and Borgia—is now shocking audiences at the 20th Century The- atre where Paramount's melodrama based ontheir activities, “Bride of Vengeance,” which started Sunday The title role, that of Lucretia | Borgia, is portriyed by Paulette | Goddard, who is co-starred with {Jchn Lund and Macdonald Carey, the latter appearing as her male- volent brother Directed by Mitchell Leisen, whose flair for the spectacular was brilliantly displayed in “Lady in the Dark,” “Frenchman's Creek”| and “Kitty,” to name a few, “Bride | of Vengeance” adds another feather to his cap of screen triumphs. With the lush period of the Italian Ren- aissance to work with, Leisen went all out on costumes and sets, and the result is magnificent back- grounds and elegant, eye-filling story of --Bzmo of Veng- | eance” concerns the pleasure-mad, power-mad Lucretia and Cesare Borgia, who want to deminate the world, When the film opens they are well -on the road to conquering all of Italy, but in their way stands | the independent duchy of Ferrara. The Duke of Ferrara, wonderiully played by John Lund, is a strong- willed man who won't yield to pres- sure or the war of nerves Cesare imposes on him and his advisors. So Cesare has Lucretia’s beloved husband murdered, pinning the crime on the Duke and so firing her with a lust for vengeance that she is ready to do anything—even marry him, the better to destroy him. The Duke, gn the other hand, must stall for time to prepare for the inevitable war with the Borglas, s0 he agrees to murry Lucretia. WSCS MEETING s SET FOR WEDNESDAY | The July business meeting of the ! Women's Society of Christian Ser- vice will be held this evening at 8 o'clock with worship service in the Little Chapel followed by humne%‘ and social hour in the Methodist | parsonage. There will also be reports on the | recent conference at Seward. Host- | esses will be Mrs. Lloyd Coe and Mrs. Walter Ebbett. Officers are asked to attend the executive committee meeting in the Little Chapel at 7:30 p.m. The society meetifigs are open to, any women interested in the work. ATTENTION TOURISTS For an i{ntimatec acquaintance with S. E. Alaska with the mailboat Yakobi for a 600 mile 4 day scenic voyage. Sailings once a week. De- pnrt.s ‘Wednesday a.m. 818 174 | | | | EYES EXAMINED Becond and Franklin | —nny DR. D. D. MARQUARDT OPTOMETRIST PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTS - PAULETTE GODDARD Jobn ,U!'!“,:M“J'P!"J!Péfl_ : Starts Tomorrow HOUSE ACROSS THE STREEI - werring Wayne MORRIS ¢ Janis PAIGE FLUS - Second i‘eaiure "TRAIL OF - THE YUKON" FROM ASTORIA Floyd Wright of Astoria is, stops ping at the Baranof hotel, | HELP ALAbKA‘S (‘RIPI’LFI) CHILDREN tickét to Lake Geéorge Closes July 1% +862-9% BUy a Break-up Ball. SINGER SEWING. MACH REPRESENTA WILL BE IN' JUNEAU FOR SALES AN SERVICE FROM July 10 to 14 Call Baranof Hotel - Room 408 ik LENSES PRESCRIBED"~ i ast Junesau It’s yours when you fly Pan American O ®When you fly by Clipper* you enjoy the finest of food—and plenty of it! One time you may dine on, prinde roast of beef. Another time it may be chicken fricassee with dumplings. And always, of course, there’s a crisp salad—ho t rolls and bulter—freoh'f vegetables—and a delicious dessert. Um-mmm—no« wonder more and more people fly Pan American!, For reservations, just call... , BARANOF HOTEL — Phone 106 *Tvade Mark, Pan Aiaerican World Aireays, Ina PAN AHERICAN World's Most Experienced Airline at auy drugatore.