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FRIDAY, JULY Rokert 3, 1951 STARTS TODAY THE RS OF LOVE— The Son of Robin Hood ! Jeads his Merry Men through glorious new adventures! starting Jobin s et o WA MAEHEAI]Y i HALE Perry, who was arrested Sunday night on charge of assault, drew a susnende: $350 fine ® jail sentence in Zummissioner’s court yesterday. SINGER SEWING = MACHINE REPRESENTATIVE ll 700% BONDED KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY — 100 PROOF WILL BE IN JUNEAU FOR SALES AND SERVICE FROM _ July 10 1o 14 Call Baranof Hotel Room 408 EYES EXAMINED DR. D. D. MARQUARDT OPTOMETRIST Becond and Franklin PHONE 506 FOR APPOINTMENTS bourbon costs more to make than any other bourbon in the world. Yet Old Fitzgerald, Kentucky’s first Sour Mash : Bourbon, costs . no more to enjoy., - an HIZGERALD Genvine SOUR MASH Bourbon SHOWPLALE or Clurneacsy, I Shows MATINEE S and six months | U. 8. G Exciting Herois | in "Rogues’ Film At Capitol Theatre Kindling a vivid kind of screen excitement that recalls to mind the unabashed screen heroics of the past, “Rogues of Sherwood For-t{ est,” Columbia Pictures’ Technicol- or entry into the realm of swash- buckling romantic adventure, open- ed yesterday at the Capitol theatre. John Derek, new romantic idol of “Knock On Any Door” and “All {the King’s Men,” wears the cloak of romance lightly as he and Diana Lynn bring to the screen thrilling new exploits of the son of Robin Hood providing enchanting enter- tainment for the whole family. In fact, Parents’ Magazine so recog- nized the film by awarding it a medal as the “Movie-of-the-Month for Family Audiences.” 28 Fly Weshvard Wednesday, 13 In Thirteen arrivals and 28 depar jures was the Pacific Northern Air- lines score for Juneau Wednesday. } From Anchorage: Ken Kadow, E. L. Fisher, D. L. Drown, H. Gron- roos, D. Chase, A. Sax, Art John- son, M. Mullet. Five were picked up at Cordova:j To Anchorage: Thomas R. Win- ter, R. W. Algeo, M. M. Flint, R: and Hilda Stephens, Willis and R. Graham, Daniel Gore, H. Schvoe- |der, D. Narodick, Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Whiteside, George Vaara, W. DeBoff, Paul Morrison, Jessie Mc- Crary, R. G. Daughtery, J. Hudert, E. T. Brehm, Lewis Vandergood. To Yakutat: Susan Jackson, Stober. To Cordova: Forest A. Reynolds, | Carl F. Peterson, E. Escola, Fred Seidell, John Clark, William An- derson. 7:30 - 9:30 Feature 8:05 - 10:05 SAT. AT 1:30 P.M. MS OF BATILE E. — Added — COMEDY CARTOON * NEWS Real Estate is |Moving in Juneau In recent property transfers the {Peter Wood Agency announces that | To evaluate the fishing intensity' Snl et Faseots ot aHey Y.Kolia and Bea Albegoff have sold | ® {their home on 12th St. at Glacier | scapement, Richard Shuman, acting Highway to Mr. and Mrs. David | director of the FWS, is leaving Sat-|pyneon and have purchased the urday or Sunday for Cook Inlet. |gam pakke house on 12th St. where He will be joined there by Region- | iy alveoort is directing the ren- al Director Ciarcnice Rhode, Assist-|ovating and redecorating. ant Regional Director Howard Balt-| The same agency arranged the z0 and Enforcement Supervisor Dan [sale of the Elwyn Dell home in Ralston. The latter men have been Douglas to Mr. and Mrs. Robert in Bristol Bay inspecting the sal- Dugan and their five children just mon run. arrived from Salt Lake City. Dell has recently been named Superin- tendent of Douglas Schools. | Other Wood sales include the | Harold Bates house to Mr. and | Mrs. Irvin Curtis; the Rudy Sedmik house and lots on Evergreen Ave- nue in the Seatter Tract to Karl and Patricia Lane; the Erland | Pearson house on 9th St. to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lupro; and the Ralph Beistline house in Seatter Tract to Mr. and - Mrs. Leonard Evans. A sale concluded by Wood today is the transfer of the Col. Joe Al- exander house at 214 4th St. to the Presbyterian Church. The final FHA papers are ex- pected this week in the sale of the Thomas McIver house on Behrends‘ Ave. to Gordon Anderson and fam- ily, also handled by the Peter Wood Agency. 16 Arrive on PAA, 22 Leave Pan American World Alrways brought 16 passengers from Seattle Wednesday and took 22 south. From Seattle: Bernice Bjornson, Arnetta Fbornson, R. E. Dignon, Wallis George, Donald Lowery, M. Lurie, Myrtis McMahan, J. O'Brien, V. R. Scheuman, Noreen Hicks, Gordon Graham, Joseph Moreland, Anna, Katherine .and Mrs. O. Means. To Seattle: Sam Chinn, Fred and Mary Walker, Henry Ceinola, Mr. and Mrs. Jay Larson, George Cush- ing, Robert Lee, V. F. Worthington, M. A. Titus, J. F. Wright, E. J. Briere, T. L. Avery, A. W. Vankoy- chment, T. E. O'Grady, W. Carolliz, Lloyd Clay, A. Rempile, C. Frank, E. Haigh, Jan Ogg, Henry Mullett. Offspring Count Fleet is in Money LEXINGTON, Ky., July 12, —(®— The offspring of Count Fleet have #on, considering first monies only, a spectacular $494,330 during the first six months of this year. Figures compiled and released today by the magazine Blood-Horse showed the sons and daughters of the 1943 American triple crown winner have' won, in first monies only, more than twice the total credited to the next sire on the current money list. SHUMAN GOING OK INLET ON INSPECTION TRIP TO REMEMBER GREEN'S FUR SALE at the BARANOF HOTEL POSITIVELY ENDS THIS WEEK LENSES PRESCRIBED Juneau OLD FASHIONED “Stitzel-Weller Distillery, Est. TABLES July 14 3:40 am. 10:01 a.m. TIDE Low tide High tide Low tide ... 3:28 p.m. High tide .. .. 9:45 pm. ————————————————————————— (Pulp Mill Wil !for helping us to have so much fun 'in the parade on the 4th of I'Thanks also {Jack Weisgerber, THE, DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Public Lauds Williams, Moore On Board Action Public reaction heavily toward the ney General J and Neil Moore, tor, followir.” a Be Discussed at Legion Meeting B. B. Mullen, head of the Alaska Celluose Co., will appear at tonight's monthly meeting of Auke Bay Post No. 25, The American Legion, to ex- plain the advantages of the pulp mill his company is planning to|Empire on p:oce erect at Auke Bay. The meeting w1lli°f Admini be held at DeHart’s Store and the Banizatio public is invited. \ | Small from Juneaws mayor, W. E. Hendrick- | had co son, past department commander for | Wer¢ V Alaska of the American Legion, will | TePOrter w also be present to present its perm- “""I‘ them for publication anent American Legion charter to) The Attorney General holds the the Auke Bay post. "l‘“’\' B8 Bill illegal and, The meeting is scheduled to begin | V4! at 8 p.m ution RS i 2%, lffll 0,000 to complete the fourth {and fifth floors of the new Terri- B[iS|0| Ba Fish | torial building, advised the present y |board to also get signatures of .the s |old Board of Administration on the Ru" Is poor jcontract to assure legality of the . ] | action. : | The bc Says H. B. Friele . !lion and taking “under study and H. B. Friele, Naket Packing Co. advisement” a plan to create a executive, stopped overnight in'!central purchasing and central ac- Juneau enroute from Bristol Bay counting office to his Seattle headquarters. He re- ported salmon xing operations | OTTKES LEAVE FOR are going forward in Bristol Bay FAMILY REUNION IN EAST but the best part of the season \va g sver and only a few fish were run-| On their e iow a family Early operations were held up due to union jurisdictional disputes in the Bay. Naket operates a salmon cannery at Nakeen on the Kvichat river. | LEAVING TO VISIT FORMER JUNEAUITES tended side of Attor- erald Willlams Territorial audi- tory in yesterday's today tion under the Reor- which protest ie Federal Building | morning when a | thi. h l,” the adjourned at noon to Cincinnati for Mr. and Mrs, way reunion, Pan American World Airways. They destination by and visit Lake Louise on the way. | In Cincinnati they will see Mr. | Ottke’s 86-year old mother and be {joined by their son Howard, who is in the graduated in aviation administra~ tion from Penn State late this month and will spend his leave with his family in Cineinnati be- fore gnment to the European theate Ottke is Former Juneau residents will be visited by Miss Marguerite Shaw, secretary to Sterling Sears, Juneau | s¢hocl superintendent, when she leaves tomorrow for Los Angeles on a six-weeks vacation. Among them will be Mr. and Mr Louis Hoffman, Mrs. Josephine | White and daughter, and Mr. and ! Mrs. Edwin Clark. Mrs. Hoffman is the former Alice Coughlin, well known in Juneau | and Mrs. White is the widow of the | late “Stroller” White, pioneer Ju- neau newspaper man. Edwin Clal was superintendent of schools Juneau from 1947 to 1949. CARD OF THANK We, the boys of Mendenhall 4-H Club wish to thank our parents, the 4th of July Committee, the Exten- sion Service, and our club leaders chief of the claims div- ision of the Veterans Administra- |tion. Howard, graduated from Ju- | neau High School in 1950, left an viation administration course at northwest college last winter to join the air corps. His Penn State course was an army assignment. 16 In, 7 Out on Denali This Morning Six passengers arrived on:the Denali southbound this morning and seven passengers embarked for ! Petersburg and Seattle. Disembarking from Kodiak: Na- dene Lumsden and two children; Lillian Rupert, Oscar Swanson. From Seward: Sigurd Wallstedt. Embarking for Petersburg: H. Schwamm, Hazel Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Louls Elkins, Mrs. An- drew Ash, Robert Neven. For Seattle: E. L. Fisher. in. July. to our many 4-H friends for the numerous items loaned us for the use of our cov- ered wagon. Bob Ogden, President, Secretary. 859-1t —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— ! b dings of the Board | t to get statements | board yesterday passed | to bond the Territory | er unfreezing $2% mil- | Norbert Ottke left Juneau today by | | will travel from Vancouver to their | Canadian Pacific | 'Large Crowd Calls To Greet Wives of air corps. Howard will be | 1Alaska Officials - Premier Showing ;Slarls Tomorrow \At 20th Century A taut and highly dramatic sit- uation has been exploited with ex- citing results in Paramount’s “Pas- sage West,” which opens tomorrow at the 20th Century Theatre. Deal- ing with a wagon train of religious settlers bound for California, and | the escaped convicts who hold them | captive during the hazardous jour- ney, this Technicolor adventure will hold the attention of the most seasoned action fan. | In tense and skillfully linked se- quences, the film develops the con- flict between the young preacher who heads the pioneers and the murderous leader of the hunted convict gang that forces itself upon | the caravan. The tension is height- ened when the preacher’s girl is at- |tracted to the coarsely masculine killer as he brutally drives the | wagon train West. Though storm, drought and sick- ness plague the party, the ruthle convict leader allows no respite to icare for the sick and bury the dead, mistaking the preacher's re- straint for cowardice. Women are molested, trunks looted and men whipped during the reign of ter- iror. But when the decimated party larrives in California and gold is discovered, there is an explosive showdown between minister and | killer—a showdown which alters the iate of settlers and convicts alike. A large number of Juneau women called at the G.vernor's Mansion yesterday afterncon between 4 and nest Gruening, to greet Mrs. E. L. Bartlett, wife of Alaska's delegate to Congress and Mrs. Earl Land- reth, wife of the new director of civilian defense for Alaska. Mrs Bartlett came up from washington, D. C., about two weeks ago to spend the summer in Alaska. Mrs. Landreth arrived with Col. Landreth last week to make their home in Juneau. P Pouring during the - afternoon were Mesdames John Dimond, C. C. Carter, Katherine Nordale, Ern- est Parsons, William M. Whitehead, Hugh Wade, Raymond Taylor, John McCormick, Joseph Alexan- der and George Sundborg. FROM VENETIE and Mrs. Texas B. Hall of Venetie, Alaska, came in on Pan American Airways from Seattle yesterday and arz stopping at the Baranof Hotel. Mr. 4 ’Bxis April, one hundred and seventy-six years after the original Minute Men fought the Battle of Lexington, our country once more is seeking to defend the rights which are the breath of life to every American. Get in the fight—buy U. 8. Defense* Bonds! Your own experience tells you— save regularly or you won't save af alll The secret of saving is system! Start g 6 o'clock, at invication of Mrs. Er- | Our Government is asking every liberty-toving citizen to do his part in maintaining the freedom for which America stands. Buy U. 8, Defense Bonds...be the American Minute Man of 1951. *U. S. Savings Bonds are Defense Bonds. Buy Them Regularlyl saving today the automatie, painless way! Go to the pay office of the com- pany where you work and sign up for U. 8. Defense Bonds through the Pay- roll Savings Plan. Or go to your bank and join the Bond-A-Month Plan. If you can set aside $7.50 each week, In ten years you'll have $4,829.021 The U. l.Gonn\mnntdo-leyhuldv-IH- 'fln'l‘n-lry Department thanks, or their patriotic donation, the Advertising Couacil The Daily Alaska Empire PAGE FIVE 20:LCENTURY THEATRE + WHERE HITS ARE A HABIT! | t DOUBLE BILL ENDS TONIG { Doors Open 6:50 Show Starts 7:00 % HOUSE ACROSS THE STREET \ srarring Wayne MORRIS ¢ Janis PAIGE —————— MATINEE SATURDAY Doors Open 12:30 Show Starts 1:00 FREE CANDY FOR THE KIDS Starting Wesi Coas! Premiere IOWING DAY AND DATE WITH THE NATION'S LEADING MOVIE THEATRES ARLEEN VIIIE[AN DBOTANIST HERE Joyce Hope Award Trip To Seattle Tomorrow Juneau’s Fourth of July Queen, Miss Joyce Hope, leaves tomorrow on Pan American World Airways for a two weeks' trip to Secattle which was awarded to ber for being winner in the q.2en contest Miss Bennice Bjornson, Bolse, Idaho botanist, accompanied by her sister, Arnetta Bjornson of Port= land, arrived here yesterday from | Seattle on PAA to spend a few days in Juneau. Today they were hiking in the vicinity galhering botarfical specimen. They arc stopping at Hotel Junéau. Plans have been made by both the Seattle and Pertland chambers of commerce to meet Juneau's queen, Joyce was graduated from Juneau High school last month and is secretary in the law and insurance offices of McLean cid Krhm Jacnhsnn Upholstery Phone 997 Juneau Will continue in business until further notice. Joyce, wno camc to Juneau when she was 10 years oid, has been Out- side but once. She 15 excited about her trip and is looking forward to going roller skating and riding es- calators. She will be in Seattle un- til Wednesday following a Juneau- Douglas picnic in Woodland Park, when \ht- will go to Pnn.hu\d WARNER’S FISHING GEAR 408 8. Franklin — Phone 473 LUCILLE S BEAII'I'Y SALON invites ——————at MRS. JAMES WELLINGTON :: for a Free Hair Set Tomorrow. LUCILLE’S FEATURES . . . - Scalp Treatments - Facials - Pcrmanent Waving Oppomte Lxght Co. Phone 492 ANOTHER CLIPPER EXTRAI You fly in ¢ £ngine Plénes Only the best is good enough for Pan American travelers! Wherever you go in Alaska with Pan American, you fly in big 4-engine Clippers. They’re extra powerful ...extra fast...extra dependable. And when it comes to frequency of service, you can’t beat Pan American! Every day, 7 days a week the Clippers fly to Seattle from Ketchikan, Juneau (connections to Anchorage), and Fairbanks. Two days a week, the Clippers fly to Whitehorse and Nome, Alaska is anly hours small when you go by Clipper! For reservations, just call... Baranof Hotel Phone 106 Lan AMERICAN | WorLo AIRwAYs WORLD'S MOST EXPERIENCED AIRLINE *Trode Mark, Pan American World Airways, Ine