The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 9, 1951, Page 5

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1951 TONIGHT SSBATINS HING OF P “FOVENTURES HEVER 5554‘«' 5 | LAl thru Saturday rates WEDINA b MAI‘HM{IY / BM Drak Alfonsa Bedoya DBED: Comedy MEETING TONIGHT Veterans of Foreign Wars €. 1. 0. Hall - 8 o'Clock F. W. MEMBERS ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND ALL VISITING V. James Burnette, Commander - Cartoen — News "Fortunes of 'Captain Blood’ At Capitol Theatre Wonderful new exploits of Rafael | Sabatini’s fabulous king of pirates, Captain Blood, have been brought to the screen by Columbia Pictures in a lush productionsthat churns with excitement and is aflame with thrills. Titled “Fortunes of Cap- | tain Blood,” this picturesque, swash- buckling epic is at the Capitol The- atre tonight. With Louis Hayward filling the dashing title role with magnificent verve, “Fortunes of Captain Blood” is a full-bodied romance alive with a thousand thrills. Shots of pirate ships under full sail, the blood- | tingling fury of a boarding party nd rousing swordplay crowd the reen. Inte ersed with the seeth- action are me lighter moments ayward indulges in with luscious Patricia Me- ! dina and fiery Dona Drake. “Fortunes of Captain Blood” starts ackling story, which relates pades of Cabatini’s dash- ling pirate hero with Hayward, the | terror of the Spanish Main, sworn | to liberate members of his crew who have been made slaves in the pearl | fisheries. Disguising himself as a | fruit pedd Hayward, despite a price on his 1 roams through | hostile territory fighting, looting, | |loving — as he conspires to free his men. : Hospifal Nofes Admitted | Wednesday ~ were | Mountjoy, Mrs ‘Jnn Austin, | Cc FRATUR] DOORS 7:90 1 OPEN >. M. to St. Ann’s Hospital Mrs. Charles Don Cramer, Mrs. Fred Redding, Ryder verse, Albert Berry, Eugene Nor- |ton, Roland Anderson, George Am- |ner; dismissed were Mrs. Mary |Stamm, Kenneth Millard, Vern | Knuthson. | Born at St. Ann's Hospital to Mrs. Robert Bean of Douglas at 9:30 a.m Wednesday, a boy weighing 7 | pounds 5 ounces; to Mrs. Fred Cun- ningham of J au at 4:45 pm Wednesday, a boy weighing 9 pounds 7 ounces Dismissed from the Government Hospital Wednesday were Kurt/Wil- I son ‘of |Juneau and Karen Lée of 2s. There were no admissions l.flh' I Gitmore IL MEETS TONIGHT A regular meeting of the Juneau | City Council will be held at 8 o'clock tonight in the city clerk’s office on the city dock. Due for second read- ling is an ordinance to change the | term of city councilmen from one to two years, After the first year the councilmen’s terms of office would ] be for two years so there will be a i carry over of three courciln each year. The change lLave to be ection. NOTICE The Aurora Trio light Trail, KINY, tonight 9:30. Frank Drouin, Adjutant ' 882-1t e T P ) 0 T ] @l%ve }&/Z:/eo’ /%wrz .S'fivmea’/%m' ond fi/w;y/e 7 ABY FOODS CffiEALS o STRAINED FOODS « JUNIOR FOODS 277 Reucll for a Col(e. 9 get real refreshmeni romantic |~ approved at a regulsr or special EA-' presents Twi-' THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Grandma Knew Thing or Two ‘Vmad) has gon through some weird contraptions since granny's day to keep that form divine, but latest Paris corset designs would seem to indicate that the old girl had the right ide: of grandma’s day are these new Rose Lebigot. touch. (® Wirephoto. Premier De Gasperi ]Wms Vole of Faith in Stormy Session ROME, Aug. 9.—(P—Premier Al- cide De Gasperi won a 291 to 175 vote of confidence today for his government in the Chamber of Deputies after a stormy session in which he denounced both Commun- ists and Fascists. His fiery speech 1touched off a brief fist fight be- tween Communists and Christian Democrats. A brief but stormy battle of fists broke out after the Premier com- pleted his address asking confidence Strongly reminiscent corsets, designed by Paris' Marie- Yellow silk with black trimmings add the modern 14 In; 19 Ouf; 15 {Through Wednesday {On Paific Northern Pacific Northern Airlines carried arrivals, 19 departures and 15 fly- ing through From Anchorage: L. M. Hagen, R. Krause, W. Kestor, E. Moork. From Cordova: H. Grahn. From Yakutat: R. J. Newberry, ‘Ted Chris, Gloria Brenner, T. H. Dyer, H. Pollen. To Anchorage: N. Neergaard, Dr. T. E. Hynson, Harry Halvorson, Pri- cilla Parker, Robert Lund, H. W. Pollock, Norman Erickson, M. J. lin the seventh government he has | headed since the war's end. Com- munist Fausto Gullo, apparently stung by the Christian Democratic Premier’s remarks, rose and accus- ed him of having “broken the moral unity of the Italian people in the moment of theiy liberation.? De_ Gasperi, in his, speech; vow- ed to defend Italy from both Fas- cism -and Communism, EReno Divorce Will Free Sinafra fo Marry Ava RENO, Nev, Aug. 9, Crooner Frank Sinatra announced today he will divorce his wife ancy so he can marry movie siren Ava Gardner. The entertainer talked affably with newsmen in his suite at the Riverside Hotel, where he opens | a $25000 two-week singing en- gagement tonight. | , “I'm going to file for divorce while I'm here,” said Sinatra. “Nancy didn't want to come up here for the divorce, but she has no objection to my filing for it.” He said money matters and cus. tody of their three children were settled in their separation agree-: ment some time ago. Under terms | of that agreement, Mrs. Sinatra | gets one third of his income. Asked if he would marry Miss Garner—with whom he has been romancing in the U. S., Spain and | Mexico—Sinatra grmned and said: “I would assume s0.” Pan Am Carries 30,000 Passengers On Pacific Trips SEATTLE, Aug. 8, —(Special to The Empire) — Completing a year ORI ek | | and Lee, W. S. Dujardin, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Smith. To Co Renner, L : Stanley Levine, Dick a Strickerty. To Yakutat: Clara Robison, Lt.| Pennock, John Olson, Ennis Whit- aker, Nora Johnson. LARRY HAGEN HERE Larry Hagen, Standard Oil Co., official from Seattle, arrived here yesterday from Anchorage on PNA is stopping af the Baranof Hotel. \Killers.” 48 pasengers on Wednesday with 14 | Nick Bez; "Under My Skin,’ Hemingway Yarn, At 20th Century The sixth movie based on the pen ¢ of Ernest Hemingway is “Under My Skin,” which is the next attraction at the 20th Century Theatre. Based on an early short story called “My Old Man,” it follo such great Hemingway successes as “A Farewell to Arm: “T2 Have and Have Not,” “For Whom the Bell Tolls," | “The Macomber Affair,” and "Thel A thrilling story of horse racing and the lives and loves of those who work behind its scenes, it stars John Garfield and Micheline Prelle in the leading roles. Hemingway's life itself is a thril- ling story. Not only a writer, he is the owner of a fabulous career that includes boxing, lion hunting in Af- rica and considerable fighting in two world wars. 28 Arrive from Seattle; 42 Fly South on PAA Pan American World Airways brought 28 passengers {rom Seattle Wednesday and took 42 south. From Seattle: Robert Benson, Pat Ellifritt and two children, Mary Nieve, Barbara Froh- man, M J. Lee, Neil Mill, Jerry Manning, T. Ommaney, Richard | Renner, K. F. Warrk, Lea Strich- | erty, Myrtle Anderson, C. A. Baur, | Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Budge and son, | 3. €. Dawson, Alberta Davis, Mrs. | E. Enerberg, Barbara Grayson, Lill- |ian Loser, Eugene Lawrence, Jim- my Madden, C. V. Wilder, Ernest Gruening. To Seattle: Mrs. L. McKechnie, H Graham, Mrs. R. Needles and twi children, Frank Dundas, K. C. By-| ers, F. Kusenko, A. Matteson, R. J. Thompson, A. D. Campbell, Al Goff, | James Nelson, Leo Fisher, S. Brown, | R. Edwards, M. R. Seldman, Chester Karlson, Carl Naslund, Ed Droul- | lard, John Wiss, Irving Rabel, Will- jami Newman, G. Boelcher, Rowland King, Vern Watkins, Mr, and Mrs. ' E. Martin, Mr. and Mrs, A. Parkins, Rev. and Mrs. Murray Layne, Jack Sturdivent, John and Byron Limb, M. Kalek, D. Kaklchuk, Mr. and Mrs. B. R. Field, M. V. Raney. | To Ketchikan: Kenneth Baxter. The figures 66 seem to add up| to bad luck for fishermen's licen- sing laws. It was Chapter 66 of the 1949 Alaska Laws that was successfully attacked recently in the Circuit Court. The Court declared invalid the $50 nonresident license fee provided by Chapter 66. And down in Seattle not so long |ago a Justice of the Peace found | Section 66 of a Washington State fishermen’s licensing law uncon- |stitutional, her decision on a Superior Court ruling, held that Section 66 of the Washington law, requiring each commercial fisherman to purchase a personal fishing license from the states, at a cost of $5, was unrea- sonable and unconstitutional inso- far as it applied to fish not com- mon to State of Washington wa- ters and caught outside the three- of national defense duty in the Ko- imile limit. rean airlift Pan American World Airways and its subcontractors re- ports that approximately 30,000 pas- sengers and 11,000,000 pounds of | cargo had been transported on 968 round trips across the Pacific. The Pan American fleet flew 12,- 971,000 miles. Each averages 10.56 hours a day utilization. Plane utili- zation was maintained at 12 hours a day for several months during the early part of the emergency. At various times planes and crews from Eastern Airlines, Capital, Western, Panagra, American and American Overseas joined the Pan American fleet under subcontract to form a smoothly working airline under PAA’s direction. At the height of the airlift activi- ties the fleet numbered 24 planes. Pan American today has actually | completed slightly more than a year | of operation since the company jumped into the airlift business within a few hours of the first call without waiting for a formal con-| tract. Defendant in the case was Gun- der Hanson, who had landed a load of Alaska-caught halibut in Seattle without buying the per- sonal fishing license. Leo Richter, the deputy prose- cutor, said he would not appeal the decision. Speaking of numbers: The Al- aska Statehood bill in the 8lst Congress was H. R. 331. And the resolution authorizing an inves| igation of the Palmer Airport quisition, also in the 8lst Con- gress, was S. R. 331 If Alaska miners have a little trouble thees days keeping track of government policies regarding mining and miners, the fact is nof 'at all surprising and they are no Iworse off than miners elsewhere in the country. nowaddys encounter a multitude |of government bureaus and agen- cies, but a special assortment of The first airlift plane, a Pan American Clipper flown for the them has been set up to advise, assist—and confuse—the miner. Today’s miner, especially if his Justice Evangeline Starr, basing | People in every line of business | BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY Army left the U.S. for Tokyo June€ | proquct is considered strategic or 2. A few days alter the PAA air- critical, may find himself invol- ift operations were made a part of ved in one way or another with he general U. S. Air Force Military one, several or even all of the Air Transport Service effort and following Federal agencies: this partnership has continued Metallurgical Advisory Board National Security ~ Resources JUNEAU COLD STORAGE COMPANY © 1951, The Coca-Cola Company around the clock ever since. | | J. F. Van Ackeren with the U. S. | Public Health Service at Seattle, is | registered at the Baranof Hotel. | Board Materials Policy Commission Defense Production Administra- tion National Council Defense tion United States Bureau of Mines United States Geological Sur- vey National Production Authority Emergency Procurement Service Atomic Energy Commission Research and Development Board Minerals Advisory Minerals Administra- The Flamingo Room of the New ‘Washington Hotel, Seattle, will be the scene of the opening of bids for the construction of aircraft parking apron at Eilson Air Porce Base, according to a press an- \nouncement. The Flamingo Room seems an entirely appropriate place for op- ening any bids in connection with aviation, and the idea could well be carried further, | Bids for harbor dredging or dock construction might be open- ed in the Marine Room at the Ol- ympic and ' the anughrmer Room at the !w'onvuk gould handle the opening of bids for future work on the Alaska. Railroad. | Bids for pushing new roads |through the wilderness might be taken care of in the Pilgrim Room at the Frye, and it would perhaps not be inapp:opriate to open the bids for drilling oil wells in Al- jaska in the Cloud Room at the {Camlin or even in the Bubble {Room at the Baranof in Juneau. What can Congress do for Alas- ka? At least five United States Sen- ators—the men who affixed their “John Henrys” to the minprity report. on the pending statehood bill-have a frank, definite an- swer to that question. They say: . . . the Congress can best aid Alaska by understanding thorough inquiry into the many economic problems and restrictive policies now hampering the Territory, and by adopting corrective measures based on logic and reason. “This would be a departure frcm the emotional and highly colored approach to this matter which marked all the previous at- force the bill through has tempts to Congress. “It would also be an act of, simple justice and common sense, toward those United States citi- ' zens who are the most concerned; |namely, the Alaskans themselves.” 2 0:LCENTURY THEATRE « WHERE HITS ARE A HABIT! DOORS OPEN 7:00 SHOWS AT TONIGHT ¢ 7:21 — 9:30 “BECAUSE I'm a Woman . . : I LOVE YOU! IF I were a Man ' KILL YOU!” BASID ON A STORY BY ERNEST HEMINGWAY There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising! 19 YEARS OF SERVICE IN ALASKA Year round Reduced Fares ; . One Way ' ' Round Trip 63.00 113.40 | 98.00 17640 .. °80.00 - 144:00 Homier. Naknek A. B.. 104.50 188. 10 Plus Tax 10% Reduction on Round Trip Anchorage Kodiak Daily Flights — Passengers, Mail and Air Cargo Connections at Anchorage for all Interior and Westward Points Tickets and Reservations BARANOF HOTEL Phone 716 ! CHRISTIAN SCIENCE A Foundation for World Brotherhood and Peace by ARTHUR C. WHITNEY, C.S. of Chicago, Illinois SUNDAY, AUGUST 12 at 8:30 P.M. in CHURCH EDIFICE Fifth and Main Sts. ' First Church of Christ, Scientist of Juneau, Alaska All Are Cordially Invited

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