The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 7, 1951, Page 5

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5 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1951 . - TODAY - and - SATURDAY “LAST OF BUCCANEERS” AT 8:06—-1( “HOLIDAY IN HAVANA” AT 6:44— ¢ THE ROUSING STORY OF /mfifléz who fought under three flags~-to build an outlaw kingdom for his one true fove! o EAST or THE BUCCANEERS PAUL HENREID as Jean Lafitte with JACK OAKIE Karin Booth « Mary Anderson Wiritten for the Screen by Robert E. Kent Produced by SAM KATZMAN Directed by LEW LANDERS 2ND FEATURE! A RUNAWAY RHUMBA ROMANCE rumbling A With rtiotous rhythm! ST DESI 5 MARY Gy Ann Doran - Steven Geray - Minerva Urecal * A COLUMBIA PICTURE WOBLD NEWS VIA EXPRESS! KIDDIE MATINEE SATURDAY DOORS OPEN 1:30 SHOW STARTS 2:00 DR. TED OBERMAN OPTOMETRIST PHONE: OFFicE 61 20TH CENTURY THEATRE BLDG. JUNEAU, ALASKA 2ND FLOOR THE MAMZELLE SHOP 310 S. Franklin Street Phone 463——Juneau 0 Have you scen our large selection of attractive new merchandise?, It includes Suits—Toppers— Coats and Others, all at Reasonable Prices to fit your budget. | 1 j from Weather at Famous Tale of "Last 0f Buccaneers’ Now At Capitol Theatre The rousing story of one of Amer- ica’s most violent figures, Jean La- fitte, is told in Columbia Pictures’ “Last of the Buccaneers,” now at the Capitol Theatre. “Last of the; Buccaneers” stars Paul Renreid as Lafitte, a soldier-sailor of fortune whose fleet swept the seven seas for loot, whose sword carved out a jungle empire for his outlaw bride. History has recorded much of the | rousing excitement which sur- rounded Lafitte and, according to advance report, so has this screen adventure - drama. Lafitte com- manded a cutthroat crew which ( used the Louisiana bayous as its headquarters. A pirate with a price | on his head, he marched against the British to save the city of New Orleans during the War of 1812 This made him a hero and a patriot, accepted in the highest society, but his newly-won respectability was no match for the violence in his nature. He seized the island of Galveston its Indian habitants and turned his attention to the ships of Spein, looting them of fabulous treasures. Alaska Points ‘Weather conditions and tempera- tures at various Alaska points also on the Pacific Coast, at 4:30 p.m., 120th Meridian Time, and released by the Weather Bureau are as follow: Ancho Annette Barrow Bethel Cordova Dawson Edmonton Fairbanks Haines Havre Juneau Kodiak Kotzebue McGrath Nome Northway . Petersburg Portland Prince George Seattle Sitka Whitehorse Yakutat ge i 40—Fog ! Island 55 Rain 38—Cloudy 38—Partly Cloudy 45—Rain 44—Cloudy 48—Clear 38—Clear 53—Cloudy 49—Clear 49—Cloudy 47—Fog 38—Cloudy 43—Cloudy ; 30—Cloudy 37—Partly Cloudy | 55—Rain | 58—Rain . 53—Rain 5¢—Rain | 63—Cloudy | 51—Cloudy 52—Rain (ordova Passengers Head Pacific Northern Lists on Thursday Cordova-Juneau traffic headed the list on Pacific Northern Airways incoming plane Thursday with lhe.\c‘ ten passengers for Juneau. | Christine George, Katherine, Ar-; thur and Cecelia Mayo, Charles Tega, C. E. Olson, Dave Crossman, | S. C. Carlson, G. Groves and Dew- ard Halsey. Juneau passengers from Anchor- age were Col. Earl Landreth, W.; Reedy, and J. Bradford. C. Milton and G. Mitroitch ar- rived in Juneau from Yakutat. FLIES TO ANCHORAGE TO MEET DIRECTOR To meet Al Day,”director of the U. 8. Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington, D. C., who is attend-i ing the second Alaska Science Conference at McKinley Park, Clarence Rhode, regional director, flew to Anchorage today. Day is accompanied by an as- sistant secretary of the Interior Department and Rhode expects to fly them to the Pribilof Islands and most of the field stations of the service in the Interior. The two men will probably visit Southeastern Alaska before return- ing to Washington, Rhode said. SITKA, 1CY STRATTS AND \‘7m1um STRAITS POINTS / oown COASTAL AIRLINES 088 308, Ay Pt d 3% €= a6 STOR STOPOVER, PRIVILEWS oN THS AOVTE, ~ i “THY -5T0P MAY B8 OMITTED IF_TRAFAC wa DOES NOT WARRANT X ARRVAL TIME VARIADLS) ure for manufacturers and whole- |t} THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE InFine Shape Margaret Fisher, . Murlen Isaacs Wed ‘In Home Ceremony and ir JUNEAU, ALASKA % Qan v ] 4 the home of A leer 1 Dou prono in th nd ac Mrs gréen with a Juneau, v erday in and are Douglas wh in constrt watm e Dil Talks wilhh Iran LO broke tonight | “The recent speech sian e minister | shows usively that no | negotiat with the pre sian government can produce result foreign office spoke . witn | announced se with | g ephoto. re now ¢ Shapely Mari Blanchard, movie | { oi her talks with Ir starlat and former bathing suit model, is a pretty example of e value of massage and exercise in the treatment of polio. Paralyzed below the hips and on the right side by poliomyelitis when she was nine, Mari obviously quered the dreaded Wi f EE tiatior FOREST SERVICE OFFICES ON MOVE TODAY Today was moving day for some of the offices of the U. S. Forest Service in the federal building. Desks, files and chairs were being carried through the corridors, some | of them out of the buildin e | Thur to new rooms in the building. Ste The headquarters of the Admiralty [ ham, Marvin C Division, of which Bob Davlin is| Giovanetti, George head, moved from room 318 to the | missed were Franz service building near the subport.| Chappell, Harvy James Born at St Mrs.; Crawford Friday, a boy by the in 'the con- ty's government there that the the Lord in suspense a vengeance. nsider: un by no longer Hospital Notes Kilman, A. W. Blackerby and M. M. Page, administrative manager and regional engineer, respectively, were moving from Room 409 to the quarters va- | cated by the Admiralty Division. | ) The Procurement Office, headed by | at 1:15 a.m. Friday, ¢ occupying J | Ann’s Hospita Smith at weighing George Haen, Room 409, is now ing 8 pounds 9 Admitted Thur to the Gov — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — :onjoer Hoon Refailers Percenfage Matkip Allowed hy Price Office; Ceilin Must be Tagged on Arficias 4 to establish unif cent ceiling prices for merchandise sold in the te This was explained as is r Fred G. Hanford, Territorial di- | dise for which a retail p! rector, said the changes should have | termined by the m: little effect an current prices. He|is generally uniform wi listed the following amendatory pro- | Manufacturers of branded visions in Regulation 9, the retail | must apply for a price. If appr price control regulation: the manufacturer must pr 1—After Sept. 12, retail mer- | the artic o the r iler wiil kno chants may use their traditional |the correct ceiling price percentage system of markup in- ‘When authorizin stead of the dollar-amd-cent sys- | cenlage markups, tem required under the present | thai the regulation w regulation, The merchant may use |7 (o fake sel either system but must use the | caused by rising same system throughout his store. | and their frozen retail 2—After Sept. €0, retailers may ;w‘ > allowed to pa not offer for sale any article cov- | increase in th ered by the regulation unless it | without py is marked or tagged with the ceil- | consumer, X ing price plainly visible to the With wholesale costs presently buyer. ’ below the high lev of early 3—After Sept. 30, retail mer- 1951, the use of merchants’ trad- chants must post a sign in a prom- onal percentage system of mark- inent -place stating that prices should not result in a general are no higher than ceiling prices increase in prices, Hanford s: for the articles. Copies of the amended re The office also outlined a proced- | will be sent to those affected are available, Hanford said. Several drastic changes in Alaska®saler retail regulations were announced today by the Office of Price Stabili- zation. issue of a WA= :N=l=-Na@ TO OWNERS OF DOGS, CATS AND OTHER PETS by - CITY OF DJUGLAS KEEP YOUR OGS ON A LEASH, ACCORDING T0 CITY ORDINANCE NO. 31 A Professional Exterminator is placing poison bait in many places fo clean up rais. Care and cooperation is needed to protect your pets. CITY OF DOUGLAS, ALASKA (Signed) Mike Pusich, Mayor Hospital ernment Hospital was Frances Wi'- r- | claims, Alaska defenses should not | Greal Lover Team in "The Fountainhead’ 1 At 20th Tomorrow 1, Guaranteed pl vith the J , John B Costello Clar n Leigh pairs, i of Ga Cooper the two the tempe Fountainh long 0th Centary { Gi 1 l more-Dolore and who tnous lov . War- ited Thea When W Bro: er decided t¢ novel American readin in recen public as no other problem wa casting of two lovers w credible the tumultou { the independent-mind 10 architect and Dom ! ind br book dmi hough beautiful who succumb: man whom she cannot appears unimpressec of letters descended producer Jack L. Wa estions, mu the producer Wind” itive ting manner th the that 1 the receive back, | | | ¥ Hubhard fo be Used U, S. Air Foree R |Picures Taken b Hub- pr The Rev. Fr. Bernard bard, Alaska’s famed g has returned from the nd Taku Inlet pictures racy whe past used by lor took ¢ > Strateg Air He will lecture 1 8 o'clock in the Parish Hall on ka and the Asiatic Proble The talk will be illustrate lor picture *, St. Lawrence tor with 1 s taken on I D and King I he Air Command, he said in an interview yesterday, making terrain and personnel sy vel films from the pi he taken in the Alaskan and Canadiar ctic 8. The film will be shown to member {oi the Command Durin, s he ha | the Arctic areas, Father Hubbar: iid he taken a total of 1,500,- feet of pictures. About one-third been made on color film, > be discussed be that to Asia is geo- econor 8 pent 't rok in lecture the of Alas nd not Hubbard said. The talk will be non- jolitical. Admission to the lectur plus tax. His appearance is d by the Cardinal Club. maintiined in a recent article | that the vastness of the Territory wn protection. “An aggressor would bypass Alaska and strike at { continental United States.” But, he e wid ©al ¥ | Rridaa SYIGUG or Two Se only bid f coal-h; bank: be neglected, because the Territory |is important as an offensive base Father Hubbard leaves Sept {for the University of Santa Clara, }c;\m., where he is a teacher | A Butler Con Cor i §707,052. , | VIS 1| ON FAST FLIGHT EAST Vacation-bound, Miss Wilma Lig- on will be a Pan Ame AN pa ger to Seattle Saturday, mal atocruiser connections for east Saturday at, and arrive Washington, D. C. Sunday after- noon, No doubt feeling like an * she said about her projected construct and steel br in airn Miss Lignon is in the Department f Labor Office in Juneau and w return when her vacation ends two weel CLOEHE] 177 10 179 So. Bureau ks PAGE FIVE _ INEE SHOW by STARTS RS 1:00 3 —— COMEDIES VREE (GANDY » ‘7‘@‘31 A asrlt 910 Qe T e = = T DOUGLAS NEWS Freshmen Ini c iyal members of the wé to be initiated at the High School at 8:00 o'clock Initiation activities are be- 1 by the Sophomore’Class. is Invited to attend. this year are: Efnest 1:¢, Louis Pusich, Lestet' Hen-" Ellly Andrews, Bob Riess,' Bob Fred Wittonen, Maria Woro- 1d Judy Niemi. » o RRNE T. Smith Returns Iton F. Smith, Fish and Wild- returned this week, from fler completing the sum- mer season. Cold Bay ¢ APPLY FOR LICENSE r for an applicaiion to wed 8. Commisisoner’s offiée yes- afternoon were Ignacio E. mino and Marie Partridge.: mino gave his residence as Port- id, Ore,, and his occupationy Jun- clerk-typist. The prospective a resident of Hoonah, is list- student i NGy € - s Fr ank aln lin [

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