The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 15, 1951, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1951 Go to a Movie Theatre Today! IT°S HERE TONIGHT! NEVER BEFORE such « BARGAIN in MOVIE ENTERTAIN MENT!? IF Y0U LOVE A GOOD SPICY STORY . "EMERGENCY WEDDINE” IS A HONEY! AND - the companion feature does not have fo take a back seat when it comes to fun - CHUCKLE . . . CHILLS run down your spine . . . while you thrill MYSTERY STORY! F wio HOLDS THE KEY TO--.. THESE STRANGE AND EERIE __ CRIMES! e e o e as to the world's most famous “Lady, I'd marry you in a minute! and you’ll have to!” sueit appy-TaLk/ sucH Happy-ooms/ PHIllIP TERRY JACQUELINE WHITE ) MARGARET LINDSAY "'" EDUARDO CIANNELLL *‘fl"‘ COLUMBIA PICTURES preseats LARRY BARBARA PARKS - HALE MERGEMC m; THE WORLDS FASTEST LOVE AFFA/R WILLARD PARKET'\’ - UNA MERKEL ALAN REED COME EARLY ccomununn DOORS OFPEN 6:50 ® "Emergency Wedding” 8:10 — 10:55 "Seven Keys to Baldpate” 7:05 — 9:50 + Thereisno suhsmute for Newspaper Adverhsmg' | FLY SEATTLE $50.00 plus tax Large 50-Passenger Planes De Luxe Air Coach Service STORMS VISITING HERE LEAVES FOR SEWARD | MRS. Ward A. Carroll, operations man- ager for the Alaska Teiephone Co., Mrs, Joseph H. Storms of Seattle and former Juneau resident is visit- here, left today for Seward. He h ing here for the first time in four received word that his ten-year-old | years. She and her five-year-old daughter there is seriously ill. f‘dflughter Catherine are house guests —_— of Dr. . Mrs. Geyer. David R. Moréland of San Fran: SR Auster of cisco is registered at the Baranof | Hotel. ‘ Mrs. FROM WHITTIER Harold McRoberts or Whittier is registered at the Gastineau Hotel Paul Karlack cf Haines is stop- ping at the Hotel Juneau. and Mrs. John Geyer for two THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 'Double Feafure Capito! Thealre There is a double feature bill at the Capi e opening to- { night Larry that ing {from “Jolson Si | united in C new c openir atre. and Barbara Hale, and mm'umc pair ergency Wuddinp 9 t the Capitol The- cency Wedding” is said ,to be the swift-paced, hilarious comedy of a couple who celebrated their courtship, engagement, nup- tials and quarrel in less time than it takes to fall in love at first sight! The new comedy presents Parks |as a young man with plenty of { money and nothing much to do. “Enmfl\il.\' hunting a career, he fin- ally finds it—in being jealous about his new wife's own career. Miss Hale is the bride who won’t even stay for breakfast because she has | plans of her own, Authorship and crime are the twin themes of “Seven Keys to Bald- | pate,” RKO Radio’s new screen ver- {sion of the highly popular drama, | with Phillip Terry and Jacqueline | White the cast, which is the A mountain resort, thought to be closed for the winter, is the setting for the fast-paced action. Ken- eth Magee, a young novelist, heads | for Baldpate Inn on a wager that ‘he can write a new novel in 24 hours, d with what he believes to be the only key to the place. | But half a dofen other persons, ! | each with a key, show up in rapid| | succession, and it soon becomes ob- vious that there is dirty work afoot. Magee at first thinks the intruders have come only to keep him from winning his bet, and he is quickly involved in a series of mysterious and ster happenings. Dr. L. P. Dawes Funeral Services IFriday Afterncon Funeral services for Dr. Dawes, well known Juneau ph: cian and surgeon, will be held Fri- day afterncon at 2 o'clock in the Scottish Rite Temple. He died sud- denly at his home Monday after- noon after an illness of two years. The Masonic ritual will be used with the Rev. Boyd Field dcli\'cr-\[ ing the eulogy. Mr. Harold Salis- bury will sing. Interment will be! in the Masonic plot at Evergreen Cemetery. The casket will not be | opened during the ‘servicks but! friends may call at the Carter Mort- |uary between 7 and 9 p.m. today. Surviving are his wife, Effie Lenore; two brothers, Harold F. of Everett, Wash,, who has arrived here and Roy A. of Edmonds, Wash. two sisters, Mrs. Hettie Elizabeth Tinney of Kalispell, Mont. and Mrs. Edna Leona McGowan of Friend- ship, Wis. [ i 8 Bill Tonight at - | " ke Who Brought the Pickled Peaches To Juneau! There's a mystery in Juneau. It stands, as it has for a long time, in the window of the Hope Second Hand Store. Ray Hope can’t recall how he got it. “So many things come and go," he says, “I didn’t think anything about it,until . . " Until . . . Pat (Merle) Kimes, local telephone operator, passed one day and told Hope that she thought it was the mate to another she'd seen in Fairbanks. “It” was a fancy container of pickled peaches. There were a pair of them in the early days of Fairbanks. Where they came from . .. nobody knows, but old timers recall that they were .| rescued from at least four fires and nobody knows how many brawls. Within the memory of oldtimers (that's up to 1940 now), they proudly | stood in the Model Cafe in Fair- banks when Tom Yuill ran it. The pair of them, the pickled peaches, had become so much a part of the Model Cafe that one was not missed until Miss Kimes returned and asked of Pete Despot, then owner of the Model, “Where’s the other?” “What other?” “Pickles peaches, of coursel!” “Oh, a pair?” Miss Kimes walked out leaving the new proprietor wondering. Sourdoughs in Seattle are buzz- ing, “It’s a shame to have them separated.” How it happened—nobody knows. The fact remains. One jar in Juneau. One jar is in Fairbanks. After four fires together, Seattle Sourdoughs think the 45-year-old | twins should be together again—at| the Model cafe. Judge Makes Good Ruling on Young IMan's Drinking By Associated Press An Oakland municipal judge has ruled that a man old enough to| be called to fight in Korea shouldn't | penalized for drinking a l{ld\s of beer. Judge Edward J. Smith suspended |sentence against 19-year-old Will- am Diaz of Oakland—a National Guardsman subject to a call to active duty. Diaz pleaded to charges | of drinking a beer in a tavern. Judge Smith said: “It seems odd to me that young’' men are old| enough at 18 to be drafted and sent to Korea to fight and maybe die, yet: they are not old enough to drink beer here.” California’s legal drinking age is 21. "Colt 45" Now Exciting Story |front was a At 20th Century They say it was the Colt .45 that brought law and order to the wild| West a hundred years or so ago at| a time when it seemed that lawless- | ness might rule that part of Amer- ica forever The story of the introduction of | this weapon to the law enforcement officers of the West as well as of its| early day misuse in the hands of desperadoes, is the story of “Colt 45,” now on the screen at the 20th Century Theatre. Filmed in color by Technicolor, the tremendous Warner Bros. west- ern epic stars Randolph Scott, Ruth Roman, with Zachary Scott. Hospital Notes Admitted to St. Ann's Hospital | Wednesday were Mrs. Mary James, | Richard Digger, Charles A. Sinith. dismissed were Mrs. Corbett Shipp, | Dan Katzeek, Nancy Torum, M Gilbett Sensmefer, Mrs. Gene Chil- ton; Alex Berardini, Mrs. Rober; | Pickering and baby girl. ! Dismissed from the Goverinent Hospital Wednesday was Jack Sum- | dum of Hoonah. There were no ad- | missions. Rain Bogs Down Korean War fo Cne Small Battle SEOUL, Korea, Nov. 15—(P—Cold, ' drizzling rain bogged down the Korean war today. The U. S. Eighth Army reported the only action along the muddy; small sec-saw night | battle for advance allied positions. | That was fought northwest of Yang- | gu on the e n front. Attacking Reds captured the out- posts but were quickly routed by a counterattack, the evening commun- ique said. United Nations infantry- men chased the Reds back to their own lines. P MEETING PAGE FIVE 1201 TONITE Shows Start 7:27-9:30 Feature at 8:14-10:17 CENTURY WHERE MITS ARE A WABIT \with ZACHARY SCOTT MPIRE WANT ADS PAY— Juneau Drug Co. Phone 33 - Box 1151 Mall Orders Filled Promptly TONIGHT Velerans of Foreign Wars Jeep Club — ALL VISITING V. F. 8 o'Clock W. MEMBERS ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO AT’];EW}'.E“"" ¢ James Burnette, Commander Frank Drouin; Adjutant , THE RECORD SHOP Pallbearers will be George A.| Parks, J. B. Holland, B. Frank| Heintzleman, Albert E. Goetz, Ed-| ywin Sutton, Dr. John H. Clements. MAKE TRIP TO TULSEQUAH | | Herbert S. Rowland, president of the Juneau Chamber of Commerce and Crown Life Insurance agent here, returned yesterday from Tul- sequah, B. C., where he had been on a four-day business trip. AT THE GASTINEAU Richard A. Kautz of the Interna- tional Fish Commission from Seat- tle is stopping at the Gastineau Hotel. | W. S. OLSON IS HERE | W. 8. Olson of Seattle, cannery superintendent at Kake, is here in connection with the Fish and Wild- | life fishing regulation hearings. He is stopping at the Baranof Hotel. | AT THE GASTINEAU J. J. Grove of Anchorage is stop- ping at the Gastineau Hotel. SOUTH-BOUND NON-STOP Alaska’s Leading Non-Scheduled Airline AIR TRANSPORT Associates Sales Co.. Inc. 181 South Franklin St. Phone 177 Office Hours: 10:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. PICK UP THIS BOTTLE if you wish to enjoy a choice Kentucky bourbon that will always be Your Flrst Ice-cold Coca-Cola won't make y, ~or any other day, of course 'sure helps. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY 86 PROOF * THE BOND & LILLARD COMPANY, LOUISVILLE, K¥s Thanksgiving Day JUNEAU COLD STORAGE COMPANY © 1951, THE COCA-COLA CORPANY Under the Management of Ned Kester Announces Its Formal Opening Monday=-November 19 in its Temporary Quarters in the George Bros. Building south of the Juneau Clinic ———The only store in Alaska specializing in the sale of Long+Play Recordings ——We have access to All Labels. There are over one hundred). ———We sell only factury fresh, guaranteed record- mgs ——FAST SERVICE—Orders placed every day if not in stock. ———For you to get acquainted with The Record Shop and The Record Shop to know you better we are giving a 10 on opening week. orders’. discount for all cash purchases (This ineludes cut-of-town ———Out-of-town orders are given prompt attention. We pay the postage on orders of ten dollars or more. For the Best in Recorded Music— It’s The RECORD SHOP Box 2478 — Juneau, Alaska

Other pages from this issue: