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5 THURSDAY, MAY 22, 1941. 3 The CAPITOL has the BIG Pictures and News that, Is News NOW! I.OVE S"‘ORY AI éros‘swo" RI% HSA!:AR'I'" ENDS rr— - | i ot LN Vi THE BETTER BIG PICTURES Y i Show Place of Juneau Y i > C’LE l 3 PLA . . (Ap"ol SHow ACROSS 35 Biblical ehar- AS EEAIURE A]‘ 6” L Last Time Tonight! . Lialgat il Last Times Tonight bifl' 5 Arabian gar- Vice- Presi- TH E ments dent | ~ R Seat in chureh 45 prare animay 4 R 49 American ex- s - plorer . [ Lana Turner, John Shelfon TR Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. and DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS, Jr. y " A d " or stupi ! Form Romantic Duo in bt 4 Qbeta Medeleine Carroll "We Who Are Young' A S T i Star in Play MADH.E'NE CARRBU. 20, (iminant » Px 1 53. Tear — A story as simple, straightfor- . Cattall used by Solution Of Yest x t erday’s Puzzle o i aiaa v ward and heartwarmin; any to o e 4 ¥ | The love of two strong-willed reach the screen in some time ends 26 of tight roofs 63. Bacchanalian DOWN | ruthless men, for beautiful g | ey — e tonight at the Capi fentre. 35 Sooimpliner f5qijee i Lamts | with an African jungle forming the | J 5 —1: . M. TONIGHT It is “We Who Are Y Y fea- . direct to the 61 Dutcl 3. Constituent | background, is the theme of the X S h O R T S . PREVIEW-—L:15 & i .H b g \”_ b & consumer AL 4 Things to be | Faramount picture, “Safari,” which| T an |turing Lana Turner and John 32 Genus of the 62 Night added } . " | Strangs As It May 1 llary cal emy Shelton beet an event & Donicey ends tonight at the 20th Century 3 T . BaRe e Theatre. Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and Seem ” " The new picture unfolds the Z % . Bearing wea- . glé . | LATEST NEWS Granipa Goes to Town [story of a young couple, portrayed 7 “%nn o oo, | Madele: e O oll ar !\"l“n!l”i\\n‘»‘ ! | Featuring i ,jGONE WITH THE WIND" |bx Mies ‘Turmer ana ghetion; whe |77 Wi .% 3 Bife8Sroceea. | with Tullo Carminati, Murcl An- { o ma with high hopes for con- A 10, Weiss | getus, Lynne A | - \ U. S. Military . . = quering a large city. It moves from a %“. % \yfl‘nl\mna- use | Gilbert playing featured roles. Us- i Surprises & JUNE 1—2—3—4 the dotirtroom’ wherd the marciage /,’/ G % . Compact { ing Tairbanks, & famous hunter, to 1 i is performed through a rapid series .- //fl..% .. poBiblical 'wora | insplie the jealousy of Carminati, Pl B of climaxes which finds the couple b ”% P Infarfi's 'bed n g Ix(’;f.)‘l"’;“‘r‘;u:'\'"F":'i:." Vel v oy Sthel 1A al Madele! Ses * Screen Player to Wed Singer i ored o so on wiet - F7/7 e P11 | | ol Madine rowes Par-| ————~ = T AV ~o\ The rcle of the wife, Margy, is % |2 % 28. Large drain s o - S | ders to ta 1 oo o 2 2 J W L ” a distinetly new departure for Miss VA 417 Hegist authort. |« ceiners, according to Joe l-,llison. COLI SE“ : ; Turner who up until this time has a- .“% il wdiba, | when Madeleine and | yegular tender service to the Taku been seen in collegiate and danc- A Hfi‘.‘.i?ifl“’"" | anks spend a night alone infynict which the Done tm v WNED AN YorRATED & W 1B OS | Ve At ‘rodse. SEn RN . /% Perched jungle, the Baron, who has nas maintained for many pas A“:e . TR !a straight dramatic actress cannot 1 Y | the hunter to'lead a safarl, ' ons, will be conunued as Hsuid, “GRANNY GET YOUR GUN" be denied from now on. She shows | him to dispatch a wounded |said, Elson stated that this in- 2 “EAST SIDE KIDS" rare sympathy and understanding Difficnte tically a ‘Sentence of | ease of tender service is desirable ang | for the rllnrn&ter she portrays. : . Animal of the ging with a torn arm,/in view of the vastly 1mpyowd effi- . | "As the husband, Metro-Gold- “';““‘ fam: rbanks breaks camp, denounces|iency of the cannery this year. rohnson and Orrin Edwards will | wyn-Mayer introdu John Shel- . Metal tag of h Madeleine—who now ' really| > Jook after the refreshments. 13 P o s - ton, a personable chap whose dra- - Him—and the Baron, and pre RALDWIN BUYS LOT - Douglas W. Wilhoit and Olympe Bradna Wedding of Olympe Bradna, screen player, and Douglas W. Wilhoit, 22, a radio singer, will take place soon, according to an announce- ment in Hollywood. The two will be married in Beverly Hills and svend their honeymoon in Boston. HERE FROM SITKA Turner will remain in Juneau fo:| several da | s en. Tu Iz ape gard- s i et v Evereif Erickson | the Governor's House, is here from his home in the Historic City. The parked gardens of the Pio- ist in landscaping around th Aboard Lodestar Everett R. Erickson, professor of education and head of the Depart-| ment of Education at the Univer- | sity of Alaska, came here by plane | yesterday from Fairbanks and flew south ‘this morning aboard the | Lodestar. | Professor Erickson will aitend the | National Education Association| meeting at Boston and will spend | the summer visiting friends and| relatives in the States. He expects to return about the latter part of Sitka's tourists. of to neers’ Home are one greatest attractions CLOTHES that are CLEANED OFTEN—Wear Longer! Send YOUR GARMENTS Tri;ngle matic abilities have also been r or less* untried. Shelton, too, gives an excellent of himself in a difficult roie and will prob- ably be given more important as- signments on the strength of his performance. — eee Hellywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Coons HOLLYWOOD, May 22 — It's a wonderful world The glamorous movie star up ALL to marry the simple cow- boy from the plains instead of the rich and famous producer, just as Mary Beth Hughes does in [he Cowboy and the Blonde"—though you and I know how many movie stars don't marry the producer when they get the chance, The idolized crooner weary with the burden of fem- inine adulation that he runs away and joins the Navy, just as Di Powell does “In the Navy"- but you and I suspect this weari- some fame has compensations There’s mnever more than one real beauty in a town that Mar- lene Dietrich visits, and that one gets 50 in 'ibeauty can twist the male popu- lation around her little finger while the homely crows caw in the background—though you and I know old New Orleans had some famous beauties who somehow didn’t get in camera range. Jovial fat boys always lose out in love, but never fail to play best pal to the lost love and her new sweetie, just like Jack Oakie in “The Great American Broadcast —though you and I know fat boys can nurse a grudge as well as the next one. True love finds its reward, hon- esty is the best policy, virtue triumphs in the end, there's de-, cency in the worst of us, hearts of gold beat beneath glittering ex- teriors. Hedy Lamarr in the Ful-‘ lies dreams only of her, impover- ished husband instead of fur coats and jewels and stagedoor wolves, for what is WEALTH when TRUE LOVE is at STAKE? considerate? Instead of conking people over the head, passing them out with brief finality, it gently lets them linger, for pretty dying speeches, Virginia Grey in “Wash- ingten Melodrama” can be nursing a load of lead, but it never stops her from Teliing All to unravel |the h t Humphrey Bo- s irouble; gart, clawed to pieces by a lion in ‘The Wagons Roll at Night,” has a lengthy period of grace in which to say “Bless you my children, I was wrong about it all;” Edward G. Robinson, an old hand at pro- tracted passing away, will do it again in “Manpower,"—very dra- matics of course What's a little bullet “or two among friends in our wonderful | world? Quickies: Milton Berle, who was unfunny to Hollywood a ago, now is a most-in- demand m. c. . Joseph Cotten, !the “Citizen Kane” hit, is to be | with France’s Michele Morgan :n surney into Fear” Betty ble, who used to wait a long time between movie breaks, has really arrived — shooting on “A Yank in the RAF.” was delayed 10 | days to get her in it. ., . Teaming: Jackie Cooper and singing Susan- ina Foster in the comedy, “Glamour Boy. . George Montgomery, who so wants to be a movie cowboy, [won't be allowed the pleasure—too valuable, the studio thinks, in straight leading man stuff. . . . e e-e HELP AN | | ALASKAN Telephone 713 or write The Alaska Territorial Employment Service for this qualified worker, somehow few years | Gr: BANK CLERK-OFFICE WORKs ER—Young man, age 23, university | graduate. Three years’ experience in bank and general office work. d to fly to Ewrope. The de-| sment provides one of the most | ations in the picture. B — the fine | . Moxican laborer | in . Heraidle beage Claude Baldwin of Juneau has purchased a lot on Third Street vetween E and F from Mrs. Jos. Wehren who recently arrived here from the south. There is a small TO CARRY OUT PLANS FOR BOWLING Eagles will begin Dongls work on the bowling alleys which they recenfly purchased from the ing AT BARANOF e 1.0 g 1c Kol : AL VY shop building on the lot. It is the FIKS' Tedze d‘";i“";" r:ice‘:f:;"gm;; 1 Y auhd A -| K. A Stephanus of Tyee arrived |intention of Baldwin who has a :\le;i ¥he alleys ‘are wiready in . o Jumeaw 1ash might. for. & short|Wite and two childfen ta bulld aitil Wl R SR W be as Com mi itees fOl' lvisit and Is stopping at the B“‘”'irmamw e ncco;'dh;ng TEPOTt. embled and set up for use. [anor Ectel. b “mmgye':fl,‘.‘( are | The renominated: officers were WOmen Of MOOSG BERGA BREEZE OUT TODAY {also elected as previpusly nomin- " S, 4 ated and their installation was VISITORS RETURN HOME Douglas high schoot annual, final| bt AFG L St eting 10 Are A n n 0 u n ced T ¢ dition of the Breeze was being dis- |y, e | M™r. and Mrs. A. M. Michaelson | (yviputed this morning by enterpris-/ W 3 Mrs. R. L. Michaelson, wh-b} Various committees were ap-|have been visiting in Juneau for pointed at a business meeting heid|several days, left on the Northland last night by Women of the Moose| returning to their home in Peters-| | who is leaving for the States on| | the North Sea. at the L.O.O.F. Hall | burg | Elected to the auditing commit- ————t—— | tee were Mesdames Anna Roden- | burg, Charlotte Kirchoffer and noUG' AS Cora Costella, Mrs. Ethel Burnett! 4. | was sclected as acting recorder in A the absence of Mrs. Art McKinnon, NEWS | Mrs. Phyllis Lesher will be (‘n—}l!\'l-l STUD s TO TONIGHT | tertainment chairman for (]u'i GRADUATE month of June, which is Moose- —_— heart month, and the first meet-| Commencement exercises for the ing will be June 4. Assisting Muys.|five seniors who are graduating Dougias High Sehool this will be held tonight in the| gymnasium, starting at 8| Lesher on the committee will be from Mrs. Gertie Olson and Helen Jack- year son. On the kitchen committee for|school thé session will be Mesdames Ethel|o'clock. An appropriate subject will| Burnett, Anna Jackson and Cora|be briefly discussed by each of the| Costella | eraduates as follows: | Following last night's gathering,| “Building for Tomorrow", by Glen |a social ho was enjoyed. Win-|Krenquist, salutatorian; “Our Third ning prizes for bingo were Mus,|Line of Defense”, Frank Doogan; Charlotte Kirchoffer, Mrs. Cora|“Vccational Education”, ~Gordon Costella, Mrs. Aleen Smith and Mvs,|Wahto; “Youth Looks On Today”", Martha Gutshe. | Robert Fleek, valedictorian; “Youth Lo On Temorrow”, Dan Krsul The program will open with the processional, and Mrs. Daniel Lang- !don will play a violin solo. Presen- | taticn of the Class gift, and schol- larship awards will be made. Arne | ehudshift, president of the S¢hool John McCormick, Selective Ser-|Board will present the diplomas and vice Director, is now a granapa|the Rev. G. Edwards Knight wm‘ according to a radiogram received|ive the benediction. ] this mornin; | After the ceremonies Juniors and McCormick's daughter Irene, M. Is:r':;t:ls ‘;’32}\’:5);“2;_05‘:":‘ ::h:;” Everett Shafer, became the mother Board, Faculty and high school! of an 8-pound baby boy at 1:39| oclock yesterday afternoon n|itudents. The party will be held in Walla Walla, Wash., accocrding to ¢ 5chool. the radiogram. The youngster has ¥ been named Everett Dean Shafer. DOUGLAS CANNERY WILL Mrs. Shafer js well known here OPERATE THREE TENDERS JOHN McCORMICK - ISNOW GRANDPA ing graders who reported very good business. Dedicated to the new gmduntes,‘ front page of the edition carries ex-| cellent cuts of the five senior boys and a message of particular inter- est at the presert time by Supt. Calvin Pool. e PICNIC PLANNED ! Sunaay, June 1 was selected as; |the date for their annual picnic by Douglas school Alumni ‘Association at the final meeting of the current! year last night. All arrangements fcr the picnic, destination anjd transportation have been placed in the hands of a committee composed of Urho Kronquist, Jack Mills, Joe| Riedi, Jr. and Hjalmar Savikko. Ancther committee composed of; George Stragier, Mrs. Robert Bon- ner, Jr, Gerald Cashen, Mrs, L. A, / AS ITS 7 oo 93 Proof N = Welcome Everywhere N\ because it’s * “CHEERFUL MR. AND MRS. WOODS BECOME BOAT OWNERS Henry Woods yesterday purchas- a 20 foot trolling boat from Albert Schrammen which they plan to use as a pleasure boat this sum- mer and later on perhaps do com- mercial fishing. e e HOME AGAIN Arvo Wahto arrived home yester- day from Pelican City where he has been teaching school for the past éight months. o (OLISEUM-DOUGLAS THURSDAY and FRIDAY “The G Y Ghost Breaker” e sy - Z NAME” AN W Your appearance 1 Assured when National Distillers Products Corporation, New xork zzzzzzzzzzzr T TR RAERENNNN Distributed by NATIONAL GROCERY COMPANY Seattle, Washington Yea, verily, t's a wonderful|Available for part-time or tempor- and attended the Juneau Public ary employment. Call for ES 311. | Schools. | During the busiest part of the || - The proud grandfather should be season this year, the Douglas can- Augus and travel in the Territory for a few weeks before resuming his| 0T ©f the screen. duties at the University. | Where else, besides, is Death o Subscribe 50 3 for The Empire. pzmmg out smokes todary,fi ; nery exp»etfsfiko_flu_ thrse ten- OSCAR MR OSPITAL HERE Nazi Bombers Vflflt PUFY"OH London’s Famous Landmar kS in Raid In — A Oscar Harri, of the Harri Ma- T by i Fa g T A 7 o 7 7 ? 7 i auum nlmv m 4 :hine Shop, was admitted to St.| i - ; o o i ,w« v . " ’ g e Ann's Hospital yesterday afternoon.| 4 i . o n He is receiving medical attention. | .- — The Laily Alasks Tmpire guarabe Boiling 212° Temperature Southeast Alaska *ALASKA’S FINEST DAIRY PLANT — the only dairy in JUNEAU yet to be award- ed GRADE “A” rating on its PASTEURIZED MILK — is able to supply demands for 15" Pasteurization 142° Temperature sy L S g £ its products, from districts g' 137° Destroyed y away from Gastineau Chan- = o SSincheiod nel. = Beptic Sore JUNO-MAID ICE CREAM £ Jasher welded COTTAGE CHEESE = 2:!1!-::::--# BUTTERMILK Z. _ Diphtheria of the washer. No Al produced right in Alaska. S L% "Destroyed P e el The All the highest, possible stan- F— fegs will not become wobbly. dard of quality and sanita- = Scarlet Pever - tion—are now easily available = 130° Destroyed Welded legs are only to you. i B S A::'I’.:I::y.-'-':::‘;::':.hl Whetr pou: live 2. 128° gfi::;:: \you bought a G-E Washer. Angoon, Sitke, Hee- VIR y nah -or any other = ‘fiu'd' : “,';* 4 Te1] SOUTHEAST ALAS- & gulank Pyver. o GENERAL &3 KA TOWN, yeu tan £ pewms do3 READ UP From Findings of U. S. Department Fresh Dairy Products ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT . | of S of Agriculture. AND POWER (0. — i ' SENiE e | JUNEAU DAIRIES, Inc. 4 o London’s world famous landmarks, including Big Ben, Westminster edifices. In this picture, Big Ben, the big clock, 15 seen (i), oo 838 % PHONE 618 Abbey and the stately houses of Parliament today bear the scars Commons chamber in Parliament (2) was wrecked, .London coun- ¢ i ;¢ o Juneau, Alaska—PHONE Tk of bomb and fire following a.long raid by German bombers which | ty hall which was not reported hit, is No. 3. No estimate of the . ¢ All Milk Botiles Sealed by New Machine Process! ¢ was given. i took a tremendous toll of life besides wrecking many famous di