Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY JULY 22, 1941. 'CANADIAN WOMEN IN WAR Army Man How to Be Chic Amid the ?,':;'.,’.}.‘;' MachinesIsa War Secret | .o oo e oo 0f Women of (anada Where the Better Big Pictures Play TIOMENTURY LAST 'l'IMES TON‘IG}H‘ LAST TIME FOR "FOUR SONS' AT 20TH CENTURY TimerSIorfiMotherand Four Sons Stars New Tal- ent in Mother Role l:-nnlnvlt h, star, makes her debut actress in “Four Sons,” new 20th Centu Fox film drama, a timely and inspired motion picture, whi is being at the 20th Cen- tury Miss portant four sons, agreement INTRIGUE AND ROMARNCE FILL "SEVEN SINNERS' |Film of South Seas Shows| for Last Times at Capitol —Also March of Time Marlene Dietrich stars in the new Universal film, “Seven Sin- | ners,” a romance of the South Ses in which she appears opposite John Wayne, at the «Capitol for the last two showings tonight, One of the season’s outstanding casts is seen in support of the two |stars, including Albert Dekker, | Broderick Crawford, Mischa Auer, into the bay| iy Gilbert, Anna Lee, Samuel S. - But my dreams| gings and Oscar Homolka. Miss Dietrich portrays a beauti- LAST TIMES TONIGHT the \(H‘m{(h of the United States Army there are several,un- loubtedly many, men who are su- erior to Major Jesse E. Graham National Guard instructor for the Territory But in Dotys Cove with rod and reel in hand, the Army Major has no superior, no equal, as was proven Sunday when Graham land- ed five out of six fish caught by the nine fishermen and women on Treyor Davis’ Cordelia D. Major Graham landed the five kings nonchalantly, packing into the catech box nearly 100 pounds of fresh fish. Mrs. Graham brought | o the gaff the largest salmon on the hook during the trip, but lost it as the line parted after sawing ng the boat edge as the fight- fish struggled. - Girl Scout Committee Plans for Next Year Troop 3 of the Girl Scouts held a meeting yesterday afternoon in the Northern Light Presbyterian Church parlors for the purpose of electing officers, but the attendance not large enough for this fea- tu Committee members present, Mrs. Earl McGinty, Mrs. H. L. Faulkner, Mrs. S8id Thompson, Mr: A. B. Phillips, and Mrs. G. W, Folta, planned the next year's work for the troop. ‘The next meeting is planned for September 4. PRSI EC Gt ng famous stage as a screen Eugenie Preview 1:15 a.m. Tonight Too Many Girls shown plays the Iim-| mother whose in happy turned against each other. She was selected for the part after nearly a score of stage and screen actresses had been test- ed. The compelling force of the emotional moved the audience to preview critics, who nounced “Four Sons” public must see.” Featured with Miss Leontovich in “Four Sons” are Don Ameche, Mary Beth Hughes, Alan Curtis, George Ernest, Robert Lowe Lionel Royce and Sig Rumann. picture was produced by Dar Zanuck and Harry Joe Brown was assoclate producer. .- Jewett fo Speak to ; Ornithologists Here Stanley Jewett of Portland, who is making a survey of Alaska birds | lecture will take place at the home in the interest of the Alaska Game | [ of Mrs. Wellman Holbrook Thurs- Commission, has consented to give | | day evening, July 24, at 8 o'clock. a lecture for the members of the| All those interested in hearing Juneau Onmhulorxml Society. T')c‘Mn Jewett are invited to attend. Roses for the Grand Duchess Leontovich role of a heretofore trip. No, the spill P didn’t bother me. . did, later on. | “I used to dream that I was| ful cafe singer who drifts from {rapped in a plane that had pitched 3 B IS Goi Io i and the waters would |°¢ island to another creating hav and the | drama agree with have pro- “a picture the power |oc amon; g] I g down upon me, and|C¢ &mong the men who fight over then I would wake up. I had (hal‘h" At an American naval island 5 same dream for months. I always|ShC Meets & young naval officer, #m w-o up just before the waters hit|Played by Wayne, and their ro- So. Americe . I | ring climax. “Seven Sinners” was produced oy Joe Pasternak, who likewise was the producer of Miss Dietrich’'s mem- orable “Destry Rides Again.” The latest March of Time film, ‘Australia at War,” presents a pan- orama of Australia’s war effort | The film shows how the crisis in the Far East today centersaround "DON AMECHE « MARY BETH HUGHES - ALAN CURTS + ROBERT LOWERY Marie Reardon operates a turret lathe on 'which gun barrels AR CTONEL ROYCE. - 81G RUMANN rod turned out in a Toronto factory. bov o I said, “Jean, while you were in| . . i H that plane, what happened to you? Will Give 16 Concerfs il wha were our reactions? What s s e 'did you think?” Six Weeks—Airliners |t ‘ihcusn 1 was W|” Be Used yshe said simply (Second of two articles on war.) rector welcome 40 farmerettes who | came gut almost directly from high school commencement to a big barn barracks on a 1,000-acre farm of southern Ontario. They looked like a bunch of jolly campers. TORONTO, Cm\.\du —Hundreds 0( Before they could come to th pretty girls are holding hoes in-{Or any of the other '12 Farm Force stead of golf clubs in Canada this hostels, the girls filled out blanks summer. And thousands of perma- and l)l'0l||l~l‘l|. to = at least nents and powdered noses are in-|three weeks, They have to be be- vading Canadian munition plan: tween 17 and 45 y old. Their | women under 30 push their y| work is for individual mrmex_«,,y into wartime industries from which |but their program is directed by they were barred little more than|the labor departments of th*“MfS. A E. Glovel' a year ago province and nation and their Honored at Party The Boston-born Minister of|housing by the Y.W.C.A. Some of | Mrs. A. E. Glover, who is leaving Munitions, C. D. Howe, told me|them live in tents in his Ottawa office that 50 per- cent of the workers in small arms | Juneau soon, will be guest of honor ammunition plants of this coun- |cents an hour for a 9- or m-h“"”‘tumght at a bridge party given by |try today are women. One big day (counting overtime) will ’)C‘Mrs J. H. Brillhart. Three tables plant owner told me that the 800|picking, packing or shipping fruit,) &"c b o e pm"’md girl employees in his gun factory|weeding, hoeing or gathering vege-{ ™ . o Atiending the p;\l'ty will be will be increased to 1,000 this | tables, pruning or ty-|yyee pearl Peterson, and the Mes- PG ing up vines. Some of them learn | o es iin Ffimst‘ Robert uuci(-v In one to milk a cow as extra-curricular wortl;, Fred Gcex]in: V. R. Farrell, : are | thir milking cows and taking | Onories Burdick, Reginald Brust, | resort vacations. and ! care of chickens before they gvl‘H""y Sperling, and Helen Oass. in kerchiefs or pretty nets y i s are brigt ish.|to the farms. . o 0 0 e e IMMUNIZATION CLINIC TO BE HELD JULY 23 Their hands are white and clean| othes | photographs of outdoor Alaska,and to those of men in the farms they work on, hun- | there are several full pages devoted |same work go out daily from Toronto | | to unusual pictures of Alaska’s big] The girl 30 cents an hour|on trucks to do farm work. | game animals. Two pages of pic-|with a 5-cents-an-hour rise after{ T8y Say, this practice is spread-| qw. monthly clinic for immuni- zation against diphtheria and vac- cination against smallpox will be | | held at the Juneau Public Health piers that stretch tures show scenes in Anchorage|a month. ing Center, room 108 in the Territorial Building, tomorrow between the their 3y . ams ‘into the oFdson and Eagt| L8 Guring s ipresent boom. | ‘There two shifts, one from Hvers. Feon LG hatt i | frontispiece is a photograph|7 (o 3, one from 3 to 11. Lunch hours of 2 and 4 o'clock, the De-| ;partmem of Health announced to- going to die,” “I thought we | Canadian women at | i hculd all of us rely die. It was| in the early morning and we were taking off. I was Jose Iturbi's man- ager, and we had to get to Buenos|the great commonwealth “down un- Aires. . .So we were on the clip-|der” and how the military and - Who IS{per, and we must have hit some-|paval forces of Australia’s neigh- l"-:““;‘kh thing, or the pilot must have swerv- | horing Pacific islands may coop- it, looks like | q ceep fr : or Siiith Ronirisg 113 10, beed from hitting another|erate to block Japanese aggression uth America oot for just as we began to rise| %y i e 1 \eert tour and preserve democracy in the Far mee! we fell back, and the windows broke | gt to do it in.” jand I can still see the waters pour ked h ! s 3 .l e ing in. The crew got out the c v /0u COV-. haton, We got out the back hateh. . AlASKA SpoRTSMA" a in six weeks un- {1t was opened by the steward. . .| » down the eastiw, only had about 30 seconds to HAS WRITE up 0" 5T ! fore back a few years and | e only think I thought The Alaska of today and of ye Well, this is it. We're trapped, iay are both featured in The cut of that ill-starred clip- |qreams began to bother me. I never | mance, scenery and wildlife of the © accompanying rear of even thought about not flying. I'm | country are ented in a very the Andes, and come up the coast Py MARGARET KERNODLE AP Feature Service Writer NEW We were | ipie, who is YORK, July STARTS TONIGHT RICHARD GREEN in “I WAS AN ADVENTUMS le topping Minimum 17 Cents An Hour Their jobs at a minimum of 17 ht iline; about the ple iv- fac- slacks and for swanky | curls the Ja t girls » and up the ‘make it, . . I thought I was going at all princi- |ty qje. | | “Did your life pass in review be- | ! as they say it does?” | in the morning nev a clipper plane \nd how long will it take?' But we | Alaska Sportsman’s greatest issue to bay at Trinidad, of {got cut, and that night we took|date—the Fifth Annual Pictorial losing their lives, and ser o Buenos Aires. 1t | Number, just issued. In pictures ple—this same Jean much later, that the|and in prose and verse, the ro- of gun hing in thr broken | not superstitious. I wouldn't miss| attractive , from the natu- it’s the enly way to travel.” | ral-color to the last of its think: s going to be ex-|56 pages. |citing to sce South America again, (to go down one coast and b3 cover didn’t mak ne leery flown il This magazine in this, its special cross| August ¢ mimber, ‘Dresents - mAny .: is, unless these drea come get All the are | bacl | | Send YOUR GARMENTS to Triangle r appearance 18 ured When You ave Them Cleaned Here! The banks | aren't for foreign shipping, . . .|Of Perseverance, near Juneau, ac-|takes half an hour and the com- | About 40 per cent are used and con- | COmpanied by the stirring poem,|pany cafeteria provides fruit salad Itrolled by the railvoads. Manhat-| Ghost Town” by Cornelius Van-|plate with dessert and beverage for !tan used to have more than 200 d°rbresgen Jr. 25 cents, roast or meat pie for 30 piers in hourly use, befere the war. AR, R cents, potatoes and beverage for| Now a great many of them are idle. | 15. Girls can smoke (and do) ex- 'The daily tidal rise and fall is four NATWE YOUTH Dlis cept for the last half-hour of work. | feet EARI.Y '"."S MORNIHG Have Fewer Accidents | y Their tirst job is making & Part| s o C. Personeus and daugh- Julian Tassell, & native youth of|©f & Bun magazine. They are S0 (e Anna Mae, are recent arrivals 12, died at 2 o'clock this morning good the men don't do this job| .y 4 yisit here after an absence of at the Government Hospital. He|>"Y ™Mo'® In fact, the girls can|iw, years and are the house guests 'Mrs. Personeus, Daughter Now Vlsmng Here The Department urges parents to avail themselves of this service. In| order to give children the maximum | | protection against diphtheria, a child should receive three injec- [ tions of toxoid four weeks apart, it is said. | ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS “ a | SEALED BIDS will be received ‘the Grand Duchess Charlotte (left) of Luxembourg receives a bouquet !by the Board of Directors of the‘ of roses from Mrs. Alan Reed, councillor of the Pennsylvania Horti- cultur: Pa, the I.,u}u Lutheran Church, at Sitka,| | Alaska, on or before July 26, 1941’ |at 8 o'clock p.m. at which time they will be opened for the furrish- ing of all labor and materials for the CONSTRUCTION of the Sitka Lutheran Church buildirig at Sitks, | Alaska. | Plans may be obtained either from the architect, Harold Foss, {Juneau, Alaska, or Frank Kuehn,| ! secretary of the Board. of Directors, | | Sitka, Alaska. A deposit of $10.90 |will be required for each set of plans and specifications. | The Board of Directors reserves {the right to reject any or all bids. adv. THE SITKA | LUTHERAN CHURCH, The Datly Alaska Empire nas the was born in Douglas and has lived handle nearly all of the 3,000 op- |of Mrs. Julla A. Costigan on: the ociety, at West Grove, (is survived by his father, Joseph in thet communly, all his Mfe, He iy " - ioone and Spitfire planes. Tassell, sisters. The remains are at the Charles W. Carter mortuary pending fun- eral arrangements. DOUGLAS NEWS OLD MILLS HOME SOLD Articles of transfer were drawn up yesterday for sale to George Cortez of the John Mills property on St. Ann’s Avenue by Mr, and Mrs. Mills. Their home for many years, the property consists of a and several brothers and they take better c; Not have Canadian women been work- of equipment sport-loving head of the Farm Ser- vice Force in Ontario. The fruit growers asked for girl workers in wartime food production, she said. I saw this tall, gray-haired di- Crossword Puzzle ACROSS Component of erations in making the guns used| ;jaofer Hignway. since the first World War|, ing on farms and in factories as| they are naw: 1 found by talking| v personeus and daughter visit- with Mrs. Allan Scott. She is the|.q for several weeks along the coast | The Rev. C. C. Personeus is now | Byron is with him. The Ilater is rf time announcer of KGBU sta-| ‘tmn at Ketchikan. Cgming north from Pomona, Cal., |and met many former residents of | this city, now located in the States. | ——————— BUY DEFENSE BONDS 'Mrs. Kohler Leaves { | ! Their bosses say they have fewer ;, getcnikan establishing an As- | accidents than the men and that|.omply of God Mission and his son | After Visiting Here Mrs, Karl Kohler left aboard the | Yukon for her home at Homer. She has been visiting her son-in-law and daughter, Mr, and Mrs. David Ram- sey, for several weeks and during her stay here, she was honored at several soclal affairs. FROM PALMS TO PINES Over 4,000 miles from home is Thorold Field and in a climate quite different to that of his na- tive state, for Field is from Palm country is in sl | iargest paid circulation of any Al- large three-story frame building 1. Color Beach, 1. aska’ newspener: with ample grounds. The Cortezes ‘cxpcct to move over from Juneau shortly to occupy the residencs. - TAX ASSESSMENTS MAILED The mailing began yesterday of assessment notices to property owners of Douglas. In addition to { the usual real estate, improvements, | jand personal valuations shown, the ,LcLal frontage measurement of all | property which will be used for sewer tax assessment appears (»n- | the notices. NOW? LSTENTO (OLUMBIA PROGRAMS Tune in KIRO—now the most powerful station serving Al- aska! Enjoy the great pro- grams of the Columbia Broad- casting System. You can get them easily over KIRO. Mark of American Distilling Co The City Council will hold three YOUR GUI UIDE To meéetings as a Board of Equaliza- Q U A ’ l T Y | tion on the evenings of July 28, 29 % s {and 30 to hear complaints, if any | W h i [3 k i es— G i ns should arise regarding individual | = L.ia | assessments, Eyerder Giain Alcohol 190 Proof | Always Reasonably Priced THE AMERICAN DISTILLING CO, 369 Pine Street, San Francisco —————— PETTRGROVES MOVING Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pettygrove are planning to move soon to their own cottage, formerly known as Frank’s Cabin, on Third Street. e o NOTICE SPECIAL NOTICE is hereby given that the Director, Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation, under | date of July 14, 1941, file 3-3479, gave ' ‘nufluxuywchuweflumeulme \ oil screw yacht CONTENT to TAKU. ‘Snldvmlmbufltlnlmnw | Angeles, Calif., her official numberj | is 220784; her gross tonnage is 45; . ! her home port, Juneau; owner, Ed- 1 Put a Covig Diesel in Your Boat If You Wan! | MORE ROOM IN YOUR BOAT More Miles for Your Money Comfortable, Quiet Ride gl that Instantly Starts A-rume of Blh Trips A Broad e of Smooth Speeds Low mm; and Maintenance Cests Full Diesel Anmmtcnn-nm,mmnu ARLES G. WARNER CO ward Lowe, Juneau, Alaska. JAMES . CONNORS, Collector of Customs. t publication, July 21, 1941, Last publication, July 24, 1941, ,oo esssere CHAl 4. Accumulate 9. Light touch 12. Melr!a land easure 13. Parmlnln( to 14 Artlhcld lan- 15. 16. R 7. 18. 20. Ui h thpnlna Mo- hammedan Tribunal 9. Unele: Scotch 40. Langulshed One who lays out with hop of profit 44, Lament . Paradisale 50. Above Massachusetts cape 53. Rail hlrd 21 o Rodent 5. Approximately 22. 57, Lawless crowd 24. One who exacts 58. Dutch city high interest 59. Plants of a region 60. Tropical bird 61. East Indian welght ocky Sojemn. prom- Elmallyan ‘monkshood rge Cupbearer of Solution Of Yesterday’s Puzzle 62. Article of be- liet 63. Low haunt DOWN 1. Clerical collar Muse of lyric and amatory 26. Iranians 28. Fast 31, Indefinite amount poetry Cotton cloth Danish island . Shooting star . Conflddnpt. B Jmmmm Ammu JmmE T 277 d e fgur Unréfined Grow Willing to' "h Tl % > % i Buhs met, : 2 HANEEE dudEE AN NN JENZUNEN N 2 ”/ L Aml oot olding T para Fla, Field is at present staying at the Baranof Hotel. in a ceremony introducin “Grande Duchesse Charlotte” rose to Ameflunl. The Grand Duchess’ Nagi banda Schilling XQIU‘I SITE FLAVOR ’I‘I"A II you enjoy fine tea, try © Schilling Tea,..fragrant, flavorful and refreshing, Compare its quality ! BUY DEFENSE BOND! DO YOU WANT MOST OF ALL IN A REFRIGERATOR? Dependable Performance day after day is ‘what makes a refrigerator thrifty and con- venient—and you get it in a G-E! Low Operating Cost means savings month after month—and you get it in a G-E! Long Life means a lasting investment—and you get it in a G-E! Of gourse you also get the size and the features you waat in a GE- : There is a new 6.2 Cubic Ft. Model for Only 8$134.95 ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CO.