Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES The Wlmle Town's Talking . . . Back Again STARTS TONIGHT SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU And HOW! 1T'S KAY KYSER, BACK AGAIN...in the darndest chiller-diller you ever saw! BORIS KARLOFF - PETER ORRE BELA LUGOSI-HELEN.-PARR!SH nd, Ka; K«;Am 4 Rand 'eulurmg GINNY SIMMS ALS KYSER BRINGS MUSIC, SPOOKS Lai : and Shivers reen’s first mys cal is the claim for Kay film, “Youw'll Find Out,” t at the Capitol which combines sweet 1 shrill shrieks and n v with well deserves rama; ith e of three. forelr c of menace in Tk it des Li¢ melod ured the OI' st Hslen Parrist 1d Babbitt, Mason. h the i Kyser's sister, believe his Ja >rinee pretty daughter, and I the who keeps occult Ihe new novelty number, Man,” is dies by Jam n Mercer intr ELODYRAMA itol Shows Mystery- ical Full of Songs ry musi- | Kyser's open- | he: crip- Professor Musical.. Knowl- mer- with Ish loits in a haunt- is occupied by Aunt in spiritual- anis, Saliano, a fake medium fires burn- “The one of five 5 ‘\’[(‘HA\I h WEDDING BELLS LATEST NEWS mirth and madness. The other songs “I'd Know You Anywhere” u've Got Me This Wa “Like the Fel nce 1" and ‘ve Got a One Da are nd 1 B ed “You'll borated with original story writing the screen pla Radio. It's Kay Kyse pature, the first being cessful “That's Right, Find James with Kern for RKO econd film the suc- You're Out” on the BLAKE, MOFFITT, TOWNE ' REPRESENTATIVE IS HERE AFTER BUSINESS TRIP Everett Nowell, representative in Alaska of Blake, Moffitt and [ Towne, and Ballou and Wright | arrived in Juneau on the Aleutian ‘niLer a business. trip of several | weeks in Seattle. Nowell, who is at the Juneau; Hotel, will remain in Juneau |‘about a month before starting ¥ fall trip to the Westward and In» terior. | - e MRS. H. E .MULVIHILL IS ABOARD CHARLOTTE | ; wife of y, con- and Yu- aboard | Mrs, Gladys Mulvihill, H. E. Mulvihill of Skagv ductor on the White Pa: kon Route, is a passenger the Princess Charlotte for home, accompanied by her son Carl. Mrs, Mulvihill has been south for the past five months, principally in Chehalis, Wash., visiting her par- ents. sth produced and | and | V. Kern | for | The U. S. S. Amber, now a Navy patrol vessel but at one time John Barrymore's personal yacht, will| | visit Juneau August 15 to 18 for thr convenience of Alaskan citizens who are interested in the Navy, author- | ities of Navy headquarters in Seattle | have announced. | Aboard the Amber will be Lt-' Comdr. Park W. Willis, Jr., U. Naval Reserve, who will act as re- cruiting officer, and will also con- duct physical examinations for ap- plicants, The Amber, which is well known in Alaskan waters, has a double mis- sion, Lt.-Comdr. Willis recently ob- served. “The Navy is vitally interested in | w recruiting Alaskan offshore fisher- men and seamen for its new M-2 classification,” he said. “It also wants to tell young Alaskans some of the advantages of serving in the regular Navy or Naval Reserve dur- ing the present national emer- gency.” Lt.-Comdr. Willis placed particu- lar emphasis on the Navy's desire to interest experienced seamen in its inshore patrol activities. ‘Men from 17 to 50 who have had | deep-water experience on fishing boats, yachts, or just small boats and ships, can qualify for immediate | naval ratings to accord with their ability,” he indicated. “Seamen are wanted; and cnoks and engineers, the latter both gaso- line and Diesel, are particularly de- | sired,” he declared. | | “The Navy has made special con- | cessions so far as physical require- | ments are concerned, and the num- | ber of men desired is virtually un- | limited. The pay ranges from $21 | per month to $133, depending on a man’s rating. Food and clothing, of course, are included.” | Alaskan seamen, cooks and en-! gineers who volunteer for the Navy | will serve in the local defense forces | in Northwest and Alaskan waters, | Lt.-Comdr. Willis stated. Men in the | M-2 class are not required to enter | Naval Training schools at San Diego | or Great Lakes. Each man thus will have the ad— vantage of knowing intimately the | | waters in which he is asked to serve. | | The only difference will be that in- | stead of fishing or navigating be- | | tween ports, he'll be engaged in Lhe more serious occupation of mnmung | his country’s first line of defense. | While the Amber is at Juneau, | | her personnel will also accept young | | men for other classifications of the regular Navy and the Naval Reserve. When she returns to Seattle, she ;wiu take aboard her as many newly | | recruited men as she can accommo- | | date for I.he trlp south Miss Pat Clark to r Vacation in South| Miss Pat Clark, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack R. Clark of Juneau, | left on the southbound Lodestar | ths morning for a three weeks' | vacation. Miss Clark will visit friends in| Seattle while south, and will also| | visit relatives in Victoria and Dun- | can, B. C. She is employed by the Juneau and Douglas Telephone Company in Juneau. e BUY DEFENSE STAMPS % 1.5. 5. AMBER COMING 10 JUNEAU AUGUST 15; CHANCE FOR RECRUITS FORMERLOCAL | BOY MARRIED | IN WRANGELL | s Curtis Bradford Well| Known in Juneau, Weds Wrangell Girl Aug. 2 been received here of | Miss Vivian Green nd Curtis Bradford, former Juneau boy, on August 3. The wedding took place in Wran- gell, where the sle had lived for |a long time until Mr. Bradford rec- ntly took a positi ith the Stan- dard Oil Company in Ketehikan. Miss Green is the daughter of |Mr. and Mrs. George H. Green of | Wrangell. Mr. Bradford is the son of Z. M. Bradford, also of Wrangell | The Bradford family lived in Juneau | | many years. The m ge was an afternoon | ceremony at 4 ¢ in the Wran- gell Presbyterian Church, with the Rev. N. H. Champlin officiating. | Tlu couple will live in Ketchikan, DR. HOWE VANCE IS ON CRUISE ABOARD YACHT MESSENGER Dr. Howe Vance left yesterday afternoon aboard his yacht Me senger for a short vacation cruise to Sitka and other points adjacent to Juneau. On the cruisé with Dr. Vance is Tom McCaul and Wendell Schneider. Joining the Messenger as the craft Josephine Winter Back in New York after having been held in jail for 11 days in Figueras, Spain, on suspicion of being a spy, Josephine Winter, 25-year-old American ambulance ver, told newsmen that all pretty blondes are suspected as spies in Spain. She had been driving an ambulance at Bor- deaux. | left the Channel was the yacht Ger with a ,party aboard from Sacramento. The Sacramento party | has been in Juneau for the past | week, - BOUND FOR WHITEHORSE Gordon H. Anderson and Mrs. Anderson were passengers aboard the Princess Charlotte enroute to Whitehorse after spending several months in the south, - > BUY DEFENSE BONDS A series- about your daily food needs based on the National search Council's new dietary yardstick CALCIUM: (lime), which givi is TOMATOES 013 oz One of the principal constituents of bone is calcium s strength and rigidity. The blood clot without it and it ; helps in building soft tissues. A definite amount needed daily must be replaced. 8 gram WOMEN: .8 SMALL CHILDREN: Up to 9 ‘years—1 10-12 years—1.2 GIRLS (over 12 years) 13-15 years—1.3 16-20 years—1 BOYS (over 12 years) 1320 years—1.4 Salcium nlw is found in suitable quantity in buttermilk, drued dried beans, oranges, spinach, maple syrup, celery, cab- II not e “WHITE BREAD 3 slices—.026 b — CAULIFLOWER 4 ounces—.147 CHEESE 1 ounc bage and. eggs.) (Clip This For Reference) GUESS WHM' HATS FOR COMING FALL Loex lII(E HATS Coque feathers, lhlny nem and bluk :vm wwnrds in wll‘llnl lines, making something sensational out of this snug black felt. !ilm ? nie Simon designed it. You'll be meeting clouds of feathers on fall millinery, now um l.he Audubon Society has pnade peace with the o " wu i3 v BY AP FASHION EDITOR A hat is a hat this fall, for a change. I mean if you just ran into one somewhere you'd think right away, “It's a hat,” and not, as you may have done in the past, “It's a saucepan,” “It’s a bird,” “It's' a scottie” or “It’s a—I give up, you tell me.” Not that there’s anything stuffy about the millinery designs launched at the early fall show- ings, but somehow most of the offerings conform, more or less, to the shape of the head. The usual assortment of monkey fur, mink, sequins, fringe and feath- ers 'shoots off at a tangent, but the base is always there, snug and solid on your head. Defiance of the pompadour is part of the reason for the fit-the- head trend. Sally Victor has worked out a snug silhouette with a little disk that settles down over the brow, and where the disk settles a pom- padour can't be. However, part of a pompadour can show at either side, aleng with a fine sweet of hair back, over the ears. Madame Pauline suggests a draped jersey fez with a point in front. You can wear this straight across the brow, with no hair showing at all, or, it .can be perchéd, as of old, back of bangs or' pompadowr. * Feathers are rampant, now that the Audubon Society and the feath- er manufacturers have reached a compromise, releasing -certain wild bird plumage which has been taboo for years. Many milliners sponsor wide pro- file brims, sweeping up high on . ape, side, down ©On the other. They have a Gainsborough flavor. Upward, lorwlli., sideways, north by nor'east by north — is the way i the fashion winds blow big brims for fall. You see the possibilities in this H‘ black beret designed by Madame Pauline. Wear it and people will mention the lovely profile you didn’t know you had, .,-I"A‘ Battling With Hard Fists... 'CAGNEY IS TOP STAR OF "CITY FOR CONQUEST - Story Is Based on Widely | Read Novel by Kandel | | at 20th Century Newest, in the line-up of hit films is “City for Conquest,” co-starring James Cagney and Ann Sheridan in | a masterful story of the world’s big- gest city. “City for Conquest,” which is based on Aben Kandels widely read novel of the same name, will have its first local showing tonight af, the 20th Century Theatre. New York is the “City for Con- quest’ and the busy, swarming ' many-facted city serves not only as the background — but as a central part of the vital story, which is told as seen through the eyes of “Old Timer,” a sage roving New York's streets and alleys. His eyes miss little and his philosophical mind leaves little for him to misunder- ‘stand about the big city. Frank Craven portrays the “Old Timer.” In “City for Conquest,” Jim Cag- ney plays the starring role, with Ann Sheridan as his co-star. His broth- er, Bill Cagney, is the associate pro- ducer under whom Director Anatole Litvak brought the story to the screen. Hal B. Wallis, executive producer at Warner Bros., is the man who saw the screen possibilities /in the story, after Bill Cagney had |been carrying Kandel's volume | around with him for four years, try- |ing to gain the interest of some | major film studio, in producing it. | Others featured in the cast of the | film are Frank Craven, Donald | Crisp, Frank McHugh, Arthur Ken- | | nedy, George Tobias, Jerome Cowan, Joyce Compton, Anthony Quinn, Lee | Patrick and many other famous plnyeru. i SE(OIID MASTER LIST, SELECTEES " RECEIVED HERE The second master®list of selectee | | i i | i 1 | place in Washington, D. C,, on July | 1 has been received by the board in Juneau. | There are 34 on the list for the Juneau district and these will be * | integrated on the former Juneau list of 1416 for Juneau at the rate of every 42. This means the first num- | ber will be after 42. The new list, order number first and serial number second, i3 as fol- | lows, Order Serial | No. No. 8- 966 S- |8- 924 S- 8-1176 S- $-1092 S- |8-1008 8- S- 882 S- Olsen, Orwoll Andrew Woolman, Claude Roy Oppen, James J. | Bokn, Anton ! Bauernfeind, Merlin N. Ritter, Grant Kem- merling Slagle, John Vernon Furuness, Iver William Bingham, Roland James Erbe, Richard Charles Schmuck, Henry Wil- ton | Ramsey, William Stev- | enson Tarrant, Paul McCul- | land Hanson, Robert Ernest Hellan, Thomas Wal- ter Hasu, 2dwin George Melvin, Bennie John S- 126.8-18 Aarhus, Lyle Burton | 8- 756 S-19 Huffaker, Alton Wil- | y ford l 1 2 3 4 5 6 S- 836 8- 7 5-1260 S- 8 5- 428-9 420 §-10 84 s-11 B- 8- 8- 546 S-12 8- 504 S-13 8- 630 S-14 8-1050 S-15 8- 672 8-16 8- 168 8-17 | 8- 840 S-22 | drafting registratfon which took . }i S- 378 S-20 Huben, Herbert Joseph August Zenger, Alfred Loy Lindoff, James Reischl, David Weary Geyer, Robert Joseph Wallace, Wendell Mor~ gan Janson, John, Jr, ‘Williams, John, Jr. Alstead, John Axelson, Wayne Bern- ard Dietrichs, Peter John Cottrell, Thomas Bar- ton Smith, Jack M. Hughes, Stanley Mnt.suo, Jon Tnkash\m S~ 798 S-21 S- 714 S-23 S-1302 S-24 462 S-25 S- 210 S-26 S-1218 8-27 S- 204 S-28 S- 252 S-29 S-1344 S-30 S- 588 S-31 5-1416 S-32 5-1134 8-33 $-1386 S-34 DEFENSE WORKERS WARNED NOT 10 TRY JOB CHANGES Another warning was issued to- day from Joseph T .Flakne, Direc~ tor of Territorial Employment hers, to the effect that defense project ! workers should nof leaye work at one defense project with the ex- pectation of being hired on an- other. Movement, of workmen who at- tempt to leave one project for an- other is piling up groups of un- employed men in Alaskan Flakne pointed out. He again called attention to tha recent ruling which made defense workers who have quit one project ineligible to go to work on an- other defense project. The ruling, hé declared, was meant to prevent the needless movemen! of nrojec workers, D ARNOLD BACK C. B. Arnaold, former manager of radio station KINY, returned to, Juneau on the Yukon for a short ! business trip here. Arnold, connected with the Northwest Radlo Advertis- \ing, is stopping at the Gastineau Hotel. cities, | ., e T Where the Better BIG Pictures Play! 750 eNTuRy 4 BIG DAYS 4 STARTING TONIGHT LAST TIME TONIGHT ‘““HIGH SCHOOL’’ Late News—Shorts Jim Orme Forms Transfer Company; Has Headquarters A new delivery and truck qrvlce for Juneau is announced today by, | James Orme, formerly owner of the' Sanitary Refuse Company. The busi- |'ness will be known as the Jim Ormeé Transfer. Mr. Orme reports that the new company will have headquarters at the Parsons Dlectric Company store |on South Scward Street and the’ phone number of the new business is 98. The Sanitary Refuse Company business has been purchased by the Peterson Refuse Company, aceord- ing to Orme, and the deal was ef- feciive yesterday. | Reconstruction of his truck was | completed last week, and the new | eompany is now doing business with | new equipment, starting today. G Miss Doris Clark Is - Honored, Birthday Tn honor of her thirteenth birth~ day, Miss Doris Clark was feted at a party given by her mother, Mrs. Frank Clark. The affair was given | 4L the home of Mis. J. W. Mo~ Kinley, Approximately 20 guests were present for an afternoon of games 'and dancing, and freshments were | served. Miss Clark received many lovely gifts from her friends. e BUY DEFENSE BTAMH Crossword Puzzls 1 Mavr Y 31 Conjunction , Conjunct o 2 A on e ive 9. dolf instrustor: 42 %n.. 2. Safotadon &8 ho takes 18, Olfl -omnl-n ?«'fl i 3 ‘l‘urkl b ca 15 Fastening o1 3 Foaten 16. Plant of ‘the 81 Botoh * et w.ur My 52 The herb eve family 54. Contended with 15 Fhicectioszea 5. Oppo ree-) 50 stand - o2 Gone by 20. 63. Ethical 22. Takes the chlef 65. Rowing Im-~ meal plement 24. Humor 66. Large wagon 25. Omit 67. Make speeches: 27. Pouch humorous 29. Fruit of the 63 Rubber tr urd tamily §3. Bpoch 82. Fails to keep 70. Hindu princess 3t Biony'utens 7 Understana uq-fll 1 /'Hlll‘ dudEE flld%fl iIII///fllII. ! |1]L IoIoILIT] STAILTATATH I610|WiS] WIAIN| H 6L [EID) ufl'i”u lm Solution 01 Vlmrfiy’l P_l.' DOWN 3. Armentan devil 1. Cause to float worabipers.. gen 4. Drawing reom 2. Declare 5. Positive elec~ I-I'l poles A-xrlnnnt salt . Stiteh in TANI dish 3 :d _contest 3 earisome Femipine. name . Salt of * borle acld 3 rm.cnu cov- = mflll L]