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N | | | \\ E RN\’X Billie BURKE A1 1 ALSO Lone Strangers Waldo's Last Stand He Asked For It LATEST NEWS | then complained: “Wouldn't you know it? Fifteen|ine cagt are Dan Dailey, Jr. as Miss | wall, .. A laughing Maiter . . JACK BENNY'S Favorite Story years in this place and on the day| I'm supposed to get out,” I have to cut my head off.” (»\P lcdlurn Service) HOSPITAL NOIES had i g Young Joul Johnson had his ton- e e e et e “,: sils removed this morning at 3 % Ann’s Hospital. hi departure, he arose ca to the bathro 1 N i shave. While thus er a mo-| Mrs. Robert Duncalfl and her | torist drove up outside and began baby son were dismissed from St to Bonk the horn, Our } 16 i | Ann’s Hospital this morning out of the window and recognized | e hi cr, come to take him| Mrs. Henry Jenkins and her baby 1 | boy left Ann’s Hospital this| a minute” he yelled, “I'm morning for their home on the| sheving and will be right out.! He Highway in the Lemon Creek val- ley. Sanders, a medical pa Ann’s Hospital, w morning. Manus tient at St dismissed this John Jacobs was dismissed from St. Ann’s Hospital today after re- ceiving sur al treatment. Ellsworth Jensen left St. Ann's Hospital today after receiving med- ical treatment. i Minnie Brown was admitted to the Government Hospital yesterday | for medical attention and was dis missed this morning. d back to his mirror but after e of minutes the horn again up its incessant honking. Irri- the fellow again went to the “All right, all ac set tated, window and shouted, Margaret Fawcett underwent a tonsilectomy this morning at the; SRS B B R . | Government Hospital. | ne turnea Irom ihe window AL t sudden jerk by his| d the mirs | NOTICE ble to complete his sk Attention Bartenders! Special| hero looked long and des- meeting Thursday, August 28, 1| at blank adv. mirrorless p.m., AF of L Hall. STUBBY...QUART...0R DRAUGET! Any way you buy it, you can always be sure that Olympia is mild, refreshing, flavorful, clean tasting—a different and beter beer. For nearly half a century Olympia’s conception of the brewing art has been to cre- ate a light ye satisfying beer. Modern facilitics have played cheir part, as have premium quality ingredicnts, the skill of our scasoned brewmasters ..and, above all, the rare waters from our subterrane- an wells. Observe those who enjoy Olympia—you'll always find it in good company. Have you had your Olympia today? . | “It’s the Watcr '\ this city. /has been remitted to New York| |mittee letter, IN "DULCY" AT CAPITOL NOW| Gay Comedy of Wealthy | | Girl with Heart aof. Gold 1 Also Has lan Hunter | | With Ann Sfllhvn\ as its star, Dulcy,” heralded as setting a new high in hilarity, will open at the Capitol Theatre tonight. The popu- | comedienne is supported by a strong cast and the combination of ot, situations and dialogue is ac- med sure-fire for one of the pst picture in a blue moon ' is the story of a modern woman who believes in the that humanity should ex- ltend a helping hand to others. But when she attempts to sell an ai plane motor and run the romantic affairs of two couples in addition to herself, she runs into uproarious difficulties, The film finds Miss | Sothern in a different type of role. Tempoxanl\ dropping her “Maisie”;| clnmctnizmmm the new Miss So- | thern appears in Adrian N\rdxobev and chic hair style: Ian Hunter, whose excellent per- formances are well known is seen as Miss Sothern’s leading | man, a young inventor who has |perfected ‘a type of airplane motor i the arm. The two were sitling |capable of running on kerosene. The fact that he falls heir to a five- year-old hinese boy makes edy. Roland Young portrays the airplane magnate, Roger Forbes. His wife is played by Billie Burke and his daughter by Lynne Carver. Reginald Gardiner offers another gem of comedy portrayal as a | slightly demented gentleman with 'ing, wounding both men before he illusions of grandeur. Completing Sothern’s brother, Donald Huie, Jonathan Hale, Guinn “Big Boy” Williams and Hnns‘ Conreid. British War < Relief From Juneau Grows Bundles for r Brifain Contri- butions Here $1,379 Since February o.| Juneau contributions to Bundles declared for Britain have totaled $1,379.80 |since February according to a lrLLcr‘ !distributed to donors this week by the local committee. The letter, signed by the Rev. | John L. Cauble, George Sundborg and H. L. Faulkner, thanked those | who have contributed and urged| that the effort should not be slack- ened. The Juneau Chapter has adopted the Memorial Hospital at| | Woolwich, one of 19 London hos-| pitals suported by Bundles for “Brit- ain, as the recipient of funds from| Every dollar subscribed headquarters. Nothing has been de-| ducted for expenses. The committee states that Juneau could well contribute several times| the amount now. being coqlrsbuwdl‘ |and asks that all interested in help-| ing this humanitarian cause address donations to the Rev. JoHa L. Cauble. 3 “With the battle of the Atlantic |V tecoming increasingly 'vital in, the fight which Britain' is, making . for our common defense,” the com- says, “and with. the| certainty of renewed intensive| British Isfes ‘this fall, ‘Bundles for Britain must gear its organjzation to the probability of vastly in- \creased needs for aid to civilians!:’ financially ruined “and physically | injured and maimed. The maintenance of the morale of the British people is of paramount importance to the defense of.Amer- ica; much more important ‘than hundreds of other undertakings, worthy in themselves, but of ‘sec- is successful in his campaign agmn st Russia and the time comes,.which jected to a strain which results in peace upon the best terms obtain- | able, then what is in store for America? 7 ial things, the comfort; demand and enjoy will be gone, and in our feyerish efforts of, prepara- tion to carry on the struggle alone on two oceans, ‘we shall have to submit to sacrifice’ and 'hardships, discomforts and risks ‘and finglly to the destruction of property and life which . is’ presently the lot. of the British alone’ GOES' TO WHITEHORSE Miss “Anna “ B.''How wab 4 pas- senger on the Princess Charlotte for ‘Whitehorse. FROM POWELL RIVER Mr. and Mrs. John William Purdy of Powell River, B. C., where VISITORS WIICQME AT *One of America's Excepional B ios® i “YI”" “i"'!"? €Q- ¥ QUYMPIA. WASH. Y. $. A they make paper, are round trip- pers aboard the Prircess Charlotte. ' ———ee———— “BUY MEFENSE STAMPS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 27, 1941. ARM SOTHERN 'lAVAl SHOTBY his | position in the film tops for com- ! bembing of cities and tewns in the | ondary importance. Supparse’ * Hitler it soon may, when England is sib- |- The unnecessary things, the triv- | s and pleas-| 1 ures, the standards of lfiving We now |i TEXAS FLIER SHOOTS DOWN TWO GERMANS LONDON, Aug. 27—Pilot Of- ficor William Robert Dunn, of the American Eagle squadron, shot down two German fighter planes teday. Dunn, a fermer airline flier out of Housten, Texas, is suf- fering from a bullet wound in the foot as a result of the sky COMMUNIST AT VERSAILLES Ex-Premier Is Hit in Chest While Recruiting | Volunteers VICHY, Aug. 27—Pierre Laval, 58, | | former vice-premier under Marshall . battle, the Air Ministry re- [based on the J {ERiAIn, aug leadnk (French, B oreg, |“Persons in Hidl opening to- | ponent of strong ‘collaboration with pe w o e | Germany, was shot this morning ->> night at the 20th Century Thea- as he attended an anti-Communist w 'h B o i demonstration in German-occupied ea e' ureau The story stems from the reve-{ Versailes, | Shot in the chest, Laval was re-| {ported sericusly wounded, however | doctors said they believed he will| live arage space which Have you any Shot at the same time, although|!S:lated to be vacant this winter |less ceriously hurt, was Marcel ¢ you can put the space to {Deat, former air minister and right- WOk for you il * Prensh *Jourhalist, " who, iied "“The Weather Bureau yesterday for bids on storage of| |Laval, was a leading collaborationf®dvertised - | ldst. in autcmobile from September 1 to June 30 next year, or whatever 4/portion of that time is desired. Bids on the garage space will be opened riday at 2 p. m. at the Weather Bureau offices in the Federal| To Fight Russians | Laval, the swarthy, white-tie politician who brought Petain and |Hitler together after the armistice, was shot in the arm and the body, whil> Deat received only a wound Building. he bid call specifies that the age be steam heated and in a fireproof building, the bids are to be based on a monthly fee for the storage of the machine. - - Mnll(;‘\N FLIES NORTH Thomas Morgan, manager of the Columbia Lumber Company in Ju- neau, left for a business trip to beside each other receiving |istrations from Anti-Communist fight in a volunteer force along- side Germany in the war against |Russia, when the shooting occured. | At the time, French legionnaires were taking oaths of allegiance. In the midst of the ceremony, a man identified as Paul Colette, 21, a Communist, arose and started fir- lmrbf‘“ks AR I g morning on a northhound PAA could be overpowered ol | D - Reports said that doctors have ex- | tracted the bullet from Laval's chest and fhat he asked to talk with his wife by telephone. Anti-Communis¢ Courts | The shooting eccurred on the very day when newly established anti~ ;Cnmmuuisl courts began functlon- Berner's Bay s of reported Com- ON INSPECTION TRIP Harold Smith, Divisional Super- visor of the Tongass National For- est for the Department of Agricul- ture, left aboard the Marmot yes- terday for inspection trip in an - {munist activity in France. Many INSPECTING CITY i | hundreds of Communists have been | Steve McCuteheon, of the De-| larrested in both occupied and un- |partment of Labor, made a rou-| uuupml France as there is a grow- | tine m\pulmn of the city today |ing manifestation of opposition to —— collaboration with the Germans. A number of persons described as Jews and Communists have been arresteds | in the fourth ward of German-occu- | pied Paris. | Colette told authorities he had joined the legion of anti-Communist X\'uluntvm's simply to have an oppor- tunm to shoot collaborationist lead>! |ers. Arriving in Versailles this mm-nfl Tk |ing, he volunteered for the sole pur- | | pose of “shooting down” Laval, he U.S. Envoy to Slam - ., Alaska Is Now JuneauBound ey SEATTLE, Aug. 27—Steamer Al-| aska ‘safled at 10 o'clock this fore-| noon for Alaska with'204 first cla; land 24 steerage passengers aboard.| Passengers, booked for Juneau in-| clude the following: } Col. G. W. Rathgene, R. M. Ham- | mer and wife, Mrs. Nanny Woods, Marjorie Tillotson, Mrs. J. E. Luff- wian, Miss Luffman. Diane DeWitt, Mrs. C. A. Fox,| Bllly Pelozan, Mrs, Julia Williams, | New United States minister L, T Llndenmeyer the Rev. A.| Thajland (Siam) is Willys R. Peelt: | $ch;id H. Tyrwhitt, Robert H. of California, who has been serving | Hyman, | as counselor of the American Em- ' Charlotte Corrlyne | bassy in China. He succeeds Hugh Willys R. Peck sbevengon Srnlth Mrs. Cou.rtney Smith and:'fi. Grant, resigned. Britain and two chtldren Phil Norest, Helen' the United States have warned | Japan against invasion of Thailand, | [CTU[PICIEID]AIRINDIATY] |AINIANNAIL] IN[ERNEIG]O] L[ARIMVIA[P[TIOIICIOIR] | iMUTSILIVINJIMIAIN[ATGE IN[TILIL[UINTAIR] 35. ' Edge jalv]1 IDIlGIAISIIVIEIGIA| 25, Bagks of boata RITPIEB[VINIlBIAIS]I(C] 1& 8% A ares, i [rilicioGle|AlL BIATH] l’!viggr'ol 4. ‘Contral part ialvVESHURNIIONE] | 1, x.f:‘:"w o4 Stinme siLio/Tlo/o/cANIvIS S o A8, Bonemizn ro- L[ |TIERMEC] [T] 18 11:8&# P5Rer Sg Gggufigmggg . pimiguive x:"o.,mp:}..,{',‘:‘,‘" El INGIT( OlE[SHT AN 21 Handls " Crom it [rlolcMSICIANITIoIRIA] b cls “pa: l:tr']c Y’md Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle Bi-'itg;n Certaln g0, Figures of DOWN Rigpmes speech 1. Allowance for 23‘ fl u)ru) the 61 . Alkaloid In the alabar bean 62. Horses Driest shrinkage . Body of ! advisers ‘Turkish name Free Playing cards . Spanish wine shops Repeated 20, Pu ll ltol’l- P Sword prac- tice stake . Sphere Indifferent to pleasure or pain . Regards . June bug . Trappers . Has ambitions Colors again Note of Guldo's FS » = n oo o hfllll/fl”l” o i 8 amm 7y T Frel T AT JuENZ oS scale Eternity Limit: comb, form Plans 7. Traveler 38, Depresses . Instants | Optical iMue | sions . Thinnest S %llmnln‘ form Ty Greater W amount w/ | T |65 Tmitaty) W.arq!s Garage - |of clemency | | ole |situation when Wayne, as a weal- ‘ALL WOMEN ARE | The tea will take place between 2| gan, COMEDY AND CRIME NOW AT 20TH CENTURY Two Feaiures Are 6-Men m "Parole Fixer” and | "ladies Must Live” | law puts the public enemies but racketeers of law to prey on soclety ! TWO GOOD Feature Pictures WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY The | behind bars, release them | again! ! That's the point made by thef Paramount drama, “Parole Fixer,” r Hoover book, | lation by the Director of the Fed-| al Bureau of Investigation that| over one-quarter of the nation’s| criminals are men who have been parole or other forms| favored by The workings of an actual par-| ring are revealed in’ “Parole| Fixer.” The plot of the show deals | with a kidnaping committed by two! criminals on parole. G-Men enter the case andround ' up their criminals and the higher- ups who were assisting them, through scientific deduction nnd, | sheer bravery. The second feature, “Ladies Must Live,” co-stars Wayne Morris and Rosemary Lane in two of the most| sparkling roles of the year. | The picture provides a WAYNE unique Secets immediately accuses Rosemary of | A WARNER BROS. - First Na Directed by Noel S We say: ; EVERYONE ° LI JUAUGHS ~.i] Lavughs, thythm sed # double order of ro- mancel...It's got what MORRIS ROSEMARY LANE Roscoe KARNS « Lee PATRIGK REEVES Picture 'thy youth, “invites an old friend ] Orren Py Rt B Kamt Prom 1he ey by Goorts M. Grtan from his home town to act as et ag Hl ol THS ZEdmlms Late World News friend, played by Roscoe Karns, being a gold digger and claims that] - her family is playing Wayne for| COLISEUM — Last Time Tonight — “INSPECTOR HORNLEIGH" B “Ladies Must Live” was adapted for the screen by Robert E. Kent, from a play by George M. Cohan. DA T (N 'Cockfail Party fo In honar of Miss Stephenie Dres- en, who 1s visiting Miss Nell Mc- Closkey, ‘Miss McCloskey and Mr. and Mrs. Charlés Sabin are enter- taining 'a number of friends at a INVITED 10 TEA, 'WOMAN'S CLUB | cocktail party 'this afternoon. | The affair is ‘to be given in the All women of the community are!Sabin home on Seventh Street be- invited to the Woman’s Club Wel-|tween the hours of 5 and 7 o'- come Tea tomorrow, the first social ' clock. event for the s on of that gmup,} Miss Dresen comes from Wauke- Mich.,, and the time of her and 5 o'clock in the Scottish Rite|stay is indefinite. Temple. | R o Past presidents of the organiza- IN ON . ? CHARLOTTE HinfaiL D mmflm"'i Robert J. Burns of Fairbanks ar- and a musical program has been 1 arranged with piano, violin nnd\”vm iBJungat yesterday: o - the YGORY. SRleRtIONE; | northhound Princess Charlotte after a trip to the States. ek adlgignge S NORI.“E Bov Subiecriny, 1o, e (DALY - Alaaky ' Honor Miss Dresen| Radio Player Weds ;’hnhion o! tl:r:'udi Bo;jl Tolinson | Perry, known o listeners as Be::,Jahmn, and Peter J. Fick, former U. 8. Olympie star, was announced in Elkins, Va., by her parents, (wur State Senator and Mrs. H. J. Johnson, SCOUTTRO0p | | IS T0 MEET Members of the Norlite Boy | Scout Troop will meet tonight, ac- cording to a call issued this morn- ing. The meeting will be at 7:30 o'~ clock in the Northern Light Pres- byterian Church parlors and all Scouts of the troop are urged to be present. i R FLY TO SITKA Robert E. Yaw and Elmer Sticht, who arrived from the south last night on the Pripcess Charlotte, flew to. their home in Sitka today. Heads Air Station Daily A PlllCnchiuelil Commander Edward 0, McDonapll tands at tlonuth stang nlt‘m n&x&y in comma ‘the | ‘sir mdon at Floyd Bennett ' H-Id. New. York City. His was _ordered to report. 10 ‘ ‘Nmolk' Vay o5 08 duty, Duily Delivery of the ?m Boat If You 'nl laska Empire PHONE 374--Jlmeall At the Empire Printing, Company H. R. “SHORTY" WHITFIELD, Owner