The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 3, 1941, Page 3

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MONDAY. NOVEMBER 3, 1941, e RENE DUNNE, | CARY GRANTIN . CAPITOL FIlM( ‘Penny Serenade Is De-i lightful Story.of Man and | Girl, Married Troubles | screen's Nfl“’ ! Irene and Cary Grant nost popu- | reunited | rom wo of A exciting tevens ('( lumbia’s “Pen: E | Based upon Martha Cheaven's delightful magazine nov- el of a carefree, irresponsible news- and his wife, and agap! by Morrie Ryskind, the film| © opened yesterday at the Cap-! ol Theatre, is an absorbingly hu-| nan and tender love story as aeartwarming as life itself Cencerned with such delightful | s as the ecstatic courtship ot a boy and gnl their l\onc\moun‘ and their years together, “Perny Sf'rendde" possesses a ring | »f reality which makes it romance | | that is everything a love story |should be. The newspaperman's casual attitude toward life, the de- new with BEULAH EDGAR ANN | mands of his job, the near-disas-| BONDI * BUCHANAN * DORAN (o which ends their honeymoon Based on the McCall's Mogozine novel | y A by Marthe Cheavens the infant they adopt and the A COLUMBIA PICTURK |tempt to run—all these and more provide the dramatic material for| ALSO LATEST NEWS|: vivia and memorabic fiim Supporting the stars ar= | Beulah Bondi, as the spinster . uperintendent of an orphanage underland Services | v news te coute throusn tecar nd financial entanglements. Edgar gei !or Wednesda | Buchanan is equally effective as Yl 057 v y the lovable “friend of the family,” the linotype operator whose human Funer ices for Ingvald Sun- | understanding helps Grant and « have been arranged for | Miss Dunne through their diffizul- \ noon at 2 oclock it | ties, and Ann Doran is seen to day. and the Rev.|advantage as the music store sales- w. H will conduet the|girl who brings the couple to- servic gether. mnderland is survived by his wife e ——— brother in Juneau, a sister rocklyn, New York, and two erment will be in Evergreen .o Tax Returns Soon Ready te § | was dismissed from AT Hospital care. of the proposed new chorge e tax form has received from ' the Treasury Department by the Internal Rev- enue Collector of Washington and Alaska, with a statement that Sec- was admitted to St ast night and under- Ann’s Hospita ent surgery this morning retary Morgenthau has approved regulations covering its use Fred Orme, who has been a med- This form may be used by persons ical patient at St. Ann’s Hospital, whcse income in 1941 does not ex- leaving today for Seattle to re- ceed $3,000 and is derived wholly ccive treatment there. from salaries, wages, other compen- S—— sation for personal services, divis-| Wade Lacey was admitted to St. dends, interests, rents, annuities or Ann’s Hospital yesterday for medical ttention EsLatcs trusts and non-resident aliens may not usc the form Kuni The new return, known as Form St. Ann's Hospital for care of |1040-A, replaces the old Form 1040- ctured leg. A, used heretofore by taxpayers having gross incomes of $5,000 or Johnny Ardina, a medical patient less. at £t. Ann’s Hospital, was dismissed | Persons whose income for this yesterday: as admitted yester- !vear exceeds $3,000, as well as those who choose not to use this form, and Mrs, Charles Fawcett are will use the larger Form 1040, which rents of a baby girl born this 'also is to be revised and simplified. Mr the morning in the Government Hos- Fifty million copies of Form 1040- pital | A, printed on both sides of a single P sheet, have been ordered and are| NOTICE expected to be in the hands of col- AIRMALL ENVELOPES, showing €Ctors by January 1. I air route from Seattle to Nome, on at J. B. Burford" & Co. adv. SITTING UP IN BED relieves gas pressure, but you won't get much sleep that way! If gas pains, due to occasional constipation, cause restless nights, get ADLERIKA; its Qc;rn:imtiveam:?hugivnlue all: family and $1,500 for .a m'uned‘ right for gas and lazy bowels. Get |person or head of a family ADLERIKA today. 4 | Married persons not living with | Butler-Mauro Drug Co. {their spouses and married persons “The Rexall Store” ,whose spouces file separate returns Guy's Drugs in Douglas (arc classed as single persons for | 2 !purposes of the table. Status of a| Iperson on the last day of the year 1gcverns in determining the exemp-| |uon level as well as the credit for | | dependents. Tax is the same for each $25 blcck cf gross income. For example a single person (not head of a fam- |ily) having gross income between |$2300 and $2,325, with no depend- | |ents, will pay $13200. A married { person or head of a family in that et will pay $65.00. the amount of tax on increasing| |amounts lowing a $40 credit for each de- pendent, if any. It reflects auLu--; matically no tax for gross income; sale | The amount of tax in each blogk in this manner: amount of in- |was determined Tax cn the aver: come in such block, computed at| crdinary rates and with a 10 per cent earned income credit allowed for, ncrmal tax pyrposes, was re- Cueed by 10 per cent (because de- l ductionss and certain credits are allcwed) and was lixed at the nearest dollar. | 1s optional. | WE'D LIKE TO you what a {ine job show we do on Christmas personalized cards, We'd like a chance to prove . Use of Form 1040-A that our work is more Once a taxpayer uses it for any distinctive, more attrac- vear, however, he cannct substitute tive, and more economi- another form for the same year cal. We'd like to make Conversely, however, ne cannot | your Christmas cards . . . use Form 1040-A for that year. 3 - A MAY WE. American sailors will have { do without canned asparagus dui- M P ing thg coming fiscal year. Unfa- 4 L vorable’ ldbor conditions during ! he " canning “seasoh’ resulted 'in a price rise from approximately 11 Prln‘tlng CO‘ cents to 21 cents when bids we: e opened in. July for 4,000,000 pound | bis A hea of Fran, house. N TRUCK vy dump truck, skidding off a wet street over a co Chavez's home in Los Angel ither the BEAUTY ——— Califo Arms ---and Hips r That simple old exerc is back in the Here's the posture peppe then extends her arms stands up slewly, then repeats 'Robert Turner Here health. pret Jane -upper . ben ying-up pictur Randolph of She ste her For Week's Visit Robert Turner, A table on the reversz side shows Turner of Juneau, night from Anchorage Denali last of gross income after al-|to attend the funeral which morning has | Uess credit for dependents) not in‘rm- over a year, jexcess of the exemption levels—$750 | own taxi and deli: |for a single person not head of a|At ])]pxgnl he has three pas: father, tomorrow Turner son of Mrs. H. J arrived on the services for will take place been in Anchorage 1d is operating his y <crvice there. nger truck driver, C. e of bending THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE. SPLITS HOUSE EIN AL e 50-foct crashed into the livirg room s while th: [a y and all but demolished the L. Blackford, members of the Chavev family were injured. Red Cross Drive fo Soon Start Beale Is Named Campaign Manager of This District : Mrs. Burdick Is Aide The Red berskip will embankment, was a dinner Cross oon drive for men Ju- Charles D. Beale has t chairman of the 1ty Mrs. Charle have charge of Mrs, Burdick will short- ly appoint her committees to cove ctions of this city Kelly Foss, Wife Will Visit Juneau sen named Juneau Chapter i his first Juneau, Enroute to the States, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence (Kelly) 0ss, for- merly of Anchorage, will arrive in Juneau tonight on the steamer Aleutian Foss, brother of Harold Foss, Ju- ; the knees and swinging the neau architect, lived in Juneau for e because of defense emphasis several years and has many friends motion pictures in her version of |here, Mrs. Foss, the former Eliza inds erect with arms at her sides, |beth Tranahan, was an instructor knees and sits on her heels. She | in the Sitka Public Schools before he exercise. her marriage. . e — cars and a delivery truck ,and ! JUNEAU LADIES’ AUXLLIARY | another car on the way MEETING TOMORROW NIGHT Turner plans to stay in Juneau, Members of the Juneau Ladies’ about a week before returning the Auxiliary, No. 34, are planning an P A important business meeting tomor- row night in the home of Mrs. Dave ORGANIZATION TO HOLD Carison at Thane. All members are REGULAR BU S ME 7:30 o'clock to arrange transporta- The Women's Society for Christ- jan Services is holding a regular !ion business meeting tomorrow nighl s § T at 7:30 o'clock, and members will One job of the Technical Aide meet in the parlors of the Meth- 0 the Se ry of the Navy is iomsv Church. As business is being 'eviewing inventions and 1dcas conducted, members will knit and submitted to the Navy for ap- sew. proval urged to be at the Union Hall at| )UNl AU, A!fi& THRII.lS COMEDY "HERE COMES . THE NAVY" FiIM | James Cagney, Pat 0'Brien | Head Cast of Two-Fisted | Show at 20th Century Ben Markson's excit- which combines romance rollicking comedy, rapid fire action |and breath-taking thrills, “Here Comes the Navy,” with James Cag- |ney and Pat O'Brien, now playing at the 20th Century, is said to be| | one of Warner Bros.' most tremen- | Based ing story on {dous productions. 1 Cagney and O'Brien, two sea- {men, are the bitterest of enemies Jimmy having jolned the Navy just for hance to get even with O'- | Brien who has knocked him cold in | 2 fistic encounter and stolen his | 2in), a part played by Dorothy ‘ Irec add fuel to their hatred, Jimmy falls in with a beau tiful girl (Gloria \unh who turns out to be his ene s sister. Many of the thrilling scenes were shot on board an actual U. S \)d“ll’\h.p and for the first time in pictu the whole gigantic Pacific fleet is seen, weighing anchor and steam- out of its harbor. Besides a large and capable cast, three theusand gobs take active part in the picture. While the pic- ture is largely melodramatic thrills, trore is plenty of hilarious comedy | supilied by the principals, Cagney and O'Brien, and Frank McHugh, and Dorothy T Gloria Stuart | helds up the romantic end witn | o/ / as the persistent suitor. Lloyd Bacon directed the pic~ ture from the screen play by Be: Markson and Earl Baldwin, 2 oo — GIRL SCOUT ACTIVITIES SUCCESSFUL Activities of Girl Scout week, ob- served in Juneau throughout, the nation, were highly successful here accoerding to Mrs. Robert J. Scho- ettler, chairman of the Central Committee, who extends her thanks to the public for the committee for their cooperaticn. The cookie sale conducted during the week, when 1,000 boxes of cookies were offered for ale at local grocery stores, and | PAGE THREF Where the Beiter BIG Pictures Play LENTURY (] THE HiT! THE STA THE FLEE All Amer AGAIN TflNlGflT GLORIA STUART | ERANK lfilfllfi" e LT ACO - & RANNER B e e » COLISEUM ———— City Defense Forces Need 3More Memliers {Ranks of Juneau Minute- Men Should Be Doubled, F. A. Metcalf Declares A few over 200 men are now en- rolled in the Civic Defense Unit in Juneau, according to Frank Metcalf, | defense chief in the city, and about ‘twice that number are needed to form an adequate defense guard | organization | In Ketchikan, about 500 men are |enrolled as defense force for the | city, Metcalf pointed out. He urged | Juneau men in all sections of the | eity to see him in the City Engineer’s cffice at the City Hall and sign up for defense duty here. | At a meeting of Civic Defense Unit | directors held yesterday, three of the larger and more important of the |city's 32 defense districts, were split linto sub-districts for more facility | in handling the patrol work, Metcalf |declared. A second drill of the de- -lcnse squads will be held some cve- n\ng early this week, Metcalf said, |with both the Alaska Juneau mine 1siren and the old city fire bell to be used as a signal to start the ! drill. Stressed at the meeting ycsLerday\ was the fact that all food supplies are now being stored in warehouses along the waterfront, where they could be easily destroyed by sabot- eurs. It was also brought up that if this nation becomes actively en- gaged in the war, a number of the ships now serving the Territory may | be drafted for transport,work, thus leaving a shortage of shipping facil- ities to Alaska and a resultant short- | | age of food deliveries, 1 With war, also, it was pointed out, | [N "TUGBOAT ANNIE SA!LS AGAIN" Worker 100 Affer You A 19-year-old Alaska Juneau mine worker this morning was fined $100 on a charge of driving while under the influence of liquor and warned by U. S, Commissioner Felix Gray that a second offense of the same nature would be punished by a maxi- mum jall sentence. The young man was A. B. Bloom, who came here the middle of the summer from Mount Vernop, Wash- ington, A slender sapling groy(lng along the Glacler Highway near Norway Point was all that saved Bloom and a girl accompanying him from plunging in Bloom’s auto gver a 12-foot bank about a mile and a half north of the city at an early hour Sunday morning, according to Dan Ralston, Highway Patrolman, who arrested the man, According to Ralston, city police had picked up Bloom about midnight Saturday night, taken him home and warned him not to drive his car until he “sobered up.” It was be- tween 2 am. and 3 am. Sunday morning that Ralston found the car and its two occupants, off the high- way and held away from the édge of an embankment only by the sap- ling. Besides the fine, Commissioner Gray suspended Bloom's driver's license until after the first of next year. >ee Past President’ Club of ALA Elect Mrs. Homer Nordling was elect- ed president of the American Le- gion Auxiliary Past President Club, and Mrs. Lucille Stonehouse was elected secretary-treasurer at a meeting of the group held Satur- day night in the Nordling home. The meeting was conducted by Mrs. also by the Girl Scouts in house to'food rationing would probably be ajieen Olson, retiring president. house soliciting, succeeded in sell- ing all but a very few of the cookies. The remaining boxes will be sold this week. Mrs. Charles Burdick was in gen- | eral charge of the cookie sale, and‘ she was assisted by Scout leaders ! in Juneau and in Dougias. The style show, helc Saturday night in the Capitol Theatre, drew 2 large attendance to see the Girl Scouts model clothes from M. Behrends store. The models did their part like professionals. Miss Kathleen Carlson played the piano during the show Mention of the national obser- vation of Girl Scout Week was made on a number of radio programs in the States as girls throughout the nation observed the occasion. The local program was carried on to make the girls financially inde- pendent. ! e - 1 Benjamin Franklin was the first | Postmaster General under the Continental Coungress of this (country, and Samuel Osgood was the first under the Consutuuou > BUY nEPBNSE STAMPH Supreme Court Members Sans ]udlcml Robes, at Informal Recepnon A rare picture, this one, showing all nine members of the U. & suprenie court in informal dress, was taken outside the Whi House in Washington where they attended a reception given by t! The chief executive of the U. S. broke precedent in that | the traditional afternoon reception has been strictly formal in U | president. past. (chief justice); and Robert H. Francis Biddle, Hugo L. Black, Jackson and : P Left to right are Justices James ¥. Byrnes, William O. Douglas, Stanley F. Reed, ‘Owen J. Roberts, Harlan F. Stone Felix Frankfurter, Frank Murphy United States Attorney General the B.| started. To prevent being caught short on staple foods and canned goods, the defense directors urged ! that Juneau citizens begin laying in supplies of food, stored at their own | homes. STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK Nov. 3 — Closing| iquotation of Alaska Juneau mine |stock today is 2%, American Can 1797/8, Anaconda 261/2, Bethlehem | Steel 611/2, Commonwealth and( Couthern 1/16, Curtiss Wright 8% | International Harvester 49%, Nor- |thern Pacific 6'¢, United States Steel 5217/8. { o5 20 1 DOW, JONES AVER.AGES The following are today’s | Jones averages: industrials uea-l | vails 2858, utilities 16.65. | >, | MRS. WHITE HERE Elizabeth Decker, owner of the Decker Building, arrived on the Yukon for a visit wnh her aunt. SUMMONS In the District Court for the Ter- ritory of Alaska, Third Division. LILLIAN KESTER, Plaintiff, vs. RICHARD KESTER, Defendant. THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNlT~i ED STATES OF AMERICA: i To the above named detendlnc,‘ Greeting: { You are hereby required to appear | in the District Court for the Terri- | tory of Alaska, within' thirty days | after the last publication of this | summons, namely wighin thirty days \ after the 10th day of November, | 1941, in case this summons is' pub- | lished, oy within forty days after the | date of its service upon you, in case this summons is served upon you personally, and answer the com- plaint of the above named plainfiff on file in said court in the above | entitled action. The said plaintidff in said action demands the following relief, to-wit: | a decree of divorce on the grounds | of desertion. And in the event you fail to so‘ appear and an answer, the plaintiff | will take judgment against you for want thereof and will apply to the | court for the relief demanded in her | complaint as hereinabove stated. Witness, the Honorable Simon | Hellenthal, Judge of ‘sald Court, and the seal of said Court hereunto | affixed, on this 3rd day of October, 1941. M. E. S. BRUNELLE, Clerk. By A. M. THOMAS, - Deputy Clerk. Grigsby & Drager, - Attorneys for Plaintiff. First publication, Oct. 20, 1941. Last publication, Nov, 10, 1941, (BEAL) Mrs. W. E. White, niece of Mrs, + Special' guest of the evening was Miss Esther Williamson, sister of Mrs. Nordling, who is here visit- ing. She is leaving Juneau tomor- row aboard the Aleutian to return |to her home in Madison, Wis. Business taken up at the meet- mg included a discussion of future plans for the year, and it was de- ded to hold regular monthly meeungs The time of these meet- lings will be ennounced later. e o San Francisco handles 80 per- cent of United States wine ex- | ports. HERE'S A couv:m” WAY TO APPLY HEAT MANY ACHES These new Gennll Blectric _secvice. Table Model $5.95 Floor Model at $9.95 and Hind Model for spot application at $3.95 also available,

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