The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 13, 1942, Page 3

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DAY, MAY 13, 1942 THE .CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES! A THEATRE B Show Place ot Juneau THE CROWD ROARS. .. for this two-fisted blond bomber from Brooklyn! W — ALSO — “Stranger Than Fiction” “Haiti, Land of Dark Mystery” LATEST NEWS COMING SUNDAY —— MA ANN SOTHERN TONIGH T— and THURSDAY!!! goroVT) starring with Geo. MURPHY. Robt. STERLING An M-G-M Picture ‘BLOSSOMS IN THE DUST” Scalnel Was His Gun At Bataan ANN SOTHERN IS STARRED IN "MAISIE” FILM {Capnol Theafre Feature 1 penmg Tonight Is . f I ' "Ringside Maisie i Maisie’'s on the loose again with | a series of the most thrilling, side- | splitting adventures to date. The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film, “Ring-| |side Maisie,” starring Ana Sothern opens tonight at the Capitol; | Theatre Based around a fast moving plot, the story concerns what hoppens to | Maisie when, on the hunt for a| !new job, her path crosses those of | a youthful fight champion, his in- valid mother and his hard-boiled ,manager. When Maisie is hired as !a companion for the mother and then proceeds to fall in love with the manager, things happen at a| speedy rate. No Maisie film to date finds Miss Sothern more happily cast. Her | lines are particularly bright and | are delivered as only this blonde star can do it. Of particular inter- est is a jitterbug sequence early in| the film in which she does a num- | ber which could easily take a prize | in an international compatition of | jitterbug enthusiasts. A sterling cast has been gathered in support of the star. George Mul- phy is excellent as the hardboiled | manager, and young Robert Ster- lmg makes a sympathetic young‘ boxer. Natalie Thompson, a new- | comer to the screen, is seen Sterling’s girl friend, and Mnrgdret Moffat, a recruit from the stage, plays his invalid mocther. PEDECNAEL S T'his model demonstrates one way in which to help the government con- serve much needed rubber supplne« A hunched-over stance, like the one at the left, causes sagging and bulging—and the need for a girdle. At/ the right she stands straight with the chest high, shoulders back, and the weight evenly distributed on both feet. There's no strain on the muscles—and no need to buy a new two-way stretch. The picture les- ~ son is all in the interest of National Posture Week. 3 S fapliapbegyac - " MRS. J. W. TROY LEAVES ). LITTLEPAGE, FOR HOLLYWOOD HOME PAUL SORENSEN Mrs. John W. Troy left today by IN ON BUSINESS in * 'Randolph, ARMY AIR CORPS BACKGROUND OF | THRILLING FILM The thrilling story of the train-| ing of America’s birdmen, told | against the background of an ex citing tale of adventure and ro mance, will be on view when Para mount’s sweeping -epic of the air, “I Wanted Wings,” opens tonight/| at the 20th Century Theatre. Starring Ray Milland, William Holden, Wayne Morris and Brian | Donlevy, the film [features in its| impressive cast that sensationall newcomer, Veronica Lake, and lovely Constance Moore. Produced 1 by Arthur Hornblow and directed by | Mitchell Leisen, the new air dr: promises to be probably this year's | most important film. Certainly not (since “Wings,” which many of us | still remember vividly, has another laviation picture taken off from| Hollywoed with so much excited | |advance talk as “I wanted Wings." | |Nor has any previous picture had | better opportunity for packing au- thentic air thrills into celluloid Made with the complete cooper- |ation of the Army Air Corps at| { Kelly and March Fields, | the new film takes us through the| !training of America’s air cadets, as | it tells the personal stories of three | aviation trainees and the women in their lives. The men who want |wings are Milland, Holden and Morris, and the women, of course.| |are Veronica Lake and Constance | ‘Mumn ALASKA (lTIES RAISED §7,000 FOR PRESIDENT' > BETTER BIG P! TOO"CENTUR IJRFS PLAYI STABTS TONIGHT AMERICA'S FLYING YOUTH! RIDE in o fiying fortress ou it crashes against © meune tainside! DIVE tram @ tpeeding plane—5 miles up=without © parochute! HEDGE- HOP with feur "hi amazing exhibition of stunt flying ever filmed! » {plane to return to her home Paul Sorensen, Superintendent of Hollywood, California, after spend- the Hirst-Chicagof Mining Comp-| week in Juneau. Mrs. | any and Jack Littlepage, Superin- north by last | tendent of the Chichagof Mining R ‘.)Compdll\ arrived in Juneau by e, plane today to spend several days Alaska cities together raised $7, 075 in the many President's Birth- | day Balls held in Alaska communi- | ties last January to raise mnney‘ for combatting infantile paralysis. Soldiers’ ing the last came plane to attend funeral o | Troy Tuesday One of the unsung heroes of the Peninsula is Lieut, Col. Juck Schwartz (above) of Fort Worth, Tex. He Is shown outside the crude operating room of Hospital No. 2 In one night and a day, Lieut. Col. Schwartz and his staff handled 420 major nnd minor Subscribe w the Daily Alaska Empire—the paper with the largest paid circulation. for l"!llfll Mv szs Butler-Mauro Drug Co. The Rexall Store HEADQUARTERS TYPHOON SUITS Ideal for Hunters and Fishermen Sizes Small, Medium, Large Extra Large All in Stock | i | S.—G_;aves The Clothing Man CAPITAL SURPLUS COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES First National Bank Ispring banquet last Saturday nightf $ 50,000 150,000 . vote of 350 to 61, Pay Raise Hangs Fire WASHINGTON, May 13—With a the House today {approved the base pay schedule of 1850 a month for buck privates and apprentice seamen, and will send the bill back to the Senate for ap- proval of the boost from the or- iginally proposed $42 a month Members of the Military Com- mittee predicted that the original $42, voted in the Senate to be the | | figure for the measure, will be the | final amount decided on when the | magnificent resistance on Bataan operauuns Ski Club Members Enjoy Banquet at ! Last of Season Approximately 30 skiers did their last winter season skiing in the easy | |manner by attending the annual |in Percy’s Cafe. Among the various trophy awards | | presented was the Walter Scott, Jr.| | memorial trophy, which was award- | |ed to Daniel Bates for this season. | This award is based or a number | of qualifications centered around the promotion of the welfare of skiing. The high-light of the evening| |proved to be the showing of the} 1200 feet of Sun Valley pictures,! which were packed w.ith snow thrills. This event officially winds up the ski season for Juneau Ski| Club members. —l H RAY DAY RETURNS Ray G. Day, with the Selective Service System, who has been in the Interior for several weeks, has returned to headquarters here. S ee——— The Daily Alaska Empire has the largest paid circulation of any Al- aska uc\hpapex | Airlines for Sitka yesterday were |Joe Galles, Pete Snider and Roy |Lund. Returning here on the plane| |were John D. Young, Dan Roark, | | Mrs. ‘Hoonah Tuesday passengers were i Kelly St. | Hoonah to Juneau, John D. Wilson i bill emerges from a conference Lo adju.st differences. | e ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES MAKES NUMEROUS TRIPS Passengers with Alaska Coastal E. Carter, Edward Jurgeleit and | Lea Mac. i On a flight from Wrangell to Clair, Andrew Jukson,f Charles Gamble, Jacob White, John | Wilson and Amos Wallace. I*‘ram; was a passenger. G. MacDonald made the trip from Peterson Point to Petersburg with | ACA and M. A. Everson was a pas- | senger from Petersburg to Juneau. Frank Wright and Royal shep-‘ ard were passengers to Hoonah with | ACA today and J. E. Boyle went | ito Pelican City and returned to| Hoonah, | Passengers here from Kimshan Cove today were Jack Littlepage, Paul Sorenson, Mrs. Grant Evans! and Mrs. W. McNabb. Alaska Coastal Airlines left this morning for a trip to Wrangell and Ketchikan with the following | passengers: for Wrangell, Robert A. Paul and Mrs. Alfred Nauling; for Ketchikan, Capt. W. N. Snouffer,| Percy E. Reynolds and John D. Young. — .- — Owls are not blind in the day- time, and a few of them prefer dny to night work ner husband, John W. Troy W5 on Diisinces: AMID THE RUINS_AImost free of surrounding struc- | tures flattened by Nazi blitz air raids, St. Paul's Cathedral pre-' sents this view from Cannon and Queen Victoria streets, London, / ’.I'rmlc rumbles Iry cavernous holeu left by bomb hits,. ThereIs No Substitute for Newspaper Advertising! { {|ing year. - | posts with headquarters in Deer- |This amount was almost twice as much as was raised in the preced- Juneau’s ball was held on January 31, others on January | 30. Following are the results re- {|leased today by the Governor's Of- | fice: Anchorage Cordova Craig Chatanika Circle City Candle Ester Eagle Fairbanks Mr. & Mrs. Jas. Hugl\es 5.00 7.50 45.50 25.00 $1,275.14 63.40 Fox Fort Yukon Fortuna Ledge Goodpaster (Mr. Mrs. Johnson) Homer Hot Springs Haycock Jack Wade Juneau Kake Ketchikan Kotzebue Kimsham Cove Livengood Lignite : Kodiak (town) Kodiak (base WOrkers) ... McKinley Park Nenana Nome Ruby Sitka Skagway Suntrana Tanana Valdez Vault (J.. J. Prest) ‘Wrangell Total $7,075.40 Sent National Foundation .$3,537.70 | { Remaining in Territory 3,537.70 —e——— RETURN NORTH { Mrs. John Cross, her daughter Patricia Cross and brother, Boris Magids, returned to Alaska by air- plane recently after a business trip outside. The party is enroute to the Sew- | ard peninsula where Mr. Magids| and Mrs. Cross operate trading ing. Capt. Cross, formerly operator with his wife of the Northern Cross Airlines, is now in active army ser- vice. BUY DEFLNSE hTAMPh | JUNEAU—ALASKA ) 80 the Brazilian Lloyd Line is LBaya, will reach its il Prowling submarines are always on the Jookout for unescorted ships, | M destination safely. That's why the word DIP making certain that this vessel, the To the Axis: Enclosed Find an Undesirable Shnpment ¥ ATS has been painted on-her side In huge letters. The boat is earry- 7 ousted Axis diplomats from Rio de Janeiro back to the mmtivn | LO-| countries, Brazil has broken diplomatic relstions with the Axis, “[REAT YOURSELE 10 JHERMITAGL BRAND . G "UCKY STRAI \\H\\M\ W.. vty \fgr Gfllm&mfw/lflflfll £ anis \ " fentucky Whishey G-E Sunlamp gives your Baby all Winter long the ultra-violet that dnm recommend. It's the ultra-violet in S-' mer sunshine that helps so much in strengthening baby's uny bunu—m(; preventing rickets. Rmhx oow, when Summer’ sun is impossible to you can still be sure of violet for yourt baby by E Sunlamp. And have the adunn;c of able to ‘turn this “S sun” on évery day—any tiog you wish—all Winter GENERAL nlcr:} SUNLAMPS % §37.50-539.50 GENERAL {3 ELECTRIC SUNLAMPS Alaska Electric Light and Power Co;

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