The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 30, 1942, Page 3

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| SATURDAY, MAY 30, 1942 | THE SCREEN'S The year’s mightest bombardment of songs laughs and girls! SPECTACULAR MUSICAL FOR CAPITOL BILL “You'll Never Get Rich” with Astaire, Hayworth Is Exfravaganza N, of BEAUTY and RHYTHM! /“/ - ! As star-spangled as the flag itself, Columbia's “Youll Never Get Rich” brings Fred Astaire and ravishing Rita Hayworth to the Capitol Theatre Sunday in what has been hailed as the most spec- tacular military musical extrava- ganza ever filmed by Hollywood Cole Porter’s singable, swingable new lyrics provide tuneful back- ground to the film, considered the year's mightest bombardment of girls, gags and gaiety Miss Hayworth's position as As- taire’s dancing and romantic part- ner has been called, by both critics and fans, as an example of plain common-sense, albeit ‘“inspired,” casting. The young star, one of the most glamorous in sHollywood to- day, made her motion picture de- but as a dancer, after she had wou | international fame on the concert and theatre stage under the nam: of Cansino. Temporarily abandon- JOHN HUBBARD ROBERT BENCHLEY 0sa MASSEN - Frieda INESCORT Guinn WILLIAMS - Donald MacBRIDE Songs by CULE PDRTER {ing her terpsichorean efforts in order to establish herself as an PLUS |actress, Miss Hayworth currently “GHOST 2 retuins to terpsichore with the iy PREVUE i world’s most famous dancer as her TREASURES” TONITE 1:15 A. M. WHEN AIR RAIDS STRIKE" TONIGHT — "“THE GET-AWAY"” and “MEN OF THE TIMBERLAND" twinkle-toed co-star. The net result is said to be a grand new fame for both brilliant stars. Also on Sunday’s program at the Capitol will be the “March of Time,” titled “When Air Raids Strike.” U ™S i Gy LT. COL. RIEGLE ~ DELIVERS FINE ADDRESS TODAY (Continued irom Page One) and LATEST NEWS There is no substitute for newspaper JACKSON MARSHES | RETURN TODAY i | | advertising! Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Marsh re- mpe gecond of these freedoms for turned today from the south thrs‘[whm, we are fighting, is the right they have been staying since laeL;Of every person to worship God in Fall. They will resume manage-!pic qwn way, everywhere in the ment of their fur farm on the Gla- |world. Here in America, we can cier highway |0 to the church of our choice. We e B may be Catholic, Protestant or Jew ART UGGE BACK lor we can interpret the divine TODAY FROM SOUTH|teachings of the Bible in any oth- {er manner we desire, Or we can Arthur Ugzen of the Alaska Mu-|stay away from church in America Supply, refurned this morning This decision rests solely with the m the South, ,where he has been | individual, The third of the free- ic fr undergoing medical treatment. He|doms for which we are fighting is says he is feeling fine. the freedom from want. = Trans- P il BRI (lated into world terms, this means NOTE OF THANKS |economic understandings securing i Like iy com hanisith ndie ekt The Alford John Bradford Post| ® ety r'"’."l‘":"‘“h ‘::;’L‘,““y i) piece separately, thoroughly, gently, No. 4 of the American Legion|!H® i ’:1“ RO, everys gs without tangling or harm to the fab- wishes to express its appreciation"Dere in the world. SSA. “‘A’f“’“ '°“§ life to your clothes. to Lt. Col. Riegle and Lt. Mont-| e ‘@re fighting for the safety % for a demonsiration today. coniy > Wk dlone i membus[nnd security and permanency of of the U. 8. Troops at Juneaulme small nation and its people, helped to make today's Memorial|2$ Well 8s for ourselves and our big N GENERAL ELECTRIC brothers. The iourth of these free- |doms for which we are fighting is freedom from fear. Translated in- Day services a fine success. ~—CLAUDE CARNEGIE, Alaska Electric Light Commander. i 4 S |to world terms, this means a world- & Power Co. Empire Classifieds Pay! wide reduction of armaments, ‘o |such a point and in such a thor- |ough fashion, that no nation will ever be in a position to commit an act of physical aggression against {any neighbor anywhere. “America is fighting for, and | American men are giving their lives for, these ideals in this war. Opposed Philosophies present war in the final ‘annlysis is the struggle between two absolutely opposite philosophies of Douglas [y "] - “The THE DAILY ALASKA: EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA On the one hand is the “live| My friends, our design for| BOB HOPE, DOTTY LAMOUR TONIGHT { foreigners. Any manner of protest lor sign of opposition would be pun- | ished by firing squad or sil- |enced in the concentration camp.| | The wealthy man would be a paup- the \ 4 jer. The employer would be a serf. E iThe workman would toil at the point of a bayonet. The farmer would slave to feed residents of the | Axis nations. The professional man would practice only as he was | directed and for nothing—if at all.J | The White House would be the| | home of a dictator. A Nazi would at ZO'h cen'ury sit in every statehouse in the na-| : | |tion. There would be no cabinet,| Plenty of fireworks — the kind| |no congress, no supreme court, no,that are filled with laughing gags, | {govemmvm as we know them now. 8ré keeping audiences hilarious at, {There would be no state and city;the 20th Century Theatre where Bob governments " |Hope and Dorothy Lamour are play- F g |ing in “Caught in the Draft.” | Strutting forelgners would bei"p) .t all-out comedy will "Caught in the Draft” Hil- arious Farce Closes | | | | our masters. Orders would be is- |y, een tonight for the last times. sued in a foreign tongue. There The gun-shy actor creates a laugh | would be no privately owned prop-|riot when he fir¥ds himself in the | erty. We would enter the realm of slavery as now borne by the de- feated, but not conqured, nations of Europe. “ Forming Battalions “To prevent such a catastrophe, America is again forming endless battalions to follow our Flag of Freedom into battle. It is the hu- man wall of defense that protects us from enslavement. The safety of the nation, the perpetuation of our freedom, and liberty and en-| AR joyment of life, and the hope of all mankind rests today upon the courage and strength of our armedifear ES(ape o' Animals \Than Demolition Bombs people. We must not let anything (Continued from rage One) army as the result of a pracucnl‘ joke which backfires on himself. | “Caught in the Draft” might not | be a true version of everything the | |army has to offer its rookies but | Bob Hope and his top-flight comedy | | corps certainly manage to give nl'my} life a new twist—the kind even lhe’ | draftees will enjoy. ‘Shining Victory” opens at the |20th Century Theatre Sunday for a several days run with an excellent cast. |stand in the way of mobilizing the resources of our great nation. These resources include the financial cen- ter of New York, the cotton and| tobacco regions of the South, the better than coal mines of Pennsylvania and |celebrity. | Illinois, the cornfields of Towa and| If you don’t think Washington the wheat 1tields of Kansas, the|is bursting right out of its britches,| huge cattle ranches of Montana|take the word of John Ringling and Texas, the forests of Oregon!North. That dapper successor of land Washington, the garden val-'Phineas T. Barnum as announced ley of California, the shipyards of |that the great., the one and only, New England, the industrial region |the etc, Ringling Bros.-Barnum & of the Great Lakes, yes, the vast-|Bailey Circus this year will play ness and strength and beauty of Washington, D. C., for the first this great territory. |time in history for one whole week. “My friends, let us vow here and So far as the colossal, the spec- now on our sacred honor, to keep|tacular, the etc, R-B, B & B is the furnaces fed with scrap and concerned that puts the nation's steel, to keep our machines pm.‘capnnl in a circus-going class with ducing 24 hours a day, to keep New York, Chicago, Boston and the arms, fuel and food moving Philadelphia. to the front, t¢ banish greed, sel-| Washington weather item (un- fishness and complacency, to put censored): Perturbed by constant all our fighting dollars into War reports that some 4,500 visiting sol- Bonds and Stamps, to sacrifice,|diers, sailors and marines had |save, and serve. In this spirit hers,| “sleep in the streets” (or some- on this Memorial Day, let us, as did | where other than a bed) every our forefathers of old, bend our; weekend, capital civilian defense {klll‘('b at the shrines of American|officials organized a big survey |Heroes. 1In this spirit, let us re- for last weekend. . It rained :o christen our faith and loyalty to our!'hag# for two days, you could NOT |God and our Country.” {pnly NOT find a soldier, sailor or Cdl. Riegle is a veteran ‘of World |marine to survey, you couldn’t even Wwar I during which he served two|find a surveyor. The beds-for-bud- years. He was wounded during|dies-in-the-service problem still is the Meuse-Argonne offensive in|unsolved. France and is a holder of the Or- T e s ldr:erml!))lermzf Pr::l!A]:lee::.an Hx::m:; HOIYETgIBNSI{;vTEOD AI Bl LUTHERAN CHURCH |and Masonic Lodge and since 1920 has been a member of the National Tomorrow, Sunday, May 31, the Festival of The Holy Trinity, will Guard in Kansas where he makes his home. 1 Before being called into active| | service in the Army he practiced !be observed by a special service in ‘Resurrection Lutheran Church at which time the Sacrament of the | Altar will be administered. Partici- | law in Emporia, Kansas. He has served six years as Probate Judge pating in the Communion for the | tirst time will be the four young |and eight years in the Kansas House of Representatives. At pres- |women who last Sunday were re- |ceived into the church by the rite ent he is a member of the State Senate of his home state. - - of Confirmation, Misses Ada Burns, Anne Nielsen, Betty Lou Hared and Irene Shirk. Also at this service, {SIX ARRIVE IN | STAR PLANE AND Mrs, Darwin Hoel will be received NINE LEAVE IODAY‘imo Church Membership. OTES With six pasengers from Anchor- HosplTAl " a medical age, the Star Airlines weekly plane jarrived here fast night and left on| Chester Zimmerman, ithe return flight to Anchorage|Patient in St. Ann’s Hospital was this morning, piloted by A. G.|discharged yesterday. Woodley. | | | tops for any living ) | | | Mrs. Douglas Camphell and her | PAGE THREE WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAY! TIOMCENTURY & rowions Caught in the Draft” TONIGHT STARTS SUNDAY—Matinee 2:00 P. M. PREVIEW TONIGHT—1:15 A. M. shining victory % All the psychiatrist her was: GET MARRIED! STEPHENSON ERALDING FITZGERALD DONALD CRISP - BARBARA O'NEIL * r.c o 5er 4, A, J. CRONIN y“.fi’fi'..".' Sireed by IRVING RAPPER « A WARNER BROS.-tivw navt Pitere ainen Py by Mowars Koch and Anso Fraaih * St by Mo Sainer - o el COLISEUM—NOW!— “NIGHT TRAIN” —NOW!—COLISEUM Spring Dance Show | Set for Tomorrow At 20th Century The annual Spring dance recital of students of Dorothy Stearns Roff has been set for tomorrow night and will be held in, conjunction with the regular evering show at the 20th Century Theatre. Following the first showing of “Shining Victory” at the theatre, the pupils will present a 45 min- ute program including tap dancing, soft shoe numbers, ballet, and ball- room routines, Many lovely costumes will be worn by the dancers, which in- clude participants from the ages of 3 to 18, NOTICE ’ May 28, 1942, I will no longer be responsible for any debts contractéd by anyone but myself, -HANS J. GUNDERSON >ee BUY DEFENSE BONDS % > Mrs. Wallis S. George And Daughter Return From California Today Mrs. Wallis George and Miss May- delle George arrived in Juneau to- day. Miss George has completed her freshman year at Scripps College at n Cameron LADIES' Claremont, Califorr and will spend the summer visiting her o parents at their apartment in the MAN STYLE Baranof. Away from Juneau for two BI 0USES months, Mrs. George has been in Los Angeles and drove north with her daughter when her school year was over. Mr. George who was also south preceded his family back to Juneau two weeks ago. ety Sundborgs Arrive In Juneau Today George Sundborg, of the Nation- al Resources Planning Board for this region, arrived in Juneau this morning after a month's vacation trip to the States Returning with him were Mrs Sundborg, and the three Sundborg $1L.75 and up White and pastel colers, in an assortment of stripe, print and polka dot combinations. Jones-Stevens children, Pierre, George, Jr., and Rosemary, who had been residing Seward St. in the States with Mrs. Sundborg for several months CAPITAL SURPLUS $ 50,000 150,000 and let live” design for living cher- ished by the liberty+loving peoples. a nd make Teservations for an evening of On the other is the “rule or ruin” pattern of wolf Hitler and Com- o ENJOY Jomy;p FRIED ¢y (] CKEN— a delicioys SIZZLING STEAR — Or a fresh-kijleq FRIED Ragppy —— THE DOUGLAS INN JOHN MARIN, Proprietor Phone Douglas g g i were M. other alternative s unthinkable, Lot | | ©\S%¢ngers arriving here e | . |J. Loggi, A. Scheibner, Mr. and us think for a moment what me‘Mx,\. R. W. Higgins, Howard Hay, defeat of our nation in this war Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Allen and Mit- would mean to us. chell Rebarchek. “Foreign soldiers would be stand- (1he return flight of the plane were ing where we are right now, tak-| Taking passage this morning on ing whatever they wanted. Our|charles Sanford, Lynn L. Crosby, churches, schools, and clubs and|Ethel Smith, Hughes Madeley, A. lodges would be closed; our courts|M. Anderson, George Salo, Lemley abolished; our newspapers or radios Brickel, Mrs. Thelma Kohler and would be silenced or operated by Donna Kohler. Musical Here ~ ArmyCamp infant daughter have left St. Ann’s . Hospital and returned home. COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES First National Bank JUNEAU—ALASKA Mrs. Ed Skant has left St. Ann’s Hospital after undergoing surgery there. Baby June LaMoore entered St. Ann’s Hospital this morning for| medical treatment. Axel Boode a miner, entered St Ann’s Hospital early this morning for treatment of an injury. | WANTED! FOR LOGGING CAMP CHOKERMAN DONKEY ENGINEER BUCKER SIGNAL MAN Apply at Office Rita Hayworth and Fred Astaire provide the perfect combination of beauty and rhythm in the rollicking army camp musical, “You'll Never Get Rich” at thé Capitol. JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS

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