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MONDAY, JULY 13, 1942 THERE'S UNFINISHED HEART BUSINESS in Coery Womani Lile! The most down-to-earth, heart-to-heart romance ever told! “A Jockey’s Day” “Your Last Act” Latest World News | SHOW STARTS— 7:25-9:30 P. M. F‘EAT['RES AT— Show Place of Juneau 8:00‘10:00 P. “. THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES! STAR PLANE IN SATURDAY FROM WESTWARD (CITY i Seven passengers arrived here the tougher school which believes | n F that the American people can take | Saturday afternoon with Star Air Lines from Anchorage and eight it—tl 00K ith tl | (4 libgodd Wil fue pea | took passage from here on the i’edple (lamoring for Real War News, Good Or Bad; Maybe Coming (Continued from Page One) /IRENE DUNNEIS | STAR OF COMEDY | NOW AT CAPITOL “Unfinished Business"”| Brings Triangle Story | to Juneau Screen Two marriages within two weeks found Kathryn Adams of Universal Pictures and Hugh Beaumont, iyoung film actor, being wed before | the camera and later, in a real ceremony. First of the two “weddings” for the couple was for a scene in Uni- versal’s “Unfinished Business,” now |showing at the Capitol Theatre. Second marital ceremony found !Miss Adams, a minister's daughter from New Ulm, Minnesota, and Beaumont, who comes from Chat- | tanooga, Tennessee, taking genuine marriage vows less than two weeks | later. | Producer-Director Gregory La |cava cast Miss Adams as Irene |Dunne’s younger sister in “Unfin-| |ished Business,” because of Miss Ad- | |ams’ resemblance to the star. A |scene shows the younger sister be-| |ing married. When La Cava learned | ilhal Kathryn was actually engaged |to Beaumont, he cast the latter las the groom. | “No marriage could be more con- | vincing,” La Cava decided, and per- |formances by the betrothed pair |proved his contention. | La Cava had previously played 'a role in Miss Adams’ career. She, came to Hollywood from Minnesota armed only with a letter of intro- {duction to La Cava. TH Catch of HalibutIs Given Out The records of the International Fisheries Commission show that for the period from April 16 to June DA 'PLAN TO LAUNCH HNA“(E DR'VE 130, 1942, the following amounts of | [halibut have been landed in the 1 FoR Bov SCOUTSIPM“C Coast ports: | i Area 2 Area 3 |U. 8. Fleet 12,963,336 7,387,305 % .1y Canadian Fleet . 8,543,823 88,834 |Big Kickoff Breakfast Will| | Be Held Tomorrow | to date but are subject to further jcorrection. Further landings from His only definite and conclusive statement of objective since his ap- | pointment has been that he hopes | to give the public “more news, more clearly interpreted.” His powers, laid down by the def- inition of the executive order ap- tal 21,607,159 7,476,139 1 Morning These figures have been corrected plane when it left for the return | flight to Anchorage Sunday. Joe | Morris was pilr)vl of the plane and | g.out Finance Campaign were an- Lee Atu{vms, co-pilot. nounced today by Dr. J. O. Rude, 1 Arriving here with the Star plane | hgirman of the Juneau Scout Dis- | were Mrs. Myles Jones, George Pow- i ell, Jack Whitman, Edward Jewell, Mrs. L. Neville, R. A. Haines and ,morrow morning between 8 and ; |U. s. Pleet | A Kickoff Breakfast will be held Canadian Fleet |Area 2 will occur in July as the Final plans for launching the Boy last date of fishing was June 29. In 1941 the landings from April to June 30 amounted to: Area 2 11,735,186 9, 9,433,702 179,401 pointing him and setting up OWI, 15 are broad enough in print tb pemm" L‘;‘,fi;’;'e B";fin il B hi 7 S sires. R S T s Westward were Capt. J. A. Ras- But there is many a slip between | ) mussen and Judge W. C. Arnold. an executive order and execution. If | s i this is just another governmental | spring house-cleaning which, as one | IROIEa - IR correspondent expressed it, might | D20 consist only of sweeping the dust | Sunday from the Westward after under the rug, then Davis has sac- | ¢alling on the trade. The well rificed in vain his $1,000 a week job | known traveling man will remain in private life for about one-fifth in Juneau for several days. that in the service of his wartime | SRS i B s government. BUY DEFENSE STAMPS DAN We're Celebrating the Payment of Our 10th 49 dividend Wednesday, July 1, 1942 Pleasé present your pass books so that dividends may be entered. Buy Your War Bonds Here Noonan arrived in Juneau' 9 o'clock in Percy's Cafe for the mpgq) 21,168,888 9,403,309 Executive Committee and three| po. the month of June, 1942, the |teams of ten men each. INStruclons ro))5ying amounts of halibut were and assignments for the campaign landed: | will be given out at that time. i Scouts are busy preparing ex- hibits and demonstrations of Scout jcrafts and skills for the occasion \and are distributing pamphlets to- 5 A A day which report on Alaska activ- 1otal 11,078,319 3,091,239 ities. | Acknowledgment is made of the | Members of the Executive Com-|@&ssistance given by the Department /mittee include: Dr. Rude, Chair-/0f Fisheries, Canada, United States man, Wellman Holbrook, Dr. James' Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Area 2 Area 3 6,693,188 3,057,994 4,385,131 33,245 'U. 8. Fleet Canadian Fleet C. Ryan, J. B. Burford, Ludwig Canadian and United States Cus- | the compilation of these James Funeral services for Chester Tripp prominent Juneau man who died July 3, were held yesterday after- noon in the Scottish Rite Temple. Lola Mae Alexander sang two solos, “Crossing the Bar” and “No Night There.” She was accom- umph on a beach a cinch, Film Actress Evelyn Ankers wears a red and white elastic gabardine swim suit and tops it off with a red straw hat, (HARGEHUGE POUGLAS PROFITS IN ' OLD RUBBER Investigator Says Four Companies Had Big "“Take'" on Scrap NEWS L. R. ELLSON, CANNERYMAN, PASSES AWAY IN SEATTLE las Fisheries Co. hung at half mast Saturday and Sunday out of respect for L. R. Ellson, prominent can- neryman of Douglas, who died in | Seattle at 3:45 p.m. Friday after |an extended illness: Word of his | passing came by radiogram Satur- |day to his son Joe who is acting (Simpson, independent rubber dealer| i, his father’s stead. land counsel for a House subcom- Aged 63 years, the older Ellson mittee investigating the rubber sit-| . o ony bl‘eVEnth from coming uation, charges that ‘four l"m"\norlh “'“s year by the fatal ill- |scrap rubber firms reaped enormaus| .. hich ended Friday.. He had profits from the country’s scrap| been bedridden a part of the past rubber drive.’ v Simpson said In a st:ntemenL‘i"mep months and while not unex {“The four companies which were P appointed the sole rubber reserve !0 #ll Who knew him here. agents, H. Meuhlstein Company, A.¢ Surviving the deceased are Mrs. Schulmann Incorporated, Nat E.|Ellson, his widow, in Seattle; two Berzen Inc, and the Lowenthal|daughters, Mrs. Kathleen Ness and Company, all four branc ex-|Mrs. Esther Brown, both of San {tending from coast to cods ohv}l“runcisco‘ and his son in Douglas. tained tremendous profits in this|Also several brothers and sisters deal.” /in England. The funeral rites are SBimpson said the companies he set for 2:30 o'clotk tomorrow after- named were “being granted com-|noon. |missions of a dollar and a half! Bom in Brighton, England, Mr. |on every ton of scrap rubber col-|Elison landed in the U. S. in 1908 |lected of the rubber [whether or not they were instru-|yhich continued with little inter- mental in collecting the scrap.” |y ption until his death. In 1912 he ected his demise comes as a shock es In Akron, Ohio, a spokesman for| . 1jeq Miss Gertrude Marion Giles | a8 |he maintained his residence most ‘En a emen' IS lof the time when he was engaged g g in the north. Announ(ed at | Pirst phase of cannery business |brokerage end which continued Pariy Saiurday three years to give way to active | packing of salmon and in 1915 he became interested in the building . of the Scow Bay son entertairled - Saturday evemnlg‘wm,ery near Petersburg. In 1917, in honor of Miss Janet Nelson's|pe pyjlg and operated the .Union birthday, the affair also turned into Bay Cannery under the name of the son and Harold McKinley told of i |plans to be married soon. No dahe’ 8 wa.‘s ;hev mle :;D cdax: shrimx: |has been set for the wedding. °°'“"“::° nlly l_’l“ AL;'S ".u:’"fl wh“ | Guests at th ty included M | Petersburg. e HlO sail erring P " in Southeast Alaska. Mrs. Carson Lawrence, Mr. and | Mrs. Robert Cowling, Mr. and Mrs.|er and superintendent of the Gor- Arthur Lind, Mrs. Lu Hudson and|man & Co, Salmon Packers at Mrs. Julia Steele. | Drier Bay, Prince Willlam Sound, Alaska. He sold out in 1828 and the companies denied the (-hurucsz’or Seattle, and in the latter city Jengngl‘d in by Mr. Ellson was the When Mr. and Mrs. Carl Daniel-{ang operation Y an engagement party, as Miss Nfl'fumon Bay Fisheries Co. and Mrs. Willilam Hixon, Mr. and| In 1925, Mr. Ellson was part own- Miss Nelson, formerly of the Bar- Flags on all tenders of the Doug- | WASHINGTON, July 13 —Elliott| manager of the company’s business | e "SIGN OF WOLF" NOW SHOWING AT 20TH CENTURY Jack lontvioni Tale Sars Two Highly Intelli- gent Dogs Two of the most intelligent ani- | mals ever to appear in films may be currently seen in “Sign of the Wolf,” at the 20th Century The- jatre. . They are Grey Shadow and | Smoky, great-grandson and grand- son, respectively, of Strongheart, one of the first and most {amous of the movie wonder dogs. Grey Shadow, two and a half years old, is the largest Alsation Shepherd ever to be trained for film work. At one hundred ten pounds, he steals the heavyweight crown from his illustrious ancestor. Ninety-five pound Smoky is five years old, and |is often used as a stand-in for his son when only one dog is used in a film, Both animals are almost identical appearance, but to distinguish them for the benefit of the cam- leras, Grey Shadow is bleached a shade lighter. This operation, for which a famed Hollywood beauti- cian once charged a small fortune, is now done by trainer Frank Barnes at a cost of 50 cents | through a process he has developed. | Barnes, who has been training imovie dogs for many years, leaves no stone unturned to insure the j.su!ely of the animals. Fop example, |both dogs were fitted with a set of specially constructed boots, at opening bids. la cost of $18 a set, for use in the Each bid shall be accompanied snow scenes in “sign’ of the Wolf." by a certified check, cashier's check D g or bid bond (with authorized sures ty company as surety), made pay4 eble to the owner in amount mot !less than five percent (5%) of the Elaine Housel | Engagement IS " roun ot sttke, avska ot i serves the right to reject any or all Announ(ed He[e bids, and to waive informalities, | No bidder may withdraw his after the hour set for thé opening thereof, or before award of cons tract, unless said award is delayed for a period exceeding 30 days. i Where Better BIG Pictures Playl TIOMTENTURY NOW PLAYING Jock London’s power-pocked story of @ blonde spitfire and her dog, whe ash into the Canodian Wilderness «..where men know how to fight end kill, but have to learn how to level in GRACE BRADLE DARRYL HICKMAN MANTAN MORELAND BEAVERS ESTERN UNION” within 30 days after the date of ' | Close triends of Miss Elaine Hou- sel were invited by Mrs. Florine Housel, her mother, to visit during the tea hour on Saturday, and dur- ing the afternoon, miniature old- fashioned nosegays . given each guest announced the engagement of Miss Housel and Lieut. Gerald McLaughlin of Chilkoot Barracks. No date has been set for the wed- ding. Miss Housel, who took her pre- paratory schooling in Juneau and i TOWN OF SITKA, Al By W. R. HANLON, A First publication: July 6, 1042. Last pubiication: July 13, 1942.. | (4 TeServe ¢y engage in the packing industry,| Accounts Government Insured Up to $5,000.00 panied by Carol B. Davis, who also played before and after the services. M. 8. Whittier conducted the Alaska Federal Savings and Loan Association of Juneau ! ‘ i JUST THE THING & Shorien Wash Day by Hours with a General Electric Clothes Dryer Ten minutes from the time the clothes are put into this dryer direct from your washing machine, you can remove them fluffy and®thoreughly dry, only possible through the tumbling action in pure electrically heated air. SEE THIS DRYER TODAY and be convinced of the TIME and LABOR it can save you. The Alaska Electric Light and Power Company 1. § Masonic services and H. D, Stabler gave the eulogy. During ' interment - ceremonies in the Masonic Plot of Evergreen Cemetery, a firing squad signaled the last rites for this American Le- gionnaire and twp buglers played an echo arrangement of ‘Taps.” Pall bearers were H. G. Nord- ling, C. A. Wheeler, Harry I. Lucas, Trevor Davis, Roy Noland, and W. B. Heisel. Honorary pall bearers were C. C. Carnegie, Waino Hend- rickson, R. E. Coughlin, George Gullufsen, Bert Lubeck and J. E. Neate. ——————— COUNCIL MEETING Regular meeting Douglas Nelson, Charles Goldstein, Claude toms in Whittier and Tom Morgan. RMGATE <.« P Members of the three teams are, lASI SERVI( Team No.l—D. L. Reynolds, cap-: ES tain, Herbert J. Arlowe, Don Abel,| Fred R. Geeslin, Robert G. Rice.‘ “ YF R e CHESTER TRIPP Charles Waynor. Team No. 2—Dr. John Geyer, cap-| —_— Merritt, Steve McCutcheon, John! {Halm, Joe Thibodeau, Calvin Pool, Matthews, Bert MacDowell and O.| F. Benecke. | tain, G. Herbert Hillerman, C. B. | Holland, Walter R. Carl, A. M.| )’nnd E. C. Reynolds. ese said their forces have recaptured |Futuo Island near Foochow, port ;Lhe island last Thursday and the Chinese took it back on Saturday. M. Hirst, H. L. Faulkner, M. S.|totals. as follows: | William R. Booth, Fred Henning, John J. Cashen, tain, John Young, lieutenant, K. G.| | Charles Sabin, the Rev. W. H.| | Team No. 3—Homer Garvin, cap-, | Uggen, C. C. Carnegie, E. L. Hunter| SR SR | 1 | CHINESEIN CHUNGKING, July 13—The Chin- |of Fukien Province. The Japs seized | ning. anof Beauty Salon, is now living in Sitka. She was visiting friends in Juneau last week, but has now returned to the Island City. Mr. McKinley is employed at the Bar- anof Hotel here, is a well known chef and has many friends in Juneau, PETER BOND T0 | Peter Bond, Alaska Juneau mine iomploye and well known Juneau lreal estate owner, is leaving to- |morrow for Bozeman, Montana, where Mrs. Bond is now visiting. | Bond will then go to the Mayo LEAVE FOR SOUTH' went to Kodiak Island and operated a cannery at Three Saints Bay. 1932, he packed at Douglas for then attended the University of Ala- bama, is now employed in the De- partment of Public Welfare here. She is a highly popular member of Juneau's younger set. | | Lieut. McLaughlin, whose home was formerly in Colorado, attended college in that state and before going into the service was athletic| 'director at Juneau High School. | The Housel home was beautifully |decorated for the afternoon affair | |with roses, delphinium and sweet peas predominating throughout the rooms. - BUY DEFENSE BONDS tively directing the affalrs of this company. o, e e | A WONDERFUL SELECTION OF : ing the time he was associated with | it. He had been in poor health | p BRASSIERES - ‘and : the past two years, but nevertheless | continued to actively manage the | Douglas Fisheries Co. business, un- | Inl May when his fatal iliness began. | | ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS | | Sealed bids will be received by | | W. R. Hanlon, Mayor, at the City | | Clerk’s Office, Sitka, Alaska, until | |8:00 p.m. July 20, 1942, for the con- | | struction of STREET IMPROVE- | | MENTS for the TOWN OF SITKA, ALASKA, and will then and there GARMENTS | in the following nationall‘y' the year under the name of Ellson |pe opened and publicly read aloud. Packing Co.. He followed this with | Bids received after the time fixed small canning operations at Cor-|for opening will not be considered. |dova, and then left the packing of Plans and specifications, and salmon for several years. |form of contract documents, may From 1935 to 1939 he was with G. ‘ be obtained at the office of the ‘W. Hume Co. fruit and vegetable |City Clerk at Sitka, Alaska, and at canners, head office in San Francis- | the office of Pederal Works Admin- co. | istraticn at Juneau, Alaska, Baranof 1940 he and his associates took |Hotel, vpon a deposit of Five Dol- |over the Douglas Fisheries Co. in lars ($5.00). | | Douglas, rebuilt the cannery nndi The full amount of deposit for innovated many important 1mprove-‘one set of documents will be re- ments. . He was general managor | turned to each actual bidder within and superintendent of this can- a reasonable time after receipts of nery until May 19, 1942, when he bids Otner deposits will be re- was hospitalized, and the directors funded with deduction not exceed- { advertised makes: ] Flexees Maiden Form Vassarelies Van Raalte Playtex Full length Foundations and Girdles and Panty dirdles . . sizes 32 to 44. Clinic in Rochester, Minn., for a Cily complete checkup and will return of the company passed the super-:‘lng the sctual cost of reproduction Council is scheduled for this eve- to Juneau sometime during the intendency to his son Joseph G. of the drawings, upon the return g |summer. 'Ellson, who is now in Alaska ac- Jones-Stevens Seward Street f all documents in good condition | " BRINGING UP FATHER JLL WAIT OUT HERE-MAGGIE ~ ME DARLING— By GEORGE McMANUS AT LEAST SHE COULD Y e LT =