The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 10, 1942, Page 3

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i - THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 10, |942 DOUBLE FEATURE | OPENING FRIDAY AS CAPITOL BILL ]m,m “South of Tahiti,” Jungle| ~ - | Film, Here with “The | TOMORROW—PREVUE TONITE I: 15uq._ Stork Pays Off” | MARIA MONTEZ in gty gt was corrected at the very outset of Universal's new jungle drama,, “South of Tahiti,” coming tomor- row to the Capitol Theatre, star-| ring Brian Donlevy and featuring | |Brod Crawford, Maria Montez and Andy Devine. John Datu, former official of the Netherlands government for many | | years in the Dutch East Indies and | technical expert on the picture, |pointed out that the native garb of the Malayans is not, as popularly ‘.xupxmsed in cinematic circles, a | sarong. It is, instead, he avers, the slen- |dang, properly pronounced slen- ldahng | Columbia’s “The Stork Pays Off,” |to share the double bill here, pays |off with gales of laughter, gobs of action and thrills galore, as “Slap- sie” Maxie Rosenbloom and Victor {Jory trade in their guns for aprons, and play mother to a nursery.| Rochelle Hudson appears in the| | feminine lead. It all happens when |a gang of riotous racketeers move in on a nursery, thinking it's a nitery. The supporting cast in-| cludes Horace MacMahon, Danny Mummert, George McKay and Ar- Theee exciting pecple Show Place of Juneau BUY A BOND AS A SALUTE TC YOUR HERO IN SERVICE | with VICTOR JORY - ROCHELLE. HUDSON MAXIE ROSENBLOOM - HORACE MacMAHON PLUS LATE NEWS EVENT S THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES! thur Loft. Lew Landers directed IWENIY ONE TAKE 14 JUNEAUITES rom a story and screen plx\ by PASSAGE YESTERDAY GO TO WESTWARDV‘“‘“’““ o M Lot FOR BARANOF CITY . ing in Tarieen yesterday al‘- | ternoon from Seattle was Thomas New v Mall | au Leaving here last night for Sitka A Davies. {day week-end trip to Turner Lake| were. Mrs. Frank Marks, Emma| COMiDg here from Ketchikan/ |over Labor Day. The group left Marks, Selena Marks and Elizabeth Wer¢ E. Wilbur McCollum, John | \on Saturday traveling on Dr. J. O.| 1In honor of Myra Rank, Marks, Mrs. Donald Smith, Edith|Z: Crowley, Hartley Goodwin, Zin-| S slem 'or |Rude’s boat “Do-Boy.” Department. President for the Am- S. Anderson, Knute Tronstad, Mrs, 8¢f O- Roberts and Elmer Woods. | | The boys saw several bear “too H. Wiley, Albert R. Harwick. | Leaving here. easlyithis marning {close for comfort” and caught a big |STOUTS TAKE TRIP Buddy Rosar, the Yar Buffalo, N. Y., to visit the police department cxaminations, is shown back with end in the apparent good graces of Manager who slapped a $250 fine on him. catcher with the ks when he jumped thé teara. Cartky hired Rollie Hemsley, Reds, when Rosar went A. W. O. L. OVER LABOR WEEKEND Seven memb of uneau Boy Scouts, Troop 613, made a holi- Ma ee catcher who jumped the team to go to his wife, who gave birth to a son, and to take Yanks left, the Joe McCarthy, Rosar, was the only experienced ver Me- who had just been released by the AL AUXILIARY CHIEF WILL BE FETED FRIDAY named "ALOMA" BRINGS DOTTY LAMOUR T0 20TH CENTURY ‘Glamorous Star in Techm- ) color South Sea Islands | Production Here | Topping their memorable per- formance in “The Hui e,” Dor- |othy Lamour and Jon Hall thrilled last night’s audience in their new screen romance, Paramount’s “Alo- ma of the South Seas,” at the 20th Century Theatre. | Filmed in Technicolor, its sweep | of breath-taking scenes on a tropi- cal island paradise won plenty of “oohs” and “ahs” from the onlook- (ers, Every color in the rainbow seemed to be competing for a popu- rity award. And as for Lamour i she’s more exotic and exciting than | ever. R | The story is thrilling and ro- | mantic. Jon Hall, the son of the lisland chief, was betrothed to Dor- |othy Lamour during their child- hood, according to the customs of the islanders. After a ten-year ab- sence to secure an education in the States, Jon returns home to claim | his bride-to-be and to prepare him- |self for his future duties as chief | But he is unprepared for the trea- |chery planned against him by his envious, unprincipled cousin. Dorothy Lamour, the wild, beau- teous Aloma, finds herself torn be- tween her returned husband-to-be and the cousin, Philip Reed, the man she thinks she loves. | triangle of tropic love turns to stir- ring melodrama. Flying fists lead | to knives and guns. Excitement mounts to a roaring climax when steaming lava begin to pour out of a sacred volcano on the island .- | ED GARNICK lN ARMY at Sitka last Monday ac- Emmett Connor, Jack Gucker, [°F the Westward were Dan Noon-| [ mess of fish. They returncd Mon- |Juneau Auxiliary will hold a no- He has been employed by the Lyle Grant Young, Mr, and Mrs, 2% Charles Hartman and Chester, Servl(e Men day night. |host luncheon at noon tomorrow Northland Transportation Co., at Arthur Littlefield, Sidney Thomp- | Mosee for Seward, and for Haines,| .o |In Percy's Cafe. { the Naval base. son, Sam Wanamaker, Anton Bart- | Mildred Spooks, Margaret Willard, | Mrs. Rank, whose home is in i R SRR S ness, Daniel Johnson, Arcadio Y. Richard Shmidt, Ione Felton, Mrs.| ; 5 ATTENTION MASONS Fairbanks, is now staying in the FAIRHURST IN Tagaban, Charles C. Williams,|Alice Fogg, Fred Young, Carl Fogg,| Relatives and frlends of nfflct-x‘s Surance S Sk While waiting T S Moses: Johnson, and James Wil-|20d Jenny Fogg. |and men serving .with the Pacific called Communication of M| transportation. She is planning to| Hal Fairhurst of Seattle Hard- e ‘ Robert Wakelin, Stanley DeLong Fleet may now use the fast, new juneau Lodge Friday afternoon at|make a trip to the south before ware, is in town calling on his and Merle Johnson went to Valdez.|V-Mail system in writing to them, it gt CARD o;nu\m | the Thirteenth Naval District has the funeral service of our late | WEDDING reported Bro. K. C. Talmage. By order | luncheon are Junior Gladness over the recovery of our COMMISSI At the same time, they may exX- of the W. M. the Legion Auxiliary who received father’s health, Mr. Gus Lundell, we | HERE YESTERDAY Pect to receive more and more V- J. W. LEIVERS, |certificates as being 18 wish to thank Mr. Bert McDowell, Mail letters from the Fleet, since retary. | |during the 19011048 s Mr. C. Everetts and others who so John Joseph Lundy, of Juneau, bluejackets and their officers h;\ve‘ - AR All Auxiliary member: and Margaret Ann Johnson, of An- been instructed to use them when- BUY DEFE . STAMPS to the luncheon tomorrow. goon, were married yesterday in|ever possible. i Juneau by U. S. Commissioner Feiix The new V-Mail process, whereby | Gray Witnesses were the bride-|letters written on forms supplied | PHYLLIS groom’s brother and sister-in-law,|free by the Post Offire are photo- RUTH. Marion and Arthur Lundy. |graphed on mirrofilm and then air- — |mailed on the first available plano to an overseas destination, will re- |duce to about four days the regu-j {lar airmail time from the Hawaiian | larea to Pacific Coast points. | V-Mail Priority Regular airmail from the mid- | Pacific usually takes many days,| and sometimes even goes by con- voy. V-Mail, on the other hand, | has first priority for airplane space, | e i naval authorities pointed out. D POSITS s 5 | V-Mail is not compulsory, they | A said, but merely represents the IN THIS BANK | fastest and most efficient mean: | of getting word to and from men | in the Fleet, at islanl shore sta- | tions, and in Australia. Since all| ymail to these points is censored, V-Mail is no less private than or- dinary mail, which will still go for- | ward the usual way. | Alaska Mail Owing to lack of equipment, sol- CONSERVATIVEmauymm:mdmkz Government idiers and sailors stationed ashore supervision work constantly for the protection of our or aboard patrol vessels in Alaska depositors. Additional security is provided through this will receive the originals of V-Mail bank's membership in Federal Deposit Insurance Corpora- | letters rather than photographs, it tion, a United States Government agency which insures was stated. each depositor against low to 8 maximum of $5,000, Postage for V-Mail is three cents | o [ ] | per ounce, except for service men, | First National Bank who are required merely to write of JUNEAU. ALASEKA “free” in the upper right hand INSURANCE CORPORATION corner of the address space. ERAL DEPOSIT BUY DEFENSE BONDS With a CHAPMAN chx FREEZE STomct LOCKER FOR THE HOME Extra Large Capacity Eleven Cobic Feet Space for 500 Ibs. or More CONVENIENT EFFICIENT SAVE GAS OPERATION SAVE TIRES Low consumption SAVE TIME of electricity The Alaska Eleciric Light and Power Co JUNEAU ALASKA 1:15 for the purpose of conducting |returning to Fairbanks. yea on. A Y G R T 7 SRR, DoC - QFORE \E START COUNTIY T POPULATIONS 0 CHOSEF'S WERRT Ne \?E“ SR - s of age are invited |left for the Westward. trade. He is stopping at the Gas- Also to be honored at tomorrow’s tineau, membe of - NOONAN LEAV] | | Traveling man Dan Noonan has He expects to be gone several weeks. ARMY TO USE WORLD S lAKGEST HOTEL — chlcuol Stevens hotel (fore- ground), known as the wnrln s larnn. will be taken over by the army to house air corps personnal. ‘Their | Ed Garnick was inducted into the | |erican Legion Auxiliary last week- Army lend at the convention in Sitka, cording to advises received here.|las Island Woman's Club was h"‘dwnnmng operations of his coms= PAGE THREE WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAY! OMCENTURY | N © W ! SHE SOUTH SF4s Pacamount’s music-{ll1pd, theill spectaote in glaving r{t//{//to{ok / NEWS THEATRE s:amng DOROTHY AMOUR JON _HALL " LYNNE oV PHILIP RE[g““ KATHERINE oeMILLE FRITZ LEigeR DONA DRAKE Directeq by ALFRED muu STARTS TONIGHT “LAS VEGAS NIGHTS" with TOMMY DORSEY DOUGLAS NEWS ‘I)Ol GLAS WOMAN S CLUB BEGINS FALL ACTIVIT | september meeting of the Doug- Wednesday evening at the home of | Mrs, Norman Rustad, with Mrs. ‘ Devon as assistant hotess. | The committees appointed by the | president, Mrs. Rustad, are as fol- | lows: Ways and Means Committee, Mis. | | Felix Gra s on Fridays. The work is never finished. There is much to be done. May there never be & lack of women to carry on that | work. . s RETURN FROM CANNERY A. E, Goetz, ,arrived home this morning from Idaho Inlet where he has been assisting in the crab pany, the Juneau Packing Co. He | was accompanied to town by Mrs, | Goetz and son, Billy, who have ‘b(‘on vacationing at the Inlet for past two weeks. PR R L } 'KOOTIES DEFEAT ¢ Alfred Bonnett, Mrs, Samuel Devon, Mrs. Mike Pusich, Miss Kathleen Carlson. Library Committee—Mrs. Marcus | Jensen, Mrs, Ray Nevin, Miss Elea- ner Warren. Membership Committee—All D. I. W. C. members. | Girl Scouts Troop Committee— Mrs. Grant Goetz. Brownies Troop Committee—Mrs, rant Logan. Flowers and Sick Committee Mrs. Samuel Devon. Publicity Committee—Mrs. Calvin Pool. Historian—Murs. Calviif Pool. Arrangemerits are being made to ssist Miss Stephenie Bogdon, Pub-1 lic Health Nurse, with community health activities. - eee FOOD SALE! Saturday, September 26, Mark the date on your calendar! The funds from this sale will be used| for the purchase of new llbrary] books. We are looking to you rori | more of the splendid coopcmuon | you have given us in the past. In-| udenmlly. ,donations of good bmkfi‘ |to the Douglas Library will ‘ wludly received. Remember Lmz | Goody Sale, §epv.. 26. i, . GHAIG SR GIRL SCOUTS ! The Girl Scout troop will con- | tinue activities with Miss Ruby 1McNe‘fll as captain and Miss Kath- lecu Carlson as lieutenant. e ‘ WAR TIME SERVICE ‘ Outstanding among the pro)ecuve‘ accomplishments set up for the| ‘npprouching fall and winter is the | part Douglas women will be able | | to play in the naton-wide war time service drive, The opportunity to | help is afforded at the mending circles in the Red Shield Room in | Juneau on Wednesdays and wm\ | the Red Cross sewing group at Mrs. 63 Calls An OWL CAB (g By BILLY DeBECK X SRRNES NES € RIGAT, NE MLEN - \\EN)ED s NE WUZ TRV To '(E\.\. \g“\fl 2 DRETFUL TUCKLSH CRITTER CHOSEF \S O MISH __ | Kooties MISSOURI MULES BOWLING GAME The Alaska Kootles defeated th‘ |Missouri Mules on the Brunswick | Bowling Alleys last night in a new |series started by enlisted men. rolled 2433 and Missour} Mules rolled 2369. Erv Hagerup is managing the series and he is on the Alaskd Kooties but he was third man of !the team of five in last night's game, Scores made last night are u§ follows: ¥ Alaska Kooties * 1st 2nd 3rdTot? Hagerup 215 134 170 518 Ricodeau . 155 142 168 466 Nelson . 137 135 97 369 Rayala .. 196 163 200, B5® Rayodos 167 151 203; 52% ¥ Missouri Mules st 2nd 3rd Tot’} | Ackerman ... 197 148 145 490 Knoten . 121 180 169 460 Danner 143 152 170 466 \Nr]wn 164 175 137 410 Felding 211 162 125 498 COMING NEXT WEEK © CECIL B. DeMILLE’S GREATEST SPECTACLE 201 CENTURY A

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