The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 19, 1942, Page 3

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1942 ' "SUSPICION”, FINE NEW FIM, 15 BILL 47 CADITOL THEATRE k3 LaArIIVLRE FOR THE ¢ ) FIRST Cary Grant, Joan Fontaine, TIME! Stars in Character Drama Here One of the strangest romances ever filmed comes to the screen in “Suspicion,” an unusual type of mystery picture starring Cary Grant and Joan Fontaine. It was direct- ed by Alfred Hitchcock and is the | feature now showing at the Capi- {tol Theatre. [ The unique story revolves about |the lives of Johnnie Aysgarth, an jauractlve young ne'er-do-well, and |of Lina McLaidlaw, an unsophisti- |cated but beautiful heiress whom ‘Johnme woos and wins in tempes- | tuous style, inducing her to elope |with him against the wishes of her strait-laced father. | Not until after the honeymoon |does Lina discover that her ALSO' |charming husband hasn't a shil- “SCENIC GRANDUER" ’lmg to his name, and is heavily LAk b |in debt. She makes him go to \work managing an estate for a | wealthy cousin, but e neglects |his work in favor of playing the races, “borrows” money from the estate to cover his losses, and is finally discharged, under a cloud. New developments pile on top of each other in thrilling sequences. BRI FOVTAINE SeFICION CEDRIC HARDWICKE An RKO-Radio Picture THEATRE SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU B.D.STEWARTIS BACK FROM TRIP TO WASHINGTON - NAZIS GAIN OVER DEAD, STALINGRAD Hundreds of German B ies Litter Factory Territ ( Mine : Stewir for a discussic e co tion in Alaska Mr. Stewart War Producti confes natic ce the 11 re: i i ¢ ¢ Ger- e y 1 in nar- a desperate effort to break-through orts placed the most in the northern From this it is as- a new German gain is registered there. The noonday communique said: “Hundreds of enemy dead piled up in the streets and are left there. Eighteen enemy tanks have been knocked out of commission.” H at while in Washington hie was not informed of the pend- shutdown of most gold mines in Alaska, that he did not hear of the order until he was on his way - to Seattle. HAROLD Mrs. Stewart accompanied her BATES HERE husband, and also returned. | Harold H. Bates, City. Attorney of Sitka, arrived in Juneau yester- to build one day and is staying at the Baranof - e It costs as much Liberty cargo vessel as 16 heavy Hotel for a few days while conduct- tanks. ing business here. Your Electric Toaster Has Gone Off to War! The electric toaster you now have is the ONLY one you’ll be able to get till the Axis gets the Axe! — the materials used in it are war mater- ials now. This means you must keep it clean, don’t let it get clogged with crumbs, and let the Alaska Electric Light and Power Company make needed repairs! We Malce ALL Elecirical Repairs? Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—]JUNEAU, ALASKA rep———— l NECK HIGH IN TROUBLE _Their guns held high to keep them dry, steel-helmeted parachutists in training at Fort Brags, N.C., advance through a stream toward their objective—an airfield. They carry full equipment. "to cast the toy aside.’ ; “When peace comes I p— M d | “There was to have been an- for yourself—view it all Flag Of ruce On a agascar |other celebration this year in the|know when you come home o ! Danish city of Horsens, the birth-|will admit that Harriman |place of Vitus Bering. This city!right. “Many have tried to tell of majesty of the Northland me it is best expressed by Rc Service in his *Songs of the kon,” when he says: “It’s the great big broad land up yonder, {was to have celebrated its 500th| {anniversary as such, and the out- |standing feature of the affair was to have been the unveiling of the |statue of Bering in the City Mu- {seum, commemorating his discov- lery of Alaska. “How has our investment turned! It's the forest where silence | lout? We paid $7,200,000 as a pur- lease; !chase price, and what did we get| It's the beauty that thrills for it? Well, in material things with wonder, | we have taken $2,000,000,000 in| It's the stillness that fills fish, gold and other precious met-| with peace. {als, furs, lumber, and many other items. | “Outside of material benefits, we became the owners of the world’s| harness, The wilds where the Caibou The freshness, the 'feedom, greatclst1 slorehoxuse n(l n.r.ursllfl farness, f“?“" G oo l”?““‘f“- 2041 0 God! how I'm stuck on it inland waterways, that are unsur- passed anywhere. “Until this awful war came to us, the Northland was fast be- coming a great tourist mecca, and when the days of peace come agin, CHARLES GOLDSTEIN ours, Harriman’s Comment and Mrs. Goldstein visited in attle, Portland, San Francisco Los Angeles. Mrs, Goldstein I am reminded of a speech made by the late E. H. Harriman who, in 1898, spent some two months cruis- ing along the vast coastline of the Territory. On his return, speaking Broom handle surrender on the island of Madagascar is pictured another month in the State via cablephoto from Cairo, e locale 1 Mada- (o¢ what he had seen, he said, “To N8 in Los Angeles with her daugh- ascar, with Lieut. Col. Ade British political leader, shown \\‘lnjlh tHoss” of ORI ek, paiting nlonc| s the captured cnn.nfnnh!:xxtr and :\‘Tx.u;rvlll‘”(»fl.u\" Madagascar lea - | ") " L bproaching old age,| Mr. Goldstein reported that while east of i e R by all means see this grandeur be-|things are “certainly humming” in fore you die. To those of you who!the States, he had no trouble flag was slowly lowered from the staff; immediately following, our band struck up our own rNational Anthem, and General Rosseau’s son |interest or attract you. stepped forward and attached Old | “It is said that these expressions Glory to the halyards of the flag- | | 5 | were formed in his mind while m-,"Mrs. Hagmele staff, ‘and ran that grand old Flag was making what he called the| up to the truck. So ended the transfer, and so simple were the|climax o all the scenic wonders— | ceremonies that Rosseau was back the trip through Peril Straits and | | Whitestone and Sergius Narrows, | on his ship by 5 o'clock. “By this transfer we found our-|that takes one from Chatham RATISLANDS | APPROPRIATE FOR NIPPONS - Mrs. John Hagmeier and her | P ¢ § i sleaisi b ter. | Stratts S sons, John and Lee, by g selves in possession of a vast ter-|Straits to Sitka. He made it, as| ee, born last | A ¢ Archie Shiels Gives Alaska ritory, almost totally uninhabited. I have done, in the soft evening Pl Tetumed to Juneau yester- There was a total population of |lights of a perfect day, and T am oY @fter a visit in the south, where Day Spee(h n ];llgml}' over 29,000 people ;150 of not surprised that he and but The strong life that never knows # BACK FROM SOUTH |trip to the south, during which he did not return with her husband, but will spend visit- are still young, take my advice| Ve!N8, making most of his trips those of the German Occupled Zone ' andesee the rest of the world first, PY air. The people in the States, and to offer organized resistance for after you have viewed this D€ reported, are far more consci- against the attempts of the “Vichy scenic wonderland, no other will| 0Us Of the war than we in Alaska. Gang” to supply French workers rwand ; Twins Bgium Here called jt| the grandparents had a chance to PAGE THREE "LOVE" EXPERT IS | FOOLED IN FEATURE | NOW AT TWENTIETH i "Moon Over Her Shoulder’ Clever Comedy Now | Showing Here | The audience at the 20th Cen- [tury Theatre yesterday howled at the marital problems of the “love’ | doctor who thought he knew every- |thing about marriage. It was the | first performance of 20th Century- Fox's “Moon Over Her Shoulder,” jand a clever comedy it is Lynn Bari, fresh from her fine | performance in “Sun Valley Ser |nade,” gives one of the best por \n'x\_vul.s of her career. John Sut- ton, whose work in “A Yank in the R.AF." received such wide acclaim, | Where the Better BIG Pictures Play T20"LENTURY AGAIN TONIGHT again does an excellent job. Dan/ go | Dailey, Jr.,, is fine in a difficult 1| part | you The unusual story tells of Sut-| was |ton, an expert on marital problems, ' |who is so engrossed in his business the |affairs that he neglects Lynn, his to|wife, She tries to get him to pay obert | more attention to her, but she is Yu- unsuccessful. He suggests that she |resume her hobby of painting. “"‘»V! Lynn is about to follow his ad- |vice, when a crowd mistakenly has | hinks she is trying to kill herself. She escapes from them with Dan Dailey, Jrs help. Dan is attracted to her, but she does not tell him & M€ she is married. Then Sutton and Dailey meet and fight over her. In hilarious finish, Lynn learns which man she really loves. Frenchmen ~ Are Urged LYNN JOHN DAN BARI-SUTTON - DAILEY, Jr. Alan Mowbray * leonard Carey Irving Bacon * Joyce Compton Lillian Yarbo « A 20th Century-Fox Picture. me call; the THEATRE ""Moon Over Miami" SUNRISES all.” [] it will be more so than ever. No| Charles Goldstein, pioneer Ju- where else can one find what is to'neau fur merchant, arrived home be seen in this great Northland of Saturday night after a month’s | - The following are sunrises and sunsets for duck hunters: Tuesday, Oct. 20 Sunrise 7:44 a.m. Sunset 5:41p.n. Wednesday, Oct. 21 Sunrise 7:46 a.m. Sunset 5:38 p.n. { Thursday, Oct. 22 Sunrise 7:49 a.m. Sunset 5:35 p.m. Friday, Oct. 23 Sunrise 7:51 a.m. Sunset 5:33 p.m, Saturday, Oct. 24 [ Sunrise 7:53 a.m. Sunset 5:30 p, Sunday, Oct.25 i Sunrise 7:55 a.m. Sunset 5:28;:.!? ! et o el Se- and Direct Appa fo Those in Vichy, Other German Occupied Zones LONDON, Octb 19.—The Fighting French have been fanned into more growing discontent by a direct radio appeal to the people of “France occupied by Vichy” as well as as tra- BUY DEFENSE BONDS Bt th A ANTE EVERYONE TO SEE for Nazi war industry. ‘ MRS. LEMIEUX ! RETURN TO JUNEAU MR. AND Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Lemieux re- turned to Juneau yesterday after- noon from the south via Wrangell, where they stopped for a visit after | a trip to the south. Mr. Lemieux | is building superintendent for Gross | twin | Be”ingham whom were citizens of our own |the climax. "e;dtfifi twins for the first time. enterpl‘ise!»_ country, 500 Russians, 200 alien| “However, one should not con-| 'S Hagmeler visited in Sea-| | : white citizens, 1400 half-breed Rus- | fine his trip to the coastline—beau- | 5.9¢ Oregon, with Dr. and Mrs (Continued from Page One) | gans ang about 27,000 natives—|tiful as it is—but proceed into the O C: Hagmeler, paternal grand- tember. Those who knew had noth- | all of whom were chiefly domiciled | interior of the country, and see|PAT®MfS Of the boys, and her at Sitka, Kodiak, and Unalaska. “We are not going into the early history of the occupation. It seems almost too ridiculous to speak of in light of today’s history, but poor old Alaska had a hard time those there how lavish nature has been | in bestowing her wonders upon|'¢ €0y the thrill of seeing us. Go into Fairbanks, and then |"2PIeS: to Mount McKinley National Park | (by the way, the second largest in| our country), and see for yourself, ing but praise and admiration for the brave boys who were taking their planes and ships out into| the fog-banks, and for their many successes under most adverse| weather conditions. .- Brazil's sales “But, it is not the discovery that|first few years. Pirst, our wise-|mountain ranges of which you G€rmany 255 per cent. we have come to talk of today,|men in Washington wanted to|have never dreamed, including Mc- |~ o 20 but another important date in Al-|abandon it. Then they tried to|Kinley itsell, America’s highest C 0 M l N G aska’s history—October 18, 1867— | wish it off on to the then Terri- | Peak. Harriman Was Right “Go there in the fall of the year, about the end of August, and see the vast herds of game coming down from their summer feeding ranges to the lower levels of the park for the winter; moose, cari- bou, and white mountain sheep, literally by the thousands. It was our privilege to see one herd of Jjust seventy-five years ago. On this {tory of Washington as a county day Russian America (as the Rus- | This measure passed the House, slans called it) was turned over |but failed in the Senate; which to the United States, consumating body decided it would be unfair its purchase a few months earlier, to Washington to saddle such a and became Alaska. | dead-horse on to it. Make Preparations | Called Old Toy “General Rosseau, who had been| “Then there was the genius (also commissioned by the President t0|a member of the House) who re-| 'receive the country on behalf of |marked, ‘We took Alaska nearly] the United States, arrived at Sitka ‘ ten years ago just like a boy takes |caribou that was estimated by the at 11 a.m. on the morning of the|a new and strange toy—full of sat- | Superintendent of the park to be 118th and promptly notified the|jsfaction and fixed with a dagimibetween ten and fourteen thou- | Russian Commander that he would o investigate its inner workings— sand. You will also see bear, In-| ,come ashore at 3:30 the same af-|ang, like the boy, we have made cluding the immense tundra breed, | ternoon to formally take over the BING CROSBY MARY MARTIN Brian Donlevy Carolyn Lee 20th CENTUR | | mother came up from Eugene, Ore., ¢ to Japan dropped ! 45 per cent in 1941, and those to 10 MEN WANTED Wood Splitter Riggermen Hook Tender Signalman Bull Cook Fallers and Buckers ” Juneau Logging Company PHONE 358 the Chockermen | Territory. | “The services were simple. Ros- |seau came ashore accompanied by‘ | General Jefferson Davis, who was | !to command the troops after the | transfer was completed, together | with a military guard of honor. Marching smartly up to the Square Iin front of the barracks, they found that the Russian troops had BARNEY GOOGLE ANB SNUFFY SMITH OKAN ,NARD BIRD - T S0MT T KANGRRO00 CAN CARRY MESSRGES - HE'S EAST &S UGHTNWG -8UT = Can HE CONCERL HIMSELF 2 THAT'S T QUESTION | preceded them and were already |drawn up on one side of the | Square. Davis placed his troops on the opposite side. “The two Commissioners stepped | forward and the Russian Comman- | der, Captain Pestchourov, address- | ing General Rousseau, said, ‘On| behalf of His Imperial Majesty, the Emperor of all the Russians, I turn over to you the Territory of Alaska.’ | Accepts New Land “General Rosseau replied, ‘On behalf of the President and the | People of the United States of Am- erica, I accept from you as the emissary of the Emperor of Rus- sia, the Territory of Alaska.’ “Then, as they shook hands, the Russian band played the national anthem of their country as its| I B\ JEEPERS' T NEVER WINST PONDERED ON T W TTHRT L\GHT, SERGINT - ?’ e Cope 1942, King Featires Syodcate, I World rixhts reserved. PORE, PIT'ABLE CRITTER - WED NO SOONER GIT ONT (1) NO-MAN'S LAND QFORE HE'D BE A B0B-TANED NARMNT

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