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

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ONDAY, NOVEMBER 30 AMERICA? AMERICA'S GREATEST MENACE hides behind the cloak of friendship and respectability$ oae® PRISCILLA LANE Robt. CUMMINGS who did such fine pictures as “Man | a cruel trick of fate and only g Hunt” and “Foreign Correspen- | through love was she able to break | fent.’ | the “jinx" that had nearly been The story finds Robert Cum- her destruction W mings, a young fellow employed | Vicki Moore, Miss Marshall’s role, speils back luck for anyone _PLUS— ] ing with danger and adventure ;m“ sea. She is avolded and feared by | he runs into the gang of fifth col- everyone—branded as the “jinx of | LATE Y | the Orient.” David Ritchie, played | NEWS Show Place of Juneau Hundreds Die in Early | Sunday Fire When Big | Boston Night Club Burns "SABOTEUR' STORY | 1942 OF WAR INDUSTRY | NOW AT CAPITOL Priscilla Lane and Rober! Cummings Featured in Jaughn Glaser, Murray Alper, Dor- Athy Peterson and Alma Kruger are he stars The direction was by that master »f modern drama, Alfred Hitchcock, m an aviation plant, innocently in- | olved in a fire of incendiary ori- gin, He evades the police to search | down the saboteur himself, meet- | umnists. Priscilla Lane is suspicious of the young man at first, and attempts FRENCH ISLE COMES OVER WITH ALLIES ALASKA COASTAL | "BRINGS FIVEIN | FROM KETCHIKAN, Alaska Coastal Airlines planes | DOGCS WILL HELP FIGHT THE AXIS_Against a background of Mt. Chocorua in New Hampskire, U. 8. soldiers lead THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA *» The exciting story of modern | Love, excitement and adventure war industry, where just one man are three elements that are always who is a saboteur can cause havoc found in an engrossing motion pic- is portrayed in the film “Sabo- | ture, and the new Warner Bros teur,” now showing at the Capitol film, “Singapore Woman" which heatre y is now showing at the 20th Cen- Priscilla Lane, Robert Cummings tury Theatre, has plenty of each ‘ Norman Lloyd, Otto Kruger, It is a thrilling tale of a woman | to return him to the police. = il . ! some of the Army’s Siberian Huskies along a trail. The dogs, carrying light backpacks, are being trained for use in the ice covered stay at his rubber plantation for | North lands. Besides pack carrying, the Army’s dog training center at Wonalancet, N. H., teaches them to pull a sled as a member of o while 2 dog team. As soon as the dogs are trained they are shipped north for use this winter when ice and snow make transportation diffinuit it b Shes “Gal in Kalamazoo” BUILDINGS N ' JAP-HELD AREA ~ ARE DESTROYED | American Aircraft Make PAGE THREE | SING_APORE WOMAN | Where the Better BIG Pictures Play 15 NOW SHOWING AT ‘ 20TH CENTURY SHOW § DO LENTURY — o PLAYIRG — Brenda Marshall and Dav- id Bruce Share Hon- ai ors in New Film g made despondent by a stigma be- | yond her control. Set in an omin- | ous, tropical locale, the film tells | how this woman, played by Brenda Marshall, became bitter because of | who comes in contact with her. Her father dies when he is ruined fin- ancially. Her husband is lost at| by David Bruce, refuses to be taken | in by any of this silly sllpr‘r.sutlun,‘ as he terms it, and asks Vickie to ALEXANDER KIESER, | OLIVE GILLIS WED AT FOX HOLLOW RANCH Alexander Kieser, a private the US. Army, and Olive L. Gillis were married at a candlelight cere- ! mony November 23 at the Fox Hol- | BRENDA MARSHALL DAVID in | R y ok | made round trip flights to Sitka ] ity Pty s BRUC (Continued from Page Ope) onng |and Ketchikan on Saturday. On the | H w Ranch on the Glacier High-| ignited a paper palm tree to starl cunion in Ind'an O(Gan | return flight from Sitka a capacity | | Three SU((eSSfUI Ralds qu.v' R | VIRGINIA ::)‘o'infio‘-!:n?r" COWAN H H | Ve roug! | H Che brida. ouquet was com- the lightning-lil E 1 au, 3 o passengers A i Vst ; : | . : 957 . | P and both the bride and matron of | Late last night the Boston Com- out F|ght | turned with the plane from Ket- 8 : i7h ik, e : i i i WASHINGTON, Nov. 30 The honor, Mrs. Lloyd Reid, wore gar- w the death toll alone a and| | ONDON, Nov. 30.—The French |’ ArTivals from tehika ith | American aircraft destroyed all best man for the groom, whose | _’ may reach 470. |ACA were Francis Guertin, Ha bildings S EAE Abhnda areasor the k Horror Scenes The horror scenes started at the island of Reunion has joined forc- Gen. DeGaulle’s headguarters announced Mybraie, George Miller, W. E.V. | Hpose and Faust K. Hinshaw oo es with the Fighting ¥rench, Jap-held the Solomons. New Georgia Island of parents are residents of Toppenish, Wash. Judge Felix Gray officiated at i conti 1l day Sunday ’ | e fire and cr?z\xxlu‘eLi. al ay u 3,!0(135. | | The air raids, the Navy commu- | the ceremony, following which a| were never duplicated in Boston. | pp. ., same foll =¥ c a0 J y " : port came following a S'I'O(K ouo‘IA"ws nique said, took place on Novem- buffet supper was served. A num- | Last night fewer than 250 bodies 1o o =0 oo ey | s . - i ss landing upon the island ber 23, November 24 and again on'ber of friends of both the bride had been identified. Some of the |, o ro00 composed entirely of | e | November 27 'and groom attended | i 34 bodies are so terribly burned that puopiio prench | NEW YORK, Nov. 30 Closing | i Groima’ Pashals! Biisy 4 pr BB, | IINEW Yonx final identification may never be 3 | quotation of Alaska Juneau mine | ¥ . & | The announcement that the. In- | The Navy's communique also said ' | possible ldian Ocean outpost had alligne | Stock today at the 1 pidon this { American ground patrols at Gua-| SIATERS (LUB IS I TOWN" Long lines of relatives and friends | iy 1e witn the Fighting French fol- | POBtR is 3%, American Can 70%. | abiar RIaE B Saie Ardt | Sab stood Sunday outside the CIty's tWO')oueq o Vichy radio report that|ANAConda 25%. Bethlehem Stecl wred a numver of macine wuns| INCORPORATED FOR o princlpal morgues Waiting o be |neunion had surrendered undér 8| oo ot weghs o, Internations] [ west, of Point Cruz, stx -miles west | [MRS. GRACE SANFORD 18 if they could identify the bot len‘ Allied forces.” a 3 Al % e A% Mrs. Grace Sanford now is fill- lined up row on row. Hospitals Jammed Hospitals throughout Greater «, Northern Pacific 7, United States Steel 467, Pound | THIRTEEN HERE | York Central 11 - e 5 REUNION ISLAND ing in temporarily on work for. the Territorial Commissioner of Educa- | tion. She began clerical work today Incorporation privileges in the Territory have been granted the Anchorage Skating Club, a non- ;0;?110 nmfhpjhg::;i \I;}!h injured, | DOW, JON 28 | | I pIED BY profit organization formed to pro- | and will probably be employed flo; i pebimatas - . The following are today’s Dow, | mote and encourage ice skating in | several weeks in the absence of usl‘}cl;fi:;l:dxn-(;,‘-:::d:”m,mt‘( vg,'f'm FROM SOUTHI fJU“"S averages: Industrials, 114.50; | | {and around Anchorage, Territorial | Assistant Commissioner. Mrs. Marie 1 Blood plasl;‘]fl S bo,.o.ll skhad { rails, 27.06; utilities, 13.90. | | BR"ISH IROOPS Auditor Frank A.’Boyle announced | Drake who is ill in St. Ann's Hes- here from Washington and a sup- PRICES SATURDAY NINE T0 SITKA today. pital. Officers of the club include Presi- ——————— ply of sulfa drugs from Newark. Closin i g o | LONDON, Nov. 30—A communi- g quotation of Alaska Ju - dent C. W. Hufeisen, Vice-Presi- ¢ Specialists treating those burned | Arrivals from Seattle Sunday|peay mine stock last Saturday was @que broadcast from Vichy late|qont Willlam M. Svensson Sem_! BIRTHDAY PARTY ; were flown in from other cities. |evening were Lt. Roscoe C. Burr, i s | \last Saturday said British t 3 . ' | § | 3 1 3%, American Can 71%, Anaconda | 5 A y ritish troops, | ¢, o $ Among Those Trapped r i L ihionily ‘Soubhr-ANIEARK Wad” tand. | 2 orunaie o, . Eetazion a"di Penny Mae Johnson celebrated Among the hundreds trapped in| the inferno was Charles “Buck” Jones, Vannuy's California cowhcyi Lt. Phillip T. Allen, Richard Ennis,| Lt. Michael Rusnov, Lt. Milton N. Schreyer, Mrs. Josephine Scott, Lt. Ellsworth Shaw, Lt. Harold Terry, 25%, Bethlehem Steel 54'%, Com- | monwealth and Southern 9/30, Cur- tiss Wright 6%, International Har- | vester 54; Kennecott 274, New York HN ed on Reunion Island, 400 miles (east of Madagascar, Indian' Ocean and the Vichy Governor was o Treasurer Lois: Odsather. her second birthday last Priday at e | | the home of her parents, Mr. and At the last census the S()viel‘Mra. Arnold Johnson. Little guests Union contained more than 170,-|included Sandra DeHart, Eli Sheep- star in motion pictures who was|William J. Murphy, Mrs. Aubra|gcentral 11%, Northern Pacific 7! ganizing resistance. a 3 c v i 3 { ) c 7%, | , J i 000,000 people. |er, s Denny Kimmel afid Cll’l'-ica‘l,l.\ burned. SICUM R D"Hl?‘p,;Smth. Corp. George Ll Atwood | njted States Steel 47'%, Pound| You've heard the popular song hit, “I've Got a Gal in Kalamazoo ! \“B:;hi?flfx:‘;;‘: ik o also Vannuy's motion picture di-land Corp. Ralph L. Yale; fromgqgq Well, here she is—at least to students at Kalamazoo, Mich., college, | 3 i ¥ % rector, was -badly injured. | Ketehikan, H. B. Foss. | Dow. Jones averages Saturday| who picked her for the part of that mythical heroine, She's Sars | E E lE E KI 'lhe ;Bm?c'nogs :o*;flln ‘;):s‘*ll;\::s in Among the well known, identi-| fied dead, is Edward Ansin, of Su-| burban Brookline, President of the | Interstate Theatres Corporation; Norine Welch, a student, and daughter of Vincent S. Welch, Vice- President of the Equitable Life In-| surance Company, and Joseph A. Taking passage for Sitka were| Alexander Nastos, Willlam Kunz, Mrs. Martin Thompson, Phillip Jo- seph, Elizabeth Florendo, Mrs. Maxine Reynolds, Walter Reynolds, L. P. Taylor and Mrs. L. P. Tayxor.g D Honduras is the greatest banana were: industrials 114.95, rails 27.11, | utilities 13.97. HOSPITAL NOTES Richard Moen, A. A. Keefer and ! Robert Chaussee were discharged Woolley, Kalamazoo gal and a junior at the collegw. Feature af Capitol | DIES IN HOSPITAL; FUNERAL THURSDAY | Mrs. Gemevieve Larkin, wife of | M. J. Larkin of Warm Springs Bay, ;dled Saturday night at St. Anr | Hospital where she had been a pa- Boratyn, star fullback of Holy land in the world, exporting more ' e HA b Hentitar seisialide ross last year. than 12,000,000 stems a year. |from St. Ann’s Hospital November | i s, Cross a:ul | y | 28, | Mrs. Larkin, who was 36 at the BUY DEFENSE STAMPS BUY DEFENSE BONDS B Elsie Hanson, from Yakutat, en- tered the Government Hospital this | { morning and gave birth to a baby | girl this forenoon. ‘ ) 1 5 | Raymond Wilson left St. Ann’s Saturday, where he has been a pa- tient. ! Dorothy Brown and Robert Frank, both of Yakutat, were discharged from the Government Hospital Sat- urday. Mrs. V. J. Mader from Sitka was | admitted at St. Ann’s November 28 for surgery. Mrs. William Shields was dis- charged from St. Ann's Saturday, | and returned to her home. | | | | | Charles Woods was admitted to! St. Ann’s Saturday. | S. E. Philips entered St. Ann's1 Hospital yesterday for medical treat- | ment. [t % Hitchcock’s * icture revealing the most dangerous menace to the American people! g E P " BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH rc Cummings and Priscilia Lane in- Alfred |time of her death, is survived by jher parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cooney of Millwood, Washington, two brothers, also living in Wash- ington, and a third brother, Norman, in the United States Army. | Puneral services are set for 2 p. !m., December 3, at the Charles W. | Carter Mortuary, and will be con- | ducted by the Rey. W. H. Matthews, {Jr. | green Cemetery. | e 'DUANE BURNABY IS ' WITH POLICE DEPT. I Duane Burnaby, formerly with the Thomas Hardware Company, has | joined the Juneau Police Force as a patrolman, Chief B. H. Manery an- nounced today. | Buwnaby replaces Arthur Adams who has taken a position with the U. S. Customs in Skagway. Interment will be in the Ever- | Mc- | Empire Classiieds ra; 20th Century Fealure “MISTER, IF YOU LOVE YOUR LIFE—stay away from that woman,* is the advice given to David Bruce in this scene from Warner Bros.” “Singapore Woman,” at the 20th Century. The woman with thag deadly reputation is portrayed by Brenda Marshall H " LOOKS e SRS WSED f AN - Mrs. Jerry Williams and Harriet } | : | H 3 | Peterson were discharged from the | | CROSEF'S TH' FUNREST | Government Hospital November 28. | | LOOWW TW\NG SNCE 5T 1 TW QRCLS \EFT Arthur Brown, local native, en- | tered the Government Hospital Sun- | day. BN JEEPERS - ¥ CUOSTR VN6 SHANGARED ANTO & SHARE, TLL TRIN TRET BARBER'S NECW R ® 0 0 0 0 0 v v 0 00 WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. Bureau) Temp. Saturday, Nov, 28 Maximum 32, minimum 28 Temp. Sunday, Nov. 29 Maximum 23, minimum 28 10 inches snow on ground 2 9.0 0900 9 00 00 ““It can always be lurned in lo the Goverrtment for scrap if you get tired of it.”" Drawn for Office of War Information Courtesy of Bailey’s Cocktail Bar | Copr 1942, King Features Syndicate, lac. World rights reserved

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