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P ———————————————————————————————— CROWDS LAST NIGHT! Ptk " || CAPITOL THEATRE RE CRACKING! s AR becomes the year's biggest scream! starring OLSEN & JOHNSON MARTHA RAYE with Jane FRAZEE © Mischa AUER 5 Katherine JOHNSON - Lewis HOWARD Univarsal Picture THE.(‘A“!"OI HAS GEORGIA TECH IS BEATEN OUT BY TEXAS, 14-1 Thirty-six Thousand Spec- tators Witness Annual Cofton Bow! Game DALLAS, Texas, Jan Geor- gia Tech’s desperate fourth quarter rally in yesterday’s Cotton Bowl game netted touchdown and they drove to the three-yard line of Texas in the final minutes of play but two early touchdowns by Texas stood the latter up to win 14 to 7. It was the 70th annual Cotton Bowl classic and 36,000 spectators witnessed the game. Texas led 7 to 0 at the half - . GEORGIA’ WALLOPS UCLA 9-0 Frankie Sifiich Writes Blazing Chapters to (ollegiate Career PASADENA, Calif.,, Jan. 2. Irankie Sinkwich, the country’s outstanding athlete, wrote blazing {inal chapters to his collegiate foot- ball career as he teamed up yes- terday with Charlie Trippi to give Georgia a victory over UCLA in the Rose Bowl by a score of 9 to0. Frankie's clincher of a touch-| 2 one | season : Film Shows Air Raid AIer' fCamp Wilson, and little Doc Mob- tury Theatre, call in the U. S. Arm) band of spies and saboteurs who factory during a mock air rai Bromberg and Spencer Charters. g with Martha O'Driscoll in Paramonnt’s comedy thriller, “Pacific Blackout,” opening Sunday at the 20th Cen- | and practice blackout. exciting drama dedicated to Civilian Defense are Eva Merivale, Louis Jean Heydt, Thurston Hall, Mray Treen, J. Edward SATURDAY, JANUARY 2, 1943 "HELLZAPOPPIN'' IS MAKING HIT AT " New Stuff with Aid of Fun's ‘fun, but a person can't |laugh all the time! | That's the reason Johnson !sequence in their picture, “Hellza- poppin’,” wherg guns don't shoot, animals don't run riot over the set and where stooges are not sub- jected to various pranks. The picture, a Mayfair Produc- tion presented by Universal, is currently playing at the Capitol Theatre. The one rare moment of quiet in “Hellzapoppin'” is a water ballet which takes place in the Olsen and swimming pool of a lavish garden , said to have cost a cool $45,000 Olive Hatch, former Olympic and AA.U. champion, created the spec tacular and beautiful formations using two-score of Hollywood’s most Buttressing the comedy of Olsen and Johnson are Martha Raye, Hugh Herbert and Mischa Auer who abandon all restraint and cut loose to have the time of their lives. An appealing romance is pro- vided by pretty Jane Frazee and Robert Paige, which serves as a humane breathing spell to save the laughter-stricken audience from possible prostration. EAST BEATS " WESTTEAM BY 1 POINT F OO TBALL EastemersWifi First Time SCORES 5 in Five Years-13- - 12 Score SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 2. — smooth-operating band of college stars brought the East its first/ football triumph over the West in five years here yesterday, edging ¢ Westerners 13 to 12 in a spinc-tingling charity game before —ALSO— March of Time “"Men of the Fleet Latest News “Jungle Girl” 4 Sat. Mati THE BIG PICTURES! The following are final scores of various bowl games played yester- afternoon a 9: UCLA 0 t 12 labama 37 Tech 7; Texas 14 Tennessee 14 58,000 Second Bqmber Air Force 13;|" yo great opposing passers, Co- | rdin-Simmons 7 lumbia’s Paul Governals for the| Florida A & T 14; Southern Uni- g apg Washington State’s Bob | versity 6 s was the FlOWerl gannedy for the West, turned in Bowl game played between negro|pandsome jobs. Governals tossed | aggregations Jacksonville {one touchdown pass and paved the ’wn_v for another score. Kennedy.i down followed a blocked punt in|passing fiercely all afternoon, | the first play of the final quarter scored on a lateral and passed a and produced a safety for thellong one later that set up his Georgians. |team’s second tally. Sinkwich limped badly with ankle| Failures at try for points gave| injuries but was able to contribute |the East the advantage. spot duty, going in when short ————————— passes were needed late in the fourth period and when three yards were needed for a touchdown. Bombers Wi Frankie bucked the right tackle om ers |n and made the goal line by inches. \ Ninety-three thousand witnessed | over Border the exciting ‘spectacle and after! | | the game was over, both teams ad- | mitted meeting the hardest oppon: Defeat Hardin . Simmons, 13-7 in Sun Bowl | day at ents of the entire 1942 football| 21 FIRES STARTED AT CRETE; ALLED |~ 157 n S Bowl PLANES ONRAID "eerdr LONDON, Jan. 2—The British|during the first half and trail-| Navy communique says an attack [ing for more than three quarters by Allied planes on Crete set 21(in the Sun Bowl game here yester-! fires. The same planes visited the|day, the Bombers of the Second Air! Cadia airdrome and did great dam- ; Force from Fort Wright came from | age by bombs to planes on the|behind to batter out a 13 to 7 ground. victory over the Border Conference | champs, Hardin Simmons, before | an"overflow crowd of nearly 16,000. A freshman fullback named iley sparked the cowboys, while big | Vic Spadaccins, now a lieutenant ‘in the air force, and Lieut. Harold |Van Avery starred for the Bom- | bers. BASKETBALL ~ ONMONDAY Two doubleheaders are scheduled {In basketball for next Monday night, one doubleheader in .!uneaul |and the other in Douglas. In Juneau the Waacs meet the Officers’ Club and .the Moose go ! against the Sigacs. Referees will be | Smith and Lundeburg. X At Douglas the Waves play the | Beavers and Falcons meet the ‘Bluos. The referees are not stat- »d but will probapbly be Vacura }nnd Hoffman. r Corps to help him round up a threaten to blwe up a munitions Others in this abor, Philip D Eight “paint farms” throughout the country test the reactions of paint on different materials in varying climates. Two Comedians Un cork insisted on at least one|! curvaceous bathing beauties. | iin the lannouncer THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA TRAP LINES b y HENRY PEARSON | Do you have a hobby? It's fash- ionable to have a hobby these days. It doesn't matter much what you collect bits of string, stamps, clamshells, overdue bills, in fact,| anything. The more unusual it is e better, of course. Personally, I haven't had much luck with my hobbies. This winter | |1 started saving odd-shaped snow flakes, but I guess there must have | been some one elsq here who was | saving them too, for every time I |put some between the leaves of a large book I kept for the purpose, they'd later turn up missing I suspected someone I knew very well of taking them but rather \‘J\:m start a rumpus I started col- | | lecting odd women’s hats. | | I ran into a snag when I sud- |denly realized that all ladies’ hats {are odd and there wasn't much| |sense of my collecting them. - | | Now I am saving cigar butts of {and comedy 'AIR RAID PLOT THEME OF BILL {re to-Date Interest, Comes to 20th Century Show As up-to-date as today's head- dnes, “Pacific Blackout.” Para- mount’s gripping thrill film of mur- at the 20th Century. Robert leading :oles. Set in a large Ame Coast city where a prac! out, with i‘s girens, roaring bers aad crackling an guns, is fall swing, Blackout” in to come out of Hollywond. Direc- | tor Ralpa Murphy has, reports have has it, scored a direct hi. and turned ou® a fast-moving drama in which thrills, suspense, romance tumble all over each other. Preston is cast as the brilliant young inventor of a range-finder for anti-aircraft guns. When sples and saboteurs “frame” him on a | various descriptions. I have scraped | jup quite a few too, and only got| !my hands stepped on twice. R Tennessee " Too Much ~ For Tulsa Vo lunteers Win Sugarj Bowl Grid Classic- Stqndouis NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 2. Thl“ Tennessee Volunteers overpowered | Tulsa yesterday before an estimat- ed Sugar Bowl crowd of 70,000 spcc-‘ tators but the Oklahomans got off 0 a fast start and staged a blaz- {ing finish that might have tied ithe game except for a last mtnuu-] pass interception by Tennesseo'fl ‘end, (was Tennessee 14, Tulsa 7. The game was a case of ! came from behind to score a; touchdown and safety in the third | Iperiod and again for six points in| the final period. Bobby Ciffers, tall Walter Slater, alternate, were Ten-| nessee’s standouts and for Okla-| homa's Tulsas, all-American Glen | Dobbs whipped six passes without a miss. back, | . PERRY CARL GOING TO ENTER SERVICE' Perry Carl, son of Walter Carl,| manager of radio station KINY,| who has made many friends among | the younger people of Juneau since | his arrival here less than a year ago, has made plans to enter the, Naval Air Service and will leave for the East within a day or two. Because he wishes to visit his friends in Chicago, Perry will go| to Vancouver, B. C., and from there | direct to Chicago, where he will| enlist, hoping to be accepted either Naval Air Corps or the| Marine aviation service. | Perry attended school in La! Grange, Ill, graduating from Ly-} ons Township High School and completed - a year of junior col- lege before coming to Juneau to join his parents. He has worked for the radio station since his arrival here, as on the evening schedule. S e — Malaria has been known as a disease of man since ancient times; its cure was discovered in the 17th| century. | —teo——— LENSES REPLACED Dr. Rae Lilllan Gurison's office in the Blomgren Bldg. will be amination until Jan. 15. adv. | | of BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY murder charge, Miss O'Driscoll rescues him. Together, with the mounting excitement of the air raid alarm as a background, they track down the spies, save the city trom destruction by real bombs and, of equal importance from the point of view of romance, they fall in love Eva Gabor and Philip Merivale are in the capable cast - Alabama Is Vidor, Big Game Roars Fon—h—in Orange .Bowl fo Beat Boston College 37 to 21 MIAMI, Fla, Jan. 2-—Alabama Jim Powell. The final score{gpotted Boston College 14 points’ then t00 | roared vback to a 37 to 21 victory| jmuch Tennessee as the Volunteersl‘be(om 30,000 fans in a yesterday afternoon and fought Orange Bowl football game. Two minutes before half Bama drove to the eight-yard line a fourth down. The yard line to take a lead of 22 to 21. In the last quarter, Boston was consecutive nelq scoreless while Bama gained | two touchdowns, one extra point and a safety. Boston's Mickey Holovak scored Eall three touchdowns made by the| Eagles. SR e A ELISTA IS EVACUATED BY HITLER High Command Can’t Tell People Anything-So- viets Make Claims (Continued from Page One) of its usual diet of sugar-coated propaganda served up by Goebbel's experts, the DNB, which customar- ily opens the daily forecast with a flood of news. When the DNB did come on the air, the German people were brusquely told ‘“there is nothing to report as war news is not available at the present time.” Loss Conceded Subsequent broadcasts conceded the loss of Elista as the Armies swept deeper across the frozen Kalmyck steppes all sides.” BALS O'FIREW js ihe first pictare on| the vital theme of Civilian Defense| time, ’ guard | and|pooted a field goal from the 15-! SMITH e v | L OOPLENTURY Last Time Tonight COLBERT MILLAND | “"SKYLARK" | All New Show---Starts Sunday! || Preview Tonight 1:00 A. M. der, sabotage and romance during| an air raid alert, opens Sundu_\'l‘ Pres-| ton and Martha O'Driscoll have the! " FIFTH COLUMN IS AT WORK! all “berwe Matinee Sunday 2:00 P. M. Melodrama right out of today’s headlines! PACIFIC dock and dawn How does Uncle Sam rout the rats from their hidden nests? SUNDAY SHOWS wildly- ! fharpe Finds ' Labor Coffer Almost Empty !Haas Left Only $536,08 fo Run Department for Three Months (Continued from Page One) |lature is presented with all the facts concerning the expenditures in the past of this office “It is apparent that there has been a deliberate attempt to dis- | grace the functions of this office— | whether that attack was directed primarily at an individual or at | the Department itself is bes¥ left for the public to determine. Much comment was made at the last ses- sion of Legislature concerning ‘fifth column’ activities of certain legis- lators on a bill previously under consideration — now the question may be properly asked: who has engineered the villification of this department? Big Jump “What relation there is between the fact that the former occupant of this office was defeated at the (polls in April of 1942 and the fur- | ther fact that expenditures of the | Department immediately thereafter Red | kept riding to the point where the | funds ure now almost exhausted, towards [is not at the moment definitely open for repairs and replacements| the Black Sea, but the DNB in- known because of the fact that of broken lenses on Monday, Wed- | sisted Velikie Luki still held out|no financial records were left by nesday and Friday evenings only,| while admitting it was virtually sur-|the former appointee of from 7 to 10:30 p.m. No eye ex-| rounded by Russians “attacking on fice. this of- | “However, an investigation bf the OW MEAW - STEP OUTS\DE A MNUTE, NARDBIROW T DIONT WANT T DOCTO | of the Department until the Legis- | l. | vouchers may throw further ung jon the accelerated expenditures. At the same time, an examination of the reports and travel accounts of former members of this office will | definitely determine the truth or falsity of numerous rumors and | complaints that public funds have been used to further the interest of some candidate to public office. Continue Investigation “In the very near future when & more complete picture can be |given to the taxpayers of the con- | duct of the affairs of this office for the past 18 months, it will be my duty to inform the public. “How the trustees in this case | have conducted the affairs of this Department is certainly a matter for exposition to the Territory.” ... Beverly Hall Is Giving ‘Birihdanyarty Today Beverly Jane Hall is six years old today and in honor of the event she is entertaining 13 of her little friends at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Hall on Sixth Street. Plans for the event provide everything that the little ones will desire. BACK T0 SCHOOL ONNEXT MONDAY The Christmas holidays are now over and it is back to school next Monday for those in kindergarten through other grades and high | school. CoLzEon TH DOC AN'Y WMAD QA REAL CASE FOR SONE TWE, NOW Y i quet is by vory v PO S50nctr ang gy P Imek 2:30; 7:30 and 9:45 1 SPECIAL ATTRACTION SUNDAY—9:30 ALWAYS 2 EDITIONS LATE WORLD NEWS ALL NEW SHOW _ | TONIGHT! RIZAL EVENT THIS EVENING With an interesting dinner pros gram arranged and Judge George F. Alexander as principal speaker, | the Filipino Rizal celebration, to be held tonight starting at 7:30 o'¢clock in the Gold room ‘of the Baranof Hotel, promises to 'be & significant observance of Philip- pine history. [ & Given for Filipinos in the Gas- tineau Channel area, both civillang and service men, and for invited residents of Juneau and vicinity, the dinner will have as toast ter Corp. Max Rayela. The address of welcome will be made by m Peter Figueroa, and Pfc. E. Lucas will present “My Lhst Farewell,” @ tone poem. t¥ Soloists will be Miss Mary Jup kich, accompanied by Mrs. Lilliaf Uggen, and Miss Juanita Diaz, & Juneau Filipino girl of musical pro= mise. 5 Although attendance at the bane invitation only, .the public is invited to the semi-fors mal ball following. 4 Permission has been granted for Filipino service men to - receive overnight passes this evening, so they may- enjoy the entire evening of festivities. 5 e, One old car battery supplies the lead needed in three three-ineh anti-aircraft guns. BUY DEFENSE BONDS By BILLY DeBECK N