The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 19, 1943, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

"MONDAY, JULY 19, 1943 GABLE-TURNER TEAM STARRED AS LOCAL HIT g 'Somewhere I'll Find You' Is Playing at Capi- tol Theatre | \ \ ture in the war correspondent in the Far in Somewhere I'll Find Melro-Geldwyn-Mayer picture starring Lana Turner, to the Capitol Theatre Sunday The story is a¥ timely as latest war communique. tion by Wesley Ruzgles, guished for pictures of subtle power strongly emphasizes the drama anc the romance, not overlooking humor of many situations. SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU e e e —_—— TWO GRANTED PAPERS e IN COURT SATURDAY Helmuth H(‘llnll‘l Langfeldt and Karl Stensen Vestbo were granted citizenship in U. S. District Court here Saturday in naturalization hearings before Judge George F. Alexander. Notice Pan American announces with pleas- ure the resumption of our Juneau- IFairbanks Electra Shuttle Service JUNEAU-FAIRBANKS Via Whitehorse FIVE FLIGHTS W C« nnections to all interior points. gy . Franklin Phone 106 ' paAN EORGE BROTHER Super Market PASSIONOLA MADE FROM PASSION FRUIT “The Taste Thrill of a Century” PASSIONOLA makes marvelous Fancy Drinks _Collins, Fizzes, High-Balls and delicious Cocktails that make you jump with joy whether used with Gin, Rum, Whiskey or Southern Comfort. [ ] PASSIONOLA COCKTAILS 14 jigger Passionola 1 jigger Rum or Gin Juice of half a lime Use crushed ice; shake well. ] PASSIONCLA COLLINS %, Jjigger Passionola 1 jigger Rum or Gin Juice of half a lime Use tall glass; ice and soda or carbonated water. PASSIONOLA, the New Mix Thrill, exclusively at George Brothers, AFIFTH $1.50 EORGE BROTHER PHONE 92 Free Delivery Phon 95 Keep ’Em Fiying BUY VICTORY BONDS!? co- which came The direc- distin- the Appearing in support of the co- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE JUNEAU ALASKA [Dane, Tamara Shayne, Lee Patrick,| | Reginald Owen, Charles Dingle,| |Leonid Kinskey, Diana Lewis and| |Sara Haden. 1 Gable and Sterling appear as brothers, both ace war correspon-| dents who return from Europe in| 1941 to discover that their editor, Dingle, is blissfully unaware of the In the Resurrection danger, that looms in the Pacific.|p o) Saturday evening, | They manage to get a sensational Jirdes Winther, daughter of Mr. |story published but lose their jobs.| 4 mMrs. John Winther of this | Returning to his former quarters city, became the bride of Fred G. in Greenwich Village, New YOrk, Baxter, son of Mr where he roomed with an artist and | Baxter of - Suffern, | wife, portrayec by Owen and Miss Rev. MISS WINTHER IS BRIDE OF FRED BAXTER . Luthern ters Miss Turner, who has taken!'of over 100 friends of the couple. room. She, too, is a re- Wedding music was porter and they have met before, Miss Katherine Torkelson and but this occasion touches off the|“Calm As the Night” and “Because” first spark of their colorful ro-|were sung before the service by fmrics {Mrs. Henry Harmon | Baskets of garden flowers were placed at the chancel for the cere- |mony and white tapers cast a glow jof light over the young bride as |she was escorted down the aisle by her father who gave her in mar- - Scout Councilors Given Luncheon . Sne wore a gown of white satin A luncheon Saturday at the home made with long sleeves and a sweety of ‘Mrs. H. L. Faulkner, Scout Com- heart neckline outlined with seed missioner, feted camp director, pearl embroidery. Her full skirt Pauline Roche, camp councilors, ended in a train and a fingertip Mrs. B. D. Stewart, Mrs. Paul Lind- | veil of net fell from a coronet of Mrs. Irving Ail, Mrs. Fred ceed pearls. She carried a bridal Mrs. Norman Cook, Mrs. bouquet of pink roses and sweet Carlson, Mrs. John Mc-, peas intermingled with baby- Mrs. George Folta, Mrs. breath. Spadden, camp nurse,. Miss Dorothy Larsen was maid of Miss Murial Heron; and Junior hcnor and the Misses Mavis Nikula Councilors Misses Dorothea Hen-'and Jean Winther were brides- Irick<on, Jean Buttes, Lois Stand- maids. All wore similar frocks of ifer, Betty Lou Hared and Phyllis pink with shoulder corsages of Turner. |sweet peas and rose buds. Halo's of The Faulkner house was lovely.|the same flowers were worn in decorated with roses and other their hair flowers from the Wellman Holbrook | Mrs. Winther selected a gown of and Faulkner gardens. Covers werelaqua lace for her daughter's mar- laid for thirty council members, riage and her accessories were leaders and camp councilors. | white. Hostesses for the event were Mrs.| Best man for the groom was Mr. H. L. Faulkner, Mrs. D. W. Herron, S. Thorp and ushers were Richard Mrs. W. J. Manthey, Mrs. R. Congdon and Arnold Miller. Wright, Mrs. Harvey Starling, Mrs.| After the ceremony a reception Felix Toner, Mrs. Andrew Baker, Was held at the Sixth Street home Mrs. E. L. Keithahn, Mrs. Raymond | of the bride’s parents where friends Wolf, Mrs. Norman Rustad and|of the couple called to wish them Mrs. Earl McGinty. | happiness. After luncheon Miss Roche gave| The bride’s table was centered a resume of the Eagle River camp. | with a three tier cake, topped by a She stated that the camp had one tiny bride and groom and offset by of the most beautiful settings of white tapers in candelabra. Presid- any she had ever seen and Was|ing at the table were the Mesdames impressed and keenly appreciated Armond Duncan and Harold Aasey' the way Juneau people including' Assisting during the evening werg the citizens, city, army, coast guard, Mrs. G. Winther, Mrs. John Win- navy and forest service participated|ther, jr., Miss Roberta Dooley and in making the camp successful|Miss Patricia Dooley. when regular camp help such as a| The newlyweds will make their handy man, cook and other paid home in Juneau 't the Hillcrest people who are u;ua‘lly included in'Apartments. a camp setup were not able to be| Mrs. Baxter, a graduate of the secured. She also stated that the| Juneau High School, attended busi~ Juneau and Douglas Brownies were | ness school in Seattle, and has been the best campers she had ever seen.| with the Pan American Airways Before coming to Juneau Miss here. Roche had directed camps at Spo- | kane, Washington, Billings, Mon-|a year ago and 15 employed as me- tana, Havre, Montana, New Castle, | chanic with PAA. Wyoming and served as councilor | in Minnesota. D GEORGE BROTHERS PARTNER RETURNS FROM TRIP SOUTH stars are Robert Sterling, Patricia juist, Henning. Lawrence Laughlin, Mollee Mz COUPLE MARRIED | i | ! Miss Doris May Withey and James E. Norman, both of Juneau, were After a three months blLsmPss‘mflrrmd Sunday morning in Doug- trip, Tom George, partner in George las at the home of U. S. Commis- Brothers returned to Juneau Fri- |fioner Felix Gray. day night by plane. | Attendants were Mrs. Virgil Hulse, During his absence he visited his|Miss Barbara Smith and Lester L father, Michael George, at ms,P%E home at Walnut Grove, California, | made business contacts in Los| Anegeles, San Francisco and the northwest. Impressed by booming business everywhere, Mr. George, like other travellers, found travelling diffli- cult, covered most of his journey by airplane. He returned north from Seattle by Canadian Pacific| Airlines to -Whitehorse. e e—— LAY PLANS HERE FOR THIRD BIG WAR LOAN DRIVE At a luncheon meeting in the Gold Room of the Baranof Hotel Saturday, the War Finance Com- | mittee made plans for its “Outfit the Outfit” Drive scheduled for the | latter part of August as a part of |the Third War Loan Drive. With Mrs. John McCormick, chairman of the local committee |and chairman of the women's divi-| Q N\ NN Centennial \\\ NN AR \ \ The Good Health Flour ——AT ALL GROCERS Miss | and Mrs. Fred| New York. The| A. A. Alsop performed the 8] Clark Gable rises to his full sta-|Patrick, respectively, Gable encoun- o'clock ceremony in the presence Mary Astor, role of a contemporary East his old You," played by, Mr. Baxter came to Juneau about SUNDAY MORNING 20TH CENTURY PICTURE STARS BOGART-ASTOR! Is The Malteg;Falcon” Now Playing on Local Screen Starring Humphrey Bogart “The Maltese Falcon” the 20th Cen- {is now tury showing at Theatre. Bogart and Jerome Cowan play the part of private dctectives who are engaged by Mary Astor to trail man claimed had run olf h ‘her young sister. On the trail of the sister proves an exciting and gripping assignment, filled with un- cheerful murder, mystery and melo- drama, 3 The story surrounds a black fal- con, whom everyone believes to be worth a considerable fortune. In the process of obtaining the falcon, many lives are risked and much money is lost by the ruthless char- acters who trace it down John Huston wrote the screen play from the Dashiell Hammett story. In the supporting cast are Peter Lorre, Grace Geo! Barton MacLane, Lee Patrick, Ward Bon< and Elisha Cook, Jr. - LARGE CROWD AT ROTARY PICNiC HELD YESTERDAY Approximately 100 Rotarians and their families attended the Rotary Club picnic at the Auk Bay swim- ming beach yesterday in spite of the drizzle which continued all af- ternoon. Food for the celebration was fur- nished by Percy's Cafe, although cakes and cookies and other deli- some of the Rotary Annes brought cacies. Gov. and Mrs. Ernest Gruening, Lieut. Col. Roy W. Riegle and other dignitaries were among those who ibraved the weather. FRANK HELLERS ARE T0 VISIT IN PALMER Mr. and Mrs. Frank Heller plan to leave by airplane this week for Palmer, Matanuska Valley, to visit their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wilson. Their son- in-law is manager of the co-oper- ative creamery at Palmer. It will 4lso be their first airplane trip and their first visit with their fourteen months old granddaughter. The [trip will be the first vacation Mr. | Heller, proprietor of the wellknown ‘barber shop, has taken since '28. , - ® © 0 00 0 0 0 0 o a WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. Bureau) |® . e . |® . . K Temp. Saturday, July 17 Maximum 62, minimum 49 Rain—.36 inch Temp. Sunday, July 18 Maximum 61, minimum 50 Rain—.11 inch. . leoeeeoeeccee How easy, say housewives, to cooperate with the national nu- trition program. Each 10 ounces of Centennial, The Good Health Flour, contains 100% of the min- imum daily Vitamin B1, 3 daily requirements of Iron and the recommended of Niacin Vitamin) . baked into lighter rolls, strong. requirements of % of the minimum requirements (another essential B Constant nutrition breads, cakes or pie crust. Costs nothing extra. The U. S. needs US and| ¥ PAGE THREE: Where the Better BIG Pictures Play? (S CENTURY ~-NOW PLAYIWG---. The most ruthless lover you've ever met! The most exciting woman he's ever met! o A WARNER BROS. HIT, with - GLADYS GEORGE - PETER LO| _ BARTON ModtA No wonder it’s so ¢ good—Dashiell . Hammett, author of ‘Thin Man’ _ wrote it! + LEE PATRICK + SYDNEY | Directed by JOHN HUSTON L Screen Play by John Huston » Based Upon a Novel by Dashiell Hammett » A Warner Bros.-First Nat'l Picture Plus: LATEST WORLD NEWS STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, July 19. Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 6%, American Can 50%, Anaconda 28, Bethlehem Steel 64%, Commonwealth and Southern 13/16, Curtiss Wright 8, General Motors 55%, Granby Copper and Mining 6, International Harvester 72%, Kennecott 33'2, New York A | Central 18, Northern Pacific 16%, | Funeral services for Harry L. Packard Motors 4%, Republic Steel|Stanton, who passed away here 19% United States Steel 57%,|July 13, will be held Wednesday | Pound $4.04." |morning at 9 oclock from the Dow, Jones averages today Br,u(,utlmhc Church of the Nativity. as follows: industrials 14474, rails! The Rev. Edward C. Budde will 37.65, utilities 22.19 “(lenver the mass. Interment will be - |in Evergreen Cemet - DINNER PARTY HONORS BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARY In honor of the birthday of Mrs.| o a. following charges : | Helen Grainger, a group of friends "o o 0 "o 05 drunk: Jim | | gathered for dinner in the Gold p a, $15, drunk; John K. Swan-| iRoom of the Baranof Hotel Satur- /son, $25, drunk; Johnny Morrison, day night. |25, drunk; Harry L. Hughes, $35, | SR DIVORCES GRANTED Two final decrees were grant in U. 8. District Court Saturday— | Louis Harper Williams from Al | Nelson Williams, and Ethel Powvéi |from Os CATHOLIC SERVICES FOR H. L. STANTON Six persons were fined in City | Police Court this morning on the Butler-Mauro Drug Co. The Rexall Store B Empire Classmeds Pay! | disorderly conduct; William Cboper, $25, drunk. | sion of the Territorial War Finance Committee, 12 were present for the meeting. New members in attend- ance were Mrs. Elton Engstrom,| Douglas, who is replacing Mrs. W. E. Cahill on the committee, Homer | Garvin, Cliff Daigler and Frank Marshall. Harold Foss, another new | memter, was out of town. Mayor Harry I. sucas and Mrs. Henrietta Powers, stenographer on the War Finance Committee staff, were guests at the luncheon and Harold Smith represented Wellman Holbrook, committee member, at the meeting. Construction of a Victory Booth was discussed and general plans formulated to get the “Outfit the Outfit” drive underway next month. ———— BUY WAR.BONDS AN O SHAPWNTES STATIONED WERE W TRWWOAD SNUFFY 2 WE'S ONE OF BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH WANNEA GO WITH ME To \S MACk OR SPEC\AL POLLCE DUTY -OR- UK Broiled Steak and Fried Chicken SERVED ANY TIME DINE AND DANCE THE DOUGLAS IN N v OPEN UNT GEE - GEORGE S DOW' NOW — By BILLY DeBECK \E GO LOOK FER v ] GEORGE BY ORESEF - T HAW'T TAKWY NO CHANCES T FORGET JuST WHAT e WAWNT POS\T\F 2 T aNeTION \WST Wmete 3 ectric Hammond Organ Music IL- MIDNIGHT DINE AND DANCE

Other pages from this issue: