The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 14, 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)

JITUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1943 TONIGHT! “A YANK AT ETON" TOMORROW DID SHE KILL! WOU MICKEY ROONFY LD SHE KILL LOVE WAS THE PRICE OF HIS SILENCE “NIGHTMARE™ with | DIANA BARRYMORE-BRIAN DONLEVY A Sensation of Suspense!? PL Stranger Than Fiction Community Sing Us Cartoon Late News ‘ THEATRE I THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES! | . partment of Health. The Council 1w“oopl"G (ouGH MPORIAN' MEEI | voted to become responsible for one | ElD BY HE Al‘l‘H | and will devote this page to items | H | of interest to Channel residents. ‘ COUNCIL MONDAY 51 Representatives of 22 organiza- wiions and agencies of Juneau and so@Douglas attended the meeting of the :piGastineau Channel Health Council ! dn the Territorial Building last night buand followed closely the first of a i1weries of talks on “Health in War- mifime” which will feature council sommeetings during the coming months., A 'Richard S. Green, Dircc Di- sizivision of Public Health Engineerinz, aused’ the specific problem of milk amanitation. L. John S. Hall, Public Health En- vigineer, who was to have addressed athe meeting also was unable to be | i9mresent and a short question period | Midollowed Mr. Green's talk. M Miss Helen Johnson, Public Health 1:Murse, gave a report of the activities | 1 Jof the Health Center and Nursing | 138ervice and distributed copies of the : sofHealth Bulletin issued by the De- Pan AMERICAN Arways' Alaska Service ob- serves its eleventh birthday in the spirit of out wartime slogan: Toratty aT war PAN AMERICAN WORLD AIRWAYS il Y age of the bulletin each month Time of meeting was changed from the first Monday to the second Monday of each month and George Jorgenson, Chairman of the Pro- gram Committee, announced “Health of Youth” as the topic for October with Dr. Berneta Block as the speaker. ., Methodist Sewing Group_WiII Meet Trc weekly sewing meeting of the Women’s Society of Christian Ser- Jvice of the Methodist Church will be held Wednesday evening at 7:45 o'clock at the residence of Mrs. H. R. Sprague at 303 Gold Street. Members are urged to attend and to take friends with them for the evening of sewing. S eee BUY WAR BONDR 32k 2k ok ok 3 22k 0k 6 § 2222222222222 S * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * »* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * n THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU ALASKA "YANK AT ETON" ' CLOSES TONIGHT, CAPITOL THEATRE| Putting Mickey Rooney and Fred- | ;die Bartholomew together again in| the same picture, for the first time | |since they've outgrown the knee- | pants stage, was another clever| stroke by Hollywood. And the two| boys, directed by Norman Taurog, the screen’s noted director of young |stars, came through like the real troupers they are in Metro-Gold- | wyn-Mayer’s “A Yank at Eton.” The picture is seen for the last times tonight at the Capitol The- atre. Rooney, Hollywood's number one star, again shows how versatile he can be on the screen. Most of the time in “A Yank at Eton” he is hilarious. At other times, he gives a portrayal dramatically tense. Mickey is the center of the stéry, as a typical American boy whose | hopes of going to Notre Dame are | shattered when his widowed mother marries an Englishman, and he is jenrolled jn exclusive Eton. Juanita Quigley, Alan Mowbray, Ian Hunter, Marta Linden and Ray- mond Severn also are deserving of more than passing mention. BTS2 G B Y . IMMUNIZATIONS T0 BE SHOT TOMORROW | | Third and last in the series of | whooping cough immunization shots | | will be given tomorrow, beginning |at 10 o'clock in the morning, at the | regular session of the Immunization ' Clinic in Room 108 of the Terri- | torial Building. Dr. C. C. Carter, in charge of the *clinie, will also give immunizations against smallpox and diphtheria. e AALASKA ROAD .| Merit will be passed on each month B.&P.W.Cub | AMERICANS Presents Awards At Mgejing Here With Mrs. Crystal Snow Jenne presiding, as President, members of the Business and Professional | Women'’s Club gathered last evening for a dinner and meeting in the| Gold Room of the Baranof Hotel. * Announcement was made that Mrs. Leota Russell won the $25 war bond offered by the club to the businesswoman of Juneau bringing in the most sales of bonds. She| was also given the Award of Merit | to be displayed in the window of her store for thirty days. The award is under the seal of the National | Federation and is to be given to the | outstanding businesswoman of each city, After the thirty-day period of display by Leota’s, the Award of to the businesswoman voted as the | most outstanding in the town. The certificate may, however, be retain- ed by any store for more than the thirty days if the same business- “womfln is again honored. A second prize of $5 in war stamps as well as annual membership for | the year in the Business and Pro- fessional Women'’s Club, was given to Mrs. William Erickson of the Juneau Melody House. Individual introductions were made by those present and during the dinner past presidents of the club who were in attendance gave short resumes of activities of the organization during their term of office. A discussion was held on the ques- tion of pul‘chaslng a clubhouse and | a committee was appointed to look into the project and present a re- port at the meeting next month. - e Mrs. Bernard“Shaw Passes Away, London LONDON, Sept. 14.—Mrs. George | Bernard Shaw, wife o the famous | playwright, is dead at her home RUSHING IN MORE UNITS Germans Claim Yanks Re- freating-Fighting Continues (Continued from Page One) seize Bari, 656 miles above Brindisi on the Adriatic Coast The British are pushing up past Cosenza and are little more than 100 miles south of the lower hinge of the American Fifth Army. The bridgehead at Eboli is 15 miles southeast of Salerno where Allied tanks, planes and infantry, supported by naval guns, battled the Germans and sought to widen the Salerno bridgehead which is only several miles deep. Field Marshal Kesselring is said to have thrown .two armored divi- sions of the famous, reconstituted Hermann Goering Division, against Gen. Mark Clark’s Fifth Army. Overhead, increasing numbers of Nazi planes were engaged by hun- dreds of Allied bombers and fight- ers. The Allied communique gave ::0 details of the situation at Salerno, merely saying, that “heavy fighting continues. The Germans are coun- ter-attacking desperately at certain points and . have regained some ground taxen by us.” The Eighth Army advanced about 10 miles on the west coast. Nazis Change Tune After first claiming that the Am- ericans had abandoned the Salerno| bridgehead, the. German propagan- da machine swung around late today, saying: “It remains to be seen whether| Clark considers the battle lost and| here. IS PRAISED BY REP. ANGELL | | WASHINGTON, Sept. 14.—Rep- | resentative Homer D. Angell of | Oregon, told the House that con- | struction of the Alaska Highway | was an example of “the outstanding (road construction of our military | forces.” | | He praised the work of Brig. Gen. | 0'Connor and said that when the | remainder of the highway is com- ! pleted it will be an accomplishment | of which “every American can be | proud.” | Rep. Angell was a recent visitor | in Juneau while on this tour of the | Territory. SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION In the District Court for the Terri- | tory of Alaska, Division Number One, at Juneau. NICHOLAS ELIAS BOLSHANIN, Plaintiff, vs. JOE DOE TIMOFE- | JEFF and JANE DOE TIMOFE- | JEFF and all the heirs, devisees | and assigns of Nadeshda Timofe- { Jeff, deceased, and all other per-| sons or parties unknown, claiming any right, title, estate, lien or| interest in Tract “A”, Lot C-82, and appurtenances, in the Town' of Sitka, Alaska, Defendants. \ TO THE ABOVE NAMED DE-| FENDANTS, GREETING: In the name of the United States of America, you are commanded to appear in the above entitled court holden at Juneau in the:First Judi- | cial Division, Territory of Alaska, and answer the complaint of the! plaintiff filed against you in the IN WAR _AS IN PEAC DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED First National Bank of JUNEAU, ALASKA os1y above entitled action within thirty days from the date of the service of this Summons and a copy of the Complaint upon you, if the Com- plaint is served by publication, and within forty days after personal jservlce upon you, if the Summons and Complaint are served person- ally; and if you fail to so appear and answer, for want thereof plain- tiff will take judgment as prayed for in the Complaint, quieting title in plaintiff to Tract “A”, Lot C-82 within the Townsite of Sitka, Al- aska. Reference is made to the Com- plaint for the complete demands of plaintiff. The date of the Order for publi- cation of this Summons is August 28, 1043. The period of publication prescribed is four weeks. The first publication is August 30, 1943, and the last publication is September, 20, 1943, and the time within which defendants are to appear and an- swer this Summons is thirty days after completion of the last pub- lication, if the Summons is served by publication, or within forty days, if personal service is made. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, August 30, 1943, ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, All Day Long New Coat Styles o o | There’s No Shortage on Smart Budget Fashions THIS FALL! —You can be well dressed in a real classic charmer. —Active and attractive for work, their casual simplicity makes them perfect for after-hour fun, too. -——In plaids and solid colors. Jones- Stevens Seward Street is preparing for the withdrawal| of his forces.” i In the face of both German DRAMATIC FILM ENDS TONIGHT AT _ ~201H CENTURY e L0 | Stewart Edward White's best sell- ing novel of the great Northwest, “Wild Geese Calling,” is showing tonight for the last times at the ‘ZOIh Century Theatre | This new 20th Century-Fox film | has Henry Fonda as the two-fisted lumberjack and Joan Bennett as| ;‘hl‘ beautiful dance hall queen, who | together fight the fury of a great primitive country | All the action, drama and ro- "mance of the novel are welded into |an outstanding film. Set in the wilds of Alaska, the thrills come thick and fast as the film builds to its exciting climax Warren William, Ona Munson and Barton MacLane have important roles in the piclure which was di- rected by John Brahm. Horace McCoy wrote the screen play. “Wild | Geese Calling” was produced by : § Harry Joe Brown | But the Nazis {that “well informed sources said the American Fifth 'Army is almost completely wiped out.” These reports said enemy the ;F'Aflh Army consisted of the 36th | and 45 Infantry divisions, the First !Tank Division, and the British First, 46th and 56th Infantry divi- (slons with the First British Tank | Division attached. - (HELEN LONG IS ' NEW MEMBER OF SIGRID'S SALON Miss Helen Long, beautician and hair stylist in many of the most exclusive salons in the States, has joined the staff of Sigrid's Beauty Salon. i Miss Long, a former teacher of physio-therapy at Mellquists’s in Chicago, has been associated with the Hollywood Beach Hotel at Hol- | statements, Allied headquarters said fresh reserves are being poured into the bitter fight. l lywood, the King Edward Hotel in Toronto, Helena Rubenstein’s in Chicago and in shops in Florida. ‘ SUNIT STA ED WE ND*’ A DYNAMIC DOCUMENT OF THE WORLD OF TODAY EXTRA---- QuizKids GENERAL ELECTRIC CO. EDISON NEWS MAZDA LAMPS The Standard of Comparison - * Alaska Electric Light and Power Company Juneau Phone 616 Douglas Phone 18 continued to assert | German | ENDS TONITE —— HENRY FONDA + JOAN BENNETT STARTS TOMOREROW ¥ % W e MoK MAUREEN O’HARA with LAIRD CREGAR JOHN SHEPPERD VICTOR FRANCEN HARRY DAVENPORT WARD BOND DOUGLAS DUMBRILLE RALPH BYRD irected by Henry Hathaw” Produced by William Periberg’ GR: O*LENTURY Where the Better Big Pictures Play 'MOTORSHIP PATR PLYING BETWEEN Make a Date to SEE This Swell Show! Newspaper Advertsingl _ JUNEAU, HAINES and SKAGWAY LEAVES JUNEAU ‘Tuesdays and Saturdays at 8:00 P. M. TICKETS and INFORMATION at PERCY’'S CAFE Where all small packages may be left. > Clerk of the District Court. By J. W. LEIVERS, Deputy. First publication, Aug. 30, 1943. Last publication, Sept. 20, 1943, BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH HERE NARD BIRD - TAKE THESE - 200 CRUZE\ROS DOWN TO THE . AMAZON JEWELRY STORE AN GEY THE TRINKLETS T PICKED OWT — U - MoV CAN KEEP AN CHANGE THNT'S LEFT OVER T SWOW "TAWNT N0 WONDER GENRIL ROSEWARTER'S GOT ALL THEM RISBONS AN | METALS PIINED ON WS Buz1M TWO HONDRED- CRIZE\ROS ON ZE NOSE By BILLY DeB ectric Hammond Organ Music DINE AND DANCE Broiled Steak and THE DOUGLAS INN El Fried c'.icke” DINE AND DANCE OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT SERVED ANY TIME

Other pages from this issue: