The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 29, 1943, Page 3

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4 ...and a growp of whites, joined by fate, battle for survival! with * LLOVD NOLAN - DONNA REED WILLIAM LUNDIGAR PR PR AENEL T T A U —PLUS— ® Information Please ® Screen Snapshots ® Colleges at War ® Cartoon News ...You can ; spot it every time YPECIALIZING in any job is important. And, it takes only one taste of ice-cold Coca-Cola to tell you that its makers have specialized in re- freshment for years. They created this utterly different drink 57 years ago. Today it’s still individual —and delightfully so. Note the difference in taste. You can sense the special blend of flavors. Sip again. Your thirst is gone before you know it, but some- thing else arrives. This is refreshment. And it’s refreshment that goes into energy —quickly — pleasantly. When you’ve finished, you know you’ve enjoyed a drink made to a standard of quality, not to a standard of price. Folks the country over feel the same way about it. They appreci- "APACHE TRAIL" NEXT FEATURE ON CAPITOL SCREEN Blood-and-thunder action is the keynote of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's Apache Trail,” which opens lu-} night at the Capitol Theatre. In| the cast are a trio of promising newcomers, including William Lun- | digan, Donna Reed and Ann Ayars, and among the stalwart old-timers arec Lloyd Nolan, Chill Wills and Grant Withers. Together newcom- ers and old-timers make it well- cted fast “action entertainment. The story centers around the feud of Tom Folliard (William Lundi- gan) and his outlaw brother, Peso Bill (Lloyd Nolan). Having lost his job as guard of the mail- stage through one of his brother’s hold- ups, Tom manages to secure a po- ition manager of the Tonto Valley station, one constantly plag- ued by Apache raids. Richard Thorpe, veteran director of action pictures, keeps the film moving at a rapid rate. An interest- ) ing note is that the main action of the film all takes place within 24& houwis. Sam Marx produced the | picture. PLANE BOUNCES " WHENBOMBSHIT MUNITIONS DUMP. CATRO,—Lt. James Fenex, Jr., of West Lake, La., attached to the| Ninth Airforce fighter squadron, as were reported light. o T VESSELS, P oM e l [ |galore is headed this way led by stars Ray Milland and Paulette T |Goddard. It is Paramount’s hilar- Wewak Is Object of Lafest ious sov-hunt movie, “mhe raay Pacific Theatre Plans,” which is due to arrive Attack |tonight at the 20th Century. | From all accounts, it is a hilari- (Continued from Page One) A romantic fun-for-all with thrills {ous film, teeming with suspense 1nnd racing with action. The story revolves around an ace newscaster, Milland, who is stationed in Lis- {bon, from which intrigue-steeped _lcity he tries to keep America post- | ed on European goings-on. To get alidibmi. ites the news, and give it, he needs an tant and it is Paulette God- s dard who gets the assignment | for However, there are foreign spies| work to keep Paulette on this side of the Atlantic. Important, tors were shot down i flames and |y g Navy plans have been stolen | three more were Listed as probables.|ang a reproduction of them drawn | Allied raiders also destroyed 29 iy invisible ink on the back of barges in a raid cavied out last|peautiful spy Margaret Hayes. Mar- Sunday, it is ennounced, and six|garet is to impersonate Paulette,! Jap planes were shol down land upon her arrival in Lisbon, is| The total baz of Jap planes in|to sell the plans to the highest bid- | the Wewak sector is now 460 since der. | last- August. | Due to an upset in the spies’ Meanwhile, 25 Jap planes raided!timetable, Paulette arrives in Lis- the Drysdale ares in Australia amllhon and is mistaken for the lady sharp fighting was reported from|with the plans—as funny a case of the Finschaie1 area. Allied losser |Mistaken identity as ever entertain- led moviegoers. ,l oo | In addition to Margaret Hayes, FROM ANCHORAGE {Milland and Paulette Goddard get| A. G. Woodley and R. L. Hall of |SuPport from Roland Young, Al-| Anchorage are guests of the Bar-|bert Dekker and Cecil Kellaway, all| anof Hotel. 1"“ whom are exceptionally fine| P 3 | actors. | FROM SEATTLE | blow w1, carried out by heav medium bombers, escorted by figh ters. Smoke from the 2,000 feet as Wewak duced as impotent operational base. Eight out of 20 enemy iitercep- dropped two bombs recently on an| enemy gasoline dump. When his {craft bounced 1,000 feet he knew | the missiles also had hit an ammu- | nition supply. | “It was just as though someone | had turned me into a tennis ball| and given me a hefty throw,” said | Fenex. “I quickly felt the plane div- ing toward the ground but was able to pull through.” > Movement of an armored divi- sion and its equipment requires 75 railroad trains of from 28 to 45 'cars each. o | | ‘ls registered at the Baranof Hotel. |moorings and that the H. F. Reed of Seattle is a guest|rights. at the Baranof Hotel. | As for bolting the ranks, Gover- K S S |nor Olin D. Johnston of South GEO. MOODY HERE !Cnrolinn asservsd that “when the George B. Moody of Seward is a actual showdown comes, the Solid guest at the Baranof Hotel. }Soulh will be together. As usual; T there is a lot of talk about disunltyl FROM SEATTLE land dissatisfaction among the| John R. Martin of Seattle is reg-|Democrats. Being in a war at the| istered at the Baranof Hotel, present time will not make them| - > - less unified but more unified.” 1 SITKAN HERE | May Be Drifting | John Homethko of Sitka is a guest| Not so sure about this was Vir-| at the Baranof Hotel. |ginia’'s Governor Colgate W. Dar-| —————— {den, who observed, “I believe there HERE FROM BOI |are unmistakable signs that thel William E. Wagner of Boise, 1dgw;South is drifting away from its old | next ten| | years may bring a break up.” | Youthful Governor Prentice Cooper of Tennessee said with em- |phasis that any presidential can- |didate who would deny the South | URG H William B. Johnson of Petersburg is registered at the Baranof Hotel. ., | sonalities” |of the state match c: THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAY! UOORLENTURY oy TONIGHT OWLSHOWAT 12:30A. M. Shows at 7:309:30 A Paramount Picture with ROLAND YOUNG - ALBERT DEKKER - MARGARET HAYES Directed by SIONEY LAWFIELD CECIL KELLAWAY - EDWARD NORRIS « scon s by wors esme Added Short Subjects UNUSUAL OCCUPATIONS CARTOON 30—— MINUTES ——30 LATE WORLD NEWS | comes. | Another young Southern chief | executive, Ellis Arnall of Georgia, | said he was “not interested in per- | but he believed the | South should present a solid front in its demands for “fair treatment.” “I think these can best be set- against New Dealism, declined to tled within the ranks of the liberal comment on the slant of Southemn | politics . toward next year's cams | paign. So did Governor James.Mel- |ville Broughton of -North Carolina and Governor Paul Johnson q Mississippi. b FOR SALE | Federal Funds Asked i He has been plugging for distri-' Pemocratic party. bution of federal funds for social. Governor Sam Jones of Louisi- security, and other direct benolils'!:mn. who often has spoken of to the people, on the basis of need | pemocratic revolt In the South instead of the basis of the ability h. From Florida, Governor Spes- | sard Holland voiced a belief that the South had some differences with the New Deal but added e | concerned.” members charge has throttled in- Cooper said that states’ powers | Solid Ranks Reported Rip- ATLANTA — Is the Solid South to find any “runs” developing. KINGS IN JUNEAU , particularly parity freight Mr. and Mrs. L. King of Haines| Jvould _find & selld.. bloc ST ! High Shippng Costs | The Southern Governors' Confer- ence flng BBs hammered af.a na-| dustry” by imposing much higher icosl.: for shipping out of the South yielded now in the all-important job oF Winning the world conflict ping, Tearing, Buf Now " " . Runs” Developing splitting at the political seams? Maybe a rip here and a tear In brief, those in the political “know"” dook"at it In this light: are guests at the Baranof Hotel, |#8ainst him as far as the South is tional rate structure which its ithan for shipping in. HEARD' SOUTH must be reclaimed after - peace By ED BRIDGES there, but sentiment-sounders fail As things go now, the Solid South | AS IN PEAC ate the genuine ... the real thing... Coke . . . Coca-Cola. It's natural for * * * popular names to acquire friendly abbreviations. That’s why you hear Coca-Cola called Coke. Coca-Cola and Coke mean the same thing... the real thing...“coming from a single source, and well known to the community”. |isn’t laying plans at all to join the | | opposition—but. those Democrats in | ‘Lhe saddle at the coming national convention had better get ready for | some plain and fancy 4oss trading. | Pledges Needed | The 1944 Democratic presidential | candidate who expects the states | below the Mason and Dixon line to <, Full Set of Machines for Shoe Repair Shop 1 Landis 12 Stitcher—electric heat 1 Landis 12 isher . 1 Circular Feed Shoe Repairing Machine 1 Sole Cutter 1 Repairing Jack and Last Outfit Hammers—Knives—Nippers—Pincers and so on ot CALL AT THRIFT C0O-OP STORE PHONE BLUE 285 AFTERGP. M. DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK " MOTORSHIP PATRICIA ARE CIA PLYING BETWEEN ; |climb aboard his bandwagon with { their bloc of votes must make em- phatic pledges to tear away econ- |omic barriers hampering the | South’s full development. That's the gist of it. And so say several Southern gov- ernors who are zealously pressing a campaign for equality of freight irnus for the South, equal distribu- | tion of federal funds for the South, 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. INSURED HERE COMES @ JEEP BUGGY A-SKIMMIN' T GROWND - MANKAPS TUEN'LL DRAP ME OFF 8T TH' ARPORT WHaT UAPPENED T SWOW™. T Wz HELT WP N A STORE © 2-3 HOURS QN - BALLS O FIRE Y| T PLIMS FERGT WHAT T \WUZ (N OKAY ,EDD\E - T GOT WM SNAGGED Boy and girl, recreation and refreshment! ‘There’s two for company and two more for happiness and satisfaction. You know refreshment’s first name, of course. Every. body knows Coke. The best is always the better buy! SOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY. Juneau Cold Storgge_»_Co. " Broiled Steak and Fried Chicken I{E DOUGLAS IN /. SERVED ANY TIME " DINE AND DANCE OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT /’v Electric Hammond ; Organ Music DINE AND DANCE

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