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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1944 p - T THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— TWO FEATURE |50 PROUDLY WE | BILLS COMING, ' HAIL" IS NEWBILL CAPITOL SHOWS AT 20TH CENTURY | A double feature bill is on to-| Paramount's really great moving |night only at the Capitol, “This|picture, “So Proudly We Hail"” Thing Called Love” and also Roy|opens at the 20th Century tonight, Rogers in “King of the Cowboys.” co-starring Claudette Colburn, ue | Tomorrow night another two-fea-co-starring Claudette Colbert, ture bill opens to run for the Paulette Goddard and Veronica | weekend. Lake. This film about Army Nurses | | Tomorrow night the features in-/and the men they love, is gripping, | [clude “X Marks the Spot,” co-|Stirring entertainment from open- | starring Damian O'Flynn and [ing flicker to final fadeout. Helen Parrish in a mystery melo-| The stars are superb in |drama,. and “Hey Rookie filled their roles of Army Nurses who |with smiles and miles of enter-|leave the United States in peace- .|IIlIlI"IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIMI"IIIIIIIIIIIIIh AR Do T Heroines FIRST But Women ALWAYS ASKING NO QUARTER AND GIVING NONE! FRIDAY - SATURDAY s" SMILES AND MILES | with ANN MILLER JOE BESSE LARRY PARKS JOE SAWYER HAL McINTYRE & Orchestra three —SECOND FEATURE— ROY ROGERS “Kingn of the Cowboys> SHOWPLALE oF Capitd FOR KETCHIKAN (24121775 | TIDES TCHCRROW Leaves Thursday morning for bt Ketchikan, Motor Cruiser smrmy} Low ttde—5:36 a. m., 2.4 feet. Petrel. For information call Gasti-| High tide—11:59 a. m,, 15.1 feet. neau Hotel. | Low tide—6 p. m, 3.6 feet. - WATCH REPAIRING 42 Years Experience { Quick accurate air mail service CHAS. R. OAKES | 802 Green Bldg., Seattle, Wash. || Torme CARO TRANSFER HAULING and CRATING DIESEL, STOVE, CRUDE OIL Phone 344 Phone 344 B e = AUDITS TAXES NEILL, CLARK and COMPANY Public Accountants—Auditors—Tax Counselors 208 Franklin Street — Telephone 757 Fairbanks Office: 201-2 Lavery Building KINLOCH N. NEILL JOHN W. CLARK SYSTEMS WE OFFER TO A LIMITED NUMBER OF CLIENTS A COMPLETE MONTHLY ACCOUNTING AND TAX SERVICE TELEPHONE 757 SMAILY TROPICS CAFE Open 24 Hoursa Day Serving American and Chinese Dishes OPPOSITE JUNEAU COLD STORAGE ISMAEL C. VOSOTROS, Owner ' DINE and DANCE YES . . . .WE SELL MEAL TICKETS! $5.25 value for $5—$10.50 value for $10 —————————————————————————— CORY COFFEE MAKERS Table Lamps Asbestos Electric Range TOP. MATS MIXER BOWLS For General Electric, Mixmaster and Hamilton Beach Models Alaska Electric Light and Power Company JUNEAU DOUGLAS Phone No. 616 Phone No. 18 tainment, one of the big musical| ——AND—— “X MARKS the SPOT* pictures of the time. Included in the great array of | khaki-go-wacky musical are: Ann Miller, Joe Besser, Jimmy Little, Hal McIntyre and Orchestra, Hi, Lo, Jack and the Dame, Jack Gil- ford, Condos Brothers, Judy Clark |and the Solid Senders, Bob Evans, |the Vagabonds and Larry Parks. | e, — " NORTH SEA IS IN PORT FROM SOUTH | | New . . Different | | The North Sea brought the fol- . |lowing passengers from Seattle to| . . Beautiful |Juneau last night: is the 3 Henry Roden, Lottie Gritman, Art McKinnon, Brooks Hanford. Mrs. | Brooks Hanford, Victoria L. Han-| ford, Robert Shidley, Mrs. Robert | | specialty acts assembled for this| {having men fall in love with her {veloped against the background of time, bound for Hawaii. While on the high seas they hear of the at- tack on Pearl Harbor and are or- | dered to join a convoy bound for | Bataan, One of the convoy ships is | torpedoed; among- the sm-vivurs; brought to the girls’ ship is George | Reeves, a soldier. Reeves and Clau- | dette fall in love but at first she | will not acknowledge it, believing that her work must come before | her personal life. Paulette Goddard as a flippant, light-hearted girl, accustomed to by the dozen, is attracted to Sonny Tufts, a Marine, whom she first considers “just another guy.” Theiri romance, and Claudette’s, are de- bitter fighting and heartbreaking | disaster of Bataan and Corregidor. | Veronica Lake, as alluringly lovely | as ever, will surprise her many fans by her unusual performance as the | girl whose fiance was Killed at CERAMIC Dinnerware Shidley, Lois E. Hall. E. C. Graff, Mrs. E. C. Graff,| Mrs. Astrid Sadler, Howard Sadler,| Mrs. Thomas Miettinen, June Gor-| ham. | J. S. McClelland, Mrs. J. S. Mc-| Clelland, Elizabeth McCle]lmfd,’ Doris McClelland, Lowell McClel- land, Norrine McClelland, Michael McClelland, Samuel Collins. Mrs. Billie Jaegle, Barbara Jaegle, W. L. Baldwin, Cpl. W. S. Lough- nan, Mrs. W. S. Loughnan, George Jorgenson, Sid Thompson, Mrs. Brownie Bland, Elaine Bland, Mrs. 0. Price, Maryann Coluccio. Vera Smith, Mildred Conkle, Mrs. Dorothy Jameson, Miss Jessie Mills, John Jackson, Harold Jackson, Mrs. Maurine Dodge, Mrs. Maggie Lovett, James Eaton, Mrs. James Eaton. Ida Wilson, Marjorie W. Hansen, Rita F. Creighton, Ethel Kedes, John Pastl, Mrs. Marie Pastl, Har- 'old Summers. Milton Williams, George Com- stock, T. R. Pope, Robert Miller, Robert Smalley, Robert Tomblin, Julius Hoppe, Jr. The following AND OTHER GLASSWARE ITEMS NOW ON DISPLAY at the HARRI MACHINE SHOP Heating Plumbing Gifts passengers came from Ketchikan: John Huff, Earl Cox, B. F. Kane, Clifford Sandine, | whiskey is always in the hands of | taste and odor. He likes the taste; | the whiskey. His | mentals, there are the quality of | thegrain, the water, the yeast, and | ity, the most | In combination they make a fine | whiskey. i we think ~"Timo|,hy Sullivan, William Briegal, | NOTE—From timetotime, inthiss {Anna Boer, A. Van Mavern, Roy | — From timetotime, in this space, . r};mwilappenr'ununwmhirhmehopa | Hansen, James H. Davis, D. Uanno, | will be of interest to our fellow Americans. |Mrs. D. Uanno, Howard Shearer. This is number twenty-four of a serigs. From Wrangell: Eleanor McCor- | SCHENLEY INTERNATIONAL CORP., NEW YORK | o eel, A, Cramer, H. | Lorenzen, Mrs. H. Lorenzen, Louis | Judge and Jury | Hollenbeck, Paul Lorenzen, Phillip | | Lorenzen. | i From Petersburg: Andy Fred- | The verdict on the quality of & erickson, Marjorie Frederickson, the consumer; he is both judgeand |Alvin Frederickson, J. W. Jones, Pearl Harbor. It's a complete de-| parture from any role she has had | so far and she handles it excel- lently son, Peter S. Hanson, Elizabelh? Rusk ! Passengers for Sitka from Juneau are: E. Connors, H. R. Smith, N.| E. Thompson, Caroline Reynolds, | Mrs. Marie Howard, Nadine Cor- | coran, Lt. Robert Dalton, Jr., Capt. | and Mrs. Willlam Charteris, M. E. | Monagle, Ralph Mize, Stephen O. Casler, Cliff Tisdale, August Mar-) tin, Henry Moy, Chris Bailey. NOTICE Douglas property taxes for 1944 are due and delinquent Oct. 15th, 1944, City Clerk’s Office will be open Tuesday, Thursday and Satur- day evenings of this week. The First Great Romance of our Women in Uniform Under Fire! (L COLISEUM " JUNEAU » w (,\u\’a'm. b p‘,‘m‘ ha" o8 oneY ‘;oi“"\.\ e, o8 \de \* e THE LATEST NEWS” IO "WINGS AND THE WOMAN" i (Signed) A. J. Balog, City Clerk GOODIE SALE HAROLD NERS BACK { Harold Sumners, former clerk at| At Bert's Cash Grocery, Sat, 10‘ the Gastineau, has returned from|a. m., by Ladies of Lutheran a tour of the states and is nowlchurch. Please bring Donations staying at the hotel. early. o CABINETS FIXTURES L. G.FULTON & COMPANY BUILDING CONTRACTORS REPAIRING and REMODELING PAINTING ALL TYPES OF GLASS WORK Panes Replaced-New Frames Made y its |Hames Hammer, Dave Phillips, Sgt. | jury. He judges whiskey N. Hammer, Mrs. Minnie Ander- the aroma is pleasant; and he likes | PHONE 433 149 So. Main Street “yerdict”’— | favorable. | Three fundamental groduction operations are responsible for the uality of whiskey: fermentation, 3istillution, maturation (Bfm ) And, in addition to these funda- ZAS R4S the barrels. If any one of these latter are not of the highest qual- recise controls of the processes of fermentation, dis- tillation and maturation are futile. We don’t think that you are in- | terested in the nuts bolts, and the plumbing of our industry, but | ou are interested in the | easily understandable highlights of production. And we are quite safe In saying that in the years which have elapsed since Repeal of Prohibition, more scien- tific knowledge has been applied to the making of whiskey than in the entire period preceding. The Dis- tilling, f:dustry has kept pace with other industries. I Whiskey today, is “'package goods.” In the old days, most of it was sold in bulk—in barrels. The dispenser did most of the blendl'nfi cl ht modern whisl;:}/ He Will Style Phone 388 Open Evenings by Appointment himself, in his own way, whi wasn’t always exactly the g\*\\“\ Specializing in Permanent Waving, PAN AMERICAN FLY d U TuE in less than a day! WAY ,s EATTLE Direct Dally Service FJUNEAU & WHITEHORSE & FAIRBANKS Connections = ANCHORAGE, NOMS, BETHEL, and All Alaska Points No Priority Required INFORMATION . RESERVATIONS . TICKETS 135 So. Franklin St. Phone 106 N——————— e —————————— Razor Hair Cutting, Thinning, Tapering, Shingling, efc. Your Hair to Suit the Contour of Your Face! FRANCES ANN'S BEAUTY SALON 195 Franklin Street—Across from Warfield's, Drugs HARRI MACHINE SHoOP Acetylene Welding, GIFTS OIL BURNERS Phone 319 Plumbing, Heating, Blacksmithing CARD PARTY PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY Saturday night at 8 in Odd Fel-| Have a portrait artist take your lows Hall, by Sons of Norway. First | picture. Hamersley Studio. Opposite of series of 4. Admission, 75 cents. | Federal Building, Phone 204. Adv. way. Today we recognize the fact that the blending of whiskey is a fine.art, and skillful blenders are as rare as fine painters and fine musi- cal arrangers. We searched the world over for blending genius and didn’t count the cost . . . just to please the sophisticated taste-buds of the American consumer. And, today, the maker’s label— his name—is on the battle, whether you find it in the package store or on the back bar in the tavern. There are some great names in whiskey. The owners are proud of those names, and they hope you are good at remembering. MARK MERIT OfSCHENLEY INTERNATIONALCORP. FREE —A booklet containing reprints of earlier articles in this series will be sent you on request. Send a post-card to ‘me care of Schenley International 2y 350 Pl'filAwml‘, New York 1, N. lfroiled Steak and Fried Chicken SERVED ANY TIME "The DINE AND DANCE Derby Inn BAR " By BILLY DeBECK HOW'S TW' BIRD, MAKIN' OUT, Ol SAWBONES MY DECODING BOOKS . ELDERBRASH ! A DINE AND DANCE SHHUH -- HE AINT COME TO FROM THAT CRASH- LANDIN' VET -- DOC --TH\S |S THE LAST DO 7 \ME GOT W(TW TYPE iy S SKAGWAY'S ONLY DINE AND DANCE PLACE SINCE THE GOLD RUSH!