The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 25, 1944, Page 3

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SDAY. NCTORER 75 1944 T ————. | (|TING WAR % " - oy Hene it és! THE GREATEST UNTOLD STORY OF AMERICA'S YOUTH IN UNIFORM! Our fledgling commenders who march from school- hall to shelltorn hill with but one demand... “GIVE ME A FIGHTING COMMAND!” wcx RICHARD QUINE ANNE-GWYNNE NOAH BEERY, JR. - MARTHA 0'DRISCOLL HARRY DAVENPORT. - WILLIAM FRAWLEY EDGAR BARRIER BOB MITCHUM st BILL STERN OF RADIO'S THRILUNG ARMY HOUR ADDED ENTERTAINMENT ‘SMOKE RINGS c: AND HIS CASA LOMA ORCiu CARTOON LATE NEWS P | Pttt Voooooaa [ PR < ) s - [ PSR RUMMAGE SALE | /, m’ At the Lutheran Church, Thurs- day, Oct. 26, at 10 o'clock. sy iSRS, PORYTRAIT PHGTOGRAPHY | Have a portrait artist take your picture. Hamersley Studio. Opposite | Federal Building, Phone 204. Adv —Spoils Sleep Toni You’ll like the way Va-tro-nol works right where trouble is to open up nose—relieve stuffy transient con- gestion. (Alsogrand for relieving sniffly, sneezy, stuffy distress of head colds.) Follow directions in folder. VICKS VA-TRO-NOL | .- [ SAVE THD FPIECES of your broken lenses and send them to Box 468, Ketchikan, Alaska | They will be replaced promptly in our large and well equipped labora- tory. C. M. and R. L. Carlson. - -eoe — SONS OF NORWAY Regular meeting will be held at Belle Knudsen’s, 8 p. m., Oct, 25. HEALTH QUIZ vis NO Do ye have poor digestion? g Do ;7 feel headachy after eating? (] Do you get sour or upset easily? Do you feel tired—listless? i3 | Do you feel headachy and upset due to poorly digested food? To feel cheerful and happy again your food must be digested properly. | . Each day, Nature must produce about two pints of a vital digestive juice to help digest your food. If Nature fails, your food may remain undigested— i leaving you headachy and irritable. Therefore, you must increase the flow | of this digestive juice. Carter’s Little | Liver Pills increase this flow quickly — | often in as little as 30 minutes. Knd. you're on the road to feeling better. Don’t depend on artificial aids to | counteract indigestion—when Carter's | (Little Liver Pills aid digestion after Na- ture’s own order. Take Carter's Little | Liver Pills as directed. Get them at any | drugstore, Only 10¢and 25¢. ® Breathing Easier— lnvites Restful Sleep WATCH REPAIRING 42 Years Experience Quick accurate air mail service CHAS. R. OAKES 802 Green Bldg., Seattle, Wash. o S A R TR — P S ' CARO TRANSFER HAULING and CRATING DIESEL, STOVE, CRUDE OIL Phone 344 Phone 344 7o LEOTA 7 Women's Apparew ISP Just Received A Small Stock of Pottery Type TABLE LAMPS We Think Them'Rather Nice Why Not Stop In fo See Them? Alaska Electric Light and - Power Company | JUNEAU ' Phone No. 616 Phone No. 18 | JUNEAU, ALASKA Former Juneauifes ' Juneau WCTU Holds Married, Portland| | | STORY IS NOW CADHOL BILL| ssocwowers ure 2o i ceived here telling of the marriage home of Mrs. R. B. Lesher for the E > . Ve N at Portland, Oregon, September 20,'regular monthly meeting Monday ”“': g N.wor Seen L“‘kcfi'. “f‘ll of Mrs. Florence Lynagh and Mx‘._cvmm;.. As a part of the program, ter Wanger’s timely production in- |y . "o hoth well known in!Miss Madge Muchmore gave a few spired by the fighting sons of Texas |5, o, |tigures, among which were the A & M Oollege, comes “"”g}v"_",‘} Mrs. Imhoff was formerly em-statistics showing that on August the Capitol Theatre. The Universal |, coq j;, the office of the Un-|17, 1944, total American deaths of Dicture, elling the dmprEtant jw'"‘l employment Compensation Com-iWorld War II to date were re- of youth in command, has R'};‘"ff mission and Mr. Imhoff is a vet- ported as 68,156 and that during Whinp, dnne (’“‘\m,‘?' .meh Cm,‘ eran employee of the Alaska-.!u-}the period, deaths from Jr, and Martha O'Driscol in fea-| ., Gog Mining Co. liquor and liquor caused accidents el roles. .| They are at home in Blaine,'and diseases averaged at least 50,000 WMo {or T RHe s A (Part, M| regon . la year in the United States. This s e 8 g o e e |was followed by an educational dia- Sosts uRiniig. Gen P {logue given by Miss Frances Black, Been Licked” gives an account B Moc- Kilroy ind M. LAk standing hero and receives the "Kilrn\. 2 West Twelfth Street. The annual Business and Pro-|{Mary Treat Davenport, William Frawley, Edgar | . RIS ey Tre | dance, g g [ sl |ing to announcement today. The Are Aiding Roosevelt The Juneau WCTU met at the same - >->o DOUGLAS NEWS later reveals himself to be an out- Dan(e Pos'pone Blovember 27, at the Home of Mrs tary In the supporting cast are Harry ? | Bob Mitchum and others. | breviotly: ansHiamedr Many room, has been postponed, accord- |future and the date will be forth- ""REAP THE WILD Session on Monday, WIND" IS COMING - TO 20TH CENTURY Cecil B. DeMille's “Reap the Wild Wind,” greatest of spectacles in technicolor, is coming to the 20th Century tomorrow. It is a Paramount picture starring John ‘\\'n\n!‘, Ray Milland and Paulette |Goddard, with a, great supporting oA, “Aerial Gunner,” dedicated to the sharpshooters of the air, will be seen for the last times tonight CALL 'ANNUAL ROLL Tonight is another big night Elkdom. It is the annual roll call and local members and visitors are urged to attend the session, which begins at 8 o'clock, and that means 8, says Exalted Ruler A. B | Hayes. Following | the roll call and a - OF ELKS IS TONIGHT in PAGE THREE ‘ .nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIII"IHHIIIIIIII!ll|IIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIFIII"IIIWIIIHIIIII LAST TIMES /. b/‘[[l ‘r ”” TONIGHT! DEDICAYED T0 AMERICA'S SEARPSHOQTERS OF THE SKIES! Daredevil drama! Aerial combat! Training thrills! And a girl fo spur them on 1o glory! Starring "CHESTER MORRIS | trouble to DOUGLAS | ok ' BPW Hallowe’ allowe'en | i iy and i, vesher Congressional Medal of Honor The Sec A of the WCTU is Waobsr | fessional Women's Club Hallowe'en § 4 | Saturday evening at the Elks ball- Whipping-Boys ;unmr will be given in the near b In Present (ampaign b e (Continued from Page One) sion measures; the late Gen. Hugh Johnson, head of the NRA, who later became a column-writing New Deal critic; and Rexford Guy Tugwell, who as undersecretary of Agriculture masterminded some of the early New Deal farm policies and still is having his battles as Governor of Puerto Rico. Since James A. Farley has be- come a hero of dissident Democrats it's almost forgotten too that the Republicans hurled thousands of words at him, calling him the great dispenser of patronage during his years as Postmaster General and hen general of the President's job-holding army of campaign workers, | Leon Henderson's whipping as first head of the Office of Price Administration drove him out of government. This fate happened too to Thomas “Tommy the Cork” Corcoran, who lost his job in the Justice Department under fire from the opposition. Perennial whipping-boys (and girl) have been Ickes, Harry Hop. kins and Miss Perkins. Miss Pe immcs the silent treatment. Ickes {has done just the revérse and proved he has few, if any, equals in handing out tongue-lashings. Now it's Hillman who is under the Republican lash, a spot that some will recall was held by United Mine Workers Chief John L. Lewis |in those first two presidential- terms when he was carving the CIO out ]nf New Deal labor reforms. e — Warlime Government Demobilization; Great Problem Facing Smith (Continued from Page One) I lemployment compensation lists which include other war workers and service men and women. The law is very specific for gov- ernment departments about giving old jobs or equal ones back to men | and women who have served in the | armed forces and been honorably discharged. With any considerable cutbacks at all and ‘demobilization | giving priorities to veterans, there| can only result a terrific turnover | {in civilian governmen employees. | That’'s why the Budget Bureau blueprint, next to that for demob- lxlization of the armed forces, is| {likely to be one of the most vital of our domestic peacetime plans. Washington is particularly in- terested. Government employment | here has jumped from around 130,000 to more than 270,000. When the men and women in uniform leave the capital, a drastic cutback in federal workers probably would create a private depression for the city. | | e s LOTTSFELDT IN TOWN C. F. Lottsfelt, of Ophir, is in| town and is staying at the Baranof. RUMMAGE SALE At the Lutheran Church, Thurs- day, Oct. 26, at 10 o'clock. Beware Coughs from common colds | That Hang On| Creomulsion relieves promptly be- cause it goes rl)ght to the seat of the help loosen and expel germ laden phl‘e’gm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in- flamed bronchial mucous mem- branes. Tell your druggist to sell you & bottle of Creomulsion with the un- derstanding you must like the way it ly allays the cough or you are | coming. | | munity kins and Hopkins have given their | CHANGING RESIDENCE The dance, given for the purpose | Mr. and Mrs. . Kirkham are {of adding to the educational fund moving today their former \of the club, which fund is a com- residence on Hill to the affair and has for years,G. Kirkham home on Third Street. fafforded financial assistance to!Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rice, owners llocal girls in the furtherance of Of the Knob Hill property, will | their education, is being postponed 1emove from Juneau sometime this |because of other social affairs Week to occupy the residence. j\\lmh have been advertised for v,hel . | same evening. The club feels that | IN WAR INDUSTRY | {from a business angle, it will be. Lois Balog, in a recent letter to! |impossible to hold the dance until her mother, Mrs. A. J..Balog| |some future date. (announced that she is now em- | ’ployed at Seattle, gn the office of | the Tacoma Spring and Coil Co,| who are working on army contracts. | Miss Balog is enjoying her trip to| |the States and her main objection | is the crowded conditions on the| PARTY TONIGHT IS OPE" IIo puBll “buses to and from her work. She| lives with an aunt on one side! | The public is invited to attend, of the city and is employed on the | either as spectators or participants, opposite side. | the old-fashioned square dancing at | the USO tonight. The session held | | at the AB Hall last Wednesday | 0. E. S. INITIATION | evening under the joint auspices: The Order of Eastern Star, Nug- | of the AWVS and USO proved so'get Chapter No. 2, held a special | successful, with townspeople par- meeting last evening for the pur- | ticipating at well as servicemen, that pose of conferring the degrees on USO SOUARE DANCE short business be Hutchings, be session there a regular Elks' feed, chairman and plenty much. will and Tom of the feed trough committee, says there will RICHARD ARLEN | JIMMY LYDON. Directed by WILLIAM . PINE Scroan Ploy by Maxwell Shane HIS POOR feliow gambled with Fire — and lost. Now he knows tragically the vital need of sufficient dependable insurance. Don’t stake all YOU own against the chance of being wiped out by Fire. Keep up your fire insurance — and don’t forget to increase the amount to cover all those new large pur- chases you’ve made re- cently. Shattuck INSURANCE—BONDS JUNEAU w. DONE NOW! Delay Is Costly . . the USO is extending an open invi- two new candidates, Mrs. James I/ tation to the club sessions. Dancing Parsons and daughter, Mrs. Charles | :\vill begin at 9:30 o'clock. Arthur werner. Following the initiation | Van Humbeck will call the routines ' program, a delicious lunch was| and E. J. McIntyre will accompany | gerved in the banquet room, which ' him, assisted by Pfc. Homer Schwin-!yas decorated in the Hallowe'en | gle on the accordion, | motif. Mrs. Ed Bach, chairman of R R R Ithe entertainment committee, was | woonliv BR'NGS 10 ‘well rewarded with compliments { {for the hours she and her commit- PASSENGERS TUESDAY}"" consisting of Mrs. James Bar- | ras and Mrs. Clarence Walters, had | S 'spent in preparing the decorations. | Woodley Airways brought 10imne walls were strung with lan- passengers from Anchorage to Ju-|o g together with witches, black |Deau yesterday afternoon. They|.qs ang Hallowe'en pumpkins. The |were: Tom Morgan, L. A. Forrest,| 1o was decorated in similar “(,Jh-;:rlessol?]l:d;;li. cé l; fi‘ousre‘;f“'ffurm. with tall orange candles serv- dole‘ Ju(fk 'warsx;erbLofl; Slglell"na;:xi“g Miesonly. Henty fon. he wely ‘Mrs, Pebapst Mallcvv *|supplied and tasty luncheon which | : 2 e was prepared by members. | Outgoing passangers to Yakutat 2 |were: Asa Swick, Erick Larson. | To Anchorage—Ray Wrede, C. Erwin. Patricia Martin, who has been receiving. surgical treatment at St.; Ann’s Hospital, was discharged yes- terday. St. Ann’s Hospital discharged | John G. Morrison yesterday after | giving him medical treatmgnt. | Mrs. Mary Lehto was discharged‘ from St. Ann’s Hospital yésterday, where she had received medical treatment. Mrs. Vincent Yakopotz was ad- mitted to St. Ann’s Hospital yes- terday for surgical treatment. Alexander Kolshetzki entered St. | Ann’s Hospital Tuesday for medicmi treatment. Charles Munch was admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday for | medical care. | Harry Marvin, a medical patient, entered St. Ann's yesterday. | o R A S CHOIR TO MEET TONIGHT AT MEMORIAL CHURCH | A choir rehearsal is to be held, | this evening at 8 o'clock in the [ Memorial Presbyterian Church on | Eighth and E streets, it is an-| nounced. ; It is requested that all those who | have been contacted attend as well | as any who may wish to come. ’ Have your RE-ROOFING Better Get Ready . . . , AN OUNCE OF PREVENTION g IS WORTH A POUND OF CURE The winds and the rain are already starting. Have your roof finished while there are still nice days. Best material obtainable can be used. | Never before has it been more important to keep your home or business in good repair. Call on us for your building or repair needs. L G.FULTON CO. CONTRACTORS—PHONE 433 A Parameunt Picture staning . JOHN WAYNE -RAY MILLAND - PAULETTE GODDARD iaym_gnd Massey - Lynne Overman - Robert Preston - Susan Hayward Charles Bickford - Walter Hampden - Martha 0'Driscoll - Janet Beecher - "xésed 57 Cecil B. DeMille | Screem Play by Alan LaMay, Chartes Benastt and Jesse Lasky, I, @ Saturday Evaning Post Story by Theima Strabel R FLOWERS for the BRIDE? \ Three to 30 times faster. PAN AMERICAN AIR EXPRESS offers savings worth hundreds of dollars. You can fill rush orders weeks sooner. Flowers for the bride, replacement parts for your car, new merchan- dise to close a sale, perishables, special medicines... Ship and Specify AIR EXPRESS between JUNEAU FAIRBANKS BETHEL WHITEHORSE Rates and Full Information 135 So. Franklin St. SRR RN R N AMERICAN AIRWAYS sysTem SEATTLE NOME ——— CABINETS FIXTURES L. G.FULTON & COMPANY BUILDING CONTRACTORS REPAIRING and REMODELING PAINTING ALL TYPES OF GLASS WORK Panes Replaced-New Frames Made PHONE 433 149 So. Main Street BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH T JUS CHECKED ./ FINE ! WREN THEY'VE MRS, SMITH AN'[ FRESHENED UP A LEETLE JUGHAID| 81T, TLL TAKE TheMm CREOMULSION for Coughs. Chest Colds. It ronchitis Broiled Steak and 10 MUNUTES IN | WASHINGTON AN CRASWIN' SOCIETY ALREADV ! frRED Lassweel-f ; " ByBILLY DeBECK --AN' WE-UNS GIT TWO TINES AN' A WAF OVERTINE, WSTOFER GOOGLE / Located at SKAGWAY SKAGWAY'S ONLY DINE AND DANCE The Derby Inn DINE AND DANCE BAR DINE AND DANCE Fried Chicken SERVED ANY TIME PLACE SINCE THE GOLD RUSH!

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