The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 26, 1944, Page 3

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RSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1944 T()NIG]IT 234 UREAT' with Everylhmg That Makes Men Great.. GER'S m\“‘ WA q\mm\ gpect ALY RICHARD QUINE ANNE GWYNNE NOAH BEERY, JR. Martha 0'DRISCOLL HARRY DAVENPORT WILLIAM FRAWLEY EDGAR BARRIER BOB MITCHUM BILL STERN OF RADIO'S THRILUNG ARMY HOUR —PLUS— GLEN GRAY and His Casa Loma Orchestra C. ARI()()\ TEXAS AGGIES ON SCREEN AT CAPITOL SHOW sons of o inspired Licked,” t} We've Walter at the them- pic- l)wr. sequences of which wsg for the most raphed in Tes ard Quine, in the 1 portrays an A & M officer who is suspected of d AIU to ! rica. He is, ing out a perilous mis 1 results in the ultimate | destruction of an enemy fleet Anne Gwynne, Noah Martha O'Dr 1, H nd other notables are ge cast. The picture was directed by John Rawlins. Friday-Saturday DONALD DUCK LEARNS THE on the con- | Beery, Jr., Daven- in the | _ |ing carrier viving enemy warships as they areHampden, all retiring westward through the straits direction st take your tudio. Opposite al Building, Phone 294. Adv IN AMAZING TECHNICOLOR! High-Powered Mystery Melodrama! The Wings of the World’s Greatest TRAVEL SYSTEM Lontact AL Pierce, Empress Building, ks, Alnlu, or any local WATCH REPAIRING 42 Years Experience Quick accurate air mail service CHAS. R. OAKES 802 Green Bldg., Seattle, Wash. of your broken lenses and send e E— them to Box 468, Ketchikan, Alaska. | They will be replaced promptly in our large and well equipped labora- tory. C. M. and R. L. Cdrlson { CARO TRANSFER : { HAULING and CRATING Slmple Test Alds DIESEL, STOVE, CRUDE OIL Thousands Who Are Phone 344 | Hard of Hearing Thanks to an easy no-risk hearing test, many thousands who have been temporarily deafencd now say they hear well again. If You are bothered by ringing, buzzing head Toises due to hardened or coagulated wax {cerumen), try the Ourine Home Method {est.. You must hear better after making this simple test or you get your money back at SAVE THI PIECES e ) u,umms AppaneL Your Rexall Store Butler Mauro Drug Co. Just Received A Small Stock of Pottery Type TABLE LAMPS We Think Them Rather Nice Why Net Stop In to See Them? Alaska Electric Light and Power Company JUNEAU DOUGLAS Phone No. 616 Phone No. 18 | keep your cigarette uniform. | liked it success, But uniformity has to be once. Ask about Ouring Ear Drops today at | | today may have tobaccos of vari- | natural variations. And, if he is | for your taste, a uniform blend of | whiskies, year after year. | brown alcoholic beverage in the | tience, precision and control of SCHENLEY INTERNATIONALCORP. | 850 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. KINKAID FLEET i SAVES TROOPS ON LEYTE ISlE Japs Lose First Round in Batile to Halt Ad- vance on Tokyo By C. \\Tln I\lc[).’\!\ll‘,l‘ (Associated Press Correspondent) WITH THE SEVENTH FLEET HhADQ(‘ARTI RS IN THE PHIL- Japan has lost decisive round in e to halt, on the lwild wina” vance toward their home isla This occurred yesterday morning when Vice Admiral Thomas C. Kin- kaid’s outnumbe the Japanese battle forces converging on Leyte Gulf Complete results are lacking as,the Massey, Lynne planes | Preston, d’s hurt but still fight- | Bickford, action is continuing with from Ki hitting the forc sur- south of invaded Leyte. Daring Execution The fate of the American anmy ashore at Leyte hung in precarious Pars balance for an hour Wednesday morning as Kinkaid executed a dar- ing decision whether to take on two attacking enemy forces. Once, with his outnumbered fleet, the Admiral threw half of his bat- tleships and strong flotilla patrol fim of torpedo boats against the enemy force steaming into Leyte Gulf from hation’s the southwest. After 20 minutes of broadside exchange, forces began withdrawing, one vessel abandoned. R BIG CELEBRATION OF leaving d fleet put to rout man who lov the Japanese from THE DAILY ALASKA FMPIRF#JUNEAU ALASKA TR llllll|II|HHIIHIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIlIIIIlIIIIIIIlIlfHIIlIIIIIII!vHIIlI||IIl!llIII|I!HI!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIII||||IIIII|I|I|. "REAP THE WILD WIND" FEATURED AT 20TH CENIUR n of the roar roistering days when America Wi fighting for freedom of the and give Cecil B. DeMille the start- ing gun to make epic of it and what have you got? “Reap the| no less, and it’s dIIL‘ 20th Century This broad and sweeping tale, told in Technicolor, of C leston | 1d Key West in the 1840's, of the s of the Carib- Take d ty tonight at the relentless hurricax bean and la captains who 1 tall s for gold, thas| Paulette Goddard as its spitfire | heroine. Ray Milland is the hero| and John Wayne is the seafaring| 5 and loses ! s like that, plus such/ players Raymond ! Overm: Robert Susan Hayward, Charles Martha O'Driscoll, Louise | Beavers, Janet Beecher and Walter under the inspired | of DeMille, the picture Given s supporting |cannot help being the biggest event | {of the cinema season. With “F the Wild Wind”| nount and DeMille jointly | celebrate their 30th annive es. | DeMille feels he has met the chal- | lenge and made the greatest pic-| ture of his carcer. This would| seem to be amply attested by the itself, and by its record=- showings in many of the leading theatres. | “Reap the Wild Wind” was made Saturday Evening Post story | by Thelma Strabel, adapted for the screen by Alan LeMay, Charles Bennett ‘um Jesse L;.k\ Jr. | nashir TOMORROW DOU" LAS Mooseheart Da) is to be cele- brated tomorrow Moose headquarters. The Moose Lodge will meet for a short busi- ness session, following which the Women of the the big event, with and entertainment S e — HERE FROM ANCHORAGE Eugene N. Berato, of the CAA, is here from Anchorage and is reg- istered at the Hotel Juneau. SRS A e There are 2,796 languages in the | world. NOTE—From timetotime, in this space, there will appear an article which we hope will be of interest to our fellow. Americans. This is number twenty-six of a series. night in the Moose will join in| | Eleanor | tioned are as bert; | Bob Savikko, Mickey Pusich SCHENLEY INTERNATIONAL CORP,, NEW YORK Variations | TERRITORIAL margin. NEWS REPORT CARDS ISSUED The first report cards of th refreshments ' term were handed out yeste the Douglas Public Schools, ending the first six-week period. Honor roll students were announced this morn- | ing as follows: In the grade school only the fourth grade students rated mention. They were Beth Fleek, Havdahl, Thomas Cashen and John Jensen. | The high school students men- follows: Freshmen class, Carol Routsala and Mae Cuth- Juniors, Helen Isaak; Seniors, and Bill Devon. Miss Eleanor Warren stated that the next honor roll is! expected to be much larger as many students fell short by a very small GUARD MEETS e Douglas Unit of the Alaska orial Guards will meet this — By A tobacco blender and a whiskey | | evening at 7:30 o'clock at the Doug- blender have much in common. Each has to strive hard—very hard to keep his end-products uniform. | bore rifle practice. nows that there is no uni- | coveralls, leggings, ammunition belts Each |1as Natatorium for drill and small Dress will be formity in nature. And each deals umd rifle. | with nature’s raw materials. if you are a cigarette smoker you ' emlmb]ysmokeablendedclgaretbv | our cigarette, then, is a blend of | whjttier, where he assisted in a had. This drive is voluntary—and of | pile-driving contract during the past |no house-to-house canvass is being conducted here—but ple and give what you can and all you Virginia, Turkish, and Burle: to-‘ baccos; perhaps some Maryl t00. And these tobaccos vary year to year, because of variable | growing conditions such assoil, sun- | shine, rainfall, fertilizer, etc. And then, the tobacco leaves, on a sin, le K})nnt vary. The leaves at the { l‘mm | six weeks. JACK WARNER IN Jack Warner arrived Monday from ONLY SEVENTEEN PLEDGES | Attention is called again to the | ! residents of Douglas that as am ttom of the stalk are dlfierent |incorporated city it has obligations | from those in the center, or at the top. And the tobacco blender has ! to do something about all this to Originally, many combinations were created. Finally, the blender | | relief drives and rallies. |and duties to fulfill. One of those | duties is to sponsor and support to its utmost all important’ national | The Na- tional War Fund Drive is one of the selected one and said—'"That'sit!”” |most important of these, endorsed It was put on the market, you | and the brand was a! maintained or you would begin to | | by all our national leaders in both vilian and military duty—its funds |are a contribution to the boys and | girls whom are actually in uniform, complain about it. So, year after | | fighting and being wounded and year the blender must, compensate for the lack of uniformity in hisraw | materials by varying the quantities | | nese prison camps. of the grades of different types of 'tion dollars are real relief to our| tobaccos he uses to produce an end- | own Douglas boys as well as others | product that is reasonably uniform. And the cigarette you are smoking |, complete count of our Douglas [lads in some branch of the service | ous ages in it—some 1944, 1943, 1942 or 1941. Well, the skillful blender of whis- | 44 boys doing a big job out there.| kies is confronted with the same variables in raw materials. Grain 'varies from year to Nyear for exactly the same reasons. Not much oppor- tunity for variations in the yeast, because the distiller’s pure culture is carefully guarded. But barrels do vary greatly, and barrels, you remember, are considered one of | the raw materials in the production | of whiskey. So, you see, the whiskey blender not only uses whiskies of various ages, but he uses different types of the same age to compensate for very skillful and has at his com- mand a great library of whiskies of different types, he can produce, Yes, there is more than a reddish- bottle. There is artistry, skill, pa- . pride of achievement. MARK MERIT FREE—A booklet containing reprints of earlier articles in this sertes will be sent you on request. Send a post-card o me care of Schenley International Corp., | signers looks quite small with the | | drive half over. marking time in German and Japa- These contribu- | lof all nationalities. A hurried and | | adds up to the impressive figure of | That's why a list of only seventeen | So, everyone is asked again, to be sure and get their name and contribution on the list at the Douglas Drug Store and if your contribution has been made at some other place then give | the sun, the slower it travels. (O CENTURY QLE BEVOND, COMPIRE wise o y e every Pk e PARAMOUNT PRESENTS . Ceci B, Debile' | GRIA'IES'n " RAY MILLAND PAULETTE fiflDDARD e PAGE THREE STARTS TONIGHT RAYMUND MASSEY _LYNNE- OVERMAN ‘ROBERT PRESTON SUSAN HAYWARD Charles Bickford - Walter Hampden - Martha 0'Driscoll - Janet BEecher . erosuces and oected by cec|| B DeMl"e Screen Play by Alan LeMay, Charles umm and lesse Lasky, Ir.. Based on 4 Sa|umny Evening Post Story by Theima Strabel |IIIllIIIIHIIlIIHIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIII||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII T T PINOCHLE PARTY cond in series. Sat, 8 p. Norway. Admission f the amount donated so a total of | Douglas’ part in the drive may be | S drop in COLDS 4 | Relieve misery, as most mothers ICKS poRunj can as soon as you can. Our boys | would be pleased, s Val Poor, | Douglas Chairman. wdo Rub the i i R throat, chest The farther the eartn moves Irom‘ and back wmlv ‘nme teuted m--.--..,,-m.,,----,--w t ! HARRI MACHINE SHOP Acetylene Welding, GIFTS OIL BURNERS Phone 319 Plumbing, Heating, Blacksmithing CABINETS I.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 A 1 DONT CARE IF YOUR CLOSES DOWN ! TWOSE Broiled Steak and Fried Chicken SERVED ANY TIME The Derby Inn DINE AND DANCE B ARE WERE AT TWE REQUEST OF ARMY \NTELLIGENCE ON HIGH PRIORITY AND YOU CANT WIRE EM-HELP SHORTAGE OR NOT-BLAW- BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH T D\S(Y\\SS THEM \MMEDIATELY Y T OIDNT REAUZE, SR-- UW -~ HELLO -- WELLO --7?? e il R A A ‘ V-YES - YES, GENERAL ROSEWATER -~ WOTEL PEOPLE AR DINE AND DANCE NIGHT — COLISEUM---"ARIZONA FRONTIER" 0000000 00000000 In coffee, on fruits and cereals, wherever- . the receipe calls for creamy goodness, Avoset is the pcrfcc( answer. This luscious dairy product is made from 99.8% real top- grade cream plus 2{o% vegetable stabilizer, and processed at the creamery to keep it meadow-sweet for months. Once you taste the richness and flavor of Avoset you'll keep it always on hand. * By BILLY DeBECK UWHEN YOU FINISH YOUR OFFICE , ROSEWATER , WILL YOU GIWVE THESE TO COLONEL BUTTS 7 Located at SKAGWAY SKAGWAY'S ONLY DINE AND DANCE PLACE SINCE THE GOLD RUSH!

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