Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1945 THRILLS! ACTION! Right Out of the SATURDAY EVENING POST ——ADDED. “BEAR MOUNTAIN GAMI Feature Starts 8:05—10 News MOTION PICTURE INDUSTRY RED CROSS WEEK MARCH 15-21 ey Trollers Trollers Regular Meeting MARCH 7 WEDNESDAY—T7:30 P. M. UNITED TROLLERS of ALASKA LOCAL NO. 56 RMANENT WAVING HAIR CUTTING AND GE AL UTY CULTURE A FULL LINE IN DERMETICS CREAMS LUCILLE’S BEAUTY SALON PHONE 492 AUDlTh SYSTEMS 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 WE OFFER TO A LIMITED NUMBER OF CLIENTS A COMPLETE MONTHLY ACCOUNTING AND TAX SERVICE TELEPHONE 757 KELVIE S AIHMAL HIISPITAL OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY OFFICE: 914 Calhoun Avenue AMBULANCE SERVICE BOARDING KENNELS Dr. W. A. Kelvie, Veterinary PHONE: Red 115 WINDOW AUTO PLATE GLASS IDEAL GLASS CO. Glass Work of All Descriptions 121 MAIN STREET F.W. WENDT PHONES 633549 DON ABLE WALTER J. STUTTE GENERAL CONTRACTOR New Construction and Remodeling Phone Green 768 evenings P. O. Box 3091 Estimates Furnished DECORATING PAINTING and PAPERING, being in the same craft are important enough to REQUIRE CARE in their execution———It is more satisfactory to know what the job is actually worth before starting and thus avoid an indefinite expense brought on by unneces- sary working hours. JAMES S. MeCLELLAN Phone DOUGLAS 374 ' Box 1216 SABOTAGE PLOT IS REVEALED IN CAPITOL'S BILL s without saying that war in- | make interesting back-| s for motion picture stories.| re vital and everyone knows| scmething about them or sommuc! in them | In “Secret Command”, Columbia | picture produced by Phil L. Ryan for | |Terneen Productions, co-starring O'Brien and Carole Landis at the Capitol Theat the producers| have pu-kml the most dramatic set- a shipyard. Taken from i Evening Post yarn called “The Saboteurs,” it is said to be a| tough, bruising tale of an FBI man | (Pat O'Brien) who becomes a ship- | yard worker to break up a Nazi| ring. | Just as it did in the magazine | story, “Secret Command” is said to| contain vicious and thrilling nghts‘ and exciting episodes of heroism | while America's workers pnrlorm‘ their home-front hnule night and! day. Curol" Landis plays Pal's P 4 “temporary,” are Richard Lyon and Carol Nugent. Others in the cxcep- tionally brilliant cast are Chester| Morris, as Pat's brother, Ruth War- rick as an-old sweetheart and Bar- Ford, Erik Rolf, Frank Sully, How- Fenton and Charles D. Brown as loyal shipyard workers and ruthless :anl saboteurs. BONEDRY BILL GIVEN SENATE THIS MORNING ilnn MacLane, Tom Tully, WaIlM‘(“ |ard Freeman, Matt McHugh, Frank ’World’s Prettiest’ A GROUP of Hollywood beauties | have voted Diana Mumby (above), 2l-year-old movie starlet, “The | Prettiest Girl in the World.” ana's measurements are: bust, 352 inches; waist, 25 inches; hips, 35; ankles, weight, 125 pounds; | height, 5 feet 7. (Imrrnntional) “tem- | wife while his children, also | TOWNSEND (LUB ENJOYS WELL COOKED DINNER Members and guests of the Juneau | Townsend Club assembled last night| tc enjoy a well cooked dinner in the! {C.I.O. Hall. Guest speakers v\ele ! Representative Jesse D. Lander | Speaker of the House of Represen-| itatives, who talked on what had (been accomplished in the House, | during the present session, and ch— {resentative Harry Badger, known ‘throushout the Territory as tl “Strawberry King of Alaska, gave an |interesting talk on the agricultural | possibilities in Alaska, particularly | Labor Baftles Take Up Mosi"hfv:ff e Al SRR of Pre-Lunch House Session | On the heels of a Representative Fred Hanford that s long as this is a baloney bill let’s pass it and get it over with,” me House this morning passed the pro- | prediction hibition-referendum bill to the Sen- e. “Let the Senate worry about it,” one legislator said, as the vote, 14 to 9 was announced. The bill, authored by Representa- |ings and | year,” passed by the Senate, would submit|ed this week. tive Bess Cross, if considered to the public the question of abso- lute prohibition for Alaska, Also passed, after violent debate, was the Senate substitute for House Bill No. 11, which defines the du-| ties and powers of the Commissioner of Labor. Dry powder ignited when Repre- sentative Taylor offered an amend- ment to change the elective status |of the Commissioner of Labor to ap- peintive by the Gaovernor. For the next hour, a blind man in the gallery might have thought he was hearing Skidroad Depression or- ations as cries of ‘“capitalists” and “AFL” and “CIO" and “ANB” x'ang through the chambers. Frank Marshall, AFL head, regls- tered the approval of his organiza-| jtion for the bill “as it stands” and former Commissioner of Labor Mike |Haas took the stand to declare the |“AFL is not the only union in Alaska." Thinly veiled insinuations were {made from all sides of the floor with |regard to Hass' tenure in office, last |session investigated by the Senate, and with respect to incumbent Commissioner of Labor Walter, Sharpe. | The amendment failed 17 to 6 with the labor bloc vote split with ' |fear the bill, amended, might not ‘get Senate approval. Passage was finally achieved, 23 to! 1, Representative Stanley McCutch: {eon dissenting, but battle flames |rose anew when Representative | | Taylor asked for recommittal of the \bill with regards to Sharpe's $6,250 salary provided in the bill. Taylor’s motion lost and he follow- ed with motion to recommit Senate Bill 41, passed yesterday, for spe- cific amendment of the $6,250 salary raises provided for in that bill. Objection was raised on the grounds recommittal cannot be made of a measure already passed, but Speaker Jesse Lander announced his intention to sit on the matter dur- ing the lunch hour and rule on the question in the afternoon. Two memorials were passed to. start the morning’s session, Substi- tute for House Joint Memorial No. 18, memorializing the Civil Aeronautics Authority to grant Alaska-to-the- States routes to Algskan operators, and House Joint Memorial No. 19, by Vukovich, to have Congress ex- tend soldiers’ homestead -rights to | Alaska with credit for war service as after the last war. Wonderfully quick {, ? | & little Va-tropol =S each nostril hel pen w- S es—makes bread 8:1 easier—when lief, too, from head colds. Follow dkecthnl in folder, VICKS VA-TRO-MOL {of the Townsend movement in Wnshlnglon D. C, stated that there |is an excellent prospect that con- gressmnul hearings on the Townsend {Plan for National insurance will be remark bytheld this year, according to Repre- sentative Homer D, Angell, Oregon| Repubhcan Representative Angell on hearings will be held on Social Se- | curity Act revision, “I have been told by Chairman Doughton of the Ways and Means based his will probably be held this Representative Angell declar- “If they are, there is an excellent prospect of holding hearings on the Townsend Plan at the same time.” e ——— Empxre want nds get quick results THE DAlLY /\L/\SKA EMPIRE | taking in its Di=- | AT MEETING LAST NIGHT the liklihood that| | Committee that social security hear-; | GESTAPO STORY - NOW UNFOLDED AT 20TH (ENIURY. i | | A startling drama, literally breath- | revelations concerning ‘com‘lu ons in present-day Germany, ‘15 promised in “Women in Bondage” { which opens an engagement at the | 20th Cent tonight. | Gail Patri Vancy Kelly |seen in the co- ring roles, head-| |ing an exceptional cast which in-| 1ch es Bill Henty, Tala Birell, Ger- | | trude Michael, Alan Baxter, Rll'u 'y, Maris Wrixon, Felix Basch, | sel, Mary Forbes, H. B. and many other popula |sereen players | The action of the story details| |the fiendish cruelties and the low- ‘exm standards of morality which| | have been forced on the women of | | the Reich under the Hitler X\‘mm(“ resulting in a complete breakup of | '{ami'n life as it affects the rising| Warner | generations. During the progress of the story, Iboth Miss Patrick and Miss Kelly re- sist the Nazi regime in differing ways, and both are made to suffer “the cruel punishment of the ruthless (Gestapo. The entire film constitutes {a revealing expose of conditions which are little realized by the out- side world HOSPITAL NOTES | John Smith has left St. Ann's| |Hospital Jjor his home after re-| jceiving medical attention. ' Mrs. Don A. Baker, a surgeryl 'patient, has been admitted to St.| Ann's Hospital. Mrs. Mary Julason, a medical case, has been admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital. | Mrs, Albert Schramen has en-' tered St Ann's Hospital for surgical |attention. | | Chris Michelson a medical pa- uen!. has been admitted to St. Ann’s Hospital. PALM SUNDAY CONCERT | AT LUTHERAN CHURCH i On Palm Sunday evening, March {25, at 8 o'clock the Lutheran Senior Choir featuring Mr. Ernest Ehler as |soloist will present a concert of |sacret music to which the public_is cordially invitad. The choir members are requested {to be at practice tonight at 8 o'clos PICKARDS AT HOTEL Mr. and Mrs. Don Pickard, whose home on Douglas Island burned to the ground yesterday are staying at the Gastineau Hotel until they can find a place_ to l)vv Above — SqUaraway Rayon Crepe with dou- ble front for concealing lines “and adjustability. Black, navy, brown or green in sizes 12 fo 20. $8.95 Right — Same style s above in washable dot- ted -Rayon Crepe. In navy, copen,. green or brown, Sizes 12 to 20. $6.95 Your Smart Standby While Waiting for MR. S5TORK JUNEAU. /\LASK/\ JUNE ALLYSON GLORIA DEHAVEN i VAN JOHNSON S hs PAGE FIVE TONIGHT! O LENTURY "’L’{{W_fym /////:,’A’S WOWEN Women Voo snsluvad und degrcded by 'he pagan savagery of a gang of ruthless des- pots! FACTS revealed for the first time in a film that is sheer DYNAMITE! SENSATIONAL DISCLOSURES!? Expose of Nazi Morals! caie PATRICK ~ wancy KELLY st HENRY + cenreune MICHAEL w.s. WARNER » wanuis WRIXON aun BIRELL « anve NAGEL « aan BAXTER WRITTEN and DIRECTED by EYE-WITNESSES! HARRY JAMES XAVIER CUGAT and their orchest. SHOWPLALE oF lmu”l" LUISE " RAINER m—“°STAG=s THEATRE LAST TIMES TONIGHT S ] JONES - STEVENS More Northwest women have switched to Centennial Silk-Sifted Flour, in the past 12 months, than to any other brand, according to impartial surveys. THE FIXIT SHOP 5 SECOND STREET MUSICAL INSTRUMENT REPAIRING GENERAL LIGHT REPAIR WORK IT IS essential periodi- cally to check over your insurance policies. Deter- mine whether the amount you carry is sufficient to cover new things you have bought and improve- ments you have made on your properiy. If not, ask this Hartford agency to increase the amount of your insurance . . . Do it Phone 567 Roy Eaton 1.G. FULTON & COMPANY BUILDING CONTRACTORS REPAIRING gnd REMODELING ALL TYPES OF GLASS WORK Panes Replaced-New Frames Made PHOI\E 433 149 So. Main Street Shattuck Agency INSURANCE—BONDS JUNEAU