The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 19, 1945, Page 5

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TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 1945 THE DAILY ALASKA JRE— JUNEAU, ALASKA PAGE FIVE HEADS CHURCH REGULAR SHOW BOND PREMIERE, CAPITOL TONIGHT There is a double bill at the Cap- itol Theatre tonight. At 7 o'clock, the regular feature, “Sensations of 1945" will be screened, then at 9 o'clock the doors will ke opened for the bond pre- miere of “Thirty Seconds Over Tokyc,” admittance by bond pur- chase only. The “Sensations of 1945” is by the best comedy stars, best dancers, best pianists, best bands and best cir: cus acts Eleanor Powell is in the starring role and others in the big cast in- |clude Dennis O'Keefe, W. C. Field {C. Aubrey Smith, Sophie Tuckoar, | Eugene Pallette, Mimi Forsythe, Da {vid Lichine and the bands of Cab {Calloway and Woody Herman. There jare all kinds of shapely girls and new songs galore. | ——————— PLANE I0OMS " LOW; OFFICERS | DUCK AND HOW Vice Admir§fiekher Gets Greeting in Fog at Aleutian Base By OLEN CLEMENTS (Associated Preds War Correspondent) The i g, W | [AMSKA COASTAL | i - FLIES 21 MONDAY | | AN ALEUTIAN BASE, June 17, ship Norah returned to Juneau this i % (Delayed)—Rear Adm. J. H, Brown morning from Skagway and brought | Alaska Coastal Alrlines made two| 5. washington, D. C. & North 21 passengers as follows: | flights to Sitka yesterday, taking the | py ific task force commander, and| G. Henney, Mrs. G. Henney, Lu- | following passengers: Glen Leach, pic chief of Staff, Capt. Leonard S, cille Jerome, Mrs. Johnson, C. John- | Cecile Smith, E. B. Lowman, N. L. | Huntington, Sanford M. Klein, W. ONE SHOW ONLY! AT 7:00 P. M. 'WOODY HERMAN AND HIS BAND CAB CALLOWAY AND His BAND Released thru United Artists ~—————TONIGHT BOND PREMIERE SPENCER TRACY as JIMMY DOOLITTLE VAN JOHNSON and ROBERT WALKER IN M. G. M.’s “30 SECONDS OVER TOKYO" ADMISSION BY BOND TICKET ONLY GENERAL SEATS A $25 BOND LOGE SEATS A $50 BOND Mrs. Myrtle Holm Smith, of Waban, Mass., has been elected President of The Mother Church, First Church cf Christ, Scientist. (AP Wirephoto, copyright by { | Bachrach). KEEP THE PLANES FLYING OVER TOKYO NORAHINFROM Canaddian Pacific’s steam TOMORROW 1T'S GOT EVERYTHING FROM KAY TO Z! Joseph Quinn, T. ¢ ed, fully uniformed, to greet Vice Pashuid, . Quammie, Lewis Jone sand Robert | i, " (G & ST LT Wherry, Mrs. H. M. Pyle, Herbert Hnapegn, ; .| mander of the North Pacific. Riewe, Marie Loy, Mrs. Cashen, SXes: ouigeing passengFrs were:i Fog dipped down over the land- Shiela Godkin, Jan VanDez, Mrs, for Hawk Inlet, Esther Miller; ,o"¢o1q o0 10w that a tall man E. Jones, Elmer Jones, A. R. Bowen, Skagway, Mrs. Peter Johnson, Peter| /4 1eqch it with his fingertips. Loriene Buntin and M. E. Monagle. Vancouves Elizabeth Mc- Mrs. Grace Taylor, The Mitchell swished Orlean Groshey, Lura Friesen, Adah Friesen, Caryl Friesen, Lois Poole, ANN MILLER VICTOR MOORE JEFF DONNELL Empire Classifieds Pay! ELLIS AIR LINES DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN via Pelersburg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock, Hydaburg and steamers for Prince Rupert, Vancouver, and Seattle FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 .. Jolinsen, sl B s Thunms:‘ Suddenly, an Army Mitchell,! Leaving later this morning for QBLhAD), BeAnk E AN v, | fighting to get into the fog-shroud- the south were the following: Incoming passengers from Sitka |, p1q 500meq down toward the! For Prince Rupert: Ethel P. ere rauk Hughes) S/ te Lale | i | Whitfield, Paul Blake and Thomas Grove, Leslie Grove, Jr., J. C. Mc- ¥ % Aol mda M. Roberts. Grew, Adolph Norberg, W. Quammie Brown hit _lho dirt, rolled into M. 8. and Sanford Klein. g-avel, tore his pants and skinned For Incoming from Hoonah was Frank ; 1iS knee. Mewhinney dived into a Kenzie See. !muddy ditch. [k LA SRR A over them. They were pretly, bedragg FORES'I' SERVI(E they stuck it out and welcomed erly Poole, and Lester Minner. | Fletcher a few minutes later. | For Seattle: Paul Lorenzen, OFH(M“ “EAD PTG T | Phillip Lorenzen, Pearl | Ho;p"A' NOTES Fred E. Moore, Mrs. Mildred Mar- FOR FIRS‘ (“Y = tin and Alice Brown. ‘l —_ | For Wrangell: Josephine Freed- A | Mrs. E. E. Gunst, with her baby man, Bernice Floberg, H. M. Olsen Charles Forward, of the U. S.lgir] went home Monday from St. and J. P. Hawey. Forest Service ‘office here, 181t this | Ann's Hospital. " For Ketchikan: week on a 10-day trip to the Ket-| chikan office in connection "’“-hjrmm St. Ann's Hospital, where he . Karki, William Karki, Dr. J. D. timber sales. __iwas a medical patient. Smith, Mrs. J. D. Smith, and Louis Alva Blackerby, Personnel Chief| wpaster Jerry McNeeven entered paBow. for the Forest Service is also to head | st Ann's Hospital yesterday for sur-' Rkt A R for Ketchikan on an official fleldlgmal care. | trip. He plane to leave Juneau paster Fausto Paulo, a medical tomorrow. |patient, returned to his home from F|SHERIES OFF'(IALS R R | St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday. Robert Fulton, the inventor-en-| jchn Cgro:@ h’;s emyered s',_g HEAD FORBRISTOI BAY gineer, was a portrait and landscape | Ann’s Hospital for medical care. | : painter as well. | Dora Kuich has left St. Ann’s Hos-| With the opening soon of the Ipital for her home after receiving Bristol Bay fishing season in mind, medical attention. Frank W. Brown was admitted agement Supervisor for the Fish and yesterday to St. Ann's Hospital for | Wildlife Service, and Earl C. Bright, medical care. Charlotte and Jewell Williams of the F&WL, were to board a west- Hoonah were admitted yesterday to bound plane here today, enroute to the Government Hospital, i the red salmon area. ——————— R SEATTLE MEN HERE PASKIND ARRIVES James O'Brien, Ted Peterson, C.| Phillip Paskind, of Whitehorse, is Thomas Saxton and Louis LaBow, a guest at the Hotel Juneau. Iol Seattle, are guests at the Bar- el s anof Hotel. BOWELL HERE R. J. Bowell, of San Francisco, Empire wanr-ags bring resuits/ is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. - NO PRIORITY ' RELEASED X0, PRIOR™Y NEW MACHINES Underwood Typewriters and Adding Machines Marchant Calculators . . Hand or Electrics PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW First Ordered. First Delivered Exclusive Agents for Alaska—WRITE or WIRE ROSCOE TOWNSEND, Anchorage, Alaska END OF RACE FOR RACE HATER do a little better grade of PAINTING and PAPERING Many people have asked if we did Residence work and I wish to say we do and are taking care of these jobs as fast as we can possibly get to them. JAMES S. MeCLELLAN Phone Douglas 374 P. 0. Box 1216 —_—— AUDITS SYSTEMS TAXES NEILL, CLARK and COMPANY Public Accountants—Auditors—Tax Counselors 208 Franklin Street — Telephone 757 Falrbanks Office: 201-2 Lavery Building KuNLOCH N. NEILL JOHN W. CLARK WE OFFER TO A LIMITED NUMBER OF CLIENTS A COMPLETE MONTHLY ACCOUNTING AND TAX SERVICE TELEPHONE 757 BY AN IRONICAL TWIST of war’s fortunes, Julius Streicher (right), Nazi- dom’s foremost practitioner of anti-Semitism, finds himself here the prisoner of a young Jewish officer, Maj. Henry C. Pliit of New York. Former editor of “Die Sturmer,” a rabid Jew-baiting paper, Streicher was captured in a small farmhouse near Boskie, Germany. Official U. S*Army Signal Corps Radigphoto. (International Soundphoto) SKAGWAY, SOUTH Mewhinney, Cameron, Texas, wait- son, M. Bathelder, J. Tropea, Phillip | Lorenzen, | Ernest M. Bliven, | Donald Peterson was discharged Ethel Bayou, M. D. Williams, Mrs. | | J. Steele Culbertson, Fisheries Man- | | Alaska Region Fleet Engineer for | | VETERAN - WASHINGTON — In a pasb issue of Yank, five letters were printed which indicated that National Ser- vice Life Insurance couldn’t be ob- tained by the service men who wrote ‘he Jett because they couldn’t meet insurance physical or medical requirements service and overseas—presumably in or near combat areas. Yank commented that under pres- ent interpretations of the law, a man considered in bad health ¢ i as insurance require- ments go and still be considered good combat meterial “This doecs not make sense,” Yank continued. “Yank, like the writers of the above letters, feels that our present insurance requirements are unfair,” Just about that time, a Con- gressman came out with an asser- tion that approximately 600,000 ser- vice men overseas are reported to |have been denied Governmnt life insurance policies because of their physical condition. The 600,000 figure had to be quickly retracted, of course, because officials knew that, for physical reasons, less than 20,000 servicemen's applications had ben rejected—both overseas and in {this country. Many of these re- | jections have since been granted in= | surance But a controversy of this kind doesn’t concern ex-service people tco much, if they were wise enough to apply for insurance wh.n in the |gervice, and have had the good sense to keep it from lapsing since they became veterans. I only men- !tioned the fuss to show that there is {still scrambling in the service for jthe privilege of buying National |Service Life Insurance. And I mean “privilegl- So, as I tried to get over in my |last column, keep that insurance in :fcroe. If you've let ’it lapse, rein- istate it. It will only cost you two menthly premiums even thought the \insurance has lapsed for two or eight or more months. | Next thing to consider is conver- !'sion of the term insurance you ori- ginally bought to a permanent pol- |icy. The general advice given by | ctficials handling this insurance is be led, but Edward Poole, Yvoune Poole, Bev-| | another!”’ ‘Transportation says: to replace them.” of commission, you' of luck. ore Mileage Service. By MAJOR THOMAS M. NIAL Yet' the men were in | to convert as soon as you can rea- | Mrs. | - R Uncle Sam says: “Take care of that car, brother... no ftelling when you can get Juneau Motm' Co. Studebaker . . . Peacetime builder of fine cars and trucks $' GUIDE | i \ sonably afford to do so. You have five years—from the time you took 'out that insurance—to convert. Very probably a Bill now before Con- 'gress, (HR 2949) will soon be enact- ed to extend that five year period for three more years. The sooner you convert, the quick- er you'll be absorbing two advan- tages for yourself The term pol- ticy you bought in the service pro- vides only for the payment of money “to someone in case you'r2 bumped off. Whoever you have named as teneficiary will get the money. But there’s not a cash-value in a car-! load of term policies. You pay the' premium to keep a term policy in effect so someone will get something ' if you are liquidated. But therc's never any cash value for you 1 Yet when a term policy is convert- | ed to a permanent one, the new pol- icy—after it has been in force one year—starts to build up a cash value for you. This increases with every! premium you pay. If you ever need | to, you can borrow up to 94 per cent rof the cash value at any time, or you | could even surrender the policy and ake the cash value—though this wouldn’t be wise. | The policy will also pay dividends. | You can collect these in cash each| year or, if you just decide to let them accumulate to your credit, they will in effect increase the cnsh, value. The dividends Lhcmselves‘ will also earn interest. A second] premium on the permanent policy will always be lower than if he waits | two or three years before converting. | It he waits, he pays more. | A $10,000 twenty-pay life policy will cost a veteran about $13.00 more a year if he converts when he is 28 years -cld than if he converts at 25., When you convert, you'll have a, choice of three types of permanent | policies. If you don't know about these, I'll try to give you an idea in my next article. ., — NOTICk! Not responsible for any debts !contracted only personally by our- | selves. | | MR. & MRS. CHAS. JOHNSON, | Tenakee,. Alaska. (20th Century Theatre for the last ‘Cht‘stm' Cinklin, Arthur Hoyt 1£hop during the absence of Frances on st Towighy LELLEATURY AT 20TH CENTURY Last Times Tonight! | s \% The Preston Sturges stock com- pany of movie players is on the, march again through a Sturges film. | ‘These are the men and women whom he has used in picture after picture since he started to direct the stories he writes at Paramount. The current picture, “Hail Conquering Hero,” playing at Eddie, a Hay-Fever Hero, runs for Mayor on @ Laugh Platform. You'll the | — wh the Preston Sturges — who gave you “The Miracle of Morgan's Creek’l times tonight, stars Eddie Bracken | 3 ' and Ella Raines. This is Sturges’ eighth film as both writer and dir- | ector. For at , least half of the| group this is the eigthth straight Sturges movie in which they've had leading character roles. All of the others have been in at least five of Sturges’ productions. | These people include William Demarest, Victor Potel, Jimmy Con- lin, Al Bridge, Torben Meyer, Frank- lin Pangborn, Frank Moran, Georgia | Caine, Esther Howard, Jack Norton, and Harry Hayden. ! “Hail the Conquering Hero” deals | with a Marine discharged because of | hay fever, who is ashamed to face| his family and neighbors. His bud- dies force him to return, however, describe him as a hero with the re-| sult that he is elected mayor of the town, MRS, NELSON TAKING [ VACATION BUT SHOP | EDDIE | WIL REMAIN 0PEN BRACKEN Mrs. F. E. Nelso Frances Ann Beauty Parlor, is tak- ing a vacation from her shop until July 18. She plans to spend her va- cation here in . Juneau with her father, W. L. Blatchford, who is |’ coming from Vancouver, B. C. for a! visit. Mrs. Nelson is also expectlng} her husband home soon, from the Marine Hospital in Seattle. | Marjorie Newburn will manage the n, owner of the | and ol v WILLIAM DEMAREST e COLISEUM v TONIGHT and WEDNESDAY BETTE DAVIS Miriam Hopkins "0ld Ac!uainlance" OLYMPIC NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY SEATTLE RUTH B. ROCK ‘BETTY McCORMICK General Agent—Baranof Hotel Juneau Agent—] Ann. fo——— o e e CARO TRANSFER HAULING and CRATING DIESEL, STOVE, CRUDE OIL Phone 344 Phone 344 | | i | FERN'S PORTRAIT STUDIO A photegraph captures forever the heauty of the bride on her wed- ding day. We will take all your wedding pictures. ' PHONE 567 SECOND STREET Director J. Monroe Johnson of the U.’S. Office of Defense “Every day, 4,000 more cars | are going off the road and not one single car is being built Do you realize what that mumg If your car goes out be out Studebaker dealers will gladly help you save your car with K{ REMEMBER—THE 7TH WAR LOAN . Come and Now in Stock Some of the 40 and 60 Watt LUMILINE LAMPS Get Them! * Alaska Electric Light and Power Company Phone 616 OIL BURNERS DRAFT CONTROLS HEATING Smith 0il Burner Service ~ Day Phone 711 P. O. Box 2066 Night Phone 476 MEN WANTED at JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS Must Have Availability Certificates Delivery Service 104--PHONE-105 OR CALL AT | Bert's Cash Grocery LIGHT HAULING JUNEAU and DOUGLAS DAILY

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