The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 31, 1945, Page 5

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TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1945 L = o s I ||Il|||IIll||lIIIIIIIIIII|lIIIIIIIII|IIII|III|I|. ‘ smywmuh%w% v IN MATCHLESS TECHNICOLOR CapiToL TONIGHT— "THIRTY SECONDS | OVERTOKYO" LAST - TIMES AT CAPITOL ; “Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo" will te shown for the last two times at |the Capitol tonight jof the features of the kind ever n the screen, a story by one Doolittle bombers who es- the adventure. Spen- ds the cast. ’anmu,“ night .“The Climax” is the feature to be shown. The stor: centers in a European opera house during the last century. The pro- AT 7:00———9:40 | duction is high in popular cntertain- WEDNESDAY ment value. - ik Fnow THE e PVI. WILLIAM SPMN (under the jurisdiction of the mili-| with native 14 "l‘i'llIIII'l'"""!IllI‘IH!IIlIIIIlI‘IIIIH IIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIII|lIIIIII"' GETS HIS JAP; CUTS | tary government, but | years of age. £ 5 ME] 4 SI AR,I,S 0K|N Aw A Grade school classes with more !‘;‘V‘r ”W‘ifi‘(‘f\”f: L]{?%p‘;r“{fi‘ :(11“:?::( l:\‘n‘ll\m.l\rz““;:::ll]l:l:g;ynmdx: William Spain, 20, of Juneau, Alaska, OKINAWA, July 31.—High school | afternoon. ':!;‘fi?::"rlil:“:;“( l:to?l:*o?h:;d.v N«;u; first time today and 400 barefooted d English history, hy. Iur the event showed up to take ad- | ned for the ume whcn ma'.eth are pr ,“"m" “,0 I)Irmdvp struggle for EDUCATION OF NOTCH IN GUN STOCK. |than 2,500 in attendance are con- o SRR P g L education came to Okinawa for the Hiah school subjects in(‘ludo Japa- | rifle. the opportunity lh"‘a\'mldbk‘ vantage of m“ 26. AmeribhnecHpd’ HEEEE them. | S ccept for mine fields which The Japanese discouraged any-| J. McLean Walker and O. C. held us up on the beach for a short » thing higher than elementary edu- Ziebell, of Chicago, are guests at while, the initial landing was not the Juneau soldier ex- ven as we pus hv(l ahead having arrived | l(ndlfh(\lll p‘ ained cation. i the Baranof Hotel, The new high school classes are in Juneau \cxtnday 1 This is one g fight, Spain was awarded the Com-| t Infantryman's Badge. He is t0 merit its own special place among ) entitled to wear the Asiatic-|the truly great and unusual sea Pacific Campaign ribbon with one storics comes tonight to the screen battle star and the Philippine Lib-|0f the 20th Century Theatre. 1Its eration ribbon. Warner Bros. “Between Two Worl Overseas six month he has one|—the motion picture starring John scar of army service ind hi Garfield, Paul Henreid, Sydney “ sy gl i BTy T b amloyeq | GIcenstreet. and Eleanor Parker. OF A CREWLESS as an aire ‘fl mechanic. ¢ story is that of a handful | jof travelers who find themselves THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA 'BETWEEN TWO WORLDS" COMES T0 20TH CENTURY we met only scattered wsistance as’ lhe main body of the Japs had pull- cd out to the hills. But from them on in the going got tougher. Those Japs put up a stubborn defense from well-hidden, elaborately constructed caves and we had the devil of a time rooting them out.” For his participation in the Cebu| e ed the ship. STARLINER JUNEAU HAS 21 PASSENGERS [ IN FROM ANCHORAGE | s . “atioine |edd Alaska Airlines’ Starliner Juneau |day from Anchorage. The passen- |all ship lights on. 'gers were: Donald Hall, L. M. wgl.lown limited group (eight in all) lington, Mrs. L. M. Wellington, Ed.ithewmv no other passengers aboard. ith Wellington, Pat Wellington, Wil-{And, too, rie Granger, W. H. Hines, Roy Gris-| son, C. E. Albrecht, Charles Lamphear, tance into totally uncharted seas. Ed Hamon, Archie J. Loss, Lt. David And when at last the engines come is a startling and un- peclud port which awaits the movie- A. Brown, Mrs. Bessie Hendricks and to rest, it Mrs. W. H. Hines. Outgoing passengers to Anchorage 8Cer. were Art Woodley, Carrie McAlis-| ter, L. J. Jewett, A. E. Oswald, Doris above, the excellent cast includes Velwiler, Paul Nations, Doris Kid- Edmund Gwenn, George Tobias, man and Arthur Johnson. |George Coulouris, Faye Emerson, To Yakutat: Dave Johnson Dallas Zeiler. Elsom and Gilbmt Emcry. How SMART PEOPLE AND JACK BENNY ATCH ON TO THEIR MONEY Smart people hang on to their money by buying War Bonds @ —and holding them. Jack Benny does, too. But don’t let that stop you. Buy some anyway. All high-class people do this. For example, I do. Lowlifes like Benny imitate us upper-crust denizens by buying Bonds just so they can get their picture in the Police ~The boys coming back from Europe and Okinawa probably Among polite circles, it is no @longer considered de rigeur to The laziest way in the world to make extra money is to let those And don’t think because your @ Aunt Cracklethroat’s tea leaves An ocean voyage strange enough aboard an ocean liner though no one| | passenger remembers having board- Af first they mistaken- {ly assume they are on their way to since all had reasons for But there are many little factors about their voyage which defy nll‘ reasonable explanation. Despite mc, flew 21 passengers to Juneau yescer.‘subnmnne menace, they travel with| Outside of their the ship’s company con-| liam R. Mattox, June Granger, Ter- sists of only one man—the steward. The film arrives at an eventual Bernice Smith, Harry J. Hill,lexplanation only after the ship has/ Louise Davie, Olaf C. Knutson, Dr.|traveled a truly immeasurable dis- Besides the four stars mentioned and Sara Allgood, Dennis King, Isobel Play With v EXTRA! 5% Veloz and Yolanda Werld's Greatest Ballroom Dancers in “CAVALCADE OF THE DANCE” VETERAN tlvl‘ Service| Ever heard of it? \Dont answer that question. the outfit that got you into trouble in the first place—the outfit re- sponsible for uprooting you from your nice comfortable life and home and family and putting you into the distinctive G I Joe's monkey suit, vice. Despite your protests, Selec- tive Service has done its bit by you and handed you over to the Army| or Nayy so you could be taught | how to really gripe in the approved GI way. At any rate, you figured! you'd never hear from Selective Ser- vice again. But you're wrong there, Mate. Just as Selective Service got you into trouble, so does it get you out of it after you leave the service. For| it’s the agency given the task of put-| It's all down in black and white, under Section 8 of the Selective Ser- vice Act. If you were working for a private employer when you got the call to arms, he “shall restore” you to your old position, or one of like “seniority, status and pay.” There's one exception Which I STARTING ' A NEW THRILL m, ENTERTAINMENT! TONIGHT... A SENSATIONAL CAST OF STARS IN THE MOST STARTLING STORY EVER FILMED WASHINGTON—Good old Selec-| That's| And, probably sooner than later,| you forgot all about Selective Ser-:_ ting ex-Joes back in their old jobs.| | THE TALE OF A VOYAGE THAT HAD NO DESTINATION SHIP IN A FOG -SWEPT SEA! e rg“-rand youre in heaven, Play g wrong and Youre n 'rroub/e’fl JOHN EDMUND GWENN - GEO. TOBIAS - GEO. I:fllllflllRIS I’AYE EMERSON S e e §' GUIDE By MAJOR THOMAS M. NIAL to be 40 days. Now you can go down to the shore or up in the mountains or anywhere you want (if you can get there) and spend almost | three months after you're ‘discharged | getting acquainted with your wife— and still get that old job back. | If you don't have a wife—well, who ever kicked about a 90-day { honeymoon? | Section 8 brings “seniority” into the picture, so next time I'll order| inspection, JOHN DOVYLE BISHOP RETURNS FROM TRIP John Doyle Bishop, manager for B. M. Behrends Company Dcpar'.-I | ment Store, is back in Juneau after a seven-week buying trip to the States. He purchased new fall merchan- dise for the store at all of the large national markets including Roches- ter, N, Y., New York City, Chicago, St. Louis, Los Angeles and San Francisco, 28 FLOWN SOUTH RAIELD SYONeY Gmgggmr DR oETURY it to step three paces forward for! 2 trip up the ‘waiter or cash in your ‘War Bonds, In these circles, in which Benny is considered a square, it is also deemed a trifle gauche—that’s hog Latin for sloppy—to dunk your feet in the finger bowl. When Benny finds this out, he’ll probably be so embar- rassed he’ll break down and start wearing shoes. AR BONDS...T0 HAVE AND won't lope up to you breathlessly and dangle a medal around your neck for buying War Bonds, but you can bet your bottom Jap yen they won’t give You the water cure, either. They know the importance of Bonds—they buy enough every month themselves to make Benny’s toupee turn green, SR War Bonds accumulate interest. You get back 133% on your original in- vestment in ten years. So et all your spare cash snooze away in War Bonds. If you must tuck something under your mattress, try your mother-in-la= spelled “rat” last Sunday that the end of this war is in sight. It’s not even within swooning distance. So make like Benny and pinch that penny. Or, as the farsighted zoo keeper said to the careless elephant keeper, “Till V-J day, hoard that hay!” Then, keep hoarding till uu Bonds mature, 70 HoLo A Thfil 1s an official U.S. T}eamry ury advertisement—prepared under auspices of Dauury Department lnd War Mmlhlnfl Council might as well bring im, though the chances are it won't affect many veterans. An employer's condition may have so changed since you left your old job that it would be either “impossible or unfeasonable” for him to put you back on the pay- roll. In that case he won't have to—that's the one exception. Selec-| tive Service tells me this happens son, Bessie Hendricks, Edward Ha- only infrequently. | man, Charles Lanphear, Lt. David Section 8, the re-employment part’ Brown, Olaf Knutson, Gov. Ernest of the act, says any one who * ‘satis-| Gruening, Elaine Swift, Donna Lee factorily completes” his period of Swift, Jimmie Swift, Maj. Carl active duty gets the re- empluymem‘ Schreibner, Gladys Isaaeson, Lt. benefits. That means any veteran Chester Gunther, Earl Forsythe, who can produce a discharge other Gaynell Schwinn, Iver Strom, Helen than dishonorable. Saale, Arthur Mattila, Ruth Park-| There’s a time limit of 90 days!er, Clara Neal and Katherine Stew- on getting back that old job. That art. seems pretty liberal to me—it used To Ketchikan: BY PAN AMERICAN Pan American’s outgoing passen- gers to Seattle yesterday, number- ing 28, were the following: Willilam Hines, Jessie Hines, Archie J. Loss, Louise Davis, June Granger, Terrie Granger, Bernice Smith, Roy Gris- Harold Synnest- HenRED § i 1 y: iy | |4 COLISEUM # TONIGHT and WEDNESDAY / BEN LYON in "Paris After Dark” | cedt and Oscar Bergseth, 4 To Fairbanks: Dorothye Chrest. & Incoming passengers from Seatt}e were: Dave Johnson, Dallas Zieger, Carl Carlson, Paul Nations, Maudi Kunz, Robert Reed, Arthur Jol Doris Kidman, Sgt. Elliot William McCants, Einer Sandgren, | Arthur Woodley, Mrs, Doris Volw! | Clarence Merr and Louise Herr. From Whitehorse: Lt. Cmdr. den A. Ewald, Lt. Robert M. Bi | Everett O. Williams and Kather; Williams. From Fairbanks: Roy Douglas. 'PRINCESS NORAH IS ON WAY 50U Passengers arriving from Skag on the Princess Norah this m |ing were Carl Hahn, Mrs. T. |Mrs, K. Hahn, Miss Jean Thom| Miss Mary Wendling, H. C. Wi iwuk I. Phelps, R. Benmn‘m& | Dapcevich, Misg D. Turpin, Hutchins, G. H. Scarrive and A. V# Maverri. Leaving for the South at 9 a: N._‘ the Princess Norah had the follows |ing Seattle-bound passengers: Helef C. Holt, Margaret Shoucair, Sgt. P. L. Salvus and A. G. Ifft. To Prince Rupert: Miss Audrey Huet, Wm. R. Selby, 8. M. Powelsorl; Geo. Bacon, Mariea Dinger and Jos. McMahan. To Vancouver: Christy McCaskell, Elvira Green, Mrs. J. H. Clements, Vera L. Parke, Mrs. G. Hensey and Ned Hensey. To Victoria: Sister Mary Hemletu. To Wrangell: E. R. Shernbroich, Mrs. Sharnbroich, Barbara Sharn. broich, Carol Sharnbroich, Helen ® | Ronning, Pauline Jorsenben Alice . Cannenzine and Georgia Fabricuis To Ketchikan: H. Gunderson, — e —— Empire Want-ads bring results!

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