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THURSDAY APRIL 4, 1946 SHOWPLALE o "UN(I-E HARR"’ ls Y1) 1] ¥} | FEATURED PROGRAM SHOWING, (CAPITOL , now at the Capi- re-unites three of the made Universal's earl- melodrama, “Phantom Last Tlmes Tenight tcl Theatre, people who ier murder Lady.” They are Ella Raines, the star; ind Robert Siodmak, director; and Joan Harrison, prcducer. Milton H. Feld is executive producer. “Uncle Harry,” like “Phantom | Lady” deals with a crime of pas- sion played ainst an background. Co-starring with Raines are George Sanders Ger'\]dmo Fitzgerald. .o — NEWEST STYLES COME BY EXPRESS FOR 'PROMENADE' Promising to be the outstanding !event of the spring season for Ju- ‘neau women, “Promenade”, pre- | Easter fashion show scheduled for |Saturday, April 13, is now in the 'hml stages of preparation. | Exclusive styles by leading de- | signers, budget costumes and play loutfits will be modeled in two [showings during the afternoon by | prominent Juneau women. The first show will be during the |luncheon hour, beginning at 12:30 o'clock in the Gold Room of the Prince Rupen Baranof Hotel, and the second show will be combined with a tea beginning at 3 p. m. Beta Sigma SEATTLE, Apru 4. — The new Phi sorority is the sponsor for the General Manager of the Alaska De- event, which is expected to attract velopment Board, Col. Henry W. several hundred woren. Clark, expressed belief here that Sorority members are handling the Haines “cutoff” to the Alaska the tickets and women desiring military highway must be lmprnvsd luncheon tickets ars warned to get and maintained as them early, because the seating road and a barge rvice est space will be limited. ed to Prince Rupert, B. C., if 41 Members of the sorority from ka is to protect horsclf againss, Whom tickets may Le obtained in- longshore strikes and Irma Purington, general freight rates. chairman, Irene Rasmussen, Mrs. Col. Clark, on terminal leave Ken Alexander, Dorianne Barnes, from the Army, was in Seattle on Mrs. W. R. Carter, Mrs. R. B. Clif- Lcn‘ Elise Coome< Mr L. M. Dun- Miss and with GEORGE SANDERS Geraldine Ella Fitzgerald: Raines COMPLETE SHOW AT 7:15—9:30 FEATURE AT 8:10—10:25 EXTRA! “SONGS OF THE COLLEG! MAINTERANCE OF HAINES "CUT-OFF' URGED BY CLARK Wants All- Year Road wit Barge Service from excessive clude THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— [UNEAU, ALASKA Lan- - |ELKS INSTALL |1ap, Laurene Knowles, Pe daas, Mrs. D. C. Langdon | Vernon More, Senna’ Powers, Mar-| garet Welsh, Mrs. R. B. William ‘ NEw OFH(ERS Mrs. J. H. Williams, Mary Jane Ly-| man, Dorothy Farrell, Jean and| Mrs. Louise Kizer, Mrs. Ruth Shu- man and Mrs. Walter Conrad Costumies will be arranged by :.M‘Elhs Reynolds Takes Over, act as commentator for the affair.| 2 Several air expr shipments of Helm Of lO(al Or newest styles have just arrived in| H H Juneau for the event. [ ganlza'lon .« with fitting ceremony, officers who will lead Juneau Lodge No. 420, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks through the next lodge year PNA MAKES TWO Pacific Nerthern Air the! Ellis C Reynolds, succeeding followirig ye y n the Doug- Leonard J. Holmquist as Exalted last DC3, pi by Capt. Robert Ruler Desmarias with First Officer Rich-| Victor ard Ferguson and Stew s Paul- | Knight. ine Knight, to Cordeva: T. Ox-| Claude C. Carnegie, land, O. Olsness, Jay Jolly, Michael Loyal Knight. Cahill, Mrs. Da ¥m. Dan-| Lou Hudson, forth, Ernest Pel .| Knight Eric Bulmer. W. H. Biggs, Secretary. Jake Aaland, Robert Doherty William Franks, Treasurer. Bloberg, Jaks Hansen, Bert A H. M. Porter, Tiler. son, Nels Hatley, Bob | Appointed as his assistants by Chas. Olson, Tony Hansen and Bo g i Exalted Ruler Reynolds were: gan Boe. Joe Saddler, Esquire. To Anchorage: M | Charles Porter, Inner Guard. Gren Collins Dewey Baker, Chaplain. on the same route, aboard the| Robert Satre, Orzamb! 0L 0 DASSENGERS ARE flew Power, Esteemed L"ading Esteemed Esteemed Lecluring ne Ar. and Mrs. Matty Spnng,m Ium Officer .uk Dean and Stewardess Louise eight- | ner, the following were flown to| John Gatfney, William Wagner, ‘Florence Bradford, Donald Dcnn‘ Lucille Dean, Jerry Dean, Bessie Smith, Everett Markham, Lee Jolm— son, Emma Johnson, Irene Olson,| Grady McKay, Patricia Sullivan, | Judy Shohns, Dr. John Livie, Syrus | ‘Atwe!l, Della Murphy, Chester Mur- | iphy, Charles Hanas and Waso Peckovich | From Whitehorse, William Wrede; from Fairbanks, Joseph B. Pollas- |trine. To Fairbanks: Neva Whaley, Frank Whaley, Nina Whaley, Louise ! Walsh, Michael Walsh and Leonard Berlin. ‘To Seattle: Rudolph Haas, Gale Hines, Paul Thomas, Edward Walsh, Robert Norton, Robert White, Jack Fletcher, Thelma Fletcher. Andrew Nerland, James Davis, ,Ralph Mortensen, Art Hicks, James {Back, June Peterson, Don Van Brockin, Duncan Campbell, Patricia Hulet, Bernice Rady and Leon De- {Long. THE WAY AHEAD' FEATURE SHOWING AT 20TH CENTURY “The Way Ahead” is one of the most important pictures that has come out of the war period. Itis a story about civilians—a platoon of them. For, as this 20th Century-Fox re- lease opened last night at the 20th |Century Theatre so splendidly dramatizes the armies that fought in the far flung corners of the world were made up of little people who left their factories and farms and 'homes to do a job that needed do- ing. Long after the battles have been forgotten the men who fought them will be remembered, just as now we remember the Minute Men, the Rough Riders and the Lost e ! Battalion. David Nivin, the star of the |screenplay, plays the role of Lt. 20"' A“"IVERSARY }Jim Perry with all the charm, ‘bnllnme and conviction that has l“IHERA" (HuR(H ‘\mn him his tremendous popular- OBSERVED SUNDA ¥ ity. With him in the cast are Ray- hnom Huntley, Billy Martnell, Stan- Sunday, April 7, will be used by »lm Holloway and Penelope Ward, Resurrection Lutheran Ciurch to umum; others. ! e — mark the 20th anniversary of its | organization. | After preliminary work the locall RATES DIS(USSED tcongregaucn was formally orgamz-! ed on April 11, 1926, under the di- BY SEATT[E ( ( L] L] irection of the Rev. P, E. Baisler, | 'Fleld Missionary of the United Lu- | theran Church, Cordeova: Jerry Neonan and Dan| Molier. : To Anchorage Harrop, Dr. C. Mr. E.| C.| s.| nd Mrs. Walter | Huntley, Kay, Wm. Wagner, Patricia Sullivan, Chester Mur- phy, C. Murphy, Diane Murphy, Shirley Dean and Jack Dean, Jr. | From Anchorage: Collar,! Beverly Collar, Dar Jollar, Dun- can Campbell, Patri R. Shelton, Rocco Cassandra, Cha. lec W. Holz. ! Col. E. Sutton, Ernest S. Vigil,| John A. Reich, Leon B. DeLong Carl Shute, Mrs. Carl Shute, Gecil| Jones and Mrs. Bernice Rady. ' Judy Sohn: FLOWN TO JUNEAU BY PAN AMERICAN, Pan American Airways flew the os Atwell, Grady Me-|following passengers yesterday from | Torkelsen, O. Bodding, A. L. Shav- ‘Sequle Eric Bulmer, William Hnm-\e,. and H. L. Arnold. Mr. Reck has ilton, Ernest Petry, William Dan-| forth, W. G. Danforth, Michael Ca- hill, Boe Bargen, Charles Olson, Tony Hansen. Robert Bergman, Nels Hatley, » Hulet, Wm | Bert Anderson, Jake Hansen, GUS marry A. Allen was installed as the | Blombmg Jake Aaddand, Ray Frankhouser. Rolland Wonker, Walter Gabilein, Theodore Bystedt, Haidee Rocco, Laurine Anderson. Gus An(lenun John Bnckman. Forty-five persons constituted the charter membership {list of which 20 are still connected | with the church, The first group of {church councilmen consisted of John Reck, J. A. Krugness, O. iserved continuously since the! i founding of the church as a mem- ber of the council and as treasurer | of the church. 1 On September 22, 1926 the Rev. | first regularly called pastor. He !served the congregation until the first of June 1831. Other pastors | have been: the Rev. Erling H. Olaf- son, July 1931 to June 1937; the Rev. John L. Cauble July 1937 to | SEATTLE, April 4—Recommen- dations for rate changes to shift the burden of operating the Alaska Railroad are being formulated by the Railroad with the support of !the Seattle Chamber of Commerce. In the interest of National secur- ity the Railroad must be rehabili- tated and maintained, the Cham- ber's Board of Trustees pointed out yesterday, but the expense should be charged to the Nation and not to the residents of Alukn llone THANKS EVERYBODY GASTONIA, N. C., April 4—D. Reid Wallace, a candidate for the LAST TIMES TONIGHT! A SIMPLY GREAT STORY! returns fo the screen in G.C.F's Foreword by Directed by QUENTIN REYNOLDS *CAROL REED A Two Cities Film THE MOST EXTRAORDINARY STORY OF OUR TIMES! OIL BURNERS PLUMBING HEATING - Smith Oil Burner Service PHONE 476 Location—214 Second Street GREEN 559 BOX 2318 FRED R. WOLF ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR “HOUSE WIRING OUE SPECIALTY” VIILCANIZIHG—Tlres and 'l'llhl PROMPT SERVICE—WORK GUARANTEED H State House of Representatives, ran I a newspaper advertisement thank- [} his way west to wind up his army affairs. | October 1941. The present pastor, . “At the present time,” he said, “we Alaskans are at the mercy of American shipping. Through the Haines cutoff we .can move the products of the whole interior of Alaska, and by barge we could transport them to the western ter- minus of the Canadian National Railway's northernmost line at Prince Rupert. : The Colenel said, too, that most Alaskans feel Haines is an ideal tourist port for the whele’ Terri- tory. “From Haines a fleet of buses could reach every interior point over the highway. It is not neces- sary to cross the Gulf of Alaska to reach it,” he said. Part of the Haines cut off runs through Canada and must be main- tained by the Canadian govern- ment. The Canadian government has assured Alaskan Clark said, that Canada will main- tain the road. FIVE STATES 10 ADOPT DAYLIGHT SAVING APRIL 28 (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) Five states and parts of 18 oth-, ers will observe daylight saving i | time beginning April 28 while the | remainder will continue on Stan-| dard time. Among the cities which will push their clocks ahead one hour are New York, Boston, Buffalo, Chi- cago, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Mi- ami, Louisville, Newark, Charles- ton, and Indianapolis. But Kansas City, San Francisco, Seattle, Dallas, Des Moines, Mem- | phis, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Sait Lake City, Omaha, Phoenix and Portland, Ore, will ignore the change. In the nation's capital the ques- tion of observing the time advance —first ‘States in 1917 under wartime pres- sure—still was being considered. President Truman has said he would not put daylight saving time into general effect unless it was legfislnte . .t — POLICE RAID IN PEIPING SNARES 21 COMMUNISTS PEIPING, April 4.—Gendarmes, micipal police and plain clothes- todav arrested 27 Chinese Communrists, including a- score of spevmen and the head of the an Chamber of Commerce, in 4 3 pm. raid on the 18th Group Army Headquarters and two news- payer offices. Police Chief Chen Kung-ju said tne arrests were made because the 27 lacked proper identification cards ‘ot because they are Communists as such.” He said the raids were incidental in a citywide drive to enforce regulations requiring ail persons to obtain certificates of residence. Release of the 27 de- pends upon their identification, the Chiet added. officials, | introduced in the United' BARBARA HALE, ATT’«\INING FILM STARDOM, HAPPIEST OVER OBTAINING A NEW HOUSE! By VICTOR GUNSON Central Press Correspondent HOLLYWOOD—Lovely Barbara Hale is preparing to celebrate her forthcoming birthday as Holly- wood’'s happiest girl. Barbara fig- ures she has ptenty of good rea- sons for overflowing emotions. Only three years in Hollywood, Miss Hale attained at last solid full-fledged stardom. That is some- thing which comes to one girl in a million. Then, she has just moved into the first house she ever owned. ' Last, but certainly not least, she has the unswerving devotion of one of filmland's most likeable young men, Bill Williams. They have just had a long-desired wish fulfilled—they are co-starring to- gether in a comedy, “A Likely Story.” Barbara celebrates her next | birthday April 18. Unlike so many | screen beauties who guard their | ages like Uncle Sam protects the secret of the atomic bomb, Bar- bara frankly admits that on that day she will reach the ripe old age of 24, Neither of them is publicly dis- cussing it, but no one in Holly- wood will be surprised if Miss Barbara Hale becomes Mrs. Bill Williams before she has another _birthday roll around. Barbara, who lived in the Holly- | wood. Studio club up until a month ago, is now getting her first ex- perience as a homemaker in her new nouse. The house s in the ¥San Fer- nando valley—famous in song and | story—where many other film notables reside, some in Yegal splendor and others in quiet, coun- try simplicity. Barbara bought the kind of a house she would liked to have had if she had never left her home town of Rockford, I, to become a movie star. Barbara’s “Dog House” 1t has six rooms—two bedrooms, a den, living room, dining room, kitchen and two baths. It has a small yard in which there is a doll house. Barbara is having this lengthened by two feet and will install a bunk in it as a guest house. She will call that “The Dog House.” The house is to be repainted a rich French gray with blue trim. ‘She's just acquiring the drapes and furniture. At first she slept on the floor on a mattress she borrowed from a friend. For a while visitors had to sit on the floor or boxes. That is because Barbara was not in a hurry. “I intend to make this house into a home,” she said. “It's not going to look like a movie set. It's going to look as if people lived in it. Comfort will be the main thing.” Barbara's sketching talents—she studied commercial art in Chicago —are being put to good use in furnishing and decorating her house and laying out her small garden. .Bub-n Hale i3 one star who CONGRATS, BABS!—Robert Young <ongm'ulflhl Barbgra nalo on her, elevation to stardom, but warns footing at top is often precarious. AT THE TOP—Beauteous Barbara in @ most fetching evening gawn. never intended to be an actress. While she was attepding Rock- ford Hill school she dabbled a lit- tle in amateur acting, but she in- tended to make art her life's work, Immediately upon graduation | she entered the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts. After two years there, an incident happened which changed th: whole course of her life. Barbara was standing on a Chi- cago corner- waiting for a street- | car when she was handed a card from a passing automobile. It read: “Come gnd see us. Al and Connie Seamsn—chicnxo Models’ Bureau.” A Chicago Model Barbara decided to investigate ! and soon became one of Chicago’s top models. But, unknown to.her, Seaman sent her picture to a movie executive. A few weeks later a talent scout, on his way to Hollywood from New York, stopped off at Chicago to see her. Two weeks after that, with a contract in her pocket, she was on her way to Hollywood. Within 24 hours she was in her first pic- | ture, with Hal Peary in “Gilder- sleeve’s Bad Day.” ‘Then began the gradual climb up the Hollywood ladder of fame. Her bosses gave her full stardom when she played opposite Robert Young in “Lady Luck.” They gave her a beautifully ap- pointed portable dressing room with her name on the door as the symbol of her success. She ex- pects to be finished with her co- starrer with Boy Friend Bill be- fore her birthday rolls around. After that Barbara has not any definite plans. She is going to let her studio bosses arrange them. Barbara is quite sure they will be good ones, o the Rev. G. H. Hillerman came to Juneau the first of November in ‘ The congregation enters its 20th' | anniversary service with $9,400 on ‘hnnd in a fund for the erection of | !'a new church plant. As a part of this special service the Sacrament of Infant Baptism ‘will be administered. The Sen¥r Choir will sing “Built on a Rock” by Christiansen, and “Lord of ‘Spir- | its” by Reissiger. There will also | ibe a *“Special Order” in the ser- vice, the character of which will be revealed at the service. The public is cordially welcome | /to attend this service. "ta, ing voters in advance for support- {ing him. “I wish to thank all those who will vote for me and lend to me their support in the coming Demo- cratic primary,” he said. ‘Then, he added this note: wife wishes to thank all of those staunch and very religious souls who will not.” ——————— Nine - hundred " thousand square miles of Russia’ were planted with mines and shells and booby traps {by the German invaders. — Utah, formerly was spelled Yu- Youta, Eutaw, and Utaw. THE WAY YOU LIKE TOLOOK.. .. .. IN THE DRESS YOU LIKE TO WEAR. . .. [/ o “It’s the Nicest : I PRI i Ak A o SN * An Exquisitely simple “GABARDINE CLASSIC” at = Trorn . Women's Avoaner Baranof Hotel Building Store In Town” JUNEAU MOTOR C0. — mm 3 There is no substitute for newspaner ldverfisinul 9 “My You won't believe you} eyes when you see the new . AUTOMAGIC Women said the Thor Glad- iron couldn’t be improved ~—but wait ’till you see the new Automagic Gladiron! It takes even the bandwork out of ironing —you’ll use your hands only for guid- ing clothes through the famous Gladiron roll. Com- ing soop—watch for it! How to get u Gladiron soonest! Thor Automagic Gladirons will be distributed by us in the exact order in which our Priority Register is signed. Make sure your name is on our list! Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. | Alaska = Electronies JIM LANGDON—Manager Box 2165 217 Seward St. Phone 62 Anytime MARINE RADIO TRANSMITTERS AND RECEIVERS — BENDIX DEPTH RE- CORDERS — HALLICRAFTER RECEIV- ERS — BENDIX HOME RADIOS AND COMBINATIONS LARGE STOCK DRY BATTERIES AND RADIO TUBES Mail Orders Prompily Filled Complete Radio Repair Service Performed by Government Licensed Experienced Technician WRITE FOR INFORMATION Baranof Turkish Bath and Massage Hours 9 A. M. to 6 P. M.—Open Evenings by Appointment BARANOF HOTEL—Lower Level PHONE 753 | || DOUGLAS BOAT SHOP | , New Construction and Repairs Jobs Free Estimate Phone Douglas 192 e rrrrrrrrrrr et s e e rrrerr e e rees