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it b I SATUR_DAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1951 HURRY! — — — ENDS TONIGHT! A HARD-HITTING STORY THAT PULLS NO PUNCHES! 1‘ June Allyson—Dick Powell § \ Ricardo Montaiban in “RIGHT CROSS” @ - I & } HAVE | FUN! | [~ | GALA HOLIDAY SHOW STARTS SUNDAY! | * The Most Luscious Magazine Girl of All Time * . Becomes Seduciively Alive on the Screen! | + IN GLAMORQUS TECHNICOLOR! & | | Youth... excitement... X X - | and 4 great songs! ¢ 5 N A | T <o Flsa Lanchester - Metile Cooper - wems: THE 12 SLAMOROUS PETTY GRS ™ Screen Pl v Nat P - Music by Harud Aven - Lyrcs by Jokn Mercer = And Added Treats ===== THIS IS AMERICA CARTOON - COMEDY “AIRLINES TO ANYWHERE” "THE PEACHY COBBLER" WORLD NEWS VIA AIR EXPRESS! CONTINUOUS SHOWINGS SUNDAY AND LABOR DAY SHOWS START . 1:37 — 3:09 — 5:16 — 7:23 — 9:30 FEATURE STARTS . 1:37 — 3:44 — 5:51 — 7:58 — 10:05 — Draffees Given~3 More Months io Make 'tc join the service of their choice even after they have taken pre-in- duction physicals. The department said the experi- TO SCIENCE CONFERENCE To attend the second Alaska Conference beginning Sept. 4 at Mount McKinley National Park, | commissioner |around a small scale map showing Choice of Service WASHINGTON, Sept. 1—(®—The Defense Department announced to- day it is extending until Nov. 30 its trial policy of permitting draftees ment has worked out well thus far. Whether it will be continued beyond November, a spokesman added, de- pends on what happens during the nexi three months. The second extension of the policy was to have expired today. FOR Knotty White Pine Red Cedar Shingles Red Cedar Shakes Processed Send for Color Chart ONLY ONE QUALITY - THE BEST Write Vancouver Lumber Co. (1931) Limited Vancouver,. British Columbia two Fish and Wildlife Service of- ficials are leaving Juneau Sunday. They are W. A. “Bud” Elkins, game management supervisor and C. Howard Baltzo, ional director. Flying to Haines, they will drive up the Haines and Alaska High~ ways to Fairbanks and take the train from there to the park.!| — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — assistant reg- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 'The Petty (Woof!) Girl’ Bubbles Into The Capitol Thealre That luscious fluff of femininity who is the answer to a man’s long, |1ow whistle, the glamor girl of all time known as the Petty Girl, has/ now been made the subject of a bubbling romantic comedy with mu- sic. Columbia Pictures’ “The Petty Girl,” with color by Technicolor, is a captivating romp of youth and music, starring Robert Cummings and Joan Caulfield, in the title role. The comedy arrives at the Capitol Theatre Sunday. In telling the story of the Petty Girl, Columbia relates a story that bubbles over with youth, laughter and four great songs, contributed by | top tunesmiths Harold Arlen and John Mercer. tanglements that George Petty, the creator of the Petty Girl, encoun- tered on the way up and the man- ner in which he acquired his favorite Petty Girl model, have been nar- rated as saucily as a gay wink. As the famed artist, Cummings is | discouraged in the opening sequences of the film when his Petty Girl is rejected as commercal art. Caught |on the rebound by Audrey Long, predatory daughter of an auto mag- ! nate, he is easily persuaded to take up highbrow painting. Soropfimists Hear 0f Girl Scouting at Luncheon Meefing Girl Scouting was featured at the regular luncheon of the Soroptimist ~Club in~the Goid Room of the Bar- anof Hotel yesterday. Mrs. John Clements, Girl Scout for Alaska, passed the location of the property at Tee Harbor presented to the Juneau Girl Scouts by P. E. Harris for a future camp site. She described the extent of the movement in Juneau where more than 250 girls are engaged in scout- ing activities under the leadeérship of at least 120 women of the com- munity, all volunteer workers. Mrs. Morton Flint, camp chair- man for the past two years, ex- plained the camp organization and personnel, both for the camp at | Eagle River and the Day Camp in the Evergrpen Bowl. Dr. Grace | Field was then called upon to re- | late problems connected with de- | velopment of the new camp site |in regard to water supply. waste disposal and removal of old scrap iron and debris from the days of cannery oceupancy. Then followed a general discussion of the advantages of the new site | gna the problems invelved in its development. In the absence of the president. Gertrude Wetzel; Mrs. Frances Paul wielded the gavel. Dr. Elizabeth Bishop, who is the new director of the division of crippled children and maternal and child health for the Alaska Department of Health, was a guest. She was formerly a Sorop- timist in Baker and Bend, Ore. Mrs. Alstead Shower Hostess For Bride-Eled To honor Miss Rosemary Doogan, to be an October bride, Mrs. Karl Alstead was hostess at a linen and bathroom shower at her home Thursday night. During the evening guests em- broidered dish towels, each one cross-stitching her name in a cor- ner. Late in the evening refreshments were served from a lace cloth cov- ered table decorated with candles and lavender bouquets of gladioli. Many lovely gifts were presented to the guest of honr. Invited were Mesdames Francis Moesh, John Moesh, Kenneth Gilo, Robert Prather, WVerne Metcalfe, Frank Cashen, Carl Meuller, Pat Grove, J. K. McAlister, George Gul- lufsen Jr., John Doogan, the bride- elect’s mother, Mary Doogan, and the Misses Tillie and Eleanor Moesh. Miss. Doogan will be married Oct. 13 to Mr. George Navarre, who came to Juneau recently and is employed at the Home Grocery. Miss Tillie Moesh and Mrs. Francis Moesh are aunts of Mr. Navarre who are visiting Juneau from Lan- sing, Mich., accompanied by Mrs. Moesh’s daughter Eleanor. MOOSE CALL Come-Joininthe Fun SATURDAY SEPTEMBER It W Music — Entertainment by Dancing fo 2:00 A.M. The romantic en-|: 8 B RS | PAGE THRER Hilarious "My Friend Irma’ Opens Sunday at 20th | Those sensational new song-and- | | comedy men, Dean Martin flll(li | Jerry Lewis, will make their film in Paramount’s Hal Wnllis‘ duction of the popular radio| am, “My Friend Irma,” which | s Sunday at the 20th Cent-| It is an auspicous| [bow in many ways, one of them | MOST DARING RAIDER: EVER TO PROWL - THE HIGH SEAS! < Y ENDS TONITE ?&* Show Starts 7:19-9:30 Feature Starts 7:36-9:47 | pr arriy ury Theatre, 1)1“ in that they share starring | honors with Marie Wilson, who| s P - ‘1,. s Irma in the film just as she "'s p does on the air, and with John| Lund, Diana Lynn and Don De.- | LATE WORLD Fore. | Another way in which they are| ate is that two of the na-| s top tunesmiths—Jay Living- and Ray Evans, who wrote ttons and Bows” and “Golden rings,” among other hits — composed three new songs espe- | cially for them to sing in “My | riend Trma.” They are “My Own,! My Only, My All,” “Here’s to Love” | NEWS STARTS SUNDAY 1 THE SHOW THAT MADE THEM A NATIONAL HIT PXe and “Just for Fun.” A fourth Liv-| RS 2 SR ingston-Evans tune is the ullei | SUNDAY MATINEE FAMOUS § M | ENDS TONIGHT ; Doors Open 1:30 Gregory Peck learned, during the weeks he played the fabulous title role in “Captain Horatio Horn- blower,” Warner Bros.” romantic sea epic, that one end of an an- tique bronze ship cannon is just about as dangerous as the other, | The real business end of such a gun spits out its ball shot from the muzzle but, at the same time, it spurts flames and blazing pow- der from the other end. ! This, of course, had been no se- cret to the studio’s experts who planned the sea battles for the Technicolor film, which ends to- night at the theatre. They advised the cast of the chances everyone working with the antique weapons would take during the engagement while they were being fired. Tripartite Pad For Pacific Defense Due for Signatures SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 1—®— The United States, Australia and New Zealand today sign a mutual | defense treaty extending this coun- try’s security guarantees over a| vast new area of the world. | 1t provides another link in ni future Pacific-wide military alli- ance against the Communist threat and is a curtain-raiser for next week's Japanese peace conference. | Arriving by plane yesterday, Sec-“ retary of State Acheson in an ob-| vious reference to Russia sald the | days-ahead would show which are. the peaceful nations and which are those that “talk peace while taking action that may impair and prevent the strengthening of peace.” The tripartite pact is conceived by its creators as raising a warn- | ing flag to Moscow against any aggressive thrust into the South- west Pacific. At the same time it places a barrier in the way of any future resurgence of Japanese | empire building, i 1t will be signed at the historic| presidio of San Francisco, headquar- ters of the U. 8. Sixth Army, in a| setting of military pomp with ar-| tillery booming 19-gun salutes to each delegation. Just before signatures are pen- ned on the three-way treaty,dep- uty foreign minister Andrei Gromy- ko is scheduled to lead Russia’s 39- member delegation into town for the Japanese peace treaty confer- ence. That conference will be open- ed by President Truman Tuesday night at the San Francisco Memor- ial Opera House, birthplace of the United Nations. A 20-member Japanese delegation to the peace conference arrived in Seattle today and is due here Sun- day. The delegation is led by Prem- jer Shigeru Yoshida. M Show Starts 2:00 WILSON . ona LUND e Diana LYNN *Don DeFORE SHOW STARTS 7:20 - 9:30 FEATURE STARTS 7:43 - 9:54 Plus: Cartoon and Late News - WATCH THE Mrs. Coke Leaves To Join Husband Home from Korea To meet her husband, who has just returned to the states from a three-year tour of duty in Jap- an and Korea, Mrs. Paul E. Coke and two children flew south Tues- day. B’:fl's. Coke has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Pet- rich at their home on Glacler Highway the past several weeks. Lieut. Coke, who was raised in Juneau, has seen active duty at the Korean front since the start of hostilities as pilot of small re- connaissance planes. He is with the U. 8. Air Force. The family is at home in Berk- eley, Calif., for a short time be- fore Lt. Coke is assigned to & sta- tion in the states, possibly at Great Falls, Mont. Before the start of the Korean conflict Mrs. Coke and children were with Lt. Coke in Japan for a year. ’ly;hb was the first visit of MIs. Coke in Juneau in over three years. She was born and received her schooling here and was the honor guest of many delightful social events during her stay. R g — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — C=~ JLQUINCE OF STOPY VARIABLE @~ 5T0P MAY B8 OMITTLD IF TRAFIC e 9OES NOT WARRANT XS ARRNVAL TIME VARIADLS) *THY! 75§