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————————— A TH WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1942 RILLING EXPERIENCE you'll cliiawi nememben! A THRILLING PICTURE you'll never forgel! STEPHEN VINCENT BENET'S ASTOUNDING SATURDAY EVENING POST STORY= ALSO: “Iniomation P E.ase"—News Show Place of Juneau THE CAPITOL H NEW SELECTIVE SERVICE CLASSES ARE ANNOUNCED Reclassification of Selective Serv- ice registrants as listed by the local Draft Board following their last meeting re as follows: A —Bennie Balagat Campos, Donald Elwyn McLane, Crockett William Riley,-Svend Asger Jorgen- son, James Evert Bliss, Dennis Al- ‘onzo Shepperd, William ,Petr James Ramsay, Jack Clarence Wil- son, Lewis Ben McClellan, Reuben william Johnsen, Roy Stanley Thomas, Sven Nelson Staveland, Harry Andrew Savage, Luis F. Zs ate, George Henry Gombart and Pete A. Savella 2-A — Lee Utter Imhoff, Arthur | Perainen, Gust Anders Gustafson. 2-B—James Wilton Hanna, Edwin Nickols Amelung, Edwin George Hasn and Harry Wall Ferguson. 3-A—George John Nelson and Eu- gene Richman Johnson. 4-F—Oscar Virgil Bagynska, Frank Phillip Mereer, Milton Hopkins Dan- jel, Ronald Wiley, Buena Ventura Samaniego, George Tarbell Dudley, Frank Robert Morton and Willis * Henry Rice. Additional reclassifications as the result of a meeting of the Draft Board held last evening will be announced this week. THE BIG PICTURES FEATURES 7:50—10:10 . WAR BONDS BUY A BGND AS A SALUTE iC YOUR HERO IN SERVICE ED SOBERG, FORMER JUNEAU RESIDENT, DEAD IN ACCIDENT received in Ju- neau of the accidental death in Sitka of Ed Soberg, former Juneau resident who has been employed in the defense city for some time. Reports here are that Mr. Soberg'’s body was found one morning last weekend near the barge where he worked, but the cause of his death was not determined, although it was presumed he was hit by part News has been ' |of the machinery on the pile driver on which he was working, fell into the water and drowned. His mother, who has lived on Ninth Street in Juneau for many years, has been in Sitka for the last month’ witl r son, who was in his late thigties. His sister left | Monday for Sitka and a btother | came down from Anchorage today. | The funeral was to be held at 1 | o'clock this afternoon. | e e | CONSTANCE RUDE ON 1 WAY' EAST TO SCHOOL Constance Rude, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. O. Rude, left this morning by steamer for the south, from where she will proceed to Minnesota to go into her third year at St. Olaf’s College. Her brother, Donald Rude, 'has already gone east and will be a freshman at St. Olaf’s. IN WAR AS N'_PEA[IE CONSERVATIVE management and strict Governmens owt DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED supervision work constantly for the prbtection of our depositors. Additional security is provided through this 5 baak’s membership in Federal Deposit Insurance Corpora- tion, & United States Government agency, which insures each depositor against loss t0 8 mazimum of $5,000, - First National Bank of JUNEAU, ALASEKA "FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION \ WHIMSICAL STORY | PIRACY, ROMANCE | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA BY BENET MAKES =~ MARK NEW FILM GRAND NEW FiLM AT 20TH CENTURY Al that Money Can Buy” | Opening Tonight at Capitol Theatre $alking com- | with its | ir "Reap the Wild Wind,” | Technicolor Epic of | Sea, Opening Here yarn of when I the roar- days America for freedom of the > Cecil B. DeMille the | Interweaving a a lusty {mentary on Americanism | whimsical story of a man who sold | we |his soul to the devil and got it back again, “All That Money Can starting make a super-epic based on the Stephen Vin- of it and what have you got? Benet story, “The Devil and | “Reap the Wild Wind” no less, and Daniel Webster,” comes to the|it's due tor for a 4-day run | screen of the Capitol Theatre to-|at the 20ti ry Theatre. night with the advance reputation| This broad ar weeping tale, being one of the most memor- |told in Technicolor, of Charleston able films of recent years. and Key West in the 1840's, of the Edward Arnold and Walter H\ls-"x'r entless hur ines of the Carib- ton share top honors in the picture |bean and la captains who version of Stephen Vinceht Benet's|wrecked tall for gold, has remarkable story, with Anne Shir-| Paulette Goc its spitfire ley and James Craig in the ro-|heroine. Ray is the hero and John Wayne i man who love and Given stars like mantic leads and Jane Darwell, Simone Simon, Gene Lockhart and ‘John Qualen in the other featured seafaring that plus such roles supporting player 1s Raymond The action is laid in the 1840’s in | Massey, Lynne Overman, Robert a New Hampshire community. Ja- | Preston, Susan Hayward, Charles bez Stone, a young and newly-mar- | Bickford, Martha O'Driscoll, Louise |ried farmer, discouraged with his|Beavers Janet Beecher and Walter | continued bad luck, unexpectedly |Hampden, all under the inspired | encounters The Devil, locally known | direction of DeMille, the picture |as Mr. Scratch. Mr. Scratch agrees | cannot help being the biggest event to give Jabez everything that money |of the cinema season can buy for the next seven years| Reap the Wild Wind” was hy in return for his soul. i of being a challe to De- But as the seven-year period|Mille. It's his 66th picture since draws to an end, Jabez begins to he fist directed “The Squaw Man” worry about his bargain. In de-|thirty years ago in a Hollywood spair, he appeals to his,wife, and|barn. That was the first Pai she lays the case before Daniel mount film. Between then and Webster. Webster demands a jury |[now DeMille has become the un- trial and Mr. Scratch summons up | disputed master of movie magie, the jury; Benedict Arnold, Simon |the greatest producer-director in Girty,, Captain Kidd and others of [ the business. Such pictures s their ilk—traitors, murderers, scoun- | “King of Kings," “Cleopat g drels, all. Webster makes an im-| “Union Pacific”™ and orth West passioned plea in behalf of Jabez Mounted Police” have made him a and so moves the jurymen that| legend. The “DeMille touch” is a they tear up the contract and ac-|synonym for movie canvases quit Jabez, who hastens to make lashed with a prodigal brush amends for his past. ! =, O oy | JOHN NEWMARKER, JR. 0SCAR LARSON, WELL | LEAVES FOR K. C., MO. KNOWN CANNERYMAN | sonn ewmarier, ar, son o . and Mrs. John Newmarker, left IS HERE SOUTHBOUND :: mornin for the soutn. wnere |he will go to Kansas City, Mo, Oscar Larson, for twelve years|to live with his grandparents and superintendent of the Port Althorp|attend high school. cannery and more recently asso-! Mrs. Newmarker will go to Kan- ciated with the Red Salmon Com-|sas City later in the year to be pany of San Francisco in the Bris- | with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. tol Bay region, is in Juneau on his| Goff, and her son, for the winter way south, months. Mr. Larson has been associated e with the United States Engineers; MINING MAN AND | in Bering Sea during the past| FAMILY LEAVE FOR ALBERT THOMPSON HER season during which his cannerv SOUTH TO MAKE HOME Albert Thompson, outside fore- did not operate. He arrived here| man for the Hood Bay Canning with Woodley Airways yesterday, Harry Pratt, well known mining c,npany arrived in Juneau this afternoon and is staying at the|man of the Platinum district, with (.. on a tender from the can- Baranof Hotel waiting for trans-|Mrs. Pratt and their sons, Henry | ... .nq will be here for a wi portation south. and Frank, left Juneau on their . ., days on company busine - - «|way south to make their home in i s L i 2 the States. ‘AI.ASKA( A Mr. Pratt disposed of his mining Mrs. Lee Myers has been dis- SIAI. {interests in the Westward district missed from St. Ann’s Hospital before after. undergoing surgery ing Alaska. Now at 20th Century * MAKES SEVERAL -~ SITKA_FLIGHTS Passengers who a_rrivpd" from Sitka with Alaska Coastal Airlines yesterday afternoon were Durnel| Denhon, Claude Rhodes and Holley | Evans. Taking passage for Sitka today with ACA were Matt A. Minzgohr, Mrs. John Zenanoff, Fred Soberg, Mary Nakomota and Holly Evans. | On the return flight this morn- |ing incoming passengers were Nick Peters, Carol Peters, John Hom- 'ethko, Frances Jost and A. E.John- son, Jr. 1 Another flight to Sitka was on the ACA schedule for this after- noon, NINE DEPART FOR ANCHORAGE WITH WOODLEY Leaving here yesterday afternoon o - w for Anchorage with a Woodley Air- ways plane piloted by Don Glass were nine passengers from Juneau. Those taking passage were Cath- erine Coyle, John A. Eidswick, Irene Clay, Colleen Clay, J. J. Hill, Leon- ard Taylor, K. R. Zeman, J. Freid- man and H. B. Grigsby. The plane arrived on schedule late Tuesday bringing a. full load of passengers and left immediately for the return flight to the West- ward. IN SEA SAGA—Paulette Goddard and Lynne Overman are shown on the deck of the good ship “Claibcrne” in Cecil B. DeMille’s lusty epic of the sea, “Reap the Wild Wind,” now at the 20th Century Theatre. Released by Paramount, this Technicolor triumph co-stars Miss MARK MY WORDS, CHOSEF ™ \F ME DON'T POLWNCE OVER THRR AN WHLEP T LININ DRNL\GHTS oONT'R SAREWT CASSIOY A TH NEYX ROUND UM GONRG —OTe ME_DOWN To W' SWIT-CASE FACT'RY “o# ' Jane Alexander On Vacation Trip Miss Jane Alexander, Chief Clerk for the Department of Public Wel- fare, and daughter of Judge and Mrs. George F. Alexander, left last night for the south, for a combined business and vacation trip. Miss Alexander plans to visit her sister, Mrs. Dean Sherman, in Se- attle, and may make a trip to Port- land, her former home, during her six-weeks stay in the south. \ elWille NEWS 7:30—9:15 : PAGE THREE Where the Betier BiG Pictures Play G R n S Q PREVIEW AUDIENCES SPELLBOUND! l 2 [[ ” wfiy ypectacie of Spectacles STARTS TONIGHT FEATURE 7: 12—10:00 S GREATEST TRIUMPH! OUT-THRILLS ALL OTHER SCREEN SPECTACLES! Jate . make a 8 n ‘:\ follows: medical Hospital, Richard Hunter, a tient in St, Ann's gone home. pa- has UNITED STATES | DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR | GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office | Anchorage, Alaska | Aug. 22, 1942 | Notice is hereby given that John | Christian Berg has made applica- |tion for a homesite under Act of | May 26, 1934 (48 Stat. 809) Anchor- | age Serial No. 09067, for a tract of |land described as Lot “C” of the | Auk Lake Group of Homesites s uvated about 14 miles Northwest of Juneau, Alaska, Plat of U. S. Survey | No. 2392 Tract A, Sheet 1, contain- ing 4.87 acres, and it is now in the | |files of the U. S. Land Office, An- | | chorage, Alaska. Any and all persons claiming ad- | | versely any of the above mentioned | land should file their adverse claim in the district land office within | the period of publication or thirty da, thereafter, or they will be barred by~ the - provisions of the statutes, FLORENCE L. KOLB, Acting Register. | First publication, Sept. 9, 1942. Last publication, Nov. 4, 1942. | UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR | GENERAL LAND OFFICE ¥ District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska July 15, 1942 Notice is hereby given that Ever- ett E. Smith has made application for a homesite under the Act of May 26, 193¢ (48 Stat. 809) Anchorage 1lc 10¢ 65¢ 75¢ TAX . p———— Serial No. 010201 for a tract of land described as Lot E of the Triangle Group of Homesites situated on Glacier Highway approximately 12 miles Northwest of Juneau, Alaska, Plat of U. S. Survey No. 2391 Sheet 2, containing 2.17 acres, and it is now in the files of the United States Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska. Any and all persons claiming ad- versely any of the above mentioned land should file their adverse claim in the district land office within the period of publication or thirty days thereafter, or they will be barred by the provisions of the sta- tutes. FLORENCE L. KOLB Acting Register. First publication, August 12, 1942. Last publication, October 7, 1942. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska Aug. 23, 1942 Notice is hereby given that Stan- ley Nowicka has made application for a homesite under the Act May 26, 1934 ¢48 Stat. 809) Anchor- age Serial No. 09863, for a tract of ‘l;md described as Lot “B” of the Pear] Harbor Group of Homesites situated about 24 miles Northwest of Juneau, Alaska, Plat of U. 8. Survey No. 2517, containing 1.77 acres, and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska. Any and all persons claiming ad- sely any of the above mentioned land should file their adverse claim in the district land office within the period of publication or thirty days thereafter, or they will be 6ua of | THEATRE LAST TIME TONIGHT "ROAR of the PRESS” SRR R barred by the provisions of the sta= tutes. FLORENCE L. KOLB, Acting Register, First publication, Sept, 2, 1942. 28, 1942. t publication, Oc! rds Will Assembleat 1 Tomorrow Members of the Territorial Nes tional Guard of Juneau will meet at 7 o'clock tomorrow night at the Baseball Park according to notige made public this afternoon by Capt. George F. Freeburger. A new phase of training will be started, it 'i§ o | announced. Guardsmen are requested to wear their uniforms but if they are not ready, attend the meeting anyway. The hour of assembling is ade vanced half an hour in case there is the usual Thursday night alert. i / COME BACK WERE, . \E BODAC\OYS \DI\T NE KNOW T DON'T, MORE'N AT T Sy / - — = %3