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MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1942 YOU'RE IN THE GROOVE! _GET HEP AND HAPP —as Kay and his cavorting cookies put the ham in “Hamlet”, the jam in ro- mance and the jinx on with , JOHN BARRYMORE LUPE VELEZ GINNY SIMMS MAY ROBSON PATSY KELLY PETER LIND HAYES KAY KYSER'S BAND ALSO " ALSO iaws SPECI KL! (1] FIRST FILMS OF DIEPPE RAID T0 SUPPORT J. BENNETT Announcement Foilows La- Guardia Endorsement of Alfance for Governor YORK Dean O Endorse- Amer F:orello 1 Guardi as followed by Precident Roosevelt's announcement that he will back New York Attorney General John J. Bennett, Jr., Demo- eratic candidate. Roosevelt previously had backed enator James Mead in the primary election. Mead was beaten out by Benneft when big Jim Farley swung his weight for the Attorney Gen- eral. e HEALTH COUNCIL MEETS TONIGHT The Gastineau Pubic Council will meet at 7:30 o'clock tonight in room 106 of the Terri- torial Building. Mrs. A. W. Stewart, Vice-Presi- dent, will preside over tonight's meeting, and urges that all civic organizations send representatives | to the meeting as new officers are to be elected and plans made for the year’s activities. The Rev. W. H. Matthews, Jr., has resigned as President of the Council. GRANT RUTH T0 BE WITH LOCAL PAA MECHANICAL STAF To relieve B. S. Seltenreich, Chief Mechanic for Pan American Airways . in Juneau, Grant Ruth arrived yes- terday from Seattle and will remain here for about a month while Mr. Seltenreich takes further training in Seattle. Mr. Ruth was accompanied by his wife and when his assignment in Juneau is completed they will con- tinue to Fairbanks where Mr. Ruth will be with the PAA staff. Health | Photographed Under Fire! FEATURES 8—10:25 90 PERCENT 0FFOODNOW HAS CEILING Permanenfio—p Prices fo Be Determined by Stab- ilization Board HINGTON, Oct. 5. James Stabilization Di- i We at home nited in waging an all- st any further increase f living of the American director asserted that “Today, eople profit, but many more suffer” as he warned that “this war must be fought not only on the bat- tlefield, but on the home front.” Following up Saturday’s order ex- tending the price ceilings to cover 90 percent of all food products, Leon Henderson, who will help administer the general policies formulated by Byrnes and his Economic Stabiliza- tion Board, the board has ordered all rents rolled back to March 1 levels and food prices frozen for a 60-day period. This emergency order will be followed soon by permanent ceilings for the duration. The emergency order, effective to- day, enjoins all retailers, wholesal- ers, manufacturers, and processors to charge no more than the highest price charged between September 28 {and October 2. | | The only important foodstuffs ex- cepted are fresh fish, most fresh | fruit, vegetables and peanuts, which will probably be treated later on a seasonal basis. — .- — \ | JACK NEATE GOES SOUTH | 3. E. (Jack) Neate, for the past seven years connected with the | mechanical department of the |Daily Alaska Empire, has resigned land left for the south Sunday for | Seattle where he will join Mrs. Neate who went south last spring. Mr. Neate was a member of the Juneau Civilian Defense and vari- ous organizations including the Elks, Mrs. Neate was prominent in various organizations during her residence here. | Both had a wide circle of ac- quaintances. e | BUY DEFENSE BONDS 'IN WAR AS IN PEACE DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED CONSBKVATN! mansgement and wtrict Governmens supervision work constantly for the protection of our depositors. Additional security i provided through this bank's membership in Federal Deposit Insurance Corpora- tion, 8 United States Government sgency which insures each depositor against loss to o, maximym of $5,000, First Natioml Bank of JUNEAU, MEWISR # AL DEPOSIT INSURANCE €O RATTON | when catcher Cooper whipped a | KYSER, BARRYMORE “PLAYMATES” NOW ON CAPITOL SCREEN Musical Comedy Supple- mented by New ““March of Time” on India Kay Kyser is not merely the na- tion’s best-known band leader; he’s | also an A-1 screen favorite, as his previous vehicles have proved. And in his latest starrer, “Playmates,” which opened at the Capitol The- atre yesterday, he has one of the gayest pieces of celluloid enter- tainment in many months. Featuring John Barrymore, Kyser is ;supported by his band and by ( a brilliant cast who aid and abet the hilarity in delightful fashion. The OI' Professor and the Great Profile both play themselves, and hey are brought together by their respective press-agents in connec- don with a publicity stunt that in- | volves having Barrymore give Ky- ser lessons in dramatic acting. Barrymore detests the idea, and | Plans to double-cross Kyser at the | last minute, while secretly carrying |on a campaign designed to make a nervous wreck of the band-leader. Kyser, however, gets wind of the scheme and uses his own methods to turn the tables on his adversary. How it all works out makes for some of the funniest episodes of che season. For the first time in its history, The March of Time is allotting two issues to a single subject.| ‘India in Crisis,” now showing at the Capitol Theatre, is Number One of two different issues, each | complete, (the second being, “In- dia at War”) which together com- | prise the story of India. | KUROWSKI'S " KOMER PUTS | - GAMEAWAY | Beazley Credited with Sec- ond Victory in Big | Playoff (Continued from Page One) one man was out when Kurowski pounded one of Ruffings’ change of pace pitches into the stands just inside of the left field line to score Cooper and wrap up the| second victory in the series for Beszley, 23-year-old Card rookie. Yank Rally Stopped The Yanks were still fighting, however, when they went down before the National Leaguers.They | got their first two batters on base in the last of the ninth when Joe | Gordon singled to left and Bill| Dickey’s grounder was muffed by Brown. But the rally was choked | off in a twinkling moment later| beautiful peg to Marion who caught f Gordon off second base. | Beazley then attended to Prid- dy and Selkirk who batted for Ruf-| fing, the first on an infield pop and the other on a roller toBrown who tossed the last man out. The Cards, who went into the series with the Yanks heavy fa-| |1and THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA DIFFERENCE HEAVY STORM OFOPINION, HITS JUNEAU FOOD SUPPLY ON WEEKEND Nelson Makes One Asser- Little Damade Done - Al- tion but Fulmer Scents most Three Inches of Shortage Soon Rain Sunday WASHINGTON, Oct. { A terrific southeast wind ing the report on the findings of|a¢ juneau and a wide surrounding the six months' investigation of! g.0q Saturday night and Sunday, the general farm situation, mem- carrying g driving rain that reached | bers of the House Agriculture COM-|gimost three inches on yesterday, miltee are inclined to disagree Witht| glone, and doing considerable min- the testimony of Donald M. Nelson o; gamage in the city and along that Americans may not get fat|ihe Glacier Highway during the war but certainly will| geveral small boats, carrying Ju- RS S RmEe. {neauites on weekend hunting par- Chairman H. P. Fulmer of South | tjes, still had failed to return late Carolina said he has discussed the|todqay and U, S. Coast Guardsmen situation with other members or‘w?m busy over the weekend round- the committee after the hearing|ing up drifting boats and barges. on Friday and all were convinced | Damage Slight there will be “absolutely a f00d| Actual damage in the city was shortage in the near future unless|gjght, but city workmen under something can be done about the outside Operations Foreman Bert makgllity of the farmers to xet‘Lbek were busy keeping dfains labor and equipment to produce|and culverts open as rain and enough food for the United Na-|leaves tried 'to plug the outlets. tions.” A small slide was reported in the rear of the Steinbeck Apart- lmems with no damage done. A | telephone line blew down on the | Seventh Street hill. In the small boat harbor, two v s were set |adrift and one was swamped. The other was towed back by the Coast OPENS NEw !Guard, Two lumber barges leaped |their moorings near the Juneau | Lumber Mill and were corralled by Coast Guardsmen and tied up at the Government Dock. Some lum- /ber was scattered along the water- front. Out at Lena Cove, Floyd Fager- |son’s boat broke loose and was Istill heading north all by itself late this afternoon. Another small boat was saved |by Coast Guardsmen just as - eee Session MayiBrring Import- ant Decisions on Pres- ident’s Powers WASHINGTON, Oct. 5- of notables visited the Supreme the harbor. It had broken moor- Court to witness the opening of inzs at Thane. its new term, which may produce Meadows Flooded decisions clarifying the wartime Out on the highway, meadows powers of the President, andhieard [along both sides of the road were Chief Justice Harlan Stone pay | flooded by rain and the wind sent tribute to Justice James F. B_\'rnm“reps and brances crashing down. and the late Justices Louis D.| pew persons ventured out in the Brandeis and Arthur E. S"“l”’i\‘\-lugc in Juneau. Even Jimmy | Morrison, messenger for the Sig- Stone said that the court is re-|nal Corps, was forced to take conciled to the resignation Uri‘“““ out yesterday afternoon to Byrnes ‘“only by the realization change into dry clothes after tak- that he is moved by a sense of ling a soaking while delivering a duty to render needed services Of‘mggsase at the small hoat harbor. public importance in this time ori No storm warnings were pub- great national emergency.” |lished last Saturday because the Justice Byrnes was appointed Di-(km:wledge that the storm wascom- rector of Economic Stabilization by |ing did not reach the Juneau of- President Roosevelt on Saturday. ‘nce of the U. S. Weather Bureau W o |until late Saturday. HALIBUT VESSEL |, .~ - IS WRECKED OFF 'Mrs. Oscar G. Olson KODIAK ISLAN DT And Daughters Back : — " From Stay in South Nine Men Aboard 63-Ton| Mrs. Oscar G. Olson, wife of the Ship 56408 When | TS ERe and feir oro Boat Hifs Rock | Carol Anne, returned yesterday from 63-ton halibut |the South after an absence of sev- | eral months. The schooner, | while they were outside, Mrs. Ol- lashed | it | -A crowd | drifted toward the rock dump in| U.S.SUB - LOST IN PACIFIC Grunion, long Overdue, Is Given Up for Lost by Navy Department WASHINGTON, Oct. 5 — The Navy announced today that the submarine Grunion has been over- «due in the Pacific for some time {and it is presumed the under: craft is lost. The Grunion was launched cember 22. The commander marine was Lieut. B89 years of age. The Navy did not say how many men were aboard the Grunion but vessels of the class, 1526 tons, De- of the Comdr, sub- Abele, proximately 65 men. This is the fifth submarine lost since the war began. NURSES' AIDES EXAMINATIONS SET TONIGHT First Juneau Class for Red Cross Corps Will Com- plete Course | Juneau’s corps of Nurses' Aides, having completed their study course and their preliminary training in | St. Ann’s Hospital, will take their | final examinations tonight, at 7:30 o'clock in the basement of the Northern Light Presbyterian Church, All Nurses' Aides who complet- ed their hospital training by yes- !l('rdny, should bring their time |sheets to the examinations tonight ready to hand t6 Mrs. Lillian Nel- son, instructor. | The sheets may be obtained from }Mrs, C. C. Carter, hospital super- visor for Nurses’ Aides, or at the desk of the women's floor of St. Ann’s Hospital. | Following tonight’s examinations, |the full-fledged Nurses' Aides will arrange schedules for volunteer work in the hospitals. | This is Juneau’s first class In |the American Red Cross Nurses’ | Aide course and the 16 women who |are now enrolled will form the nu- ;clous of a corps for Juneau, | The Nurses' Aide corps is inval- }unble in war time, when the great demand among the branches of the armed services causes a shortage of nurses for civilian hospitals. Nurses’ Aides, by helping with the patients in routine jobs which take up the time of regular nurs- es, can relieve the shortage by their volunteer services. WOMAN'S CLUB PARTY T0 FETE MRS, J. CLARK | | carry a normal complement of ap-| y‘fBI sibRy Now I[ Where Better BIG Pictures Play! - SHOWING HERE | AT TWENIIHH} 'Man at larg;' Is Thrill- ‘ Packed Drama-Nazi ‘ Spy Round-Up The {tury Theatre last tight thrilled to| the exciting story of a daring FBI| |spy round-up. It happens in 20th | Century - Fox’s “Man At Large,”| which opened last night An amazing depiction of whz\t‘ might be the facts behind recent newspaper headlines, “Man At | Large” is the thrilling story of an| escaped German flyer who crosses | the Canadian border intb the Unit- |ed States—and how he mixes with |the FBI | | Lovely Marjorie Weaver is excel- lent in her role of the reporter | assigned to get pictures of this e ved flyer. As the good-looking stranger who seems to be both an ;unvmy agent and a G-Man, George ‘Rvm't-s gives a fine performance. inwlmrd Derr, as the supposed German ace, stands on in a dif- | ficult part. - eee Junior Trinity Guild fo Meef, i | Junior Trinity Guild will meet at' |8 o'clock tomorrow night in the| residence of Mrs. C. E. Rice, with | Kathleen Carlson as co-hostess. | All members are urged to attend land any one interested in activities ' of the Guild is invited. A short business meeting will be followed by a social hour. Mrs. Frank Dufresne | Returns from South, —— | Mrs. Frank Dufresne, whose hus- band is Executive Officer of the | Alaska Game Commission and chief representative in Alaska for the U. S. Blological Survey, returned yes-| arrjyals in Juneau from Seattle terday from a six weeks' | ' Seatils stay In | yesterday were Mrs. Madeline Bey= al { ef- - | y » Beyer, Clarence J While she was south she visiteq | °" Thecdore Beye ferson, Mrs. Helen Jefferson, M with their daughter, Virginia, who st oy 4 i L |1s taking a nurse’s training course | Beryl Nicholson,: Apiiiur 8. Vigem 5 3 @ inop | 80d Mrs. Edna Wennbloom. £ ’l‘gogb?:;':g;nt:é bt il el From Ketchikan arrivals were i DA, Amby Frederick, M. Berg, Clyde Poulton, J. §. Matterson, Mrs. &, S. Matterson and H. O. Addison; e | from Wrangell, Nick Johnson, M. Mrs. Gordon Burnett, whose|p williams, and. Emil Lang and husband is radio operator for Pan | from Petersburg, Mrs. Ingar Norg American Airways here, and her Master Glenn Nore, Pat Sweeney, son Darrel, returned Sunday from | sigurd Danielson and Bill Anders a trip to the States. | son. & e | o S | | i audience at the 20th Cen- words to describe! MARJORE Wi EAVE GEORGE REEVES 3 RICHARD p A 20h Contury. oy 5:: | | | | THEATRE LAST TIME TONIGHT JOHN GARFIELD in | “OUT OF THE FOG" | TWENTY-TWO ARRIVE AND ELEVEN LEAVE RETURNS TO JUNEAU Leave for Sitka o | Those who left here for .;lute yesterday were Nick .]Carol W. Peters, Dorothy @. o Brownell, R. R. Brownell, Martha o |A Martin, Mary A. Nelson, Pearl E. Collins, G. Rich, Dr. Dean Wess Rain—37 inch. 1 f ley Knowles, Lewis E. Burkhart and Temp. Sunday, Oct. 4: Harry Datoff, ' Maximum® 52, minimum 44. BErnd] oi B . Rain—2.35 inches. " ¥ ® o0 0 000 00 00 BUY DEFENSE STAMPS ® & 0 0 0 00 00 0o WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. Bureau) Temp. Saturday, Oct. 3: | Maximum 52, minimum 49. | | = - g, 1 20 SAWMILL MEN | Radio, was wrecked September 27 when she hit a rock in Shuyak Straits, on her way south to Seattle, vorites, lost the first game a.nd} then took four straight contests, stretching out a magnificent rally that started when the Redbirds beat Brooklyn out of the Natienal | League pennant. ‘The game saw three home runs, those in addition to Kurowski’s| being slammed out by Slaughter and Rizzuto. Fourth Championship In St. Louis today the home town fans were preparing a ‘royal welcome for the returning Cardi- nals, marking the fourth time since 1903, that the Cards have brought | pgyg Arnold Miller, whose hus- home a world championship. |band recently joingd the mechani- - The 8t. Louls team won theiq, siaff of PAA in Juneau, and coveted title in 193¢ against De- yeor two daughters arrived in Ju- troit, and also in 1931 against ,o., on Sunday to make their Philadelphia. Today’s victory Was|pome here, b a repeat performance for the| . it was learned here today. The master, Gunnar M. Bergman, were saved and are now being cared for by the Red Cross in Kodiak, awaiting transportation to Seattle. Members of the crew are Edward Ekdahl, Simon Sletton, Joseph Laur- itsen, Hans M. Nerland, Fred A. Jensen, Bersvin Larsen, David P. Nash and Reider Ervik. are not known here. e JOINS HUSBAND HERE and all eight members of the crew | Details of how the men were saved | son and her daughters visited her mother in Nampa, Idaho. Mr. Olson | joined them for a short time dur- | ing the summer. Scheduled to meet tomorrow, Oc- | tobey 6, at 2:00 p.m., in the social | room of the Lutheran Church, the | Juneau Woman's Club will follow | its monthly business meeting with | an informal reception honoring Mrs. | John Clark, who is leaving for the South this week. Mrs. Thomas | Parke, President of the club, cor- dially invites friends of the guesi of honor to be present even though they may not be members of the organization. Regular business of the woman’s | clubs will be taken up, including reports of department chairmen and special committees. ——-——— ANNA ANDERSON ~ WEDS IN HYDER Anna Andersoh, formerly of Douglas, and Harry Boer, of Hyder, |were married at Hyder, Alaska,, September 26 by the United States Commissioner. The newlyweds will make their home in Hyder. The bride, after a residence in| DIVORCE GRANTED Douglas for about six years, lculr Inga L. Behrends was granted a |for Hyder during last spring. She |divorce from Frank J. Behrends in was wellknown on the Island. U.S. District Court on Saturday. Mr. Boer is employed at Hyder —————— | | as a miner. Empirc Classifieds Pay! time the Redbirds beat out the, Yanks for the World Championship | in 1926, four games to three. CHARLES D. BEALE HAS RETURNED T0 THEATRE BUSINESS WANTED at JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS JUNEAU ® Now Operating / [ Charles D. Beale, who for a number of years managed the Capitol Theatre in Juneau and was active in Chamber of Com- merce and other civic activities in the city, has returned to the thea- tre business with'the B. F. Shear- er Company, according to word re- ceived from Mr. Shearer by Homer Garvin, who succeeded Mr. Beale as manager of the Capitol early this year. Mr. Beale left Juneau to enter the lumber business in California, and accompanied by Mrs. Beale left early last spring to make his home in that State. He is now managing the B. F. Shearer State Theatre in Santa Barbara, Calif. l T TEWL Ve ,CORP'\. - THAT THAR KANGRROO'S GOT MORE BRAING THAN ALl T REST OF T _ DUB CRITTERS W TH NEWNTED STRTES AN CANADY PUT TOGETHER - HOMIN PLGEONS AN SANT BARNWARD Y065 \S \GORRNT BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH. \NAAL - OFFHAND - CANT 1 RECKIMEMBER ~ HOWSOMEVER - T SENT T URRMNT T0 Town TAS SORNWNY To LK WP N WARSHINY' A \RONINY BN~ \ OWNERMZ WHATD e BNER DO TTHAT \WAS S0 BRILLIANT 2 WEN - L\SSEN ANHRTS 8L THAT COMNNOTION QUER BT TR WA GRTE 2