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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1942 e — — ENDS TO FTYT R Y . NimEE G egrr , GRACIE ALLEN in "MBE. ¢ RT ‘ 2"““!!3? RO W b3 4 2 Mur (IZQ/Z IN THE SKIES! orit believe your eyes il the astounding solution! WILLIAM IRENE HERVEY CHARLES LANG MARIA MONTEZ MARY GORDON LLOYD RIGAN IRUMAN BRADLEY ESMITH ungle Girl'— 78 RAY MIDDLETON JANE WYATT AT. MATINEE a HURRICAN 1A FROM It’s smart to own a hosiery wardrobe this season! Holeproof designed these gay and oh! so usefully good looking Luxuria mercerized cottons for your busy daytime needs. You will love them for your tweeds and cottons and for wear with walking, casual and play shoes. Holenroof aualit in plain, lace, ribbed T Family Shoe Store Seward Street —WANTED- ONE HOOK TENDER ORE DONKEY ERGINEER \./\.7 Junean Logging Company PHONE 338 MISS STEPHANIE e ot By e Sl FQQ h‘gchfii (!\qa.) TUNFAU FOR BRIEF STAY |7 i incipal of the I Vi in Juneau X ! 1v. He left l R. C. WAKE m; .\:n E. TVETE ¥ vy WESTWARD THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA "BOMBAY CLIPPER' |SELECTEES ARE IS SHOW SET FOR ~ RECLASSIFIED CAPITOL FRIDAY BY DRAFT BOARD | e Reclassification of selectees as Wl“lam Garga“ and Irene'llw result of recent Draft Board Hervey Star in Adion ™", 5. % “otenc, sonm wa- Mys’ery Drama s, Phillip J. James, Warren Engagement of Patricia Walker | their home r {and thrilling action-mystery dra-|yikolaeyich Tulintseff, John John- ma, “Bombay Clipper,” comes 10 g, preq schneider. of its kind ever made, presents a g, thrilling mystery drama which | , Edward C. Sweeney, Fran- to-be is Other well-known screen players | Southern 5/16, Curtiss Wright 8% |in the cast include Charles Lang, son, Austin H. Brown, Floresca. 3 r Maria Montez, Mary Gordon and| Those shown on the Draft Board‘:fi;{;,{o?‘i ;sfix ??,rk s | Lloyd Corrigan. records as class 1-C, enlisted are |Steel 50, Pound $4.04 | Roy Chanslor and Stanley wrote john Wesley Hickman, Crockett W. | ( ; |the original screen play. Stanley Riley, Harace R. Blood. In l»C“ DOW, JONES AVERAGES | Cortez, noted cinematographer, Was on the records, are Bennie B. Cam-. The following are today’'s Dow, {the cameraman and Marshall pos, Edward E. Ratzow, Everett F. Jones averages: Industials, 114.87, Grant is credited as associate pro-'miller and Philip P. James up .31; rails, 29.09, down .11; utilities, ducer. 14.06, down .01. OFFICER TELLS AALASKA COASTAL CFPROGRESS O MAKES FLIGHTS ALCANHIGHWAY T0 SITKA TODAY \Lieut. Richard L. Neuberg- Arrivals here from Sitka yester- er Addresses Cham- - .- ALASKA STAR PLANE LEAVES FOR WEST On the return flight to Anchor- age, Alaska Star Air Lines left this norning with thirteen passengers. Lurry Flahart is pilot of the plane nd Cyril Seeds, co-pilot. day afternoon with Alaska Coastal Airlines were C. R. Smiter, A. D T'anner, F. A. Metcalf, Dorine Lew- |noon were the following arrivals: ;H«\M‘l Kirmse, Mary K. Cauthorne, |Mrs. Lou Taylor and Marjorie ‘Sncll. ! " ers leaving today were: ind A. Louis. ber Commerce Whitehead and| Leaving for Sitka today with | ACA were Mr. and Mrs. Art Beau- { d 1 euberger alde 1 Lo* din, Amby Frederick, C. B. Peter- It J ChConno o hillip 'son, A, J. Palmer, Mrs. F. P. Service Comn t Lt 1 D Hoover, Alvin | gnapp, P, C. Patterson and Mrs. P. told membe he Juneau Cham- H, Metz, Stanley W. Brady, Joseph | ¢ patterson. ber of Commerce at the noon lunchi- M. Slosberg, Frank S. Ferguson, | R(,L"mmg' BB Yyahe - on: con meeting today that Gen. O’'Con- Sammie H. Cobb, Jr., Arthur Herbin. | fir ¥ i) i B and his EALRCTENE b i R AT g |first plane from Sitka this after- : (. €. O'LEARY HERE | *Lieut. Neub rger, Public Relations ON OFFICIAL WORK | Pt L | officer, also told members that Gen FROM_S-E(OND DIV. \ARRE“ YOUTH HERE O’Connor has extended ON FORGERY CHARGE ehorse ment in the Second Division, and Remarkable Achievement long time resident of Nome, arrived | Thomas Williams, formerly of Neuberger, well-known writer and pere yesterday on official business | Wrangell, has been arrested in Ju- a member of Oregon’s State Legisla- ywith the department headquarters neau by U.S. Deputy Marshal W. ture, touched on the early disagree- pere, | J. Markle on a bench warrant is- ment concerning the'rouw of the My O'Leary will be here about |sued in Ketchikan. new highway which will be formally '{wo weeks and on his return to Nome Williams was indicted by the opened on November 20, but said i) go by way of the Third Division grand jury on a charge of for- that he didn’t believe that any dis- to take care of business for the|goro and is being taken to Ket- agreement existed when it came t0 gepartment. considering the remarkable achieve- B chikan by boat for trial. ment reached by Army engineers and civilian workmen in putting the Empire Classifieds Pay! 1,600-mile road through in six — months, many months ahead of | schedule. | He stressed one point—"This is not a finished highway,” he said. Neu- berger pointed out that compared to roads in the States, the new Alcan Highway is by no means completed. In many places it provides only for one-way traffic. Other sections will not be open to traffic during the thawing season. But Very Useful “But the road can be used,” he added, “to move thousands of tons of equipment and supplies to Alaska |from Central Canada” beginning tentatively on November 20 and ex- tending through the winter. Eventually, he said, the highway will be further developed and will have access roads to the coastal com- munities. He described the present route from Dawson Creek to White- horse and Fairbanks as the begin- ning of a network. Building Bridge Paying tribute to the men who | bult the road, Neuberger told of one Negro regiment pushing a bridge iacross a wide river in 44 hours, driving piles and laying planks so | that two-and-a-half-ton trucks were able to cross. The men worked with | little equipment and under the dif- | ficulties of long supply lines in pushing the highway across four or five mountain ranges, through thick forests around and over muskeg y Trucks with vital suppiies for the { Alaskan forces already have almost reached the Canadian-Alaskan bor- | !der and are expected to be roaring | |into Fairbanks in about two weeks. | The final break-through occurred | several days ago. | {OPA ATTY. GEMMILL T0 LEAVE SEATTLE 1 FOR JUNEAU FRIDAY Lynn J. Gemmill, recently ap- | pointed chief enforcement attorney for Office of Price Administration in Alaska, is scheduled to leave | Seattle tomorrow for Juneau to assume the duties of enforcing OPA | regulations in the Territory, ac- cording to word received by Calvin Pool, Assistant OPA Director. Mr. Gemmill was formerly Assis- | tant United States Attorney in the First Division with headquarters in Juneau. He resigned the posi- tion JJast spring to go to Washing- ton, D.C. e BUY DEFENSE STAMPS an i i itheast Ala | visit with him and his staff 19 ©.C. O'Leary, License Officer with In the Territorial Treasurer’s Depart- e eee Lt BUY DEFENSE BONDS POLL-PARROT “Little Officer” He'll feel like a big shot in this Poll-Parrot Little Officer . . . with a real military air . . . youthful and correctly fitting. Soft tan leather upper, gen- uine leather counters, insoles and retan leather sole. | FOR MAXIMUM SERVICE. .select Poll-Parrot scuffproof sharkskin tip oxfords, soft Elk upper. Weather Wear sole . . . all-leather! Family Shoe Store Seward Street BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH JEEPERSY e -TW (%‘TER \NHIST TOOW CWOSEF AINT GOT BRANS ENOFFTO v‘c\&\:‘o SRONEL \N A RETWOLE -~ W& ‘V\QX‘ ?Ro?\éR TUDENCE BGANST GRAKE, TAL G ENUFF POADER TO BLOW THET MISKH-RET w%&fim =S0N, WEW Is Announced Mr. and Mrs. Fred Walker, of Cape Fanshaw, announced the en- gagement of their daughter, Patricia | to Leon Pettibone, U. S. Coast Guard, | lat an announcecent party given at ently | | kley,” William Bell Jack- = % (son, Ingvald Peterson, James Sam- \‘\_mlv the wedding date was not Featuring William Gargan and| ..’ oaome. James Leland Coul- | definite announced that | When Bob Hope makes a bet of Irene Hervey, Universal's unique |, .. pgoward Erickson, Peters it Would take place soon. Guests|$10,000 that he can tell the truth for the occasion, in addition to the for 24 hours, you can bet consider- host and hostess and the engaged | ably more than the price of ad- Fred Miller | mission to the 20th Century Tk " uple, included Mrs the Capitol Theatre tomorrow. | 2-A—Robert W. Martin, Jr. mdp R oducti ne of the first and Mrs. Willie Johnson The production, one 2-B—Don M. Iverson, Kenneth A.| My ker, father of the bride- per of the Five Finger Doyle v Pe transpires almost entirely aboard a( 3.5 joh: Westfall, George 511:1}::»1:‘1?3 at "t‘):lmM;;lm-l:lmmm *|new Paramount farce comedy, giant passenger plane as it wings w sundborg, H H. Kazee, Wil- | A 4 | “Nothing But the Truth,” co-star- its way from Bombay, India, t0[ljam R. Windsor, Norman E. Bleu- | ‘]rim: Paulette Goddard, and featur- San Francisco, carrying all the|jp gnd Raymond J. Donlan. STO(K QUOMHONS {4883 % cor_nedy cast packed solid principals in the mystery. 4-C—Isamu Taguchi, Harno Ku- | bl with favorite names, including Ed-| Gargan is cast s 8 NeWSPAPEr |masaka, Sabaro Tanaka, Takeo| NEW YORK, Nov. 5. — Closing |Ward Arnold, Leif Erickson, Helen| reporter who becomes innocently | Mori, Tommy T. Mukai, -William |qUotation of Alaska Juneau mine | Vinson, Catharine Déucet, Glenn | involved in the mystery when he|akagi and William H. Samato. Istock today is 2%, American Can|Anders, Grant Mitchell, Rose Ho-! embarks aboard the clipper With| 4.p_George Henry Loveless. {67%, Anaconda 27'%, Bethlehem bart and Willie Best. An added his bride, played by Miss Hervey. 4-F—Robert M. in. TomdRaks ! Steel 59 Commonwealth and | recommendation is the fact that Honorio J. | mternational Hatvester 52%, Ken- , United States | Hope-Goddard adventures into the WELL WELL 1T'S MOW -~ N, DO MOUW ANANT TO SEE SONETRNG Where the Better BIG Pictures Play! NOW SHOWING BOB HOPE STARS . IN COMEDY FILM AT20TH CENTURY | PS5 rENTUR ‘Paulette Goddard Is Back | with Comedian in ""No- thing But the Truth” - tre, that what will follow will be high-speed, gag-glorious comedy. | Hope makes the wager in the ‘the new laugh opus was directed by Elliott Nugent, comedy-wise di- rector of one of the two previous Pardmount presants HOPE - GO |laugh sphere, “The Cat and the | Canary.” { Right now Hope is just about tops in film comedy, following sock- successes in such comedies as “Road to Singapore,” “Road to Zanzibar' and “Caught in the Draft” His |film following has been increasing | by leaps and bounds with each new | picture, until now his eminence u.s} |a comedian is almost undisputed. B i Ruibsis ODDARD NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH" [ I vow:? MISS MARJORIE SNELL | RETURNS FROM SITKA Miss Marjorie Snell, clerk-steno- rapher with the Selective Service ce here, returned this morning om Sitka where she spent a ¢+ days assisting the local Draft JWNED AND OPERATED By _ W.0.GROSS ¥ WURSES AIDES CORPS AIDES SERVE YOUR COUNTRY HERE! Has Juneau 50 More Women Who Want to Help When Only They Can Serve? You can get the satisfaction that comes only with intelligent and patriotic serv- ice by enrolling now if you are between the ages of 18 and 50. Training Period Consists of: 35 Hours of Class Work; 45 Hours of Supervised Hospital Training; Followed by 150 hours of Voluntary Service a year. THIS MFSSAGE 1S DONATED TO THE RED CROSS AND THE OFFICE OF CIVILIAN DEFENSE BY Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU DOUGLAS Call Mrs. Harley Turner, Phone Blue 440, for Application Blanks By BILLY DeBECK - LOOK , ANT T O STATY -V BET BUEN NOU CONTELL TS GENUWNE NES - T'S UNDER W BED -CONE ON ONER TO (N QUARTERS AN OULL SEE 1T-- QANSS32 THMADE MV SELF SURE - - o ANNS GALY v WTERESTED U= 4 PAGE 'IHRfi i i | | } |