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’ » FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1943 BREEZY COMEDY " P , =2 2-Great Features AND DRAMATIC FIRST SHOW STARTS 6:50 P. M. LTS ACTION--Rl the Way! ...then fight it outl |Capitol Theatre Has Cali- fornia Gold Rush and Smart Farce on Bill Historic California tale me, plus a rollicking you'll wa John Wayne Binnie ; Barnes and whistle, will be the screen fare for A of the Capitol Theatre night when Universal ilm, “Almost Married,” i to begin its engagement, with Republic’s In Ol California Jane and Ro- bert Paige are cc The sup- lette, C! beth Patterson The picture story relates a small- town singer’s xllk‘)" to make good in the big-town and e mad mix- up that involves her in a marriage masquerade with a wealthy, curio- collecting bachelor d Has Singing Role : d | 'n pre-Hoyt days, it took an editor- = Miss Frazee, of course, plays the Gimlet Eye for OWI; | P eorenae"to decide that it singer and warbles songs by the | would be proper to use a two-col- Well-known tunesmith team of Ed- Tough, Smart EX-Opy | hesa when president Harding die Cherkose and Jacques Press. In lied.) addition, the novelty hi Binjec Reader Is Now on Job | "7\, 1iooq trasstusion that oyt Bingee, Scootta,” 15 miroduced by i | gave the Oregonian made a 1 its authors, Slim and Slam, jive (Continued from Page one) | paper out of it. Circulation perked instrumentalists e p. Headlines and type faces wer - servative Portlanders gasped when ne Ep slapped that AP wirephoto of | mmer Davis, OWI director, is| NEW ‘YORK, June 4 FRE the Hindenburg airship explosion | newspaperman who turned mag-| quotation of Alaska Juneau mine over all eight ‘columns of the front | sine writer and Tadio commen-|sioek today is 6'. American Can page. (It's a Rose City legend that | iator Hoyt reversed the procedure.|gar: Anaconda 58 e d was & successful magazine greel 64%, Commony 3 writer who abandoned free-lancing | goiihern 1. Curtis General Motors 55, Internatio Harvester 697%, Kennecott 32, New York Central 18%, Northern Pa- son, JANE FRAZEE ROBERT EUGENI llll”l " “WHITE EAGLE" (Saturday Matinee)}——LATE NEWS includes Eugene Pal Coleman and Eliza- CARA NOME HAND (REAM No need now to .v to_concentrate on newspapering Harris worth, Roseburg pub- »shman Congressman says there isn't a Bogrely’ - hands) el in the state whol|Cific 16%, Packard Motors 4 yours soft, ,moom o Ep a reporter first|RePublic Steel 17%, United States lovely by applying this | 3 afterward. Despite | Stetl 557, Pound '$4.04 daintycream iay afterward i e it ; ; indny times: LARGE s publisher, the 46- LWy AOtioe Eayers today are each day. It JAR vear-old westerner is still a work-|as follows: industrials 142 ul will fot soil 1 ng newspaperman, with his roots| 3662, utilities gloves or h ti1e- coby Bk - >oe needlo work. L] iR 3 ASK FOR IT AT Anthracite reserves ' at Shansi The Australian monitor, largest are estimated at more than 500 hes a length of six billion tons, half the coal in all China BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. “The Rexall Stor of lizards, r to seven feet prewed to °0 v ::::\ choicest grains se' . h"P;: by ter. ‘tv‘l‘l“' puresl rew g prie "e'e' b:o‘: eB:i? Iai its bests suy RMNIEIU SEATTLE BREWING & MALTING CO. Since 1878 % Emil Sick, Pres. Washington’s Oldest Industrial Institution FILMS SHOWING Esther William salis drape in front and plain color lastex back. including thic class, is 1,646. Thi anniversary of its founding by U, | Robert S. White, from Camp Perry, is still following him around. On Easter morning in 1936 White |came down with the influenza, the r it was the mumps. ‘ O, TTHANKY FER T SEEGRR, covewW - He'e NORESE'® TO NN CORN SQUEEZW'S Broiled Steak and Fried Chicken SERVED ANY TIME DINE AND DANCE THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA —AND SHE CAN SWiM, TOO USUALLY WHEN YOU SEE A HOLLYWOOD STARLET wearing the latest in you'll invariably find that the clc get to the water is the edge of a pool. Here's the exceptiol now a screen pla uit, if you're interested, is a gay print, chry- st both the girl and suit 1t's lovely seral national r and holder of s (International) HE 56 graduates of this year’s class of the Moose child city of Moose- heart, I11.—29 boys and 27 girls. leads with 13 graduates; Ohio and Wi the commencement exercis graduate will be awarded a high school diploma accredited by the Illi- tate Department of Public Instructian, In addition to an academic o Mooseheart graduate is trained in a useful trade or voca= tion, of which 22 are taught at Mooseheart. As of May 1, 1943, more than 400 Mooseheart graduates are now serving in the armed forces of the . The total number of graduates since the first class of 5 in 1919, ear Mooseheart celebrates the 30th Senator James J, Davis of Pennsyl- vania, director general of the Loyal Order of Moose. In June, the 1,587! Moose lodges. throughout the North American Continent will enroll classes totaling 25,000 candidates, as a feature of the celebration. EASTER JINX STRAWBERRY PLAINS, Tenn.— They come from 20 states. Illinois Virginia second, with € each. At cld June 12, at Mooseheart, each B L N R 1938 the diagnosis was measles and in 1939 the flu again. His Easter ill luck in 1940 was to be m(uooned with his car in a snowstorm, and last year he was laid up with appendicitis. Easter of 1943 found him in an| Army hospital recovering from an appendectomy and still wondering how he escaped the jinx in 1941, BUY WAR BONDS THE DOUGLAS IN PAGE THREE TOMBSTONE'S . TOUGHS OUSTED . BYU.S.MARSHAL ;Authentic Tale of Arizona Beginnings Stars Richard | Dix at 20th Cenfury | Produced by Paramount’s Harry Sherman, ranking producer of | Westerns Tombstone the Town {Too Tough to Die,” now at the 20th Century, tells the gun-smoked | story of Wyatt Earp, the greatest fighting peace marshal [the West ever knew. It's a story so exciting it'll keep you on the edge of your chair most of the time | Richard Dix, who stars with | Kent Taylor and Ed Buchanan makes his interpretation of the gun-fighting marshal a clear-cut nerve-tingling characterization Through the splendid acting of Dix, Wyatt Earp comes alive for us on the screen as the colorful, thrill- ling figure he actually was. | There’s trick gun-play, hard-rid- ing, fast shooting and many a tense | moment, as the new film tells the story of Earps' fight on the gang| of desperadoes who've made Tomb- stone the toughest town in the| state. How he brings the unruly| |ones to order makes the town safe {to live in, forms the plot of the film -+ NAZI PLANE starring RICHARD DIX KENT TAYLOR EDGAR BUCHANAN VICTOR JORY GOOD MEN (and Women) LIVE IN TOMBSTONE But Not for Long! and 30--MINUTES LATEST NEWS--30 Buy GR Juy [?0"[[///’1/,4}’ 19 Smashing! Crashing! Action! “Tombstone The Town Too Tough To Die*” "NO HANDS ON THE CLOCK" IN STRAFING = GOOD NEWS ‘Innl 4—John L. Lewis announced ‘1.\(\ this afternoon he would re- No Bombsr Are Dropped, No Casualties-Attempt fo Bomb Ship | NEW YORK, June 4.—It is re- ported here that a single German plane strafed military installations at Iceland today but no bombs were dropped and no casualties re- sulted A broadcast from Iceland rmu't-d American Army headquarters a | stating that another German plane, earlier this week, unsuccesstully at- tempted to drop four bombs on an English steamer crossing a bay on| the north Iceland coast i > - COMPROMISE FRENCH AIM ALGIERS, June Q.AUnquolubh-{ sources said today that a new com- | promise is being considered, under | which Gen. Giraud will remain \ commander-in-chief of the French | army but will make concessions to! the De Gaullists, including replace- | Fighting French generals. | “Gen. Giraud is to have a purely | headquarters job and not the ac-| tive field task of directing the gen- eral war effort, according to action | aken by the “Committee for Na- | ional Liberation.” | Giraud and De Gaulle will act as joint heads. | .. CITY COUNCIL WiLL i MEET THIS EVENING | The regular 8 o’clock meceting of ‘Ih(- Juneau City Council will b | held tonight in the Council Cham- bers at City Hall. | Routine business will be dis- cussed and consideration will be! made for the appointment of a new | City Magistrate, which position was | |left vacant by the late Grover C.| | Winn. | | | commend the mine waqrkers, return to work on Monday. This will be his reply to Ickes' letter which stat- ed: “As operator of the coal mines and in behalf of the United States Government, I expect you to direct the members of your UMW to re- turn to work Monday.” Lewis's decision appears to solve, for a time at least, the grave crisis that has almost par industry zed the coal - - Fir Flying At Fuehrer By H. W. AP Science E NEW YORK-—Now Uncle Sam is going to start throwing trees at | Hitler, in the guise of a new form When the ball goes anywhere near ‘ul smokeless powder, - Untal \fictory 1 ment of several high officers by<| offer— Pan American Airways’ experience gained by more than 165 million miles of overseas flight to 63 foreign countries and colonies and the “know how” of 10 years’ pioneering of scheduled flying in Alaska— I All are at work for the Government and Military services of the United States. Meanwhile, we appreciate the patience and understanding of Alaskans who so often find that war priority stands in the way of that trip or delays that express shipment. Until Victory is won, everything we have to © By BILLY DeBECK WARK -HAACK Y KETCH ME,CONSN - || (e ENVENENR 't FAX\WY To ‘The process was developed by the Hercules Powder Company. Cotton is used in making smokeless powder. But there wasn't enough cotton available or the American war pro~ gram Wood, used already to make rayon, was a natural aid to piece out the cotton. But use of wood pulp result- »d in powder of uncertain quality.’ The Hercules Company put research men on the ob. There have been two results: Good wood pulp smokeless powder, and an increase in output of the ex- plosive due to improved manufact- uring methods. The Weyerhauser Timber Coms pany of Longview, Wash., cooper- ated in the development, The wood methods were adapted so that all the American pulp companies can contribute some wood for powder. One gain, predictéd by the Hercules announcement, is a saving of $20,- 000,000 in 1943 E $ ORI SRR TUCKER THROWS BULLSEYES CHICAGO.—White Sox opponents are learning fast that cedterfielder Thurman Tucker has a powerful arm. Since the rookie threw out two men at the plate in the same inning, base runners hug the bag | him i QAMER\CANTO OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT Electric Hammond Organ Music DINE AND DANCE