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; THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE —JUNEAU ALASKA 2 P/}GE THRF% WEISMULLER |COL. NICHOLS |ALASKA COASTAL |ADVENTURES OF IN "TARZAN" | IS CHEERED BY | MAKESSCHEDULE, = OLD WEST AT NEW THRILLER CHAMBER TODAY CHARTER TRIPS 20TH CENTURY v ! wgers to cursion Inet| g i Maureen 0Sullivan, John i 5 ot rames wea-| Errol Flynn, Olivia de Hay- Sheffield, Fine Sup- |needay were Onactes v. Moctims,| {land Score in Tale of port at Capitol Gen. Custer Lucy Perrin, F.| w. MacDonald, Highlighted by the appearance of | T Died With Their . Farzan and his mate in New York, Brotherton, J. Doyle, Wherry On.” the new Warner Bros. ple- THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1943 THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAY Y RE 120" [ENTURY Buy More Bonds "Tarzan's New York Adventure” Pnzvu TONITE 12:30 Lupe...at her fire-eating best ...when the... Buy More Stamps Statehood D_isalssed—Com- mandeering of Vessels Also Brought Up Three cheers resounded from the Baranof Gold Room this noon as Metgjoy, David Ifinden, Neal Carlson ils in Juneau with ACA Excursion Inlet yesterday were EDGAR ALLEN POE'S MASTERPIECE of W “They Boots THE CAPITOL HAS HE BIG PICTURESI More People Killed In Bathtub Slipups GOVERNOR Tol Than Plane Wrecks GH‘ (opy OI: | Lawr { Arr from Tom praving newer and bigger perils in|members of the Juneau Chamber jones, Clyde Doublery, J. L. Welch, ture which opened ye (N'dvn\' -flbl a crowded city than they of Commerce complimented Lieut.|J M. O'Keefe, Fred A. Nolger, E the 20th Century Theatre, with Er- faced in the jungles, “Tarzan’s New |Col. Frederic Nichols with a rous- j. Nelson, R. Baldridge rol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland york Adventure,” with Johnny|ing greeting of farewell. Col Nichols, Arriving here from Hawk Inlet the co-starring roles, brings to Welssmuller, Maureen O'Sullivan|will leave shortly to assume duties yesterday were L. A. Daugherty, life on the screen one of the most \nd Johnny Sheffield is the at-|elsewhere, this being the 1ast Hans Floe, Joe Caron, V. L. P.Surring chapters in the history of traction now playing at the Capi- {Chamber meeting he would be iIn Grige and R. J. Patton |the old West. But even more than tol Theatre attendance prior to his departure. | From Juneau to Sitka, passen-|that it tells for the first time on ‘n reverts to jungle methods| R. E. Robertson addressed num-|gers yesterday were C. L. McGraw, |the screen, the true story of the to attack the circus, later creates|erous complimentary -~ wmarks to the Oli Brandt, Jack Engdahl, E. P./Mman who made the phrase: "Cus- an uproar in a court of law, and colonel on behalf \e Chamber Sommers. Returning to Juneau ter's Last Stand” a synonym for finally stages an escape from theland he in turn responded with @ from Sitka were E. Sargota, Mrs, | deathless courage. : police by diving off the Brooklyn|few expressive words of apprecia- Binkley, R. J. Claire, Mrs. R J.| Flynn is cast perfectly as Custer, Bridge, before he regains the|tion. | Claire and Tom Morgan and he has done a magnificent job roungster and they return to their Dr. Rupert Emerson lh-uuln“on‘ Today's Flights |of bringing the historical character ungle. Amid the thrills are comedy |OPA Director for the Territdry,!" Leaving for Haines with ACA (%0 life as a very real kind of per- .pisodes dealing with the primitive|was a guest speaker during the this morning were Mrs. Arvid o building up the man Custer in man’s struggles with the clothes|luncheon. Oberg, Hazel Zimmerman, Cum;““m a way that his magnificent id customs of civilization Statehood Talk | Shat Milce Jurich, I. Matson; | 3¢t of heroism at the close of the Richard Thorpe directed with| Chamber members were given in-"for Skagway, Phillip ‘W. Amborn, Story becomes perfectly logical and left skill. Players include Charles|formation concerning the advan- G, 1 Newton, Barbara Dedman, believable. As his sweetheart and Bickford ‘the boy's abductor,|tages and disadvantages of 'the Velma Larsen, D. P. Hulcell later his wife, Olivia de Havilland much discussed matter of statehood |scores one of the notable hits of a as today (Continued from Page one papers. In spite of the high places that are now “working for the ment,” scme of the best legal minds here unanimous in_ declaring that it will take an opinion of the United States Supreme Court prove it If the court shculd hold that way, they say, the miners would be due all the rights and privileges remarks in som the coal mix govern- are to ~ OLD JOURNAL Famous félégraph Trail Diary to Be Pres- and ented Here (Continued from Page One) Anthony J. Dimond Paul Kelly as the aviator who, with | Virginia Grey, playir his sweet- | oart, befriends the jungle family, | {Chill Wills in the principal comedy | role as a broken-dowr Cyrus W. Kendall, Russell | 1 Howard Hickman, Matthew | {Boulton and several hundred “na-| tives” Effective photography was/ | contributed by Sidney Wagner animal train- | ler, s, | |a for Alaska, by Allen Shattuck, hairman of a special committee in regard to this subject, ,who read letter which had been drafted here to be sent to Senators Pat McCarran of Nevada, and Willlam Langer of North Dakota A letter was also read by Robertson, chairman of a committee, to report on the Gov- ernment’s commandeering of pri- vately ownell vessels for use by the {Navy and Maritime Commission, in | which he referred to the injustice R. E. special here from Haines were Marland Linck, R. Mitrovich; from Skagway, Harry Glish, C. J. Wgigs., Carl Saari, Roger Dallan- able, Luther Jensen, Owen Flynn. | Outgoing today to Ketchikan Theodore Dillard, Albert Hol- rth, E. H. Wood, A. F. Mag- B. Ward; returning to Ju- neau from Ketchikan were Robert D. Young, Bobby Reynolds, A. Van Mavern, Mrs. Jennie Homethko Taking passage to Excursion In-| let today were David P. Welch, George Thomas, Charles W. Hinds, Arrivals career. In her capable hands, Beth Custer emerges fine and courageous woman A truly fine supporting cast cludes Gene Lockhart, as father, Arthur Kennedy, Grapewin, Stanley Ridges, Greenstreet and Walter Hampden - RAF MAKES lustrous as a in- Beth's Charley Sydney Delegate Robert Seela; from Excursion Inlet,| accorded other government workers —and in matters of k leave, v cations with pay, per those rights and privile erous. Most attorneys off the possibility that will ever be made. just a status quo labor troubles are etc., are gen- a test likely mine here ju such More until the >ttled of [ Alas berta, & ‘1 Columbia, according to Lieu-| | nt Neuberger. | | - eee | Ahoy shipboa neral O'Connor Al- of Manning, Premier of and John Hart, Premier !—the traditional hail on rd—was once the dreaded battle cry of the Vikings Bad Can Buy Mere RBonds if He Receives Wearable Gifts | Boston-Former Har- | | \Famous Scholar Dies in| vard Official | (Continued from Page one) figure, clad in a well-worn black coat with furry collar, was fa- miliar in ancient Harvard Square where his upheld arm stilled many a traffic tumult. His beard was de- clared by Harvard men to be the finest seen on Cambridge's Brattle Street “since the days of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.” Born in Clarksville, Pa., July 1, 1854, he was a descendant of a freeman who came to Cambridge in the Massachusetts Bay colony in 1634. He received his A.B. de- gree from Harvard in 1880—he was a classmate of Theodore Roosevelt |—and then studied at the Ecole| |Des Sciences Politiques at Paris, | |and the universities of Berlin and | | Freiburg. Harvard Record el being done to such boat owners. g s .310‘ The question of the Government's ent copies. -later:. 1o/ ] taking these vessels and not pay- ing either the agreed purchase or charter price and in some instances' offering to pay a greatly reduced purchase or charter price has been cause for considerable discussion throughout the country. Ask Information In order to make an accurate survey in regard to this matter, the Chamber has asked that all boat owners furnish them with the following information: Name of owner and name of boat, date when boat was taken, whether boat was taken under charter or as a pur- chase, amount of purchase or char- ter price, value of boat, whether either the purchase or charter price had been paid, whether the |Government has made any coun- ter offer and what the offer was, when the made. counter offer was D SURVIVOR OF PLANE CRASH AND WIFE HERE R. R. Gebo, one of the survivors of the Gillam plane wreck of Y. F. Mason, A. L. Knight, W. C.| Miller, L. R. Yott, E. Downey, ‘W. Fawhll E. To Sitka Sitka passengers with Alaska Coastal today were Miss Rosa T. G. Villegracia Leohard C. Allen, Jen- nie Buchanan, Gertrude Buchanan; |from Sitka to Juneau passengers were James Howard, E. E. Curtis, Angus M. Lewis, R. V. Dodge, Ole Brendt Leaving for Todd this afternoon were A. Nearjpa, Joe Fulgencio, George Hine, Alex Costillano and Fiorentine Yanson; for Excursion Inlet, C. E. Kinnery, Dick Black, Ernest J. Rockne, Frank Binns; for Sitka, J. W. Gucker, Alex Kashe- varoffl and for Hawk Inlet, Hans Floe and Roy Minor. CHANGES GIVEN INDRAFTBOARD CLASSIFICATION | Reclassifications of the Juneau |Draft Board released today show ‘(hv following changes: | 1-A—Vincent P. Derig, |Joseph Laird, ~Theodor Mack. 1-A(H) —Nels James Weltain Skandter ., Charles Thom- Ander- NIGHT RAID " ONGERMANY Rip Up Enemy Airfields, Railways — Smash Nazi Ships LONDON, June 17.—The British announced that Royal Air Force bombers ranged the continent over Denmark and France Tuesday night the renewed aerial offensive continued through the fifth suc- | cessive night. The Germans indicated some of the raiders attacked targets near Berlin. ! | The RAF ripped up enemy air-| | fields, railway communications and | hit water transport, the announce- ment said | - RUSS ARMY - TAKES BACK thrillingly teamed again with OLIVIA D:HAVILIAND in the new Warner Bros. success He' beegmp sl dunictor, In his-| january 5, and Mrs, Gebo arrived son, George Anti [tory at Harvard in 1889. From that |y, jupeau yesterday from Ketchi-(as Ashby, David Senior Burnett, \;‘f‘f} to 192:?- o ki ;‘?‘j“‘““' JPro- kan and are at the Baranof Ho-|Letoy Carrigan, David Hans Clark, | "“‘f“r_- p"’f‘“"‘“ o f“‘"g-, YO0 1e] here while waiting for trans- Andrew John Davis, Fridolph Val- professor of government, Chairman ., ..iion to Mr. Gebo's headquar-|demar Erickson Honorio J. Flor- — of the division of history and gov-! v : t. d chai f th gd |ters in Anchorage. lesca, Walter Ralph Hermanson,| MOSCOW, June 17. — The Red ern;nen L ar; 'c arrmanto e de-| "y Gebo, most severely injured|Wilbur Irving, Olavi John Koskey, |Army cut off a chunk of strunv,lyi |pariment of government. lof the passengers in the plane|Henry Hyalmar Larsen, Vern Adel-ifortified German defenses north- For many years, he was a mem- P I | | ) " |wreck south of Ketchikan, was bert Lee, Freeman Willlam Math- | west of Mtsnesk to the north of| ber of Cambridg school com- |’ 4 H e s | | |just released from the Ketchikan |[®5O0 onorato Monte, Frank Rob- | Orel Tuesday in some of the most | | | mittee. He served as a member of e} i r i | the Massachusetts Consmution'Grneral Hospital and 18 still yecups (¢t Motton, Vinoent Wilfred Mul-}violent fighiiug of the war. | | setts | vihill, Adrian Vernall Roff, Sidney Frontline dispatches said the Ger- Slippers Robes convention from 1917 to 1919, and | €rating from the effects of his in- . Iia 1926 ot ’:ppoime e o jurles sind. exposiue, Elmer Steves, Paul Warner Talk- mans counter-attacked strongly in qumg Wear Ithe federal commission on the bi-| The plane passengers were miss- L?lgc!:n&‘]“k Westfall, Donald Clar- an effort to take back four popu-| w ¥ centennial of George Washington, ing for nearly a month and hope|“" [ OO::lE]‘ T lated places captured by the Rus-| orkmg Clothes At first a believer in the League of their rescue was practically given |, te ™ clrh -ix) YO’L}K;g‘ obert E. sians, but were forced to withdraw Handkerchiefs . " MORE LAND Neckties Hosiery Shoes Father's Day June 20 Help him save money precious dollars he can use for taxes and defense bonds . . . give him wear- able, practical, handsome accessories from Graves. A gf/éry of an 'Undying Fakh of Nations, he reversed his views up at the time they were found in| o g at sundown when the Russians beat | 2-B—Gles in 1925 when he termed the league|the wilds south of Ketchikan. ' |poger . T °'PR Benjamin off the attempt. a failure. Mr. Gebo is associated with Mor-| 3.4(H) — Roy Hutto Bailey. * ke govilagh “I do not believe in Santa Claus,”|rison-Knudsen Company, contract-|charles Oscar Beck, Wilbur Bur: With ARTHUR KENNEDY CHARLEY GRAPEWIN H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man he snapped, “and by the same pro-| cess, I do not believe that the League of Nations will be Santa Claus to fill everyone’s stocking ors, and his present headquarters are in Anchorage. Mrs. Gebo, who was south at the time of the acci- dent, and came north to Ketchi- ford, Hugh Lewis Cochrane, Mau- rice Edgar Corthell, George Allen Dale, Charles Thomas Doucette, Alfred Francis Christ- TAFT HITS GENE LOCKHART Directed by AOUL WALSH Ellenberg, Niginal Screen Ploy by Wally Kline and Aeneas MacKenzie * Music by Max Steiaer / each Christmas morn. . L A Warner Bros.-First Natianal Picture Mrs. ADeIeb“e‘cque And Daughter K|SKA HIT Leave for South WASHINGTON, June 17. — The | Mrs. Louis Delebecque and her)nayy gaid Ventura bombers at- ::ru gkf):;rvchfig;, s‘!‘;(h:e:;vevm:fi;: tacked Kiska Tuesday, scoring hnsl e p Mrs. Delebecque’s parents, Mr. and 00 e aualil Eamip Sies - Mrs. F. A. J. Gallwas, left this week for their home in Seattle. During her stay in Juneau, Mrs. Delebecque was the inspiration for many social functions given in her honor. Mr. and Mrs. Delebecque lived in Juneau for a number of years when he was connected with Pan Ameri- can Airways Alaska Division here. He was transferred to the Seattle PAA office about six months ago. L% XS A ELLIOTT BRADFORD IS NAVY ENSIGN Of interest to Juneau friends of Elliott Bradford, son of Mr. Z. M. Bradford of Wrangell, and former local resident, comes news of his graduation recently from the Na- val Reserve Midshipmen's School on the campus of the university of Notre Dame. Young Bradford was commissioned as an ensign. kan where she remained until a few days ago when her husband was able to leave. - — ian Huber, Leslie Erik ‘Iversen, John Thorwoll Johnson, George Gregor Laing, Melville 8. Leath, James Lawrence McNamara (en- listed), Edward Miller, John Russell Riggs, James Cecil Ryan, Harold Edmund Snaring, Sven Heribert | Svenson, ; 4-E—Carl Floridan. 4-F—Erling Olaf Abrahamsen. 4-F(H)—Roy Stanley Thomas. -ee - ~ OPA MEAT ~ SUBSIDIES WASHINGTON, June 17.—Criti-| cizing attempts of Price Adminis- trator Prentiss Brown to roll back | ] =1 [ 1 gletall prices, Senator Robert Taft| The Ohioan contended that OPA |large meat purchases by the Amiy |told Brown in a Cungre.\smnalhear-;;”Dns kui Fut bnck‘pn‘cm \(;:?[aa‘fgltid u;nr to TMTQ ‘IorHan{ ;'tt}txlrenuned way and among anti-aircraft bat- boasted the largest locomotive ing that because of the “demorali-| ¥ FDADREPS " Promises - 1D ally | civilian shortage. He further staj- teries. | works in Europe. zation of markets you are not goinz‘hunlpuCk','.:.,_“melm,i:: :(l);llfrmajor}t-(‘l“ul\'al:l lhe.rArmy ;:“dl LNhnvy o | to have any meat for civilians meat markets in wy. now taking 45 percent of the coun- I next | Empire Classifieds Pay! { month."” 5 "MR. BUG GOES TO TOWN" WAR PAINT for our planes Many planes operated in Pan American’s Alaska Services are in war paint. Others soon will be, symbolizing the fact that our every resource of personnel and experience is now dedicated to the war effort. This means every passenger, every ounce of cargo is under military priority. Afrer Victory, we will again give our Alaska friends the standard of service for which Pan American is known throughout the Terri- tory. The German city of Kassel, once ! Brown replied .thut the unusually | try’s meat supply. BUY WAR BONDS BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH SALUTE TH' CRITTER, THaY, GOOGLE *. pont MN LLTTLE CORNSEED, STAND THAR LIKE & HAPPENS TO 8E A ~ TOM-FOOL CLERTO RICAN WOIT Y - POLICEMAN ' 'ByBILLY DeBECK HA ' so vou DIDN'T 81N THaT SWRT- FUL OF MANGOES \Ou BROUGHT HONME LAST NUGHT anN' stoe ' INTWN MORE NOSE