Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 1943 WITH MUSCLES of STEEIL. and BRAIN of DEATH, the MONSTER CRUSHES EVERYTHING IN HIS PATH! The GHOST Dankenste .~ Lon CHANEY - Bela LUGOSI RALPH SIR CEDRIC BELLAMY * HARDWICKE — AND hing Zpifl /| Smas (Saturday Matinee) T NEWS LATE - 'CHARLES . STARRETT RUSSELL HAYDEN S Show Place of Juneau HISTORIC SALONixn and a $4 fine was also given P'anes Om 0\',6r Anderson was fined $25 and Sicily Today ys in jail Page morni fines collected totaled $144 Vachel E ng and Young with and charged fined $20 uspended time. ilso brought in on a charge, was fined $20 20 days suspended sen- Duane ticket for $50 was given 5 on given yo0d fined § and Smart was charge suspended time. on from one) (Continued > PLAXS MADE JULY FOURTH CELEBRATION from Page one) not named night fighters the Allies action - SIX FINES ARE. COLLECTED M jective On enemy while in sky was the before last, 29 were shot dc lost nine plan (Continued leff, Ralph Baker, Capt. T. J. Dyck pou([ COURI ind Mike Daniloff, Harold Foss, g Glenn Allen, Alfred Zenger, William Franks, George Gullufson, Howard police were Button. N Court this Mayor Lucas. Arrests made by city brought before Police AP is ready |Ru LON CHANEY'S | MONSTER ROLE IS IMPRESSIVE | "Ghost of Frankenstein” | with Bela Lugosi, Lon Chaney, at Capitol f the is | with a becoming | thou- The son o “man thousand fast faces knowr the “man with a sand talents | On the lot where the late n Chaney, Sr., was a star, a new| Chaney is displaying tt the same Lor versgtility or screen he ha in real life. another bizarre ying the Frankenstein Monster horror drama nkenstein,” coming Capitol Theatre. Hardwicke, Ralph Bel- will, Bela have other lead- shock-film Chaney the adds role ord by pl in- in he to- famous Fr to the Sir Cedric Univer t of jonel Lugosi in the new the new dr is mpletely terrifying a creation of the infs ankenstein. The Mon- 1s portrayed by Chaney, stands feet, high pounds and is as indica ama man- nine inche menacing te. the as proporti Erle C ind George of “The Ghost Kenton was director Wagener the producer of Frankenstein.” > ALASKA COASTAL MAKES SCHEDULE, CHARTER TRIPS Passengers for Excursion Inlet with Alaska Coastal Airlines yester- day afternoon were W. F. Homby, Lee Braden, Frank Rank V. E Israles, A. Anderson, Oliver Han- Albert Blake, Eric Mattson, Susan Brown, Mrs. Mary Sarabia, Irene Sarabia, W Grower, Roy Westfall. Norman O'Brien Forrest Humble Don Paxton, R. E Reynolds, Dave Carlson Arrivals in Juneau from Excur- ion Inlet were D. J. Schalbach, Charles Leisticry James C. Shelton, Frank P. Rankis, William Hornby. 1 Passengers Sitka yesterday Helen Butcher, sen, L. Horace Trollope, Frank Yarnot Murphy, R. C Bert, Lawrence Pa for were Martha Ridley, ell Clithero. Arrivals from Kr Peter J enge Sitka were Walter Krus, C. S. Jordan, L. A. Lawrence, M. Petrowcki From Funter, Walter Kashevar- off was an incoming passenger; from Gustavus, arrivals were H A. Kenyon and H. Hartley. O. W. Keuther was a passenger with ACA from Petersburg to Ketchikan and on the return flight, Dave Westerberg and T. H. Strom- kan to I’lll‘l\l)m;, and Hazel Arnold | wherever invasion comes! THE Associated Press plans its war reporting for this and hundreds of newspapers as a general plans a campaign—far in advance! Months before the invasion of Africa, AP's Chief of Foreign Service, John Evans, strength- ened the staffs in London, Cairo, the Likewi AP looked to its commu: The result was AP flashed the first story from . the Second Front. It continued to prov-d. read- ers of this newspaper with superior npomng to the finish of the campaign in Africa. Meantime, AP prepared for the invasion of Europe. It is ready with @ chain of American- staffed bureaus that virtally ring “Fortress Europe”’—London, with more than a score of seasoned war reporters .under AP Chief of Iceland to Iran. vasion comes! Bureau Robert Bunnelle; Algiers, with the crack staff under Chief of Bureau Edward Kennedy that covered the African campaign; Cairo, with a staff equally expe Mediterranean and Near East; Bern, in the heart of Europe; Madrid, Stockholm, Ankara, Moscow, not to mention roving At home a corps of specially recrvited experts under the direction of AP Fox Glenn Babb, is on hand to edit the news of invasion. Many were AP foreign correspondents in Tokyo, Berlin, Paris, London, Madrid, Rome. Thus AP and this newspaper are ready—at home and abroad — wherever, whenever in- nced and assigned to the spondents from n News Editor, | [I!llhl L amous | weighs| THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU ALASKA FORTY FIVE LEAVEHERE FOR SOUTH here from Sitka last were Louise Olson, Carrol Bjordahl, Helen Reichman, Elsa Martin, Fanny John, Jonny John, Eliza Phillips, Jack Shepard, M Miles, Edith Robertson, Joseph A. Goard, Vernon C. Brooks, Dr. Paul Singleton For Alaska Ports pass from Juneau Al were, Charles Bessie Quin- aking to Southeast Petersburg, El T Mills, Marcelo Quint to, Marcedes Quint to For |son; nner, Wrangell, Gertrude for Ketchikan, T. N. Bom- carl Kerr, Christopher Nel- Roy Peratovich, John L. ‘Theodore Swink Leave for Seattle Passengers leaving Juneau for |Seattle last night were Harry G. Ask, George Cattanch, Albert Drex- ler, Robert V Olaf Ol- sen, Elizabeth Purane lin, Hildur Johnson ton, James Tormey {chett, Marian Richey, Ann Richey, |Betty Richey, Elwyn G. Gleason, EV:I(']\(‘] E. Young, Charles L. ner, Walla Stogn Mrs, erson, Mary Lou Fagerson. Harry G. Maxwell, Emil Norden, Walter J. Dahl, Benson R. Phil- {lips, Edmund Plazewski, Roy ;Klll‘.:h\_ 5. W. Robertshaw, Albert| K. Harris, W. E. Woods, E. M. Hon- Clarence Mowe, A. Skluzac Halver- |stead, son Swink, Sandber A. L. Pinker- Leslie R. Bur- nold, and D. K. MacKechnie were pa |sengers from Ketchikan to Jun Today's Flights Passengers for Excursion Inle today were K. W. Trooper, John Perlas, Armand Erstad. Arriving in Juneau from Excursion Inlet today were Clarence Elford, C. Kukitas, L. E. Love, S. C. McIntosh, Harry rison, R. E. Musphy. On a charter trip to Hoonah and | return, P. J Octanes were to Juneau Andrae and John M incoming -, HOUSE PASSES ALASKA COURT TRANSFER BILL = WASHINGTON, House passed and ate bill providing June 25. — The sent to the Sen- a for holding a general term of the United States | District Court at Anchorage, instead of at Valdez. KANSAS CITY, —Motor- ists who waste rubber with excessive speeds will have their pocket books Floyd Fagerson and dah were passengers from Ketchi-| punctured. Speeders will be fined $5 plus an extra dollar for every mile over 35 (on 25-mile streets) or over 40 (on 35-mile streets). Edmund B. Smith and Earle W. Frost, municipal judges, think that will help drivers remember the na- 5-mile-an-hour rule. LET'S GO OVER QND SEE THE \WWD Hoas ON NMONA \SLAND TOORN , SNUEFFY e Ry THE BYLINE OF DEPENDAB]LITY 1943, King Features Syndiclte Inc , Marcelo Quin- | , Floyd Hef-| _'wh,.m "ham | passengers | Plane, Train involved in Freak Wreck Pilofs Collide - One Air- pane Falls in Front ‘ of Train THVILLE, Mass.,, June 25.— anes collided and burst at high altitude and hed directly in front of a h passenger train bound ter and Boston, derail- engine and five coaches pilot of one plane safely and the other is be- lieved to have perished in his burn- {ing ship None of the in passengers W hlhrul THIRTY-SEVEN ARRIVE HERE FROM WEST from were 80t Twc into w ing t The | chuted 150 the approximate hurt, but a \lx;m cut tr {er the Wade K. E Wil Juneau night Hart, Mrs Sylvia Ross Arrivals in | Westward lakt ‘Lm.\ sarah {Johnson, Mrs. liam Finecane, William {Frances Metken, Edward Putnam, | Bdward Warner, Alfred Seip, Edith Ohman, Mrs. W. C. Erwin, Bernard Zobel Fred F. Powell, ivan, Lawrence Dixon, Alice reffers, Grace Treffe Ralph Gertrude Treffers, Julia H Mary Harry, Samuel Harry, L. P. Callahan, James Jones. Thomas Denison, Walter mels, Chris Broten, John A. Louis Steiner, Thomas John L. Hendrickson, F. J Ketchikan Bound passengers boarded for Ketchikan. They F. Hebert, Bernard J ler C., Yesas, J Gucker, Willard E. B. Verg and Sulli- L. Blanche Charles M. Carlson, Treffers, Wil- Treffers, Jr., A Brom- Olsen, Seven vessel | Lisle ley, Jerry | Fausto | Ancheta | Seattle ‘Taking attle the were V\’.\lk(l Leocadid Bound passage from Juneau to were Daniel Thomas, Mar- garet Norville, Margaret Howard, | Léslie A. Sturm, Frank Sigmandli, Kanaclerk, Stanka Karodich, Emma J! Mize, Mrs. Mary Freeman, Mrs. Margaret rison, Mrs. Eleanor Heinrich, Mrs. Margaret | Chesley R. Moody, Robert R. Moco- dy, John Olsen e PHILADELPHIA - Faint heart, Private Victor Williams mused, nev- er won Janet Blair. So, entering a letter-writing con- test with other service men at the Stage Door Canteen the winner to take the curvaceous screen star to a movie premier—he wrote: “I'd be a damned fool if T didn’t want to take you out.” Naturally, he won. e BUY WAR BONDS NMOWRE FULLA COCONUT ALK (€ NA DON'T WaNT -1 ALREADY PAID 'EN & LEETLE U\S\T, cous\n <o World Tights reserved. para-* Beeson, Ralph | Grado, | Thorpe, Tveten, | JUST SN SOV TROPICAL ISLE . LOVE STORY OF BAHAMAS HERE Full Technicolor Feature [ Thrills Audiences at 20th Century Buy More Stamp: wa-burned and salt amanufacturing is- in the British their first Indies mo- saw after the contingent hortly ar- Hollywood Paramount Griffith and star Carroll and Stirling Hay- Paramount group came Hollywood to picture, “Ba- at the tion picture rival headed by Edward H a Producer-di- rector Madel den all film hama 20th The is the eine The the the P from Technicalor assage which is Century Theatre of “Bahama of. a modern Adam jand Eve garden paradise. It |starts out by bringing the lovely | Madeleine Carroll to the -pro Salt Cay hundred native operated by a Stirling interest women absent wife. Made- a determined girl who kno and how to cope with it, falls not knowing that story Passage” tory in a Wary ducing island of an is- | 1and | blacks, | bronzed Hayden, limited to a of several owned and giant of a man, whose in eine, 1m {in love with him, somewhere off the island is a wi {man with priority rights. By the itime she finds out Hayden is mar- ried, knows that loves her and not his wife, and to make him know it Provides enough romantic ment for anyon PACKERS SAY BEEF SUPPLY IS SERIOUS he she sets out What follows excite- she The Ameri- sserted under armed forces and ci- CHICAGO, June Meat Institute conditions the obtain needed beef vilian supply will have to be ly curtailed The meat packers' organization hundreds of plants have re- stopped slaughtering and caught between a price for live cattle and the roll- prices on their product - MANHATTAN, Kas landlords make the headlines by declining to rent their houses t people with children. Not so Mrs. H. K. Work. When she and her two children decided to join her husband, Lieutenant Work, U, 8. N,, in San Francisco, sl refused to consider any applicant seeking to rent her home here if the family didn’t have children. can present cannot sharp- said duced or packers are rise back Some \ LEGS W IN_wanda Steven- son is said to have most beautis *ful long legs in Hollywood. / offer— TI0 CENTURY FILMED IN GORGEOUS TECHNICOLOR ; \ora Robso? 3 produced PAGE THREE Juy More Jonds with 6.0 Q“ \ \\e\\awa‘i h‘N N W, SRF 3 and Directed Plus: Short Subjects and 30 Minutes Latest World News ‘Socks Cut, Even Shins Face Draft LONDON, ~The latest device for winning the war will he a strong draft on the shins thi§ winter The board of trade, which has been dictating clothing restrictions, ruled today that men will have to wear ankle-length socks nine inchs es long instead of the standard 14% inchers 4 Like other sawed-off wartime goods, the new model will be caled austerity” socks .o Cabaret Saturday Night. - Adv. Moose Empire Classifieds Pay! =—_———== } ,TA.I.ETS for NYPERACID STOMACHS v size Butler-Mauro Drug Co. _—== WANTED i = MAN TO CATCH DOGS THAT ARE RUNNING AT LARGE ON THE STREETS OF JUNEAU Apply at Office of City Clerk Until \7ictory Until Victory is won, everything we have to 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— 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. WAACS ON REVIEW — Members of the WAAC line up before planes at Bolling Field, Washington, D, C., for a picturesque review (ulnudent with the ornnlut n's rst anniversary. By BILLY DeBECK T S\NOW W NO'RE TW DOUBTIN'EST oL TOM W Ty WESTERN %EM\%F@\RE, . GOOG\E * “ GO \NTH the - COME OWT AN TLRSH NORE £ANGS, TRAST-TAN