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FRIDAY JULY 9, 1943 THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURESI CAPITOL Now! 2 Now! Show Place of Juneau Big F(‘at“"(‘s YOUR HEART TINGLE WITH THRILLS and ROMANCE! GLORIA DICKSON oTT0 KRUGER Winslow” (Sat. Mat.) ANDY DEVINE ELYSE KNOX News Republic Picture some essential while others Over-expansion dustries was side with small plants that the same job. programs are shot of some war unearthed, side complete neglect Role of Congress in War Mobilization Is (redited, Commitfees (Continued from Page one) itep in the right direction. “It would appear More than two months ago, Robert R. Reynolds, chairman ne Senate Military Affairs com- ittee, appointed a subcommittee a ar mobilization. When th beommitee brought in its report rwearly a month ago and a full two eweeks before President Roosevelt t up OWM, it didn't then «t more than pas It should have. “In brief,” mittee, “no ove existed (in the fort) nor any war s sibility of integrate essential The teel Sen of | duced virtually service station, ply requirement ber of claimants,” aid “Testimony of the War tion Board vice chairman E. Wilson) indicated that also has reduced station to the status of even mention e status. are made by maritithe and "ncies, the food the rubber director, (e poiroleum administrator.” WPB has authority over of them.) The though lished sing agency rvice tern: armed ions for reported all does now exis! gency exist which is to balance and| the various but equally programs.” | committee pointed to the shortage, which results in DANCE Elks’ Hall SATURDAY—JULY 10th 1I0P.M.to 1 A. M, BOB TEW'S BAND W Admission $1.00 . .10 program the respon- | no committee reported that WPB was originally SERVICE MEN 55¢ HAND-CRAFT RUGS Materials are absolutely new and selected for beauty of color and long- wearing qualities. Delightfully soft and thick. Easily vacuumed, and dry cleanable . . . A rug for every room and every season. For Luxury Underfoot THETHOMAS HARDWARE (0. Phone 555 Juneau, Alaska lagging | brings forward in-| by | most of could have done ple that the War Gloria Dickson.) Ramsey is obsessed | {follows: Manpower Commission has been re- attempting to sup- ted by a num- assumes the proportions of a ma- the committee|nia when he is cast on a swampy, Produc- (Charles thit to powers Unilateral | © the ship- adminis- and (And any m\‘ll)— to mobilize the nation’s re- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA TARY, TOMGHT STATEHOOD CARGO PI_AN[ attocat movie. ENDORSED Island”’ Featured at Capnol The drama within the drama of one of Uncle Sam's huge Army amps is brought to the screen with | sock, punch and speed in “Top Ser- featuring Leo Carrillo and |Andy Devine, which opens tonight |at the Capitol Theatre. adopted a resolution Carrillo and Devine are right “in{a study in order to make the groove” as a couple of old-time |Suggestions regarding the in Congress, introduced non-coms who have fought a dozen I Congress, 4 : . e e S her | tors William Langer and c-| 1 : together, battled each ot ran. {of Duluth. His wife and infant here. hundred times, and battled with The resolution points out there|daughter |the book of army regulations con-| 0“0 R0 noitions of attitude| The co-pilot was Raymond Van- tinually |in the question: derbush, 28, of South Minneapolis, | The triangle situation, always re-| 1—Alaska should have the repub-land the radio operator was John |plete with drama, takes a DNeW|yjoqn form of government guaran-|Redus, of Little Rock, Ark twist in Republic's "Mercy Island,”|eeq by the Constitution to states| The plane was returning from a based on the popular novel by|of the Union, regardless of the|routine cargo flight north and was Theodore Pratt. The film, which ls‘monetmy cost actual or anticipated.|last reported when contacting a scheduled to open tonight as a sec-; Other Attitude field on the Canadian side of the ond feature at the Capitol Theatre, 2—If the actual or mmc,pu".d\bordel | six people together in alcost of Alaska’s political operation | fantastic chain of circumstances as a state will exceed the cost of | which provide background for aits political operation as a territory, | S'rl ke Ends Copper Again unusual screenpla then Alaska should remain a wr- Outstanding among these six peo- |ritory indefinitely because no new| is a young New York lawyer, sources of tax revenue are readily| One-third of Nation's Out- put Resumed when Condudors Return Warren Ramsey, and his wife, ch-;apparcm, lie (played by Ray Middleton and' The resolution then continues as BINGHAM, Utah, July 9.-One third of the Nation's copper pro- duction has been resumed in this section as the result of the strik- ing: members of the Railway Con- {ductors Union voting to return to |work immediately, ending the tieup of the Utah Copper Mines Com- any Earlier order DOUBLE BILL TO ALASKA AREA Passes Resolution on Sub Jed The Juneau Bar statehood for Alaska, and ! June 16 Association has! EDMONTON, Alberta, July 9.—A will make | United Army cargo plane, advocating ' 1ast. reported near the Alaska bor- further |der, has been missing since June bill now 18, officials of the Air Transport by Sena- Command announced today. Pat The pilot was Gilbert Enger, 32, | geant” are “The present war and other exist- |ing economic conditions do not lallow reasonable prophesy of gov- ernmental costs of even five years |hence. Your committee believes it |impossible to obtain definite figures |of either actual or anticipated costs jof Alaska's operation as a'state; in| fact, future anticipated costs of | | with the ambition to become 'hr‘ greatest criminal lawyer since Clar-| ence Darrow, and this obsession' | alligator infested tropical island nearly all of redelegated, for war, had been sources its py|Alaska as a territory cannot be| %! foretold. We assume statehood w simpler assume statehood will Beyond asure “However, your committee firmly the men making NEW YORK, July 9. — A DNB NEW YORK, July dispatch, broadcast from Berlin and recorded by the Associated Press here, declares the Germans de- stroyed 862 Soviet tanks and 847, aircraft in the last three days and| that fortifications in the Belgorod | area were “overcome at depth.” 9.—The Fed- erick Wright, identified in the in- dictment, as a Daily News copy ed- itor, agent for the Japznese Government and did not notify the State De- partment of such employment. Wright has surrendered volun- tarily and pleaded innocent to the| indictment charging him with being | a paid Japanese agent. - - JOINS STAFF AT WELFARE OFFIC Miss Frances O'Leary took over| YOUR BROKEN LENSES |her duties this morning as a cleri- \R,eplaced in our own shop. Eyes cal employee with the Department |Examined. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson. of Public Welfare. She came here| Blomrzren Bldg. Phone 636. adv. recently from Portland, Oregon. (apllol Show Scene Elysc Knox and Don Terry find romance in their latest picture “Top MISSING IN Juneau Bar Association! Army Transport Ship Not Heard from Since | National | GOVERNMENT AGENT eral Grand Jury has indicted Fred-| on charges he acted as a paid | PRIZE COMEDY ATTRACTION AT 20TH CENTURY EXteIIent (ast Featured in "Take a Lefter, Darling” Hollywood has come up new story idea, and cleverly now at the At last |with a refreshingly amusingly developed played. It is playing 20th Century Theatre The picture, ake a arling,” co-stars Rosalind Russell 1d Fred g with Mac- donald Carey, Robert Benchley and |Constance Moore in supporting roles. It was produced and direct- (‘(\ Mitchell Leisen. The plot concerns the determination of a ‘lughl\ successful business woman i‘Ro\nlmd Russell) to keep her back |turned on romance, and the equal ‘detelmunnun of her good-looking nmlt secretary (Fred MacMurray) |to make her do an about-face. There are riotous complications when a woman-hating tobacco | magnate (Macdonald Carey) also |falls for Rosalind. That stubborn {lady refuses to admit her infatua- |tion for MacMurray. To punish | her, he pretends to go for the mag- nate’s sister, Constance Moore, Robert Benchley as Miss Rus- sell's business partner, is funnier than ever. Leaving all the work in her capable hands, he spends his time playing with all kinds of games and gadgets. Take a Letter, vastly entertaining hubbl('s with good Letter, by is It and Darling” film fare. humnr nm ln be-missed hits. >-ee (lausein ~ Bill Hits (10, Claim _—— """ " from | em- | |"Legalizing Collusive: Agreemenis" Benefits A. F. of L. Confracts WASHINGTON, July 9. — The| Executive Board of the CIO has| condemned as “legalizing collusxvei | agreements” the action of Congress in decreeing the National Labor Relations Board shall not invali-| date any employer-employee agree- | ment of 90 days’ standing. | The prohibition is contained in a | |rider on an appropriatons bill now | |awaiting the President's bi[.;nal.ure.i | The immediate effect, it is| claimed, is to freeze AFL contracts| with the Henry Kaiser shipyards - 11Killedin Plane (rash, Dutch Harbor! SEATTLE, July 9—Mrs. Vernon Thatcher said that the Navy, in Inotifying her that her husband, | Lieutenant Commander Thatcher, |had been killed in the crash of a |Navy transport plane he was pil- oting at Dutch Harbor last Friday, said ten others on the plane were {also victims. g MISS ESTHER BOYD LEAVES FOR SOUTH Miss Esther Boyd, who was [Lcacher of the fifth grade in the Juneau Public Schools, left this week for the south. She plans to be married in‘the States and will not return to Juneau. ‘ E PHILLIPS NOW WITH U. 8. FOREST SERVICE Superintendent of Schools A. B. Phillips returned yesterday from a trip to Ketchikan, He has joined the staff of the U. S. Forest Serv- ice for the rest of the summer in connection with work on the Al- aska Airplane Spruce project. In the first year of war the fire loss to critical materials and lac-| xrgum. featured with Leo Carrillo and Andy Deviac. BAPNEY | GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH STAND BACK SNUEFY \NE'RE GONNG FARE & FEW .o beyond measure in monetary term The resolution is addressed to|Railway Labor Act. PRI L. Ickes' Maryland farm to join Hit London |alert in two weeks, but none of Estimates of Amounts Pos- | xecutive order or by the gty ’ expediency of having some com- |0t MOre money peting agency head merely take |the ball and run with it B believes that statehood, with its ac companying political freedom, even though difficulty may be found in BIG (lA I MS |comparing the tangible advantage and that only when Alaska become a state will Alaska be an actual| Feosdad member of the Union of States and | the canducto be able to aid in curbing the con-|Ployees of the Utah Copper which BY GERMANS stantly continuing, increasing evil|the strikers said deprived them of A. Hellenthal, president of the| g .lum-:m Bar Assoctation, and signed | ASSE” HUdeedS Of SOVIef committec making the investiga- tion, and members R. E. Robertson INDI(TED AS JAP Tanks, Planes Destroy- Ickes loses His Jap-Am. Rai ap-Am. Raiser WASHINGTON, July 9. — Fred great Kosayash, 24, gives up poultry rais- le University of Maryland’s physi- Kcal education class to teach judo. | Ickes has applied for another| |Japanese-American to replace Ko- | *|sayash. | Many Casualhes Expededw | LONDON, July 9—German raid-| iers dropped high explosives on a) town in southeast England and| struck a theater. Heavy casualties are expected. Ithe Nazi raiders were able to break | through to m(- city. sible Given Ouf by* Agency | WASHINGTON, July 9. — Com- PRACTICE ROWNDS — munity Credit Corporation officials | WERTCH OUT EOR sti they c ly | estimated they could spend legally | TAE RECO“_ \.\ - ! (Tomorrow: Blueprint for OWM) 'of statehood and territorihood of bureapcracy.” |their rights under the 1nd Frank H. Foster. ed on Russian Front lng on Secretary of Interior Harold —Raiders Unable to | London had the first daylight | . ‘ | (upwards of $175,000,000 in subsidies | DONT PROD NE, NE SHIF'LESS |by January 1 as a result of legisla- tion sent to the White House yester- | day. | However, most of the subsidies, |including meat and butter, will be !paid by subsidiaries of the Recon-| :.su-uc(ion Finance Corporation, whose officials said they had no es- |timates on amounts which might be paid. RFC payments have beén averaging about $450,000,000 a year. tories in the U. 8. was Sll)fl 000,000. e i oot T 52 GARDEN CLUB MEETING CGarden Club met yestéfda i Wellman ‘(\I! and a discussion of the ‘]rl‘.n\n(‘d for fate August | PA(‘F THREE WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAY IO CENTURY NOW PLAYING! 0 and 9:35 P. M. oot FRED M:MURRAY SHOWS AT ROSALIND remount Picty, "BENCHLEY-“*"“MOORE - I.EISEH CECIL KELLAWAY « Oicoctod by MITCHELL LEISEN - screen Play by Cloude Sinyon Plus 30 MINUTES LATE WORLD NEWS ALL NEW SHOW TONIGHT COLIZEUMN | THEATRE] ments were planned. ‘ It was also decided that the club purchase soil testing equipment for | use of members and friends in tests | ing soil for Vietory Gardens. -es ATTENDED BY THIRTY Thirty Juneau at the summer home for luncheon flower show members of the e e e 00000000 WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. Bureau) Temp. Thursday, July 8 Maximum 68, minimum 53 o0 e e 0000000 Holbrook Glacier Highway Committees were appointed by president and other arrange FOR SALE New Stock Floor, Bridge and Table Lamp Shades * Alaska Electric Light and Power Company Telephone 6 and 616 Juneau, Alaska Notice Pan American announces with pleas- ure the resumption of our Juneau- Fairbanks Electra Shuttle Service. JUNEAU-FAIRBANKS Via Whitehor: FIVE FLIGHTS WEEKLY Connections to all interior points. gy 135.S0. Franklin Phone 106 ' PAN AMERICAN AIRIN A} S BALLS 0 F\RE % T THNK T UARMNTS WWZ AN T ME W