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U Iz you.. with o BOMBARDMENT OF FUN! ADDED FUN EL BRENDEL in “Sweet Spirits of Nighter” CANOVA JOE E. BROWN EVERYBODY SING——LATE NEWS THEATRE THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURESI MRS. LINGO AND Blopd is created in the animals, bones of DAUGHTER LEAVE| medical attention, Mrs. e A. Lingo left for the south | 3 day. She was accom- panied by ker daughter, Miss Joan Lm'n 'lh(\ will fly to Washington, they will meet Lieut. L:Ilu) A tea that had been planned for this week by Mrs. Lingo and Mrs. Alf N. Monsen for Mrs. Dean Sher- man, whe is visiting her parents, Judge and Mrs. George . Alexan- der, and Mrs. A. B. Hayes, who has recently returned from California, has n postponed - STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, July 14 quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 6%, American Can| 90'2, Anaconda 287, Bethlehem Steel 65'2, Commonwealth and Southern 7/8, Cum ss Wright 8% General Motor: %, Granby Cop- per and Mining 5 7/8, International Harvester 74%, Kennecott 34'% New York Central 18%, N()l'lll(‘l‘n Pacific 17, Packard Motors 4% public Steel 20%, Steel 58%, Pound Dow, Jones avera lows: industrials 145.82, utilities 22.30. - For or, cremdr. Not everyone can own the finest pearl, or drive the costliest car. But America’s most distige guished beer is within the reach of everybody. SCHLITZ.. .. 50 fine it made a city famous. abeer America’s Most Distinguished Beer United States $4.04 re as fol- rails 38.11, | W. D. GROSS, SON i SOUTH LAST | W. D. Gross, theatre ! for the south last night, [ young out for | tion. NIGHT man, left taking his son medical atten- — e YHE BEER i ; v VK(')V]C“ ouT | Steve Vukovich, salesman, left for THAT MADE MILWAUKEE FAMOU® | Ketchikan last night on a business Ropr. 19437 0u. Schisiz Brewing Co., Muwauber, Wi | tTiD. New Tax Deducions PERSON CLAIMING NO PER' WHO HAS Kol :-gm ‘flm d-vm MARRIED rwxuh(uww HALF OF PERSONAL EXEMPTIC MARRIED EXEMPTION JMARRIED PERSON CLAIMING ALL HO HAS §HEAD OF A FAMILY WHO HAS F PERSONAL EXEMPTION 8. 8 883 55333 8B DoNe awpl 8838 ssgs: o7 Tipog 3% 82 i HIS chart shows the amounts withheld from wage and salary earners under the new Pay-As-You-Go tax effective July 1. By finding your classification and dependency status and salary range, and reading classification column down and salary line across, you will find your tax at the point at which they m 101 Closing | , Re-| THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA JUDY CANOVA, JOE E. BROWN IN COMEDY HIT "Joan of 01ark Feature| Opening Tonight at Capitol Theatre FROM SOUTH | | " | engers anm-d here this from the south and l"“ afternoon for Sitka: | Passengers for Juneau from Se-| attle were: i LeRoy A. Feirzli, William H. Cur-| ran, Edward E. Potts, W. C. White, Tuneful, colorful and mirthful are|yr joan M. Schigelone, Jean He- | the adjectives by which Republic’ “[lund»-x William T. Mahoney, Mrs.| new Judy Canova starrer, “Joan of| anna Lowell, . Mrs. Rose Taylor,| s described in advance pub-iprs. Letha M. Crawford, Mrs. Helen| licity from the Capitol T‘“‘““""{E Miller, Helen Miller, Stanley| where the picture opens tonight.|gen . .dy, Matilda gota, MTrS. |« With Joe E. Brown playing oppo-| |Ruth I. Swank, Mrs. Cora M. Wil-| site her, the hilarious combination | |liams, Clifford Furness, the Rev.| is pretty to be a dlaugh sen-'j p Hurley, Mrs. Bernice Parker,| sation \Leslie F. Parker, Casper B. Tew, The plot John G. Evans, Samuel Kunz. { adventures after R. M. Green, Mrs. Florence Hei-| down pigeon bearing a|ge) Mrs. H. A. Stephanus, Kenneth age o from. a souegt i SPY|F. Martin, Wayne B. Carlson, Mrs. She becomes a national hcm'EWayne Carlson, Claire Dore, Mrs. ine, and Philip Munson, head Of|Glaire Dore, Ann Dapcevich, Mrs. the spy ring (with headquarters|nr Baker, Garland Baker, Bryan | in the Club 76, which he operates),| Baker, Mrs. Naomi Oakran, Lila | |veceives orders from the GestaPoiann Oakran, Marjorie Oakran, to immediately liquidate Judy as|maybelle Williams and Leroy Frisk. an object lesson to all Americans| pagsengers from Ketchikan were who might try to emulate her. Frank G. Demile, George N. Red- This complex situation launches|qing Helen M. Lynch, Bonnie Jo Judy on a series of mirth-packed|pynch, Tommy Lynch, June Ander-| adventures which Canova fans wm‘son, welcome with keen anticipation. | From Wrangell, Santiago Sonto- 2 g | from Petersburg, Arthur Ot- M.ASKA COASTAL "‘eZL:vZ‘,f‘g it 100 -BI1NE Wtk . PLANES KEEPING | BUSY SCHEDULE |Mrs. Phil Johnson, Lynn Johnson, | Fifty p mmmng .IMI this sure revolves around Judy’s she inadvertently a a |Harold B. Foss, Madge Muchmore, ! Albert Florence, Homer Crewson,| Ethel Lange, C. Powers, J. E. Wall- sted, Alice Allaine, Mary Martin| and Alex Martin. - A busy schedule being kept by |Alaska Cotstal Airlines as planes| |were in the air almost Loulmually ltoday end late yesterday. 1 Leaving for Haines this morning lon a flight were Rudolph Notar,| Jack Miller, W. A. Armstrong, Os- BASTI llE |car Larson and David Paddy. Re- [turning were J. B. Harris, Louie| . | Baffi and Eddie E. Swape i DAY FETE Going to Skagway this morning| were Fred Lang, G. M. Hill, H. A.' |Forayth and Stanley Jurik. On| the return were Mrs. M. Moe, G. |Laskin, Everett Sorsensen, Robert| | Hutt, Peter H. Hielm and Elton G.| | Boo Laval, Hifier, Musso- lini - Gen. DeGaulle Speaks Word | Burris. | . Going to Sitka with Alaska| |Coastal today were passengers A. |VanMavern, L. Blanche Homer,| (By Associated Press) Amy Montgomery, Jim Reed and| Reynoting Bastille Day opser- Mrs. Seeliger. On the return trip vances on three continents, Gen were Tern Masser, T. A. Harris,|Charles DeGaulle, co-chairman of |W. M. Wolfe and J. C. Gilker. |the French For Excursion Inlet were James Liberation, {Huston, O. Wilkennin, N. H. Carl- broadcast: son and S. Hull. Coming to Ju-} “After three years of trials the neau from the Inlet were A. Rob- French rise again.” |inson, Willlam Mesquit, D. D.| The name of Pierre Laval was [’I‘a\,lm H. J. Weait, A. Melo and |booed at the Algiers meeting along IM. E. Mollett. with those of Hitler and Mussolini Completing yesterday's b"sy‘Fn‘m‘h troops paraded in London, schedule, a trip to Excursion was|joined French troops in a parade made with the following: E. a@nd American and British soldiers {Whitehead, H. L. Skoog and on |t Algiers. the return were D. C. McLean,| % Harry H. Amold ‘and J. L. Hall, SE(' S'I'VIM’_SOO*" 'l'o Going to Ketchikan were Orthus Blixt, Frank Serifari, Jack H. Howe | and Jo Anne Randall. Coming back | TEA wITH KING {to Juneau from the First City were | 4 Rio De Cano and Walter Fuhrer. | OUEEN ENG[AND From Excursion yesterday were| [] 1 Jean McNuse, W. Kedrick, F. S.| Duchemin, Sterling Cooper, William McNoble and Tom Robertson. 1 Mrs. Smithmeyer, Mrs. John| Ebing, Martha Reddey and J. L. McNamara flew to Sitka yesterday. Returning were Mrs. William Ott, in Buckingham Palace. g S Loretta Ott, William Beatty, H. R.| 1 Bean and Margaret Close. Oh' we"' Excursion Inlet passengers were!'"ley Missed Lester Carlson, M. McCrite and| 3 Nothing Fred Manley. On the return were| Bennie Bell, Ed Bilodeau and D. G. Paxton. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN| |NORTH AFRICA, July 14.—Shab- bily, uniformed Italians captured m‘ Committee of National| said in an Alglers| LONDON, July 14.—Secretary of ‘War Henry L. Stimson and his of- ficial party had tea today with King George and Queen Elizabeth Going to Pelican yesterday were Sam Warburton and H. A. Wel-‘ lons. Paul Sorenson flew to Hirst.| |the Siclly invasion, have a chance | On the return the plane went via|, - tead 10 tHe aakiiers newspaper, | Excursion and picked up the fol- Stars and Stripes, that Mussolim” lowing for Juneau: Ted 8. THomP- ragied them in Sicily “I am with son, Roy . Owens, and H. L. you in spirit.” Skoog. The message was sent out from Making a trip to Sitka were Mrs. # A the Rome radio station but the| J. Winther, Jr., Wallis George, W. ",Italians did not get it. M. Wolfe and J. C. Gilker. Return- Ml BSOS Gy WP ing were Merle Scott from Sitka and J. W. DeChamplain, O. K. John Roosevelt Is In Smly Atfack Reede, Mrs. Ernest Rude and Mrs.| Fannie Mekom, from Hoonah. Last trip of the day to Excursion ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, July 14.—Lieut. John Roosevelt, one of the sons of Inlet was made with Mal Turner| and C. E. Smith as passengers. Re- the President, is one of the officers on an American destroyer protect- turning were Andrew Crisco, Ed- ward Hayes, Art Waligma, Gerald M. Lueke, B. M. Thomas and E. G. Whitehead. e Bay area, Sicily. jand $5,000 medical expenses. ing American landings in the Gela |says the child, named Sharon, was in the Westward on official busi- 50 ARRIVE SAYS JAPAN ¥ WARNEDU.S. ABOUT WAR NEW 14 Ambassador that Japan's ‘Foreign Mlniswr warned him in the spring of 1941) that if the United States got into oting war with Germany, Japan 1 go to war sald Yosuke Matsuoka told mocracy was bankrupt and the day of great military YORK Julv - I“mmm wot Grew | him De “this is power Grew said Matsuoka said Ger- many will win and Japan will sta- bilize the Far East. CUTDOWN CANGOODS, CIVILIANS Less Allotted by War Food Administration This Year WASHINGTON, July War prospective supply vegetables and soups, nation’s canned juices for the next 12 months. This is a somewhat smaller quota than now allowed. The total allo- is 213 million 278 million and an average 1935 for civilians compared with cated cases, bought last year, of 225 million a year from | through 1939 MANY NAZI FIGHTERS SHOTDOWN [Forfresses Get 45 - Huge Raid Is Carried to French Targets LONDON, Jnlv 14.—Strong mations of Fortresses light planes attacked German installations three points in France. The Fortresses destroyed more than 45 enemy fighters, and U. S. ‘Thunderbolts shot down three more German planes while other fighters accounted for three more. The huge Boeings bombed an air- craft repair and assembly plant at Villa Coublay, an aircraft factory at Lebourget, an airfield at Amiens. “Bombing results were good at all targets,” the communique said. Eight bombers and four fighters were lost. GETS SENTENCE FOR REVEALING SECRET PLANS for- LONDON, July 14—A military | court martial has sentenced Private Arthur Ingebredsten, of North Minneapolis, Minn., to five years imprisonment, for disclosing details of a new type of combat plane in conversation with two RAF non- commissioned officers in the pres- ence of civilians. - HENRY FONDA IS ACCUSED IN SUIT LOS ANGELES, Calif., July 14.—| A woman identified by lawyers as Barbara Thompson, has brought suit against movie actor Henry Fonda, 37, now in the Navy, charg-| ing he is father of her child, and asking for $2,000 monthly support She born June 21 Receipts of Catfle Now At New High CHICAGO, Ill, July 14. — Cattle receipts have climbed to new highs, breaking' the Nation’s worst beef shortage. Packers expect producers will soon flood the markets. -~ — SWEET TW' oY, NE DECK-S\WNOBBERS “ FOLOWNY MONEY TO SQLANDER TRINN -DaD FOSS TO SITKA H. B. Foss, architect, left Sitka today on a business trip. for PAPPY NEEDS A LEETLE CuT THE ORETION AN RO/ Joseph Grew declared | 14. — The Food Administration has allo- cated for civilians, 70 percent of the of 53 percent of the canned fruits and and RAF and !izhbrr-bnmbers‘ at EW COMEDY ON | SCREEN TONIGHT | . FOR FIRST TIME| i Marry the Boss's Daugh- | r"" Opens at 20th ‘ Century Theaire | He was a bright young man.| {“Why waste your technique on the 'typist when the same line will land daughter,” he thought And so Bruce Edwards, in 20th Century-Fox's “Marry the Boss' Daughter,” the new attraction slat- led to open tonight at the 20th Cen- tury Theatre, followed the advice of Professor Robert Emmett Rogers of the Massachusetts Institute of | Technology, who said that the only |way for a young man to get nlnm, [these d is to marry the b di hter. This comedy starts with Bruce, a young man from the West, com- imp: to New York to seek his for- tune. He is a very systematic fel- low. He starts at the Battery, and files an application in every office on the way up town. But no one seems to want his particular type |of genius, Then he has a stroke of luck. He finds a dog belonging to Bren- da Joyce, the beautiful blonde |the boss' Brenda goes for his unusual tech- nique, and talks Pop into giving ithis handsome boy with a tricky |line a job. How he sells himself to |the boss’ daughter and—the boss! —promises to make for an unusual comedy film. - POPULATION INCREASING IN AMERICA WASHINGI‘ON July 14. — The resident population of the United States increased more than 300,000 during the first year of the war despite the increasingly large num- |ber of troops sent abroad, the Cen- |sus Bureau reports. Os of last December 1, the Census Bureau estimated the resident pop- ulation oi the U S as 133,949,529, Red Army Allatks In Kursk Salient MOSCOW, July 14. — The Red forces on the southern end of the Kursk salient have launched a ser- ies of fresh local counter-attacks as a follow up of the successful re- | enlarge the Belgorod bulge yester- day. That the Russians are still able to take the initiative after absorbing the toughest German blows, is taken as a healthy sign of the calibre of the Army. - .- MERCHANT SHIP SUNK OFF EAST WASHINGTON, July 14. — The Navy reports a medium sized U. 8. merchant vessel was torpedoed and sunk early this month off the east | coast. Survivors were Charleston, 8. C. fil it R 'ADMIRAL'S WIFE | ASKS DIVORCE BALTIMORE, July 14. — Circuit |Court Judge Eli Frank said Mrs. Adelaide Stirling, wife of Rear Ad- miral Yates Stirling, retired, has filed suit for divorce, charging her husband with misconduct involv- ing another woman. They were married in Manila in 1903, and have five children. e HESSE RETURNS ON William A. Hesse, | Highway Engineer, returned last |night from Seward. He has been |ness for the pat few weeks. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH HEN , SNUFEY ¢ WHERE \@ BEEN WD T LAST Conela daughter of tycoon George Barbier. | pulse of the German attempts to| COAST, REPORT landed at | BOAT LAST EVENING | Territorial | PAGE THREE WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAYI (5 CENTURY STARTS TONIGHT? BRENDA | IIWGE GEGIG! JOYCE " EDWARDS BARBIER | A 20th Contury-Fox Picture COMPANION FEATURE and LATE WORLD NEWS "RIGHT TO THE HEART” Notice >an American announces with pleas- ure the resumption of our Juneau- Fairbanks Electra Shuttle Service. JUNEAU-FAIRBANKS Via Whitehorse p, FIVE FLIGHTS WEEKLY Connections to all interior points. gy 135 So. Franklin Phone 106 LAN AMERICAN QIR 1} “)N‘t to remain in Juneau for a few WH"EHORSE (ouplE d‘ ys on their honeymoon and age MARRY IN jUNEAU“ the Baranof Holel. R “"BILL" W"lTl’. T Miss Aflsa l)lvksun and John Paul ! BACK IN JUN!W lJones were married last evening| W. C. (Billl White, former mail at a quiet ceremony performed by carrier and formerly of Gusta the Rev. C. E. Rice at Holy Trinity |is back in Juneau after spending Cathedral. the past two years in the The bride and groom are from States. 3 ‘Whitehorse, where both are with Pan American Airways. They ex-' Emplre Classifieds Payl WANTED- L] TWO WOMEN to clean theatre and apariment house hallways. Good steady work and good pay. [ Apply 20th Century Theatre Office By BILLY DeBECK Q PAR 0 SAWLERS JES' LAORNT ME \WHET TUET TUAR \NORD * SCNTTLED “ MEANS