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TUESDAY, AUGUST 17, | TONIGHT! 70 Loretta YOUNG Brian AHERNE WEDNESDAY—THURSDAY mflfl ERS, as "KIT" I R A JOYLE," America s White- [ o Collar Girl, heroine of the sensational novel by R I Ohristopher Morley:: The NSRS Natural History of a Wo- Wan;::With DENNIS MORGAN, AMES ORAIG, Eduardo PSRRI Oiannelli ,Ernest Cossart | o E | Gladys Cooper., Direoted by Sam Wood, who made "Goodbye, Mr. Chips. 0 i 'KITTY: FOYLE' Show Place of Juneau 943 'MYSTERY-COMEDY | AT CAPITOL SHOW | T END TONIGHT, MoviesSole Business of | . ! Loretta Young and Brian Aherne,| m |a r co-starred in Columbia’s “A Night| new comedy | i | | | | to Remember,” a gay showing at the Capitol Theatre rnx“ the times tonight, probably are| : i :'l‘("'m“ ‘d:m"‘;“"\' sxgtipiee o6 ffll"d\ HOLLYWOOD—Among Holly- wood’s stellar coterie of side-line et oy, - youlk t‘“\ll)h"‘h”_me“‘ shopkeepers, elite kennel| who blithely walk into their new| ... - ang gold mine entrepren- | home and the most mirthful MUr-|oirs the name of Claudette Colbert | der mystery of the season, Loretta ;" onnicuously missing | and Aherne are talentes good to| por all that, our Claudette is one | look at, and eminently fitted to[uf our most successful business wo- their wise-cracking characteriza- The only board of directors |on which she sits is a one-woman writer Oof poard whose attention is devoted who-dun-its, dragged by his wife solely to the business firm of one into Greenwich Village, because she)C. Colbert, actress. Probably be- has an idea that a change of scene!couse she tried the other things! will ins| him to more seriouslonce and learned a lesson, she is effort |content to make acting a full-time As the inquisitive and, job, | the timorous hero, Loretta and| Not that she doesn't admire the Aherne brillianily head an im-|others who can rush from roles to portant cast which includes Jeff|rural enterprises and back again, or| Donnell, William Wright, Sidney|turn a neat profit on a real estate Toler, Gale Sondergaard, Blunketd?ul between ~emotional scenes. | Yurka, Richard Gaines and Umx-}fl‘al sort of thing is not for Col- |ald MacBride. Richard Wallace di-|Dert—it's a mystery to her how they By ROBBIN COONS Seen as Nancy married men tions. Jeff is a novelist, a heroine |Red Star said “very |are raging around Kharkov. | Germans are meeting with success in their counterthr rected the new comedy which was|d0 it- screenplay for “A Night to Remem-| This Is her tune and she sings | | with conviction: | noy and Jack Henley. g = lieve if .you're an actress and want| - - | { {main there, then that’s a business| | {which demands all your time. You| | that business until you have become | | ON BRYANSK an expert. If you aren't an expert | i )’out of it. i don’t Bnow anything about Lhe‘ MOVES FAST |urant business, so I stay away from | [them. And if you sink money into every detail, and have to rely on | f C't St," R . l | someone else to run it for you on ¥ It has been nearly ten years since | uhice at Kharkov |Claudette had a lesson in the prime | (Continued from Page one) vancing a career. Luck was on her | side that time. Al her fans knew | The|“It Happened One Night” was un- little | favorable, and she went into the produced by Samuel Bischoff. The| " wa yritten by Ri Flour- ber” was written by Richard Flour-| BRGNS THY GONCREANANAT Nes {to build yourself to stardom and re-| HRUST 'must get to know every phase nr‘ in any enterprise, you'd better stay | | dairy, machine, furniture or resta- R i W_th, 15 M_I something you don't understand in | | your money, then you're foolish. | pllng £ | importance of proper vehicles in ad- | tense battles”|that her judgment on the script of de- | picture hesitantly. When it made THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA ltalian Staller | Marshal Pietro Badoglio (above), the Allies insistent demand that Ttaly be blasted from the war. ; Premier of Italy, who keeps del rrender unconditionally four hours a day in an aircraft fac- tory, told a meeting of women shop dtewards representing 1,300 women war workers, that “queueing is the great hindrance to factory produc- tion.” Suggestions for the elimination of queues included: | Staggered hours for shopping; shops to remain open later at night and not, dlos¢at lunch time; certain hoyrs to be confined to war workers énly wasn't a financier. In fact, I have a hard time adding. A long time ago, I turned the arithmetic over to my brother who's an agent. What I earn, I make sure I invest in war bonds and annuities.” - . Women of Brifain in New Blitz By JOYCE ATWOOD LONDON-—Millions of British wo- men, weary of queueing in order to buy almost anything for sale in D 'ALASKA COASTAL ' RESUMES FLIGHT " SCHEDULE TODAY The following passengers flew to Britain Skagway today with the Alaska FLYING FILM ~ ENDS TONIGHT " 20TH CENTURY International Squadron” seen for | the last time tonight at the 20th, Century Theatre, gives Ronald Rea- gan his first starring role. Reagan,| whose work in such pictures as “Knute Rockne-All American’ and “Million Dollar Baby proved to his studio that he was ready for | stardom, was recently chosen by the Motion Picture Herald's Exhibitor Poll as “a star of tomorrow.” Featured with him ‘in the excit- ing film story are Olympe Bradna William Lundigan, Joan Perry and Reginald Denny “International Squadron” was di- rected by Lewis Seiler from a screen play by Barry Trivers and Kenneth Gamet, suggested by a play by Frank Wead D e Coast of Borneols Hit Twice American ébnibers Make Another Record Flight of 2500 Miles - ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, Aug. 17— For the second time in less than one week, American bombers flew a roundtrip 2500 miles and hit Bali- kiaian on the southeast coast of Borneo, the Jap-held area. Six Zeros were shot down in the raid. Pilots observed the results of the first flight which showed oil tank- ers and oil storage tanks had been i All | base. 40 BUY bombers returned safely to e §5,000 " PAGE THREE WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAY TO0 ENTURY NOW PLAYING! THEY'LL CLIMB TO ANY, ‘CEILING"IN A FLIGHT! THEY'LL REACH For ANy | 4 DANGER J/ A WARNER BROS. HIT, with nnNAln HEAGAN (OLYMPE BRADNA- WM. LUNDIGAN « JOAN PERRY s the reck lovable Yankee Ace! REGINALD DENNY - Directed by LEWIS SEILER Burone ey by Barry Uivers & Kennath Gomes + Sugaesind by o Plas by Frosk Weodeh Warner Weor. e Netowel Pleiws. LATEST WORLD NEWS 1918 had made the nerves of the German people “acutely sensis tive.” Observers say the German | people now are probably not hungry as in 1918 but they ‘are probably as war-weary. 4 moral shock to the towns in western Germany Sub- jected to enemy air raids called for effective and speedy meas- o The weight on Germany during all of World population of of bombs dropped |Red Star said the Soviet army spite their use of picked troops. The | her a star and won her an Oscar Nazis back losses. the heavy throwing tlicting and |inventory has helped. The Russian troops are driving | Sharp—the record of her films is the s| proof. is | besides, she had to take stock of her in- abilities as a story-picker, and the Today she's are attempting to end the | practice which they claim is costing them jointly millions of hours a year. Movie and bus queues were fre- (quent in peacetime but the shop- godstal Afrlines: Leland G. H. J. Anderson, and (Hansen. Return passengers Malcolm Mae, Catherine mick, W Piery William O wer McCor E. Spencer, and Margar-/ IN WAR BONDS AT THEATRE HERE Forty persons purchased $5,000 e| War I was estimated at about 1,600 tons. This summer in a single 45-minute d on Duisburg, the RAF dropped 1500 tons of explo- sives, And in a recent one-night | And it was Nazi morale buildér Goebbels himself who, in Septem- ber, 1942, in instructions to his edf- tors, said: “The German people more sensitive than the British. .. Enemy air attacks on German |ping queue is a war child which w with the increasing scarcity of certain commodities not yet on the regular ration list. Ministry of Food et “Holmes, {worth of War Bonds at the Capi- Flying to Haines were Dorothy tol Theatre during the two-week 20seland, James G. Taylor, and|“Send-Your-Name-To-War” cam- Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sorrels. The Paign, Homer Garvin, manager, re- officials say the United States will geturn trip: brought V. E. $ehorn-|ported today. soon face the same problem NOW pel and Peggy Goodrich to Ju-| All persons signed their names that rationing has begun. | neau fon a scroll which is being sent to blasting of Hamburg the bomb ton- | cities will, in forthcoming months, nage was estimated at 2,600, create a inost decisive problem fh Hunger and war weariness in!internal politics.” w MOTORSHIP PATRICIA PLYING BETWEEN JUNEAU, HAINES and SKAGWAY LEAVES JUNEAU Tuesdays and Saturdays at 8:00 P. M. " TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY TICKETS and INFORMATION at PERCY’'S CAFE Where all small packages may be left. | through shattered German defens 29 west of Karachev and have ap-| She likes to vary comedies with CORDOVA CITY FINANCES |proached within 15 miles of Bry-|MOTe serious stories. She will frolic The finances of the city of Cor-|ansk, the Moscow communique sa . lightly lhrmf'gh pieces like “Palm doya are in excellent condition, the | ; RSt 4 |Beach Story” and “No Time for sum of over $27,000 being on hand iy ey b A :r‘i""vm:l‘:gn{:f“;’:l:“fi‘g; “};ilw;‘leu;*O Ligkpegloes m."l“’ i pra(h(e Bom s re “Remember the Day” or this year’s One hundred women, represent- v g 4 BUY WAR BONDS | H {1180 Proudly “We Hull» This story i it wollifsis of protestints Nragal D o usian . Tilews ook |92 SIGHE JReriney AvRNID O ' > Dropped on Village; o nurs o suiaun imcideiai. 2, i of B 2 8 0. pase, B . cona, ana - |puny, which il mier-tim_ihe | (] |is her first war picture, although . : ? S sh 1)3 0 ;‘ C. Steele, and to Hoonah the pas- names and place them on a plaque 2 H 2 4.0%. o |“Remember The Day” was back- | oiution to the problem whichig.,pers were Floyd Johnson and|in the cabin of a Billy Mitchell FOR SALE ‘One Misses 2 Kiddies .c.nic:"™. ever {mechianis sphon and Minleey ol i 0 Opamptann, {bomber on its way to the fighting SACRIFICE — Large 5-room fur-| mARNOQV, Neb, Aug 17—Six| The record would jusify her in-|" pooyeqpo zh,, ?,.mh; Union Coun- ! Coming from the Inlet were p,|front. nished house With 5 acres of lupractice” bombs dropped on this Sistence on making acting her sole | " tne qelegates will draw up a nine!D: C8vanaugh, John Ervin, Clar-| The scroll will be sent back after land, dishes, pots and pans,ready | platte County village with a popu- business concern. But expenenue‘wm( shopping plan collating views, | ¢0¢¢ Ward and E. W. Putman. |it has been micro-filmed and will to move in, garden tools, lum-|jation of 71 early in the morning, 210 played its part in persuading | omnlaints and suggestions, from| FW¥ing to Taku were Clara Ben-|then be displayed in the theater ber, shingles, nails, woodshe aused no casualties and there were | Der to stick to what she knows. {the women who are trying hard to €cke, O. F. Benecke and A, L./lobby, Garvin said. also 1-room shack with stove,ino explosions. “Once I tried the other things”|.,;yine factory work and house-|lammert. | DR s odds and ends. $1100 down, bal-| One of the bombs hit a house, She says, “but I never put money | ooping. | -oo |OIL BURNER CAUSE ance like rent. Mile 13, Auk Lake.| missing by two or three feet, two into any enterprise that ever earned| ;) ~omyigee Mrs, Dorothy Kir-| Utiless there is a military advan-| FIRE THIS MORNING, Phone red 325. children in their bed in their home, me a dime. Then I realized that T, "4q veor 614 housewife, who looks tagé Otherwise, the Army's policy| Fire resulting from an oil bur ST T Iaftal eight people, does all her own i to Keep twins in the same or-|ner in a house on South PFranklin' housework and shopping and works ganization. this forenoon called the Juneau T AR Fire Department out to extinguish the flames. No damage was re- ported. TR YOU'RE HELPING Ly SPEED THE DAY! e oo el s i Result of Allied Bombs | IMPORTANT WAR WORK o | .- s K I L L E n L o G G E R s ( In the United States there is ) ~ one motion picture theatre seat ‘ror every 12 inhabitants. and - After\fictory When the war is won, Pan American Airways will pioneer new standards of service for our friends in Alaska. 0. 5 of a series) (Continued trom Page one) tives and ‘“non-bombardable zones" | 2 . ... means that just that much sooner is Mr. Hirohito going to Many times, in the years we've been serving the Alaska trade, we've wished that our ships might have been made of rubber. Or some stretchable substance which would enable us to stretch them to accommodate some extra last- minute passenger, or must-go ton of freight. 3ut never have we wished this so fervently as we do today! war-worker we Every extra can carry . ... every extra ton of war material we can stow aboard start wondering why in hell he o < started this war anyway. And wishing that he hadn’t! And the sooner we set the little yellow emperor right in his think- ing, the sooner we are all going to get back to living our normal, peaceful existence. So, next time you are unable to get a berth, or cargo space, on an Alaska vessel, remember that the soldier, or workman in that berth you couldn’'t get, or the war material in the cargo space you couldn’t have, is helping speed that day when Alaska will again be Alaska . . . . one of the happiest, healthiest, most thoroughly-livable areas on the face of the earth. NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION CO. SERVING In War 7 ATy Alaska DEPENDABLY In Peace Certificate of Availability Required U. S. Employment Service 124 Marine Way, Juneau Lynn LErosby‘ to be under the supervision of a | committee of neutrals.’ , A few days later Winston Cchurill | said: “Nothing will turn us from | our endeavor to accomplish the complete destruction of our foes by bombing from the air in addi- | tion to all other methods.” | And U. S. air chief General| Henry Arnold said: “We are gomg‘ to end the war and end it soon by bombing military objectives consis- tently. . . . Axis morale is already beginning to crack.” | Major Grosskreutz, writing in the German military publication at the Gastineau Hotel, Juneau “Die Luftwacht” in October, 1928, | said that the reason for thel Reichstag’s air-raid limiting pro- posal in 1918 was that “the severe | Meanwhile, we are 100, engaged in the war effort — with every passenger and every ounce of cargo priorited by the Armed Forces—and we appreci- ate your patience and understanding when the accommodation you want is not available. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH THE B0SS OF NAVY WTIELWGENCE Gk SENT FOR MOW AN You WHAT'SA | W8S SLEEPWY, B\G \DER - THA'S I TRVYW To TAKE \S (T QGAWNST T LAW W TRWNDAD To Q L\TTLE S\ESTA, W\SE G\l;( 2 By BILLY DeBECK GOOGLE - L KNOW \WTELL\GENCE SN T N NOUR LINE - HOWENER |, / /! T WOULD LIKE YOUR OPLNION 7