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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1943 "“‘\); -, /wa\\ Bruce BENNETT W"‘W FIELD Jolin BEAL | SECOND FEATURE | “PARDON MY GUN” with CHARLES STARRETT “THE PERILS OF (Sat. Mat.) —LATE NEWS Howdy Bills! AllYouElks! FIRST Ladies’ Night of the Winter Season SATURDAY, GCTOBER 2 Just for Elks and Their Ladies i Dancing Starts at 10 o'Clock PAS Club Rooms Open at 9:30 s Plenty of Amusement Entire Night ! viceable in eight days from now.”| NEW STOCK Floor Lamp Reflecior Bowls ALL SIZES Floor Lamp Breakage Replacements * Alaska Electric Light and Power Company Juneau Phone 616 Douglas Phone 18 ' DOUBLE FEATURE | APPEARS NEXTON | CAPITOL S(REEN‘ Break-neck action, fabulous ad- venture and thundering thrills are promised for Capitol Theatre pat- rons tonight, when Columbia's “At- lantic Convoy” blazes its way into that theatre. Featuring Bruce Ben- nett, Virginia Field and John Beal in its cast, the new thriller tells a | dramatic story of Uncle Sam’s fly- | |ing Marines and their valiant ef-, forts to blast Axis subs out of the North Atlantic. Directed by Lew Landers, the| film is said to be a magnificent trib- 'nl( to the devil dogs of tie air as ‘ shows them in action hunting down -boat raiders; thus guarnn-“, (ng that ships, ships and more | ships will get through to foreign shores to keep OIld Glory flying| wherever the battle rages. In a gun-roaring round-up of| bandits and rhythm, Charles Star-! rett is back again in his latest Col-| umbia outdoor adventure drama, “Pardon My Gun” on the double | feature program. The new thriller |also features Alma Carroll, Arthur “Arkansas” Hunnicutt and Texas| |Jim Lewis and his Lone Star Co\\-{ boys. 1 | (ONOUEST OF - GREAT PORT - NOW ENDED Allied Forces Claffer Info! Italy’s Third Larg- est City miles north of Naples still is con- sidered the most likely line for the| next major fighting. The United Nations radio at Al- giers said naval experts at Allied| Headquarters estimate that the| Harbor of Naples in “its most im-| portant respects can be made ser- Meanwhile, the British Eighth Army is officially reported as mak- ing a rapid advance northward from Foggia to Manfredonia, along the Adriatic, although a communique | !made only this cryptic statement (of the progress. | —>e 'Befuddled Taxpayer's | | Headache May Be Eased ' Filing Income Refurns (Continued from Page One) | - Use of the March 15 simplified tax | forms is now limited to persons with incomes of not more than $3,000. If those with incomes up to $5,000 were allowed to use such a form, | several million persons would get some relief from the tax-figuring | heeble-jeebies. | Washington tax authorities are | also studying a proposal to combine the Victory tax with the income tax, “domg away with the complicated | figuring of different exemptions and | post-war credits on Victory tax. | Another proposed “simplifier” is | the elimination of earned income credit. One idea is to compensate | for its ablishment by fixing surtax | | rates at lower levels in low income | brackets. i All this may be scant consolation i for folks who face a probable in- | crease in taxes of some kind next | year, but even the smallest relief is | something these days. - CONVICTED OF TREASON, APPEALING ‘WASHINGTON, Oct. 1.—Anthony |Cramer, New Yorker, convicted and sentenced to 45 years imprisonment and fined $10,000 for treason in helping two of eight Nazi saboteurs who landed in the United States from submarines, wants the United States Supreme Court to review the conviction. Cramer challenges that there isar insufficiency of evidence to sustain the conviction and also contends that prejudiced evidence was ad- mitted at the trial. e BILLY WILLIAMS BACK AS NIGHT PATROLMAN Billy Williams, Juneau's Night Merchant Patrolman, is back on the | now, | High School, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE~JUNEAU ALASKA OREGON BOND SALES SAVE 7 DRIFTERS Men on Raft 13 Days Until State Filled Ifs 0uota PORTLAND, Oxe;..on Oct. 1.— Oregon has filled its quota in the Third War Loan campaign and the State's seven men on a raft earned the reward of a square meal about an inch square. Doctors denied the men anything more substantial, warning their stomachs had shrunk after the 13| gruelling days aboard a Navy raft in Portland’s harbor. The men had pledged to stick it out until the State reached its quota. They were lifted from the; river last night as Oregon reached its $104,000,000 bond goal and wob- bled ashore with cries of “Oh, Boy, | We Eat Again!” The seven men bvgnn the affair| g expecting a “rescue” within six dnya and their rations dwindled rapidly. | Toward the end, only a small piece | of pemmican and two milk tablets daily were their rations. o — Backlire Hits Dictafor of Germans LONDON, Oct. Just a year‘ ap,o, Fuehrer Adolf Hitler promised | the Germans that Su'\linxrad would be taken. | This speech is a “Nazis nightmare | said a broadcast to Axis oc-' cupied Europe last night by the| British Broadcasting Company. Since the speech backfired on Hitler, he has made only two broad - {casts to the Germans. e PAFKO ISNAMED MOST VALUABLE PLAYER ON COAST ST. LOUIS, Oct. l-—AndV Pafk’). 22, outfielder from Los Angeles, has been named the most valuable play- jer on the Pacific Coast by a com-| mittee of baseball writers. Pafko went to the Chicago Cubs Septem-| ‘ber 24 from the Angels. He won the honor over a field; (including John Dickshot, Hollywood outfielder and Hal Sueme, Seattle catcher. Pafko appeared in all the’ Angels’ 157 games and had 214 hits, | batted in 118 runs. High blood pres- isure keeps him out of the Army. —————————— | HIGH SCHOOL FROLIC | EVENT OF OCTOBER 8 | A joint frolic, planned by the Jun- | ior and Senior classes of the Juneau will be an event of October 8 in the Grade School Gym- ' nasium. The affair is to be informal and there will be a surprise enter- tainment during intermission. P 55 08 50 St A 7 STUDENTS TO GIVE VAUDEVILLE OCT. 22 ‘r Students of the Juneau ngh School will present a vaudeville show | October 22, the proceeds of which | will be used for financing the school | publications and for purchasing new | suits and equipment for the bas- ! ketball teams. BUY WAR BONDS CARA NOME FACE POWDER Instant new loveliness is yours when you use your tint of this exquisite pow- der—superior in quality, fexture, fint ECONOMY and clinging §jZE powerl GET YOUR s.;g‘ 2;“ TODAY BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. “The Rexall Store” AMERICAN DIPLOMACY | IS SLIPPING |Forced German Troops British Postwar Policies| Refreat in “"Many Functioning While U. | “’NI)ELBCS% lClalm S. Has No Policy Cinie Brosdos WASHINGTON, Oct. 1.—A criti- cal report of British commercial and diplomatic activities ma be laid before the Senate by members a 1ive man inspection committee, just returned from a 40,000 mile trip of the world's battlefronts. | While the committee members de- | West of Trieste. clined to discuss the publlcny lin phase, indications are they feel that American diplomacy economic ac- tivity is falling far behind the British. The gist of their complaint reported that the British postw: pdlicies -are already functioning In Baton twirling, tap, acrobatic, practical way while Amnuc(m ballets, moderne, e representatives are at a loss to ities. Stenographe know what this nation’s attitude to the many important world ques | tions when flghuuu is over. FOR SALE Full Set of Machines for Shoe Repair Shop 1 Landis 12 Stitcher—electric heat 1 Landis 12 Finisher 1 Circular Feed Shoe Repairing Machine 1 Sole Cutter 1 Repairing Jack and Last Outfit Hammers—Knives—Nippers—Pincers and so on or CALL AT THRIFT CO-OP STORE PHONE BLUE 285 AFTER6 P. M. ng,fimfim/ «o.You can spot it every time ‘T TAKES something extra...a plus...to make a:reputstion that everybody re spects. Coca-Cola got its reputation for quali- ty, because it has always been made the quality way out of quality ingredients. Coca-Cola is an original creation with a very special something to offér, found in no other drink ... a blend of wholesome flavors that creates for Coca-Cola a taste all its own, Yugoslav Guerrillas \\lu re in Yugoslavia The Yugoslavia bulletin was corded here by Reuters but made area, e e e is DANCING CLASSES Now body adv. There are many things for thirst but only one stands out for refreshment...ice-cold Wartime limits the supply of Coca-Cola. Those times when you cannot get it, remember: Coke, being first cheice, sells out first. Ask for it each time. No matter how short the supply, the quality of Coca-Cola carries on. The best is always the better buy! BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY Junean Cold Storage Co. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH WH-WHKT 22 / NEP-TUEY TooK, OFE BT \400 GWT - WE OUGHTTA BE NARD BIRD SNUFFY SMWTH \S ON HIS Waly o AFRICA 22 job tonight. Jack Javodsky, who has been relieving Willlams for some months, will retire for the time being to his cabin. SUNP'N 2 In Aclion A patriotic unmmunmuv broadeast from some- said guerilla |forces have forced German troops | 4 g excitement, a combination de- to retreat in “many places” near the voutly to be wished for and seldom northeastern Italian city of Gorfia. |, pieveq. fo| re=| no! The London Mail, however, quot- ‘ g German radio accounts, said the | guerillas have penetrated 100 miles | into northern italy Lo the Vewe chilling as the humorless Nazi, and ENRDLLIN(‘ tot’ rentris, special- of one and toning | ychieves its purpose | classes. Beginners ballroom dancing. | Studio, 411 Tth St. Phone Red 575, | | drugstore here. | | edy, | Ray Milland and Paulette Goddard, | of the type that is more than wel- TWO STARS IN SPY FILM AT 20TH CENTURY If you want a good, solid laugh it's going to be easy to get it by attending the new spy-chase com- “The Lady Has Plans,” with WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAY! TI0MENTURY NOW PLAYING! LETTE’S BACK is the objective at the front! Spy fun...sly funl AV now playing at the 20th Century ' Theatre. It is high-powered entertainment come in these troubled times. Every | moment of it is crammed with Iun} | Romantically it is hard to imagine ! a more attractive twosome than mention as to how far the irregulars | p. . iette Goddard and Ray Milland swept Goriia, 25 miles west of the Yugoslav border and 30 miles north- who appear together for the first | time. Roland Young as the polite but persistent Englishman contrib- utes in no small measure to the | general hilarity. Albert Dekker is; | effectively menacing and hlood-‘ Margaret Hayes is lovely and dan- gerous as the lady who really has| the plans. “The Lady Has Plans” is a pic- | ture designed for the entertainment | all. It more than MILLAND PAULETTE GODDARD Roland Young Margaret Hayes Edward N Amil’ [‘LN‘ WINGARD OUT | Cecil Kellaway L. G. Wingard, cannery man, left retenSIONY A today aboard the steamer for the south. e MORRIS LEAVES | Sam Morris, Sitka fish buyer, is aboard a southbound steamer booked for Seattle. | SCHUBERTS HAVE GIRL BABY A daughter, Lois Gay, was born 19 Mr. and Mrs. Guy Schubert on Zugust 26 in Corpus Christi, Texas, according to word received in Ju- reau recently. Schubert is now a member of the Naval Air Corps. He was formerly a ) harmacist in the Harry Race “Murder in the Big House”: and “Sundown Jim” D|mond Asks Salary - Of Alaska Secrefary | Advanced fo $8, m and Chiropodist. WASHINGTON Oct. l—AM Office 387 iDelegate Anthony Dimond has ins Lower Lobby, Baranof Hotel 1troduced a bill that would fix the salary of the Secretary of Alut‘ — .-, FEET HURT? If so, see Dr. D. W. Knowlea, ~ | latest scientific methods. Osteopath Home, Red 669 ldv at 38 000 nnnullly Labor Union Hall October?2 BOB TEW'S BAND pAS SERVICE Admission MOTORSHIP PATRICIA PLYING BETWEEN JUNEAU, HAINES and SKAGWAY LEAVES JUNEAU ‘fuesdays and Saturdays at 8:00 P. M. TICKETS and INFORMATION at PERCY’'S CAFE \NE\.\.-NE\.\.- ANT THAT ¢ 2 & GIN WO SPENT, emaaomea\l work | 20 NERRS “NO FURDERN ! o4 § TWELVE QWE FROM HOME, /FLNW ACROSS THE OCEAN. Where all small packages may be left. éy BILLY DeBECK o \S TS ON T BRCK OF T! NARD B\RD'S SH\RT 2 SOoNY T BE'; WES PLENTY | EXCITED & % Broiled Steak and Fried Chicken SERVED ANY TIME THE DOUGLAS IN. Dlll AHD DA-NCI OPIII UNTIL MIDNIGHT Flectric Hammond Organ Music DINE AND DANCE