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Every once in awhile a picture comes r-lon} . that has that certain eralded . . unsung . A5-YEAROLD ... Withall the courage and charm of “MRS. MINIVER” “One of the most moving books to come out of this war..." LIFE MAGAZINE “One of the truest and most touching stories of the war...” NEW YORK TIMES —ALSO— “Stranger Than Fiction” “Calling All Pas” Music Quiz News + AR, ‘something”’ that calches the publlc kmry and transforms it into a hit! gl - sleeper! in the motion picture industry call s Here is a picture of this type n a picture a HOMER GARVIN, Manager THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES! SECOND JAP *+3HIP FORCED UP ON SHORE (Continued from Page One) 17. — Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s spokesman today said “the South- west Pacific has something less than five percent of the Ameri tary resources and recei g under | ten percent of American shipping ! overseas.” The spokesman added that every- | thing possible was being done with | the available equipment received. The spokesman, Col. LaGrande Diller, made comment in the state- ment of Rear Admiral William Brent Young that “American supplies were reaching the Southwest Pacific in quantities sufficient for large scale operations against the Japs.” ————— AT GASTINEAU Hal Fairhurst, traveling man, is a guest at the Gastineau Hotel. Doll Bazaar Junior Trinity Guild Featuring Dressed Dolls Dell Clothes TRINITY PARISH HALL " JOURNEY FOR an mili- | MARGARET" 1 CAPITOL SHOW “Every once in a while a picture comes along—unheralded — unsung, |that has that certain ‘something’ It catches the publie fancy and |transforms it into a hit! We in the motion picture industry call such a picture a sleeper. Here is a picture of this type.” | This is the message to Juneau |moviegoers from Homer Garvin, manager of the Capitol Theatre re- garding “Journey for Margaret,” a dramatic, true-life human interest story of the war, which opens to- night Little Margaret O'Brien is the star jof the film, supported by Robert Young, Laraine Day, Fay Bainter, Nigel Bruce, and Billy Severn. The story concerns the adventures of a war correspondent in London during 1940, when Germany un- |leashed her all-out air offensive |against Britain. Young plays John | Davis, who with his wife, Nora (Laraine Day) is in London on a special assignment. Nora, expect- ing a child, is injured in an air {raid. An operation saves her but the doctor informs Davis that she never will have children. Heart- broken, Nora returns to America. Davis remains in London to com- |plete the assignment. While there he meets two war |orphans, Margaret and Peter. How |he rehabilitates their war-shattered nerves and brings them to the com- parative peace and quiet of Am- erica is the Lon of th sv.my UMW Soll Coal Workers Meef In Walshmglon,mvm.s IN 'WARM PRAISE Veteran film fans who were ad- mirers of Ella Hall will be pleas- ed to learn that Ella’s daugh- ter, lovely 20-year-old Ellen Hall, above, is soon to make her first movie appearance. Her father is Emory Johnston, actor-director- producer. Outcome of Session May| Be New Contraci-Ickes Starts Meeting WASHINGTON, Nov. 17. A United Mine Workers group of soft coal opeartors took the first steps| today to ward a new contract amid |signs of a new lineup developing |among operators. Conferees, including John L. | Lewis, got together at a meeting |relations between the Soviet Union {sponsored by Harold L. Ickes, Sec- |and the United States, pointed to retary of the Interior, who got the |{phe increasingly friendly relations |session under way and then left | them alone. ; The group agreed, after talking |a couple of hours, to meet again [ tomorrow, when it is expected a | formal conference of that body will be organized. Actual work on the contract mak- ,ing was begun by Ickes, boss of the (government-operated mines, who| | has been urging a new contract so { the miners would return to the mines for private operation. - L()l'l\ RAPUZZIS ARE HERE FROM SKAGWAY “ Louis Rapuzzi, U. S. Deputy Mar- | shal at Skagway, has arrived in Juneau for a few days and is at the Gastineau Hotel. He is accompanied by Mrs. Rapuzzi. — | MRY. DOOLIN, KETCHIKAN ! FOR REMAINDER OF COURT MOSCOW, Nov. 17—The Com- munist party newspaper Pravda in praise to American aid during the war. The editorial said: Union appreciated very much the moral and material aid accorded the Soviet Union by the United States since the beginning of the| invasion by Germany. It is known to us that during the war our country, on agreement has received a large amount of arms, war material, and food, and that the good will of the American government and the Am- erican people was invested in those supplies.” — .t — JAP ADMIRAL REPORTED DEAD (By Associated Press) | Mrs. Flossie Doolin, Chief Deputy, The Japanese Navy Ministry an- ; |mances in which each becomes in-| i }volvod provide the central dramatic { | situations. i |ert Cummings, ; | foreign noblewoman, and his child- | |riage, but finds his true mate m OF AMERICA an editorial on the 10th anniver-| sary of the beginning of diplomatic between the nations and gave warm | “The Soviet| a basis of lend-leuse| - ["KINGS ROW" IS FEATURE COMING T0 20TH CENTURY| The film version of “Kings Row,” one of the most popular novels of | this decade, will be the new screen| offering at the 20th Century The-| |atre starting tonight. Ann Sheri- dan, Robert Cummings, Ronald Reagan and Betty Field head one of the most distinguished casts ever assembled in one motion picture. Vividly brought to life on the | screen is this story of young peo- ple, hemmed in by the stifling in- hibitions and taboos of a small mid- | western town in the early years of | this century. Struggling to find | happiness against the opposition of | |the seething undercurrent of gos- | sip and back-biting, the strong and | brave emerge victorious, the wcak‘ are submerged. Two young men, and the two ro- The love affair of Rob- as Parris Mitchell,| | the gently-reared grandson of al i hood sweetheart, Cassandra (played | by Betiy Field) meets a tragic end. \He eventually finds some consola-| {tion and a promise of future hap- | | piness with Elise (played by Kaaren | Verne) The other young man, | Drake McHugh, who is portrayed by ’Ronflld Reagan, is embittered by (the parental opposition which| \Louhe Gordon's (Nancy Colcmam‘ family put in the way of their mar- | « s Because I'm from the wrong side of § the tracks. But if they understood my love they wouldn't despise me for doing what 1 did..." Randy Monaghan (Ann Shcndnn»‘ the right girl from the wrong side| of the tracks. . W. G. Noll of \ Portland, Oregon, are guests at the | Baranof Hotel. [ ———————— MR WASHBURN HERE Mrs. H. M. Washburn of Haines a guest at the Baranof Hotel. ——————— | FROM STRAWBERRY POINT | Mrs. G. E. Bierhous of Straw- wberry Point is registered at the Baranof Hotel. ——,—— — KENYONS HERE | Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Kenyon of | Gustavus are registered at the Bar- | |anof Hotel. { IR o | SITKA MAN HERE | | ©C. Rhoades of Sitka is staying at | the Baranof Hotel. —————— HERE FROM FAIRBANKS | Richard E. Lee of Fairbanks, is | registered at the Baranof Hotel. B EMMERICK IN TOWN : | Fred J. Emmerick of Excursion {Inlet is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. is | | KAAREN VERNE - MARIA OUSI@NSKAYA - + CURTIS HERE T. R. Curtis, traveling man, who is staying in Juneau for a few days, is a guest at the Gastineau Hotel. g a FROM MONTEREY A. G. Mascacilla of Monterey, California, is registered at the Bar- anof Hotel. .- BUTTON IN COAS Howard A. Button, former Fire Department truck driver here, left last evening for Ketchikan, where he will enter the Coast Guard. - — . A. D. McRAE WEDS G Gen. A. D. McRae, 69, has married a widow, 50, a very handsome wo- | man, in Texas, He'is a member o the Canadian Senate, RS L s {10 POLICE COURT FINES Paul Krukoff was fined $25 in |City Police Court on a charge of | drunkenness. Donald Anderson was | fined $15 for speeding, i i e LONNIE MacINTOSH SOUTH | Lonnie MacIntosh, Treasury De- | partment Special Agent for Alaska, | left Juneau for Seattle this morn- ing via Pan American Airways on an official business trip. and various sections of Alaska. PR S R DAWSON OVER TOP Dawson City and surrounding dis- | the to Loan drive, amounting adian Pifth War total subscriptions $53,350. It Is Important at This Time to have your Electrie trict went over the top in the Can-| | u. 5. Marshal's Office, left yesterday for Ketchikan for the remainder of | the term of the District Court now nounces in a broadcast that Ad- miral Shiozawa, a member of the Supreme Military Council, is dead Refrigerator TI0 eNTURY wanner onos. New success. win CHARLES COBURN' Claude Rains- Judith Anderson - Nancy Coleman HARRY DAVENPORT The Strange A RO RO BE STARTS TONIGHT FEATURE at 7:30 and 10:00 All Their Secret Desires and All the Damage of Their Sculs, Laid Bare in Story of Kings Row | Unmatched in screen history . . . this story of the town that lived in the shadows—to hide its scarlet shame! N SHERIDAN BT. CUMMINGS NALD REAGAN ITY FIELD KINGS O ‘Will certainly be t the best te n <————. Directed by \,nM wUOll OWL SHOW 'ALASKA COASTAL Word has been received here that | | ¢ P. C. Walker, Ral Woodruff, owner of #nd Mrs. | mines in the Dawson area, in Atlin,|Lew McFerson to the First City. MAKES TWO TRIPS TO FIRST CITY Flying to Ketchikan with the Alaska Coastal Airlines this morn- ing were Tony Konston, Paula An- dree and W. E. Hunt. Mira Galloway and Jay E. Fincke were passengers to Excursion In- let, and returning here were B. Benos, A. L. Baylies, Charles Kra- mer, V. Swensson and Leonard Fritz, Another flight to Ketchikan took Mr James Halvis and Mrs, TONIGHT 12:30 A. M. # A trip to Sitka had as pn&.sengzr; N. A. McEachran and Jennie methko, and coming back on return flight were Dallas Bl Choppy Davies, Mabel Cropley, ! Wortman, R. B. Clifton and Jenny Jack. e ———— WMB MAN HERE Glenn Robinson, —representative of the War Manpower commi has returned to Juneau after official business trip to the west- ward. He is a guest at the Guun]' eau Hotel. F L e o FAULKNER GOES SOUTH H. L. Faulkner took | south on the vessel leaving here .| night for a business trip to couver and other points in the Pa- cmr Northwest. WANTED EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER®: Write P.0.Box 1193 Juneau as the result of an acute pancreas trouble. The broadcast said a State funeral will be held Saturday. The Admiral was the Jap Nnval' Commander who directed the start | of the fighting against the Chinese in Shanghai in January, 1932, and was a by-product of the war in Manchuria now the Jap puppet state ; of Manchuokuo. - BINGHAM HERE Vance Bingham, representative of the Graybar Electric Cmpany during his stay of several days in Nov.17—10a.m.{o 5 p. m. | in session there. checked for that minor defect which might cause a complete breakdown . for the duration. * Alaska Electric Light and Power Company \ auneau, s o guest at the Casi- | Juneau Phone 616 Douglas Phone 18 BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH PS5-5-ST- NOU L\KE SW-HILLOOK... JUST WHAT TO BUN SOMETHWNG 22 NOW BONS LIKE ... T SELL «..CWEEP---NO\ MaKE BEAUTIFUL POST-CARD-- WIT WEET ALL TW SOLDIERS NOO-LQ-\Q ForMen Who Shave SDaily # Special Preparation Soothes Skin, Saves Time Needs No Brush For men who must shave every day —doctors, lawyers, businessmen and others—Glider is invaluable. 1t is a special cream for daily shav- ers. It ruelt.her sticky :;y;fireu To use Glider, first your face with hot water and soap to remove grit and oily sebum that collect on whiskers every 24 hours. Then spread on Glider quickly and K with your fingers. Never a e T ek b fl; top layer of your skin. kglel '?hn :’mn sharp edge to glide over J’our skin, cumnz your clean without w‘h'whhken hhdn. skin. Glider eliminates much ol the irritation that frequent shaving may have for the tender face, and leaves your skin smoother, cleaner. Glider is made by the 100- old J. B. Williams Company. THE DOUGLAS IN DINE AND DANCE OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT 'MOTORSHIP PATRICIA. Is temporarily laid up while new motors are installed and other improvements made. Waich this space for announce- ment of resumption of schedule between Juneau, Haines and Skagway. By BILLY DeBECK SALLS O'F\RE A GEN-L-WNINE BONEN-FWD DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED GOT DEMOTED TN TH LAEEN STORK. 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