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TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, LAST TIMES TONIGHT! Wednesday—Thursday was in the lood of these wo...and ate decreed thot nothing could ever part them: Goorge BRENT- LANE BRUCE CABOT United Artists Relowse PREVUE TO Show Place of Juneau Mustering Out Pay Legislation Held Up WASHINGTON, Dec. 7. - The House Military Affairs Committee probably won't be able to pull itself together in time to produce muster- ing out pay legislation to servicemen before Christmas. Efforts to get the members of the committee together failed, Chairman | mitteemen are out of town on var- ious investigations or other bus When the war is won, Pan American Airways will pioneer new standards of service for our Meanwhile, we are 1009, 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. o, il i P ———————————————————— It Is Important at This Time to have your Electrie Refrigerator checked for that minor defect which might cause a complete breakdown for the duration. * Alaska Electric Light and Power Compan Juneau Phone 616 Broded Fried 1943 'WARTIME COMEDY ENDING TONIGHT AT CAPITOL SHOW All Europe ablaze wnh the blitz— and in the midst of it two Ameri- cans in love, trying to pull one an- other out of peril—that's the excit-) ing idea of Leo Carey’s “Once Upon |A Honeymoon,” new starring ve- hicle for Cary Grant and Ginger | (Rogers. The picture is showing for fthe last times tonight at the Capi- | |tol Theatre. | Sparkling with hilarity through- out its swift action, the story re- | volves about the efforts of a former !dancer, married to a Nazi noble- man, to break away from |newly-wed husband as soon as she, learns his real character. Aiding ‘and abetting her attempts is an |American news commentator who {has helped in the unmasking and her! THE {WEATHER HITS The Washlngton | SKIING PARTY Merry - Go- Round Few Juneau skmn ventured into ! the unfavorable weather Sunday which-took virtually all snow off the " lower reaches of the Douglas Island ‘\.u area. Several high school skiers spent Saturday night at the upper ', | Ski Bowl cabin and reported skiing By DREW PEARSON | (Major Robert 8. Allen on active duty.) WASHINGTON Don't take those “Bricker-for-President” breezes from | "Hill too seriously. Senate | Capitol lcundmons as poor. A few others| [who went part way up the uall‘a"d House members from Ohio have come out unanimously for yesterday said conditions were very §b‘"‘d Late in the afternoon a large; “number of Ski Club members and their friends gathered at the home|GOP White House nonfinee of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Werner rm-f Further inside fact is that Taft refreshments and to talk over plans hasn’t completely eliminated him- for the winter. |self as a Presidential hopeful, Ski Club dues are due, according ! though it was Taft—and none other to Secretary Faith Cushman, and| | —who convinced Bricker that he 'any person wishing to renew a mem- should throw his hat in the Presi- bership or join for the fimst time | dential ring even after Bricker had should get in touch with her, with | made up his mind to run for a lare that they would prefer to see |Senator Bob Taft emerge as the | the Ohio governor—but inside facts, ) TIRES, TUBES ISSUED [BOARD OF MANAGERS, DURING LAST MONTH| TERRITORIAL C. OF (., | TO MEET ON FRIDAY Board u{ Managers - for the The Iollcmm(. is a list of pas senger car tires and tubes issued by the Juneau War Price and Ra-| The {tioning Board, No. 7, during the | Territorial Chamber of Commerce {month of November, according wgwm meet Friday night at 7:30! {a report made by Carol M. Carlson, |o'clock according to anouncement.| | Chief Clerk: The session will be held in the | Yellow Cab Company, 4 tires, 4|Council Chambers of the City Hall| tubes; Royal Blue Cab Company, 4 and general business will be dis- | 4 tubes; Homer G. Nordling, |cyssed. All members are urged to 2 tives, 2 tubes; Territory of Alaska |p. i, attendence (E. M. Botelho), 1 tire; John G. - Yie Olson, 2 tires, 2 tubes; B. M. Me- | Yowell, & Eresr Liight B cirbrit, 12| TTOIAN AREAKRS HEAD tire, 1 tube; Rev. Wm. G. LeVas- | R e & s ¥ "« | Claude M. Hirst, General Super- seur, S. J., 1 tire, 1 tube; James S.| " lndlsn' Putman, 2 tires. 2 tubes: R. Cv‘lnlenden( of the Bureau o | Richards, 1 tube. Affairs, was scheduled to leave for| At the regular meeting of the Ju- AKNchnum today on a routine busi- neau War Price and Ratfoning Boqrd\"(’&“ trip. Mr. Hirst will be away| on Thursday, December 2, the fol |about 10 days and will visit Hyda- lowing excerpt, from the weekly let- |burg and Metlakatla, as well as ter of Chester Bowles to all War \Krlchlknn Price and Rationing Board was read | with considerable interest as it " PAGE THRmf JAP ESPIONAGE FILM ENDS AT 20TH CENTURY The records nr the Dies Com- Imittee had a great deal to do with the filming of 20th Century- Foxs “Little Tokyo, U. S. A" showing for the last times tonight at the 20th Century Theatre, | Producer Bryan Foy Although the original screen p]ay‘ is fictional, Foy revealed that inci- |dents of espionage in the Los | Angeles Japanese sector, before Lhef attack on Pearl Harbor, were incor- | porated into the script from actual cases recorded by the committee in-' |vestigating espionage. Furthermore, “Little Tokyo, U A" carrles a foreword stating that all incidents having to do with es-| pionage are based on facts. according to| o it ,e WHERE THE BETTER BIG | - PICTURES PLAY! L OALENTURY. 5LAST TIME Tfllflfilf, i A N 44 o { A fearless l'“‘"' .,....mul girt . sing the P::'n of the Axist ¥ May said, because so many com- | Week at Sitka on buSiness. IR AN /T4 SBERVED tee Chairman, or Curtis Shattuck, | 1 President. ! who, very much in love with her, idoes his best to get them both through the German ring of steel, from Poland to France. How the trio come together again) in Paris under thrill-packed cir-! cumstances makes the climax of the! Leo McCarey production, Which 15| The Alaska Coastal Arlines made | |said to be one of the most enter-ia trip to Ketchikan today with | {taining films of the entire season.|Arthur Morgan, C. R. Collins, V. A. | | Walter Slezak, noted Viennese; Mueller, and J. P. Eberhardt. i {actor making his first American| Passengers on a flight to Snkfl‘ screen appearance, has the role of! were T. T. Peterson, Harold Mc- |the suave but deadly Baron, and‘ROberl: and Irene Devlgnv | Albert Dekker, Ferike Boros, Al- |bert Basserman and other well- 'known players are cast in import- ant p.n-ts /ALASKA COASTAL ON 5 TWO FLIGHTS TODAY, - — INDIAN AFFAIRS GROUP TO SITKA Leonard Allen, Supervisor of So- cial Welfare for the Bureau of In- dian Affairs; Miss Lela Cheney, Supervisor of Welfare from the | TO WESTWARD ON WOODLEY PLANE Leaving today for the Westward | |aboard a Woodley Airways plane | | were the following passengers: .lackI | Cramley, T. I. Morgan, Harold Foss, | Elinor High, D. B. Lingssect, V. G Rowe, and C. B. Taylor. Chicago office and Miss Gladys‘ REop, ot b TR McIlveen, Supervisor of Welfare H from the Seattle office; left Sun- NO-HOS' Mee"ng Of day for Sitka to look into welfare problems for the Indian Affairs| Office. | From Sitka, Miss Cheney and Miss McIlveen will go to Ketchi- kan and then return to Seattle.! Mr. Allen will return to Juneau from Ketchikan. Accompanying the group was Dr. Evelyn 1. Butler, Associate Supervi- sor of Education for the Bureau of | Indian Affairs, who will spend a Trinity, Jr., Guild The regular meeting of the Jun- jor Trinity Guild will be held to- morrow night at 8 o'clock in the| Trinity Parish Hall. It will be a, no-host gathering. b All members are requested to| bring their own scissors as Red!| Cross work is planned. l | - | |12 ARRIVE FROM | HAINES, SKAGWAY | Arriving by boat from Skngwny this morning were Capt. clyde Treloggen and Charles Lovin, and |from Haines the passengers were | {Ray Tucker, Isabelle Lucas, Harry Elie, C. M. Conrad, Sammy Que- | jada, Eugene Lowman, E. J. Cow- ling, A. H. Kauzlerick, George Dun- | |can, and Earl Martens. | e e ————— BUY WAR BONDS IS HERE ON FURLOUGH Kenneth Lea arrived from the| {westward on Sunday on a 30-day) furlough to visit his parents, Mr.| and Mrs. Harry Lea, other rela-| tives and friends. He was here about | one year ago. Lea has now been ltruns{erred to the Ski Troops, unn.\ of the military forces. friends in Alaska. 'FDR INVITES SHAH OF IRAN TO VISIT U.S.,BRING QUEEN| TEHERAN, Iran, Dec. 7.—Presi-| dent Roosevelt, while here, sent a letter to young Shah of Iran, Mohammed Reza Pahlavia, thank- ing- him for his hospitality during the three-power conference, and in- viting him to bring his Queen on a visit to the United States. i IV 172008 1} Y JUNEAU PLUMBING & HEATING CO. PLUMBING HEATING OIL BURNERS SHEET METAL PHONE 787 Third and Franklin NIGHT: B. E. Feero, Green 585 J. R. Clark, Red 750 BATAAN CAFE Genuine Chow Mein Chop Suey COME ONE ———COME ALL! L4 289 So. Franklin Street John Wynne, Membership Commit- | fourth term as Governor of Ohln' | Congressmen which endorsed Brick- | Representative Ed Rowe of Ohio SEVEN PERSONS FLY jien This eased out, in part, at a se- {throw» some light on the tire situa- cret meeting of Ohio Senators and tion in Juneau: “Right now one of our biggest er unanimously for the Presidency.|worries is the tire situation. As you While everybody was giving lip service to Bricker, it was quite ap- parent that their hearts belonged 'to Taft. Hardly had the “unanimous” meeting for Bricker begun, when Director, had to reduce our quotas of both truck and passenger car tires sharply for November. At the moment, the demand for truck tires is exceeding production by about as if we might be a million short by the end of the year. “I have just seen the figures showing how many tires of all kinds, both new and used, we have on hand. {The total is roughly 5,800,000, and declared that he doubted that Bricker could beat Wendell Willkie in the Akron area. Willkie had got in a lot of spadework in this sec- tion, Rowe said, and had some po-| | (emenb::;kmvg, mré\lldmlg ‘;h-lt of| ithe experts say that four million is rastoes’ eaver, a Cleveland manu-|4he apsolute minimum if even a few i death dealing devices of war. This is the statement made by {Maj. Gen. E. M. Cowell, British Army |and Allled Force Surgeon, to the ! Allied Malaria Control School. m-e~ are to be available in all parts Representative Frances Bolton "”ot the country. They tell me that Ohio, one of the wealthiest mem-'if our stock gets down below four bers of Congress, demurred that|million, three are going to a good | Miss Marion Martin, chief of the|many towns where no tires of any | women's division of the Republican kind will be available. In view of National Committee, had Lurned,moxe facts, conservation certainly against” Willkie and that Willkie becomes all the more important.” could therefore expect little sup- port from GOP women voters in o, STOCK QUOTATIONS This was quickly challenged on| ——— the ground that Miss Martin was| NEW YORK, Dec. 7. — Closing a palitical ally of Sinclair Weeks guotation of Alaska Juneau mlnc of Massachusetts, treasurer of the gtock today is 5'¢, American Can! Republican National Committee and ggi,, Anaconda 24':, Bethlehem a strong Willkie booster. However, Steel 56, Curtiss Wright 57, Inter- Mrs. Bolton insisted that Miss Mar- national Harvester 69, Kennecott! tin had -been “talking against”{3gy, New York Central 15, Nor- Willkie. {thern Pacific 13%, United Sun.c\ It was brought out that Repre- Steel 51'4, Pound $4.04. sentative Carroll Reece of Tennes- i Dow, Jones averages today are see, a Republican, likely would man- g5 follows: industrials 13337, rails age Bricker’s campaign and could 3264, utilities 21 52 |assure the Ohio governor the sup- i port of most of the Southern dele-| gates at the GOP convention. M AlARlA B'G FoE This raised Bricker’s stock a ttle, but most of the Ohio Co or ‘»ms SI(“Y (Continued on Page Four) | ’ - i ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN u S. Hulm SERVICE |ALGIERS, Dec. 7. — Malaria put ([ERKS ARRIVE HERE!more soldiers out of action in the Miss Beulah Spongberg and Miss F. Louise Beane, have arrived in Juneau to take over their duties as | jclerks in the recently organized MINING MAN HERE | District No. 11 office of the United i Harry Townsend, mining engin-| | States Public Health Service. ST 7 S A eer from Seattle, is a guest at the| Formerly the two were employed m Gastineau. [by the U. S. Health Service head- | “DB I ORROVI SRR AL o |quarters in Bethesda, Maryland.|Low tide 5:06 am., 24 feet. |'They are residing temporarily at High tide 11:23 am., 178 feet. KEN LEA, SKI-TROOPER | least in the Baranof. Hotel. Low tide 5:54 pm., -0.5 feet. Trollers : Trollers MEETING WEDNESDAY December 8 T7:30P.M. UNION HALL Business of importance to all trollers o be taken up. You will benefit by attending. ] United Trollers of Alaska know, Colonel Dewey, the Rubber | 200,000 tires a month, and it looks | 38-day conquest of Sicily than «ll} e “Some of these incidents’ ex-! ‘Rebekah lod e ;pl:nnod the producer, “are so fan- g tastic that some folks will find| them hard to believe. But they all |are true and we have the records |to prove them.” Preston Foster and Brenda Joyce | ‘BH‘ featured in “Little Tokyo, U. S. ' To Initiate at Wednesday Meet A meeting of the Rebekah Lodge. will be held tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock in the IO.OF Hall Ini-| {tiation will take place and refresh- | ments will be served at the close of the meeting. | The refreshment committee is| composed of Mrs. Katherine Hook- | er, chairman, assisted by Mesdames ' |Anna Pusich, Etta Bringdale, Leona 'PEARL HARBOR IS REMEMBERED BY ARMY AIR FORCES WASHINGTON, Dec. 7. — The g McKinnon, Edla Gihlstrom, Re- f 4 4 Air F w becca Feero, Marian Hedges, Gemgw:‘::,y m':“ ?;l:e: :fiw';"c m:’]"h‘s‘: LATEST WORLD NEWS" {Balo syasBetiy. MaDSwell, branches were able to. move 10| IRPREY TN Europe in the First World War, de- WELFARE SUPERVISOR |stroyed or damaged 13,500 enemy) | ON TRIP TO KETCHIKAN pjanes since the Pearl Harbor at- | Miss Alice Brandebury, Supervi-|tack; swelled to 2,300,000 men in |sor of Child Welfare Services with me air arm that have flown more the Territorial Department of Pub-!tnan 225000 plane flights, fircd lic Welfare, was to leave for Ketch- 41,000,000 rounds of ammunition and ‘ikan today on a routine business chewed up 2,000,000,000 gallons of | ,tnp She expects to be away about gasoline since that time. 110 days. General Hap Arnold disclosed the | TRt jabove figures in a Magnitude Air GIVEN PRIORTTY . ON NATION'S LIST WASHINGTON, Dec. 7. — Inva- {ston craft have been put ahead of | ]everymlng else in the Nation’s pri-| |ority list, overriding planes and| A‘uviauon gasoline. t | Aviation sources say 4,000 con-| tractors will soon be turning out invasion, craft but the number is not disclosed but the drive is big- ger than last winter when $75,000,- 000 worth of the craft were pro- duced in the five months preceding the Mediterranean invasions. ! i YOUR. BROKEN L!Nlll | Replaced m our own shop. Eyes Examined. Dr. Rae Lilllan Carlson IBlomrrm Bldg. Phone 636. adv. MUSSOLINI PARAlYlEfl BERN, Dec. 7.—Italian informan in Zurich said Benito Mussolini 5 now virtually in a paralyzed condis | tion and is growing worse ste: R. W. Mitchell, ot Sitka, is rog-‘ns the result of the outbreak of’ |istered at the Baranof Hotel. ‘old dlscase contncted in his e MOTORSHIP pumcl_n Is temporarily laid up while new motors are installed and other improvements made. Watch this space for announce- ment of resumption of schedule hetween il Juneau, Haines and Skagway. | Well, drop in at the ROYAL BLUE CAB COMPANY and pick up your free copy of your calendar for 1944, this year fea- turing the DIONNE QUINTUPLETS -- "MAYTIME" - a beautiful oil painting. GET YOUR FREE COPY WHILE THE.SUPPLY LASTS at the ROYAL BLUE CAB CO. Phones 14 and 444 102 Franklin Street BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMIT SO, MRS LITTLE BON Y5 LOST WITHOUT WS SHEEP . WWN R ) § Douglas Phone 18 Open All Night Steak and Chicken ANY TIME MR AND DANCE T SAW WD ON NOUR WATER- AMNUITES QG0 WRTCHNG ™ ARTILLARY RANGEY, H By BILLY DeBECK BUGEN TWENTY ON NOUR CANEL AND BONS OB Tl WG \ms‘\s THE DOUGLAS IN OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGH? Electric Hammond Organ Music DINE AND DANCE