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wcth Gil STRATTON "Rags” RAGLAND STARTS TOMORRO SHOWPLALE oF APIT PIRE-— JUNEAU, ALASKA 'IRL CRAZY' HAS LAST SHOWING ON CAPITOL SCREEN Mickey Rooney and Judy Gar- land, who have staged a minstrel show, won a radio band contest and put on a vaudeville show orevious musicals together, now are going in for something new. In M-G-M's “Girl Crazy,” which shows last times tonight at the Capitol Theatre, the two stars are at the head of a real, whoop-'em- up Western rodeo. 2 DAY 1 special number created by Busb; Berkeley and featuring Gershw .mmortal “I Got Rhythm” high- dghts the film. There are many other musical numbers, but “I Got Rhythm” tops 'em all. Also in the cast are “Rags’ Ragland, Frances Rafferty, Guy Kibbe and Tommy Dorsey and his band. — eee— IS CAPTURED BY 3RD ARMY Inner Ring of Defenses Are Under Atftack-Freez- ing Temperatures (Continued from Page One) mans might withdraw came from a German broadcast which asserted the city, in holding the Americans | while fortifications were deepened, had “fulfilled its task.” Freezing Temperatures The Third Army is battling freez- ing temperatures and snowstorms and is within 15 miles of the Ger- man-Saar border at a point 16 miles southeast of Metz where six arm- ored divisions and tanks entered two villages and drove to within four miles of the Nazi base at Fal- quemont. South of this front, in an area east of Luneville, the United States Seventh Army gained two miles in a snowstorm against stiff opposition and broke up counterattacks south- west of Baccarat. On the United States First Army front, inside Germany, artillery fire broke up a German attempt to counterattack in the Schmidt area. Southeast of Aachen in Holland, the Allies engaged the Nazis in artillery duels. ARG ; Mushra)mmg Pension Plans; Hundreds of EASTERN STAR , Tuesday, Initiation, Juneau Chapter No Nov. 14, at 8 o'clock. Refreshments Janice | | McSpadden, | Worthy Matrcu e PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY Have a portrait artlst take your picture. Hamersley Studio. Opposite Federal Building, Phone 204. Adv. | TIDE THEM UP PELELIU, Palau Islands—Marines quartered near the beach added one new enemy. At first thHey| counted enemy gunfire and raiding planes und land crabs among their | discomfarts. Then they found that| the ocean’s tide came in at night and filled up their foxholes. ——r————— BUY WAR BONDS Firms Adopt System (Continued from Page One) history. ‘The first needs no elucidation and there certainly shouldn’t be any wholesale condemnation of employ- ers who are motivated by the sec- ond. Many merely are trying to share something with their em- ployes. WINDOW AUTO IDEAL GLASS CO. *" Glass. Work of All Descriptions 121 MAIN STREET PHONES 633—549 PLATE GLASS Higher bracket excess profit taxes run up to 95 per cent. Consider then what happens if the employer can lower his excess profits. He can set up a pension plan and spend only five cents on the dollar more than he would pay if he allowed the money to remain as taxable profits. F.W. WENDT DON ABLE DECOR should not be confused with the ordinary run of painting. It is mot This growth of private industry ipension plans has been a boon to the insurance companies. In most {instances, they are the only agen- cies equipped to do the complicated ATING in| In their eighth picture together| FOURTH FORT ICONGRESS P-TA Prr.o—gram for 1 Monday‘@nounced A meet Teachers ( | | | ing of the Juneau Parent- Executive Board was |held last evening at the home of Mrs. L. A. Sturm, resident, with S E S S I 0 N seven officers and chairmen at- |tending e | The program for the next meet- | Lame-duckers Consoled-s.ngt,l“:m held Novembor 20, was Rayburn Gives Qut Leg- [speaker o islative Program | Will give @ Thanks- will be Don Foster Office, who |giving address. Mys. Harold Smith| WASHINGTON, Nov. 14 — Con-|Wwill give a short talk on the aims soling losers in the recent electipn|and objectives of the Association,! and congratulating the winneps,|and a musical number will be pro- Congress reassembled for a six-|vided by Mrs. Pharobee Oliver weeks' flurry of activity but de- Richard Peters, humorist, will alw‘ cided to wait a few days before|participate in the entertainment,! | buckling down to work. which will be followed by refresh- Neither the Senate nor the House {ments. had anything to do, but Senator{ All parents, teachers, and others} Vandenberg supplied material for |interested cordially invited to some future chores by offering|attend that the Social Security payroll| |taxes of one per cent continue for |another year for employer and em- ployee Speaker Rayburn told newsmen the President's extraordinary war| | powers would expire December 31| but would be unanimously ex-| |tended, and also the Federal Crop |Insurance program, killed at the ast session, will be revived. Ray- burn also said legislation will be enacted providing for Federal ex- penditures, with the states cooper- ating in building programs throughout the nation. - TOY CENTER WILL discussed the evening of the U. S. are e, POLICE COURT 3 In City Magistrate’s Court today, Julia Gamble, 19, was fined $25| on a disorderly conduct charge zum, sentenced to 15 days in jail - - | IMMUNIZATION CLINIC The regular monthly immuniza- | tion clinic will be held Wednesday, | November 15, at 10 a. m,, in the Juneau Health Center, room 108 of the Territorial Building. - - HENRY NELSON DIES Henry Nelson, § died {morning at 2:50 o'clock in |Ann’s Hospital. He was born | Norway and belonged to the theran Church. The remains av the Charles W. Carter Mortuary e WALTER HELLAN BACK FROM HUNTING this | st. in Lu- The Toy Center, an annual civie project, sponsored by the Juneau Woman's Club in conjunction with the local Welfare department, will be opened Friday morning at 317 Franklin Street, directly opposite the MacKinnon Apartments. | Toys donated by townspeople are repaired and repainted at the |center and distributed at Christ- TRIP On duty again after a several weeks hunting trip, is Deputy Mar- | shal Walter Hellan. Hellan return- ed here from Tenakee over the weekend with the legal limit of two deer. - C. Shinkus is in town and is reg- i newspaper 1 ing the visit tomorrow of President Indian j g, of slovakia.” EP(*mnsuln for the past three yea (where he has been in charge of ! {tin exploration projects. |supervised I FURTHER PLANS FORMULATED FOR JUNEAU SCOUTING Final plans for reorganizing the | Boy Scout troops in Juneau must {wait until the charters are received |from Portland, Oregon, headquar- ters, it was announced last night by Dr. J. O. Rude. | However, the sponsoring commit- | tee decided there will be no let- ;dnwn in keeping the meetings going luntil the charters arrive. It was tentatively decided last night to |have two troops at present, the pisifione VDN 3 MINING ENGINEERS RE'UR" TO .'UNEAU :Amt"’iml\ Legion and the Northern FROM NOME AREA "% iect wienvs cub mecting, 36 iCub Scouts were present, and for|Henry Harmon announced that 60 ither want to continue with HITLER DEAD, RUMORNOW STOCKHOLM, Nov. 14—The| Tidningen today pub- ished a “private report” saying & “rumor is circulating in Berlin that Hitler is dead and this has been itensified by the report all visits to the Fuehrer are cancelled, includ- Harold E. Heide, Engineer | the Bureau of Mines, arrived hcreibfl."“ L yesterday by plane from Nome. He |scouting or has been employed on the Seward |the first time. last close the The Scouts assembled at night's meeting were taught order drill by Lou Levie of During the past summer he also|jocal Coast Guard contingent. an® asbestos project| The committee announced there north of the Kobuk River, near|was still a need for scoutmasters the village of Shungnak. O"“‘,““d urged anyone interested in mining company has already started |scout work to turn his name in 20 tons of high-grade termolite | asbestos have been shipped purchasers in the States. Assisting Mr. Heide with the tin explorations was Robert L. Thorne, Bureau of Mines Engineer Each sponsoring organization (it was decided, and those present “mst night were Don Skuse, Waino | Hendrickson, Leo Jewett, Henry join a Scout troop for | production on this site and over|to any of the committee members. i to |will choose their own scoutmaster, | ’AGE. THREE R i [0 CENTURY LAST NIGHT! —~TONIGHT— MERRIE MELODY CARTOON PATHE NEWS—SPORTS TODAY and WEDNESDAY IDA LUPINO JOAN LESLIE JACK CARSON DENNIS MORGAN “The HARD WAY" To SII[)[) ;mvx\'; the egg ration, London shops sell unrationed turkey ““d;Hnrmon, Dr. J. O. Rude and Bill Juneau resident, who arrived here and gull eggs. Ricketts. recently after completing a micnh project on the Seward Pemnsuluvl Preliminary investigation of the asbestos and mica properties were | conducted by Eskil Anderson, As-| ociate Engineer with the Terri- | torial Department of Mines, who| is now in this city. | -ee 1 JIGGS DINNER COMING A Jiggs Dinner, sponsored by the American Legion, will be given on November 27, probably in the Odd Fellows Hall. Les Sturm, Com- mander of the Post, is in charge| of all arrangements, including | special entertainment. \ LR { \ { v, | This is to e————— {mas time to the needy youngsters |of Gastineau Channel, who are recommended by the Welfare Of- |fice. Last year, 200 children and adults received gifts through the|g |center and it is hoped that even more may be remembered this season. 1 All Juneau citizens are urged to }parucxpun- in the project by do- nating toys, labor, or materials. The building used this year has been provided by Millard Mills; |lighting by the Alaska Light & |Power Co.; wood by the Juneau Lumber Mills, and hauling by the Rev. Ralph E. Baker. | The Juneau High School man- |ual training class, under the di- rection of Henry Harmon, will do |most of the repair work necessary lon the toys, none of which will be |for sale. A box will be placed at the Sears | | Roebuck & Co. order office for the | |convenience of donors, or con- | tributions may be taken directly to the center. Toys needing repair work should be delivered as early as possible. | The committee this year con- sists of Betty McCormick, chair- man; Mrs. D. W. Hared, Mrs. |Frank Marshall, Mrs. Jack Shurre, |and Mrs. William Byington. SR S S Y Martha Bazaar to Be Held on Friday| The annual bazaar, sponsored by istered at the Gastineau from Pet- ershurg. FIGURINES | be a public affair and open to all men. & SEATTLE NN, O D SN N NN SN NN N NN NN NN NN & 135 So. Franklin St. /A\Pffiv AMERI » & e\ 1Yy SYSTEM l e way in less than a day! Direct Daily Service #FJUNEAU & WHITEHORSE FAIRBANKS Connections = ANCHORAGE, NOME, BETHEL, ond All Alaska Points INFORMATION . RESERVATIONS . TICKETS Phone 106 N ———— ———————————— PAN AMERICAN AIRWALS svsTes CABINETS PHONE 433 Are Fun I.G.FULTON & COMPANY /G CONTRACTORS REPAIRING and REMODELING ALL TYPES OF GLASS WORK Panes Replaced-New Frames Made 149 So. Main Street To Give e' the Martha Society, will be held Friday evening, from 7:15 to 10 o'clock in the Parlors of the Nor- YOU CAN ALWAYS GIVE A FIGURINE — FOR FIGURINES CAN BE ALL THINGS THAT AUDITS SYSTEMS TAXES business of working out equitable|inern Light Presbyterian Church. only our business to suggest proper color harmony but to see that the decorative scheme is properly balanced. LET MeCLELLAN SOLVE YOUR DECORATIVE PROBLEMS CALL DOUGLAS 374 J. S. pension plans and guaranteeing that payments will be made regard- less of what happens to the em- ployer companies. One of the mysteries that Inter- nal Revenue is puzzling over is what might happen to many of these We have a Few ...1CE CUBE TR Some with Rubber Dividers Some with M » AlsoSome G.E. Metal Polish 2nd Some Whiz Polish and Cleanser Alaska Eleciric Light and Power Company JUNEAU Phone No. 616 plans if weé run into a serious de- |1s reduced or eliminated. The only thing certain now is that under | approved plans, there will be no |cash loss to employes. — S. 0. TRANSFERS AYS in Stock. Oil Company at Wrangell, has been transferred to Craig as agent there. He succeeds Lloyd Giffin, trans- ferred to the company’s station at Anchorage. etal Dividers Some Folks Only THINK They Are Hard of Hearing If you are temporarily deafened, bothered by ringing, buzzing head noises due to hardened or coagulated wax (cerumen), try the Ourine Home Method test that so many say has enabled them to hear well again. You must hear better after making this simple test or you get your money back at once. Ask about Ourine Ear Drops today at Butler, Mauro Drug Co. Your Rexall Store DOUGLAS Phone No. 18 pression or if the Excess Profits tax J. D. Smith, with the Standard | A crocheted bedspread, pillow cases, aprons, dish towels, and no- tions ,n addition to candy and cookies, will be featured in the |sale. A dessert lunch of home-made cake, pie, tea, coffee and punch,| will also be sold throughout thef evening. Mrs. George Rice is Chairman of the committee in charge of the affair. e — FROM WHITEHORSE Mr. and Mrs. Keith H. Elliott, | are in town from Whitehorse, and are making their stay at the Bar- anof Hotel. Do Your Sho e e ey S T T e e T e L e e e o S E E L LLL LU UL L L LU L EC LU UL LU E LU UL C S VY HAVE COME TO MEAN! HARRI MACHINE SHOP PLUMBING, HEATING and GIFTS Christmas % | Gifts ‘ RARITY gnd LUXURY pping Early KINLOCH N. NEILL NEILL, CLARK and COMPANY Public Accountants—Auditors—Tax Counselors 208 Franklin Street — Telephone 757 Falrbanks Office: 201-2 Lavery Building JOHN W. CLARK WE OFFER TO A LIMITED NUMBER OF CLIENTS A COMPLETE MONTHLY ACCOUNTING AND TAX SERVICE TELEPHONE 757 LOOKY a1 THIS SIGN I FOUND TWO-T MILE DOWN TH' ...aD, HAWKY TAWKY N Jae e THAT MEANS “DANGER, > " ByBILLY DeBECK BALLS 0 FIREY A _BONEY -FIDE 800BY TRAP Broiled Steak and Fried Chicken SERVED ANY TIME DINE AN The Derby Inn D DANCE B AR DINE AN D DANCE Located at SKAGWAY SKAGWAY'S ONLY DINE AND DANCE PLACE SINCE THE GOLD RUSH!