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FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 28 |945 /S UBLE FEATURE BILL AT CAPITOL DURING WEEKEND SHOWPLALE or APIT There are two features this week-| end at the Capitol starting tonight. A tender . & joyous picture warm- y the touch of “heary” that makes love stories memorable . . . a love story that tells in-a thrilling new may the things Eve told Adam! “They All Kissed. the Bride” is a gay comedy of love . of a girl with a career who preferred a caress . . . and of a guy who needed a shave! With Joan Crawford and Melvyn Douglas starred, is one feature. Can a man be forced to murder himself? Meet the weirdest gang of criminals in history . . . peg-leg killer who strikes by night. See [the secret rites in the mystic “thieves’ market!” Thrill to radio’s 'greatest mystery detective team now jon the screen . . fas they solve the i sinister mystery of the man who jpredicted death in Columbia Pic- | tures’ lond feature. ! Included in the cast are Nina ilf‘och, George Macready, Jim Ban- {non, Carole Mathews, Marton Yar- | borough, Gregory Gay and Lester Matthe\u 'RECORDS| FAlSIFIED ' BY JAPS ONDEATH, YJoan CRAWFORD + Meloyn DOUGLAS 0—11:00 SECOND FEATURE | | Roland Young RSEM [ Billie Burke Z#IAREN MoRe M| Allen Jenkins e A mbiacture (Clmi!mwd from Page One) | saber and gave the order to fire. .Twn bullets entered the head of |each American. The Japanese kicked the romance wreathed in| the | “I Love A Mystery,” the sec-| DOOLITTLE RAIDERS bodies | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRL JUNEAU ALASKA HOLDOUT | i \ Most girls spend a good many months getting in the way of | movie scouts when they want to | crash Hollywood, but Pat Knight, above, who also answers to the name of Mrs. Cornel Wilde, re- fused to take a screen test until rocently. Now she helds a con- | tract and will make her screen | cidents |ican Office of | delegation here. 20TH CENTURY T0 HAVE 2 FEATURES, | KIDDIES' MATINEE Showing for the Saturday Matinee tomorrow will be a double feature program, “Spy Train” with Richard Travis and “Outlaws of the Rio| Grande” with Tim McCoy. The regular Juneau Juniors stage show and contests will also be offered. Prizes will be offered for the best amateur acts and of course for the various contests and games. Stage show starts at 1:30 p. m. with the pictures at 2 p m. D One American | Is Killed in| Saigon Riols By VERN HAUGLAND SAIGON, Indo-China, Sept. 28— (Delayed) —Lt. Col. A. Peter Dewey of Washington, D. C., was killed and Capt. Joseph Coolidge of New Hampshire was seriously wounded by Annamese in disorders today. | The American officers, defending | U. S. Headquarters from a siege of three hours, killed at least eight na- | tives ‘ British, Prench and Japanese also suffered casualties in a series of in- As a result of the contin- ued disorders, Field Marshal Count Juichi Terauchi, the Japanese com- mander, was placed under virtual house arrest. Dewey, about 28, headed the Amer- Strategic Services PAGE FIVE JUST ARRIVED! Air Express FOX NEWS “MIGHTIEST OF ALL” (O LN TURY TONIGIIT' ——ALSO— SATURDAY MATINEE 1:30 P. M. Z—F EAT RES' U = LONDON CON BIG “RENCE 5 MAP TREATIES OF 1 i i ° P BOMBED TOKYO UNDER OCCUPATION . ARMY AIR SECRETS NOW REVEALED ° NYLON STOCKINGS BACK and OTHER \l'\\'.\ EV I—KIDS' A'I'TEND THE BIG JUNEAU JUNIOBS SATURDAY MATINEE . .. 2FEATURES . . . CARTOON . . . STAGE SHOW! b dae e SATURDAY 3:%% w A’l‘ TP.M 1T TARTS Saturday Matinee Open 1 P. M.—Starts 1:30 and crosses into the graves. A dis- position crew put the corpses, with debut soon. CONDITIONS IMPROVE cresses attached, into coffins and took them to a crematory. The ashes were turned over to They dusty ADDED FOR THE KIDS CARTOON—“FLYING CADETS” { ¢ {the mortuary 30 days later. | were found yesterday cn BALCONY OPEN FOR STARTS AT i ADULTS ONLY'! 7:00—9:50 \ Ll YOUNG ROOSEVELT TELLS ABOUT THAT : BORROWED $200, SINGAPORE, Sept. 28-—Maj. Gen. | D. D. Gracey, commander of Allied | forces in South Indo-China, arrived \by plane in Singapore today for conferences on the continuing dis- rders throughout Japan's one-time Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. Gracey said conditions had im- 'ELi;l"s AIR LINES i ‘DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN | via Petershurg and Wrangell With connections to Craig, Klawock, Hydaburg and steamers for, Prince Rupert, Vancouver, and Seattle | T0 FORMER ALASKAN Lt. Comdr. Joel risoer, U. S. Coast Guard, lauded by Drew Pearscn in the Washington Merry-Go-Round cclumn that appeaied yesterday in the Empire for his work in uncover- ing Nazi treasurers, was formerly | stationed in Alaska, it was disclosed here today. Comdr. Fisher (then HOLLYWOOD' Sept. 28—Elliott| proved in Saigon, with the Japa- Roosevelt, son of the late President,| nese doing a far better job of says that not one cent of the| keeping the peace last night as a $200,000 he borrowed from John|result of his stern orders yesterday Hartford, president of the Great;m Field Marshal Count Juichi Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co. was|Terauchi, commander of the Japa- converted to his personal use but nese Southern Armies. put into the Texas State Radln; (The New Delhi radio said today Network which he organized in|Tefauchi had been arrested by the 1938. | British because “it was suspected “All the money I promoted was:!.hé Japanese had a hand in the EXCITlNG | ROMANCE SERVATIONS PHONE 612 AEnsxgm was Captain of .the Port at” Excursion Inlet, Alaska, in 1942. bt BN B A S “Everyone says it the best cellar in the nejghborhood * America.... and no one else has yet been able. to match our gloriously lmoolh and - mellow blend. So get on the best-cellar list youmelf —with a bottle or two of Calvert. But be sure it is Calvert. .. if you want the real thing. CLEAR HEADS CHOOSE calvm't /ts the Real Thing TS VERY definitely a “‘best-cellar” item — this Calvert! For you’ll find it’s unmistakably the real thing in whiskey . . . with a superb pre-war quality that simply can’t be imitated. You see, we’ve blended more fine whiskey in our time than any other distiller in Calvert Distillers Corp., N. Y. C. BLENDED WHISKEY 868 Proof. Calyen ‘Reflefle —65% Gnm Neutral Spirits. .. Calvert “Special”’—72%% Crain Neutral Spirits put into the corporation,” Roose- velt was quoted as declaring in a | copyrighted interview ‘mm trade publication. “Whether | lit came frem A&P's Hartford or | Texas oilmen, it was all corpora- {tion money and treated as such.” | Stock of the Texas State Radio | Network is conservatively valued |at present between $1,500,000 and i$2,000.000. Roosevelt said. | It was on his 55 per cent of this | stock, Roosevelt told the | Ways and Means Committee, that | he borrowed $600,000, including the | $200,000 from Hartford. The com-! | mittee learned the Hartford loan was settled by Jesse Jones 1 $4,000. {tered the Army in 1940. “I asked| the creditors of my 55 per cent of | the corporation’s stock what terests,” he said. took the whole matter as a tax loss | and returned the stock at two rcnu on the dollar.” The corporation began to show a profit in 1942, he said, and by the |end of last year was $400,000 in the Iblack before taxes. “In 1944, he for my children of that marriage.” 'NEW DRAFT LIST SHOWS 16 LOCAL - MEN DISCHARGED Sixteen discharged servicemen, six new. inductees and two 1-A classifications comprise the 24/ names on the latest draft classifi- cation list released here today by Local Selective Service Board No. 3. Reclassifications announced are: 1-A—Donald E. Scott, Donald M. Williams. 1-C (inducted)—Frank E. Olson, Jr., Alvin M. Mill, Robert C. Sa- vikko, Paul J. Williams, Richard Willard, John Howard. 1-C (Discharged) = Thomas E. Garnick, Aldo Roberts, Ernest C. Kunesh, Joseph 8. Lapinski, Tony B. Florendo, Helmut H. Langfeldt, Frank J. Behrends, Lloyd P. Gar- ner, Arthur Berggren, James H. Triplette, Edward F. Houser, George | M. George, Hugh Rudolph, Anton Bokn, Julian R. Juarez, Norman| C. Banfield. AT R S LICENSE TO WED ISSUED A marriage license has been is- sued by U. S. Commissioner Felix Gray to Capt. Charles H. Wagner, U. 8. Army, of Whitehorse, and, Miss Estelle Frances Wolf, of Juneau. in Variety, House “ for | : said, “my stock went to other stock- | holders, my ex-wife ‘and in trust/ latest Indo-China disorders.”) | JAPS JOIN REBELS | SAIGON, Sept. 28—A high-rank- ing Japanese General conceded to- day that some’' Japanese soldiers had supplied arms to rioting Anna- mese after Emperor Hirohiti’s sur- render order last month. | Lt. Gen. Takazo Numata, Chicf of Staff and spokesman for Field Marshal Count Juichi Terauchi, former commander of the Japanese Southern Armies, told a news con- ference that “some Japanese but no officers joined the Annamite !rebels after our surrender.” “We now regard and treat them |as enemies,” he said. Divorce Actions the backlog of di- pending before the U. |S. District Court here are three 'more cases filed today with the ‘(mrk of Court: Virginia Rude, Juneau, asks a de- cree from Ernest Rude, Juneau, be- cause of incompatibility. She seeks {to continue her custoday of the couple’s two minor female children, with $50 monthly support payments from the defendant. She proposes |a division of property by which she would receive full title to their Auk Bay homeé and the defendant would get the fishing boat “Mabel C” own- ed by the couple. Phyllis Lagasse seeks a divorce frcom Melvin George Legasse, also on grounds of incompatibility, wn.h' |restoration of her maiden name Phyllis La Berne Stephenson. couple has no children and there ls no property in dispute. Catherine DeCoite, Juneau, charg- es desertion and non-support in her action against Manuel There is no property affected. They| have one minor child of which the plaintiff asks to continue in custody. Ste also asks $30 monthly support payments and $125 Anorm;y fees. Pioneer Dinner to Be Held This Eve. Membership of Igloo No. 6, Al- aska Pioneers and the Auxiliary will gather tonight at 6:30 o'clock in LOOF. Hall for a potluck dinner, which will be followed by, the regular business meetings and| social hour. A good attendance is anticipated and an enjoyable evening is as-' sufed by the committee in charge |}/ of ithe dinner, Roosevelt said he started putting | | his affairs in order after he en-| I| should do in disposing of my in-| “The creditors | ‘ Augmenting |vorce actions e ECKEL IN JUNEAU | - Empire Want ads bring results! Karl C. Eckel, of Seattle, is a ruest at the Gastineau Hotel, b ¢ (OlISEUM * DeCoite. | DOUGLAS 'You (an't Beat the Law’ ‘Pern's Pfiffiail S!ndioE |Phone 567 OF THE YEAR! GREAT AS ONLY SHE CAN BE, /N "MR SKEFFINGTON ‘} With CLAUDE RAINS "2 7 WALTER ABEL « RICHARD WARING « GEO. COULOURIS + MARJORIE RIORDAN ERENZESRENINNTRNAYANLBNSSARNNAILNT THE FIXIT SHOP 215 SECOND STREET MUSICAL INSTRUMENT REPAIRING GENERAL LIGHT REPAIR WORK preagsgan LAST NIGHT “THE BATTLE COLISEUM THEATRE TONIGHT ONLY 2—FEATURES—2 Phone 567 | ‘ammwanEsE R BARE RS RO RN NN BRI R NAT R ERREATISERENITIEN Roy Eaton LEETT TR T PP SAYNETISNERLNINERY! I aezErRsessTRERANSE TTLITEELE seazesmer GRAY I{IABINE ENGINES FISHERMEN’S PRIORITY ORDERS BEING FILL El) FROM 60 TO 90 DAYS Non-priority orders being filled as material is released. Distributors for EDCO Bronze Elecirodes Juneau Welding & Machine Shop ibielidebblaleeia it -uu-nulluulnuunnl- wnnuluunnunn-unulusluq PLUS "Where Trails End’ Time to Think of Christmas | LET US TAKE THAT ||| PHOTOGRAPH | Second Street | l'here is no substitute for newspaper adverlising!