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SHE FOUND LOVE IN THE ARMS OFA | | FIGHTING MAN! “Bride auction!’’ Pirate raids! il ' Romantic thrills...adventure thrills...musical thrills! ietue with FRANK MORGAN LANCHESTER * Dy Joseph CAWTHORNE STATS AT 7:40—10:00 ADDED FRONT PAGE NEWS | WALT DISNEY CARTOON tor HYPERACID STOMACHS Butler, Mauro Drag Co. Xour Rexall Store Hotel Roems - Seattle | Close to shopping, business, theatres—away from noise. b Daily Only CORNELIUS Apartment Hotel Third at Blanchard EL 2888 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1945 _ they should contact SWPC District ) TABLETS '3 INAUGHTY MARIETTA IS NOW SHOWING 'ON CAPITOL SCREEN Haunting music of Victor Herbert blended with thundering drama of the founding of a great city, and| 'with a delicate love romance run- {ning through it; such is “Naughty | Marietta,” Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's spectacular translation to the screen jof Victor Herbert's masterpiece, ‘which opened a return engagement last night at the Capitol. | Jeanette MacDonald, who never was more beautiful nor sang so di- {vinely, and Nelson Eddy, young American operatic baritone, who | makes his debut as a screen hero with a performance that catapult- | | ed him to stardom, head a fine cast. The story is staged on a spectac-| ular scale. Huge settings, including | | & replica of old New Orleans ofj{ Creole days, gorgeous costumes, and| intense dramatic action embellishing | | such song hits as “Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life,” “I'm Falling in Love With Someone,” “Chasonette,” “The Ital- |ian Street Song,” and other immor- Mal Herbert music. ‘ - - fSURPlUS T0 VETERANS | FOR BUSINESS NEEDS Only a discharged veteran enter~ ing a small business or now operat- ing a small business can qualify to secure surplus property through the' Smaller War Plants Corporation, ac- cording to Howard MacGowan, Re- gional Director, at Seattle. « { “It is our duty to help the veteran set himself up in business by secur- ing for him the necessary tools with | which to work,” McaGowan said. All kinds of businesses are includ- ed: commercial, industrial, manufac- turing, service, legal, medical, den- tal, and other lawful enterprises. If one needs any of this surplus to help establish or maintain their business, Office, 4448 Stuart Building, Seattle. | PAAFLIES20 0N | SOUTHERN FLIGHT| Pan American World Airways flew 20 to Seattle yesterday and an in-| coming clipper brought the following seven here from Seattle: Harold Ca- ven, James Neely, Harold Houston, Frank Beeman, Geraldine Polk, Wil-' liam Stevens and James Lamanuzzi. Passengers to Seattle were: Ag-| nes Van Wettering, Emily Dodge, O. J. Blende, John Dawson, Catherine Pasquan, Art Van Humbeck, Lloyd Cleaves, Chris Bailey, nald O'Conner, Arthur Woodley, Beulah' Ely, Duey Metzdorf, Charles Nelson, August Dienier, Arthur See, Merwin Ferris, Mae Ferris, Swan Aasen, Sherman Starr and Hazel Starr. To Whitehorse: Mavera Mock, To Fairbanks. Howard Henretta. e ‘The Landing Ship, Dock (LSD) is slightly more than 457 feet long, and has a beam of 72 feet. 1 —— e DRINK KING BLACK LABEL! FRANCIS DEXTER & Tailored shlrtwa&st models in warm gabardine . . . brass buttons . . . brace- let length sleeves « ...leather belt ... 04 O SCGGaGSAEaaeeeeaeans } i By WILLIAM A. BAKER Central Press Correspondent ALPINE, Tex.—With Big Bend National park, on the Rio Grande south of here, now open, and with a national park in Mexico, oppo- site Big Bend, under discussion by Mexican and United States offi- cials, the tourists who are expected to throng all the parks soon may be able to drive from one to an- other of some 50 historic and scenic areas in Alaska, Canada, the United States and Mexico, along several thousand miles of the projected Alaska-to-Argentina In- ternational highway. A ruler laid on the map of North America with its edge touching Dawson Creek, British Columbia, southern terminus of the Alaska Highway, and Nuevo Laredo, Mex- ico, northern terminus of the Pan American highway, would be roughly paralleled by U. S. Route 87, from Great Falls, Mont, via Cheyenne, Wyo.; Denver, Colo.; Raton, N. M.; Amarillo and San Angelo to San Antonio, Tex. An association is striving to have the United States section of the International highway located on or near U. S. 87. If the Alaska military road is opened to tourists after the war, the international trunk road will have as a tourist attraction, ac- cessible by rail from the highway's northern (Fairbanks, Alaska) ter- minus, Mt. McKinley National park, containing the highest peak ir North America. It is understood that the Canadian government is setting aside a mountain and gla- cier area in the southwestern cor- ner of Yukon Territory, west of the highway. After the Canadian Rockies parks of Jasper and Banff (joined by thy Icefield Drive and with Mount Revelstoke, Glacier and Yoho National parks nearby) a good road reaches the Canada- U. S. Border at Waterton lakes (Canadian) and Glacier (United State) National parks. Among the many national parks and monuments and state parks farther south along U. S. 87 (or fairly close to it) are Yellowstone, Grand Teton and the Devil’s Tower in Wyoming, the Badlands, Wind Cave and Mt. Rushmore in South Dakota, Rocky Mountain (Estes), the Garden of the Gods, Pike's Peak and Mesa Verde in Colorado, the White Sands and Carlsbad Caverns in New Mexico, Palo Duro Canyon, Davis Mountain and Big Bend in Texas. Some distance to the west are Zion, the Grand Canyon, the Paint- ed desert and the Petrified Forest; however, these places are nearer another route also advocatéd as the United States section of the International highway. Several states have officially requested a Louisein From South | The Princess Louise arrived at the Alaska Steamship Company’s dock| from the South last evening at 8 o'clock with 30 inbound passengers. [ Those arriving from Seattle were: | Clara E. Currie, James L. Currie, Ce- | FORT YUKONO 7 QUAIRBANKS ALASKA THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-—JUNEAU, ALASKA TOURISTS TO VIEW FIFTY HISTORIC AND 'GOING MY WAY' { SCENIC AREAS FROM ALASKA TO MEXICO oreAr PAGE FIVE LENTURY s Back acam DRASS - AT 20TH CENTURY Tonight and Thursday at the muh“ Century Theatre is a return show- | | | R p vear = = "% /| | ing of the Academy award winning =g = ™ Crosby and Barry Fitzgerald. an —r= o) It is a heart-warming story of a = a young priest and his troubles in RETURN SHOWING L - % making over a neighborhood parish Crowds the country over have seen = ront Nmson 014 SAYELRER 1t Gver and over again, yet enjoying » , t /‘ H ' DOMINION OF |is more each time. | ( ( A 4 !’ ‘, . D. ® CANADA === | Others in the cast are Risc Stev- b g |ens and Frank McHugh. By " o \ A T ‘TBBROADCASTS ARE | : Pacific 4 = . Of—Lran) G kg Y } STARTING TONIGHT| BING CROSBY .fi‘fié::. “ = ! Sponsored by the Alaska Tuber- L ik PARK AT 7. i sis 2RO g i St B\ o] | Culosis Assoclation, aseries of 13 BARRY FITZGERALD [naronar rarx [ "8 ) s nm;@< radio dramatizations on Alas! i GRAND TETON] e | ever-current problem, tubercule Yo i QUi swsmore] | will be presented over KINY during i 4 THE GODS successive weeks. The first will be RGTKY MOUNTAIN (65165 <“l"m« PAINTED] (e NATIONAL PARK eS| oeseRT PEAK foenver | heard this evening at 7:30 o'clock during the regular time allotted the e (11 —f P e | Gastineau Health Association. — canvon =3 | The seri entitled “The Con- = stant Invader,” was written and & produced by Hu Chain, author and £ = producer of many notable radio = shows. Dr. A. J. Cronin, famed gy | author and physician, acts as nar- L. i rator. Ben Ludlow, composer, has Ocean PAN-AMERICAN PSS~} fwazonciaie —ouur ] IT'S A LONG DRIVE!—Here is route United States route number for this route which is being promoted as the “Canada-United States- Mexi o Highway of Friendship.” This route is from Sweetgrass, Mont., via Great Falls and Billings, Mont.; Shoshoni and Rawlins, Wpyo.; Craig, Grand Junction and Durango, Colo.; Shiprock, N. M.; Sanders and Springerville, Ariz. There is controversy in Arizona over two routes from Springerville to the Mexican Border, one via Clifton and Safford to Douglas, the other via Globe and Tucson to Nogales. _There has been no action by any governmental agency to designate a United States section of the In- ternational highway. From El Paso, Tex., there is a good road to Chihuahua (230 miles), with the road under con- struction 100 miles farther south, to Camargo. Geography -and eco- nomics seem to demand a high- way from El Paso to Mexico City. From Nogales, Ariz., there is a road, via Hermosillo, to Guaymas, NEW ISSUE BROUGHT UP BY MOLOTOV (Continued from l’aqe One) e ek celia Chonder, Virginia Aahcmn‘ Mary V. Crawford, Mabel E. Carter, sign for the beaten Balkan States; Mabel B. Ellenwood, Oliver L. Ellen- and all five foreign ministers would wood, Florence Freed, Floyd F. sign the procotol for other deci- Goowwill, Eve Hamilton, Sidney H.'sions. He said repeatedly that the Hamilton, Isabelle Hartung, Grant potsdam agreement confined imme- McMurray, Harvey Oster, Elizabeth giate discussions of peace treaties . | JONES-STEVENS | SEWARD STREET oT T rosreserenag J. Peratrovich, Vera L. Parke, Helen B. Rice, Myrtle Turner, Charles H.‘ Treat and Martha P. Treat. From Ketchikan: Johny Scherrin~ ger, L. Levington, Herb Kittilsby, L. Levy, R. E. Randell and L. P. Rin- ard. From Wrangell: Fred Vegler, E. C.! Intolubbe and H. D. Barrow. The following 22 people left at] 11:30 p. m. for Skagway: Mrs. Rey‘i noldson, L. E. Reynoldson, George Angel, Mrs. W. McCracken, Mrs. Lyle Lohr, Dora Johns, Mary Bean, The Rev. H. F. Fredsell, R. R. Wilson, | J. R. Clark, W. J. Plumley, H. Evans, Mrs. W. Zeiser, Walt Zeiser, Earl Stendahl, Agnes V. Peterson, H. B.| Peterson, R. B. Clifton, Mrs. R. B. Clifton, H. Oster, G. N. Woodward and David Fox. i The Louise is scheduled to arrive, from Skagway Friday morning at; 6:15 o'clock and sails south at 8 o'clock. REMINDER GIVEN ON | OVERSEAS MAIL FOR CHRISTMAS mcfls{ Postmaster Crystal Jenne todny pointed to the nearing deadline, oc-! tober 15, for mailing Christmas packages to servicemen overseas as a reminder to the home folks in and about Juneau that they had better get busy and get those parcels in the mail — right now: | Packages, she said, should be well- wrapped and plalnly marked as, Christmas gifts and, most 1mportant,) they must be postéd not later than October 15. After that date, parcels| must be requested by the service- | man in order to be acceptable for | overseas mailing. - e Seventeen American ships have | been converted to mule cafriers at| an average cost of $317,133 each. | ze05 to countries signing armistices. “We hold that the ministers are not entitled to violate decisions by the heads of their governments,” | he said. “It is not the habit of the Soviet Union to violate its obliga- tiéns and I do not recommend to others to do so.” AGREEMMENTS ACHIEVED MOSCOW Oct. 3—Soviet news- papers printed a Tass dispatch from London today which reported | that while there were “serious con- | tradictions” at the conference of the foreign ministers council, ‘“agreements were achieved on a number of questions.” The first reaction expressed among the people was not one of of the highway, Alaska to Mexico. deep sea fishing. From the United States border to Mexico City the only all-weather road is the Pan American highway Tamazunchale (Thomas and it). According to William H. Fur- long of San Antonio, director gen- eral, Inter-American Highway as- sociation, the Pan American is fin- ished to beyond Comitan, Chiapas, with the exception of about 100 miles of extremely difficult moun- tainous terrain between Juchitan and Arriaga, near the Gulf of Tehuantepec. Dr. H. W. Morelock, president of Sul Ross State college at Alpine, who believes the International highway ought to pass through Big! Bend, envisions that park as an’ "Acropolis of the Americas,” a shrine of international understand- ing for all the nations of the west- ern hemisphere. dismay, but more of concern. | The Tass dispatch said the efforts | of the United States and Britain |to bring China and France into | the Balkan settlement was in | “strict contradiction” to procedure \agreed upon at Berlin. Col. James Stewart [ Going fo Take Rest - Then Back in Films HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Oct. 3.—Col. James Stewart has arrived home and outlined his postwar plans. | “First I'll take a rest, stretch my legs, read a good book and stuff like that,” the lanky former screen star told newsmen as he alighted from the train. After that he wants to start making pictures, he added. Stewart served overseas for two years with the Eighth Air Force, flying 20 bomber missions and act-| |ing as flight operations officer. He | has 123 discharge points. “I want| |to get out as soon as possible,” he 1 told reporters. | o > | TREAT'S PARENTS \ HERE “ | The Rev. and Mrs. Robert Treat have as their house guests his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles H., Treat, who arrived on the Steamer | | Princess Louise, coming here from their home in Michigan for a visit of several mont) Gulf of California port tumous ror via Nuevo Laredo, Monterrey and | Charlie—-as American tourists call | only a few miles from Guatemala, | ;arranged the accompanying music. Record No. 1 is called “Medicine and Surgery,” and it gives the his- , , torical background of the tuber- culosis campaign. It dramatizes | Laennec’s invention of the stetho- scope, Koch's discovery of the X- y and Trudeau's discovery of the regime. Mrs. Bess Winn, execu- retary of the Alaska Tuber- Association, invites listeners to tune in and not miss any of these really fine dramatizations. - D MRS. W. A. CHIPPERFIELD HERE FROM PETERSBURG i’s the Academy Award Winner? | Mrs. W. A. Chipperfield is in Juneau from her home in Peters- burg where her husband is Peters- burg Division Supervisor for the United States Forest Service.- A former resident of Juneau, she will be in town about a week and is staying at the Baranof Hotel. .- DPRINK KlNG BLACK LABEL! ‘Y COLISEUM & - LAST TIMES TONIGHT “THE APE MAN” “SIX-GUN GOSPEL” BRONZE SHAFTING — STERN BEARINGS — PROPELLORS GRAY MARINE ENGINES SAL and SERVICE Juneau Welding and Machine Shop Famous Osco Marine Moior Now Available in all sizes—sturdy and compact. ALSO 0SCO HERCULES DIESEL as small as 25 horsepower. HARBOR MAHINE SHOP ™' 5V e™ WELDING West Eleventh and F. Streets Phone 876 PSR AN RS SR SRS S SR SERC O SR G e I AUDITS SYSTEMS TAXES NEILL, CLARK and COMPANY Established 1940 Public Accountants — Auditors — Tax Counselors 208 Franklin Street — Phone 757 FAIRBANKS OFFICE—201-2 LAVERY BUILDING Kinloch N. Neill John W. Clark IRE ABOUT OUR MONTHLY ACCOUNTING SERVICE B HERE'S NO ration- J Juneau ing of insurance policies! You don’t need tokens or ration books to buy full protection for all your property or posses- sions. Just drop in our office any time and ask us for information about your insurance. Shattuek Agency Seward Street Phone 249 NEW HALLICRAFTER RECEIVERS ‘ Now in Stock ALASKA ELECTRONICS 217 Seward Street @ Expert repair work done without delays @ Let us overhaul your old radio to restore its new performance OUT-OF-TOWN ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED Tubes . . . Batieries . . . Marine Transmitters . . . Etc. 56 FORRIPTERHG PO TET ORI RIIEIIF I RRRREEETRERIFRRFRRFRFR SPECIALIZING IN FERMANENT WAVING HAIR CUTTING AND GENERAL BEAUTY CULTURE A FULL LINE IN DERMETICS CREAMS LUCILLE’S BEAUTY SALON PHONE 492 i | | E f SRS PR SSRGS ST DU L B AU i A | ANCHORAGE — FAIRBANKS | BusLeaves VALDEZIA.M. | Monday — Wednesday — Friday J Valdez to Anchorage, one way, $19.45 Valdez to Fairbanks, one way, $21.15 TAX INCLUDED O’Harra Bus Lines : FRANK’S / QUICK / LUNCH 92 announces THE RE-OPENING OF ITS CAFE Breakfasts Lunehes Dinners Open 7 A. M.to 3 A. M. Special Chinese Dishes ———“BEST CUP OF COFFEE IN TOWN"”——— SERVING SSGS There Is No Suhsntute for Newspaper Advertising! , ~\\§\\§&\mm\