The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 24, 1941, Page 2

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CHAIN STORE TAX BILL IS INTRODUCED Rep. Gordon Asks License of $10 to $475 Year- ly on Each Branch A bill taxing chain stores operat- ing in A was introduced in the House tod by Rep. Fre of the Fourth Division similar to one the Fairbanks chant submitted two years ago The license on such stores, which include order offices, would be based er of stores belonging whether within or The bill is mer- upon the num to the chain, without the Territory not more than ten stores the tax would be $10 for each store operat- ing in Alaska. This tax is graduated up to $475 per year on each Alaska store of a chain having more than 450 stores anywhere. The House today passed Rep. Charles Herbert's bill repealing ob- solete provisions for-the election of District Road Commissioner The much-discussed, much-substi- tuted. much-referred “pill bill” to regulate the sale of certain drugs was referred again to the Education Committee to have a penalty clause inserted “Do pass” recommendatior made on Rep. William Egan’s'bill to punish employers who fail to pay workmen and on Rep. Jesse Lander's bill to allow taking of depositions from witnesses living outside ihe Territory in criminal cases. Another Lander bill, one which would make judgments of Justice Courts prim; facie evidence on appeal to Distric were Courts, came out of the Judiciary | Committee with a “do not pass” recommendation signed by all mem- bers of the committee except Lan- der. The House adjourned o'clock tomorrow ~ .o IN THE | | SENATE H. J. M. 8, by Shattuck ask ress to extend the Fed- eral Highw Act in Alaska PASSED—H. B. 7, by Education Committee, licensing embalmers at $10 per vear. KILLED — H. B. 14, by Harvey Smith, to appropriate $2,000 for an entertainment fund for the Alaska Delegate to Congress; vote 5 to 3. KILLED—S. B. 1, by Cochran, to repeal the bounty on eagles; vote 4104 PASSED S. J asking Congress to transfer juris diction over Alaska fisheries from the Department of Interior to the Territorial Legislature, RALPH MOREAU IS FOUR - EVENT SKI CHAMPION untit 11 M. 5, by Coffey, Juneau I?;bresenlative | Takes Honors at ‘41 An- chorage Rendezvous Alaska, Feb. 24.— was ac- champion the An- complet- u of Juneau, four-event at the ski tournament of chorage Fur Rendezvous ed Saturday afternoon Totaling 365 points for honors in the downhill, cross country, sl lom and jumping contests, the pop- ular Juneau was followed by of Fairbanks,” with a points and Dow third was a possibility of four events jumping contests tournament were held Satur- Fis Inn. Jacobsen Mines won fir: Anchorage, second and third two Juneau 1d Axel 343. Ther points for The f the day The Moreau torn Kinley representativ. Nielson, will re- Ju - o Terriforial Schoo! Board Meei Begins ritcrial Board first meeting Office of the ition. James session Memk cf Educ this fo Commissione Ryan. Minu were read and furthet business was postpe until tomorrow awaiting the atten ce s alsh, in the of Ed 5 of the last Nome, who will arrive on the Yukon. | - MRS. BOTSFORD SOUTH Mrs. Botsford is on leave of absence from her duties at the Bureau of Mines office and sailed south on the Princess Norah L nk Gordon | On chains of | [ IN THE | HOUSE B. 52, by Attorney Gea paid INT D H Lander, to reimburse |eral James S. Truitt for extra clerical help INTRODUCED — H Lander, providing for appeal to the Circuit Court INTRODUCED—H B 54, Lander extending contempt court di of ments, 1 for 1y by on B record by of judg- pay and to cover decrees alim tees in divorce t "RODUCED—H. B by M- appropriate $5,000 for ng the Doug- orders | ment. of k, to ing and equipp! hool gymnasium, INTRODUCED—H. B, 56, by Gor- lon, INTRODUC! B. 57, Herbert, authorizing Postmaste take acknowledgements, adminis oaths and perform other nota | public functions required by of the Legislature. PASSED—H. B, 26, by repealing sections providing | District Road Commissioners. R by S to ct Herbert, | fe LABORBILL - SUBSTITUTE IS KILLED Attorney General Would Be Ex Officio Com- | missioner : Proposal for a new Department of Labor bill which would make tk Territorial Attorney General ex of- ficio Commissioner of Labor was de- | feated in the Senate today w | substitute bill so providing dorsed by only two of the four mem- bers of the Labor Committee. Senate President Henry Roden | ruled that the original Department of Labor bill, Senate Bill No. 13, is| the one now before the body. Those supporting the substitute | were Senators C. H. LaBoyteaux and | O. D. Cochran and those successfully |opposing were Henry Roden and | Edward Coffey. | The Senate today passed Rep. Al- |len Shattuck’s memorial asking ex- | tension of the Federal Highway Act to Alaska and also passed Senator | Coffey’s memorial asking that fish- |eries jurisdiction be transferred to | the Territory. | Adjournment was taken out of re- |spect to the late Senator Joe Hof- !man of Seward, member two years | ago, who was characterized by Sen- |ator Cochran in a brief tribute to- |day as kindly, courageous, hones jand a man loved and respected by |all. | “of all the men it has been my privilege to know in this Territory, I have never known one imbued with | higher ideals,” Cochran said. 1 Hofman died shortly after ad- journment of the 1939 Legislature. - - NORTHSEA ATS A M. Steamer North Sea, scheduled | earlier to arrive tomorrow afternoon, is due here at 8 o'clock tomorrow | | morning, according to a radiog ram | |late this afternoon. The vessel will be in port three or four hours before | sailing for Sitka. o Silent Star Injured | | eau on the Mount Me- | Vera Steadman Once a leading comedienne of the silent movies, Vera Steadman, 40, is in critical condition in a Bever- “ ly Hills, Cal., hospital of injuries received when two automobiles | struck her while she was crossing | & street, we | where's the inequi | have a property | pack whether it wa THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, FEB. 24, t ory behind Federal Gov- ernment’s, as understood by min- ALOLS, that it allowead to build up a fupd for development and future ope; was vork Harsch's reply was that he had 0 knowledge of the theory in ba of the law, that he considered .a concession to the mining inc on the part Congress letion delinite deg from the d theo Rep. Davis called atten- ion to the fact that to encoura Further Features of Meas- IV ure Brought Out in |winig development some coun- » ries allowed up to 5 ercen: g~ Senate Hearing etiod 3 it rE . 2 allowance on the cost of rospecting and development, E if of ure et Clcser the propes income made thi n Committee-of-the-Whole session was resumed in the Senate Chambers { Questioned closely by Senator O | D. Cochran of Nome, Prof. Alber Harsch, who draf the bill, admit ted that on indiv Is engaged mining the proposed income would be ‘pyramic upon the nt gross Cochran meant by pres ferred to in the bill’s preamble, whi the Professor answered by sa the present structure is not based the universally accepted theo ation on the basis of abil pay. i ect on Capital the Territory’s 1 uld not tend to havg effect upon the en- capital into Alaska f Judge W. C. Ar anted further information arding any deviation of s rom the more liberal depletion iauses of the Federal act and M 1 said that he knew of state income tax law that deps d from the Federal law in this ircumsfance. Chairman Den Carlos Brownell lled to appear Lefore the com- nittee Judge E. F Medley, oldtin kan, but now a practicing attor- ey in Seattle where, after } tice in the Territory he is now presenting Capt. A. E. Lathrop. ho has extensive investments in |5 and v iness brought | udge Medley Juneau at this tme nfining marks about t posed income t il to its leg nd practical effects, Judge Med anding on the fleor of the Sena committee of Asking Leral law ‘deterring ance of evelopment, ta pre: Hars no ch what h - inequities re- Uniform System ‘The Senator claimed the pr vstem was not inequitable, a plies uniformly. “We don't tax non-re don’t tax r hran in- quired. | Y The Professor said only | ‘ountries in the world today do not | “ivulzed tax on the basis of net income. He|whele a study of the bill from i caid there were types of business and | brema > final sections, ndividuals in the Territory who are | Preambie Not Excepted not contributing at all at present.| Questioning the exempting section Marsch said the Territory was alsé |of the bill, Medley called attention ‘very unique” in that it has no prop- 1 to the fact that it failed to exempt rty tax. |in legal effect, the preamble. A " m»mnor place my finger on anv | preamble, he said, usually lays “the State in' the world which does not|basis for some act whose constitu- said. | tionality may be questioned” and he v azreed in | questioned the preamble’s descrip- want one,” | tion of the Territory’s tax structure ‘:v.s an outmeded survival of frontier days before Territorial governme Abont eigh “No, and it e Territory we ochran retorted Carryever Problems Senator Edward Coffey said that | existed. when salmon packs were carried| Th: pughout the preposed Territor- ver from one year to the next, as|igl net income tax measure, the often happens, Territorial ir | 3 : st s i | tendency was, Judge Medley said Wvl : '\-(“h‘ e greatly 1S O Income | when ther¢ was any deviation from X would be paid until the pack was |the Federal law, to deviate on the sold [ ’ on the part of i} o -1 side of severity t was broueht out that the pack |Territorial law. This was evident i pertaining to personal tax would have to be paid on the | the section | or , to exemptions, to errors on bill designed to|the part of corporations in making more heavily | ret and to deductions of taxes gth again to-|pe paid h said that undoubt ere would bhe some who ¥ > to avoid p: the with however, ite any great lecting, Coffey observed, “W have to have an Att in each Division.” don sold or not. | losses, Features of the A further question wa 1 be | by Judge Medley yment entirvely de: ‘\quvm references_in the law to the clause. Harsch | Federal Internal Revenue Codesr If he did not antici-|q)) references to the Federal statutes difficulty in eol-|included in the Territorial law had been set down, he said, the Terri- e'd probably ) torial act would be twice as long as 'y Gener !}us present 97 pages, but this he The bill would not cover incom l:;ga(nl;.};m,‘:z !,i,,d(,":[ h?,:,t,{";,figz utside companies derived frem | taxpayers, S T pm,,}\;‘o[ the nail orders, it was brought out. |Federal code might not be available The depletion features of the bill | Deductions Discussed il differ from the Federal provision,| In the matter of deductions of net it was explained, in t depletion | jncome taxes, not allowed by the would be allowed only up to the | Teritorial law, (the Federal law al- umount of the capital ! : hile the Fede brought up ng the fre- 1 lows the ' net income taxes of any other in- aking of de’))lvt‘mn-v y come tax except the Federali tax— vith no final limit. | that is State or ecity or Territorial) At one point, Coffey observed :a deviation from the theory of {he ‘This may be fairly clear to you,|Federal law. Judge Medley nave Professor, but not to me.” this example: g i Depletion Theory ! Under the proposed Territorial Charles Johnston, Goodnews Bay law, a mining company which he ‘num cperator, questioned tunecited as having paid on a $650,000 manner in which the bill deals income in 1940, net income tax of vith depleticn, and explained that | $156,000 and excise tax of $156,000 *| erman I The total U. 8. pack was 422,625 the ! 5 a half million cases below the pre- 1941. REPEAL OF EAGLE BOUNTY DEFEATED IN SENATE TODAY ‘But Removal of Appropri-| ation Foreshadowed | in Discussion | A bill to do away with the fll bounty on eagles was killed by a tie vote of four to four in the Senate this morning, but several] of the Senators voting against the| | pill said they would vote against lan appropriation for carrying it | into effect in the next biennium. Senator Leroy Sullivan argued | the eagle bounty act should be leftl on the Statute books to preserve Alaska control over the bird but that no appropriation need be made‘ | if Territorial finances will not per- mit. Senator Edward Coffey said that as a member of the Finance Committee he would oppose the appropriation. Coffey asserted removal of the| eagle bounty was being sought as| the result of “pressure” upon the| Game Commission from Washing- ton “from sources with which most of you are familiar.” Representative Heard Rep. Willlam Egan of Valdez, was given the privilege of the floor ‘0 oppose the bill. Senator Don Carlos Brownell of Seward also voted against it. Senator O, D. Cochran of Nome,| author of the bill, said the argu-| ment that eagles destroyed salmon | nas proved so puerile that it hadn’t even heen advanced in recent years. He said that was no doubt but what eagles destroyed animal and bird life, but that this was a na-| tural process of survival of the| fittest which there was no reason| (anned Fish Packin 1940 Is Announced Wwith the appearance of the 1941 rearbook number of Pacific Fish- coordinated statistics = on U. S. supply of canned fisn m Pacific waters are now avail- able, The total U, the S. pack of canned salmon during the 1940 season ;4'...““1!‘([ to 5548902 cases, of | which 5,028,378 cases were packed [in Alaska. The Columbia River | pack came to 386999 cases. Puget ound production was 121,428 cases, and Washington and Oregon coast | streams accounted for 12,097 cases. | cases below the 1939 output and 11,376,000 cases below the average for |the preceding ten years. The 1940| pack was the smalilest since 1927, {when total U. 8. canned salmon | production amounted to 5053472 | cases. { [ While the 1940 salmon pack was | considerably below average, thej pack of other canned fish which | competes with canned salmon for | consumer acceptance is plentiful. | The California pack of canned |tuna during 1940 amounted to 3;- 8 5 cases, more than half a million cases over the 1939 pack,| and the largest canned tuna pack) ever put up in California. | The pack of canned sardines in Californja during the last year to- talled 2.869,031 cases, approximately | ceding year, but siightly more than erage canned sardine pack previous five years. California’s production of canned ., which competes vigorous- StMare with southern markets, particuarly | (b, Ierfers win | \ Alaska packed chum salmon,| % Those voting for tue DU o | . o oot mounted ith. 1,948,405 {6asak, TRY| $OCIaI; (Ce H. - (Alabg). TEHOYC) gain of nearly 40 percent teaux, Norman R. Walker and 1939 pack, and was the| BJalmar Nordale Sullivan, Coffey, cost canmed mackerel | Brownéll and Henry Rofen voted | the history of the Cali-|2BaINSE | >o of w over industry to the Federai Government, would in | DELEGATE FUND turn be required to pay a 4 percent | net income tax on the original | voTED Dow" IN | SENATE SESSION | $650,000— though $312,000 of this had Legislators Doubt Advisa-' been paid to the Federal Govern- | ment and in no sense, Judge Medley said, should be regarded as net | income in computing Territorial taxes. Both the Federal net income tax and the excise tax should, Judge | THE WEATHER ¥ (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) U. S. DEPARTMENT OF CON MERCE, WEATHER BUREAU Forecast for Juneau snd vicinity, bcginning at 4:30 p.m., Feb, 24: Increasing high cloudiness tonigh! and Tuesday but with light snow probably commencing Tuesday aft:rnogn; not much change in tem- perature, lowest temperature tonight about 23 degrees, highest tem- perature Tuesday about 30 degrees; moderate to fresh northeaste winds, becoming easterly Tuesday; winds strong tonight and Tuesday in nearby channels. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Increasing cloudiness tonight, light rain commencing over the south portion Tuesday, and occa- sional light snow over the northern portion Tuesday afternoon; no decided change in temperatures tonight and Tuesday morning. Mod- erate to fresh north to northeasterly winds tonight and Tuesday, ex- cept winds becoming east and southeasterly over the southern por- tion Tuesday. Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alasks: Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: Strong easterly winds tonight, becoming easterly and southeast Tu>sday; cloudy tonight; rain Tues- day; Cape Spencer to Cape Hinch nbrook: Fresh to strong east to northeasterly winds tonight, becomng strong Tuesday; partly cloud Cape Hinchinbrook to Kodiak: Fr:sh to strong northeasterly winds; partly cloudy. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 26 35 NE 21 24 35 sSwW 9 25 37 NE 18 RADIO REPORTS ‘Weather Clear Clear Cloudy Time 4:30 p.m. yesterday 29.98 4:30 am, today ... 29.92 Noon today ... 29.94 TODAY Lowest 4:30am. Precip. 4:30am temp. temp. 24 hours Weather --9 -2 0 Pt. Cldy -12 -10 0 Clear -4 1 01 Snow -14 4 Cloudy 19 19 Clear 31 1 Snow 13 Pt. Cldy 36 Rain 39 Pt. Cldy 40 Rain 35 Cloudy 20 Clear 24 Clear Clear Clear Pt. Cldy Clear Cloudy Foggy Pt. Cidy Max. tempt. last 24 hours -1 15, 2 10 31 2 17 38 42 .43 42 41 21 41 40 42 21 47 49 59 Station Barrow .. Fairbanks Nome Dawson Anchorage Bethe] St. Paul Dutch Harbor Wosnesenski Kanatak .. Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka ... Ketchikan Prince Rupert Prince George Seattle Portland San Francisco 24 30 -2 42 36 36 51 52 WEATHER SYNOPSIS Weather summary for Monday morning’s weather chart: relati ly high pressure with clear skies and slightly below the seasonal nor- mal temperatures prevailed over S .utheast Alaska, and over most sections of Alaska propert, duringthe past 24 hours. Light snow was falling this morning over the Bristol Bay and Norton Sound areas A relatively weak low pressure area was centered this morning about 200 miles off the coast of Vancouver Island. This storm ap- peared to be moving slowly eastward inland, but its path was to far south to cause more than some high cloudiness over the southen portion of Southeast Alaska, Another more intense low pressure cen- ter of about 981 millibars (29.97 inches), located in the extreme lower southwestern Gulf of Alaska, was also advancing eastward, but it ap- peared to be following a course more to the north of the first storm and at its present rate of movement should approach the coast of Southeast Alaska sometime Tuesday. This pressure distribution will cause the strong winds in the chaunnels of Southeast Alaska to con- tinue until after Tuesday. Juneau, Feb. 25.—Sunrise 8:06 am. sunset 6:17 p.m. 2 33 -2 44 40 Medley pointed, be a credit on the Territorial income tax. - ‘ Stock QUOTATIO! ’ NEW YORK, Feu. 24. — Ciosing tion of Alaska Juneau mine today is 4 American Can 85':, Anaconda 23%, Bethlehem Steel 78%, Commonwealth and Scuthern 11/16, Curtiss Wright 8% neral Motors 427%, International Harvester 48%, Kennecott 33'%, New York Central 12%, Northern Pacific 6%, United States Steel 584, Pound $4.03. ment, | Jows the deductions from Federal DOW, JONES AVERAGES y Zollowing are today's Dow, Jones averages: industrials 12149, rails 27.35, utilities 19.05. - SISTERS SOUTH Sister Mary Modeste and Sister Mary Olive-Ann, hoth of St. Ann’s | Hospital, sailed south on the Prin cess Norah yesterday morning en- route to Victoria for a visit. Top left, large woven grass hat; below, felt hat with pie-crust brim; right, chapeau with matching bib. This season the relation between the new hats and | be worn ‘either off the hair arrangement are closer than ever. The position you wear your hat on your head will de- pend largely on haw you do your hair, It's en- tirely up to you whether you should wear your chapeau forward, behind the pompadour, ‘or straigh§ on your head. The large hat, top left, is called “Jungle Reed,” and is woven of native of the new sailor third hat, right, the face or level, depending upon your whim or your hair. Below, a perfect example which is worn level. It is made of green felt with a violet band and the new pie-crust brim that is so popular this year. The is the “necklace” type, which focuses interest on a well-molded chin. It is made of pink dotted Swiss, has a soft, pointed brim, and South American grass in natural color. It may | its matching bib is_attached with tiny self bows. bility, Leqality of | Appropriation :‘ | The Alaska Delegate to Congress will get no $2,000 Territorial abpro- | priation for entertainment “and | other purposes” this session, it was | determined in the Senate {oday | when a vote of five to three de-| feated Rep. Harvey Smith's bill for | such a fund. | Those voting against the bill| were Senators Hjalmar Nordale, | Leroy Sullivan, N. R. Walker, O./ D. Cochran and Henry Roden. { Cochran said he felt very confi-| dant the Delegate had not request- | ed passage of such a measure and added he doubted very much if the | Delegate would approve its pas-; sage. He suggested provision of |such a fund by the Legislature | might come withini the Federal| i corrupt practices act. It would, ne said, set a precedent which has |never even been asked in the his- | tory of the. nation. Heavy Expense Senator Don Carlos Brownell ar- | gued that the Delegate at present | was making a very heavy expendi- | ture out of his own pocket for an- | swering telegrams of inquiry from Alaska and for other purposes. It isn't for the Delegate but for Al-| askans that the bill is intended, he said, | “Such an appropriation is right | 5m|d just and we should have, given |it to the Delegate long ago,” Brown- | ell declared. | Roden held the expréssion “and | for other purposes” in the bill meant “just nothing.” He said that | when the people of Alaska give | the - Legislature _the authority to | spend their money they want to know what it’s going for, o S i el e 'MAIL TO COME ~ NORTHINNEW | PAALODESTAR %Ship Scheduled fo Leave ' Tomorrow Morning- May Go 10 Fairbanks | Making its first Alaska flight, a Inew PAA Lodestar, only recently | | off the Lockheed assembly line,|her record of 100 percent in attend- | will leave Seattle tomorrow morn- ‘ing bound for Juneau with mail. There is a possibility that the ship |will fly on to Fairbanks after landing here. It is scheduled to re- | turn to Seattle Wednesday. An Electra is due to land here from Fairbanks this afternoon with one passenger, John White. The Douglas DC-3 which has re- cently been repaired and flown o | south. "pougLas NEWS DOUGLASITES ASSIST IN HONORING DR. the surprise party given in Juneau Saturday evening at Percy's Cafe complimentary to Dr. L. P. Dawes, who with Mrs. Dawes is leaving soon for an extended Vacation trip. With Mrs. W. E. Cahill in charge, numerpus island friends of the doc- tor participated liberally in the tri- bute so well deserved. —-0'.-.— COUNCIL MEETING The City Council of Douglas will be in session this evening for the second of the regular bi-monthly meetings. Routine business only is scheduled. SCHRAMMS RETURNING Due home tomorrow, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schramm are returning aboard the Yukon after two and one- half months’ vacation visit in the —,———— CHRISTENING Attended by Mr. and Mrs. William Cooper as godparents, Mrs. Ida Rein- ikka, and Mr. and Mrs, George Bol- yan, his grandparents, and Mary and Lawrence Bolyan, niece and nephew, in addition to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Bolyan, young son of the latter couple was yesterday christ- ened Clyde Henry. Service for the six weeks’ old youngster was held at Holy Trinity Cathedral, Rev. Dean Charles E. Rice, officiating. S e o o BOY'S HAND BADLY CUT Curtis Bach, son of Mr. and ‘Mrs. | Edward Bach, received quite a’ cut | in the palm of his hand Saturday afternoon when he slipped on the frozen ground and falling backwards | landed on some broken glass. The young man now has his hand in a sling after being treated by Dr. L. P. Dawes. BACK TO SCHOOL Alfonso’s Condifion VeryGrave Douglas was well represented at | Former King? Spain How- ever Passed Quief Night His Physician States ROME Feb. 24.—Dr. Giovanni Col- azza, personal physician to former | King Alfonso fo Spain, describad the | ex-Monarch as still “gravely ill.” The doctor said his patient was relieved of some of the symptcms and passed last night in a much quieter condition than for several nights. ankle bone received at his work, Merrill is able to get around with the aid of crutches and he hopes to be fully recovered when he re- turns. B WARNER'S STORE 5 MINUS CLERKS TODAY Weather of the past two days has undoubtedly been pretty stormy be- tween the channel and Berners Bay and accounts for the failure of Pat Parkhurst, Wilfred Fleek, Bernhart and Hjalmar Savikko who left Sat- urday in the latter’s boat for the trip there, to return in time for re- opening of business this morning. Both Parkhurst and - Fleek are ems ployed at Warner's grocery store. Louise Sands Has Seventh Birthday The seventh birthday of Louise 3ands was complimented at a party ziven Saturday afternoon by her mother, Mrs. Harry Sands, at the family residence on the Douglas Highway. A patriotic theme was se- 'ceted for the occasion. Thoese present were Bebe Daniels, Lucile Goetz was able to TelUrn | youp mayior Janice, Virginia and to school today after a week’s in- | capacitation due to flu which broke ance for the term. —— e _MRS. WALTERS LEAVES Mys. Clarence Walters sailed Sat- urday aboard the Mount McKinley for Skagway where she will visit for several weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Feero. B MERRILL ENROUTE SOUTH A. H. Merrill left yesterday on the | Seattle, is due to return to Juneau | some time at the end of the week, RPAA officials said, Princess Norah enroute to Chelan, Wash., for a couple of weeks busi- ness trip. Injured with a crushed Ssther Jenson, Mary Neimi, Carol Ructsala, Alice Johnson, Mary and May Cuthbert, Dede Warner, Bon- nie Wagner, Marilyn Isaac, Beverly Irickson, Pauline Bonner, Catherine Valesen, Gloria Anderson, Glenadee Heatherly and Pat Patterson. . (OLISEUM-DOUGLAS Tuesday—Wednesday CHARLIE CHAN in 2 | "Treasure Island” e e .

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