The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 27, 1942, Page 3

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L e A S T L I AR .2 TONIGET and SATURDAY 2 FEATURES THEATRE SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU The Lone Wolf makes a deal with the cops. .. off the bottom of the £4 RE AND Comedy RULES THE WAVES! EDWARDSMALL W% By e o JHREE > o(KEYED §AILOW ~ MICHAEL WIL HMANN LATE NEWS—“JUNGLE GIRI turday Matinee (PROVIDING THEY ARRIVE) THE CAPITOL HAS TIIE EIG PICTURES! DOUGLAS NEW (LASS OF NEWS NURSES AIDES THANKSGI\'H\T(; IS QUIETLY : BEG}N MONDAY OBSERVED IN DOUGLAS Monday evening in the Territorial T | Health Building, Mrs. Kenneth Nel- son will begin the instruction of a new class of Nurses' Aides, Juneau | women who are going to train to | assist in the hospitals on volunteer duty during the war because of the shortage of nurses now. Among those who have register- ed and have been accepted for this class are Ethel Burnette, Bea- trice Turner, Gertrude Naylor, Ruth lor, Ruth Kenyon, Ruth Halter- man, Mrs. W. J. Manthey, Mary Claire Ayer, Jacqueline Stacy, Mrs Margaret Post, Marilyn Jackson, Phyllis Malcom and Elizabeth Ter- hune. This group will take an 80-hour Family gatherings and home par- | ties for the most part featured observance of Thanksgiving Day in Douglas yesterda It was a holiday for busin in general and a vaca- tion for school children which will extend to Monday, November 30. SO g e DANCE IS SUCCESS | First dance given by the newly organized Douglas Social Club her last night provided a good time for a fair sized crowd and paved the way for better and bigger events to follow. ->>o KIRKHAM, JR, TO KETCHIKAN Glenward Kirkham took passage on a halibut boat the first of this | week for Ketchikan, where he plan- | course, consisting of the class ned to spend some time before goINg | i ang later, a training course into military service. | goeriohs g § o el under the supervision of Mrs. Andy Gundersen, in the hospital. They will then give volunteer service for a few hours each week, along with the Nurses’ Aides who have already been trained and are now assisting in the hospital. WORKING AT FOUNDRY Alex Demos is now a member of the Treadwell foundry crew, having started to work there the fore part of this week. —— e TIDES TOMORROW High tide—5:26 am., 13.7 feet. Low tide—11:12 am, 5.7 feet. High tide—4:55 p.m., 14.1 feet. Low tide—I1:42 p.m, 18 feet. —,————— | SITKA BUSINESS MAN HERE ON WAY HOME FROM TRIP TO STATES Alden B. (Bill) Holt, owner of Holt's Men’s Shop, of Sitka, arrived | here from the south Wednesday {night and is stopping off in Juneau lon business before continuing his trip home. BUY DEFENSE STAMPS RIG— Let the scene be camp, tavern, or mansion—your choice of OLD SCHENLEY will give you the luxury of enjoyment of the finest whiskey money can buy. 'DOUBLE FEATURE |5 SCHEDULED AT | " CAPITOL THEATRE "Lone Wolf' o Share Bill | This Weekend with | "Cockeyed Sailors’ | The Lone Wolf, that :oguish |gentleman who steals jewels and | | kisses with equal dispatch, returns {to the screen in what has been Ihailed as his most exciting film, | “Secrets of the Lone Wolf,” Co- lumbia’s newest picturization of the popular detective series, coming to- jnight to the Capitol Theatre on a | double bill Warren William continues debo- nairly in the title role, as the past master of love and larceny. Filmed 1 side-splitting comedy |about the exploits of three screwy sailors, “Three Cockeyed Sailor which was directed by Walter Forde, with Tommy Trinder and| C 1 Lehmann in the principal tarring roles, will be unreeled in he other feature. United Artists| released the film. In the support- ng cast are-Michael Wilding and Claud Hulbert ,ee RUSSIAIS - CLEANING UP NAZIS \Great Offensive Rolls Out from Stalingrad-Other | Fronts Are Active | (Continued from Page One) DNB ther that the| Russians have launched an of- |fensive on a wide front south of| | Kalinin, 95 miles northwest of Mos- COw. Although the Kremlin remained | silent, these reports indicate that | {the Red Armies have also started \a major drive on the Moscow front, synchronized with the great coun- | ter-sweep at Stalingrad. Intermittently for several weeks,| the Germans have reported le(! powerful Soviet forces are massing | |in the Moscow region. { Germans Report Action Admitting for the first time that the Russians are fighting less than 135 miles from the Latvian fron- tier, the Nazi headquarters report- | ed that “in the region south of | Kalinin and the sector southeast| and west of Torpets, the enemy has | started an expected attack Novem- | ber 25 on a broad front.” The German communique assert- |ed that all the Soviet attacks in the new offensive have been ra—: |pulsed and that “local pockets |the enemy has been able to cre- |ate momentarily have been wiped {out by counter-attacks.” 1 Hitler's command acknowledged | that the Russians are striking out | with heavy tank-led infantry at- tacks between the Volga and Don; river bends near Stalingrad. - -ee J. W. GUCKER MAKES i TRIP ON BUSINESS J. W. Gucker, well known mer- chandise broker, arrived in Juneau : THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA™ ~ 3 ALERT RULES, PRACTICE AND ACTUAL,GIVEN Civilian Defense Diredorf Issues Complefe Di- | rections for Public i the public's knowing definitely the difference between Practice Alerts and Actual Alerts and how to govern their conduct accordingly, the Juneau Civilian Defense Council authorizes the fol- lowing announcement Initial Alarm Same The initial alarm of both Prac-| tice Alerts and Actual Alerts is' given by sounding 1-2 on the fire' siren i Practice Alerts are give practice to the the Juneau Civilian Defense or- ganization in the performance of their duties and to make the gen-' eral public conscious of the neces- sity, for the preservation of their own livés, of keeping under cover should actual enemy raids occur. | In Practice Alerts all Civilian Defense members should immedi- ately report to their proper sta-| tions, and all members of the pub- lic should remain indoors or, if upon the streets, immediately seek shelter in-doors or preferably in the nearest air raid shelter, and cease all automobile traffic No Surprise Practices No Practice Alert will be called without previous publicity. If the alert 1-2 is sounded, without pre- vious public notice, the public will To insure designed to members of |know that the Defense Council has received information of a threat- ened or impending actual enemy attack. | Actual Alert | Upon the sounding of the Alert 1-2, without previous publicity, all auxiliary police, air raid wardens, and auxiliary firemen should im-! mediately report to their proper stations, and remain on duty until relieved. All members of the De- fense Council staff should imme- diately report to the Control Sta- tion in the City Hall. | Schools, churches, theatres, lodg- es, and other places in which peo- ple are congregated should imme- | diately disperse and either go to| their homes or, if necessary, w; their places of business to guard or close them, or to the nearest air raid shelter. If the building in which they are congregated is an air raid shelter, then they may stay there | All persons, other than those necessary to close up or guard stores and businesses, should im- mediately return to their homes or ordinary places of domicile, or the nearest air raid shelter. i Emergency Kit v They should make certain they have quickly available warm cloth- | ing and an emergency supply of food, should evacuation become ex- | pedient. ! All dogs and other domestic ani- | mals should be securely confined indoor Air raid wardens and auxiliary police will aid in directing both pedestrian and automobile traffic, 50 that everyone may reach home and the streets be entirely cleared as quickly as possible, Information Given Out As soon as the Defense Council and get under tables, beds and similar pieces of furniture. Persons caught on the streets and unable to get indoors or into air raid shelters should lie flat on their stomachs, next to gutters or along the outer walls of buildings, and put their hands and arms over their heads for protection. All auto- mobile traffic should immediately stop and drivers and passengers seek shelter indoors. Night Alert In addition, should either an un- announced Alert Alarm of 1-2 or the General Enemy Attack Alarm of all whistles and bells be sound- ed during hours of darkness, then aN lights of every kind must be immediately extinguished, except in blacked-out rooms. Likewise, either of those Alarms has been sounded during daylight and the all clear signal has not been sound- ed before darkness arrives, . all lights must be Kkept extinguished until the all clear signal is sounded. Black-Out Rules During Black-Outs no lights of any kind should be shown upon the streets, except flashlights properly dimmed with red paint or paper, s0 to show only a small slit of light. Telephone Use During Actual Alerts or Attacks use of the telephone for personal purposes should be kept to a mini- mum, because the telephone serv- ice will be needed by the Civilian Defense Council. Emergency Water Residents are urged to keep on hand at all times a couple of gal- lons of drinking water, and, also, whenever possible, to keep a tub or barrel of water on hand for use should the town's water sys- tem be put out of operation. CDA. To Report Immediately after an actual enemy attack all Civilian Defense members should immediately, if not already on their stations, report to their stations to aid the injured, put out fires, and to do whatever they can to assist. All Clear The all clear signal will be sounded as soon as the Defense Council has official information it is safe to do so. The public as well as members of Juneau Civilian Defense are re- quested to clip this article and keep it posted in their homes or places of business. Miss Rae Stevens, Robert Hoopes Are Wed Wednesday Miss Rae Helen Stevens, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Stevens of this city, and Mr. Robert Hoppes of Fairbanks, were married at 8 |o'clock on Wednesday evening at a charming wedding in the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Wallis S. George in the Baranof Hotel. The Rev. W. H. Matthews, Jr., of- ficiated at the wedding which was’ attended by close friends of the family. The ceremony took place in the living room of the George pent- house which was beautifully dec- orated with banked white chrysan- themums. Preceding the ceremony Ernest ' Ehlers sang “God Made Thee Mine” and “Ah Sweet Mystery of Life.” | Miss Stevens, who was given in marriage by her father, was at- tended by Mrs. David Ramsay while James McNaughton acted as groomsman. The bride wore a pastel green two- piece afternoon dress with a corsage of white asters while Mrs. Ramsay was dressed in black with aqua trim and a corsage of yellow baby chrys- if )" "DIVE BOMBER' IS SHOWING ON BILL AT 20TH CENTURY Thrillin g Color Picture Shows Experimental Naval Flying Scenes There's something thrilling in the air, and Warner Bros. have drama- tized it, photographed it in won- derfully natural Technicolor, and served it up under the title of ive Bomber,” with two of the screen’'s most dashing heroes, Errol Flynn and Fred MacMurray for its costars. Made with the coopera- tion of the United States Navy, “Dive Bomber” is now showing at the 20th Century Theatre in the most gloriously exciting air drama the screen has yet given us The super-pilots who fly Uncle Sam’s super-planes, the dive bomb- ers, are the heroes of this epic of the skyways, and theirs is a thrill- a-second drama. The tremendously high altitude, the terrific rate of speed at which they descend upon their targets makes dive-bombing the most hazardous type of fly- ing. The main theme of the story is the work being done by the flight surgeons to lessen the physi- cal hazards to the dive bomber pilots. |INDIAN OFFICE RESEARCH NURSE HERE FOR WORK Miss Erma L. Parr, research nurse for the Office of Indian Affairs, accompanied by Ramona Grevelle, clerk, has arrived in Juneau to carry out X-ray examinations and tuber- |culin testing among the natives of Southeast Alaska. Their work is part of the B. C. G. disease prevention program, which has been carried on by the Indian | Service, U. 8. Public Health Service and Phipps Institute for the last six !years in the States and Southeast Alaska. | Miss Parr expects to be in this ipart of the Territory for about four months carrying on her work. Since (her last visit to the Territory, she ( has been working in Arizona, Wyom- ing, and other States on the same type of program. | Her headquarters will be in Ju- neau during her Southeast Alaska stay. | e HOSPITAL NOTES Master Bily Andrews has been discharged from St. Ann’s Hospi- tal where he underwent an op- eration. Mrs. Harry Douglas has been dis- missed from St. Ann’s Hospital where she was a surgical patient. James Reed, a medical patient of St. Ann's Hospital, has been | discharged. Mrs. Harry Harto became the mother of a daughter yesterday at 12:30 am. The baby weighed 6 pounds, 6 ounces. Bill Douglas entered St. Hospital yesterday for medical care. Mrs. Jerry Willlams has entered the Government Hospital. Ann’s from the south yesterday and con-|receives authentic information tinued to Sitka, leaving here early|after the sounding of an unan- this morritog: nounced Alert 1-2, as to when the —_— —e—— impending or threatened enemy BUY DEFENSE BONDS ‘lattack may be expected, it will spread, through the air raid war- dens, that information to the resi- dents of the town. If sufficient time offers, before the attack, to ]permn evacuation, orders will be immediately issued to evacuate everybody in accordance with the plans previously published. In case of evacuation every person should take with him warm clothing and an emergency supply of food. Immediate Attack If an actual enemy attack is im- mediately impending, the general alarm will be given by staccato| sounding of the fire horn and by a general sounding of all whistles and bells in Juneau. Should the| general alarms sound, either with| or without previously sounding the | Alert 1-2, the public will know the | attack is immediately imminent, and all persons should remain in-| doors, keep away from wxndows,‘ 'HOLZHEIMER BACK anthemums, Mrs. Stevens, mother of the bride, wore an afternoon dress | of salute blue with a corsage of: FROM FIRS' (I“ white flowers. | o Following the ceremony there was | U.S. Attorney William A. Holz- an informal reception. In the dining | heimer has returned from Ketchi- room, also decorated with white kan after an official trip to the chrysanthemums, the table Wwas Pirst City in connection with busi- lighted with white tapers in tall ness regarding the term of court. silver candelabra. He was gone approximately two Mr. and Mrs. Hoopes are at the | geeks Baranof Hotel and plan to leave the — court still is in session and will first of January for Fairbanks( oo o week from today with nat- where they will make their home. uralization hearings. Mr. Hoopes, who has lived in the ___“’_ Interior city for the last fifteen | years, is Master Senior Mechanic for the United States Army Engineers at Ladd Field and Mrs. Hoppes has worked for the Army Engineers in Fairbanks for the last year and a half. MRS. GUNNAR BLOMGREN RETURNS FROM SEATTLE Mrs. Gunnar Blomgren returned yesterday from Seattle where she went two months ago to receive T T emergency medical treatment for CHIEF DEPUTY MARSHAL her eyes. B IKAN | Mrs. Blomgren consulted a spec- AN RREN KETON |ialist in Seattle and is much im- Chief U. 8. Deputy Marshal Flos- | proved after having been under sie Doolin has returned to Juneau | treatment for several weeks after an official business trip to| MR i 3 A Ketchikan. BUY DEFENSE STAMPS PLAYING Matinee Tomorrow M. WARNIRS made it and made ¥ great ... with RALPH BELLAMY - ALEXIS SMI’I:H Robt, Armstrong - Regis Toomey - Allen Jenkins 5 e Directed by MICHAEL CURTIZ f s o by e Weod et et b i s e by e W4 W B A WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAY! NOW PLAYING— “THE OUTSIDER" COLISEUmM OWNED _AND. ODERATED 87 W.D.5ROSS WALTER SHARPE LEAVES i 3 ¥ FOR SITKA ON BUSINESS HOWARD L. CASE ARRIVES ‘\ TO JOIN FAMILY HERE' | | Howard L. Case arrived in Juneau| Walter Sharpe left early , thi§ from Platinum where he has been | morning on a trip to Sitka in eon= interested in mining for several nection with business for the .J 3 | Cooper accounting firm with years. Mrs, Case and their small child |he is associated. He will retumn to came to Juneau several weeks ago | Juneau in a few days. § VSRR A R . from Seattle and have been the | s EYES EXAMINED house guests of Mr. Case's sister, Mrs. Hugh J. Wade, while awaiting |and BROKEN LENS] replaced {n his arrival. They expect to spend |our own shop. Dr. Rae the winter here. Carlson, Blomgren Bldg. o “The jury is deadlocked, your Honor—they ean't decide | o whom to award the lires."” Drawn for Offce of War Iformetis®, ktail Bar BARNEY GOOGLE NEP-1T'S TROE 1 UNDERSTOND | TH SERGEAMNT'S Wk QA RESTRUATION & TWe WOSPITAL FOR TWe AND SNUFFY SMITH

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