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1943 "PARIS CALLING” 1S NEXT FEATURE COMING, CAPITOL The greatest mass drama of mod- ern times, the evacuation of a great European capital and the flight of the civilian refugees ahead of the invading armies is re-cre- ated in Universal's powerful “Paris Calling,” which comes to the Capi- tol Wednesday The picture presents Flizabeth | Bergner, famed Continental star, her first appearance in an i made production. She is ¢4 with Randolph Scott. | presents: Miss | of wealthy | becomes a TUESDAY, JANUARY 12 ENDS TONIGHT— BABES ON il BROAOWAY Wednesday—Thursday Thrill-Gilled ROMANCE! The life and loves in a city torn with ror! is Calling” gner in the ari; socialite member of the underground spy system following the invasion Scott an RAF. pilot maroon territory wher his plane role who vast is seen as in enemy is wrecked found the best routine is first, pick the baby up and pat it gently on the back. Doctors say this will relieve pressure from gas congestion but in realify you're just cheering it up and telling in a wordless way that things will tur out all right. Second, fix up a hamburger sandwich, preferably t little touch of pickle. The only trouble with this is that by the time the infant has eaten it you will be hungry and have to fix yourself cne and then when eaten, the baby will be again and when T've a Show Place of Juneau TRAP LINES HENRY PEARSON you have hun- ery Thirdly, you'll to Just. inie Fewer in number but of equal change the durn th Get & jmportance to the owners was the clean pair out of the linen closet work done on 14 caps, 2 neckties, or a dishtowel will do if it’s handy. 5 pairs of shorts, 2 Sweaters, 24 Throw a half-hitch around each parkas, 1 raincoat and 4 drapes. P. badges were sewn on, leg and a running bowline around Seven M sheets mended, and 33 overcoats the tummy. This should be good 7 until 5 am altered or mended. Most unusual - items submitted were a bathrobe oW those directions and a laundry bag, while sailors™ vou should have braid, O. D. badges and 48 table- keeping the infant cloths were other unexpected sub- r, it will be neces- jects received. sometimes to gag it, of course. Women of Juneau “donated their time, either at the Salvation Army reading room or in their own homes, infant care but this column does @ total of 728 times, for many ot permit a lengthy discussion so| times that number of hours. The if there is any doubt in the minds Mending unit averaged 151 articles of you fathers, a self-addressed en- | Of clothing a month, or over 30 velope with $500 enclosed (to cover €4Ch meeting day. cost of postage) will bring you nn; Additional women sewers are Eadiatareniy: needed, Mrs. Lesher said, and In fact, a very immediate reply. should come to the Salvation Army et ki i “"|Reading Room any Wednesday. | Work begins at 9 a. m. and con- must not be handled too roughly tinues throughout the day. Women | or a few hours, start a baby out on a paper, route|:) | as they are . able to, she said. when i learns to walk, but as a SUCCESSFUL Slx - Room. G baen. U b B 20800 MONTHS MENDING AlASKA C(OASTAL MAKES | In Ah.\m,\smg the report on the s. According to recent taken by someonz W 1 to do, only 115 percent of *m-~ri can fathers know how to take care of a baby in the absence of its mother, a survey reallly | - sary This is just one small phase to 115 to Being one of those select percenters, I feel duty-bound give to many Alaskan fathers, the wonderful knowledge that I have accumulated in rd to Infan- tology. First of all, fathe: member that newly born babes , we must re- 100 or contribute to the family upkeep. .I.mp EX(URSION "".H the said infant will mature rapidly and after all, they B young only once, you know. gm\mom flew are Shell three | geon One of the first things we must learn to become successful fathers is how and when to eliminate 3 am. squalling. In order to under- stand more fully why a baby in- variably awakens at that unheard of hour and tests out its lungs, we Salvation Army’s Red Shield mend-| ing project, which was submitted at the Friday night meeting of the City Council, Mayor Harry I. Lucas d, “These women have done an| amazing job and a tremendous lot good in the mending for ser- vice men that has passed through their hands.The facts deserve to this Air- sengers to Excursion Inlet morning for Alaska Coastal lines and returned with three, Those taking passage for Ex- cursion Inlet were L. R. Hurley, George Jem, and George Shull Earl E. Stevens, William Wat- kins, and L. D. Kretzmeier, came pas- | | ing. DESERT DESOLATION_something of the “feel” of the war in the Libyan desert is captured in this view of the vast flat lands. Axis shells burst rsss » seasial read A sranded enemy truck Rebekahs Are fo Install Jan. 27 Meeting tomorrow at 8 p. m. in the Odd Fellows Hall, the Juneau chapter of Rebekahs will make plans for installation of officers at the January 27 meeting, when Peggy Mclvor will become Noble Grand for the order. Edythe Larsen , retiring Grand, will preside at her meeting at that time All members who have rituals are asked to return them at tomorrow night’s meetng it was requested. >o o DR. COFFEY OVERSEAS Dr. Robert M. Coffey, former well known physician and sur- of Juneau, is now overseas, according to information received | here. His whereabouts and rank are not known. PRERER - CPS T 5 ANCHORAGE VISITORS Julius Friedman and Robert Ro- mig from Anchorage are Juneau | visitors stopping at the Baranof Hotel Noble final LARS EIDE HERE Lars Eide, Wrangell resident, ar- rived in Juneau early this morn- He is guest at the Baranof Hotel while in the Capital City. e “E” is the most commonly used ! letter in the English language, but .- capital. the most commonly used D/\II .Y AL ASKA EMPIRE JUNEAU ALASKA ON THE SUNNY SIDE" NOW AT 20TH CENTURY Sixteen pictures two years— that is the colossal record of 11- year-old Ann Todd, “veteran’ | trouper on the 20th Century-Fox lnl and currently featured in Roddy | McDowall's first starring picture, | |"On the Sunny Side,” now at l}lo 20th Century Petite, brown eyed Miss Todd h‘ the superb example of the fg hat any attractive youngster {be whittled into the shape of a enius with the ald of the “proper | training.” For Ann is what Holly-| wood calls a ‘natural” Possessed | dramatic sense and natural ability to -act s been climbing steadily tilm heights, In “On tne Sunny Side” her 16th film, Ann comes into her own and port imply Ann Todd, years young! i .- "Good Morning, Judqe Going fo Take on New Slant in Many States (Continued [lum Page One) | Where the Better BIG Pictures Play fi"[llfll/( TONIGHT in | { of unusual | clear, | al Ann to new | eleven vailed ora As a result of going to be a in the horse and buggy this survey there nationwide drive, cponsored by good many gov- rnment officials and members of Congress, as well as the organiza- tions mentioned, to: (1) Ravise traffic laws to get rid of the unenforceable and more mportantly the unnecessary (check your own and you will see what they mean) laws. | (2) Make traffic laws all over ‘he land as uniform as possible | within the limits of purely local requirements. (3) Have llfilflullm. Ifl'." 7+ Don Douglas Freddie Mer: Amn Tedd il Femond Directed by Harold Schuster A 20th Century-Fox Picture 2EDITIONS NEWS s forlornly in the foreground. 1INVADERS |/ ARE ROUTED FROMTOWNS :Triumphant_ Hbmecoming for Black-Caped So- viet Horsemen (Continued from r’uge One) who fell back from their towns and villages last summer before the weight of the Nazi offensive, are riding in the vanguard of the Rus- sian fore weeping back across the | steppes. For the black-caped, high-hatted | horsemen of the steppes and their townspeople it was one of the most | dramatic homecomings of the war as the Russians rolled back over Georgievsk, Mineralnye, Yodi, Yati- gorsk, Budennovsk, Karamik, Kis- lovodski, to broaden the Caucasian front. Other forces, meanwhile, drove 20 | | miles down the rail line past Zim- [ ovkni to Kuberle, southeast of Ros- {tov, narrowing the semi-circle fred Lewis (above) has a hobby | around that endangered Nazi strong- | of “queening.” She’s been queen | hold. DIVORCE GRANTED of lettuce, oranges, gladioll, mo- | A final decree was granted tor-boating znd now is queen of U X special traffic courts in all cities where traffic cases wmber more than 7,500 a year with a violations bureau in opera- fon or 15000 a year, if there is 10 such bureau, { (4) Have circuit and district ‘raflic courts mc.miznd on a state- wide basi (5) Eliminate “court costs” en-! tirely or impose such costs only on a reasonable basis. | (6) Appont traffic court Judms who know traffic laws, ,policing and | engineering, well as have byck- ! grounds in the ordinary legal fields. | (7 Have permanent or long- erm traflic court magstrates, su-| 0 s suitable for use suywhere in the pervised by a chief traffic court world can be obtained for the court magistrate with TER“‘"“Y‘expenditure of mlnpoweru:; The office of the Fishery Co- powers. " If the folks behind this national b Z'l"’l‘f"me”" get their ‘“druthers,”|grdinator intends to exert every rere’ll be no more of that old effort to obtain the maximum pack story, “So I just paid my fine and | | under the abnormal conditions pror let go what's the use of arguing| | duced by the war 8 onhe contribue even when you're not gulty?” | tion of this department to the war At Jeast they hope to hring the | food pmgnm 3 | “horse and buggy” police courts | A up to the Model-T era. In some g TO HAVE ELECTION sections, that liiz;qu*lwfinn advance. | IN PELICAN IN APRIL U. S. District Court Jpdge George | F. - Alexander yesterday . set - April in |6 at the date for an eleetion "at District Court yesterday in Pelican to deteymine, if the com= THEATRE! ""GOLDEN TRAIL" and ""Shadow on the Stairs"” 30 Percent Increase, Alaska Salmon Pack, Possible Says Ickes (Continued from Page One) HOBBY QUEEN — wini. 8. hobbyists. ‘ Skin from flounders is being munity may beeome an. incorpor- must look, of course, to the cause.|p published, and the city was glad |to Juneau on the return flight to continue its $60 a month con- - used in Holland for shoe leather|the case of Pauline Hayes vs. C. lated r-uy ot the seeond class. Empire Classlllcds Fnyl iand to repair 1lltl\ll|0blll‘ tires. The reasons can be broken down | trihution toward the maintenancel FLY FROM l\“l““’\' INLET thusly: | of the project.” Passengers coming to Juneau (a)—the infant feels a need for Here is the report submitted by|from Excursion Inlet yesterday midnight snack. Mrs. R. B. Lesher, in charge of the| with Shell Simmons, flying for (b)—possible bad dreams—such | service: | Alaska Coastal Airlines, were W. as realizing how much income tax For the six months ending De-|J. Fitzgerald, Lt. Howard Wiant, it will have to pay in 1960. cember 30, alterations which in-| Charles L. Roberts, Roy E.Evans, (e)—it’s too danged quiet. |cluded 224 field jackets, 182 wool and Willis Thorp (d)—there’ll have to be some pants, 136 wool shirts, 79 pairs of —————————— N the giant panorama of global changes made. socks, 76 blouses and 27 mackinaws. | BUY DEFENSE BONI y 4 ’ war, the U.S.A. in 1942 still had = e = Z o GV » e i 7 time for the strange, the comic, . ¥ the bizarre. For instance: BUY DEFENSE BONDS | Human Drama Sfill Played on Nation's Slage Durmg 1942 By AP Features TEASER: Alfred Felardo was § fined for teas- ; Ing squirrels h nut gadget. QUEEN: Darleen Griffin, “Victory Venus,” in annval CUQBSIDE IAIIIS!‘!I~ Goorgo Ronca, grocer, was cleared in New York court of illegally selling vegetables on Sunday when he provcd tomato isn’t vegetable but a fruit. SOCK ON PUSS Tabby’s jaw was broken when a New Yorker kicked her because he was startled by cat’s Hitler-like mustache. Puss recovered after huphcl treatment. STRANGE WEDLOCK: Mrs. G W. Miller, widow, awoke from year of amnesia to find herself wed u:ond time. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH WWN, MR SOTH = NOW SVOLLDN'T SPEAK THAT e QROUT AN OLD ADNIRER OF INE - HE JUST MALED NIE HE NEWEST PROTO TELAS N OURE QA LTVE JTAOWS ~REGHROLESS, T TRINK THE MUSTACHE'S CATEY, OLD GLORY WAVES FROM A CAlllll—mghoverthenuhtdeehdnu.l. aft carrier waves the American flag. A destroyer, ever watchful, trails the carrier.