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THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1943 — ow ROMAN(E TR ucnie saus | OFA}HE A\‘:}Els'}l()[ oy THE JAMES CRAIG i'Valley of the SLn Closes Y| pecracoee Fnday—-Saturduy TS { Run-Story of Desert OF OUR NATION'S [ Romance UNSUNG HEROINES! RSSOt PR Dk B v astness of the great Southwest, Valley of the Sun,” now showing 1t the Capitol Theatre, is based up- n Clarence Budington Kelland's glamorous |along with the scout and the girl, |but the scout makes a desperate flort to save Sawyer’s life, and nally does so on the agent's prom- Hse to make restitution. When Sawyer reneges and sur- renders the scout to the Army au- | thorities, the Apaches start their |raid. How the scout escapes and averts a massacre, provides a stir- ir'imz climax to this colorful story. TWENTY-FOUR " INTODAY AND FIFTY LEAVE Arrivals from the south last night Potluck Supper | Is Enjoyed by 54 | Guests Last NightL Committee members of the Am- exican Home Department of the Juneau Woman's Club provided a delightful occasion last night for all club members and their guests, numbering 54 persons, at a potluck | supper held in the Scottish Rite Temple. | Following the appetizing buffet supper, when spaghetti, chicken noodles, scalloped potatoes and other hot dishes as well as pies, cakes and salads were served, club Scattergood takes the social set for a ride...and how! were Virgil Baker, Mis. Ruth Ber- members listened with delight to | ‘hold, Leo T. Cavanaugh, Joseph- vocal solos presented by Mrs. John Nina Crumrine, Headland. Preceding the supper the | Rev. Willis R. Booth said grace. Accompanied by Mrs. C. L. Pope- , Mrs. Ida Enloe, Jo- kne, R. T. Furness, Carl les R. Griffin, Major Nicholas Kasakan, Rachel Kasa-| ">, by Curran, “ah, Love But a D: by Beach, and “My Johann’ ‘L'm Robert Kasakan, June Presley, Joyce J. Ruseling, Ike P. Taylor and Mrs. G. Waltman. Leave for West by Grieg A comedy skit directed by Mrs Willis R. Booth was well received TANK FIGHT Taking passage for the Westward and included in the cast Mrs. D. pRoeRESSlNG | were, for Yakufat, Edith Hansen, W- Herron, Mrs. Harvey W. Star- | B lh’"n Cremner, Mr. and Mrs., J. ling, Mrs. Earl Russell, Mrs. Earl { Marns, Dewey S. Smith, Sadie John- | McGinty, Audrey Landreth, Mrs | scn, Frank Dick; for Cordova, Gwen E. M. Polley, Mrs. Booth, Mrs. R. wIDE FR ‘G Dorsey, Mrs. Blanche Chirstian, L. Wolfe, Mrs. James Cole and Edaksey Euphrane, Lawrence Linde; Mrs. Robert Coughlin. |for Valdez, Walter S. Gambel, Glen | A number of the guests remained . ; = [E. Good, Paul Nestoriak, But A. following the program for bridge, NaZIS C'alm AdVan(eS Al'e Leaf, Arvid Erlandson, Weldon S. Tripoli and pinmochle. Mrs. Harvey | | Holmes, Oscar L. Powell, Tom M. Armstrong, Nick K. Korzdorf Starling, department chairman, was | assisted by Mrs. B. W. Herron, Mrs, Made with Heavy Loss- | : “Lom'mg for Seward were Hilda |W. C. Kennell, Mrs. Burrass Smith es '0 SUVIet FOf(eS ;{ugpe. Gertrude Lewis, Kathleen and Mrs. E. F. Russell. Mrs. C. J. | > arlow, Joan Christ, Carl Berg- Peterson was coffee maker for the ; P : man, Simon Hellenthal, Helen Van eyening (Continued from Page One) Kleek, J. H. Pindall, John R. Dahl- BRI concentrating their reserve tanks g“”; Tho'_"“” R. Berg, Marshall agatnst marrow sectors striving vio- | BAIOW, Fred Cameron, Antonius 'l I flAK"E Pauaus, Clarence Johnson, Jack ! lently to break through toward cit- still held by the| F: Martin. John B. Meyers, William ies and town: e 5] Van Kleek, Walter Langfett, Vern OIHERS HERE i On the Central battlefront, the| G271 Dick, Robert Barrett, Hugh G ! Cooper, John R. Palmer, Raymond Russians are reported moving down | FOR MEETING upon a score of settlements south| (ngd"l‘bc(kfld(r‘md\/l M’i‘ L"fi John H biggest health problem among the of Bely and are said to be shaping | [CERCEE G M, Al e | R TR At AR ] | Indians,” Dr. Eberhardt explained a wide attack on the stretch on| " oo Be e Ll S e 1. Dircotor for the War Manpower| A church dinner and congrega- Siiling from Junciu today forthat all primitive people have less the Vyazma-Smolensk railway. The | “Cith s Hom Kot sm?:‘ “6:" E. | Commission for Alaska, arrived in|tional meeting ‘were enjoyed b: couver were Virginia M. Le-|immunity to the disease ‘than is drive 18 in the fashion of & .pin-|p, oa . 0 o * B| Juneau last night from a trip to!about 50 members and friends of chelt, Amby F ok Joveph: ‘8. totnd Hmbhg highly. civilissd sas | per diiotit the key base of Smplensk. o Pl Seattle together with ofher offi.|the Memorial Presbyterian Church, Barnett and for Seattle Bernard E. |tions, and in Alaska, ten times as 'g;‘:e :-’1::‘::1 1?:::;\1:;?19‘”“ o :llx who will .rmn;m the first held last night in the recreational Feero, Rebecca Feero, Audrey Fee- |many natives as whites are in- Onp(;he Norlhw;stem front, Tim-! Ralnbows io HOId meeting of the War Manpower rocms of the cipiech HEey O ”.\\,w 'I‘_’.n)h‘;l‘[:m.‘.i“Ecwd' - oshenko’s men continue the offen- Committee which will be held here| Arranged by members of the Mis- land, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth ¥ors Tuberculosis continues b be an sive. ln"la"on Meehn on Saturday. sionary Society with Mrs. Anna W 4 \tfppumng problcm‘ in Alasks; a8 A late report today claims the g Others who are here in connec- |Anderson as.chairman, the occasion | George Antic, Jeanette B. Ring- |shown in graphs distributed by Russians are within sight of Smo-' tion with the meeting are C. D.|was gfeatly enjoyed by those at- stad, Solomon A Gold, Ernest C./the Territorial Department Stewart, Mary F. Stewart, Victor |Health and the Alaska Tuberculo- | lensk. | : Saturday Evening | POLE FlYING RUSS ;:.fi B Sty g 30 o'clock in the Scottish Rite PILOTS PROMOTED Temple, when three new members Knutsen Company at Anchorage,| MOSCOW, March 18. — Georgi Service of Supply, C. R. Shinn, Vice-President of the Morrison and | mittee will arrive here between | now and Saturday, Mr. Flakne said. Purpose of the meeting is to set| up ghe War Manpower organization for the Territory. will be initiated and regular busi- Who is a member of the commit- ness of the Order conducted. |tee representing the contractors; Following the business meeting Glenn Robinson, of Kodiak, AF.| Baidukov ‘and Andrey Iumashev,|there will be dancnig for Rainbow of L., who is a member of the| both second pilots on two Russian |virls and their invited guests. committee representing labor. { pioneer planes flown from Moscow > Additional members of the com-! to Vancouver, B. C., via the North ‘The entire solar system is mov- Pole in 1937, have been made Ma- ‘lng forward as a unit through jor Generals in the Red Army Air |space in “the general direction of Force by a decree issued by Joseph #he star Vega at a rave of 12 miles Stalin. a second NEW ZOOMPH Corsair Fighter in Flight, the F4-U1 | UNVE!LED in Hartford, Conn., by the U. S. Navy was its new Corsair fighter. Sponsors call it the “fastest airplane in the United States.” 1t has a 2,000 horsepower air-cooled motor, can be used as an interceptor, a medium altitude or a high i altitude fighter. All drag is eliminated by pulling | its landing gear, tail wheel and arresting gear inside i the plane; speed is a military secret. (International) THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR |My Dear How You Have (,hanged" | Jaturday Evening Post serial | James Craig the scout, in trouble |with Army authorit because of his sympathy for the Apaches, meets the restaurant girl Lucille AP Features | Ball and. with the aid of a Britsh ONLY a year ago Dolores Moran, film starlet, was remittance man and an old desert posing for ba'fimg suit art—and not too grace- character, endeavors to keep her fully. But a year in Hollywood can make a big dif- from marrying Sawyer a crooked ference, as witness Dolores’ newest picture at the Indian agent. right—glamorous enough to make even Ann Sheridan | Because of Sawyer's (hieving, the jealous. Looks like Ann, too, doesn’t she now? | Apaches prepare to raid the white | cettlement. They capture Sawyer JUNEAU ALASKA LADY DILL VISITS BOEING PLANT LADY DILL, wife of Field Marshal Sir John Dill, British Chief of Staft in Washington, visits with Geneva Swaffor, a sheet metal worker at the Wichita plant of the Boeing Airplane Company. She is particu- larly interested in the big part women are play CHURCH ELECTION HELD, MEMORIAL Ross, Labor Relation Secretary for |tending. With the pastor, the Rev. the Army Engineering Department Walter Soboleff, acting as toast- H at Seattle, Major Robert Hutchison, master, short impromptu talks were made by several of those present jof the church. New deacons of the church who | were elected last night are Ralph Young., Jr., Tom Paddock and Mrs. |Anna May Andersen. Mrs, Nellie Willard became Sun- day School = superintendent, {Lillian Barlow, secretary-treasurer. Two long moles, FOR THE NAVY . ,e,e enclose Cas;\hlancn | ng in FROM SKA PRESBYTERIAN ~ DEPART beth K. Green. Archie W. R. Johnson, Berle liam B. Bron, Ed and Sunday School * - — | Rev ‘Eax)'mn Robert | ram Sigbers and dominated by | and grain elevators, the 350-acre- harbor of Shiels, | James W. Leivers, John J. Fargher, H. D. Stabler, the E. A. McNamara, war production., 'TWENTY-NINE ARRIVE GWAY; 49 FOR SOUTH Walter Keeley, Following a brief recess the con- £ V SW"’;“{" »Jthna:;.ncI;loard gregation reconvened in the ad- i mes (l,?éorgeal)w)éermmell Raloh i lect officers | Spence, ; : HasHE SRR 0. Elock s SRS L. Riiffe, Robert Hinkel, Glen E. Eadler, Seymour R. Berman, Lloyd s C. Johnson. Sailing from Juneau to Prince Rupert were George Hurst, 'ward Flynn. For Ketchikan—Frank G. Adams, | Michel McIsaac, Walter B. Heisel, Edwin Sutton, N. A. Mc- Von Scheele, Hi- Arthur Libby. van Hayden Fisk and George A. wil- | MAD, MERRY IS MARRIAGE MIX-UP FILM All Star Vehicle Is Comic 'Misbehaving Husbands’ at Twentieth Century William Beaudine, Jed Buell and | an all-star cast of excellent come- dians have pooled their resources and thus accounted for one of the most amusing comedies | | | | season’s Misbehaving Husbands” which i€ at the 20th Century, accompanied by hearty audience laughter Which is as it should be. For this new feature from the PR.C.| | studios is a delightful comedy and 'a grand satire on the eternal tri- angle. In the hands of such capable | artists as Ralph Byrd, Esther Muir, those old friends Harry Langdon and Betty Blythe and directed by ! william Beaudine, “Misbehaving | | Husbands” turns out to be one of | the most diverting bits of enter- | | tainment this season has offered. i The story recounts the trials and ]u'lbuhmm\s of a well meaning but ‘lhougmlcss husband who spends his ‘lwemlclh anniversary, not with his | spouse but in his store window with | | three beautiful blondes. When scan- | dal looms on the horizon, Hubby, | panic-striken, decides to straighten | everything out. His efforts result {in some of the funniest scenes re- {corded on film since way back. ‘h.xh- were Wrangell passengers. i Arriving in Juneau on the steam- ler from Skagway were Wayne Mil ler, Joe Miller, C. P. Gainer, Mrs J. Miller, W, E. Feero, S. Brown virs. V. Aubert, W. Shafer, J. W Berquist, M. O. Beggs, Mrs. T. Ja- cobsen, Mrs. H. Barrie, B. Calvin Viola H. Groh, W. E. Feero, Sr, the Rev. Couvent, Mrs. S. Selme: Mrs. F. Storey, Louise Selmer, Warren Baker, Paul Morris, James Cole, James Hooker, Dick Crane, Lowell Morgan, Gil L. Rich, Leon- ard R. Hall, Major Gordon L. ‘anh and A. Van Mavern. - B AS GRAVE ALASKA WORRY IS DISCUSSED [Dr. Everhard! Addresses | Sanitarians-Milk Sani- fation Is Explained In a morning address today, Dr. Jacob P. Everhardt, medical direc- tor of the #ureau of Indian Af- fairs, told members of the Short Course in Restaurant Inspection and Sanitation facts regarding the tuberculosis situation in Alaska. Designating tuberculosis as “tha Reeder, Henry K. Green, Eliza- isls Association, with Alaska’s death rate per 100,000 population being eleven times that of the national | dverage, or 521 compared to 47 .| deaths in the States, he said. | Combat Disease Combatting the disease is carried cn in two ways, Dr. Eberhardt con- tinued, first by an attempt to |gain more healthful living condi- tions, and second, by segregation of those infected. In the latter respect he referred to the remarkable correlation shown in the state of Oregon with the de- crease of the disease as more hos- pitalization is provided. From 1910 to 1939, records show that with the establishment of 700 beds for tu- bercular patients per 100,000 popu- mtion, the number of cases have WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAY TODMENTURY ® Starts Tonite [ ] AND decreased from 102 per 100,000 to 30. Also discussed at the morning session were “The Legal Phases of‘ Public Health,” the speaker being {Assistant U. S. District Attorney | |P. J. Gilmore, who read the sta- | tutes regarding health enforcement in the Territory, those governing the annual examination of food handle and the standards of |cleanliness set up for food dis- pensing establishments. He also ex- plained methods of gathering evi- dence in cases where legal prose- cutions proved necessary. | Milk Sanitation | Enlarging on a point made by |Dr. Eberhardt—that bovine tuber- lculosis has largely been stamped out in Alaska by the killing of all |infected cattle—sanitary engineer Richard Green carefully presented the subject of “Milly, Milk Pro- ducts, and Their Relation to | Health, | “As our most |food, milk has all of a balanced diet, teins, fats, calcium and high vita- | important single the essentials including pro- variety of infections than any other, | jit is the most difficult of foods | to prepare and handle, it is the most readMy decomposable of | foods, and it is used in the un- cooked state.” | respect to sanitation are saniury‘ —methods of production and hand- ling; bacteriological, phyulcal-«bem-} perature, taste, odor, etc.; and| chemical—percentages of fats and | solids, Mr. Green said. Reasons for grading were also advanced, and the various milk ‘produccs were defined, while di- seases sprend by milk cause anav- erage of from 30 to 50 outbreaks in the United States a year, he 'said. T——-’—r Standards of judging milk with | SHOOTING DOUBLE TROUBLE and SILVER STALLION HARRY LANGDON - Bfmmlf WILLIAM BéxIIDINE RCA Recording JD Bob Sleele in Anzona Gang Buster . In clcmng. Mr. Green mplumld | stron: 1y the value of pasteurizafien as a meens of public protection, stating thot | nutritive value is lost in the analyses show little cess, although practically all hfi ful bacteria are destroyed when' For members of tomorrows meetings, process is carried out correctly. the Department, z Health will speak and a Mlhut mary of work of the course will made. Dr. George Hays will outline methods and procedures, %! | reporting inspections. Field trips/ a dairy, a pasteurizing plant. and an ice cream factory will be made | during the a(ternoon STOCK OUOTATIONS NEW YORK, March 18— Clgsi quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 4%, Amerlasn Anaconda - 27%, bsa, Commonwealth Southern 11/16, 47%, International " Y, el Harvester Bethleh General Mfi 64, Kennecott 32%, New York Centrpl 13%, Northerh Pacific 113, Uni of |min content. But at the same time | States Steel 55%, Pound $4.04. milk may be our most dangerous| Dow, Jones averages today ln food, since it can carry a grent.er‘as follows: industrials 129.66, Nl 32,09, utilities 17.43. e - THOUSANDS POISONED: BY NAZIS LONDON, March 18. — A radip from Moscow, picked up here, broadcasts the horrible report ! the Germans shot .or poisoned 000 to 18,000 men, women and en. during the occupation of Ko, | & LEET.ONERS W T SREE CIPBORRD 2 S SNEFY 1““ %geava\cw( -~ m w\\ma g STAR SANNER \t~\ 5‘?&‘ I MONSE TNST TRING W ¢ T CNORNW ¢f BABNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH 55T, LOWIZ\E - 1S THAR EWNY ‘ 77 SN — ELERTANT BNE BYE,PAN —- ZEETCH ME BACK A SWNT L0 RBG OR TWO-TYREE A A ~~ \WORY caNGS By BILLY DeBECK GOOD-BNE, SWELESS aamgfi\“ A AT EERGLT, LOWZAE - Oute T D0GS QTN @ SMOKE HOWSE 8N W POSSWNG Y MORE SROWUERANIS LONZO, QANeN CRACKEN (.W?