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FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 1943 TONIGHT and TURDAY! GENE AUTRY 2‘—(EI{E:\T FEA\TlTRES'—z “WHITE EAGLE”—Saturday Matinee ALSO LATEST NEWS TONIGHT'S SHOW SPONSORED BY DE MOLAYS TEATRE THE CAPITOL BIG PICTURES STRIP TEASER | S FRRR W] T 4 nAa to $300 a week, and when s age she really hit $75 went on percent: the cash register. This enabled her e Dey, Master Jerrold R. Kinney, Roy ~ THE DAILY ALASKA EM CRIME PUZLLE, AUTRY WESTERN | NOW AT CAPITOL William Gargan Stars in| Most Recent Screen l Vehicle Here | Genial, friendly and ingrntimmgi Gene Autry, who receives a greater| volume of fan mail than any other| actor, is now playing in his latesi | singing western, “Sierra Sue,” at| Homer Garvin's Capitol Theatre Second attraction on the same Ibill is “A Close Call for Ellery Queen,” with William Gargan in the title role. It is a suspenseful, edge-of-the-seat thriller jam-pack- ed. with mystery, mirth and murder The suave sleuth confronted with a varied assortment of clue-less crimes, including a triple homicide blackmail, and the mysterious dis- |uppearance of some $50,000 in lmall bills. FIFTY - ONE ARRIVE HERE FROM SOUTH e ) 3 H s arrived here Seattle and Fifty-one passengs this afternoon from |Southeast Alaska ports. | Arriving from Vancouver werel | Philip S. Blodgett, Charles V. Brea- {zeele, Allison G. Brownlow, Herbert | V. Callow, Mrs. Norma T. Callow. | {Russel E. Carlson, Mrs. Evelyn L.| Cevotti, Mrs. Johanna G. Cowling Berger C. Engquist, Lawrence L.| Flanders, Gilbert H. Fromm, Wil-! |iam H. Gallagher, Leslie W. Gip- | iple, Frank Ray Howard, Miss | Katherine Jenson. | Miss Dorothea A. Jackson, Verice | E. Johnson, Miss Justine Johnston, | {Alford L. Kinney, Mrs. Esther Kin- | line in the rugged mountains \of with cold, deep snow and mud in (OMPROMISE ON PARITY FOR FARMER | Senate Passes One Admin- | Kinney, Mrs. Pauline Kinney, Miss |Royce Kinney, Frank C. Parish, THE ‘BIG INCH’ MOVES FORW CONTRACTORS AND THEIR CREWS engaged in laying the “Big-Inch” pipe | will help increase the flow of ol‘f to the East coast. (International) 23 NAMED PIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA " ARD |TYRONE-BETTY COMBINATION IN FINE FILM RAF Is Hona;d in Current Attraction at 20th Century The story of Britain’s gallant’ | fighters of the sky, 20t.h Century- Fox's new hit, “A Yank in the RAF,” is the attraction at the 20th Century. With Tyrone Power as the devil- may-care flying Yank and Betty Grable as his sweetheart, a night club entertainer in London, this first film of the RAF. shows these 1f1yers as real men who take hero- ism as part of their every-day job,) lnnd who look forward to their! {tun on the ground. | | Director Henry King used more| {than a thousand players, workers nd special effects men when he photographed the evacuation of & | Dunkirk. Actual combat films from | | the archives of the R.AF. are also | used. | John Sutton, Reginald Gardiner and Gladys Cooper complete the featured cast of the film, which was produced by Darryl F. Zanuck. ‘Mafiali—rn ‘Some Canned Goods, Rumor, | Believed Excess Supplies| AS MA]OR of Military ‘:g'Be GENERALS [ Pennsylvania are forced to cope building the vital line. This project Former Juneau Girl Shown in Pictures In Lif_giMagazine In an article on Percussion mu- sic which appears in the March 15 issue of Life Magazine, two pag- | es of photographs appear in which (John Cage, conductor, and his wife, the former Xenia Kashevaroff of i WASHINGTON, March 26.—Tes- ‘thnony that part of an estimated 30 million cases of canned goods |might be returned to “normalljynequ, are featured, together with WASHINGTON, March 26. —|channels” from reported Army and | others of the orchestra which re- ‘Twenty-three Brigadier ~Generals Navy excess inventories, was heard | cently gave a concert at the Mu- have been nominated by President yesterday before the Senate Bank- MATINEE SATURDAY——— FCIUETITT) HUDSON WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAY (20 TRy NOW Playing 1:00 P. M. JOUN SUTTON INALD GARDINER DARRYL F. ZANUCK DIRECTED BY HENRY KING it ok il BN NURSE SUPERVISOR RETURNS 10 JUNEAD | Returning to her Juneau head- | | i | \ quarters this afternoon is Miss: Ma- |bel Morgan, supervisor of nurses \for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, {who has been on a three week's |field trip to Southeast Alaska sét- | tlements. 2 | The trip, including conferences (with field nurses and visits with i patients, covered stops at Hyda- }burg, Klawock, Craig, Wrcn’d!_‘ 3 | Morgan reports. L4 | No epidemics are existing in a; istration-Opposed Bill seum of Modern Art in New York of these places, she found. While | to send lots of money home, and (Miss Helen H. Peterson, Mrs. Edna i i v E sen- Roosevelt for promotion to the rank ing Committee, Cit: in Ketchikan the supervisor eventually her mother, who is dead | Smith Porth, Harry E. Rosen : ' | 4 y. now, was reconciled. [berry, Cecil N. Stafford, Verden O. and Junks Another of Major General. Clarence Francis, president of | wr Gage, who is said to be the |Made official checkups at Though she has forsaken bur- | Wilde, Mrs. Emilie M. Wilde, Miss | O ! Included are Claire Chennault, General Foods Corporation and and among the evacuees at Ward's IN FILM SHOW By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD—There’s a pret- ty lady in town making a movie in which she can't mention the art that made her famous. Her name is Ann Corjo. “Are+you a public dawncer?” in- quires a dowager character in the seript. “I'm a strip teaser,” would be Ann’s natural response, but she couldn’t be natural with the Hays office keeping an eye on her. She had to evade the issue—just how hadn’t been decided. Her picture, “Sarong Girl,” is about a burlesque queen Wwho went to work in a night club af- ter New York clamped the lid on burlesque and put the stripteuses in fnnc'y revues on Broadway. Miss Corio, small and shapely| and darkly striking, was not hit| lesque, she hasn't forsaken strip-'Charlotte C. Wilde, Miss Julia A.' ping. She has done it in vaudeville. |Wilde, Miss Lorna Wilde. In the picture? From Prince Rupert arrivals were “Well, T get a percentage of it Lt. Martin O. Nelson and Lt. Mar- and 1 love music. There’s none ion G. Stewart. sweeter than the bell on a cash | most active percussion musician in WASHINGTON, March 26.—The | commanding the Fourteenth ~Air chairman of the Food Industry War [the United States, not only con- Senate took a compromise course Force in China, and Clayton Bissell, Committee, testifying in support of 'ducts percussion orchestras but al- in the battle on inflation controls |commanding’ the Tenth Air Force legislation to create a separate of- so composes the percussion music. today, sending to the White House in the India-Burma area. l |fice of civilian supply, told the Mrs. Cage who took up percussion one Administration-opposed mea- Among the 73 colonels nominated committee that “there is a current after her marriage nine years ago, register. I'll show them a little.” - From Southeast Alaska ports ar- sure to boost farmers’ incomes, re- |rivals were, from Ketchikan—F. J. turning to committee another in-| Baronovich, Mrs. Baronovich, Lau- crease in parity price ceilings. ra Baines, B. P. Falkenberg, J. J. The coalition of Administration| Faragher, W. B. Heisel, J. W. Leiv- Republicans and Democrats split for the rank of Brigadier General report which I do not have the is shown with a pair of Cuban are William Donovan, director of facts about that this amount may drums which are tapped or rubbed the Office of Strategic Services in be in excess of 30 million cases|with the fingers and also with a Washington. |and they are now negotiating to group of pieces of shaped bronze Others promoted to Major Genér- retyrn some of it to normal chan-| which are said to sound like anvils, ors, Elsie Moar, A, H, Parson, L, the . farm bloc wide open- to halt McIntosh, E. Sutton, H. D. Sta- consideration of a House-approved ¥ pler; - from Wrangell_N. A. M. Dill. Which OPA chief Prentiss,!n Greenwich, N John. Tayior Brown charged would boost food Lewis of Rockford, Il Elbridge iac;mr&l"‘red Q. Hanfordl: anil Bfise prices 10 l/g percent, add $2,333,- [ Geny Chapman’ of Arcadia, Calif,| A et O /000,000 to the cost of living. |Clarence Ralph Beubner of Bush- | This was the measure requiring 'on. Kansas, Eugene Manuel Lan- Forty and Eight SKAGWAY | V5. WAAGS | TOMORROW !turned to the agricultural Commit- Melrose, Louisiana, George Ralph, |tee for further study on an unex- born in Montgomery, Minn, Glad- als are Alan Walter Jones of ‘Se-| pajg» The music which is experimental attle, John Bernard Brooks, born P SHARESSOAR AS BULLISH objects such as dishes, tin cans, auto brake drums, bells, sheets of metal, ox bells and gourds. At the concert given recently in New York, the earnest well-dressed musicians played to a high-brow audience to this strange music which is pro- duced by banging one object with another. i and modern, utilizes all manner of | |inclusion of all farm labor costs drum of Pensacola, Florida, |in calculating parity. It was re-| Also Stephen Garrett and Henry . Dinner Tomorrow . Evening at Dugou Moose vs._Afi-Star Team! for Second Basketball | pected voice vote without dissent. Then the Senate passed the| House revised measure which now goes to the President. It would | prevent deduction of benefit pay-|Coulter of Austin, Texas, Thomas | eon Marcus Barnes of Hastings, MOVE SEEN Mich., Lloyd Davidson Brown of Sharon, Georgia, Stonewall Jackson chestra has been written up in of Plattsburg, N. Y., John Breitling | recent issues of Time, American Magazine and other publications. Mr. and Mrs. Cage were married Broad Buyifig Takes Placs Mr. Cage and his percussion or- - by New York's blow to burlesque.i Game a' ngh Gym “Fd been out of it for two years pt it when that came,” she says. “I gave| “Bring your War Stamp bpok to up $1,000 a week and more in bur-|the championship basketball game lesque, for $100 in summer stock, at the Juneau High School gym to which ought to prove that I'Mimorrow night, Saturday,March27,” | serious about wanting to become ,rge members of the playing teams. lm“ §c"°fi~ i Admission to the game, which is Td wanted to act ever since I'oypected to be onme of the most was @& kid, and I set myself a goal ;jocely contested of the season, will to make it possible. I bought a! t fund of $100,000 ‘s t |be the purchase of war stamps. The rustx l‘;n 'Od he et 50 T4 e l;‘luwer limit on admission is a 25- n:;l:: ybll;‘l:speu: eInm ;?fib]me:m cent stamp per adult, while the gmouspand I c?idn"t frasayy chuul;fee for children is a 10-cent stamp. get any further in i oing the‘]\.lo upper limit has _been estab-‘ same routines all the time.” |lished, and bonds will even be;| That was when Ann app(.m.ed‘available for those who desire to in “White Cargo” and “It's a Wise Purchase them. Members of the 40 and 8 and ments made to farmers in calcu- | D¢Wees Finley, born at Annapolls, & { e S | is Clement Whitehead of nine years ago in California and their wives or lady guests will en- lating parity price ceilings, a, Mr Enn_ : . # joy a home cooked dinner at to-|change which Brown said would WestPhalia, Kff!.fiflh, Delmar :iall: -Tradmg |S lafges' }::?v;cxv‘;flm_{:’rchhe last two years morrow night’s meeting in the Am- | raise food prices seven = percent | Dunton of Detroit, Everett Strait| i y. i | i | Mrs. Cage was born and raised lin Juneau and two of her sisters, | Mrs. Hollis Triplette and Mrs. John in Year WASHINGTON, March 26. i | Hughes, born in Ipswich, S. Dakota, | Horace Logan McBride of Elgin, Neb., Harry Fouts Hazelett of Can- rican Legion Dugout. {boost living costs a billion and All Voydgeurs on the Gastineau half. Channel are invited to attend the! e L 6:30 o'clock dinner and are per- . i‘““. Oh.m,AHexfm.n Frederick vl(m | Broad buying of stock on the New ?son are still residents of this peigwil M J M c | mer born in Lincoln, Neb., wmard‘York Exch S0 hed lead. | 1Y mitted one lady guest each, it is| [V][S, J@SSI@ V|( FAry |pau of -shrewsbury, Mass, and| SN today pusliedl lpad- ;) announced. They are asked to William Maynadier Miley, born at| 'S UP from $1 to $2 a share and| |a few shares went up as much as| |$5,' many reaching the highest levels since May of 1940 Today’s volume of buying was the largest in a year and the turn- phone in their reservations before | noon tomorrow, however, to George | Gullufsen. Following the dinner an enter- taining informal program has been!the Juneau office of the Sears Roe- arranged. Committee in charge of 'buck Company, returned last night the dinner is Leo Jewett, George!from Seattle where she was called Gullufsen and Al Zenger. ! e Fort Monroe, Virginia -ee LEASK WILL Returns from South Mrs. Jessie McCrary, manager of STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, March 26—Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine over was around 2,200,000 shares. !su)ck today is 4%, American Can Credit for the bullish sweep 15!79“/.. Anaconda 29%, Bethlehem still given by the brokers as the|Steel 66, Commonwealth and /three weeks ago by the illness of her father, James Frawley. |Cove. At Wrangell, Miss Morgdn found Mrs. Lydia Fohn-Ha conducting highly successful nutgi- [tion courses similar to tHose taught here. 5 | As a recreational experience. of the trip Miss Morgan says ma:g | Joyed most the excellent [games played between ‘the fakt | Metlakatla team ‘and teams | frém the men of the armed' forces. |} SCOTISH RIE. DEGREE TEAM - RETURNS TODAY “ i * Walter B, Helsel, J, W. u;v'xi‘. Edwin Sutton, H. D. Stabler, J. Fargher, members -of' the Scottish Rite - degree team made a trip to Ketchikan for tiation and a Scottish. Rite .ceres mony, returned to Junesu today. ' i CALLOWS RETURN ' ] Herbert V. Callow, with the Stan- dard Oil Company here, and . Mrs. Callow. arrived here this afternog from the south where they ha been for several weeks. T R LIGHTNING STRIKES TWICE/| PUEBLO, Colo.—On Sunday H. L. Burnham'’s car was stoleri from in front of his residence. On Mo~ ! day night he borrowed his son’s ‘g [ to drive to a suburb. The son's LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE TE N too, was stolen. B TRAIN FOR demand for war confidence, mrla«fSuuthem %, Curtiss Wright 8%, | Regular meeting tonight at tion psychology and congressional | International Harvester. 66 7/8, | o'clock, initiations, April 3, elect activities. | General Motors, 49'%, Kennecott 34, of officers. | New York Central 15, Northern Pa- | Child” and “The Barker"—and got! The game is a two-star attrac-; pretty good notices for her acting tion—the first being between the as well as for her more cbvious|Moose, runner up to the league Mr. Frawley is much improved, according to Mrs. McCrary, and the visit took on the proportions F. 6. HANFORD, B.P.0.E. charms. “I know I've a long way to|Champions, and an all-star team go before I can call myself a real‘l actress,” she says, “but that’s what I want.” | She's the daughter of Italian-| born immigrants, and one of 12 children. The father, a factory worker in Hartford, Conn., died when she was 13, and her mother, DISTRICT DEPUTY IS | HERE FROM WRANGELL F. G. Hanford, Union Oil Agent picked from top players of the remainder of the league, The championship game between the league-winning Waacs and the district champs of Skagway is ex- of a family reunion with the ar- rival in Seattle of her young bro- | ther, who is with the armed forces | stationed in Texas. | o pected to be closely matched and full of thrills. War Stamp sales will he in charge of two charming ‘girls from J. S. JEFFREY LEAVES J. 8. Jeffrey, merchandise bro- ker, left last night for the West- ward on a business trip. at Wrangell and District Deputy of the B. P. O. Elks, arrived this after- noon from his headquarters and will be the house guest of his son |cific 12, United States Steel 557%, |Pound $4.04. | The following are today's Dow, { MEIl'IlA R AlDED!mees averages: industrials - 133.96, | rails 33.06, utilities 17.90. members of the Army, Air Corps | [ Enlisted Reserve of the University| NEW DELHI, March 26 7—Heavyf of Washington 'left by train today | American aerial blows have been | AIR CORPS yey prprieip aT | ¥ | | SEATTLE, March 26—A hundred | BUY WAR PONDS - | for preliminary flight training at|raining against the Japs in Burma | though poor, disapproved Anne’s|Juneau, Miss Bonnie Klein and theatrical ambition. But a danoe(‘Mlss Norma Burford. contest won her a chance with| The first game begins at 7:30 o'- Earl Carroll’s Vanities on tour, and | clock. Be patriotic and we guaran- her mother finally consented. |tee you will be entertained, says “I got homesick,” Ann recalls, the official statement. “and mother sent me money to| ——— come home. Then a girl friend told | me she could get me a job at a| BP.O. ELKS place called Mincky’s and I took | Lodge session tonight, Friday, 8 it—with never an idea what bur-|p.m. Ballot. lesque was.” Her strip tease boosted her from | adv. NOTICE! PLEASEPAY ALL ACCOUNTS DUE THE CASE LOT GROCERY AT FEM- MER'S TRANSFER, next door to the store or mail to P. 0. Box 662. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. | centets' at. Sheppard Field, Texas, |for thé past two days the commu- | N. A. McCEACHRAN HERE | and Kearns, Utah. nique of the Tenth Air Force an- | N. A. McEachran, merchandise, Among them was Wally Leask, | nounced this afternoon. broker, arrived this afternoon in| Metlakatla Indian, captain of the| The communique also says Juneau from a business trip to University of Washington's Pacific |“highly successful operation” and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Brooks Hanford, for the next week or ten days. Mr. Hanford came to Juneau particularly to attend Exalted Rul- | a has | PIANO H. J. BAKER TUNING SECOND SPRUCE RAFT LEAVES ALASKA UNDER FOREST SERVICE PLAN Bound for Puget Sound, where it will be auctioned off, the second raft of airplane spruce, under the Alaska airplane spruce program of {the United States Forest Service, left Edna Bay 10 days ago, it was announced today by Wellman Hol- brook, Assistant Regional Forester. The first raft was towed south late in January and it expected that the rafts will follow along with fair regularity from now on, Mr. Holbrook said, Mo theN UNFRSTEN YOUR SAFETN-BELT NOW, GENERBL — \WE'RE oON THE F\RST LEGTo QERCA THANK MO STEWARD - LK - \WHERE \S MY BRGGAGE 2 T WRNE SOME \WPORTANT PRPERS TO GO NER. QMW VE ¥ AWMWET BEASTIEOL e e e ETA TS \S GONG T QE DELNGHTFUL er Arthur Adams’ night next Wed-|cities of the southern end of the | Coast champlonship basketball been made against the key airfield GASTINEAU HOTEL or ALASKA MUSIC SHOP nesday when one of the largest|division. team, |at Meiltila. ) classes of the year is to be initiated. ™ o o e — e = - % BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH By BILLY DeBECK ! DOWT BUST A LOOD WSSLE TMALNE