The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 11, 1943, Page 3

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JUNEAU ALASKA SDAY, MAY 11, 1943 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE * Uk \ S | "BUCKEROO" IS f ; ] - SURPRISE FILtM ! & HOTTEST BAND Y IE: Q ll M Q N i | Where the Better BIG Pictures Play et Y AL ' HOLDS UNUSUAL s [7] . Fun - ON AT CAPITOL TWIST, (OMEDY L s " R e ' [ Andrews Sisters and Harry | Postman Didn"t Ring”! | James Appear in (loses Tonight at | | 4 $ Song Film 1 20th Century ¥ A musical jive session built| Brenda Joyce and newcomer HARRY JAMES and his wound a lively plot full of sur- Richard Travis romp througha ) merrymakers prises and upsets is the “Private remantic comedy in the hilarious ]'HE ANDREWS SIST Buckeroo,” opening tomorrow night { » Postman Didn't Ring,” play- | at the Capitol Theatre ing the last time tonight at the Richard . Harry James and his music-mak- | 20th Century Theatre | s, the crooning Andrews sisters | A 20th Century-Fox production, | TRAVIS | and the Jivin Jacks and Jills all do | the tale is based on the provocative( Brenda | their stuff in the strictly modern | possibilities of the arrival of a h-(—‘ ' | swing session ter 50 s late. Not incredible at| | "1t's a Universal production | all, cases have been reported of let- | - | t following a man or woman |t | | around for years befote finally| ““ | i catching up with him | ¥ T\ \ | i a Rip Van Winkle intermission, | ‘ ,v‘ | ! brings all sorts of excitement to “N v | | B the typical American small town | “ ») DICK FORAN { ’esse y | 2 _ 4 |and throws two love birds together | v ‘N‘, 1 | - in one of the most unusual of sol- “ 1 ENDS TODAY! MARY WICKES 4 | |° RAF BOMBER OBJECTI utions AN ek “AL ADY IN S 4 | ‘ have struck frequently at Milan, Northern Italian industrial city, shown here in a peacetime view. - - | V-FOX PICTURE PREVUE TONITE—12:30 A. M. || a erwor ‘ ‘ ! oy A JAM” | | | 5 parts had been located, loaded on e er an s | OF THE JUNGLE" | | e | ! an mer'(an sleds and moved to the lodge ten | | of the precious twenty-eight days! | Cartoon—“BACK TO THE SOIL” 5 " Coast Guard Auxili ‘ 5 : ‘ uxiliary Ac- i had passed Irene Dunne L THEATRE | o eas M y | | . [ | “Was it safe to cross the river ow n er 130 MINUTES 3 R SHOW PLACE OF Juntau 1 tivities Are Explamed- | ‘ Eng I neers ln directly across from the base site?”| LATE NEWS | they had radioe cad, | @ e 5 THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES! | Organizing Here } | SRREE oaey. congig it . 1— | | sorship restrictions, had had to re-| Iege a'e‘"’ | ST | Well. 8 pad AT it | ! L | Lieutenant Earle Watterworth } REPORIED oN Grea' Ba“le 1\)1;\;(0 w:\“,‘ pack of wolves crdssed, | . village has disappeared except for |district Coast Guard Auxiliary di-| ! e » | ? | Wrifer Ie"s How our a half dozen Russian ()rl]\odnx!r(’(‘lm' for Alaska, told Juneau Ro-| S mf'd""“'v‘*\:'l“f afternogn (08 Uk Dutch Patri ied, Set U crosses marking the old cemetery |tarians at their weekly luncheon | U RNE | i ! e B bl e | dogs found | DI atriots Executed as| Men Occupied, Set Up 150 . iotesaue midst theanti- [In_Percy's Cafe today about, the Bt f {Defy Blizzards, lcy Riversiiicisesce s, md-river with iee ir Fi i ’ iroratt and eround force inctalla. |activities of the Auxiliary in Alas Assselted Frope Wt ety ' breaking up all around them, There Others Sentenced Air Field on Amchitka ¢ lka, disclosing that volunteer Auxil-| SO Seponaent . toSetU Radio Sta- ¥ha, Do oaier WY 10 GC ARSI | . i o etk noh cadbieadial < ) k4 cept by hacking a trail for two miles fo Death | . % he ancient harbor is filled now | ©'5 VEECE SECHTY D =t 2 vk ¥ through thick underbrush along the | v e e s (Continued from Page one) |with warships and cargo carriers |Puted vital information to the Coast| ADVANCED ANDREANOF BASE, tion in Alaska mountain side and before Lhryb had | T | nounced that our seasoned Ax.hkm\““ enough supplies for a !ox'nudablrrl“.'x’,k'm-".hm_;mb")"_\ \nguid ‘Iluzu.mg“n(,s( daily snow storms a plane | come. ¢ |lands News Agency Aneta today| e, Uooge eck 1E. Sa0s 0 [T |58 Beaniea i 1 later removed, | consisting of Williams U. S. Army Battling raging mountain 10" Tpe men found it easier to haul quoted.repsris (HKG B Sehte ot woge| i et by surprise in their swift occupa- . Jap planes which began |\ o ued the passengers from & {pombing fighters, pilots dumped 700 |rents choked with ice and HERUNE 1o four tone of equipment up the has been decreed throughout Nazi| NEW YORK, May 11. — Closing tion of this island in the fac oty diniadalastin: i Wikl AR vessel in distress. Alaska AuX-ltons of explosives on Japanese |fierce Alaskan williwaws to nstall gioan slope from the river to the “cCuPled Holland and 26 Dutch pa- | quotation of Alaska Juneau mine adverse weather i Foreipan by antiin. 30 & ]| lu]u‘v mt’mb;r.\' also reported two g and Attu April 11, the Ajr @ badly-needed radio station I & camy Gte on their backs than at.! ("0l have been executed already stock today is 6%, American B3N, Move in Fast hh-- single tloat type generally d"”"ul:xit :'1lll'n> h (lln':!:l.)u){ «‘ll i‘ Junt .‘m:Fm_c(‘ headquarters announce remote glacier-locked Alaskan river tempt to push the loaded sleds up. r{d ten others sentenced to death.|Anaconda 29's, Bethlehem Steel Our troops moved in with the |y ,q10q a5 Zeros sy e e bl week,| "0 4o this, the American and BOTEe. engineers of the Alaska Di- " yyiph only brief snatches of sleep L1 Siege 15 A result of disorders)64'¢, Commonwealth and Southern precision of a war college demon-| “qpey haye been over this base | ‘lg:)l'"gx‘l‘:r\:l\élthV‘Orf’f -‘“‘d’v Canadian pilots made 148 raids, ViSion of Pan American AIrways .nq working every hour possible apparently connected with the at-|1, Curtiss Wright 87, International stration to effect a landing in bad! s (imes and dropped bombs flfll’“.”c(‘r ~v.a’tm‘x§e‘1 in l?‘li‘lsl»\-nmm,\ du” | comprising 991 sorties with tempo | PEVE succeeded in setting up a radiol (sometimes by the aid of bonfires) ‘(m‘:pl to stage a general strike. |Harvester 66%, Kennecott 33%, e % A o | $ area and a| A g 3 able - i, 4 neta says P y | d s ¢ weather. Drenched in the fcy surf.}yne There has not yet been a|former Rotarian at Missoula, M " |bombing wheh is increasing over |841d¢ Of inestimable value to mil-lthe men rigged the 45 foot steell ANC!d Says the state of siege was York Central 18%, Northem Pas the men successfully completed the | uiq” ot any, considerable intensity. |1ana, was introduced by Lioytenant |the Aleutians monthly, since the | Ly 474 civilien fliers of the (ower into position, moored it in “,""“d by Arthur Seysx Inquart,|cific 17%, Republic Steel 18, occupatfon under a leader, WhO.|Tpe jarpest bomb dropped was not |Colonel Frederic H fiwhzx;i‘né:lwll Nippatiost ‘begin thillatg runiwiys T Snd. : _place and placed the transmitter in (""’;' “}‘;“i:‘ 2 dConlmihslonm' of occu-|pound $4.04. until assigned to Alaska never had|nore than 500 pounds, most of |Nichols mentioned parenthetically |on Kiska and Attu {HRue stugglox A ‘ml" dlnsl.“‘“"k”‘b' order four days from the P HOUTC " st | Dow, Jones avorages today dfe experience in the type of bitter|ior oo WAt any Togal) Hbtariats olio. are | 2,000 Tons Dropped of 4 rugged divide often lashed by |date they arrived at the site B et Yb‘;;k':"’ mbl"_”“'“p“p" Sven-| a5 follows: industrials 13836, rally weather offered here | ey ; ) " b AR A o , | three kinds of weather at once, NOW. - pinally the message flashed out!' .- DEblhet published an article 605 y:jities 2033. S g | Weather Helped {contemplating entering the Army! April's high makes a total of 3,- jg u pellwether for pilots flying air-| (o Seattle: Pan Ameri . isaying the siege is the result of " He is Brig. Gen. Lloyd B. JONES| qnese planes were able to bomb [in the near future would be most|911720 pounds, or nearly 2000 tons | horne supplies to Alaskan fowns OF| XXX consored. Al on Sttion serious disturbances” following the | e S of Columbia, South Carolina. De-|at gy culy because of Weather pe- | Welcome, “particularly if they are|of explosives which have been un- |pjg bombers winging their way Overisianding by for m‘;;‘l_: ready and ) nNusi grder for reinternment of all . §3iug the operalion today {culiarities which sent our fighters |°0Cks or butchers.” Percy Reynolds(loaded on the enemy since the one of the most vital military ai*| ¢ wag just before midnight of the| C'M¢’ Dutch Army members Buckner's _""-“‘v‘l‘_“‘y‘“‘*‘ l“" o ““mm; to their bases. Later in the |2nd Roald Copstad joined in the|Jap's occupation last June. routés in that section of the World.|aseh day since the a\signkm‘s'n! h,."l‘hl'lSOHPl'.\ of war. | 3 the maueuver was perfectly execul-|qsierngon, Jap warplanes with only |3eneral laughter. However, the Japs are still dig-| For military reasons, the exact first been given Downie & 201" Aneta also asserts serious inter-| ELKHART, Ind—OCity detectives ed without a flaw by the end of ly (ot fiight back to their Kiska| COYPOral Mel Smith, soldier sing- | ging in, and pilots tell that “tough- |l6eation of the station cannol be | crey § wnle and his|yupiions of the supply of f00d. %0 solued & series of burslariss: niee the first day after the initial land- 00 wore able to come over Am- | ,‘"““v has a remarkable range,|est days of the month were when|revealed, but the Tull story ‘of men'| {3 sk |the country resulting from strikes.'with basketball plays—and here's 138 chitka after the American patrols|“2P8 Several baritone numbers and|we were ready at dawn and stood |successfully battling against time | e, | how that trick was done By that time our forces hadl) ; lled back for encores by en-|py all day, our planes loaded, but|and the elements to move four tons FIRS'I‘ vE'I'ERA" or | [] Investigating a restaurant burg- + moved in guns, ammunition and| g, the past several days, our ;j.“" ““) applause. Mrs. Lillian|we couldn't take off to sock the|of supplies to the station site, then, Ine Floals Linry. - olfloers Soqnd. i et e aHaR o o i complete control of yroung crews have referred to the [ S8F WONOIAIY member afd) japanese because of the assembling the equipment within PRESENT WAR IS ketball plays. On a tour of coufi= ”’;)“‘“““"‘x‘ A | hour of 6:30 pm. as “Tojo's hour” | potariane favarite ‘\:mi v‘,,gh;:o!““'“m"l i ihe 90 day: tme dmiiellowsd) can | {try schools they found the coach he morale ol he men was in- . i e e Aaria e 8 - - | - 3 R be told because of the regularity in which | Our month’s losses vere 3 e vho had issued coples of the pl “* spiring, he said. Every man in the| i, Y hepe . |pee Other guests were Frank| . gk T ' The work was done by a crew .of ADM'"ED Io pOSll bhdinst 54 e » |a formation of float bombers ap-!wright, Hoonah. d Ferd |Lightning pilot, a plane crew of| 2 : | to his team. ¢ i o:eupying force was called upo | peared at that time “Of !n{et.chik ‘bfln er Holrmmnmm. from & Liberator, and mw]zn;mu-.-r.« under the direction nl’ _— ! ' | The boys were told to turn im for extra performance and duty hr-# The Japs never dropped more | an. on‘Sku:se proslded.gm“” injured. Thir five planes ,v‘.,!‘«V".“‘" Downie, Alaskan Division| ayon Sherigan, first veteran of | mw“. coples, and the youth who cause of the hasardous WeRtNer than o dozen bombs, and those| |ceived battle dar which, m—I“"“m_'"".‘:'lm:;:; | LI'HN,“‘:]'(‘,';;'.‘ alithe present World War to Join | H | was unable to do so quickly plead- prevailing [from an extremely high altitude. | |cept in the case of four pnnu».\_lfi’f’}i‘:’““;\_“‘_x“m ]“::“i:l:‘ il hl"| the Alford John Bradford Post, was | p ' e ed guilty to the restaurant job and Some Cited | There were few strafing attacks AROU"NE H_IGHTS jcould be repaired by the village |, el gespite weather conditions admitted to the Legion at last I |several others. Some of these were cited for in-'few times a single Jap strafed an |smithy. RCAF pilots made n..‘?m.( ,],'H,.,,:,,,m, ,.(‘“m,,\ reid b”né night's meeting held in the Dug- 5 | R € wish SRS /. dividual accomplishments. The |isolated outpost. | MADE BY AlASKA -|Kiska raids during the month of |icaster to the entire expedition. | -I- " | A. D. WRIGHT HERE 4 Army commander also praised the Fear Our Gins | | April | e <(n;\ Vagtrias b Downie's| _Sherigan entered the Infantry | ragedy Otcurs a' v|"age A. D. Wright, with the Iey ~ participating naval personnel for: But for the most, anti-aircraft | ST ;“Wp““'“' of & message from Charles| Décember 12 of last year and was Straits Packing Company, came in extraordinary performance and duty | guns ashore and on the ships have | COASIAI. plANES E. Huntley, Communications su- | discharged May 4. A marine en- | on WeSf COGS' Of from Hoonah yesterday and is @t under difficult conditions. |kept the invaders high. ! ‘ perintendent of the Division, read-| Eineer, he now plans to go into | 'feland the Baranof Hotel The Army and Navy forces were| These bombings are the first | VIS Licoe i 2110 i Jlacier | the armed transport service. J Pt T st miying % ing: Proceed installation glacier e perfectly coordinated, he said o A e e e e | Flying to. Exvuislon. Inleh. thigy 5 . Must be op-| Curator E. L. Keithahn of the | g MISS ZIMMERMAN HERE e AR | rming with Alaaks Cioastal was {base soonest possible. Must be op " Among the men mentioned were |sojl since the bombing of Dutch|say Rnudson. and m‘k’ l~“ erative within twenty-eight days.| Territorial Museum spoke to an| BELFAST, Ireland, May 11—A| J. Hazel Zimmerman, Reglonal Lieut. Paul Kovar of Missouri Val- Harbor last June 1mlurn Rriaed J‘ a¥ing lw{ Anticipate difficulties but need ur- interested audience on Harris and [mine floated ashore and exploded | Representative in charge of extefis ley, Towa; Pvt. Buck Thompson, Only two or three nuisance "“‘ds'-vnam :] H o,k ux.“‘,au Mfe g gent. Know you can do it Joe Juneau, their two trips to near the west coast village of Don- | sion work for the University of Al- former Alaskan trapper, NOW a by single planes have been made nomre 800, Arthar L.| F | The “anticipated difficulties” were the present site of the town and €gal today, killing 20 men and in-|aska, flew in from Anchorage yes- combat intelligence scout, and!a)l year as the Americans have! o i | nothing to what Downie and his/ their discovery of gold in Silver juring four others. Two other men|terday. She is at the Baranof. others et “Advaneing’ TrabT - ANna ‘O;th_m_} J““f"”: to' ‘Halnes: were| crew actually faced soon after leav-|Bow Basin. are missing. D Thompson pitched into the icy island for more than 800 miles, | “d"fl i Lo Mrs. R. L. Roberts, | ing the plane that had flown them| Arrangements for Memorial Day | The tragedy occurred when a large BOYLE TO WRANGELL surf with half a dozen other sol- puilding a series of air bases. ‘?‘n. ),“:;“' to s'k(?qv Vie Rt-odm-; to within seventy miles of their'are now being made with the fol- crowd gathered on the beach and| James E. Boyle, area manager tgr diers, hundreds of yards off shore,' These advance fields will help “;)mEm;,n‘(,kJ\«‘m' zt]hed L. Clark, | B A destination. With equipment load- lowing committee in charge several men tried to loosen thelthe Union Oil Company, left for assisted his companions to the greatly for until now -each of our| , ;._tflta e G. L. Beach. E | i F d ed in a 25-foot skiff the party set| Col. Ry W. Reigle, J. T. Pet- nu‘—~k on Lfle ‘hu.gz‘ explosive with|Wrangell, Sunday, on a short beach, pulling them out of the planes which took off or left a | 1”1[1) o Sitka was n.mdc with | xp ams run amen'a' out i a launch for an “easy” 40 rich, George Gullufsen, Gene Wal- Ton l:; wz‘em.hes. Others pounded | pusiness trip. : water and wrapping them in their pase L 2 fs her | e following: Wes Barrett, Alf| g mile trip up-river to a landing|lis, Alfred Zenger, C. C. Curuegtell wi sticks—and the explos‘lon - : base in the Andreanofs or further|oien Tom Morgan and Mrs. D eason forU S B ok (il i was heard for 50 miles, shattering G sleeping bags. He stayed with them cast ran great risks $imply because |5 g, 4 . d Mrs o5, emg place where dog teams would meetiand Leo Jewett. }wmdows A S T MR, MRS. WM. JOHNSON for several hours. it might run into foul weather be-\"h' l':mf"” Beturning, Were /Dpro- . P 1 c fl. 1 them and _transport the ?mu.l forl A work party will spend Thursday | aighcs afi"' ! ON TRIP TO KETCHIKAN Worked Hard 1t St S R O Ly Dr D W sawliel g In Fresent Lontiic the remainder of the distance. = levening making the American Le- | iy Mr. and Mrs. William Johnson, All during the occupation the is- gerial losses were fr £ doin Hees | — The first trouble came in the|gio, semetery plot attractive for | who live in the Earl Apartments, » aerial losses were from this cause,i o ¢ Grubb. Byran Alford, Auf form ‘of a raging williwaw piling land was shrouded with snow and not the Japs g PR B~ | Ao AA A g el | B ekt chunks, Memorial Day, it was announced. are leaving today for a short trip , the men worked unceasingly for 24, - - 54 K:l:vhil:(lx:x\ i {low'];x'elul‘y e ot | ot i aa;'lm.xl the boate and final.| Cars will be at the Dugout at 7:30 to Betahikan, thelr. fermer Hom hours to unload supplies, dig in i z 155 _' - s e o'clock following the Alert, to e e SO SR % { yesterday ' 5 |night that the Navy's part in the ly sinking the skiff beneath the _ ’ oac | Sndgoisiiial, themeiven, Agtiing up HOSPITAl NOIB mLa:] ZZZW"S?\L aRnt:)? v\:h e At et ca‘!‘ngalglr:‘has o gl oo [transport all Legionnaires who can The advantage of the Alaskan | i ; | i onare, Were an John- 5, y ¢ anid) oaching | the evening. ! Shar Ki 1 ed five, en-|Son, Agnes John and Ruby Wein- Addressing the Union League against the rapidly-approaching; training was shown, too. The main ' haron Kimmel, ag ive, = b, Tub. = 5 3 Ailig] » men succeeded Visitors from out of town who| J-Hi's Senior Class of nine boys| oma ey bin: o tered St. Ann’s Hospital this morn-|man Club, Knox said that the United Alaskan twilight the men succeeded i s it g ; i % ; | anding force .was precef y a a t 4 i .. |States “is in the war for this fun- in repacking the ice-caked equip-|Were present last night are Major an girls will gather this even-| . ” : unit of special combat scouts who, 18 for a fonsillectomy. |2 }”lEf(‘i{“}“‘°“_ W‘éhh“dhkfl‘dammm reason: fo preserve the ment in the bailed-out skiff and|Bolz, Lieut. Behn, Capt. McLean,|ing at 8 o'clock in the Gold Room |, Withest Calensi s Aud Taufll Jow ey led by Col. William Verbeck, went b e bl e ;”““ i Ar1es| ontry, not because of love for| making the landing place where all and Lieut. Earl Waterworth from |of the Baranof Hotel for their| . Tl 0 00 kL 1 ashore 'in rubber boats to occupy ' MYS Olf Pelerson e O ot ! gy Bs ga”""f the British, Russians, or Chinese. but the most delicate part of the Ketchikan Post No. 3 |Senior Class dinner, an annually | jquid bile into your bowels daily. 1t & strategic points. One of the places 1O O ¢ ty B st 5 _i“‘I‘l dg' Xy Hey, Mike COIPUS|ppne aqhesive force which makes load was stacked on shore. Equip-| 4 - |observed custom of many years' | bile i ot fowing fr occupied was a Russian Aleut vil- :_mgl;mg“' ';;‘vean i "t:l:; ::‘1,‘:“' ‘:" JE‘:d‘e Algvc:,nyac.‘r‘x;)‘x]n the Inlet|ine jlies—of which we are a part— ment that otherwise would have| | standing | B e T Thatih it ot Y ® Jage which had previously been hit i i ;:len: ‘;““-“J"ms ’nnd :ils:;‘ S;’l’ldipossxblc is self-preservation. After been damaged was taken with the : e 'w"_A'T“'E; I:EI:OI:T. L/ : Arr:engcd by mlomm-s of Ll;w :;lass' stipated. LY.I.:“?.-I sour, sunk and She s, | ' it dis a - |the war we must find a we men to a nearby lodge for the| M i | members, several surprise features| “qic 50T B g ” = 5. bombfls—. = Frank Kardanoff dical A Hoonan. maintain peace. We :ave l(‘:}l]’l\;g :ught & " ie AL B Buresn) &:gpave bears plaanad And full ik e TS & e o s . Tan! rdanoff, medical pa-| Another trip to Excursion was|by now that good wishes g SR /drifts had bur-' ® Temp. Monday, May 10: ® attendance is expected ng freely to make you fecl “up #tid ‘ NES ST FLYING z S 2 g A y at g wishes on paper By morning snowdrifts ha ur- d 5 3 . , 4 up.” Amazing Xing bile flow fresly. | AI:(I;:II'HEA 15?:3«13 :I::(BASE tieot, and Travis LGofifi. 'S“rgf:fll‘fmade with the following as pas- |will not do the job. That requires ied everything under six feet of ® Maximum 65, minimum 37. @ | Everyone is expected to be on| A for Gariar's Little Liver Pilla by v ] el e Sty FAb hEATE “(m;z “,]xwmmil pdllelntb yesterday | sengers: William O. Raybell, Mark {sheer brute force.” powdery whiteness, By the time ® e o o e o o e ¢ » o hand promptly at 6, it is announced. bbornly refuse anything clse, Price: 28, —(Delayed)—It is February 16 and a nn’s Hospital. Joxies, Obisrles: Fontain, J. Standlgsy —= i RTINS i (G ki o MRS s B L i S i b e $ e e despite a series of eight Jap bomb- Rid R Sadlacer O the ratun - 4 o | . . . urn ing raids, this American air base, Mis Emma Mark this moming iy were Frea Rierce, W. W, Wol. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH By BILLY DeBECK only a few minutes from Kiska, Government Hdspital, where she o qo, Joseph G. Hn}z aoa "hmm‘ i & » went into operation today, less than gave birth to a baby boy at the|pgq, : ) \ 18 hours after the latest Jap at- Was admitted yesterday. e AWK, THANK “ERVE&Eé.‘\ HLLLP THAR Y * tempt to bomb the operation to a John, both of Angoon, have en- o \T'S AN AMERICAN SHP Y NE LOW-DOWN standstill - SPEEDING ARREST THEV'RE THROWING & L\WE SHE'NESS 5\(0&\(‘5 0 " merican fighter planes landea| Mrs. Lillian Johnson and Agnes .Ntorr;mn B. Moller was arrested | OUER THE S\DE POR WS T BEEN WaTTIN- * on the new field this morning. By tered the Government Hospital lm';:l"'S "h“?' and pleaded guilty to| OONN RERE & EBLL tme they had landsd treatment. |the charge of speeding. He paid a| \ W the time they had landed, no trace [ ris" o 810 nnd | ks selsased, oo~ | QA'E HOUR W was left of any damage done by i.-ominrv to Deputy M'lrsht:lswv 14"")' the Japs and casualties were neg- |SENTENCED AT PETERSBURG |go.. -~ s Gt ligible. According to a wire received by | s i 5" alb This island is only five miles the Marshal's aoffice from Deputy | z % % , wide, It is the nearest place to Marshal Chris Christensen at Pet- GILMORES LEAVE Kiska save a few minute dots un- ersburg, Ben Josue Marshall, a| Patrick Giimore, Jr, assistant » fit for bases. Filipino, was arrested May 6, on a United States Attorney, has lefy ; Transformation charge of assault and battery. He|for the south to join the Armed (L A month ago it contained only was convicted by a jury on May |Forces. Mrs. Gilmore accompanied the barren tundra and the ruins from an Aleut village. Today the 8, and given 150 days in the Fed- eral Jail, . him as far as Ketchikan, where she will visit for some time. ey

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