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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1943 S fhc sEmremmn 9 A B R, LEAVES TONITE! Mary Roberts Rinehart’s TRIPLE-THREAT TRIO! b MARJORIE MAIN PITTS - MacMAHON TOMORROW ;‘::&-v with Dean JAGGER James CRAIG Donald MEEK . Pamela BLAKE COMEDY "TISH" NOW ON SCREEN AS CAPITOL BILL Mary Rhinehart’s “Tish” is on the screen at the Capitol Theatre |tonight for the last two times. Zasu | Plits, Marjorie Main, Aline Mc- Mahon and others are in the com- i Several shorts are also| ery cast. lon the bill. Beginning Friday and for the | week-end, there will ‘be a double | feature bill, Constance Bennett and |Don Porter having the principal roles in “Madame Spy” and James (Craig, Pamela Blake and Dean |Jagger appearing in “The Omaha ‘Train.“ an action-packed story. | —— PLAY-BY-PLAY (Continued from Page One) Croestti. W. Cooper bounced to Johnson and was thrown out. No runs, no hits, no errors; none | | left on base. | YANKEES—Gordon grounded to | Kurowski and was thrown out.! | Dickey singled to right. Etten lifted | '@ short fly to Marion back of short. | ! Lindell struck out. { No runs, one hit, no errors; one deft on base. { SIXTH INNING | CARDINALS — Kurowski popped |out to Gordon. Sanders grounded | to Gordon who made a great back- | ' hand stop and threw out Sanders. | Litwhiler struck out. | No runs, no hits, no errors; none {left on base. YANKEES-—Borowy slapped a liner | | over Lithwhiler's head that bounced me the left field stands for a | 1ground rule double. Stainback foul | flied out. Musial fouled and Borowy | raced to third after the catch. Cros- | {etti flied out to Litwhiler at short | {left field, holding Bdrowy to third. | It was a good throw. Johnson ! { grounded to Kurowski who fumbled | | the ball for an error, letting Johnson | reach first. Borowy scored. Keller | | grounded to Marion who stepped on | | second base, forcing Johnson. i One run, one hit, one error; one| !left on base. { SEVENTH INNNG 1 CARDINALS — Marion struck | | out. Brazle grounded out to Crosetti. | i Klein popped out to Crosetti at short | left field. ‘ No runs, no hits, no errors; none left on base. | | YANKEES—Gordon grounded to | ! Marion and was thrown out. Dickey ! I bounced out, Sanders to Brazle who covered first base. Etten struck out. | | No runs, no hits, no errors; none | TWO HITS TOGETHER' CAPITOL Etten back of first base. Musial flied out in deep left field to Keller. W. {Cooper singled to right field and was thrown out in an au.empwdl steal, Dickey to Gordon. ! | No runs, one hit, no errors; none \left on base. YANKEES—Lindell singled sharp- CARDINALS—Walker flied out to Show Place of Juneau Announcement THE NEW YORK TAYE!IN Is now under new management and will be glad to serve all the old patrons as well as the new ones with the same efficient service and the best of Wines, Liquors and Beers, as has been its policy in the past. George Salo Floor Lamp Reflector Bowls ALL SIZES Floor Lamp Breakage Replacements * Alaska Eleciric Light and Power Company Juneau Phone 616 Douglas Phone 18 Broiled Steak and Fried Chicken SERVED ANY TIME ly in center field and when Walker fumbled for an error he raced safely to second . Stirnweiss, righthanded hitter, batted for Borowy. Stirnweiss attempted a sacrifice hit but Sanders sped in and scooped up the bunt and made a perfect throw to third for Lindell but the big Yankee out- fielder crashed Kurowski, causing him to drop the ball for an error. Stirnweiss was safe at first on a field's choice. An assist for Sanders and no sacrifice for Stirnweiss. Stainback flied out to Litwhiler. Lindell was held at third, alss Stirn- weiss went to second after the catch. Crosetti was walked intentionally, loading the bases. Johnson lined a triple between left and center’ field- ers and the ball rolled all the way to the wall, 450 feet from home plate. Lindell, Stirnweiss and Cros- etti scored. Keller walked. Man- ager Southworth came out and talk- ed to the pitcher, waving the bull- pen for replacement. Howard Krist, right hander, came in for the Card- inals. Gordon singled to left scoring Johnson and putting Keller on sec- ond. Southworth removed Krist vnd called in Lefty Harry Brecheen who pitched one inning as relief in the first game. Dickey's grounder struck Gordon’s left on the base path. Gor- |don automatically out, Dickey get-; ting credit for a single and a put- out going to Sanders. Keller had to go back to second. Etten singled to right field scoring Keller, but Dickey was caught sliding into third, Musial to W. Cooper to Kurowski. Five runs, five hits, two errors; |one left on base. NINTH INNING CARDINALS+Three Yank rans in the eighth were earned. 'John Murphy, righthander, came to the mound for the Yankees. Ken O'Dea, lefthanded swinger, batting for Kur- owski. O'Dea flied out to Gordon. Sanders flied to deep center and Lindell caught the ball. Litwhiler | fanned. | No runs, no hits, no errors; none | left on base. | Rehabilitating of Europe’s Scorched | Earth Big Problem, (Continued from Page One) "~ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-~JUNEAU ALASKA WHIFFS 3 CARDS | Sin(g 1933 1 INNING Bonham Turned Trick Yes- terday for First Time NEW YORK, Oct. 7—When Er- MONTY WOOLLEY, BETTE DAVIS AT 20T CENTURY “The Man Who Came to Din- ner,” which opened last night at the 20th Century Theatre is prob- ably, the most hilarious feast since the knife and fork were invented, for the play which rocked Broad- |way for two solid years is even | more delightfully funny in the War- ner Bros. screen version. The no- | table flock of guests is headed by Bette Davis, Ann Sheridan, Monty nie Bonham whiffed the first three men at bat in a row in the six in- ning yesterday he turned the trick for the first time since Carl Hub- | ators in 1933. balls before settling down. — e PUB. HEALTH NURSE IN Mary Davidson Forbes, Public Health Nurse, has arrived from Seattle aboard a PAA plane. ——ee ARRIVES FROM FAIRBANKS Harvey Grant, Fairbanks mining man, has arrived here on a Pan American Airways plane. AP RICHARD COOK HERE Richard Cook, salesman, came in by PAA plane from the Interior. ———.— MINING MAN HERE Arriving by PAA plane today,, Curtis Robert, mining man, is in| Juneau from Fairbanks. ! e COMING HOME Annabelle Simpson ,daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Robert Simpson, is re- turning in a few weeks to visit her parents after an absence of a year and a half. Miss Simpson is a re- search editor for Time Magazine in New York City. - 1 are sure to make a last ditch stand. | Its factories are virtually useless! without the million tons or so of | coal they have been getting from Germany each year. They have no fuel oil. | When these problems are consid- ered—-and they will be equally great or grester in France, Greece, the Balkans, the Netherlands, Norway, Denmark and Poland—the magni- tude of the job becomes apparent. In coal alone, the United Nations are up against it. England has no more than its minimum require- ments and this nation is faced with a rationing possibility—yet Fuels Administrator Harold L. Ickes has announced that so urgent is the need for coal in Italy that some already is being shipped from here. In food, it seems now that abso- lute minimum requirements will be far greater and the length of time before freed nations can help feed| themselves far longer than the most pessimistic predictions previously. | All that United Natfons relief agencies are now shooting at is a minimum per capita subsistence tevel in freed areas of about 2,000 calories a day, one-third less than javerage dally consumption here. ‘The problem is how to do it without cutting dangerously into our own requirements. ; It is considered likely that the realities discovered in southern Italy will cause an overhaul of our now loosely- integrated relief and i rehabilitation program. As it is, not only Herbert H. Lehman’s | OFFRO, but more than half a dozen other agencies have their fingers in the pie, not to mention the com- bined Food Board and the British Supply Council. Any day now a central United Nations coordinat- ing agency may be set up. e ALASKA COASTAL TRIPS MADE T0 HAINES, INLET ‘The Alaska Cogstal Airlines planes were inactive yesterday due to the censored weather, but took to the air again today with a flight to Haines with the following pas- sengers: Susie Shorty, E. L. Malotte, IR. O. Schmidt, and George Whisen- hunt. On the return flight T. W. Wheat and Louis C. Peters were passengers. Flying to Skagway were C. C. Gruble, Mrs. R. E. Copstick, Stew- art Hull, Sterling Cooper and Harry Harto. Bound for Excursion Inlet were A. V. Lesherg, C. L. Wingerson, Gus | LEAVES BY PAA Jack Bickler flew by PAA plane today enroute to Whitehorse where he will be employed by a construc-| tion company. .- — SOUTH ON CRANE Miss Charlene Craft, with the Bureau of Fisheries office at Cor- dova, left on the Fisheries vessel Crane yesterday, enroute to Rad- cliffe College in the East. bt PR FISHERIES MEN OUT Sam Hutchinson and Neil Sim-' mons, with the biological diviston of the Bureau of Fisheries, at Little Port Walter, went south yesterday | on the Fisheries vessel, Crane. — e ENROUTE TO FAIRBANKS Enroute to Fairbanks, Leslie A. Stevens, public accountant, flew to| Whitehorse this morning on a Pan_ American Airways plane. —l THATCHER IN TOWN Irl Thatcher, traveling man, is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. He arrived from Sitka yesterday. — ., CITY REDEEMS BONDS The City has redeemed $6,000 in City of Juneau Obligation Bonds, according to announcement by May- or Harry I Lucas. — LEAVES HOSPITAL Mrs. Eske Eskesen was discharged from St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday after medicalstreatment. ——eeo— AT GOVERNMENT HOSPITAL Marlene St. Clair was admitted to the Government Hospital on Wed- nesday for medical care. — - INFANT DIES Katherine Starr, native infant, died last night at the family home| !in \the Indian Village. The body is at the Charles W. Carter Mortuary, and funeral arrangements have not | been made. ———,.— BROWNIES POSTPONE MEETING TOMORROW Because of the prevalence of measles, members of the Brownies group will not meet tomorrow. The | \ (“The Man”) Woolley and Jimmy Durante, Reginald Gardiner, Rich- ard Travis and others, with Billie Burke and Grant Mitchell as hosts. bell did it for the Giants in the William Keighley has directed the| game against the Washington Sen- Party with the deft comedy touch | that has made him one of Holly- Bonham fanned nine Cardinals|Wood's ace directors. . vesterday but the Yankee right-| Jimmy Durante, as a mad Holly-|9'clock. ‘Topic of her speech is hander served too many boom-boom | Weodite; Reginald Gardiner as a| “Adult He too, too, Pritish writer; Billie Burke as the bewildered hostess; Grant FIRE FREVENTION WEEK EVERY FIRE IS AN AXIS VICTORY. Fire not only causes of dollars worth of propety yearly, but also takes its toll of lives fewer men to fight, fewer men to work for victory. HELP PREVENT FIRES DUE TO CARELESSNESS. & Follow These Safety Rules 1. Keep floor lamps and electrical cords in good repair. 2. Use ONLY SAFETY MATCHES kept out of . the reach of small chil- dren. 3" Do not store rubbish in cluttered attics or basements. Mitchell, as the irate host; Mary Wickes, as Woolley's abused nurse, and Elisabeth Fraser, as the daugh- ter of the house, all contribute ex- pert performances. | ADULT HEALTH, PUBLIC | " SPEECH THEME MONDAY Health problems and disease pre- | vention with special reference to | middle age and older people will be ! | the subject of discussion and lec- | ture by Dr. Berneta Block Monday |night in a public meeting in the ‘Cny Council Room in the City Hall. | | The meeting, the regular monthly | meeting of the Gastineau Public | Health Council, is the first in a series of public meetings, according. {to Mrs. M. O. Johngon, secretary of the Health Council. 3 Dr. Block, director of the Division of Maternal and Child Health of |the Territorial Health Department, |will begin her lecture at eight| alth and Its Promotion.” | ee— | BUY WAR BONDS * ** the loss of thousands ... lives which mean " PAGE THREF WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAYI (O LENTURY sfi-‘“v\s O JUNEAU INSURANCE AGENCY STANLEY GRUMMETT FIRE DESTROYS WAR .0 ASSETS Gnan Py by 1 . 0 Py 0. Byt * & Woarme Bron 1 bonst e ¢ Prpdutnd W5 S . et (ooum 0 thage Ploy by GEORGE S. KAUFMAN and MOSS HART 30 Minutes Latest News IN WAR !j‘irst next regular meeting will be Friday, October 15, in the parlors of the Methodist church. » AS IN PEAC 1 . . ~ COLIZEV ALL NEW [TugaTan) 'SHOW TONIGHT | BACK ¥ROM FUNTER BAY KODIAK. AGENT som‘j After treating Aleuts at Funter Logan, Bay for measles, Dr. Berneta Block, lo:‘:;: Buruu' o;‘. p';,:h,::u_ director of the division of maternal|south from Juneau yesterday aboarg’ and child health, and. Dr. Paul the’ Pisheries vessel Crane. z Lindquist, acting, asslstant, commis- : b sioner of health for the Territorial Health Department, have returned National Bank " of JUNEAU, AL"SKA DEPOSITS 1N THIS BANK ARE INSURED , Mrs. ‘W., J. Rechin recelved a n* to thelt desks in the Territorial|diogram this morning informing hek Building, P that her mother died at the age’ Dr. Block returned yesterday and 85 years, in Canton, North Dr. Lindquist earlier in the week. Today is Mrs. Rechin’s birthda ' MOTORSHIP PATRICIA - Is temporarily laid up while new motors are installed and other improvements made. Watch this space for announce- ment of resumption of schedule between Juneau, Haines and Skagway. Lewis and Mrs. R. A. Churchman. NOTICE TO SCOTTISH RITE MASONS: eunion this week commencing *Nednesday continuing through Sat- urday. All evening sessions at 7:30. Dinner Saturday at 6:30. Full at- tendance desired. Visiting members welcome, adv, O\S TWME T GOT YOu, NARD BIRD SNOFEY SMEETH Y I S'Y - OID You | PP.P\P, 'EAR A SLOOMIN DR\“\&%R THE DOU DINB AND DANCE Electric Hammond Organ Music DINE AND DANCE