The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 28, 1944, Page 3

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THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 28, 1944 PAGE THREE I;BATVIlVEOrF’ NORTH 4-HAchievementDay|"WATCH ON THE | 00000 | ATLANTICSHOWN |Meeting to Be Held| RHINE” FEATURE | A Love Like Hers... | [ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU, ALASKA LAST TIMES A NEW ( TERROR! TONIGHT! CAPITOLTHERTRE . .- . sco.zcc AT 207H CENTURY, o Day meeting will be held Saturday . | : fat 5:30 oilock in_ the Methodist - It Is Part of His Courage . . . A graphic new revelation of war| Bros. 'Watch on the |Rhine” starts an engagement to- | Whalever He DOGS K |Church, Mae Stephenson, District |day at the 20th Century. The New Wherever He Goes . . . {York drama Critics Circle gave it its award as the best play of the | season. President Roosevelt desig- Inated it for the annual “command | |on the North Atlantic is exhibited in “Corvette K-225," by all odds| |one of the most stirring documen-| tary screen thrillers yet recorded !by movie cameras. The Howard Hawks production, presented by Extension Agent, reports. Prizes will be awarded to those of the 4-H members who were proclaimed winners at the recent |exhibit sponsored by the Chamber |of Commerce and Rotary Club. Universal, came yesterday to the ) = " e e turning in performance” in Washington. Its iCapxtol ‘Theatre. It_ls She aul'he‘nm tecord of their ‘work to. thets: okl star, Paul Lukas, had won the |saga of those big-little U-Boat leader will receive ‘& 4-H patch a d of the Néw York Drama | smashers wh)ch-keep dfmgcrous Sea | pollowing the meeting, refresh- L e for the best performance of lanes open for shipping between | ... will ‘be served, after: Wi the season. So Warner Bros. could |North America and Britain. h do no less than add the luster of M rrank cRven M| Filmed with the cooperation of :“:l':‘(lz‘”fl; e [_'[‘:;:Lr"s,‘t’\j:n‘v’il“l::‘ns own two-time winner of the 8 LON CHANEY [ [the Royal Canadian Navy, “Cor-\7"jeiock show. 5 r |Motion Picture Academy Award, Slarzing a4 (Pount Dracuta ‘vme K-225" brings a sensational | |Miss Bette Davis, to co-star with | IMr. Lukas in the film. ESOME lips... a Smile it LOUISE ALLBRITTON ROBERT PAIGE EVELYN ANKERS RANDOLPH SCOTT {and heroic story to movie audiences S g with JANES BROWN NOAH BEERY, Jr. COND FEATURE — § for the first time. Every fascinating Couple Mar"ed | stars, story and production are BARRY FITZGERALD ANDY DEVINE fand f;}izflfflous detalll of convoy | la triple guarantee of a superlative FUZZY ENIGHT DAVID BRUCE protection seems to have been in-| B C . . iscreen story in this intensely dra- y ommlssloner matic narrative of a family united THOMAS GONEZ BICHARD LANE cluded a.nd the actual gxlcouxlters‘ |with German submarines and in defiance of a ruthless, relentless {planes are tremendously impres-\ Andres Cadiente and Irene Kasko, €N¢mY : gl | Bhve |both of Juneau, were married by| Bette Davis, as the American |U. 8. Commissioner Feliz Gray in|Wife of Kurt Muller (Paul Lukas), The Catholic Daughters of Am-|his offices in the Federal Bufldmg'“ German who has made the fight |erica will hold a Goody Sale Satur- |yesterday afternoon. Witnesses|28ainst Fascism his life work, adds | day morning at 9 o'clock in Bert’s|were Mrs. Martha Barril and Cata- another vivid and distinctive por- | Cash Grocery. Adv. |lina B. Barril. ltrayal to the varied dramatic roles 2 Following the ceremony, ‘a bfln_|Whuh have distinguished her ca- | g |reer. She plays the role of a de- | anet:.waa ek 45 the DR CB“’"VO!NL courageous wife, in complete | where Mr. Cadiente is employed as} o ainy with the ideals of her | chief chef. PAUL LUKAS WRRWWE e o Y husband and therefore prepared to| > g b “‘ W ST BT G {accept with him the risks of a| WARNER BROS. HIT test, many thouasnds who have been ® ©® O angerous profession. | : temporarily deafened now say they WEATHER REPORT o e Ay ! «GERALDINE FITZGERALD A HAL B. WALLIS rmopucnion LUCILE WATSON - BEULAH BONDI*GEO. COULOURIS * From the Stage Play by Lithan HELLMAN | hear well again. If you are bothered . . TWO NEW SAILORS LEAVE by ringing, buzzing head noises due U. S. Weather Bureau ®| Daniel Moreno and Arthur An- Screen Play by Deshicll Hammere . Addirional Scenes and Dislogue by Lillisn Hellman + Music by Max Sealnse | , Directed by HERMAN SHUMLIN who waged e for Beosdway SHOWPLALE or | to hardened or coagulated wax (cer- Temp. for Wednesday, Sept. 27 ® |qrews who traveled from Skagway | umen), try the Ourine Home Method Fll Juneau: Maximum, 59; e {to Juneau to enlist in the Unued! G ) test. Youvmust hear better afi.el: minimum, 41. Rainfall, .28. 'istutm Navy during the recently-| ;’!(‘):I;mr:urtxke];'sb?::(p; :le::te o;sio:bgue:-. At Airport: Maximum, 58; @ concluded recruiting drive con- minimum, 34. Rainfall, .19. ® |ducted by Dr. Howard G. Romig, e o o 6 o o @ o o o o returned to Skagway yesterday by| iplane. The boys will remain in]| N.Y. Critics’ Award as Year’s Best Play! SOTH . AP Thousands Who Are Hard of Hearing i R " 3 ; | Simple Test Aids [} Thanks to an easy no-risk hearing Qurine Ear Drops today at Butler, Mauro Drug Co. Your Rexall Store | b T JUNEAU Alaska Electric Liglll and DOUGLAS Phone No. 616 WHAT'S A WATT? By C. M. Ripley General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y. OBODY can see a watt—nobody can weigh a watt. But many of us can observe the workings of a watt of electricity. A good floor lamp needs 300 watts. The modern iron is rated at 1000 watts. The 17,000,000 electric clocks run night and day for a nickle a month. This is because they only use two watts— (the good ones) ! Watts do millions of jobs in American homes every day. They run 17,000,000 electric washers, 20,000,000 refrigerators, 26,000,000 irons, and 30,000,000 radi To the electrician or the trained engineer the watt is easily under- stood, but to the laymen it can be and very often it a complete mystery. ol A novel demonstration of the power of one watt was recently presented by way of the television cameras at Station WRGB in Schenectady. This showed the studio audience and also the television audience just how much power one watt really is. The props for the demonstration consisted of 44 cans of condensed milk, each weighing just one pound. These were placed on a table, and above the table was a shelf, exactly one foot higher than the table. So to raise one can from the table up to the shelf required one foot pound of work. 4 Now, one watt is 441/ foot pounds of work done in one minute. So to put 44 cans up one foot in one minute would be exerting the power of one watt. It was Miss Muriel Fulmer who volunteered to be the guinea-pig for this demonstration. She found it easy to place the 44 cans on the shelf in one minute when she used beth hands. But, when she tried to do it with one hand, she found she just barely could do it! She really had to hustle so hard that her arm got tired. She worked so fast that she could not make an orderly arrangement of the cans. The time was so short that many were bottomside up and others had their labels turned toward the wall. The test was more dramatic because on the wall hung a special 16-in. electric clock in full view of the audience. The hand on this clock made just one revolution every minute. So the experiment was really a race against time! What the Test Reveals 1. To exert the power of one watt will tire out one arm in one minute. And Miss Fulmer is no “society frail,” but a strong athletic girl of 21. 2. To put the cans up in half a minute would require two watts of power, and believe me then she’d have to use both hands! 3. If she had taken her time, and leisurely put the 44 cans up on thesshelf in two minutes, she would have been exerting the power of only half of one watt. But in each of these cases, the work would have been the same—44 foot pounds. The Work in Four Cents of Electricity The work in one kilowatt hour of electricity is 2,656,000 foot pounds. Miss Fulmer could not do that much work in a day. No strong man—not even an athlete—in a long day could do as much work as there is in four cents of electricity. 4. To equal this work, she would have to put 2,656,000 of the one-pound cans up on that shelf one foot above. Those cans would weigh 1,300 tons! They would fill 26 modern freight cars!! And to lift them up, she would have to work at the rate of one watt, all day, every day for six months!!! That’s how much work there is in four cents worth of electricity— 60,000 times that done in the experiment. So she would tire out one arm 60,000 times!—(if she tried it)! So That’s Watt a Watt Is Power Company Dispensing Dependable 24-Hour Eleciric Service AND General Eleciric Company Producis TR T e, Phone No. 18 NOTE~— From time to time, in this space, there will appear an article which we hope will be of interest to our fellow Americans. | This is number twenty-two of a series. | SCHENLEY INTERNATIONAL CORP., NEW YORK | Recovery # | Years ago, when quite a lad, T made a visit with my Dad to the | great stock-yards in Chicago. I | shall never forget that visit fora | number of reasons. (You guess | one.) Really it is one of the sights | of America. We spent one of the most inter- | esting hours with a gentleman who | guided us through great pig-pens | and slaughter houses. I remember | him aayinwt the conclusion of his | lecture, “We don’t waste a thing | in this pig department. We use | everything except the squeal.” | Ithought of that experience the other day when a friend asked me | to tell him something about the “recoveries” from the grain used in mal times, and war alcohol in these critical days. He was quite sur- | prised when I told him, and that made me think that, perhaps, you, too, might be interested in this | subject. istillation process only the starch, which was converted into ferment- able sugar by the addition of mal has been taken away from the grain. but, in addition, valuable vitamins have been added during the fer- mentation process. These are in | theform of a residue which is known as “stillage’’; this stillage is con- centrated and dried, and then is cattle ration, with a high protein content. | So you see the Alcoholic Bever- age Industry is not only devoting its distilling facilities to the manu- facture of wartime alcohol to help win the war, but is simultanepusly producing food to help win the Ppeace. i Modern science has not shied stantly carried on by men in white, and several other very important products, as a result of recovery and conversion, will reveal them- selves from time to time. They will gl;y important parts in the every- y lives of our people. 1 will tell you more about some of these things in arlother article. MARK MERIT of SCHENLEYINTERNATIONAL CORP. FREE —A booklet containing reprints of earlier articlas i thée serses o0l be sent you on request. Send a post-card to me care International Corp., 550 Fipk Aven, New York 1. 8. 7. \ the distillation of whiskey in nor- | | Following the of fermen- | tation and distifi:tion of grain, itis | estimated that about 35% of the | spent grain is recoverable. In the | ‘The valuable fats and proteins not | only remain in concentrated form | | converted,into a poultry and dairy- ' away from the distilling business. | Experiments and research are con- | Skagway until they are called to| active duty. 1 " TIDES TOMORROW Low tide—5:27 a. m., 0.1 feet. i e n m. 150 teet. |OLIVER INLET IS Low tide—5:51 p. m., 24 feet. | High tide—11:56 p m., 172 feet.| MECCA FOR HUNTERS ——————— | gRIns BOED "F‘Vfisb"‘)s:"’}]‘i Oliver Inlet is attracting many | | e bflam Boyd and ngy‘ au(g : {hunters, not only for ducks but es- | | ter, of Sitka, have been discharged |,oqiq)1y for deer. Last Sunday there | |are now at the Gastineau Hotel.|y iorq and three pleasure craft | Mrs. Boyd is a teacher for the y, ¢ne jniet and those ahoard were | Office of Indian Affairs and, with |, iho Kills hunting. | | her husband, will leave soon for| « 2y i | Tanacross, where they have been | assigned. RESG NN PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY > i Arriving here yesterday from Have a portrait artist take your | | sitka was Mrs. Robert E. Nelson, | picture. Hamersley Studio. Opposite | | now a guest at the Baranof Hotel. Federal Building, Phone 294. Adv. | — O AR O SSRGS FOSTER & MARSHALL Members NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE NEW YORK CURB EXCHANGE (Associate) Underwriters of Municipal and Corporation Bonds We Invite Your Inquiries Statistical Service Available Upon Request DIRECT PRIVATE WIRE TO NEW YORK 1411 FOURTH AVENUE BUILDING—SEATTLF 1 SHRINERS attention Ceremonial Friday Evening at the TEMPLE at 8 P. M. yx i DINNER and DAN for Shriners and Their Ladies at THE BARANOF s TOUR LN TURY i | from the Government Hospital Bnd?were three coast guard boats, four ( /AX&M' AMERICA : C\ & Qg TIRWIYS SYSTEM Ul TnE way in less than a day! Direct Dally Service ' There is no substitute for newspaper advertising! & SEATTLE #JUNEAU & WHITEHORSE & FAIRBANKS Connections 42 ANCHORAGE, NOME, BETHEL, and AN Alaska Poinhs No Priority Required INFORMATION . RESERVATIONS . TICKETS . 135 So, Franklin St. Phone 106 e e e, e PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS THE FERRY WAY ROOMS TRANSIENT ROOMS Clean—Steamheated—Hot and Cold Water 212 FERRY WAY JOAN WALKER at 8 P. M. Saturday Evening AUDITS SYSTEMS TAXES NEILL, CLARK and COMPANY Public Accountants—Auditors—Tax Counselors 208 Franklin Street — Telephone 757 Fairbanks Office: 201-2 Lavery Building KINLOCH N. NEILL JOHN W. CLARK YORE LOOKIN' MORE AN WMORE UKE UNK SNUFFY EVER' SECONT, Broiled Steak and ~ Fried Chicken SERVED ANY TIME TheD DINE AND DANCE B erby Inn BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH THERE, NOW), JUGHAID -- QINT T A DEAD-RINGER f0R TW YARDBIRD ? LASSwELCC— By BILLY DeBECK JE PLUMB FERGOT TW' CLINCHER, Cnpr%mg Features Syndicate, Inc., World rights reserve: %// AR DINE AND DANCE Located at SKAGWAY SKAGWAY'S ONLY DINE AND DANCE - PLACE SINCE THE GOLD RUSH!

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