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THURSDAY, MARCH I, 1945 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Last Times Today! —ADDED— “STARS AND VIOLINS" “FANTASTIC CASTLE' CARTOON VEV FEATURE STARTS 7 FRIDAY—SATURDAY ONCOMEDY! Tlo Rationcng OF FUN! LOVE! LAUGHS! . | CAPITOL HAS - ' FEATURE "MAN FROM FRISCO" | The "vMun From Frisco,” showing; lat the Capitol for the last two times | tenight, is a thrilling story of ship-! JUNEAU'S USO NEWS Inlere;fim_liefirivenbody dramatic punch. It is an account e o o We _continue to find it a joy |cf the creation of an industry, forged ¢ THURSDAY, March 1—9:30 p. to examine the Register every few jout of necessity and the spiit of m, Dance in USO to music of days to see the latest hobbies listed. wotkers at war. Servicemen's Band. They are about as varied as you | Michael O'Shea has a part cut to e a o iwould imagine. Some represent jhis person and talents as the the ¢ FRIDAY, March 2—7:30 p. m., serious selections; many are on the Ircugh but briliant engineer. Tommy Ragdio Show' over KINY, “The flippant side; some of these latter Ecnd as the boy, and Gene Lock- Terror at Fleet Manor,” by USO are very thoughtfully selected, no hart as the former superintendent of commandos. 8 p. m., Portrait draw- doubt. tke shipbuilding plant, are excellent jg hy Mary and Jean Shaw. 10 ~ Of course, as heretofore the three in thelr roles. Ip. m., Friday Night Party, with main sources of hobbies continue Anne Shirley supplies the small gjtertainment and refreshments. to be found in the long-popular but tasteful love interest | e o o | classifications of sports, women | G io SATURDAY, March 3—9:30 p. and drinking. When one of these qu”FE !m., March Formal Dance at Scot- is selected usually the subject is S SERVI(E Etxsh Rite Temple. very general,—it's mostly, for ex- | o o o |ample, “Girls” or “Gals” or neau Ski Club welcomes servicemenINVCl!v'v in a couple of instances, it's | just “Goodlooking Girls.” On the Two {loat-equipped planes, ob- to participation in Sunday's skiing.) tained from the Navy at Sitka,| e o0 other hand, one New York man is have been added to the air fleet ¢ MONDAY, ‘March 5—7 p. m,|more specific: his hobby is handl- of the Fish and Wildlife Service. |Meeting of Servicemen's Council. ’1\1118 “She-Wolves.” : Then _there is They are to be used for summer t¢: 10 p. m., Juneau Badminton |the fellow from Missouri who, if patrol duty, according to an- Cjub meets for play in High School [not conservative, is commendably nouncement today by Jack O'Con-'gym; servicemen welcome. 8:30 p.ECOHSL’l'Ving. His hobbies are “Women, nor, Game Management Supervisor m._ Forum Club leaves USO tor | and Drinking if needed.” for the Wildlife Service. meeting in private home. 8:45 p.| Occasionally a note of wistfulness { The aircraft, a Stinson and a m, Movies in USO. |is to be detected in the very way in ‘Waco, took off from Juneau Wed- «. e 0 nesday, heading for Anchorage, ¢ TUESDAY, March 6—7 p. m., |Dook. For example, there are those where they will base for the Meeting of @GSO Council. 7:30 p.|lWO successive registrants from present. They are reported to have m, Broadcast of Quiz Contest.|Arizona, as to whose heartaches reached Cordova last 'night. 19:30 p. m, Customary Tuesday | ‘o perhaps freedom therefrom) Piloting the Waco was Del Frei- Night Games in USO. jyou are Hkely to be as sound a muth, Fish and Wildlife Service o e o | diagnostician as we are: The first ties in this sort of thing, don't Trip to Mendenhall Glacier. 5:30 While some rice degree of discrimi- p. m, Coffee Hour, with cake and nation is practiced. cookies. Ruth Brooks at the piano.| Thus, “Gorgeous Gals” are the |choice of some; more conserva- pilot at Ketchikan. At the controls |e SUNDAY, March ‘4—1:30 p. m.,|“Women.” But every once in al | which the hobby is entered in ‘the | YALTA MEET T0 CONGRESS { { (Continued from Page One) to be submitted to the Senate for ratification. Not Party Question “For unless you here in the halls of the American Congress, with the support of the 'American people, concur in the decisions reached at |Yalta and give them your active support, the meeting will not have produced any lasting results. World peace is not a party question any more than is a military victory,” he |said Standing-room-only crowds look- ed down from the galleries upon scenes unique in history. |Roosevelt sat informally in a red (plush chair, brought ' from the |White House. He was spotlighted |hy camera lamps that faced the cluster of 13 microphones that carried his words to radio lsteners. Crowds, bearing special - tickets, flowed through police lines and |jammed the galleries and corri- |dors hours before the session was called to order. “Unconditional Sufrender” For Germany — The President's voiece was again emphatic—was an ultimatum of ‘“unconditional sur- render.” He indicated simultane- ously that the general surrender jof the Nazi government was not expected. He said “the German people, as well as the German sol- | | thiller s |Charles Butterworth, CAPTAIN James R. Tague, USN, hopes to have a hand in blasting his birthplace off the face of the earth—and-he may get the chance scon, He is shown at the comniis- sioning of the new aircraft carrier Antietam, of which he is the skip- per, at Philadelphis. The pluce be'd like to blast is Kobe, Japan. That's i where he was born, son of Yank missionaris (International) PAGE THREE LENTURY Last Showings Tonight It's a Dandy Mystery Show! IMURDER in : g« PARADISEL: 20TH CENTURY @7 " HAS "BERMUDA MYSTERY" NOW Mystery fans will get that on-the- edge ci-the-seat feeling when “Ber- muda Mystery,” 20th Century-Fox's | Mst-paced comedy-thriller showing I for the last times tonight, comes on | the screen at the 20th Century. With enly two clues as guideposts, | | Preston Foster and Ann Rutherford, who are featured in the film, are led | as merry a chase as any twosome ever were in solving the five-murder The film also features with Helene Reynelds, Jean Howard, and Richard ‘L:an- e ALEUT EVACUEES 70 GET PHYSICAL - CHECK UPS NOW i Doctors Smith; Peterson | Leave for Kitlisnoo Camp Last Night To give medical and dental exam- inations to all Aleuts planning to veturn to their villages on “the ~hain,” from which they were evac- nated in the early summer of 1042, ‘vhen the Japanese struck at Attu, ska and Dutch Harvbor, Dr. James « mith, assistant medical director of the Alaska Indian Service, and Dr. [g L. L. Peterson, supervising dentist | {“or the AIS, left last night on the Estebeth for the Killisnoo Evacuee OCamp. Merrie Melodie COLOR CARTOON JOHNNY ‘SCAT’ DAVIS AND HIS ORCHESTRA SPOBTLIG“T—NEW Wsa e WEDNESDAY, March 7-—7:30 p. |Selected as his hobby the fair sex,fd\ers. must realize the sooner they but, ! Pr. E. W, Norris, Public Health added a musical Barbara Ju Alien Frank Afbertson — SECOND FEATURE — SHOWPLALE 0F CapiTiiL of the Stinson was Ray Renshaw, pilot for Ellis Airlines, of Ketchi- kan. - e COASTAL AIRLINES TO WRANGELL, SITKA AND KETCHIKAN YESTERDAY In a flight to Ketchikan yester- day, Alaska Coastal Airlines carried the following passenger to that Some 3600 fellows have entered days later seemed disinclined to be !tition Poland, He described it as | port—J. B. Jenkins. Ketchikan to Wrangell—Charles Martin, N. Robertson and Helen Davis. Juneau to Sitka—J.'W. Clapp and examined to see if it records any- many of the hobbies listed in that |Curzon Line., The Dan Moller. Sitka to Juneau—Charles Rou- dousoff, Hans Jenuch, Albert Weis- mann, Ole Kande and Charlie Gaordon. ——-— LOLA’'S BEAUTY SHOP Will be closed until further notice. notice. PRI TR MG NS A HARRI MACHINE SHOP Blacksmithing Plumbing, Heating, Acetylene Welding, OIL BURNERS GIFTS Phone 319 o Glenmore Distilleries Co., Incorporated, Louisville, Kentucky FOR BETTER 'm.;’ Movies in USO. 9:30 p. m, question mark,— Square Dancing in AB Hall, under | “Girls?” The next man, whatever |joint auspices of AWVS and USO. |his reasons for doing so, simply Bublic invited. /entered the one word,—"“Married.” | PR ey ¢ But lest you get the impression | USO STATE REGISTRY | that our GI friends have no extra- { curricular interests other than just (A Supplemental Report) these two, we bring you two re- It was almost exactly a.year and|cent entries which are mong our a half ago that the club set up. its| personal favorites. Very speecifically, State Registry Book. In it each|one young soldier stated his hobby serviceman is asked to register|to be getting ‘“$10,000.” Anogher under his home state. Thus far|chap, from the same state, a few their names, their home towns and |fenced" in even to that extent. He their hobbies. Every day new sig- just wished for a hand in “A natures appear in the Regmmr;}Good Poker Game.” and many times daily it i§ eagerly“ Yes, there is fun in reading one else from back home,—which |book. The majority are gay and is not infrequently does. Jolly. But once in a while one On two previous occasions we've | Will be found that will stand out, reported in this column concerning full of significant sudden heauty. the information révealed there. To- | The last signature on the final day we bring you down to date. |bage of the Register was entered It is the State of Washington in September, 1944. It was written which presently leads in the num- by a man ndmed Ricardo Flores. |ber of registrants, with a total of {His residence and his hobby listed | |318. Califorpia. is a close second | there didn’t seem particularly sig- | with -+ 295; “and Ilinois is third, | nificant’ when we read it - then. having 252 listed. For many months | But' we happened to re-read the inow two states have been tied for entry a month ago. The residence last place,—Delaware and Vermont. 8iven is: “Manila, Philippine TIs- |Not since December of 1943 has lands.” The hobhy is: “Home!” ,anyone added his name to the TV | \of the two men from each of these j“m‘m‘;’e‘:‘t counted up lately to? Men' wome,n Y’k o' make certain, but we are quite con- | prfle’“ w'r h F"m Own Legion Is Balief fident that the three cities that ‘hnve the largest numbers of regis- | }trnnts are Chicago, Seattle and Los " f Angeles, and probably in that order. y This is of pxenenlll interest, no1 (Continued from Page One) doubt. But what we -personally SR et ‘moat enjoy doing; with the book I had with an Air Forces captain a 'isoto watch for the names of the few hours after Mrs. Roosevelt's less widely known towns appearing comments and the American - |in it-~those little villages with 8ion’s statement had been issued are populations of perhaps only a few interesting. = What he said was: {hundred but whose names breathe ' ' “TO & certain extent, I agree with ‘the simple beauty of the country Mrs. Roosevelt. Getting the pastwar (that is our America. | . Personally, we .knew nothing :about any of these places except the fact that their sops have been ,ideas of GI Joes has beenn.hobby[ of mine. Unless the Amerjcan Legion and other established veter- ans’ .organizations are willing and give up, surrendering by groups or, |as individuals, the sooner the |present agony will be over.” | He said the decisions on German control, reached at Yalta, didn’t {mean the enslavement of the Ger- |man people. Asserting that the: whole Polish question was a poten- | {tial source of trouble in post- | war Europe, the Yalta participants ' {determined to find common groundi ifor its solution. The President said, “we’ did” make a decision to par- }a compromise under which the | 'Poles received compensation in/ Iterritory in the north and west, for what they lose east of the | limits of the | | western. boundary, he said, will be | | permanently fixed ‘at the: final | peace conference. i hgans e o o e oe e | Empire want ads get quick results to a seat in the house of r sentatives of the 79th congiless, The Reconstruction Finance Corporation has available for sale a quantity of used Tractors and Tractor-mounted Equipment Com- ! pressors, Power Units, Light Plants, Pumps; Electric Welders, Snow Plows, Automatic Vehicles, Concrete Mixers, Rooters, and miscellaneous i construction equipment, all located at Pairbanks. Descriptive offering list may be consulted at the nearest Post Office * or may be obtained by writing the RF.C, at Box 1349, Fairbanks, AUDITS KINLOCH N. NEILL WE OFFER TO A LIMITED NUMBER OF CLIENTS A COMPLETE MONTHLY . ACCOUNTING AND TAX SERVICE TELEPHONE 767 SYSTEMS NEILL, CLARK and COMPANY Public Acmntmm-Au@mn—Tax'Céfiubu 208 Franklin Street — Telephone 757 Fairbanks Office: 201-3 Lavery Building |With us here at the USO,—and the C3R Prove they are, to hand over liness: Arbutus, Maryland, -and Green Valley, California,: and For- est Grove, Oregon, and Rocl Rapids, Iowa, and Pine Island, {Minnesota, and Oak Hill, West Virginia, and Willow. Hill, Illinois. That is all we know about any of them and ail- we nheed- to' know. |lions will have iseen overseas ser- vice. Many of those who have nev- er seen . frontline -duty: have' been {bembed and’ strafed.. Compare this | with * the million men who got.over- ifact that these are names of love- Neir organizations to the youngsters, | they are not going to get very far. | | “Before this war is over, probably 85 Kk per cent of our Giniformed ten mil- | iseas in the last war and the' fourth ‘;sr that who ever saw any real fight- ng. - ’ ¢ Unless. the established veterans’ | crganizations are willing to say ‘take 1 over, kids#'-the youngsters who come (back from this mess are going to form their own: bunches.” {1t was inevitable, “we assume, that evideness : of ;statewide pride quickly would appear in GI hand- writing just - below the names ‘of their favorites, Practically. from the first day its been “Missouri—The Only State and New Mexico—The Land of ‘Euchgntment.” More re- cently, loyal soms- have given u:\ “Arkansgs—The Wonder State; and “Pennsylvania—The Land of Beautiful 'omen, AND HOW! (Being: personglly a native of ‘the Keystone State, We've been expects ing some Wwaggish non-Pennsyl- vanian fo punctuate that descrip tive phrase thus: “—AND HOW?") The latest “wrinkle Séems to be'! to utilize, as advertising A the | blank part of the’sheet Wl the state name appeprs. ‘Thus, thanks to some enterprising gent the en- tire top of the shéet for, Connectt- cut is now emblagoned with ''Wej- come to The Round Table Cock- tail Lounge, Hartford's Firest” and “After Hours It's the Roxy Dine1, Hartford” and “Gopd Fodd at De Pasqualés, Hartford,” as well as “Meet. the Stiffs at. The Hotel Bond Tap Room, Hartford.” . It isn’t only this space at the top of the sheet that has possible —65% Grain Neutral Spirits DRINKS e — Bataan \SUI'ViVOI.' TAXES JOHN W. CLARK R ] KELVIE'S ANIMAL HOSPITAL HOURS DAILY e 2 OPEN 24 OFFICE: 914 Cal}lloun Avenue AMBULANCE SERVICE JOARDING KENNELS _ advertising ~value; however. - The lay- last column, after the date, the MISSING for three years, Lt. Clay ton Rollins, 21, of Meriden, Conn. man’s namé¢ and his home town, calls for his favorite hobby. One lad ‘from Ohid, named Mose Mich- aels, proclaims his favorite to be | “Michgel’s Ice Cream.” Surely up’ st Gen, 53 showed up t et & the yoi erican ‘soldier-to have sscaped frem Bataan, and has been the Japs for three years as .‘,“',u“;‘éu. ntermasional) PHONE! Red 115 Dr. W. A, Kelvie, Veterinary ® 21-passenger Clippers * Expertly-trained stewardesses « Hot maals served aloft © Daily schedules betwyon Alaska, Canada, and Seattla * Experience qained through 12 years of Alaiken flying ' /'8 B ALRUAES \ Phone 106 THE COMEDY HIT. “THE GREAT GILDERSLEEVE" with HAROLD PEARY TODAY and FRIDAY [ ora————— BUY WAR BONDS doetor in charge of District 11, said this check-up was being made, not only to give immediate medical aid Yut' to prevent cases of serious dis- save from being returned to the is- lands where there is a serious short- age of medical care. . I He added that the Aleuts in the camps at Burnett Inlet and at Ward's Lake, near Ketchikan, | would receive similar attention be- fore leaving for their homes. 15 BT ST W YR I T S R W YA T ” NORTHLAN TRANSPORTATION C P A N ¥ M There is no substitute for newspaper advertising! THE FIXIT SHOP b 215 SECOND'STREET ' ' = % MUSICAL INSTRUMENT BEPAIRING GENERAL LIGHT REPAIR WORK Phone 567 Roy Eaton WALTER J. STUTTE New Construction and Remodeling Phone Green 768 evenings - P. O. Box 3091 Estimates Furnished CABINETS FIXTURES 1. 6. FULTON & COMPANY BUILDING CONTRACTORS REPAIRING and REMODELING ALL TYPES OF GLASS WORK Panes Replaced-New Frames Made PHONE 433 149 So. Main Street