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Super-suspense and ex- citing romance, when a reckless adventurer finds the key to mur- der in a beauty with the eyes of love and the lips of treachery! SANDERS Virginia Lenore BRUCE -AUBERT LOCKHART ROBERT ARMSTRONG S H. B. WARNER Produced by MAURICE GERAGHTY Directed by LEONIDE MOGUY FEATURE— STARTS AT 8:10—10:25 ADDED —— “RUSSIAN REVELS”—A Film Musical “INSIDE FRANCE” — CARTOON — NEWS ACTION APLENTY IN FEATURE BILL NOW ATCAPITOL The stirring adventure following the murder of an American news- Ipaperman in Damascus comprises {the plot of RKO Radios newest ro- mamlc spectacle, “Action In Ara- lbiu featuring George Sanders, Vir- |ginia Bruce, Lenore Aubert and Gene |Lockhart in the leading roles, and |showing tonight and Thursday -at |the Capitol theatre. | Miss Bruce is cast as a' girl agent of the Free French, and Sanders as the American reporter resolved to avenge a friend’s murder. De- spite the efforts of the girl agent and of the American Legation offi- cials, he sets out on the trail of the murderers and soon discovers they are a Nazi group seeking to win the | Arab tribesmen over to their side |by treachery. | How he endeavors to defeat them {by warning the responsible . Arab ‘leaders at the risk of his own life, |leads to the exciting climax of this pectacular screen offering, which s hailed as one of the year's most ] thrill-packed pictures. { Thousands of Arab warriors and | in i in | | hundreds of camels are used thrilling battle scenes staged heart of the desert TEN ARRIVE ON '~ WOODLEY PLANE Arriving in Juneau yesterday 'afternoon aboard a Woodley Air- ways plane from Anchorage were the following passengers: Wilbur Webster, Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Grif- fin, Mrs. Barnes, Mrs. Griffith, Virgil Baker, N. R. Walker, Harry Worobec, Miles Beaux, Capt. Cuddy. Juneau to Cordova—Martin Hege- | berg. Leaving for Anchorage — Pmnk Percich, Geneva Jenkins, Marion Jenkins, Ernet Oberg, W. T. Alt- wegg, Martha McKenzie, D. J. Robert, Charles A. Randup. .- COASTAL AIRLINES T0 SITKA, HOONAH; An Alaska Coastal Airlines plane yesterday took the following pas- sengers to Sitka—Charles Whitte- There is no suhsmute for newspaper advertising! more. Devaughn Kershaw: | HARRI MACHINE SHOP OIL BURNERS GIFTS Phone 319 Acetylene Welding, Blacksmithing Plumbing, Heating, I\ i ;on Raymond Wilson, Mrs. Toda;;’s Special: VIRGINIA DARE WINE red or white Fifth $1.15 Juneau Liquor Co. PHONE 498 CABINETS FIXTURES L G.FULTON & COMPANY BUILDING CONTRACTORS REPAIRING and REMODELING ALL TYPES OF GLASS WORK ~Panes Replaced-New Frames Made PHONE 433 149 So. Main Street’ ) HOLLYWOOD SHOE REPAIR Having taken Mr. Jensen as a pariner we are in a position to offer "While You Wait Service” or leave them for one day " First Class Workmanship Finished fo Your Satisfaction! LADIES' HALF SOLES and “HEELS Rebuilt Like NEW! Two Days' Service on All Mail Orders P. 0. BOX 1131 OPEN 8:30 TO 6 JUNEAU CAMPSNO. 2 A. N. B. and A. N. S. Meet Each Monday-7:30 P. M.-A.N.B. Hall Hoonah to Juneau—Johnnie Wil- Olga Wilson, J. B. Jenkins. Sitka to Juneau—L. T. Peterson, Hugh Pace, Chuck Pearl, Mrs. Chuck Penrl I.ulheran Ladies” Aid | To Meet Tomorrow Mrs. H. Loken and Mrs. R. Kronquist will be co-hostesses to the Lutheran Ladies’ Aid Society, | Thursday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock, at the home of Mrs. Kronquist, 333 West Ninth Street. Members and friends are cordial- ly invited to attend. e e—— - MRS. SIGRID WALTHERS i IS VISITING IN JUNEAU | - rs. Sigrid Walthers, the former owner of Sigrid’s Beauty Shop, is! visiting in Juneau for a few days, while awaiting transportation to Anchorage, where she is employed |at Army Headquarters. | Mrs. Walthers is returning from 1a trip to Butte, Montana, where ‘:she visited her mother, Mrs. Sigrid (Merritt, and her daughter, Patty 'Walthers. e ee—— FROM DENVER Clara Walfield, of Denver, Colo- |rado, is a guest at the Gastineau Both May Burn HE carelessness of your neighbor can be the cause of a fire which may spread to your home. BE sure you have enough insurance on your home and house- hold goods to pay for any loss. Check up with this Hartford agency NOW! Shattuek Agency INSURANCE—BONDS JUNEAU ' | nationalities. i appalling. the best acter. (AP Wirephoto) FREEDYANKS TELL ABOUT NAZI ABUSE By THOBURN WIANT April 4—Tweive hundred and sev- enty-seven Americans captured in the Belgian Bulge battle last winter were among 5,000 prisoners {ion after enduring diabolical almost every state of the Union, had starvation diet. Equally mistreated were other na- tionals found in the enclosure in an open field in this sector, about 14 miles south of Kassel. The in- cluded 2,000 British and Dominion troops, 1,000 Russians, | In addifion, the American armor-' ed division also rescued 900 Jewish women who had been bought into ‘the area from Htngary as slave la- borers. The women were between the ages of 16 and 35. They told of atrocious mistreatment at the hands of the Germans and said that in some instances sick girls unable {to work had been thrown .into trucks with corpses, hauled off and cremated. The Americans’ clothes hung on them like scarecrows and their pro- truding ribs testified to the last of 'ifood. But their morale was high. After capture in the Bastogne- Clervaux area last December they were forced to march four days through snow and mud, with only half a loaf of bread daily, they said. Then they were split into two groups jand herded into box cars. One of the prisoners, from Nc\v York City, told me that one group was held in the cars seven days and Ithe other 10 days without food m' [ water. They said the Germans, after stripping them of their watches and money, slapped them and pushed them around. One Américan said, his shoes had been taken from him and he had been forced to walk 80| miles through the snow in his stock- | ing feet. Nine of the soldiers were kflle«:l1 when American planes strafed the| }unmarked boxcars. Later they were taken to. Bad Orb, between| Frankfurt and Wuerzburg, where they said, sanitary conditions wml The privates were left there to work in slate mines, while the cor- porals and sergeants were brought to Siegenhain and jammed into wooden barracks with inadequate stoves. ALASKA ROUTES MUST WAIT FOR BOARD FINDING Infernational Routes Are Complicating Factor on Cerfificates Settlement oX Alaska - to - the- States airline certification problems is largely contingent upon interna- tional flying agreements, according to Raymond Stough, Director of the Alaska branch of the Civil Aero- nautics Board. Stough, who arrived in Juneau Sunday with Mrs. Stough, after attending CAB hearings on Alaska certificate applications, said, how- ever, that is is sible decision might be made on Alaska to the| States applications without con- sideration of the “thrqugh route” international complications. A decision of the Examiner on| the recent Washington hearings xs yet to be announced, and (urtherl The movie industry honored its best Barry Fitzgerald, for the best supporting role; plam for Alace: | sal ilm performers of 1944 at Hollywood awarding .-R) Ingrid Bergman for the best actress, and Bing Crosby for “Oscars” to ( All GUARDSMEN :a routes must neces- rily wait on the release of these Imdmg\ AmenL operators, Alaska set Al Swugh: are guests at the Baranof Wwithin the Coast | NEAR SIEGENHAIN, Germany, MRS IRENE AASE, WITH freed Elena, from a barbed-wire enclosure here Olaf A: 'by the U. S. Sixth Armored Divis- the Aleutians, mis- Alaska yesterday morning. They treatment from their Nazi captors. Will spend the summer in Seattle D The Americans, who came from With Mrs. Aase’s mother. | lost 25 to 40 pounds & man during were with Warrant Officer Aase’s 1315 months as prisoners on a semi- parents, Mr. and Mgs. Harold Aase. at the Baranof Hotel. 300 other || | al continental carriers, Pan Alrwi and two Alaskan Wopdley Airlines, and Alr s are among those eking routes from the States to aska. While PARTICIPATE IN Close of the Red Cross Guard has revealed 100 per cent partici pation of the Coast Guard |sonnel stationed here, it was an- no\mced today by the Captain of DAUGHTER, OFF TO SOUTH e Port, Lt, Warren M. Caro. Comnbutmns from every officer and enlisted man have been trans- | mitted to Coast Guard Headquar- ters at Ketchikan, from where they will be further forwarded to the National Red Cross, Washington, stopping in Juneau the Mrs. Irene Aase and dnughtnr wife of Warrant Officer who is mow serving in went south on the -o of Sitka, While s ng in Juneau, they | Hugh Pace, is a guest Juneau Rotary Club presents “WHOLE TOWN'S TALKING" A 3-Act Comedy . By John Emerson and Anita Loos COLISEUM THEATRE Juneau THURSDAY and FRIDAY April 5th and 6th At 8:00 P. M. Civilian Tickets (including tax) Servicemens’ Tn:kets (in- cluding tax) (No Seats Reserved) for Benefit Juneau Scouting Program $1.20 .80 ‘NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION SERVING ALASKA RED CROSS PUSH Drive service per- ' . | gn g, A AT 20TH CENTURY | LAST NIGHT! ONE SHOW ONLY agP.M One of the greatest casts ever }:nwmlvh-d for one motion picture is }Im\l\u’wl in 20th Century-Fox's film- ization of The Song of Bernadett s at the 20th Century theatre the last time wonight Jennifer Jones plays the role, with Willlam Eythe, Charles Bickford, Vincent Price, Lee J. Cobb a Cooper in featured role: matization was directed by and produced by Wil- for title | e is only one showing of the ting at 8 o'clock - .- at 5 imn' ¥ ‘Wefd s THE SOXG OF BERNADETTE witnh JENNIFER JONES in her Academy Award Winning Role ! WILLIAM EYTHE * CHARLES BICKFORD pirected by HENRY KING NOTICE N. Hester, M. D., Eye, Ear, Throat Speclalist of Ket- is now at the Juneau Medical and Srrgical Clinic for la few days for examination of |eyes and fitting of glasses. Appoint- iments can be made by calling | Clinic. Patients fitted on former | visits will please call for appoint- |ment if any adjustment is neces- | sary. (Adv.) Dr. R |Nose & | chikan, — e —— Produced by WILLIAM PERLBERG l‘mnlw wany ads gol qulck resuts. ¢5 feHYPERACID STOMACHS ECONOMY size Butler, Mauro Drug Co. “The Rexall Store” Baranof Hotel Building Two Free Deliveries Daily 20th Century Meat Markel DEC!)RATING PAINTING and PAPERING, being in the same craft are important enough to REQUIRE CARE in their execution———It is more satisfactory to know what the job is actually worth before starting and thus avoid an indefinite expense brought on by unneces- sary working hours. JAMES S. McCLELLAN Phone DOUGLAS 374 Box 1216 WINDOW —— AUTO — PLATE GLASS IDEAL GLASS CO. Glass Work of All Descriptions 121 MAIN STREET """ PHONE 633 AUDITS SYSTEMS TAXES NEILL, CLARK and COMPANY Public Accountants—Auditors—Tax Counselors 208 Franklin Street — Telephone 757 Pairbanks Office: 201-2 Lavery Bullding KINLOCH N. NEILL JOHN W. CLARK WE OFFER TO A LIMITED NUMBER OF CLIENTS A COMPLETE MONTHLY ACCOUNTING AND TAX SERVICE TELEPHONE 757 THE FIXIT SHOP 215 SECOND STREET MUSICAL INSTRUMENT REPAIRING GENERAL LIGHT REPAIR WORK Phone 567 Roy Eaton KELVIE S ANIHAL HOSPITAL OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY OFFICE: 914 Calhoun Avenue AMBULANCE SERVICE BOARDING KENNELS Dr. A. Kelvie, Veterinary PHONE: Red 115 WALTER J. STUTTE GENERAL CONTRACTOR New Consjruction and Remodeling Phone Green 768 evenings P. O. Box 3091 Estimates Furnished SPECIALIZING IN PERMANENT WAVING HAIR CUTTING AND GENERAL BEAUTY CULTURE A FULL LINE IN DERMETICS CREAMS LUCILLF’Q BEAUTY SALflN PHONE 492