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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1951 This very strange adventure | LEAVES TONIGHT! | § Chales | t 3 LAUGHTON ; | e Franchot TONE Burgess Colorby ANSCO COLOR! ;< 7:30—9:30 ‘ 7:50—9:50 TOMORROW this one hils the target for THRILLS! | BATTLES RAIDER IN SOUTH ATLANTIC! Filned with the coopeation ofthe Department of Defense: a0d the U. 5. Nowy. starring MACDONALD CAREY MARTA TOREN ROBERT il vsmmwwmw.m ‘GEORGE F. SLAYIN Dl y DRSS P by AP DETROH ....And More.... HIGH—FLYING THRILLS IN “AIR HOSTESS" — Juneau Drug Co. Phone 33 - Box 1151 ‘Now ai Capitel | ing offering filmed entirely in An- | film | authentic | At 2 pm.—Beta s Excifing Theme in New Color Film Revolving around an ingenious scheme to trap a murderer, “The Man on the Eiffel Tower” stars Charles Laughton, Franchot Tone, Burgess Meredith, Robert Hutton, Jean Wallace, Patricia Roc, Belita and the city of Paris in an excit- This feature is now at, sco Color | the Capitol Theatre. The Irving Allen-Franchot Tone| Production, ributed by RKO| Radio, casts French detective persistently on the| heels of Tone who is suspected in{ a case of murder. Sure that the killer’s nerve will crack if sufficient pressure can be applicd, the detec- | hag been a tourist mecca during the | tive makes use of practical psy-| iron mazes of the famous tower. Burgess Meredith directed the film, which was produced by Irving | Allen, and based on Geol | menon’s “A Battle of Nerve: Opening tomorrow on the high in Universal- | Internationa rine,” an ¢ eas s “Mystery tion-packed, thriller also| tarring Robert Douglas. The new |completed her master’s thesis for young women plan to fly across the ngninstiv,he University of Washington school |frigid wastelands of the North Pole interiors and exteriors of music. Her dissertation was on|area aboard a decommissioned navy sub- English opera in colonial America. |group here said they would be the was photographed marine near San Diego, Calif. Carl| Esmond and Ludwig Donath head|Makarky Baranof of the Russian | tempt. the supporting cast of “Mystery Submarine.” . (omMy—E;Enls TODAY At 6 p.m.—Taku Toastmasters meet at Baranof Hotel. At 8 p.m~—City Council meets. At 8 pm.—VFW post meets in Jeep club. At'8 p.m.—Wormen of Moose meet At 8:45 pm.—Juneau Singers re- hearsal at Methodist church. October 19 At 1:30 pm.—Martha Scciety meets in N.L.P. church parlors. At 8 p.m.—Square dance for Tth, 8th and Sth graders at Parish Hall. At 8 p.m.—Rebekah Past Noble Grands meet at home of Mrs. Douglas Mead. October 29 | At 12:30 p.m.—No host luncheon of member: Douglas Baranof. From 1 to 5 p.m—Lutheran Ladie: bazaar in church parlors. At 7:30 p.n.—Rainbow Girls meet in Scottish Rite Temple, initia- tion. At 8:30 p.m.—Circle Eighters Sq ance at Parish Hall. October 21 'ma Phi preferen. tial tea at home of Mrs. D. C. Langdon, 124 W. Sixth Street. Octeber 22 At 8 p.m.—American Legion. p meets in Dugout. October 23 At noon—Rotary club Baranof Hotel. October 21 At noon—Kiwanis club meets Baranof Hotel. At 7:30 p.m.—Chapeladies meet home of Mrs. Frank Meier. At 8 p.m.—Elks Lodge. October 25 At noon—Chamber of Commerce meets, Baranof Hotel. ip committee of Juneau- Concert Association at meets at at INTRODUCING NEW FALL AND WINTER Ladies’ and Men's Suits and Topcoats Made-to-Your-Individual- Measurements Your choice from over 100 ' all-wool fabries. Values to $90.00—for a limited time ONLY $60.00 CALL BLACK 840 Mail Orders Filled Promptly After 6 P.M. Sunday all day { Macdenald | Carey and Marta Toren face peril (larence Olson Reporis on Pribilofs Refrigerators are now on the want list of the Pribilof Island na- tives according to Clarence Olson, general manager of the seal is- lands. Mr. and Mrs. Olson stopped in Juneau enroute to Seattle on Mcnday. Many natives have all {modern electrical equipment in their | win have on population, commune homes and many orders have been ent in this year for refrigerators. Olson said that there are now 500 Aleuts living on the islands of ghton as a noted | St- Paul and St. George and during | the annual seal drive about 80 work- men are brought from villages in the Aleutian Islands. For the past two years, St. Paul aling drives., Tourists armed with | chology to break down the man's a) types of cameras are taken to |Alaska Public Works agency also confidence, and this leads to a /gt Paul by Reeves Aleutian Air- reviewed the report prior to its breath-taking climax high up in the |Jines, There is a 30 room hotel and |/1nal publication, these on the tour have a two day stopover. There are now 12 white families Si-lon St. Paul and four on St. George | nd. Mr. and Mrs. Olson spent eral winters on St. Paul. They said that they almost enjoyed it more in the Pribilofs-than in Seat- Subma- | tle during the winter. Mrs. Olson is | a concert pianist and thi ear she Mr. Olson reported that the Rev. |Orthodox Church at St. Paul is now visiting with his wife in the state Father Baranof was priest in chg of the Russian Orthodox Church |of St. Nicholas in Juneau during World War II when he and his con- gregation were evacuated to south- east Alaska. ADB fo Mee af ‘Anchorage from November 1010 12 | The Alaska Development Board ‘\'.lll meet at a special three-day (session to be held in Anchorage, | November 10-12, it has been an | nounced by Don H. Goodman, chair- | man. | Specific Alaskan developmental problems and opportunities, as well as matters of general policy will be | discussed at the meeting, Goodman {eaid. General Manager | Sundborg will report on a recent b to the eastern United States where he interviewed officials of ithe Aluminum Company of Amer- jca and others interested in large- | scale’ developments in-the Territory. o| Special emphasis will be given the a when a preliminary e Anchorage district sur- Y, i keing compiled, will be reviewed by the board. Field work the survey was completed in | ly October by Ralph Browne, | assistant manager. A highlight of the meeting will be }n public forum featuring promi- | Anchorage in | nent leaders of Alaskan business, railway. industry and government to be held during the final day of the session. | Speakers, topics and other infor-| | mation relating to the forum will be announced later, Goodman stated. | Members of the Alaska Develop- | ment Board include, Chairman Don H. Goodman, Anchorage; Antonio | Polet, Nome; Herb Hilscher, Fair- (banks; Robert Boochever, Juneau; and Wilfred C. Stump, Ketchikan. ARREST MADE ON ASSAULT CHARGE Arthur Davis was arrested yes- terday by the Marshal’s office on an assault charge and his case is now pending in the U. S. Commission- er's court. Davis is alleged to have beaten his wife last Sunday and she has been in St. Ann’s Hospital Dr. John Clements said that Mrs. hospital on l:‘riday or Saturday. — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — i Coke is at its delicious best when served ice cold. Keep it in llup' coldest spot in your rqfrig,.w BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY JUNEAU COLD STORAGE COMPANY ice cold 54 DRINK 1951, THE COCA-COLA COMPANY .| tractive 34-year-old Hamden, Conn., e girl who has been developing her George | this week. Her attending physician, | Davis would be discharged from the | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA 'Report Reviews Keichikan Pulp "Mill Construction | Problems and opportunities fac- |ing Ketchikan, where construction |of Alaska’s first pulp mill is ex- pected to begin early next year, are Gutlined in a special-purpose |survey just completed by the Al- ‘;uka Development Board. The report points out the impact the entrance of this basic industry |ity facilities and services | greater Ketchikan area. Preliminary copies of the study, written by Ralph Browne, assistant manager of the Development Board, | were reviewed by William Barton, |city manager; John Weir, public | utilities manager; J. E. Danielson, superintendent of schools and oth- ers in Ketchikan. Representatives of the U. S. Forest Service and in the ‘Two Women First To Fly Over Frigid North | NEW YORK, Oct. 18 — (B — Two this month. An explorers’ |first women to make such an at- | One is Virginia Withington, an at- career as a specialist in aeronaut- ical navigation. The other is Miss I. M. Dunbar of the Defense Re- arch Board of Canada. | Both are going along as ob- |servers on a Royal Canadian Air Force mission to study the behavior |of secret new navigation instru- | ments in Arctic skies. 1 ‘ The mission is in connection with | la continuing study of cold weather | military equipment being conducted |by the United States and Canada. The plane is due to take off from |the Rockcliffe Air Station near| Ottawa about Oct. 25 or 27. Plan fo Operate 'More (able Cars 'In San Francisco SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 18—®— San Francisco’s board of supervisors voted 8-1 approval yesterday of the city’s taking over the long-idle, bankrupt California Street Cable Railway Co. Under the plan, which must-be submitted to a federal bankruptcy | referee, the city will pay $138,000 for clear title to the company's buildings, tracks, cables and 40-odd little red hill-climbing cars. Deputy City Attarney A. Dal Thomson expressed hope the Calif- ‘ornia and Hyde Street cable lines may be operating again soon under |the management of the municipal 20 Arrive, 5 Leave {On Denali Monday Arriving on the Denali north-| |bound Monday Were 20 passengers | with five embarking for the west- ward. Disembarking from Ketchikan: | Dr. and Mrs. D. L. Cramer, Robert | L. Mell, Mrs. John Mills. From Seattle: Ida T. Barril, R. [R. Batterton, Patricia Duryea, Henry F. Hazel, Mrs. June Hazel, Tommy Herrett, William A. John- |son, Mr. and Mrs. W. 8. Lahti, Ken- neth G. Martinson, Loretta Mintus, Merritt Ruhlen, Leonard J. Will- iamson, Cecil W. Willis, Mary P. Willis, Linda Rae Willis. | Embarking for Sitka: Mr. and |Mrs. Albert Jack, Gil Rich. For Seward: Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Drouin. | | William Shakespeare was born in | | April, 1564, ) ‘mot a dramatic disease. | supplement | 9. Cooksey who lives at Auke Lake. Christmas Seal Sale in Alaska Begins November 1 The office of the Alaska Tuber- culosis Association has been a super-busy place the last month during which the supplies for the 1951 Christmas Seal Sale have been sent out to sponsoring groups throughout the Territory. In Juneau the Kiwanis club members will again undertake the personal solicitation of the down- town busi area, beginning around the first week in November. After that the remainder of Juneau will be reached by the well known mail sale In 1950 the people of Alaska con- tributed $3: 1.61 to the program of tuberculosis control through the purchase of Christmas Seals, which is the only appeal for funds made to the public by voluntary tuber- culosis associations during the year. Only six percent of this amount went to the national association and the rest remained in Alaska to carry on local programs and help plug the gaps in official funds. Although tuberculosis is Alaska’s most serious health problem, it is With the exception of the miliary and men- ingitis types, tuberculosis creeps on so slowly and painlessly that the victims are seriously ill before their condition is realized, and all too often they have been labelled as simply and unambitious, It is not a disease that ordinarily pulls at the heart strings and attracts the interest of large givers, so that very few large contributions are re- ceived during ‘the sale. The bulk of the returns come in gifts of two to five dollars and represents a wide per capita coverage of the Territory. One of the most satisfying expen- ditures of the Alaska Tuberculosis Association, into which they are putting $3200 this year, is the pro- gram of chest surgery at Mt. Edge- cumbe Tuberculosis Sanitorium, and without which assistance the official agency in charge would not have been able to set up the pro- gram. Not all patients have a con- dition suitable for chest surgery and for them bed rest still remains the most satisfactory treatment. But many patients can profit by surgery and this cuts down their hospitali- zation time greatly and frees the bed for a new patient. A case in point is the Juneau young man who\ has been in and out of TB hos-| pitals for fifteen years, but in six“ months after chest surgery he was home for good and is already earn- ing part of his own living. This type of expenditure of seal sale money is called a demonstra- tion ; program and it is expected that*Within a year or two this item will become a part of the permanent budget of the official agency. Last year the Alaska Tuberculosis Asso- ciation used $10,111 of its funds to official budgets for services that are very necessary in the cure and rehabilitation at\ the tuberculous patient. MRS. LEO CREMER HERE FROM WRANGELL Mrs., Leo Cremer of Wrangell is visiting with her sister, Mrs. John Mrs. Cremer said that she is wait- ing for the Taku wind to go down before she flies home. Mexico’s youngest and most ac- tive volcano is El Paracutin, which first erupted in & farmer's field in February, 1943, CEVTEANIAL PANCAKES We’re Due to an unfortunate Advertisement of the JUNEAU COLD STORAGE MEAT and FISH MARKET this Notice is published. The ad should have read . . . Choice Center Cuis POTROAST . . 755¢b. instead cf Center Cuts—Pork Roast Sorry! error in the Wednesday ONLY Fast Adtion in "Crosswinds' Now At 20th Century Take a hard-as-nails sea captain, a beautiful redhead and a villainous band of derelicts; add a secret lagoon of head-hunters, and a plane missing with a million-dollar cargo. The sum, totalled in Paramount’s “Crosswinds,” which opened yes- terday at the 20th Century Theatre, stands as almost two hours of un- relenting action and excitement. Filmed in color by Technicolor and starring John Payne, Rhonda Fleming and Forrest Tucker, this Pine-Thomas production follows a rascally collection of fortune hunters seeking treasure in the unexplored islands of the South Seas. The sizzling series of adventures starts unreeling when Payne pilots his schooner into a small South Pacific port, meets sultry Miss Fleming, and conniving trader Tucker. A deal is made to hunt pearls. But while the girl gives Payne the eye, Tucker gives him the double-cross and he finds himself in Jail, minus a schooner. On his release, Payne joins up with two murderous derelicts. Aboard a stolen yawl, the three go up river to hunt Tucker, the girl, and a plane which has-crashed in the jungle with a million dollars of bullion aboard. Blood-thirsty sav- ages, crocodile-infested rivers and intrigue among the whites punctu- ate the search. Before things are through, Payne has settled his score with the treacherous trader and made peace of a different sort with Miss Fleming. O:CENTURY THEATRE » WHERE HITS ARE A HABIT! TONITE! Through Saturday ADVANCE SHOWING (Direct from Studio to You) Filmed in Vivid Teclmi_cclor! JUNGLE DANGER.. JUNGLE TERRORS at every turn...as they hunt for Man Injured in Sawmill Acrident At Elfin Cove James Lingard, injured in a saw- mill accident at Elfin Cove Satur- day afternoon, was brought to Ju- neau on a special tllg‘ht by Alaska Coastal Airlines. 2 His left leg was broken and left ankle dislocated when his pants leg was caught in a belt that pulled him into a saw, Dr. William White- head, attending physician, sald. Dr. Whitehead made the flight to Elfin Cove and Mrs. Lingard accompanied her husband to Juneau. Lingard is at St. Ann's hospital. Dependable, scheduled service to NOME FAIRBANKS WHITEHORSE . KETCHIKAN SEATTLE by Flying Clipper® Big 4-en| Cl fast, Y ontis an cities in Alaska. You enj ~chair seats . .« food . . . stewardess hoe pitality. Fly with the world's most experienced airline — Pan American. For Clippex reservations, oall ... Phene 106 *Tvads Mork, Pon dmeriemn Workd Abrweyn, a Lin AHERICAN | WORLD'S MOST EXPERIENCED AIRLINS TRAPPED UNDERSEAS! Y. . FINISH FIGHTI SHOW STARTS 7:20—9:30 FEATURE AT 7:54—10:04 e ——— MEETING TONIGHT . Veterans of Foreign Wars Jeep Club — 8 o'Clock ALL VISITING V. F. W. MEMBERS ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND Frank Drouin, Adjutant ——— James Burnette, Commander PAMARAY CULB “PA*” RAY is pleased to announce the return engagement of ‘"THE O°REILLYS Ellie, at the piano and Solovox, and Royal, with ‘his Bass Viol and songs, are looking forward fo meeting their old friends and new acquaintances. Music starts at 9 o’clock nightly i The Pamaray Club Specializes in FRESH Fruit Beverages for Your Taste Pleasures