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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1951 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA ™ PAGE FIVE SHOWPLALE o wrr/m CARITUL® ‘Go to a Movie flun'rt Today! And what finer Picture could you see than this modern American film classic! Relive all the HOPES LAUGHS TEARS and EXCITEMENT of the Home Front during the Last War! CHDTE JWAFR S COLBERT-JONES - COTTE! SHREY HONTY TEMPLE WOOLLEY BARRYMORE 'WALKER ay MADISON inceYou Went Away SPECIAL RETURN ENGAGEMENT Ends Tomorrow [ NOTE EARLY START- ING TIME— SHOWS—7:05-9:45 FEATURE—7:25-10:05 | ternal Revenue Bureau meanwhxlew | has been asked to take steps to see i misconduct,” Dunlap said. Annual Dinner fo Be Held At Northern Light {Presbyterian Church A' (ap"o! Thea're The annual fellowship pot-luck o dinner of the Northern Light Pres- You Went Away, | byterian church will be held Friday turned to the Capitol Theatre l_fl‘l | evening at 6:30 o'clock in the church night and made'a pronounced IM-| parlors. pression as it did when first shu\vn‘ Mis R B Robectson 15 oNairman under the David O. Selznick ban-|of the menu committee and Mrs. ner. This feature is on again to- James Devinney is chairman of the night and tomerrow. | dining room. The story is simple, A one-act drama, “No Hands But there are subplots BDR’H(IY- : Mine,” will be presented after the has vol- "Since You Went 3 | Away' Showing “Since re- although Tim | Hilton, advertising man, dinner. Members of the cast are unteered, won a commission, and|ihe Misses Genevieve Mayberry, gone off to war. His wife, played| janet Flint, Gladys Knight, Mrs. by Claudette <Colbert, with two| payid James, Mes Ray Wells, daughters, played by Jennifer payiq Clem, Bob Pegues, Roger Jones and Shirley Temple, is left| pijler and Stromme. to maintain and manage the home,! Al members of the congregation and not quite enough money to do | gre urged to attend. it. In time, the husband is xf‘])(‘r od fficially, “missing in action.” The presumptions, (,r course, nre‘ USNR, is Toseph Cotton, r mand and one time hpears upon c scene &nd velibred complicatio reating the main suspense. All in all it is a rare experience to lunch Brings tions | | [ se picture, namely, Clau- Jennifer Jones, Joseph | Shirley Temple, Montey Lionel Ba fobert , Hattic M WASHINGTON, Oct, 24 A new plan to end the ! British oil dispute was reportedly an, Wynn, Gordon Oliver, Lioyd | Presented to Premier Mossadegh of \. Jane Devlin, Agnos Moore- | Iran as he lunched yesterday with Albbrt Bassermen, Guy Madi- | Fresident Truman. Graiz Stevens, Jackic Moran| Secretary of State Acheson and BT | Secretary of Defense Lovett were R VR AR ]\ among top American officials who ned ln the one hn\x (nnl 45 Tax Employees Are Suspended | Mossadegh arrived here yester- | day from Philadelphia. He came to this country to present his case WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 The Internal Revenue P nounced today the susper | against British ownership of Iran's ,uvl resources at the United Nations {Security Council. __| Officials were keeping q\m-t about an- | details of the proposal reportedly n of served up to Mossadegh with lunch, two of its employees in the New but one informed source said the York arca. | broad outlines of one suggestion Those suspended today are Theo- | Were: dore Isaacs, on agent in the upper| 1. Iran would own and operate division and Elias| her oil facilities, with the help of hulman, deputy collector in western technicians supervised by a; the frst New Work district in! manager from outside Iran but not Brooklyn. of .the same nationality as the| Commissioner John B. Dunlap| technicians. Isaacs was suspended “pend- 2 Iran would sell her oil at a ing completion of investigation cf| “discount” to Britain, and allow his testimony before special agents | Dritain to market it. of the bureau regarding his finan- cial condition and other matters. Schulman was suspended ‘pend- | ing investigation of = charges of HERE FROM PORTLAND R. J. McKinney and A. L. Henny of Portland, Ore., are at the Bara- | nof Hotel. The suspensions followed the re- signation by .request last night of | Joseph P. Marcelle as collector of | Internal Revenue for the first New | York district. Marcelle failed to appear today before a House Ways: and Means| paranof scheduled to arrive subcommittee hearing on. irregular-| ¢outhhound sometime Sunday. ities in the government’s tax coll€c-| pyrincess Louise scheduled to ar- tion system, rive southbound Friday at 7 am., A subpoena was promptly issued sailing for Vancouver at 8 am. for his appearance tomorrow. | Denali scheduled to sail from Se-| Rep. King (D-Calif), chairman | attle Oct. 26. of the subcommittee, said the In Community Evenfs | TODAY | — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — !Ac 7:30 p.m.—Chapeladies meet at Ship Movements that none of the files in Marcelle’s office are “tampered with.” *| save at least 12 ways when | ship by Clipper* Cargo! You can’t compare sea and air ship- because payment ls quickes. costs by weight rates alone! ?:u‘ must also count these special economies of Clipper Cargot 9 Crating Is seldom mecessary. Sbipping weights are less, because | you use kighter #No deterioration. e Documentation time and costs are shipment from origin to destination. At 10 p.m.—Pre-Days of '98 dance| ©Goods arrive when needed . . . whils by Es in Baliroom. r October 28 the is srongest. At 11 a.m. and 8 p.m.—Special serv- oDamage and pilferage losses ase | home of Mrs. Frank Meier. | At 8 p.m—Elks Lodge. At 8 p.m.—Alaska Potters meet in| club rooms. .| At 8 p.m.—Rebekah lodge meets in Odd Fellows hall. October 25 | At noon—Chamber of Commerce meets, Baranof Hotel. At 6 p.m.—Taku Toastmasters meet at Baranof Hotel. At 8 p.n.—Emblem Club meets in | Elks Lodge rooms for installation.’ | At 8 pan. — Juneau Yacht Club! | meets in Irls Room, Baranof Hotel. | At 8 pu m*VI‘W post meets in ]ecp‘ club. At 8 p.m.—City Council meets. | At 8 p.m.—Coast Guard Wives Club| will meet at home of Mrs. Jessie Sparks, 113 Willoughby Avenye. At 8 p.m.—First of a series of card parties by Sons of Norway, Moose Hall. At 8:45 pm.—Juneau Singers re- hearsal at Methodist church. October 26 At 6:30 p.m.—Fellowship potluck dinner in N.L.P. church parlors. At 8 p.m.—Pijoneers of Alaska Aux- iliary meets in Odd Fellows Hall. October 27 At 7:30 p.m.—Hallowe'en Carnival of Rainbow Girls in Scottish Rite Temple. At 8 p.m.—Sourdocey Square Dance club meets in grade school gym. seduced. One Air Waybill covers ices at Methodist church with Dr. | Field, W. A. Chipperfield, M. H. | Lemke; to Wrangell: Imporfant Love Story Tonight At 20th Century The greatest advance anticipation of a motion picture in many years will be rewarded tomight with the arrival at the 20th Century Theatre of “David and Bathsheda,” Twen- tieth Century-Fox’s spectacular picturization of one of the immortal love stories of history, photographed in color by Technicolor with a cast of thousands headed by co-stars Gregory Peck and Susan Hayward. “David and Bathsheba” relates on the screen for the first time the lezendary drama of the romance of the King of the Israels and the sirenous wife of his able warrior, Uriah the Hittite. Beginning with their historic meeting when David sces Bathsheba bathing herself on a roof-top adjoining his palace and has her brought to him, “David and Bathsheba” follows the Biblical ac- count of how David dispatches her husband to death in battle so that he can marry her. For this sin they uffer the wrath c¢f God predicted by the bearded prophet, Nathan. Highlights in David’s life, includ- ing the classic killing of the Phil- istine giant Goliath by a pebble from the boy David’s slingshot, are re-created during the King's pii- grimage to the tabernacle where the holy Ark of the Covenant is housed to beg forgiveness from God. and An Exclusive Pre - Release Engagement Dy relief for the populace from the terrible famine inflicted on them. The culmination of the film’'s interpretation of David's life comes with the utilization of the Twenty- third Psalm, attributed to David at another point in the Bible, mark- ing his redemeption in the eyes of God. 84 Travel on Tuesday Flights Alaska Coastal Airlines carried a total of 84 passengers on Tuesday's flights with 23 on interport, 31 ar-} riving and 30 departing. Arriving from Sitka: Roy Herrin, Harry Thorburn, A. Petroborg, Mrs. H. Sulser, H. Sulser, Nancy Torum, Hallene Price, G. Hilsinger, Arne Dorum, Mr. and Mrs, J. Young; from Ketchikan: Ralph Bartholo- mew; from Haines: Mr. and Mrs, E. S. Hawkins, Bill and Bob Haw- Color by TE(HNK Don Baldwin, Carl Tagg; from Hoonah: James Howard, Kenneth Bean, Mrs. Richard Bean, Tom Jimmie, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Austin, James Austin, Mrs. J. Howard, Hazel Bell. Departing for Sitka:'L. Lindstrom, J. W. Johnson, George Babbitt, Al Matson, Tom Tilson, W. H. Hirke- vold, Susanna Kenough, A. Petro- borg, A. R. Hobos, D. Johnson, R. MecComb, L. Minard, G. Chinook; to Petersburg: Bob Bean, Dr. Grace WHE THROUGH S giant Goliath ! RAVMOND MASSEY - KIERON MOORE ; from Skagway: Ward Carroll, '.;\‘tunlorllll 2 i ., Screen by D. Sherman Starr, T. O. Dickinson, VI U Q““’"" oK O:LENTURY THEATRE » WHERE HITS ARE A HABIT! TONIGHT ATURDAY avid fells Ohe Vudory—und wild { Palace revelry! OLOR RE THE Rig - New Hits Play < Dfivid looks upon Bathsheba! ’ DOCRS OPEN 6:50 SHOW Staris at 7:14—9:30 FEATURE Staris at 7:31—9:47 “For her—you have broken God's commandment ! ADMISSION PRIC_ES: CHILDREN (Under 12) STUDENTS LOGES GENERAL AI)MISSI()\ w125 .. .50 Virginia Lay- man, Morris Larsen; to Haines: J. H. Hatton, William Klaney; to Skagway: Jack Thompson, F. Jur- ich; to Gustavus: Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Fritz, Mark Fritz; to Hoonah:| Adam Greenwald, Katryn Howard, Jim Ericson, Mary J. Johnson. Tanks Again In Assault On Kumsong U. 8. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD- | WELL BABY, HEALTH CONFERENCE THURSDAY Well Baby and Child Health | Conference will be held as schedul- ed Thursday afternoon from 1 through 3:30 o'clock at the Juneau QUARTERS, Korea, Oct. 24—(®— Health Center. Mothers in this Fifteen Allied tanks again today area are cordially invited to take shot up battered Kumsong on the their young children and babies | central front as a great jet battle |to the conference, so that they may raged across North Korea in the be weighed and meéasured regularly, | fourth straight day of air fighting. as well as discussing their develop-. The Fifth Air Force said one Red ment with the Public Health Nurs-|jet was shot down and another es. » probably destroyed. One U.S. F-86 The Health Center has several sabre Jet was reported lest. books in their lending library on The tanks killed an estimated child guidance and fcare which g5 Chinese and destroyed 24 bunkers mothers are welcome to borrow. The in a raid into a valley just west of Juneau Health Center is located at| Kumsong. They returned safely to 122 Second Street and the phonc | their lines through Red artillery number is 218. fire. Report Received on Two Missing Boals A radio réport at Funter Bay re- ported to Coast Guard headquarters | yesterday that two boats fitting the description of the Alaska Maid and Ida II had left Funter for Sit- ka on Monday. The Alaska Maid | and her tow, the Ida II, left Ju neau on October 13 and have not been heard from since. A check} made at Sitka yesterday revealed that the boats had not arrived. To° Ida II has recently been re-named the Bertha B. No report has been received on the fishing boat Jewell which is missing with Leonard Horn and Bill O'Neill aboard. An SOS radio Infantrymen slowly mopped up an estimated 120 Chinese fighting i a last-ditch defense on a ridge- line southeast of the city, a front line dispatch said. ¥t was the only resistance refaining aleng this sector. The Fifth Air Force said between 70 and 150 Russian made MIGs took part in the battle that raged across the entire waist of the Ko- rean peninsula and finally ended northwest of Wonsan on the east | eoast. The new air fight followed Tuesday’s scrap in which Allied B-29 Superforts and jets de- stroyed or damaged 20 Communist jets when they tried to stop a bombing attack on the Reds’ new airfield at Namsi. greatly reduced. Steffens as guest speaker. o Lower insurance costs: §oods a8 18 4 .0.1), nd collect services avallsble October 29 | teansit 30 briefly. to many countries. | At noon—Lions Club meets at Bara- entory nof Hotel. .{:'drudu:l" M::_a"‘ ¢0s#s A2 o Fewer bandling fees, At 7 p.m.—Headquarters and Head- ¥ o Clipper schedules are fast, frequent | quarters Service Co. weekly drill oShipping rates go down s weight j; “Alggks and to the States. Foe in Armory. ' soup. 1 rates and schedules call your Clippes | At 7 p.m.—Juneau Badminton club SWorking capisal works barder .00 Cargo Agent ot Pan Americaa, | will play in high school gym. -y At 8 p.m.—American Legion post BARANOF HOTEL — PHONE 106 G Nt W) Mmimorkmoflmlhadnmfld alppflfiiczfio'o b meets in Dugout. October 30 At noon—Rotary Club meets at Baranof Hotel. At 8:30 p.m.—Community Center Night for Adults at Teen Age club with square dancing.’ October 31 At noon—m.vanb club meets at This fourth straight day of air fighting broke out when MIGs jumped Sabre jets covering B-29s as they dumped 150 bombs weighing 1,000 pounds each on a 5,000-foot single track bridge at Sunchon in ! Northwest Korea. In Tuesday’s air battle three of mine Superforts attacking the Namsi airfield were shot down. The other six were damaged but got back to Allied bases. B-29 gun- ners were credited with five of the eight Red jets reported shot down |and one of two probables. signal was heard from the vessel on Sunday night soon after they had sailed from Warm Spric:s Bay. The final message from '"€ boat was that it was shipping we.ler and sinking. The Coast Guard scearch for and Mrs, Lee Byington is contl ing. The Byingtons in their fishing| boat Troller left Wrangell for Sit- | ka in July and have not been heard from since. Mail has accim- ulated for them in the Wr 1 post office. FROM WRANGELL Roy Herrin and Harry 'Thorb of Wrangell are guests at the B not Hotel, other enemy planes. m| \ “giana deposits i 99 PSFOTRY PUR: Dutch Gain, Irish Lose In Census NEW YORK—(P—There arc two Dutchmen today for every one in World Health Organization (WHO) report. But the news for the Irish is different. The counties of the Irish Repub- lic, with seven percent fewer people in 1949 than in 1900, were the only European land that lost population during the past two genc the Untted Nations agency The present eensus list only three million Irishmen where there were 4,000,000 before. This is despite the vy fact that Europe as a whole gained of | 103,900,000 pcople, an well over a third. The people of nearly evi pean nation increased in varying about 30 percent to 94 per- cent. The exceptions, besides Ir»- land, were France and Czechoslo- vakia, which remained almost un- changed. Eolland, the fastest prow- ing, rose from 5,100,000 to 10,000,000 increase The WHO estimated that there are now about 23774€0,000 people on the face of the ecarth. One- third of the 825,700,000 increase live in India, Pakistan, and Communist China. But immigration gave the fastest- growing populations to the Western Hemisphere, with Argentina ing. A growth of 4,800,000 to 16,- 800,000 means that every Argen- tinian couple of the turn of the century has an average of seven grandchildren (or immigrants) ta ing their places today. The or other countries that more th tripled were Cuba and Columbia U.S. and Canada Up The United States incr percent (from 76,000,000 to 002,000), lagging behind C 152 percent (from 5,200,000 to 13,- 200,000). The report pointed ut th whether population grows or d ~lines, the theorists have worries. d 95 141 - c | people. If it goes down, they fear | fa smaller proportion of young will 1ot ageds grandfather’s day, according to al fons, { /| try of contrasts. Her 20TH CENTURY THEATRE BLDG. 2ND FLOOR DR. TED OBERMAN CPTOMETRIST PHONE: OFFiCE 61 JUNEAU, ALASKA Large Escofl io Take 682-Pound Man {o Hospital TORRANCE, Calif., Oct. 24— | When . Eugene Adkins, 29, entered Harbor General Hospital, he had lan official escort of five firemen, | one policeman, two ambulance at- tendants—and a laundry truck. | That's what it took to move Ad- kins' 682 pounds f{rom his Long, | ch home to the hospital for an | operation, probably today. He is | paralyzed from the waist down as ; : result of an automobile accident. | | | (';ei'many Is Feamred al Rofary Meet | Honoring United Nation's Week, |the Rotarians at their meeting \[n.rsday noon were shown koda- | chrome slides of Germany taken by Miss Joan Greany. She taught for |two years in the Army Dependents’ | School at Mannheim and she is in | Juneau visiting with her brother | Malcolm Greany. She is now a teacher in the Children's Chronic | Disease ward at St. Ann's Hospital From the little walled villages that have remained unchanged from the Middle Ages to the modern in- | dustrial cities, Miss Greany's pic- tures presented Germany as a coun- most interest~ ing pictures were those of Mann- , which was bombed for 150 'd was T0 percent destroyed e of the economic depression, uction of the city wis slow, Greany said. In a dramatic the American planes were | shown flying in the Berlin airlift. Guests at today's meeting were . Don Altenberg of the Seattle office |of the New York Life Insurance reco | Miss shot, U.N. | If it goes up, they fear the land may Company and Bob Buechley of the fighter pilots said they damaged 10 become insufficient to support the | Department of Public Welfare. About 155 different jobs are open Sulfur found in Texas and Loul- | have to support a larger proportion to enlisted men and women in the \US, Army, l Shower ls Given For Mrs. C. Jones, Recent Bride Mrs. Charles MéLéod 'and Mrs. Ernest Davis were co-hostesses for a shower given for Mrs. Charles Jones (Arlene Godkin) a recent bride. Games were played with priz- es being won by Mrs. George Mes- serschmidt, Iirs. H. Pannebaker jand Miss Margarite Shaw. Mrs. Jones received many lovely Fift; iuests were Vicky Tydlacka, Janet Shultz, Marguerite Shaw, Pauline Greenwald, 'Betty Ham- mond, Pat Boyd, Syivia Davis, Mes- dames Pauline Washington, John Doogan, E. O. Davis, Grant Logan, E. Crowell, Dan Ralston, George Messerschmidt, James Trevarthen, Euna Anderson and Mrs. Alleene Olson. Those sending gifts were Mrs. Ray Clements, Mary Pinkley, Dora Duke, Walter Hellan, Walter Johnson, Ray Westfall, John Bowen, John Cremer, Mary Maki and Charles Doucette; and Miss Sheila Larman, Ernestine Stephens, Regina Hetfleisch, Lou- san Krause, Diane Hunsbedt, and Mary Sturgeon. Downed MIG-15 Is (aptured; Is Being Studied for Secret WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 — B — Communist soldiers and airmen fought for two days in a vain at- tempt to keep Allied Naval forces from capturing a downed MIG-15 fighter, now providing the United States with secrecs of the Russian- made jets. This was disclosed today in an official account by the Defense De- partment and Far East Naval forces of the capture of the MIG last July by a daring naval sea-air task force which went 100 miles into enemy territory to get the plane from shallow water near Hamchon On the west goast of North Korea,