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e ———————————————————————————————————— ——— 2 U. 8. . DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BURE. THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) ;, Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 3:39 p.m., March 21: BE pRESENTED ! Partly cloudy ¥ tonight and Friday, moderate, occasion- i ally fresh nortk minimum temperature tonight about 22 { e Crucifixion” Will B bt for Shotheast Alaska: Paril cidudy over néctn vortiw, | THO: CRACITiXiON " Will Be 1d snow over south portion tenight and Friday; colder | north and central portions ex moderate to fresh south fresh northerly wind over trong over Lynn Canal; south portion of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska of Dixon Entrance; y over Forecast Moderate to fresh southerly in vicinity fresh east to northe: from Sitk: to Kodiak in the Resurrection Lutheran Church a Good Friday cantata, o : “The Crucifixion” by John Stainer, Time Barometer 1¢mp. Humidity Wind Velocity ‘Weather will be presented by the chm':h‘ 3:30 p.n. yest'y 31 91 w 3 Mod.snow | choirs. This program is under the| 3:20 m. t 28 95 w 4 Lt. Snow direction of Ernest Ehler. Friends| Noon today 27 67 NE 17 Lt. Snow of the church, including Marye ’ T Berne Ehler, are lending their as-| . e, N sistance in order to make this pro-| Max, tempt. Towest 3:80 nl:OD';\,?( \p. 3:30a.m gram most successful. The church . b west 3:30a eclp. 3:30a. 4 | s : = ~|organist, Mr. Ernst Oberg, will ac- S.Lt(l.n:) las: 24 hours '\ l.en}p m!\p 24 hours Weézln» company the singers. Those who! Anchorage ... 2 i 9 2 g C,cf“. expect to attend this service are g e | -3 = g Im: requested to go early as the sea B““m, v 4 | 9 b 9 {:1()"‘» ing capacity of the church is lim- i“”g“\‘l‘;“ ;;’ "'7 'i“ il (;I;“‘: ited, This service is open to the St. Pa 5 2 dlea | Dutch Harbor . 35 31 33 0 Cloudy fi:::_“;[?\fif’ ERDLE b ROEER e, ];l‘i?“k zg f;’ f: 3 8?2: The program is arranged as fol- ordova ‘ par lows: | Juneaun 31 2 2 67 Snow ? . N Sitka i3 a6 238 orpa B, The Hill Sisters - The inv 3 Ketchikan 43 41 42 47 Cloudy| . § o & Seatile 59 a 36 0 v o et 8 Plsce Queens of Basketball ' g amed Gethsemane.” 3 % Portland 70 44 45 0 Clear |y agony. | Marijorie, Isabel, Ruth, San Franiisho .. 69 52 62 0 Cloudy| processional to Calvary. | Bflly and Helene of WEATHER SYNOPSIS And When They Were Come W. Hempstead, L. I, The Mystery of the Divine Hu- coached by their father, Very high pressure continued this morning over Interior Alaska miliation have won 80 out of 84 and Yukon Territory while the area of high pressure that was situ- 3 i epu- ames .. . binati ated over Vancouver Island has diminished. A nearly stationary| H® EIRBRRAIRL pL 20 DA Sy S il e trough extended across Southeast Alaska to the Gulf, thence far to The‘ Myster: of the Divine anywhere, ¥ southward to a moderate di:turbance which has been advanc- Humihatiozl L 5 northwar Precipitation has been continuous over all of/ ; S the Southeast Alaska for the past (wo days and was still occurring this SO"‘_]‘:‘e"ma* Miosies, bitherl; up the, merning. It was raining from Dixon Entrance to Frederick Sound 2 ? and snowing from thence o Atln, Over the rest of Alaska the| Cod S0 Leved oy ord { weather has been clear and cold. i Gt DG Horalve Juneau, March 22.—Sunrise 5:58 a.m., sunset 6:17 p.m. iThc:xs"‘fi % ¥ | 5 < A5 Sl A — R $ 3 P Narducki and Miss Helen Green,| “So Thou, Liftest, Thy Divine “ EA Y_AR Winigred's sister. | Petition. | | Soars said that as Narducki| The Mystery of Intercession. | MARR!A“E GGES |and Helen. were pronounced man| “And One of the .Malefactors.” | Comishe i940. Wi and wife, Winifred suggested, “Let's| The Adm'aur_)nrgr .n;e c:;x:xfic}c;“ ol g The RIGHT it o us get maxried. too. | 'When Jesus erefore Saw ;' ¥ % 4 R I 0 §€}£¥S Soars agreed and under Nevada's| Mother. ; " ¥ proadminded, .marriage relations| IS it Nothing to You? OAKLAND, Ma laws the ceremony took place im-| The Appeal ”IA the Crucified Leap Year e, in which (he mediately, The Narducki newlyweds| (After This, Jesus Knowing that bride proposed & minute before the | were witnesses. &All Tl"l‘lllga Were Now Accom- ceremony was performed, ended fo-| But rs told the Judge that|Plished. Y FA E day in an annulment when the couples, returned to Oak- | For the Jeva. of :depne, Orchestra trombouist Arthur Soars land, Winifred told him she had| The offering. 4 told Judge Hogan that he and Miss changed her® mind and refused to| Hymn “In the Cross of Cl ‘““‘; Winifred G went to Reno Feb- |live with him. Narducki was a|l GlOry ‘ ruary 1 as witnesses for the wed- | witness for Soars. He said his mar-| The benediction \ A ding of saxaphone player Robert ! riage ‘is' rumming in- harmony h’I"he l‘;'l'm:"el of the church el choirs oW : . 1 e Tinkham Demands Min- 14 | Lenora Olsen, Shirley Tripp, Bex-| Hollywood Sights And Sounds }; By Robbin Coons SR— HOLLYWOOD, Cni March 21.—Free-hand portrait of Warner Baxter talking to himself: ‘This thing getting me down. I'm a ghost. I've been a ghost since we finished the first 30 pages of this “Earthbound” seript. I'm a ghost that's always talking to people who don't hear me. The way this Lucien Andriot has fixed things I talk to people I don't see. Lucien's fixed us movie ghosts. We used to be pholographed as' transparent reflections on plate glass. Or through double exposure. Now Lucien takes us off the set en- tirely. The live people get the breaks. They get to use the sets. ‘We ghosts live in a black world apart. The camera reaches out and puts us in the set, transparent, on the screen—but here I am, now shunted aside. and I have to talk to other people in the set—but I'm acting in I have to act as if I'm on the set where I'll be in the picture, front of a black backdrop, and I'm saying lines to people I'm not looking at. I'm talking into space. I can see what they're doing because Lucien, my friend, has put up a mirror. Ever try acting a scene talking to people who aren’t there? Tt suppose it's a great idea, Lucien's. He has a prism that reaches out and picks up me, the ghost, and sets me down again on the celluloid right beside the live people. Uses one camera—the trick’s in the lenses. A great idea, but it's getting me down. I've become so accustomed to ghost-talk that I can carry on a conversation without looking at the person I'm talking to I'm looking away from you, see, but we can talk right on. I go /COME! 2 the receptiom charming hostessess Qlwe though*ful guests who bring gifts of delicious Van Duyn Tandies. Little sttentions meke you & "cust come™ guest. Try iti Dan Doyt VAN DUYN CHOCGLATE SHOPS NOwW AT Perey’s exclusively home at night ing over there. d T kiss my wife over here, see, when she stand- A ghost? Time was, last year, when I was so ill I thought I was a ghost. That's when I talked about retiring from pic- tures. Feel fine now, so T mean to keep on working. No more thou, one T contrac Une Baxter was a Tl do me. I'm doing two pictiures a year- this one for Uncle 8 -earner in 1938, as you may have S0 he gets sick in the spring of '39, and can't Bam, Sam ney. got to do something to pay tax on that fop money. Sold all his stocks 4nd bonGs, and this piteure will pay up the rest. Not complaining—T owe it. Quit? After 27 years in the business, T couldn't quit this picture winds up my contract. I want to have something to say about my pictures after this. This seript Is fine—picture ought to be good. But even so, I think I've been around long enough to deserve the courtesy of being consulted. Maybe I wouldn't change anything, but I'd like to be asked. Why, even the hat I wear has to be okayed by Zanuck. Think Il practice my magic. Great hobby, magic. A lot of people think it’s childish, but you've got to have something to take your mind off your work. Oh, excuse me. Got to go into my black-out again. But “w Sung at Lutheran | to and GOOD FRIDAY CANTATA WILL - ChurchTomorrow Tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock ister's Firing-Suggests He Be Impeached WASHINGTON, March 21.—Rep- |nice ‘Mead, Donald Krane, Bea-| trice Bothwell, Harold Sunderland,‘ |Emma Nielsen, Betty Lou Hared,, | Lois Hared, Dorothy Reck, DeLores| | zZinck, Ramona VanAusdle. | Senlors | resentative Tinkham of Massachu- | Mrs, H. M. Hollman, Marye Berne setts, a member of the House |Ehler, Merle Schroeder, Margaret Foreign Affairs Committee today iMcFadden. Mrs. Robert Hurley, demanded the recall of Richard | Myrtle Mello, Mrs. W. A. Ras- Cromwell, U. S. Minister to Can- | mussen, Mary Loken, Mrs. H. Ja-n-;ndn sen, Mrs. I. Tucker, Mr: Hsmnn-i Tinkham wrote Secretary of | house, Mrs. O. Westby, Mrs. B, F. State Cordell. Hull that Cromwell ‘McDowell. Ernest Ehler, John Cus- had violated President Roosevelt's | well, Jackson Rice, J. W. Leivers, neutrality proclamation in recent E, M. Polley, John Keyser, George speeches Sundborg, Olaf Swanson, John; “They were the speeches of an | Krugness Jr. jalien propagandist, not of a loyal | Soloists are Ernest Ehler, Merle American representative,” declared Schroeder, Marye Berne Ehler, and Tinkham, adding, “If he is not re- |John Keyser. called, Congréss should seriously ? - gr o consider his impeachment.” | ’ \ | | Cromwell, in a speech at Tor- jonto, Tuesday, lauded Anglo- Il“rench war aims and criticized Germany LOS ANGELES, Cal, March 21 —A voyage that began Sept. 1, 1938, has come to a successful finish at Auckland, New Zealand, according to word received here from Robert UNION BUSINESS W. A. Rasmussen, representa- and Smelter Workers, flew to Fair- and Jack Westrem. The two young banks today with PAA to spend a men accomplished the long trip m few days in Fairbanks on union a 29-foot sailboat sy business. ’0MESTIC Oll. BUBNI!IG FLOOR FURNACE ® EASY TO OPERATE LOW FIRST COST i W’ DESIG .FOR SMALL HOMES $105.00 with Coil ON D! RICE & AHLERS C0. ‘ flldest Alu Commercial Safe Deposit Bankmg by Mail Departmenl The B. M. llehrends Tuneau, Alaska ca ~Savings ! | i | S P S —— | o e it HUNT FOR tive of the International Mine, Mill! (Installation extra) i e e ) -I-fl-u-n-u-o.m | ster e COMBINATION of the world’s best cigarette tobaccos CONTRACTORS TO HIRE WORKMEN KILLER IS 4 kerchman wu)ENING Secrefary o_eravy Issues Winston Jones Speaker at Order at Request of Gov. Gruening request Young Mfielieved to| Have Murdered Moth- At the of Cioy. Ernest - Grueninz, instructior have beer —— Edison for tractors on SEATTLE, March 21. — On the|the Sitka and Kod naval air- third day since the murder of his | ba ce periodic visits to Ket- mother, attractive Mrs. Harriet Red- | ch addition to Juneau and ding, in a brutal “cupboard killing” | Ar to employ resident Al- at her suburban home, Denzel Da-|askan labor. vis, 23, is being sought by police| Word of the order to the con- on all highways tractors was received here today by It is reported that a man re- Secretary of Alaska E. L. (Bob) sembling him slept Tuesday night Bartlett, Acting Governor. in a barn in Monroe, 30 miles north- | Recently representatives of the east of here. | contractors interviewed job appli- If the man were Davis, it is be- |cants here and employed a number lieved he might be headed for Mon- | of Juneauites. The system has been tana, where his wife said he had urged as saving the workmen the yteld her he might so. trouble and expense of going to Wife Makes Appeal sitka or Kodiak without definite His pretty 21 year old wife June, | Prospect of jobs. - issued a public appeal for him surrender, saying: “You know ti are going to get you, sooner or later Whatever happens, baby, I love you and will stand by you. Al Lawton, Oklahoma, Mrs. Nan- cie Smith, sister of the m\qux.wl woman, said the burial may be at She is contactnig Seattle ; ASTIM()N\ ORE BEING FREIGHTED TO RAIL Freighting of 2 concentrates from Kirk and S Stampede Creek to Lignite, Alaska Railroad, a distance miles, has been almost Earl R. Pilgrim, 2 property, an of supplies hava been fre the railroad station tc s of ¢ Morr mine on the the antimony | Lawton. police. ed the nplet of [ Stabbed, Beaten The murder of the 45 year old, |five times married mother, was {accomplished by stabbing and beat- | The freighting is leds |ing _after which she was trussed | giawn b tract | her en sink i ployed by the mine during the win- Her son Davis had confessed to va " | the crime before his estranged wife, S I|she told police. Empire classifieGs pay. s Owder SCI“U,m;,’ Schilling ;i You will bake finer textured cakes, that stay fresh longer, with Schilling Baking Powder. It assures a smoother, creamier batter. Double-acting, made with pure cream of tartar—never leaves that “bak- ing powder taste!”” Good cooks, for over halfa century, have relied upon Schilling for sutcessful baking and true economy! MONEVIACK To show our unbounded aith in this CREAM OF TARTAR Baking Powder, your grocer will return your money at our expense, and will also pay for the egas, buster, flour, ¢tc., you have used, if you find any fault ‘whatever with it. (CGAST SHIPPING DEFINITELY MILDER COOLER-SMOKING BETTER-TASTING Y)u can look the country over and you won't find another cigarette that rates as high as Chesterfield for the things that smokers really want. Chesterfield’s RIGHT COMBINATION of the world’s best cigarette tobaccos is way out in front for mildness, for coolness, and for better taste. | ODD FELLOWS ATTENTION silver Bo this eve- the Degre Regular ng of Lodge No. IOOF BUSINESS GOOD; .:x's %ot VESSELS SCARCE =, overs wove All memb Visiting bre meet to be preser ially invit JGHLIN Grand espe - adv Chamber lunch-Miss Juneau Reports — FOOD SPECIALS! Noble in a talk at of Commerce portation Company, the Juneau Chamber luncheon Jones said, iise ships were TOMATO JUICE 4 15 oz. cans 36 that cor however, depreciating ra Woodbury FACIAL SOAP |ly and at the present time ship- 4""'“ fox zgc ping firms find themselves with lofs ::(l ”l:u.xlmms and nothing to carry Standby & Home Sty | All the new vessels being built by the Maritime Commission are for oreign trade, Jones said, and not WALNUTS and i ed Roy B. Earling, Manager for cf twise Miss Juneau Reports Another speaker at today's lunch- eon was Miss Sybil Godfrey who Juneau” represented the nity at the Fairbanks Ice nival. She reported briefly on the Fairbanks trip and thanked the Cham for sending her. It was announced at the meet- ing that Chamber support had been given a tourist guide leaflet being prepared by Mary Acton and directory being compiled by use. FILBERTS 2™ " f5c). KLIM WHOLE POWDERED MILK each STANDBY PEANUT BUTTER 1 pound jar SCHILLINGS ORANGE PEKOE TEA l DEAL " pound yackize — 43C teorge E. DeWitt. LARGE Charles W. Carter and F. E. Mc- | ¢lioCOLATE ECLAIRS Dermottwere. appotnted, Lo presy:, S aily. o 23c pare a special first flight cover for the start of the Seattle-Juneau air- mail service. ' T. J. Dyer, Keith Wildes and Curtis Shattuck were named to a radio publicity com- mittee. Felta Congratulated Hearty congratulations of the Chamber to George W. Folta, an active member, were expressed by R. E. Robertson. Folta has been appointed Counsel at Large in the Solicitor's office of the Depart- ment of the Interior, Visitors at the luncheon includ- of the Fairbanks Exploration Com- pany subsidiary of the U. S.Smelt- ing, Refining and Mining Com-| pany;- Dr. Noble Diik of Fairbanks, and"W. C. Arhiold of " Ketchikan. ; FOR SALE FRIGIDAIRE 12 CUBIC FEET RESTAURANT or COCKTAIL BAR ZWIEBACK MASTER TOAST 10 oz package PlllEX TOLIET TISSUE (Soft, White) 4 rolls 23 FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES in season Phone 767-We deliver THRIFT | CO-0P | Practically New—Cost $425.00 SACRIFICE FOR $275.00 CASH or TERMS GEORGE BROS. PHONE 92—85 PHONE 92—85 s Business on the Pacific Coast, as far as shipping is concerned. | Sxookum is better at present than it ever i B Tt ahie i | was before in history, it was stat- | OO Z 49c 1 ed today by Winston Jones, Traf- | ¥/ ¢ fic Manager of the Alaska Trans- | goirn ™~ TR ¢