The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 29, 1941, Page 3

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g § The CAPITOL has the BIG Pictures and News that I;- News NOW! L Pra fiafizavn- !mldnv Tuesday %M IN TROUBLE £72c/ OUT WEST IN A GHOST TOWN WHERE MEN MENACING! P oo 4 W\ N X ANN SOTHERN LEE BOWMAN 0\ .- SLIM i SHORTS SUMMER‘”‘LLE‘ d Crime Doesn't Pay AL LIS Women in Hiding” Walt Disney Cartoon “Bone Trouble” M-G-M PICTURE The Very Latest News of the Day! Last “100 Men and a Girl” Show Starts Times TUNITE “Man From Montreal” a PN e e e S ) B AR s b - S rd Funeral Services Sunday in the Masonic plot in cemete Solos will be by Alexander. Pallbearers will be M. O. Johungon, George John Newmarker, C. A. Sa- W. A. Chipperfield e Mrs. George F Leo McCor- mick, Park: bin and ral services for Mrs. Z. M adford will be held tomorrov on at 2 o'clock in the chapel harles W Carter Mortu- of the Eastern Star and interment will be Subscrive tne Dally Alasks Empire~che paper with the largesi' paid circulation. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, MARCH ANN SOTHERN IS~ &7 sswor -P.uzzle "MAISIE' COMEDY it Lee Bowman Co-starred in Capitol Theatre Picture Starting Sunday Joined 43, Dutch city Animal of African jun Ann Sothern jumps to lonesome desert of Arizona in “Gold Rush Maisie, third in the popular series dealing with the and lovable From “Congo Maisie rallways: collog 64. Sound 65. Snug room 1. Broad loosely 221981 "THREE CHEERS FOR THE IRISH" IS SHOWN HERE 20th Ceniu:yT)ffers Good Feature Sunday for Run of Three Days The shamrock is no more thor- oughly Irish than the Warner| Bros. comedy “Three Cheers for| ot beginaim | the Irish,” which opens at the 20th or end Century Sunday for a three-day, . Disagree run. ! Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle of a bird 2. City in Kansas 8. Duration with- DOWN hanging part which S opens Capitol Maisie is cafe ‘singer in enroute to a small g ey Heading the cast are such popular | Dike springs of Erin as Priscilla| . Unlts Lane, Thomas Mitchell, Dennis |'Morgan and Alan Hale town, when her old jallopy reaks down in the middle of the desert. A young rancher, Bill Au- ders, gives her ovel only to have her desc . Interval of rest | | Diameunted ™' | With the tang of St. Patrick's| Netai: Texas day in his role. Mitchell plays the .+ Dwell warm character of a New York cop Gruff, real, lovable Peter Case) elebrates his 35th year on the again with a whole f erant crop-followers who are pros pecting for gold. force with one bane in his other- wise happ{ existence—a roukio‘ peliceman, played by Morgan, whose . English dramatist Commerce Put botioms o shoes Lee Bowman, the young Archdul of “Florian,” wins his first male mnl vable taint is his being a . Ha ¥ o Scotsman, And, to add insult to Billow lead as Bill Anders, and Slim St merville is his comic hired hand, Was sorry for e TRy injury he is given Casey's job when . Closest the old-timer is summarily pen-| Fred Gubbins. Virginia Weidler Jubie Davis. daughter of the pro- 2. Most costly 5. Sea fighting forces sioned. One-of Casey's daughters, Pris- specting family, completes the quar- - Topaz humming bir cilla’s role, doesn’t mind Morgan's tet of principals, Also prominent- cast are John Hamilton, Mary 1 y Beckett and Baoy Quintanilla 4 A desert jeicing and cele sult in *equal turns out to be not worth digging for. must start solving oV ain. Seen for the last times tonizht is the double attraction, “Man from Montreal” and “106 Men and Girl.” gold ebr strike bring ion only to 1 dejection when it a fluke, with Then Maisie problems al! ore - e HIRST TO LEAVE SEATTLE TUESDAY Claude M. Hirst, General Super- intendent of the Office ‘of Indian Affairs, Alaska Division, will leave Seattle Tuesday on the steamer Denali to return to Juneau after several months’ stay in the States on official business and on leave. Hirst will stop over at Ketchikan to visit Hydaburg and Wrangell, where he will attend the Thlinget- Haida Claims Convention on April 9. He will be met at Ketchikan by George W. Folta, Alaska Counsel- at-Large for the Department of the Interior, who will accompany nullk to the village: | i Jay Allen Jay Allen, foreign correspondent, is MISS KUNNAS COMING Miss Ruth Kunnas is enroute here on the steamer North Coast after a vacation tnp in the south. D be seized by~Nazis within a week, He was taken into custody when he ,uuempted to return ‘Yo occupied | France from Vichy, which he had visited without a German permilf Try a c 11ea g w1 rhe Kmpire The Complete Story of Alaska! In Printed Wo The rd and Picture IS4 Daily Alaska Empire PROGRESS EDITION INOW ON SALE! ® Industries ©® Mining ® Huniing @ History ® Vacationing ® Fishing ® Defense and Many Other Articles, Too Numerous to Mention! P ©® Mountaineering Muail it to Your Friends 25c ALL NEWSSTANDS and MAILED . . . and GIFT-WBAPPEB!; THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE tation Company, cationin the { M wEeeond quarters | the second American newsman to | A”‘.E“" of “The E£coteh burr, and as a matter of Gloister and yecord sie kind of likes it. Which Nerve network J: s all sorts of complications | . Matign 2. Showing earller in the Cascy household. He is for- lllll'z“l“’“\. right | pidden to see the girl, but eventu- ., ‘Presented ally, of couvse, true love triumphs. | ¥cor the last times tonight the double features, “The Showdown"| . Biblical gacdes . To: Scotch and “The Phantom Strikes” will be | chown GREEN ON NORTH ('OAST a2 -> e —— i HIGHWAY SUMMER | HOMES OPENING: to the pleasant weather| many summer homes on e now being opened | and are already cupied over the weekends. Spring house cleaning has started, yards are being raked and rowboats and other water craft caulked, painted and placed in readiness for the jsummer months. Green, of the Juneau of the Northland Transpor- who has keen va- in the State is aboawl North Coast, accompanied by Green and son - - MORISON COMING H. S. Morison, of the Juc 1l Division of Alaska,« headquarters at Nome, ‘is a aboard the North 'Coast He will fly to his head- aboard the PAA plane. Henry Cwing prevailing, the Hignway Junacr by the ownei Judge J h enger or Jun THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU Forecast for Juneau and vicinit;, beginning at 4:30 p.m., Mar. 29: tonight; increasing cloudines; Sunday; not much change in rature; gentle variable winds, becoming southeasterly Sunday; temperature tonight about 34 degrees, highest Sunday 49 de- Tair tem; lowest grees Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Fair tonight; increasing cloudi- ness Sunday; gentle to moderate variable winds, becoming gentle to me ate southerly Sunday afternoon; not much change in tem- perature. Forecast of winos along the coast of the Gulf of Alaskas. Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer: Gentle to moderate easterly to northeasterly winds, shifting to m derate to fresh southeasterly Sun- day; fair with increasing cloudine s Sunday; Cape Spencer to Cane Hiuchinbreok: Gentle to moderat: northeasterly winds, becoming moderate to fresh southeasterly winis Sunday; increasing cloudiness with local rain by Sunday afternoon; Cape Hinchinbrook to Resur- rection Bay: Gentle to moderate northeasterly winds, shifting to southeasterly tonight and becoming fresh to strong southeasterly Sun- day; increasing cloudiness with rain Sunday; Resurrection Bay to Ko- | Surv»lif it® WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAY “THE SHOWDOWN" . .. and | “THE PHANTOM STRIKES” Tokeumumy v o e MONDAY S TUESDAY LAST TIME TONIGHT Preview Tonight 1:15 A. M. lmmh ing you hko Matinee Sunday 2:00 P. M. It Keep You Dublinup With Howls! Your Worries Will End and Your Laughs Begin! —SATURDAY —SUNDAY— —MONDAY— “SWANEE RIVER” diak: Increasing southeasterly winds tonight, becoming fresh to strong Sunday; occasional rain. ! LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity yesterday 29.85 46 70 s 5 20.82 34 920 sw 2 20.80 38 86 w 7 RADIO REPORTS Weath Cloudy Clear Cloudy ‘Time 4:30 pm. 4:30 a.m, today 10:30 a.m. TODAY Lowest 4:30a.m. Precip. 4:30a.m temp. temp. 24 hours Weather =27 0 Clear 16 08 Snow | 21 .03 Snow 12 0 Clear | 32 0 Clear| 30 o Clear 706 Rain Max. tempt. Station last 24 hours Barrow Fairbanks Nome Dawson Anchorage Bethel St. Paul Atka Duteh Harbor Wosnesenski Kanatak Cordova Jupeau Sitka Ketchikan 5 Prince Rupert Prince George Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco 51 WEATHER SYNOPSIS The low pressure area which was centered to the northwest of| Atka this morning has caused a southeply. flow of warm, moist, maritime air over the Aleutian Islands.and the Bering Sea, and it was expected that the southerly flow of mpcitime air would move eastward to Southeast Alaska by Sunday afternoon. Rain was falling this morning over the Aleutian Islands and the Bering Sea, and snow over the Seward Peninsula and the Tanana Valley, and clear or partly cloudy skies prevailed generally eisewhere over Alaska., Rain or snow had fallen during the previous twenty- four hours over the Tanana and Yukon Valleys/ and from the Sew-|’ ard Peninsula to the lower Kuskokwim Valley and to the Aleutian Islands. The greatest amount of preeipitation was 98 inch which was recorded at Atka. The lowest tempsrature this morning was minus 26 degrees which was experienced at Barrow. Generally clear skies with local patches of fog and low eclouds, and. with visibilities lo- cally very poor but otherwise fair to geod, prevailed over the Ju- neau-Ketchikan airway this morning. The Saturday morning weather, chart indicated a low pressure area of 970 millibars (28.64 inches) was located at 55 degrees nonhi and 180 degrees west, and a line of shifting winds extended south- eastward from this center and th:nce southward along longitude 173 degrees west, and was expected to move about 600 miles during the next 24 hours. A second low center of 991 millibars (20,27 inches) was located at 42 degrees north and 135 wegrees west, and the pres- sure was relatively low off the ciast of Vancouver Island. A high pressure area above 1030 millibars. (3042 inches) was located to the north of Barrow, and a second high. center of 1030 millibars (3042 inches) was located at 31 degree; north and 161 degrees. west, and| a high crest extended northwestward from-this center to Kodiak ¥s- land. Sunrise 6:31 am, sunset 7:35 p.m. ‘TERRITORIAI. Seward Day Observance T “ All Territorial offices here will be closed on Monday in observance 'and Portland. Juneau, March 30—Sunrise 6:3¢ 2., suwt 133 pam. Mazch a_x-q}_ . lof Seward Day, the 74th anniversary \of the Secretary of State's purchase Alaska from Russia. Tomorrow lx Seward Day and, according to law, a holiday is being taken on the following day. Fedeml omcu will function as ual on Monday, as will banks, ‘stores and prlvnu offices. OFFICES TO IAKE HOLIDAY| K. C. TALMAGE 18 ON NORTH COAST on Monday Commem- | orates Purchase | | K. C. Talmage is returning here on the steamer North Coast after ‘spendmg a month’s visit in Seattle s e e ANNUAL JUNIOR PROM DOUGLAS HIGH SCHOOL "Will Be'Held © = ~ TONIGHT — MARCH 2! in the New High School Gymnasinm Music by LILLIAN UGGEN and HER ORCHESTRA Admission $1.00 DANCING FROM 10 P, M. UNTIL 1 A. M. The Public Is Cordidl. hwited 3

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