The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 22, 1941, Page 2

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CATHOLIC MASS TOMORROW FOR MRS. McNAUGHTON JuneauBoun Rosary Wi Be said his - For Westward Evenigg af Carter ‘ apo‘ Arriving from Seattle at 7 o'clock ) this morning with 34 passengers for Regium mass will be heid tomor- | Juneau, the Alaska Steamship ves- yow morning at 8 ocloc in the | sel Columbia, Capt. A. A. Anderson Catholic Church of ‘the Nativity for | and Purser Paul Coe, was in Juneau Mrs. Guy (Mary) McNaughton, who | for four hours before safling to the passed away yesterday at 8t Ann's | Westward. Hospital. Mass will be said by Bisn- | Passengers arriving from Seattle op J. R. Crinmont. and arrangements | were F. Barnett, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. will be made by the Knights of |T. A. Adams, A. C. Black, Alice E. Columbus. Interment will be ‘n the Chandler, Mrs. Charles A: Creamer, Elks plot of Evergreen Cemetery Hans Floe, Tom Gaton, Mrs. A. E. Pallbearers will inélude John F.| Gouldsberry, A. F, Heady, ‘Mrs. Doria Mullen, J. K. McAlfster, M. E. Mon- | L. Hawkin, John G. Johnson, A. C, agle, Joseph Thibodeau, William | Karginoff, Mr. and Mrs, L. E. Linck, Markle and H. L. MéDonald. Sam Mazoff, John McGregor, Geo. Rosary will bé said this evening | H. Moore, Bernice H. Peniman, CLiff at 7:30 o'¢lock n thé Chapel of the | Priar, Mrs. B. Peterson, Dolores Charles W, Carter Mortuary Smith, Henry E. Wuhrman, A. E. e | Qoulasberry, Mike Gemoff, George Try a elussifiea ad I The Empire 'E. Leyser, Daniel D. Lord, Ernest [ JUNEAU BOTARY ANY BOY AGEDSTO15 ISELIGIBLE TO ENTER THE JUNEAU SOAP BOX DERBY Columbiain FTTRACLTA LT, Peterson, Ray Peltola and Paul E.| i SAWMILL T0 | Passengers arriving from South- R EMPLOY 9% NEXT MONTH | east Alaska—W. R. Calvert, R. Cur- | | tis, S. J. Marnca and Frank Sjursen. | Fifty passengers sailed for the | | Westward and Lynn Canal ports | when the Columbia sailed at 11 { o'elock this forenoon. Passengers from Juneau for Sew- ard were Jack Davis, Florente Rutherford, Mr. and Mrs, James | }Rme. Mrs. T. Hansen, Daniel D.i & (Lora, Bdwara Leyrer, Ray Petols, Opening Early in May Is F. J. Miller, F. H. Kline, J. G. John- | 3 2 i san, L. Keitn, Brie conn, £ mel-| Apnounced Following quist, Bud Eames, H. Hadley, H. A, | Mitchell and C. R. Lyon. | ‘Union Agreement For Haines—Fred Langsam, D. B. | ; " | e b il Rl iy o I Bisenber. | The Junean Lumber Mills sawmill - P L. nson, S€r- | pere will open early in May, it was geant Sherman, Mrs. J. Hoisinglon | gnpounced today by Vice-President aanoy?;fl'(ll‘x. LE';_N;“’;:{ ': Ness, Mrs, | C- T- Gardner following signing of | o5 vess, MIS.| gn agreement with the local CIO | Ingvold Ness, Elsie Dennis, Louise ;. Dennis, J. Mollan, Gladys Trefgzer, mpne mil em s ploy about 95 men, James B. Tierney, Willie Andrews.‘wmkm‘ an eight-hour shift, five S. James, John Bréemmer, J. EINS, | jave o week. David Henry, Frank Dennis, Allan | oy, Py % Dennis, Leo Dennis and Charles | goco fherefses R s iy Dennis. ® ettt traight york - For Dutch Harbor—Ward John- ‘:‘ens through the scale of work ‘ son, M. L. McNeel and A. L. Monree. Rk e TN G | For Seldovia—Kathryn Hickman | and Betty Hickman. Subscrive for The Emplre. o & Dot l vLocdl Winner’s Prize FREE TRIP to Akron, Ohie, to compete in National Finals will be awarded local winner. Dozens of other prizes. e Derby Souvenir R with HAf poding femture characterize thi helm steel. The: ‘hevrole y LINGE Texding ve Let’s Make This the Biggest Event Ever THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 1941 5. 5. NORTH SEA ARRIVES HERE SITKA BOUND With 17 members of the cannéry crew at Excursion Inlet on aboard, the steamer North Sea, Capt. Leon- ard Williams, Purser C. D. Little- hales, docked in Juneau at 1 o'clock this afternoon carrying 31 pas- sengers from the souith for Junedu. Passengers arriving here were: Charles Howard, W. K. Wyckoff, . W. Young, Mr. and Mrs, W. C. Over- by, ‘8. Wallstedt, W. D. Williams, George Sullivan, Kén Edwards, Mrs. Dewey Baker, Bill Baker, Leonard Smith, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Thomas, Mrs. Vincent Beauchamp, Mr. and Mrs, Clarence Wilde, Mr. and Mrs. |D. A. Naish, Mrs. J. W. McDaniel, | puniey, Jacw Hawks, R. J. Paxton, Arnold Pathes, Emil Nelson, Olaf Momyr, Vernon Olin, Neil Korn, G. T. Thomas, W. G. Chambers, J. W. Cummings and D. Switzér. The vessel will sail for Sitka at 4 o'clock this afternoon. Try a crassifiea ad o rhe xmpire | i Mrs. 3. E, Linek, Ciift Price, Henry PAALODESTAR FOR SEATTLE Douglas Due fo Make Iripi “fo Inferior-Waifing | Weather With three passengers on board, the PAA Lodestar left the Juneau airport this morning bound for Se- | attle. Passengers were W. P. Biss- ner, Louis Simson and Franais | | The Douglas DC-3, seneduled to | make a round trip to Fairbanks to- | idny‘ is still on the landing stage ntl | the airport " waiting for favorable | weather reports before taking off. The ship, loaded with a capacity list of 21 passengers will not cancel befote 3 o'¢lock this afternoon. | One PAA Electra left Fairbanks | late' yesterday afternoon and landed |tn Juneau with Walter Brice, E. J, Daly, Louis' Simson, W. P. Bissner | -ahd Francis Munley, Passengers seheduled to fly to Fiithanks on the Daglas, which is carrying a full load &f 21 passengers 10r the Thterior are as follows: ‘Mr, and Mrs. J. E. Lucas, Mrs. Betty Brown, Larty Galvin, Barrey Crosby, Gordon Matthews, Hughle arson, Harvey Yager, Mr. and ts. Tony Lindstrom and infant, Milde Isaacson, Harold Isaacsom, Fred Olson, Hans Tilleson, Mr. and ¢ Wurhman, G. E. Bassett, Mrs. Dana mwkm.s‘ and Arme‘nt W HOLLYWOOD, Cal, April 22—/ It's discouraging, that's what it Is.| { A' plain, old-fashioned genius| ' hardly gets a nod any more. No-| ibody granfs him even one awe-| struck “colossal” Nobody points! ihim out on the streets, practically; |nobody asks for his autograph.| | People shrug when he sits at thel ipidno, and sometimes his best| friends do tell him. It’s awful.; | that's what it is. ! | The garden variety of Holly- the dark background by a sensa-| wood genius has heen pushed into; tional, colossal, stupendous new/ species, more or less reverently! | dubbed the.one-man-band type of; | genius. They're the me-do-n-alls,‘ the umpteen-track minds, the gen-| iuses. ! | There’s always been Chaplin, of| | course. Setting aside a special niche for a fellow who acted.| | wrote, directed, produced and, | whipped up musical scores, there| LEAVES HERE. THE WEATHER (By the U, S. Weather Bureau) U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU Forecast for Juneau and viciniy, beginning at 4:30 p.m., April 2° Occasional showers and not much change in temperatu tonig and Wednesday; lowest temperature tonight about 43 degrees, hizl est Wednesday 52 degrees; gentle variable winds. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Occasional light rain show not much change in temperature tonight and Wednesday partly cloudy south portion Wednesday afternoon; moderate soutl erly to southwesterly winds, except moderate to fresh southerly iy Lynn Canal tonight. Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska Dixon Entrance to Cape Spenc Moderate to fresh southerly & southwesterly winds, becoming“moterate southwesterly Wednesday; oc casional showers tonight; partly cloudy Wednesday; Cape Spencer tc Cape Hinchinbrook: Modefate to fresh southeasterly to souther!y| winds, becoming moderate southwesterly Wednesday; occasiona showers; Cape Hinchinbrook to Resurrection Bay: Moderate to fresiy southeasterly winds, decreasiig to moderate Wednes@ay; loc showers; Resurrection Bay to Kodiak: Moderate southwesteriy winds; partly cloudy. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity =~ Weathel 4:30 p.m. yesterday 30.10 59 51 w 9 Cloudy 4:30 am, today .. 30.08 45 8 Calm Cloudy Noon today 3012 45 88 SE 16 Rain RADIO REPORTS TODAY 3 Max. tempt. Lowest 4:30a.m. Precip. 4:30 a.;ny Station last 24 hours temp. temp. 24 hours Weather Barrow 1 . -3 -2 0 Pt. Cld; Fajrbanks 60 33 33 0 Cloud$*y Nome GRS 36 36 0 Cloudy Dawson . 58 33 33 0 C Anchorage . a1 37 38 0 Cloud! Bethel 41 36 36 0 Cloudy st. Paul " 34 31 32 05 Fog drizzlc Atka .. 41 31 32 02 Pt. Cldy Dutch Harbor .. 45 37 k4 T Rain show Woshesenski ... 43 37 38 65 Rain show Kodidk ... 43 38 61 Cle Cordova 49 38 38 157 Junean 59 43 45 0 Ketchikan 62 44 45 03 Prihce George .. ... 28 0 seattle ¢ 43 45 0 Portland . 76 41 41 0 San Francisco .. 61 50 52 0 5 WEATHER SYNOPSIS Relatively warm magitime ai prevailed over all of Southeast Alaska this morning excépt ih fn extreme north portion. Rain wa falling this morning at scattered p ints from Southeast Alaska t« Cook Inlet and the Bristol Bay ar:a, and partly cloudy to cloudy skies were reported generally ove' Alaska. Rain or snow had fallcif) durinig the previous 24 hours alon: the coast from Cordova to tii Aleutian Islands, and in the Berin Sea and over the southern po: tion of Southeast Alaska. The greitest amount of precipitation wad| 157 inches which was recorded at Cordova. The lowest temperaturgy was minus two degreées which was reported at Barrow this morning | Overcast skies and local light ra‘n, moderate ceilings and good v bilities prevailed over the Juneau-<Xetchikan airway this morning. ‘The Tuesday morning weather chart indicated a center of low pressure of 29.04 inches was locat>d at 56 degrees north and 1 degrees west. The frontal portio: of this storm extended northe ward and eastward into the Gulf of Alaska and thence southward into lower Ilatitudes, and was expected to move inland over Soutiff east Alaska and the Chugach Mountains tonight. A second low . ter of about- 20.50 inches was located at 42 degrees north and 165 degrees west, and was expected to move 500 miles northeastwa:d during the next 24 hours. A high pressure of 30.38 inches was I cated at 41 degrees north and 185 degrees west, and a high crosiy extended northward to Vancouver Island. Juneau, April 23 —Sunrise 5:26 a.m., sunset 8:27 p.m. Mrs. Whittier Rummage Sale Dafe | Entertains for Has Been Changed Mrs, Shaflu(k ‘ Announcement was made today of# | the change in date of the Senior ,was still plenty of sun for the < | plain, merely colossal geniuses who vglv;eicnti:;’s;ze;i:méfgf ;f::ét l\:fl;!' % ]stuck to one last—at least as long| iy ¥ ;Bs;:: cl;r)\l';rac;r;‘a;b;d.mw Orsoht For the occasion, a centerpice of Welles, th e “; " | toys decorated each of the indi- s, they say, contributed 0| yiqua) tables and guests found their much to so many departments of| jiaces by aid of clever place i"szen Kane” that his fingers caqc” Honors for bridge were won itched when he saw the Janxwr|dm,m‘ the evening by Mrs. Robert get his broom fto sweep out the payiin, first; Mrs. Kaj Lourinig set- & __ | Trinity Guild rummage sale. Prev- ‘erF‘:n]‘;drzg:e'n_b?i};zem%;:'l'ySh:“;s\iously scheduled for Friday, the ' | sale will now be held Thursday’ May 1, at Trinity Hall. Donations will be gratefully ac- cepted and will be called for if those | having articles will phone 691. The clothing may also be left at Trinity 4 Hall if so desired. . FOR RENT | - at High School Instructions and - FREE RULE BOOK Held !Genius that Welles is at 25—but et 3 ond, and Mrs. William Hixson, con- | sotation. ¢ Invited for the affair were Mes- dameés Robert Davlin, Robert Cowl- ing, Kaj Louring, William Hixson, Harold Brown, John Halm, Lou Hudson. Kaarlo Nasi, Elizabeth Car- But some of ‘the older folks are |doins pretty well, at that. Preston |Sturges, at 43, is not the Young Preston’s one-man-band is noné; the less impressive. He writes, di- {rects, but doesn't act, and Paul Jones has been his producer. His talent is colossal enough, since the sfories and screenplay and dialogie of both “The Great McGinty” and “Christmas in July” were done by| Sturges without aid or hinderancé from 50 other writers. He can cook, too. ; Many other directors qualify, informally, for the two-way geni-; us rating contributing to the shaping of their scripts, in con- férence with their Writers, even; though they themselves get no scréen credit. Frank Capra needn’t| bow to ©Orson or to Preston, nor need Alfred Hitchcock, Edward H. Griftith, Willam Wellman, Tay | Garnett and John Ford are others who invariably keep a finger in the seript pie. Gregory Ratoff not /| only * writes but acts and directs as well. Ben Hecht, usually content to write, joined the three-way gen- fus ranks (writer-produced-direc- Directior-prpduceys - (Capra, De- ly commonplace along with writer- (Nuhnally Johnson linger) and actors who write (Regi niald Owen, Errol Fiynn) are be- | ginhing to vie with actor-authors by Benefit of “ghosts.” Actors who writé ‘music (Mickey Rooney, Gene Raymond, Ida Lupino) are:- no longer rareties. Come -to think of it, old-timer Victor * Schertzinger is something plof a Welles of the older genera- tion, musically at least. Schertzin- ger directs and writes complete mu- sical scores, .including hit songs, for his piotures. The score and Jtor) with “Angels Over Broadway.” Milte, Lubitsch) are becoming fair-| Juneau Liquor Store Space Will Remodel to Suit michael, Miss Helen Herrell and Miss Clara Walther. Tena','t' g AL L/ SR % : See Percy’s Cafe - RSN e, | RETURN 70 SKAGWAY - - Bo el e o G Oscar Selmar, accompanied by B T Mrs, Selmar, passed through Ju-| | SANITARY PLUMBING and neau ‘aboard the Columbia for their home in Skagway after a short trip| HEATING COMPANY to the State: | W. J. NIEMI; Owner — o “Let your plumbing worry be Empire Classifieds Pay} our worry.” PHONE 788 GLACIER HIGHWAY DELIVERY PAILY TRIPS “SHORTY" | the five tunes Mary Martin and Don Ameche sing in- his “Kiss the Boys Goodbye” are all his. Schert- zinger can sing them too — but doesn’t often. WHITFIELD Erm

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