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

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AN M:G-M PICTURE stasring Greer GARSON - Laurence OLIVIER LatestNows | '}'fk‘u'.'ff; "Over the Moon' of the Day ! 1:15 A. M. May Queen and the next four WOMAN'S CLUB TO HOLD MAY FESTIVAL AT ELKS SATURDAY Queen Is irogB_e Selected- Contest Closes Here Saturday close on Tuesday. vited to attend. e g Norma Eraut Ends Miss Norma Eraui weeks as the ceiving the most votes will be the Try a classiiiea ad i be her attendants. The balloting wiii The program is to begin at 1:30, and refreshments will be served dur- | tile talents as the prejudiced Eliza- ing the afternoon. The public is in- | beth Visit in Juneau who has been visiting in Juneau for the past three guest of her aunt and | CLOSES NOW AT CAPITOL SHOW "Pride and Pre;udnce Will Be Seen for Last Times Tonight dy situation to another and from d gentle chuckles to hilarious belly Evidence in Trial laughs, “Pride and Prejudicd,” pic- turization of Jane Austen's roman-' SAN RANCISCO, Cal, April29 tic novel, starring Greer Garson —Additional charges were filed to- and Laurence Olivier, provides one day against Harry Bridges, alleged | = of the season’'s most pleasant en-jCommunist at his deportation tertainments. It ends tonight at|hearing here, charging that he once | said. will | the Capitol Theatre. remembered for her Miss Garson, “Mrs. Chi again has been given a role ideally suited to her versa- while Olivier give performances a: Bennet, one of his finest the proud Darcy From the time Mr. Darey and his | friend Mr. Bingley, two aristocrati and wealthy young bachelors, ar |rive in small English village of the early 19th century to find| themselves besieged by the five un-] | wedded Bennet daughters and their scheming mother, the laughs begin. It is perfectly natural that y Celebratisn of Child Health We ! . i1l b observed in Juneau this year | Wncle. Mr. and Mrs. Waino Hend- | e} anq intelligent Elizabeth. But by & May Day fostival at the Elks | rickson, and her cousin, Miss DOr- |} eve " are complications from the! H Saturc May under the othea Hendrickson, sailed south on start. He can't stand her family, auspices of the Juneau Woman's |the steamer Columbia particularly the fluttery Mrs. Ben- Club. An exceilent program has | The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.| .. "wpoce constant meddling up- cen planned ,in which the children | H- K. Eraut was here from Port- |, ‘o yomantic applecarts for| i LA e land, Oregon, where she is employed 1©'% ¢ FO St eulminabinE 1 tHe crofing | VI (A, saeitc, Delephone' mxi |\ ESTIET wo S8 S e e of the May Queen. Telegraph Company. During her |, = oovering that love is more he Queen will be chosen by vote, Sta¥ in Juneau she was the incentive wn)‘l(‘m. e mily pride, I'{" tin- every resident. ineluding children. | for many informal affair i ol giin : g b i ally wins abeth’s affection by beina cntitled to one vote. Any girl ng- New . fupdlly . B ace attonding eithef the parochial or| KARNES IN BERKELEY [SWne Ber, fampi, SO CReroi public grade school is eligible to be ~A. E. Karnes and family have 10- |40 opterg with an eye for a uni- May Queen ,and ballots may be cated in Berkeley, Cal, and are o= " way with an adven- dropped into a ballot box situated residing at 2100 Virginia Street,|, o s ; | in the S & N Variety Store. There Apartment 11 A. D e T is no obligation to buy. The girl re- o i & he Empire Work WI" Begln Sunday Morning on A L ACROSS . Minister 1. Bread thick . Greet piece 38. Prepares for . Also publication 8. Melt 29. Tooth . Southern 40. Owing jonweiycake 41. Bristle . Associate of Shy . Not so much 14. Expe 44, Pagan god 2 46. Pronoun 15. Sec: 47. G 16. Portion of & . 50. Public lodging curve InBouses may It be 5% In a line . . Gone by Al . Part of a comex Festival Went swiftly Anglo-Saxon ‘opies . Proceeded . Flowering . Large vege- table or- ganisms cow . Children's game 3 thhl nl . One without courage . Epistle . Perform . Exclamation . Droops Spoken 9. Part played 0. Oilstone 8 Paciity side 53. Vehicle on runners 56. Merry Ii's Spring, and Clean-Up and Paint-Up Time in Juneau. When planning fo paint, always specify FULLER PAINTS, the glossy, pro- tective paint that gives your home that full, modern appearance. For Good Painis—Consult Juneau-Young Hardware Co. PHONE 12 Solution Of Yesterday’s Puzzle slave Kind of un- 61. Guideway in a DOWN | 5. Conjunction woven cloth knitting 1. Horseman's € Mdohatay ¢ ba cta-nearing machine Zoad ; 5 \‘u‘l‘)stu::.’enh 62. Color 2 Fall to win 7. Flower 1 63. Bamboolike 3. The herb dill 8. Grateful grass 4. Smear 9. Residence s ad . Kind of dog . Goes at an eas; water plant . Genus of the . Klmi of bean . Depression be- tween moun- tain peaks 52, Cover the in- id o | Mrs, Perry M. Hern Jr., garden, under the auspices of the Women’s Voluntary Services, has been generously donated by the own- ers of the Dotson farm on the Eagle River road. Arrangements have been made to have the ground pre- pared for planting and on Sunday, TIE EEEEE, May 4, weather permitting, a group of experienced gardeners will go! out to begin the work. Any of the public who would be interested to assist under their sup- {ervision are invited to join. Hot coffee for lunch will be provided but each volunteer is asked to bring food and tools if possible. The gath- ering place will be at the Governor’s House at 10 o'clock in the morning. | All who desire to go are asked to phone B. D. Stewart, at 365, so | that transportation can be arranged. J Among the purposes of the com- | munity garden are to learn what can be done in this way and to spread | instruction in the growing of local | vegetables. It is expected thaf the | produce derived from the present experiment will be distributed to needy persons or, if the quantity | permits, canned and stored for any | emergency that may arise. The Women's Voluntary Services is indebted to Mrs. Wellman Hol- braok for such monetary outlay as | | the garden has entailed. Mrs. Hol- | brook is generously giving her time | to instructing a large group in a | series of bridge lessons, the proceeds | of which she has asked to be de- | voted to the garden. o e TO SKAGWAY passed | through Juneau on the Alaska en- "route to her home in Skagway after a trip to the States. i = A B St Juneau Dairies ICE CREAM Bounding from one bright come- Community Garden| Land to be used for a community ! More (harges Brought lnlo Bridges (ase} Judge Refuses fo Accept Song Book of IWW as belonged to an organization ‘mn(‘!‘ ing “the unlawful inju da or destruction of property and sa-| botage.” He was previously charged belonging to an organization vocating the violent overthrow the government, No new organiza- tions have been added to the list f three to which the Government! charged the CIO longshore leader with affiliation T amendment was made ln cover the IWW when Trial Exam- iner Charles Sears refused to ac-| cept a hook of TWW songs as evi dence because they did not indi-| with ad- of e should fall in love with the beau- cate the organization advocated (.n-.; Govern- | overthrow of the ment. Even after an amendment| lof the original complaint, the | judge refused to accept the baok, | commenting it “is of very little importance.” ‘ violent FAULKNER HOME FROM BUSINESS TRIP 10 STATES Visits New M, Washing- { ton, San francisco in Month’s Travels I | { Juneau Attorney H. L. Faulkner| | returned on the steamer Alaska after | spending a month in the States on business. He went to Washington to confer with General Philip B, Fleming, | Administrator of the ‘Wage and Hour Division of the U. S, Department of | Lab with regard to wage and| lhru, practices of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company and returned to San Francisco where he settled a difficulty with the Regional Di- rector with the approval of General| Fleming, A statement by General Superintendent J. H. Willilams con- cerning a consent decree on this matter is contained elsewhere in to- day’s Empire. In New York Mr. Faulkner visited the headquarters of Bundles for Britain, He is chairman of the Ju- neau branch. In Palo Alto, California, he visited his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Remimmn Low. 1. J. McCAULS RETURN NORTH; ANNOUNCE | MARRIAGE LAST YEAR Surprising their friends in Juneau with the announcement of their marriage in Tacate, Mexico, in | January, 1940, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. McCaul arrived in Juneau on the Alaska this morning. Both Mr. and Mrs. McCaul are pioneers of Juneau and have many | friends here. Mrs. McCaul was Ann Early 8mith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Early, and attended school in Juneau. For many years Mr. McCaul was operator of the Mc- Caul Motor Company which he sold |to Cowling and Davlin during the last year. Mr. and Mrs. McCaul left for the south in December to attend the wedding in Miami, Arizona, of Mrs. McCaul's daughter, Virginia Smith, | to William Young. Also at the wed- jding of Virginia was her brother, ! Royal, who will be north this sum- mer to visit his mother. While on their trip, Mr. and Mrs. McCaul purchased a new Chrysler in Detroit, drove East to visit Mr. McCaul's sister in Hartford, Conn., and spent some time in New York. | Both are glad to be back in Ju- neau and will make their home here. | IMMUNIZATION AND VACCINATION CLINIC SLATED TOMORROW The regular monthly clinic for immunization against diphtheria and vaccination against smallpox | will be held tomorrow, April 30, be~ tween the hours of 2 and 4 p.m. at the Juneau Puyblic Health Center, 108 Territorial Building. | -Young children between six months and five years of age are most susceptible to smallpox and diphtheria. Parents of children three months of age or older should take advantage of smallpox pro- tection, and diphtheria protection at nine months. g ——————— CONSTRUCTON MAN HERE Irving Hoffman, representative of the Caliahan Construction Company in Los Angeles, arrived in Juneau on the steamer Alaska this morning and is staying at the Baranof Hotel, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRIL 2 BRITONS ARRESTED IN SPAIN MAY ASK FOR PRICE FIXING LEGISLATION WASF TON, April 29. — The dministration is considering the pumbm( of asking legislation to pm\sm power in price fixing.* 1‘ LONDON, April 20.—A Reuters This was disclosed today at.the |agency dispatch announces it pick- White House coincident with a con- 'ed up a German radio report that ference between President Roosevelt |31 Britons have been arrested in and Leon Henderson on that topic, | Valencia, Spain, on charge of hos- Stephen Farly, the President’s sec- | tile acts against the Spanish State. retary, revealed >+ siciat o e Detense se-un. conter- KETCHIKAN SEINER PURCHASED EY NAVY FOR PATROL DUTY The purse seiner Ketchikan has been purchased from the Balcom- Pay Flahv\w.-: by the Navy for on into a patrol boat, it has 13th Naval A red with the President to go over | the ouestion of legislation, Early | R 'Ed Borders | Gets Welcome At Hazetlon University of Alaska Skier| Reaches End of Trail | at B. C. Town lEGION T0 TAKE R " PARTIN SWEARING HAZELTON, B. C. April 20—A| IN NEW (I"l!"s caravan formed of members of the! Alford John Bradford Post of nyer been nnnuum'od by the I)Nx t » Ketchikan will undergo a few J he nges to prepare the vessel for patrol duty, including elimination of m-v seine table and installation of dditional quart and increased ‘ A ilities for stores, water and fuel ‘(11' k mall gun will be mounted on - Alaska Northwest Defense Commit- | |tee, yesterday welcomed Ed Borders,, the American Legion will cooper- of Alaska skier, who re-|ate with the District Court incere- centl °d here at the end of his\ mcnjes of inducting a class leng, lone journey i(rom Fair- banks to Hazelton over the route of the proposed International High- way uture, it was decided at last night's post meeting. Plang were alio discussed for the| ., ! 2 . Borders Welcomin g C"'”“““”"‘\';.“v!‘ rial Day program, of which :blleofm:m:;;:flih::rc l:,;(. n":?szv}l::h 7:30 o'clock and will consist of are arranged at, various points along | gey( Lybeck is Chairman, and for he has been seen in years. Rugged, pinochle, whist and chinese check- the route as the Caravan goes south. | coveral work parties to improve|gsincere and madly in love with his| 'S with prizes and refreshments Lo The party is due to arrive in Van-|ihe appearance of the Legion cem- | aptractive young wife, he nevertha- | follow. couver Fndnv Sl | etery plot. less senses the fact that she is| The Ways and Means Committee - dissatistied with her lot, and that I eharge consists of william Walk-~ | (UTTER REDWING 6 Halibuters ™70’ BRG: HORTH Sell, Seattle FISH SCIENTISTS Commanded by a new skipper, | Lieut. B, H. Brallier of Norfolk, Va., the Coast Guard cutter Redwing SEATTLE, April 20 —Halibut ar-| i) Jeave Seattle May 1 carrying a! rivals, catches and selling prices|number of scientists of the Fish and today gre as follows: Front ‘the western banks—Pacifio! walter Sands, oceanographer, and 40,000 pounds, 9': and 9% cents a faur assistants will make a cruce pound; Superior 32,000 pounds, 9% jn the Redwing and study the and !9 _eents; Rainbow 28,000 phnysical and biological pound¥, 94 and 9 cents. qualities of the water, currents and From the local banks— Meldon|temperatures. 20,000 pounds, 10%: and 9 cents:| The Redwing will go to Attu island Presho 14,000, pounds, 10% and 9 of the Aleutians; and to St. Mathew cents; Destiny 19,000 pounds, and 9 cents. uenucal, | eruise. > Dumans fo Make PRICES SEWHERE At Prince Rupert on Monday,| 128,000 pounds of halibut were sold | at 9 and 960 and 7 cents a| H i I potand. & ome In inierior Monday's prices at Ketchikan | il were 8 and 6 cents. + Mr. and Mrs, A. R. Duncan sailed - e {for the Westward on the steamer \Almka enroute to the Fortymile dis- triet, where Mr. Duncan will engage in freighting. LEGION ICE GUESSING ‘w‘w IS ABOUT ss | Well known Juneau residents, the This year's Juneau American Le- for the past several years. Mr. Dun- gion ice guessing collections total can has been an employee of the Al- about $750, meaning that the one| uskn Laundry here. whe gets the award will receive ap-| preximately $550, according to al DUFRES"ES VIS" IN LOS ANGELES report at last night’s Post meeting. ! SOMMERS RETURNS R, J. Sommers, of the Sommers Construgtion Company, returned to | Frank Dufresne, Executive Offi- cer of the Alaska Game Commis- sion, and Mrs. Dufresne are now in |Los Angeles visiting his sister, fol- lowing a motor trip across the Juneau today on the steamer Alaska after a several weeks business trip to Seattle. e GLEASON ARRI | Southern States, according to word _ | received in his office, R. J. Gleason, supervisor of com-| Dufresne reports good luck at munication for the Pacific ‘Alaska! fishing on both the Atlantic and Airways, arrived in Juneau last| Gulf coasts of Florida. night on the Douglas and left for| e Fairbanks this morning. Gleason is| FLIES IN FROM SOUTH jon a routine trip into the Terri-| Here from Hoguiam, Wash., T. B. tory. Stinchfield arrived on the PAA plane from the south last night and Ls staying at the Baranof. Empire mmmeds Pay! of alieng into citizenship in the near ‘ Where Better Big Pictures Play! "UNTAMED" WILL END. TONIGHT AT | LOCAL THEATRE Technicolor Picture Seen on Screen of 20th Cen- tury for Last Times | | Ending at 20th Century Theatre tonight, “Untamed” co- stars three players, each of whom RAY MILLAND PATRICIA MORISON AKIM TAMIROFF the in - has won enviable fame and at- wntion during their careers on the | sereen Ray Milland, in the role of & i VA p young, personable and sophisticated | society doctor, recuperating from a néfvous breakdown in the Noril woods town of Lost Lake, has the| [most impressive part which has| some to him since his entry into| pictures | Patricia Morison, concededly one| the most beautiful and talent- :d of the newer screen arrivals, has won stardom in this—only her fourth—appearance in a major pro~ duction, through her portrayal of the city-bred wife of a French- Canadian guide and hunter. Too late she has discovered that, while she respects her sturdy and devot-| ed husband, that sentiment in no slightest degree approximates the passionate love she feels a vmmnn' should experience for the one man of STARTS TONIGHT ! JACKIE COOPER ‘SEVENTEEN’ News———Shorts in her life, She further realizes 'I’o plAv (ARDS that she is utterly out of place! in the tiny community in whieh; M 'mknow | she lives and is thoroughly disliked by most of her neighbors—that is, by the feminine contingent, who envy her beauty and resent her urban manner. Plang have been completed for an evening of first-class entertain- In the part of Patricia’s husband,| ment at the Auk Bay Improvement Akim Tamiroff, famed as the out-|Club public card party to be held | standing character actor of me‘;‘ '-h;;lol’??n Bul:::\x vn’t;l;‘i: Af.uuk present day and known as the mas-| B8y a mor e 3 : 4 30. The evening play is to start at | Wildlife Service to the Bering Sea, | 10% Island, in the Bering Sea, during her | her interest in than it appcnrs on the surface. R Doris Freeburger Doris Freeburger, President of Anna Mann dormitory, Reed Col- {lege, at Portland, was hostess Sun- | day, April 28, when Anna Mann held open house for the rest of the college, | Students were dancing and_entertpinment. Re- Ireshiments were sbrved. of Dr. and Mrs. G. F. Freeburger of Juneau, MRS, 1. SOWERBY IS ILL IN CALIFORNIA Friends in Juneau will regret learning of the serious fllness in Califernia of Mrs. Ike Sowerby. Mrs. Sowerby has been visiting her twin sister and her daughter, Mrs. Bam Kelsey, in the southern state. C. White, of Seattle, went south by plane two days ago upon learning of | her mother’s illness. NOTICE I8 HEREBY GIVEN: That on April 8, 1§41, in the: Com- missioner’s court for Juneau Pre- cinct, at Juneau, Alaska, Mrs, Kar- en Jacobscn was appointed admin- Goldfield, deceased. All peuom having claims against said estate are required to present them, with verified vouchers as required by law, to said administratrix at the office of her attorney, Howard D. Stabler, Shattuck Building, Juneau, within six moiiths from the date of the first, publication of this notice. MRS, KAREN JACOBSON, Administratrix. Publication dates, April 8-15-22. 1911. Prizes tor therary Good Nelghbors Milland is deeper College Hostess | entertained for| several hours in the afternoon with, Miss Freeburger is the daughter Another daughter Mrs, Kenneth‘ istratrix of the estate of Connd‘ | er, Pat Ryan, Jack Trambitas, M1s. | Betty La Brash and Mrs. Irens | Smith, The Rrefreshments Com= mittee consists of Mrs. Emily Sten- der, Mrs. Lydia Ryan and Mrs. | June Forrest. 3 kit g lgagi DX HELP AN ALASKAN Telephone 713 or write The Alaska Territorial Employment Service for this qualified worker, HOTEL CLERK- JOUENALIST— ‘Young man;itige 23,040 ‘gears of | university trnlmng Exptflx:ed in | publicity work, also college train- ing in journalism. Has been hotel clerk, Other experience ineludes apprenticeship in taxidermy, Call for ES 298, P MAKING SHORT TRIP Mrs. C. A. Glasscock, ‘wife of Capt. Glasscock of the Yukon, and Mrs. Joe Walker, wife of the Yu- kon's chigf steward, are westbound passengers on the Alaska bound for a short trip to Seward. NUI‘!OE HEREBY GIVEN: | That on January 31, 1941, in the. Commissioner's Court for Juneau Precinct, at Juneau, Alasks, Ernest M. Polley was appointed adminis- trator of the estate of M y Be;nhorer, di having claims against are required to present verified vouchers as law, to said administrator, six months from the date d first puhuuueu of this “- PQH.! First publication, April Last publication, April " m:. ~ )[(‘l lku!wrni N 'ws.-:fia Aubnnld 'lc!gllh llbnrhn of congresl presents awards in New York to wlnnerl of the Latin-Ameri- ean prize nov,el eonéci:t deng?:.dd are Ciro Alegr of Brazil, Alegria te cultuul undarstnn i Y550, e s b4 500 _between the Americas. The writers » of Ecsudor; and Cecilio J. Cay- ,500 was split ameog other winners,

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