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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1941. POLLY AND HER PALS TH-M-M-M LETS SEE ACCORDING TO MY DIARY, TVE BE ENGAGED THREE AND A HALF SEARS NOW. WHY, DATTER, HAS YUH GONE WHY, YUH AINT KEPT COMPANY, WITH ANY SINGLE YOUNG FELLER FER MORE’N A MONTH AT A TIME !/ By CLIFF STERRETT WHAT I MEAN 1S --- THREE AND A HALF YEARS ALTOGETHER / RAF MAKES BIG ATTACK, - NAZI LAND Continued from Page One) Berlin were on December 22 December 23 rsons are reported to have the air raid on * Bremer As the peak of RAF erupted with this the British dis- al new and more powerful types of bombers” of the D 1 defense forces were unleash- ed in 1 nd with very gr ; t moon- that “sever o define the targets in the raids last night It i elieved the new bombers were flown across the ntic by the British. - LOCKHEED DOWN, DC-3 CANCELS leaving Fairbanks with a of passengers for Juneau, the Douglas DC-3 was forced to 2 because of weather early type of At- After ¢ Lockheed Lodestar is ground- n Prince Georg attle-Juneat norning 5 wer cheduled to fl v 6,400 p: Government statis feund that when business more soap is used. In Red Army’s ‘Phis scene is from the Stalin Military Aczdemy of Mechanization anc rization in Moscow. The academy trains commanders and engi- {with the situation or are tied- Mote STEAMER MOVEMENTS' NORTHBOUND Princess Norah scheduled to ar- rive Friday afterncon ening Baranof due Sat y. HEDULED SAILINGS Northland scheduled to sail from Seattle 10 a.m. Tomor- or ev- scheduled to sail from March 15 at 9 ar uled to sail from S March 18 Mount Mc v scheduled to sail fro ttle March 19 at 9 am Princess Louise scheduled to sail from Vanc March 21 at 9 pm SOUTHBOUND SAIL North Sea in port and sched- sail south at 10 o'clock uver 0000 esesccscecsoceseceonc cheduled southbound Sunday LOCAL SAILINGS Estebeth scheduled to sail every ay at 6 p. m. for Sit- ka and wayports. Naha leaves every Wednesday at 7 a. m. for Petersburg, Port Alexander, Kake and way- ports. ee e s e mnoe e (Sun Time, March 14 ) High tide—1:19 am. 188 feet Low tide—7:28 a.m. -24 feet High tide—1:37 p.m. 18.7 Low tide—7:48 p.m. -26 - - RETURNS TO WORK nes F. Adsit Auditor’s Office, is today after an absence days with a severe cold. - e esecccccee feet of se The Daily Alaska Empire has the || largest paid circulation of any Al | aska newspaper. War Laboratory feet. Chief Clerk in the back on the job FUR DEALER PAYS $1,000 ON2 COUNTS Two Month;o—f Investiga- tion Ends in Convic- tion of Alien After two months of investiga-| tion which extended from Kwiguk! on the lower Yukon to a fur house in Seattle, Wildlife agents today | saw the conviction of Axel Alstrom in Nome on two counts, on both of which he was fined $500. Alstrom pleaded guilty to dealing n illegal fur and to holding a resident f dealer’s license while being an alien, He was fined in Commissioner’s Court in Nome, a2- cording to word roceived in Juneau Game Commission ofifice. The defendant was convicted of buying early caught muskrat, and Game Management agent Webste: H. Ransom of Seattle seized five 548 skins which were by Alstrom to Seattle e Ransom seized the evidence. ldlife agents Clarence Rhode nd Grenold Collins ‘were the .ar- | resting officers | s — 1Armyr Is Planning " To Make Military ~ Morale Tough Nut (Continued from Page One) Army posts provide. ' Because it is near at hand, let’s| take Washington as an example A supervisory Districe of Colum- bia Committee has been set up. | Outstanding efforts at the mo- ment are: (1) To provide a “date t” for local dances and for those which will be held at !Camp Mead and Camp Belvoir; (2) To get a cheap admission for men in uniform at all the movie houses; (3) To enforce the laws |so that no organized vice i in liquor, gambling or prostitu-+ tion shall spring up; (4) To cor- relate all plans for special Army entertainments, In each of these. mittee is getting plenty of help from the morale division. Army hostesses (and the morale divi- sion certainly had its pick of these—with 99 jobs open, 15,000 applied) confer with civil groups fon “date lists” for the camp coed parties and okay those entertain- ments which are held in town.| Military police aid civilian author-! ities in policing districts which offer too many temptations. (Mili- tary police make no effort to con- trol civilians, but how they do take !a hand when the soldier boys get into trouble!) y the civil com- { THERE | Things | ARE TROUBLE en't camps by any ‘lhc.\v where the nearby civil au- { thorities are inadequate to cope SPOTS rosy at all the nes for the tank and armored co> units of the Red army, Here 15:2 ¢ in politically with organized vice, target range for tanks. It is landse used for stage settings. P g SCHEDULE JUNEAU TO SEATTLE (Rirmail and FAIRBANKS TO JUNEA and FARES TUESDAY FRIDAY Express Only) MONDAY, THURS- DAY, SATURDAY (Passengers—Airmail and Express) JUNEAU TO FAIRBANKS TUESDAY FRIDAY (Passengers—Airmail and Express) Jun- Fair- eau Lanks 82.00 Nome 149.00 74.00 Juneaun Fairbanks 82.00 B —via rairbanks. Mc- Ruby Bethel Flat Ohpir Grath 115.00 *151.00 *132.00 *125.00 *120.00 39.00 7600 5600 4800 44.00 LESS 10% FOR ROUND TRIP, 2—Via Fairbanks. Passengers — Airmail — Air Express Pacific Alaska Airways, Inc. Pan American Airways System TRAFFIC OFFICE L. A. DELEBECQUE District Sales Manager 135 So. Franklin St. PHONE 106 PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS 1324—4TH AVE—SEATTLE aped, with wings similar %0 the.e Hor - | made wever, an unofficial observer who most of the larger camps |opined that conditions were much | better than in 1917-'18. Bars, juke- | joints, brothels and gambling dens | tilled with khaki-clad figures were | plentiful—perhaps too much so in | some sections—but when a com- | parison was made with civilian vice| | figures, many of the campsseemed | to have a better record than the| | youth in mufti. | | Al in all, the situation might | well be summed up in the words | of a high official in the morale di- |vision who asked that his name Inot be used. He said: “Things could be better—a lot better—buat if we get a little help from ecivil- |lans, any enemy that attacks is' | going to discover that from Val- lley Forge to Chateau Thierry,! |there never was a time when American military morale was such a tough nut to craek.” SONS OF LEGION MEETING TONIGHT Sons of the American 'Legion will meet tonight:in the Dugout,; the session starting at 7:30 o'-; clock. All members are requested! to attend and refreshments will e served. means—especially | { ‘ MRS. ANNA WEBSTER as a paid-up subscriber to The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon this evening .at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE. and receive TWO tickets to see: "OUR TOWN" Federal Tax—5¢ per Person WATCH THIS SPACE— GOING WITH THE W I'N D _Her sails set, the 49-year- o1i Swedish bark Abraham Rydberg arrives at Boston after 69- aay voyage from Brazil with a cargo of cottonseed meal. War so0sses to other ships made windiammer's use as carrier profitable There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising Hollywood Sights And Sounds — By Robben Cosms HOLLYWOCD, Cal, March 13—Even after ting across a table from Jerry Colonna, you find it hard to believe in the reality of his most treasured possession, his moustache. Even close-up, that gallant, larruping, upstanding decoration looks like something fabricated in a wild moment by a make-up artist. It's real, though, and Jerry hasn't been without it for 16 of his 36 years. All those years, many of them before the moutache became an ingredient of his comic front, he has been receiving ‘‘double- takes” from incredulous passers-by. Jerry (real name Gerard) credits the wonderful item to the inspiration of his late grandfather, who had a really prodigious pair of handle-bars that reached half-way down his chest and curled up at the ends. Jerry started ear and to this day hasn't parted with one of the original hail He has become expert at resisting the hlandishments of yearning barbers, and does his own trimming. Once Jerry joined an orchestra as a trombonist when he couldn't play the trombone, a deficiency he quickly remedied by hasty study. For several years he made his living at music — in vaudeville (both on stage and in pit), in concert orchestras, on the air. The trombone further justified the moustache, he says. A moustache helps to cushion the lips for performers on any wind instrument, for which reason he still shaves. his under-lip sparingly, even though for three or four years he has played the trombone infrequently. Jerry came into pictures via airing with Fred Allen. He was under PERCY’S CAFE ' sTOP © FOUNTAIN' SERVICE © REFRESHMENTS AT.PERCY’S CAFE wmmuw “52nd Street” after a .guest contract briefly at Warner’s, where his bulging; rolling eyes and his fabulous mous-, tachios appeared in a couple of bits.— nobody, apparently, know- ing what to do with them. He. did better at Paramount, and with Bob Hope on the air. His latest film is “You're the One,” his current job the ‘roman- tic lead” opposite Judy Canova in “Sis Hopkins.” (If Republic hasn’t picked Judy's next story, they can have this tip free: Why not a. burlesque musical of “Trilby,” with hypnotic-eyed Colonna as Svengali — singing in his own distinctive “grand opera” style?) Jerry’s comedy springs — aside from his eyes, singing voice (?), and moustache — from dialogue. He borrows a couple of Bob Hope's writers to go over the scripts, looking for ways‘m twist straight lines into Colonna gags Without hurting the sense or the story. He turned down a chance to play a role in “Marie Antoin- ette” because it would have required him to shave. For “You're the One,” Producer Gene M.m:key wanted him to shave for one scene, but ¢olonna won the argument. He says he has no wish. to be an actor of other roles than Jerry Colonna — with, possibly, some alterations. In person he is quiet, almost shy. He has been married for 10 years. Mys. Colonna, he says, has never objected to the moustache — in fact, never has seen him without it. Sometimes he himself wonders what he looks like underneath the shrubberys MIKE WAHL SUCCUMBS Your Name May Appear! i TO LINGERING ILLNESS Mike Wahl, 51, died this morningl |at St. Ann's Hospital where he was| |admitted in January for medicall 1 ireatment. | | He was a native of Yugoslavia and | | was brought to Juneau two months | age from Chichagof, where he was | !cmployed as a miner. l |, No living relatives in this country | { are known. The remains are at the | Charles W. Carter Mortuary pend- | ing funeral arrangements. 1} NOTICE OF SALE ’ For Sale—20x44-foot uncomplet-; (ed building at Pelican City, on |ground leased from Pelican Coldi Storage Co., designed for apart-| ments, laundry and baths. | STEAMER Estate J. WAINO KALLIO,| YUKON Deceased. | BARANOF . By ED WALTONEN, {ALASKA ... Administrator, ih cKINLEY .. See Howard D. Stabler, ! | Shattuck Building, | Attorney for administrator. adv. | L L | LEAVE SEATTLE Sat. Mar. 8 Wed. Mar, 12 Sat. Mar. 15 .. Wed. Mar. 19 DUE JUNEAU NORTHBOUND Tues. Mar. 11 Sat. Mar. 15 Tues. Mar. 18 Sat. Mar. 22 DUE JUNEAU SOUTHBOUND Sun. Mar. 16 Thu. Mar. 20 Mon. Mar. 24 NO cALL FOR INFORMATION REGARDING PORTS OF CALL AND RESERVATIONS CALL NOTiCE | NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a hearing will sbe held before T " E A L A S K A L ' N E |'the undersigned Probate Judge on | March 17th, 1941, at 10:00 o'clock, | |A. M., in the office of the United | | States Commissioner and Ex-Officio | Probate Court for the Juneau, Al-! aska, Commissioner's Precinct, uponl TICKET OFFICE—2 H. O. ADAMS. FREIGHT OFFICES —4 Agent | the petition of JAMES YORK for | his appointment as administratar o g e . the estate of FRANK ROBERTS, | Al k S h C deceased; and, upon the petition of | as a teams lp ompanv IMILDRED R. HERMANN for herf NS ERVICE-ON-AL -qLQSKg-nOQTEC. lappointment as administratrix of | = o = the estate of FRANK ROBERTS, | |deceased; and, for the issuance of | Letters of Administration to one of | said parties. All persons in interest | | are hereby required at said time and “ | place to appeal or show cause if any | | they have, why said petition should | not be granted as prayed for. | ‘Witness my hand and Official Seal ¢ at Juneau, Alaska, this 3rd day of | | March, 1941. (Seal) FELIX GRAY, F“) | United States Commissioner and Ex- ALA s K A k l n Tuusponr lnc P . Officio Probate Judge for Juneau, Alaska, Commissioner’s Precinct. All Planes tioal First publication, March 4, 1941, vl | Ymeestag OvE Ancosen Last publication, March 14, 1941. Katié Stabin, RANG : Badio HANGAR and SHOP in JUNEAU | Equipped SEAPLANES FOR CHARTER 'CALIFORNIA . Grocery and Meat Market 478—PHONES—371 High Quality Foods at Moderate Prices a Tl ce. ALASKA TRANSPORTATION COMPANY ° Sailings from Pler 7 Seattle Leaves Beattle A MARINE AIRWAYS—U. S, MAIL | 2-Way Radio Communicatior Authotized Currier SCHEDULED PASSENGER AIRLINE SERVICE SEAPLANE CHARTER SEKVICE—ANY PLACE IN ALASKA 'UARTERS JUNEAU—PHONE 623 NORTHLAND TRA;NSP'C»'»T TION COMPANY | S. S. TONGASS S. S. TYEE ... ierch 11 March 18 PASSENGERS FREIGHT REFRIGERATION e D. B. FEMMER AGENT COLUMBIA LUMBER COMPANY ; OF ALASKA Lumber and Building Materials PHONES §37 OR 747—JUNEAU SECURE YOUR LOAN THRQUGH US To improve and Modemize Your Home Under Title I, F. H. A. “oNeay ro vancovver, || ‘Put aCavic Diesel in Your Boat If You Wanl . MORE ROOM IN YOUR BOAT o um_uflnhr!mlm