The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 11, 1943, Page 5

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THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1943. Copy must be in the office by | o'clock in the afternoon to in- vare insertion on same day. ‘We accept ads over telephone from persons listed in telephone firectory. Count five average words to the Daily rate per line for consecu- \lve insertions: One day .. Additional days ............ Minimum charge ... .10c 50 500 CLASSIFIED FOR RENT FOR SALE LOST—FOUND Accompanied by one 3-:01\mm cut and two 2-column cuts. Charles Regal of the Seattle Post-Intelli- gencer writes a first page. second section story regarding the wife of an Alaska Legislator, describing a dive-gunning raid on wolves in the Northland The story, appearing in the Se- attle-Post-Intelligencer of last Sat- | urday, March 6, follows The rear gunner was a woman a petite, blonde young woman. And as the pilot zoomed the plane’s Inose directly in line with their qguarry, she calmly squeezed the trigger—it was a direct hit! The dead-eye gunner was Neva Whaley, one-time star diver lin Seattle and the Northwest. The |pilot was her husband, Frank, a Mrs er. The victim of their ning” raid was an Alaskan wolf member of one of the Territory’s roving bandes of murderous wolves — FOR RENT UNFURNISHED apb. ‘and house. | Inquire Snap Shoppe. FUR. apts., easy kept warm. Win- | ter rates $15 a mo. Lights, water, dishes. - Seaview Apts. ~ WANTED Wolf-Hunting By Air Mrs. Whaley, the former Neva Brownfield, was in' Seattle yester- lay with her ten-year-old “Brownie,” down from Nome, where {they've lived the past ten year {Her husband, Fyank Sr., ymake the trip, he’s a member ( MISCELLANEOUS DOOR BELLS, signal systems Jll(l £ burgldr alarms quickly and e\a~ nomically installed or repaired. P.O. Box 1826. GUARANTEED Realistic a- nent, $5.50. Paper Curls, $1 up. “‘ Lola Beauty Shop. Phone 201.| on. | | | | | | Wolf-hunting by air is only one WANTED—Baby crib and high | chair, good condition. Phone 568. WANTED—Shallow draft boat of| for steady harbor Phone 303. 110 to 140 h.p. work on charter ba WANTED — Night janitor, apply Baranof Hotel. WANTED — Brown and white| springer or cocker spaniel puppy, male. Phone 92. WANTED—Man to work in Milk Plant. Juneau Dairies, Inc, P.O.! Box 2631 WANTED TO RENT-—Single pl'():‘ fessional man wants room. Resi- dence will be permanent. Write | Empire 2067. WANTED. TO BUY—3-room fu nished house. Write P.O. Box 365. WANTED TO BUY—Bathroom set. P.O. Box 2443. WANTED — Used baby carriage. Phone 677 WANTED TO RENT OR BUY — Furnished or partly furnished house. Phone Douglas 963. WANTED — Woman for _ general cleaning work. Apply Sully’s Baker: WANTED AT ONCE—Ironers and shirt finishers. Alaska Laundry. WANTED—Will pay cash for 14x14 left hand propeller. P.O. Box 911, Juneau. WANTED—High cnaw, good con- dition. Phone red 583. WANTED—WIll \pay cash for good used piano. Phone red 206, Alaska Music Supply. LOST and FOUND LObT—Mev.al Zeppo clgareue light- er. Initials VEK. Return to Em- pire. LOST—Pair of gold “rimmed bifocal !ZL) s. Please return to Empire FOR SALE 0Oil heater, gal\;;xxiz;d per tubing, $75; 2-plate range, $30. Phone g, SELE HOUSE with 2 furnished 3-room | bath. Phone | apts.,, both with green 153. 23 REMINGTO\J auwmauc L C Smith double barrel 12 guage| shotgun. Guitar and lnstruction, books. 1003 between 9th and 10th Sts. MODERN 5 room furnished log house, Mile 3% Qilacler Highway Montgomerys. FOR SALE—30 brake hp. Covic| diesel stationary engine. BB Em- | pire. i-RM, FURNISHED nouse. F.O. Box 1075. FOR SALE—6-room house, partial- | ly furnished. Call 434 after 6 p.m. STAFF ADDI"ONS 10 U.iS;ENGINEERS ‘ additional members of the Engineers’ clerical staffs have ecently arrived ‘from Seattle and have just begun their employment. Dorothy Brittain has been added to the Procurement Section, Agnes MeCann to the Finance Section, Margaret Close to the Property de-' partment, Mrs. Paula Hoel on the Payroll staff, and Mrs. Johanna THomas to the Cost Accounting| Section. ‘| Means New Incentive _|{Joint Canadian and United States|pjecn blue jof the winter pastimes engaged in; mf’ i ,Aiby Nome residents, Mis. Whaley value, relates. A confirmed Alaskah now, cash or trade at Nuggct Shop. |she “just can't wait to get b: — ————— | home,” 'she declares, and “Brownie” |seconds the motion. Almost everybody flies up in- Al- i | NORTHERN AREAS aska, Mrs. Whaley explains. She | |wheels around in the family plane E Io BE DEvElopED ‘JusL as Seattle housewives run BY CANADA-U. 5. | around in the family automobile Natives Are Credulous Building of Highway “Pa (that's what she calls hub- |by) taught me to fly,” she said “It was quite ajob, but he did it When I landed in the village of Golovin last summer, the natives {refused to believe I was alone in Hu plane and kept looking for the pnlm They still can't figure it out. |’ Mrs. Whaley, whose eyes glow !when she talks about Alaska, de- |seribed Alaskan wolf hunts, on| she often accompanies her| fo Make Settlement LONDON, Ontario, March 11. - studies of the economic develop-iy,shand. They use a twelve- -gauge |ment of the Alaska-Yukon and|goteun. Sometimes Mrs. Whaley Northern British Columbia should is pilot while her husband mans be extended to include” Alberta and|the gun, sometimes he flies the other northwest areas affected, J.!shin Wolf hunting before the war H. Sissons, liberal Member of Par-\\as’ the favorite winter sport of |liament from Peace River, Alberta, Nome residents lsaid today in a speech of interest| Bounties Paid to the United States. | “Nobody loves wolves up there,” The Alaska Highway and its re- she explained. “Wolves kill off our lated projects should not cease at]fast—disnppem'mg reindeer herds the end of the war, Sissons said. for the sheer sake of killing. They He predicted that the United States|eat out the tongue, leaving the | {would continue the interested de-!carcass lying on the snow. A boun- | velopment of the Peace River Coun- 'ty is paid for each wolf that’s shot.” try and other areas of Northern! The Whaleys were married in Se- | Alberta, British Columbia, the Yu-‘ntlle in 1931, leaving shortly after. kon and northwest territories with | ward for the North to work Whal- which it will become familiariey’s “Rainbow” mines in the Kou- | through \uxtlme activities. |garok district. Summers they plac- Pointing out that settlers of thejer ‘mine, winters Whaley flies| United States played a large part| {freight for Star Airlines’ in the development of its future, Division. He's division manager now “I have been told by Americans “When war came, Frank had t working along the Alaska Highway let the mining ride for awhile | haye heard a tQird of the men ex-|and go back to flying,” she said. |press their intentions of coming|“He's carried everything back to the country after the war,” Christmas trees to dog teams a Sissons continued. |cargo in his plane, but he love { “They will be welcomed back be- [t ‘cauw we know that Americans in Mrs. Whfl](“/ and son, Frank Jr ‘U te past have made good settlers”| Will Teturn to Nome after the boy he said. |gets a bit of local medical atten- “Canada has contributed to thmnon and a routine physical check- _ldefense of Alaska by the construc-|YP- tion of airfields throughout the| ~There’s no place like Nome, north” Sissons said and added that | S3¥s Brownie. |the Canadian and American forces % lin Alaska are being gathered there, inot only for defense, but also for “stab near Japan. S eee - ST. PATRICK'S TEA At Trinity Hall, by the Junior | Guild of Holy Trinity Cathedral. From 2 to 6, Saturday, March 13. adv. BUY WAR BONDS I = i | Casturing. rescuers appear .uainsl a back;rwnd of flames which was which razed a city block and exploded stored dynamite, kmlnx at least { well-known Seattle and Alaska fl\-; “dive-gun-| son, | couldn't | of | Perma- the Alaskan legislature now in ses-| Westerr| anq THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA PHONE A leglslalors Wife Tells ~ 0f Dive-Gunning Raid on Wolves;Write Upin Seaflle FAMOUS ACTOR DIES AT HOME IN HOLLYWOOD Tully Marsfl;IT, Stage and Screen Celebrity, An- swers Last Call HOLLYWOOD, Calif, March 11. Tully Marshall, 79, screen char- acter actor, died at his home here where he had been ill in bed for the past 10 days Tully Marshall appeared in nc:\r—‘ ly 250 stage plays and 125 motion pictures the boy, w Phillips, played vaudeville troupe through his town. Leginning of a career which |brought fame to Mr. Marshall as n actor, producer and motion picture star. The boy’s ose family name was a small part with which passed That was the budding career, how- ever, ne; struck a rock when he was 15 years old. He became a curtain lifter in a theater and his stage dreams came perilously close 'to being shattered by the “tiresome work. Before he was 20, however, his love for the theater had re- turned and he ran away from col- lege four times and finally con- vinced his parents that he was de- termined upon a stage career Mr. Marshall left college at San- ta Clara, Calif.,, and began playing small roles in vaudeville in San Francisco. When there were no parts to be had, the embryo star |cbtained work as a stage hand and assistant director In 1883 Mr. Marshall made his debut as “Fred Carter” in the play { at the old Winter Garden Theatre in San Francisco He spent the next three years play- ing in stock companies from Los Angeles to Seattle Mr. Marshall went to New York with the famous Modjeska in 1887 and played in both comedies and tragedies. Later he returned to the Pacific Coast and appeared in plays with Fanny Davenport, Margaret IMather and Rose Wood Returning to New York in 1889 Mr. Marshall played the principal |comedy leads with the noted actor, E. H. Sothern. This association led !to Mr. Marshall's greatest stage hit, “The in which he ap- |peared from 1909 to 1911. Mr. Marshall was born in Nevada City, Calif.,, April 13, 1864. He and the noted dramatist, Marion Neis- wanger, known to the public as |“Marion Fairfax,” were married in 1899. rs. Marshall wrote “The Build- in which her husband starred produced in Pittsburgh in 907. Later Mr. Marshall starred |in and directed “The Talker,” also| /by the pen of his wife. His last stage appearance was as the star of “The Trap” in 1914! and the next year he and Mn Marshall went to California on a acation. The actor was induced to| nter motion pictures by David Wark Griffith. One of Mr. Mar- shall's greatest hits in films was his work in “The Covered Wagon. The Marshalls had no children and in the later years of their life Mrs. Marshall became an invalid |and abandoned her work while her |ers, | tures. 1 \ ——.to——— BUY WAR BONDS AfLeast Five Killed i inDawson Creek Fire the fire at Dawson Creek, B. C, | five. (Amrlcml Red Cross photo) When he was only five years old, husband continued in motion pic-! \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\‘\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\“\“‘lllll UL ////7 SPREAD A BIT OF SUNSHINE TONIGHT! Tuvite your frlends over and serve SUHHY BROOK BRAND Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey LA R IWM///W // BN NN T "I" i 1 [ “CHEERFUL AS ITS NAME> WAR NOTE: Our distilleries are 100% engagéd in the production of alcohol for war purposes, This whiskey comes from reserve stocks. BUY WAR BONDS! 90.4 Proot « National Distillers Products Corp.. N. Y. / Zzzr IulullM\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\W\\ W///////I/I//IMIIIIWHMIMIMMIM Dblnbu!ed by National Grocery Company, Seattle, Washington | RUSSIAN PAPER QUOTES ARTICLE TIDES TOMORROW t High tide—5:02 am, 162 feet. | Lowtide —11:28 am., 09 feet. 0" lE“D_lEASE High tide—5:36 pam., 13.4 feet. Low tide—11:31 pm, 34 feet, MOSCOW, March 11.—Two dn}\\ after U. S. Ambassador Admiral/ William H. Standley’s statement re- | s + garding lend-lease aid to Russia,| Fesular meeting Friday evening, Izvestia printed on its back pagp,'l :30 Insmll.moln]. hallom:}g and x‘u ! an article supplied by Tass nom‘hesl\m(‘nts Visiting members coru»‘ New York based on an article by ally invited. . | Edward Stettinius, American Lend- | WatBh, € HEIREL,. . | Lease Administrator, in the Ameri- cane magazine. The statement carried a headline, “Stettinius’ Statement on Ameri- | can Food Supplies.” It represented | by. far the most inclusive m,m‘ thrown here thus far regarding | aid to the Soviet Union. Izvestia has a circulation cr‘ about 3,000,000. The article was not carried in Pravda, organ of the| Communist Party, or Red Star, the organ of the Red Army. Admiral | Standley’s statement had not been | published nor a recent Stettinius statement concerning trucks, jeeps, motorcycles, military tractors, rails, | and telephones in which Stettinius | was quoted as saying the great | majority of food supplies shipped | in 1942 consisted of pork, dairy ! products, fats, and eggs. The Moscow radio quoted at length last night a late statement | made by Stettinius on Saturday | listing planes, tanks, trucks and other articles sent to Russia. The statement was read slowly which is | NOTICE TO SCOTTISH RITE MASONS: ! | ; | i | | i | your independence of a wintez sun that fails you! Get a General Electric Sun- lamp and have a tan re ard- less of the lack of sun t. Day or night—in any wea —snap on a G-E Sunlamp while you shave, dress or read. This lamp, in just six minutes, gives you the ultra- violet benefits of two hours under the winter sun. Come in now. Get a G-E Sunlamp usually a sign that provincml; m’z“ '":"’,omm papers are expected to copy it. | from the beach—all winter Admiral Standley, in conference | long! with newsmen yesterday, declared | the Russians were not being prop- | {erly informed on U. 8. aid to the! | Soviets. [ R e | ;No(lgarelle Tax £ " On Smokes for Men | " In Alaska Service WASHINGTON, March 9. — The House Ways and Means Committee has approved of a bill to permit |shipments of cigarettes tax free to men in the armed services stationed ‘m Alaska and other territories. ! /! ARG GO | U. S. Army helmets are of non-! magnetic steel and don't affect (‘ompabsrs carried by troops. Model LM4 priced at $37.50 Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. Phone 6 T. HAGERUP as 8 paid-up subscriber tv 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: Van Heflin in “Kid Glove Killer!” Federal Tax—b6c per Person WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! 3l DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED Flrst National Bank of JUNEAU, ALASEA INSURANCE & PORA ER FEDERAL DEPOSIT o PAGE FIVE rrne PIGGLY WIGGLY P QUALITY AND DEPENDABILITY We are headquarters for all your SPRING CLEANING NEEDS TRY SOIL-OFF FOR KITCHEN WALLS and WOODWORK It works like magic. No water—no rinsing ) drying. Red Cap Cleaner and Wind-o-wash DOES FORTY-ELEVEN CLEANING JOBS! SOLD BY PIGGLY WIGGLY Orders must be in before 1 o’clock Minimum Delivery—$2.00 CALL FEMMER'S TRANSFER 114 OIL — FEED — HAULING Soothing Organ Music and | Deliclous Fried Chickén EVERY NIGHT N DOUGLAS INN John Martn, Prop. Phone 66 | Nite Phone 554 Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POULTRY FREE DELIVERY Call Phones 13 and 4 FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES—GAS—OIL J Chas. G. Warner Co. Marine Engines and Supplies MACHINE SHOP Foot of Main Street Ropés and Paints Junean Molors GEORGE EROS. Widest Selection of LIQUORS Leota’s WOMEN’S APPAREL Baranof Hotel NORTH TRANSFER || | Thomas HardwareCo. Light and Heavy Hauling PAINTS — OILS E. O.DAVIE E. W. DAVIS Bullders’ and Shelt PHONE 81 HARDWARE Utah Nut and Lamp COAL Alaska Dock & Storage Co COWLING-DAVLIN COMPANY DODGE and PLYMOUTH DFALF.RS CALL US! Juneaun Transfer Phene 48—Night Phone 481 TIMELY CLOTHES ~” NUNN-BUSH SHOES ~— STETSON HATS Quality Work Clothing [ ] FRED HENNING Complete Outtitter for Men “SMILING SERVICE" Bert's Cash Grocery PHONE 104 or 108 Pree Delivery Juneau Ideal Paint HOME GROCERY Phone 146 Home Liquor Store—Tel. 099 American Mest — Phone 38 G. E. ALMQUIST CUSTOM TAILOR Across from Elks' Club PHONE 576 Duncan’s Cleaning and PRESS SHOP Cleaning—Pressing—Repairing PHONE 333 “Neatness Is An Asset” Wwashington's government is head- | ed by three commissioners, appoint- | ed by the President to three-year terms at $9,000 annually. Scheduled Delivery 10 a. m. and 2 P. M.

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