The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 16, 1945, Page 2

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2AGE TWO Crowns rise to new heights, a whole flower garden blooms atop your head 3rims swing under, swing low and ever so effectively, ribbon trims or bows . . . Sleek new cloches, swathed in foamy veiling This is spring, and spring’s most charming millinery. 16.95-35.00 U RAINBOW GIRLS TO MEET EARLY Gets Invitation to ACTION REGARDS SATURDAY NIGHT Visit in Ketchikan The Emblem Club of Ketchikan has extended a very cordial invita- Juneau Assembly, Order of Rain- bow Gixls, has advanced the regular meeting time, Saturday evening, to tion to the Juneau Emblem Club 6:30 o'clock. to send a delegation to their in- This was done to enable the girls!stallation, Saturday, March 24 to attend the Ketchikan-Douglas| Any member desirous of going basketball game in Douglas at 8 should telephone Louise Feist at o'clock, if they wish to do so. A very short business meeting will | formation regarding transportation Le held, giving the girls ample time (o Ketchikan is available through to catch either the 7:15 or 7:45|per. o'clock bus, f Juneau Emblem Club has chosen Betty Bonnett, Worthy Advisor, saturday, April 21, for the Cabaret wishes to inform the officers that|pance to be held by members of 101t dresses may be worn, however, the organization for Elks and their s are not permitted ladies. - e | Lt. Don Dunn Is Married in South Donald A. Dunn, U. S. Army! Mrs. Lynn Tucker was hostess at a former resident of Ju- the home of her sister, Mrs. Elroy neau, was married in Los Angeles Ninnis, last evening, to a group of February 27, to Miss Marilyn Marks, Miss Elisabeth Kaser? friends, who daughter of Mr, and Mrs. J. A, &athered to honor her with a’linen Marks of Santa Ana shower “After the ceremony the bride and| Many lovely ,gifts were received groom went to Palm Springs for the by the bride-to-be, and a very en- honeymoon. | joyable evening was spent by those Lt. Dunn is the son of Mr. Joseph ‘Present. Guests were Mesdames H. Dunn of Bellingham. He entered Esther Metzgar, Betty Ninnis, A. B the Army in 1941, Previous to that Hay Gertrude Naylor, Rose Mc- he was on the maintenance gang Mullen, Karl Theile, H. O. Adams, for PAA at the Juneau airport Lance Hendrickson; the Misses He recently returned from Eng- Jane Alexander and Etolin Coulter, land and had flown 67 missions over and the guest of honor, Miss Elisa- Germany and the European theatre, beth Kaser. > Mrs. H. O. Adams will FROM MINNESOTA evening at her home Mrs. Forrest John, Minneapolis, Shower for Miss Kaser. Minnesota, is a guest at i . Pl anof Hotel. FROM CALIFORNIA Party Honors Bride-to-Be entertain th with a the Bar- ——————— JAMES SHADOIN HERE J. E. Gillespie, registering from James H. Shadoin, of Anchorage, Sacramento, California, is stopping is a guest at Hotel Juneau at the Juneau Hotel. | High, Wide and Handsome Too . A dramatic collection of Spring's loveliest millinery, by cloches, 'Juneau Emblem Club UNITED STATES {Douglas 354 for reservations. In-| Leslie James Shining rough straws or felts Sailors (big or little), bonnets, brims in black, brown, natural, hot pink, navy . .. < l/( ,Bsé'tsné 80. QUALITY SINCE /887 RUMANIAN GOVT. WASHINGTON, March 16.—The creation of a Big Three Commission on Rumania appeared possible after the United States called for consul- tations over the Communist controlled govern- ment of Bucharest. It is understood the American move was based on the Crimean de- claration pledging the political in- tegrity of liberated and ex-satellite countries, and ruling out single- handed action by any of the big powers. The present head of the Ruman- lan government, Premier Groza, head of the Communist controlled National Democratic Front, took of- !fice March 6, and it is no secret in Allied capitals the previous govern- ment of Nicolai Radescu was pushed cut under Russian pressure. The Moscow press some time ago charged the Radescu government with failure to purge Nazi Fascists | from high positions and with akbility to maintain order. WILL HOLD LUDY RITES IN STATES The body of Carl Ludy of the Coast and Geodetic Survey party at Sitka, who was drowned Tuesday night when a skiff in which he, his wife and Miss Ora Kuykendahl, a teacher, had gone to dig claims, overturned in a heavy surf after hitting a rock, has been brought to Juneau by plane. The remains are at the Charles W. Carter Mortuary and will be shipped to the States on the Wato for burial. Mrs. Ludy will accom- pany the remains south. > .- Empire want ads get quick results in- {raised it weuld amount the establishment of | THE. DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA TWO SPORTSMEN (Senate Bills .- l Draw Action; HERE T0 LOBBY “BOUNTY RAISE Say Wolves Are Killing Off | Fur-Bearing Animals | | Rapidly | Two Ketchikan officials of the| Alaska Sports and Wildlife Club are | now in Juneau to present the trap- ' side of the argument over an case in the bounty on wolves from the present $20 to $50. They | |are Harold Blanton, President of the | club, and Harry Cowan, a member of {the board of directors. These men represent over 200 members, many of whom are trap- | pers and fishermen, and from infor- mal polls they have taken the past two years, it seems that most trappers | desire a raise in the wolf bounty | The truppers and others polled also want all of the monies paid in | as game fees kept in the game fund and not half of it being turned over| to the school fund, as is the case now. From estimates on what wolf will kill a year, Blanton and Cowan say the value amounts to $3,125, meat value of the deer and skins of fur-| bearing animals. | Pointing out that only 123 wolf trapping permits were taken out in Alaska this year both men flatl stated it was not worth a trapper’s| tim2 or effort to destroy predators| under the presént low bounty. | They claim if the bounty were to but ¢mall fraction of the value of the skins shipped out of the territory| and might increase the fur catch as the wolves decreased in number. ! Today both men are contactin, legislators and other interested i a bounty raise. A bill to raise the bounty was kill- | ed in the legislature a few weeks, ago but Cowan and Blanton realize | that eventually the bounty will have | to be raised. -o o | COAST GUARD WILL PROTECT MANILA FRONT WASHINGTON, D. C.—The first six of a new fleet of radio-equipped i0-foot fireboats, manned by U. S. Scast Guardsmen, now are on duty protecting water-front facilifies at aewly captured ports in the Paific. | Almost as rapidly as docking facil-| ities are established there, the sturdy new firefighters are assign- | ed to protect shipping, warehouses ! and cargo. Similar duties have| oeen pertormed at every major port‘ in the United States since the be-‘ ginning of the war. | The boats, of an entirely new de- | sign, have a beam of 14 feet and| make 9 knots. They are capable of Jdelivering 2400 gallons of water 4 minute from four hoses. Built en-| drely of 1-inch plywood, the boats| are protected from flames by aj _ontinuous spray which dampens the entire craft. | From the oily waters of Pearl| Harbor to the coral ledges of Sai- ipan and Guam, the doughty vessels | will help protect Uncle Sam's vital' ‘wartime shipping and docking facil~ jities. It is planned to assign Coast | Guard fireboats to Manila and oth- ‘er large ports as they fall into Allied /hands. | Ten-man crews are trained at Manhattan Beach, Brooklyn, N. ¥., |and are sent overseas with pheir Iboats aboard cargo vessels. Coast |Guardsmen have been serving over- |52as on general duty since the begin- ;ning of the war, aboard invasion [eraft, transports, and escort vessels. | paring to embarg for foreign duty are laying odds as to who will man |the fireboats in the canals of t’l‘okyo! | - (ELLIS REISCHL IS - PROMOTEDTOTECS FORT RICHARDSON, Alaska — Pfc, Ellis K. Reiscnl, son of Mr. and‘ !Mrs. Ralph A. Reischl, of Juneau, Alaska, has recently been promoted to Technician Fifth Grade. Tec 5 Reischl is a member of the Medi- ical Detachment serving thic sta- tion. Tec. 5 Reischl is a graduate of Juneau High School, and attended Williamette University of Salem, Oregon, and the University of Wash- ington, prior to entering the service. PRESIDENT SAYS " NO PEACE MOVES ARE RECEIVED WASHINGTON, March 16.—The President informed reporters the gevernment has received nothing at all by way of German peace feel- lers. He was asked at a news con- | Wha Coast Guardsmen presently pre-| JONES ARRIVES | W. Jones, registering from.| Petersburg, is staying at the Gas- tineau Hotel. OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY OFFICE: 914 Calhoun Avenue PHON: AMBULANCE SERVICE ' BOARDING KENNELS United ant lighthouses. has about 39 Junior House Act Passed -F_’Vermifii;sg City Purchases of Land QOuf of Town Alaska Seed Co.’s Lilly’s Ferry's Six re passed House of Senate measure: yesterday afternoon @ FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1945 KELVIE'S ANIMAL HOSPITAL “:Red 115 ES— : : CARDERN SEEDS-Get Them Now ONION SETS - - - - 2 poundsSc i - e No. o7, by whater, vy [ LIBBY'S IBAMBY ~ Thesefoodswill g1y @ request, grants further powers to oo bhe sold only in ‘}}, ol municipalities for the acquiring .1 ¥ fi U IT S e Bt P Varieties ¥ /& ¢ ; . property outside the incorporated 1 of the city for industrial pi poses. The measure w its companion measure, No. 48, by Coilias by re held in s2cond reading. The Collins measure would extend wers oi municipalities in acquir- orts outside the corporate imits of the city, building. main- taining and leasing sucl PRINTS - - 2 pounds $1.05 UARTERS - 2 pounds $1.09 LARGEST—FRESHEST i provided 55 par cent of voters o g SRR ) NS FANCY FRUIES ion 3 s ) A motion to per cent ¢ > tc 66 2/ car- FANCY BLACK HOME STYLE SITAMROCK EGGS 2 dozen $1.19 WHOLE PEELED ried 13 to 11, but Represcntative ? A e e PEACHES CHERRIES APRICOTS ote will be taken t 4 cans $1.55 Senate Bill No. 2 Brownell, 4 cans $1.99 rec dation was for reduc to cne par cent but House members in- pascad the bill today with the waived entirely for a f ten years. nate Joint Memorial No. 4, by “offey, was passed, asking that Con- gress extend the provisions of the Federal Highway Aid Act to Alas nate Joint Memorial No. 7 v Carnation, Pet CANNED MILR g FRESH FROZEN FOODS rest (ase $4. 4 cans $1.59 il The Semies Case $8.95 12 cans $5.89 Case $9.15 99 E b ng the vard of Road Cocmmissioners to look int the - H TR g "So0ts P EAS, Birds Eye | Strawberries | Corn-On-Cob for a 12 mile road from the Naknek » airfield to the town provided the lz 0Z. 336 Po“nd 496 2 ears 3sc peeple of the area put up $25,000. L L A R AT T MR £ M S te Joint Memorial No. 5, by y was also passed, asking Con- 7 yote depredations on the rein- deer herds and citing the nece CGOKIES Arrived for an all out program of wolf MINIMUM DELIVERY—$2.50 o termination. The measure asks ex- tended air hunting and organized Pound 7 %¢ to ehabie nerders and " facetle- to DOUGLAS BELIVERY 10 A.M. Nt soimt osontion v 5 8§ TWO DELIVERIES DAILY - - I10:15A. M., 215P. M. was passed. This measure, by P : e Green, would authorize the Dept. of Public Welfare to give $6) a month to a minet who losk the sight of both eyes in the Alaska Juncau mine in 1941 . The Ordnance Department of the U, S. Army W Ioundedd by act of Congress i 181 5 - An experimental air mail service linz was set up between New York and Washington in 1918, i;Free—Z Deliveries Daily Phones v ALASKA s MEAT COMPANY _ - Juneaw’s Finest and Largest Meat Stock Our Meats are of Finest Quality, . Fairest Prices, Pleasant, Courteous Service Special RIB ROAST - Ib.53¢ GRADE A BEEF This Can't ‘Be Beal.... Freshly Ground Beef Pound 36¢ - Teylt for a Meat Loaf! : 'SHORT RIBS - - DELICIOUS—ALWAYS GOOD LEG-0-LAMB - - Ib.45% U. S. GRADE A Couniry Style Sausage - b. 5 TRY THEM FOR A BREAKFAST TREAT THE BEST! LEAN AND TENDER ———| VERY TASTY COOKED WITH VEGETABLES ! NOT ALL SPARE P e e e ference if he could give any illumin- ation on rumors from Europe, il ticularly reports from Stockh f that there had been some peace discussion. ’ Pleasant Eating L. A. STURM - Ib. 2 SAUERKRAUT - - LAMBSTEW - . - 1h.17c{ SPARERIBS - - - lh.dlc et I i i

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