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i | i THESE PRICES GOOD SATURDAY, NONDAY and TUESDAY IRVING'S INDEPENDENT MARKET BUTTER, 2 ibs. §3e¢ | SWEET CREAM—93 SCORE PHONE 519 ——————————— WE DELIVER C. O. D. E-G-G—S 2 oL 73fi(’ FRESH COFFEE ., . Ib. 27¢ ALL BRANDS [ZY ROYAI T LARGE for 25¢ —_WE HAVE NOT INCREASED QUR PRICES—— = GRAPEFRUIT L) § & I P cans B'ge (G cans e BUY WHERE YOU é‘A‘.‘ ;F)v:k' \A: ———PHONE 519 NO. 2% TINS — PEACHES ’PLE - DELUXE PLUMS —IRVING'S IS A WORKING MAN'S STORE JUICE 97¢ APEFRUIT TOMATO— PINEAPPLE——PRUNE—GR. SAUER KRAUT DOLE ., PRICE THAT COUNTS——— — TSR As-Pound Sack FL@ER\H ’ D7 i&;;mmd Aeioth bag SUGAR — 6%9c cans WML — 98¢ Case — $R.4D BORPEN'S—CARNATION—DARIGOLD When you pay CASH you SAVE the INTEREST Charges Jonathan APPLES Per Box—81.67 A MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE with EVERY PURCHASE CIGARETTES ‘opritem — — CHESTERFIELDS——CAMFEL ——OLD GOLD Plain | 153 Tipped and —_—= _____IRVINC'S MARKET IS AN UINDEPENDENT-—— CHOICE POT ROAST b Z5¢ Poric Cheps I B3¢ T-BONE STEAKS ----Ih. 33¢ Stew Meat 2 ibs. 25 WEIRNERS 2 Ibs. 35¢ #—vTHEgE ARE EVERY DAY PRICES———— IRVING'S | of $790,000 provided for aves for Washington Burdick' is' to under the|ly for their musical ability” said direction of the Secretary of thejBand Director Hugh McMillen, “but left Juneau today on|I don't think they havé any place { for Washington to]in a military band as majorettes.” Another band leader confirmed discuss the re and will then go to Seward Pen- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY OCT 201-1939. SEMS IN EVERY SECTION SATURDAY - - v\ N .A\N & T om0 'JOE (OllEGE SA\'S COED'S PlA(E i g einaeer | agreement in the Big Seven foo ball conference out here in the Roc |'Mountain country for the suppr sioh of shapely, shorts-clad drum By ROBERT GEIGER AP Feature Service Writer DENVER.—There’s a gentlemar Chosen bymile Sam for 3 | majorettes. §790,000 Task in | measons: Scme think a display of legs racts attention of fans from North Alaska i e | football pl (and possibly of players from their work). Regional | 2. Some say it isn't dignified for herself in the Charles G. E k t Inspector and Assistant Di-|a girl "to display rector of Alaskan CCC, has been | flimsy majorette uniforms. detailed to the Department of In-| *3. College military bands “are terior for a period of one year to | trad dlly male institutions” and supervise the p of non-|chculdn’t ‘be opened to females native owned re in Alaska, | (That's' the way Colorado Univer- it was made known today by Re-|slty boys voted.) ional Forester B. Frank Heintzle-| 4. Girls complicate traveling ar- rangements when bands make trips th the football team. The girl twirlers can’t “stand | aff of practicing and perform- sleet, rain or high winds.” have gifls in our concert | ase Was au- » reindeer pur d at the last regular session 5 of Congress and an appropriation the putting it]in We anization and respect them high- into effect project with the Sec- He expects to return to Al- the middle of November the report that “some of the con- ference band leaders had a gentle- man's agreement.” If one school breaks this agreement “we all may have to abandon it.” The Colorado U. complicated because there girls who have had majorette ex- A by th to start operations. providing ' for reindeer indi- and tual pi points ct situation was are 15 act ase of the 5 Wiy s l""]““"i‘;"l ence and would like to lead to the (;A joeif. tnalan 4| the band. “T don’t think they in- irs for the benefit of the Eski-|i.y o moke an issue” said Me- The measure was debated at Millen. He reported that 15 NOT OUT IN FRONT OF A BAND ' ABOLISH THIS? TUT, TUT, BOYS = BY Milf MO"IS THE' WEATHER " | o IES g /// ’/ [ (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) e \ S Forecast for Juncau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Oct. 20: r g . Light rain tonigth and Saturday;moderate southeasterly wind. Mini- | mum temperature tonight about 37 degrees. | Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Rain tonight and Saturday; mod- erate to fresh south and southeasterly winds, except fresh to strong tonight over Dixon Entrance, Clarence Strait, Chatham Strait, Fred- rick Sound and fresh to strong southerly over Lynn Canal. Forecast of winds along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska: ~ Winds will continue fresh to strong over the Gulf with a tendency to decrease Saturday afternoon. Winds along the coast from Dixon Entrance to Cape Spencer will be fresh south and southeast, prob- y strong tonight and winds from Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchin- will be fresh east to northeast:and moderate to fresh north to northwest from Cape Hinchinbrook to Kodiak. | | LOCAL DATA | Time Barometer Temb. Humidity wina Velocity Weather 3:30 p.m. yest'y 29.07 39 81 NE 15 Rain | 3:30 am. today 29.31 38 92 S 6 Cloudy y Noon today 29.32 44 84 SE 8 Rain RADIO REPORTS TODAY | Max. tempt. Lowest 3:30a.m. Precip. 3:3Cam. | Station last 24 hours | temp. temp. 24 hours Weather | Anchorage 32 16 16 0 Clear | Barrow 17 | 13 13 06 Cloudy | Nome 34 | 22 25 T Clear | Bethel 22 | 9 14 z Clear | Fairbanks 21 5 5 01 Cloudy |, , Dutch Harbor .. 38 | 33 34 33 Snow | Kodiak .. 35 28 33 0 Cloudy | Cordova 39 | 32 24 07 Cloudy | Juneau “ | 37 38 1.01 Cloudy | Sitka . 2 95 2 | Ketchikan ... 54 ! a4 49 165 Roin | Seatile 65 52 54 T Cloudy Portland 66 58 59 .05 Cloudy San Francisco .. 70 | 57 58 [ Clear i | WEATHER SYNOPSIS there also was west away from majorettes a movement in the east and mid- western schools still like them | European war. >se FLIES IN 1O VISix | WITH SON FEW DAYS Mrs. J. C. Morrison, wife of the PAA airport manager at White- | horse, flew in aboard today’s Elec- tra to visit a few days with her son, Ross, in Juneau from his Canyon Island rad post. She is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. | - -+ The Book ALASKA, Revised and | Enlarged, Now On Sale: $1.00. b | brothers. As a boy, he played in Sl ‘St\m."art Germany, with Goering. ROCKFORD, TiL, Oct. 20. — All| b A that Edward Gohring, first wu;m‘ of Nazi Field Marshal Herman Goer- | ROBERTSON ON NORTH SEA ing, hopes is that Hitler and Goering | hoth are overthrown. | R. E. Robertson, Juneau lawyer, He expressed this un-cousinly sen- | is a passenger returning to Juneau ment on revealing his relationship | on the steamer North Sea. He has to Germany’s No. 2 Nazi. | spent the past two or three weeks “I am sorry for the German peo- | in Seattle on business ple because they must again endure | - eee the horrors of w: he said. “Thope| The Book ALASRA. Revised and some one will rid the German people‘ Enlarged, Now On Sale; $1.00. POTAT Drum Majorette in Action South- great length at the recent and| preceding sessions of Congress. The | reindeer belonging to white own-? | ers throughout northern Alaska ’1181 being bought by the Gowmmem to insure the Eskimos an 1dequate| food supply and to end Native-| versus-White ~dissension on the| | ranges. s | Trained for Work | Regional ~Forester ~Heintzleman | | praised Burdick’s activities in he‘ | Forest Service and said: “Mr. Burdick was born and | reared ‘on a cattle ranch in East- ern Montana and is thoroughly fa- miliar with the livestock industry. He alsp has acquired an intimate knowledge of conditions in North- west Alaska, through his work in connection with CCC activities in | Lh@: region’ diring “the past ~ twol| years. All 'of his 'training and ex-| perience have been along lines that qualify him for this important as-| signment.” e, CANDLE OPERATOR ARRIVES HERE ON WAY OUT, ALASKA Operations of the Arctic Circle Exploration Company at Candle in the Seward Peninsula country were shut down earlier than usual this year, according to dragline operator R. D. McKittrick who flew in with PAA today on his way generations of old- fashioned distilling skill in every bottle MARKET | Phone 319 ALL PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. i Pork Steak --1b. 28e¢ ‘Inc. Aladdin, Schenley P. O, P south. McKittrick, a guest at the Bar- anof Hotel waiting for the Alaska, said early cold snaps chilled thaw- ing water to the point where it would thaw no longer and dredges shut down earlier than norimnal, Arctic Circle is drilling on ground in the Kobuk River district this season, McKittrick said, hoping ,to | Blended Whiskey 868 Pr % Groin Neu- find good gold fields where thaw- ing is unnecessary | tral Spirits. Copyright 1939, The Wilken Family, nnsylvania J LIEGLER FINISHES TWO HOTEL MURALS Eustace P. Ziegler is making| progress with his mural assignment at the Baranof Hotel The well known Alaska artist, in his studio in the basement of| the hotel, has finished two murals for the Gold Room, each eight feet by nine feet in size. One is of men and horses mov- mg upstream through heavy water | "into mountainous headwaters, full| of action and force, and the other | is of two heavy-boned prospectors,|{ men of the hills, atop a bluff, rest- ing and taking in the scene below, a breath-taking panorama marked | with a sense 6f vast distances and| great domhs TOMATO Sea Warlare | Is Extended e FRESH GROUND BEEF (By Associated Press) | POT ROAST BEEF ... According to reports from Berlin, | B WE SUGGEST FRUITS AND AR e RS ; : Economy Grocery Bargains— GET YOUR CHANCE ON THE FREE THANKSGIVING DINNER with Every §l1 Purchase! OES 251bs.69c COR N v COB voxsscs MILK | COFFEE Marshmallows .2 VEGETABLES—Celery. Letiuce, Fresh Tomatoes, Cabbage, Beets, Sweet Potatoes, Home Grown Potatoes, Turnips and Radishes ...FRESH MEATS... ..... ,u,.35e T S ik A 2 No. 2 cans 45c No Limit! $ X 49 CASE ... - W Jl]'CE MONARCH 3 15 oz cans 2. C 'l'-woM' 1B 5 c 16 POUNDS. . ... VEGETABLES——Apples, ‘Bananas, Grapes. Pears, Oranges DARIGOLD FLUFFIEST! 1LB. LAMB LEGS PORK CHOPS ... Germany has extended sea warfare in declaring neutral ships be BONELESS CORNED BEEF sunk if escorted by Allied warships, -+ | WEATHER-SNOW | SACRAMENTO, Cal, Oct. 20. —| First snow of the season fell on the| nearby Sierras September 13 this| year, a month ahead of normal and the earliest on record - FROM NOME AREA C. O. Glass, diesel engineer from Seward Peninsula mining fields, | flew in with PAA today and is a| guest at the Gastineau Hotel on| his way south for the winter LAMB ROAST SHOULDER Ib. CALIFORNIA G TELEPHONES 478 & 371 SHORT RIBS OF BEEF Swift's Jewel Shomninq 1b. 2801 15(9 . The two low pressure areas that were in the Gulf of Alaska yes- 'm | terday morning have merged and the disturbance was centered this four "ew Deslrom morning about 200 hundred miles south of Cordova with lowest re- | ported pressure 2890 inches. This storm was attended by southerly | gales over extreme southern portion of Southeast Alaska with mod- Be Floa'ed Sa'urday‘ erate to heavy rain over most sections. Cloudy and cold weather prevailed over the remainder of Alaska with some snow reported 1 CHARLESTON, Mass., Oct. 20.—| el Toweoior, S Four destroyers—Warlike, O'Brien, | Juneau, Oct. 21 —Sunrise, 6:48 a.m.; sunset, 4:40 p.m. w Madison ard Mansfield — will be !« - — 1 floated at the Boston Navy Yard " “ tomorrow, without ceremony. The | Do“m (r)irntgh"e leadership of Hitler and Goe- | | vessels were built in drydock. In-| 5 b | stead of the usual slide down the % | Cobrahgl SEYEACpld painter, g ways, the ships will float out of Wlt’l ‘changed the spelling of )}15 nz\_mE h the drydock when water is let in. | ‘wl\en he became an American citi- The navy yard has been closed | oy . fe "l‘ ‘lmi‘h f“{; ::Eg"sst“?” ‘l_;'s ino . | | arrival in the Unite ates. His to.the public since the start of the ‘ (fflerl'lg ‘raLer sl S GnaTties Tabnc - wHEe