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| SANITARY MEAT (0. Presents for the B3 W Phones 49 13 PRIME RIB OF BEEF, Ib. 4 5¢ (The King of Roasts) \ EASTER FEAST Swift's Premium and Armour’s Star HAMS 33c¢ POUND Either ROLLED or STANDING PORK SAUSAGE Ib. 35¢ (In Frigidaire Bowls FREE) Genuine Spring LAMB (Small Legs) Pound 8¢ Sirloin Steak The Treat of the Season! GENUINE 1941 Fresh Killed BROILERS Each §0¢ M ( H I ( K E N S Fricassee For Quality Cuall Sanitary Oven-Ready TURKEYS Famous Co-Op Brand -45¢ The above prices good for FRIDAY and SATURDAY, April 11 and 12 To Assure Yourself Good Selection | Pound-- Phone Your Order Early Sanitary Meat Co. PHONE 13 Ed Shaffer, Prop. PHONE 49 Melting Tender PICNIC | HAM (ARMOUR'S) Ib. 28¢ Ib. 50¢ From Armour’s Grade A Prime Steers CHUCKBEEFROAST, Ib. 3 5¢ All Tender Cuts .30 FHA HOUSING EXTENDED TO KODIAK AREA | Liberalized Regu!lations| Designed by President | for Defense Sections WASHINGTON A])Hl 10.—Presi- | dent Roosevelt today designated 146 localities includi the Kodiak de- fense areas where homes may be fi- nanced under the newly liberalized FHA 1t ations which permit the <#le of homes with no down pay- ment | Now the law provides that the| FHA may insure mortgages up to 190 percent of the value in ca. 2 | | “he bu'gler is the mortgagor. | gages are limited to $4,000 for gle family home, $5,000 on a two- family home, $8,000 on three famil-/ b }l(‘.s and $10,500 for four families o | Mrs. Blake Given \ Rebekah Office; | Events Planned| Mrs, E. J. Blake was elected Dis- trict Deputy President of the Re-| ‘bekah Lodge at a meeting held last | night at the IL.O.O.F. Hall. She, | will represent the local Rebekahs at | the Assembly of the organization| to be held sometime in June. | Plans for a white elephant party| were discussed during the business session and an initiation wnsi i [plunned for Aprfl 23, and drill team | practices were announced for Mon- | |day evenings at 7:30 o'clock undm‘ the direction of Mrs. Frances de- erhelman. A social committee was :\ppomt- led and includes Mesdames Lulu | Gordon, Etta Mae Duckworth, Ger- trude Snow, Miss Chede Paul and | Miss duls Mol © STRAIGHT SHOULDERS © | approximately 60 members of the Bend your elbow for a better bust line, says pretty Lucile Fairbanks of the movies. Stand with your shoulders high and comfortably | pushed back. Bend your arms and | grasp each forearm. Then jerk long Ride | For Nickel NEW YORK, April 10.—You can| get on an elevated train out m‘ Flushing, . where - .they held the World’s . Fair, and ride across the| East River, go south to Chatham/| | Square, transfer back north on! |the Third Avenue elevated to the end of the line well past Fordham | University, transfer to a subway| {and ride to Grand Central, trans-| \rel to a Flushing train, which goes junder the river home again—more than 800 blocks—all for one nickel. Try a classified ad in‘ine Empire | forward and upward in a motion that moves chest muscles. Repeat until muscles tire. Your back meanwhile should be straight as mible AddnsAbaba Is: Caplured [ ngum | ggnslx\:cu:; m: &"d 250 enlist- ¢p,0 north’ side of Kodiak Island. \ : g S imn o g Earl Olmstead of Anchorage will| CAIRO, April 10—Four. thousand| I avor of a resolution favoring|yay iy o' the Bering Sea to hunt: Talian and 1000 natives have been| the establishment of a reading and | 1ar pears, Rusten said. This is the taken prisoners by the British fol- | Writing room for transient men.|.ouplers fifth spring bear hunt. A lewing occupation of Addis Ababa, ! Ethiopia. This is the official report Chamber on record as going i0|ganq black bear in the Moose River made tonight. Seekmg Clydesnde Casualties Clydeside ruins are still smouldering, but the rescue workers can’t wait There are people trapped in the debris. Five hundred persons were killed, 800 injured in Nazi raids on this area. Note how the wall has besn sheared fsom building in bukzronnd. luvinz bnthroom intaet Co \.\u\\\“' ’Wlnos ors ci1avor's as real to me as music - or the voice of a friend. Its full, | delicious flaver makes Schilling Coffee completely satisfying: YOUR CHOICE — DRIP OR PERCOLATOR Schilling YNI NQRNING | LEGISLATURE 3 1 = Preluding his suggestion with ob- * }guneau in the last three years, !flnm OFFICER ASKS RECALL | AT THE VOGUE Saor COATS and SUITS ACCESSORIES | fore Chamber, Reopens %General leei?peaking Be- | Armory Question Twills-Checks-Plaids | BagS T $1.95 B A G s Plain and Pas- to $3.95 —Wide Choice of Colors=— tel Shades Dark and Pastel Shades s8uggesting that the people of the Tar,rltory ask the Governor to re- cail the Legislature into special ses- |slcn to appropriate money for | maintenance and training for Na- xal Guard units in Alaska, Brig- r General John C. H. Lee, Com- mander of Ports of Embarkation for the Pacific Coast, spoke before : MATCHING COLORS Gloves Light and dark shades and Scarfs Costume Jewelry Nylon Hosiery $12.95andup | Juneau Chamber of Commerce at itheir regular noon luncheon this afternoon, re-opening one of the | most discussed and bitterly fought questiong. of the 1941 Legislature, COMPLETE the EASTER . 5 ‘1;’ ENSEMBLE with our n n E s s E s ’é | servaticns on the improvement of & . P ' Paris Fashion Shoes Patents—Calf—@abardines Low, Medium and China Heels ALL MATCHING COLORS ® Green ® Brown ® Tans Only 3.98 : g;’,y © Black $7.95 and up el PRINTS SOLIDS COMBINATIONS SILK CHIFFONS Sheer Wools | General Lee bluntly came to the point of his short talk by point- ing out the need for Guardsmen in the Territory and their useful- ness as a nucleus for untrained | militia in case of any emergency. He said original plans were for the Alaska National Guard to be kept in the Territory for special training in the kind of defense | needed for Alaska, and that the | Guard should not, like other units in the States, be called out of the | Territory. But in the case they do | not receive the essentials for such training, the Territory would prob- | ably “lose” them. ! | Military Weakness i } The high ranking Army omcerl b LA = | stressed the former weakness of Alaska from a military standpoint FIRSI BEAR and said that the formation of Na- | tional Guard units is part of the program to defend the Territory trom possible invasion and war, which he said might happen at} any time. ! General Lee, returning to nis headquarters at Fort Mason, Cal., ! after an inspection of dock and| Mlnneso'a DO(fOI’ and Wlfe RIO DE JANEIRO. April 10, transportation facilities at Seward Bound for Kodlak ot To S'Udy, Hllnl BI’OWHIGS Jvessel crossed from Bordeaux, in 11, Billings, Mont, or Reno, | occupied France, in 29 days and {and Anchorage, was one of three auests introduced at the Chamber luncheon. t KETCHIKAN, Alaska, April 10— was never attacked. No surface or; One of the first big game hunters of | air craft patrols were seen on th the 1941 Alaska season, Dr. Elmer‘.mp the officers said. Rusten of Minneapolis, a doctor on | ——————————— the staff of the University of Min-| desota Medical School, and Mrs\ Rusten visited here today enroute] to photdgraph, study and hunt Ko- diak brown bears at Uyak Bay on Crepes NEW YORK CITY HUNTERS OF {Runs Blmkade' HAS 23,268 TAXES | "41 ON WAY, (rosses Ocean! s vor o u has 23,628 taxicabs, which astonishing fact came out when | the ban against cab cruising cn — | snooty Fifth Avenue was lifte: he * 1,500-ton German freighter| porarily during the bus | Hermes arrived here' today. The! That's enough taxicabs to pr | one apiece for everyone in Freeport, Other Guests Nev. Other guests were J. G. Rivers, member of the Board of Public Weltare from Fairbanks, and R. C. | Ingram, resident engineer for the’ Public Roads administration at Seward. Rivers said-that Fairbanks lhad enjoyed a ‘“very prosperous” winter as a result of 500 Army e eea Try & classified ad in The Empire EASTER FLOWERS Order Yours Early and Get-Good Selection The Chamber voted unanimously be their outfitter and guide. Theyl | The resolution passed put the year ago they hunted for grizzlies |ask the City Council to pay the|gjstrict in British Columbia. rent for such quarters. Plans, Qro-! - The main object of this trip, said iposed by Adjutant Stanley Jack-|Rusten, is to study the habits and’ | son of the Salvation Army, are to|hjbernation characteristics of &he‘ | rent quarters in the Pond Build- fhear, taking photographs and shoot- ring on South Franklin Street and|ing only “on the side.” | to appropriate monthly rents by| The Doctor said Mrs. Rusten is funds from the City and from pri-|his “aide de camp” and always ac- vate philanthropic citizens. companies him. She does her share | Radio Interference of the shooting. They expect to hunt Charles Beale started a discus-|until May 20, sicn proposed to take steps to Brmg the Euster Spirit into your home, and into the homes of your friends and relatives with flowers. neau that has been keeping Ju- | neau virtually isolated from Out- ;smc radio rcception. Suggesting that |a leakage in the A-J power lines might be the cause, Beale proposed {that the Chamber start a fund {for investigation to find the pos- sible leak. He, himself, pledged $10 |for the fund. last two weeks to discover the cause of the interference. The pro- tee for action. The Rev. John A. Glasse reported that progress was being made on a eliminate radio interference in Ju-|<aiq that the cost of construction Discussion from other members|ner of the City Hall was being revealed that the A-J has been|fenced off and prepared for plant- testing their power lines for the!ing today’ by City workmen. | posal was referred to a commit- stroyed four-fifths of the city. was $3,000 to build a court 50 by 110 feet and included merely the excavation and not the mets or fences, a cost higher than a prc- vious estimate. ————— CITY GARDEN A small garden plot at the cor- ———— London's great fire of 1666 de- ——eo——— A television periscope for use FRESH FLOWERS ON LATEST BOAT Choice Potted Lilies ® VIOLETS, 25¢ Bunch ® Fresh Cut Flowers on Friday's Boat! Forgef-Me-Not Flower Shop Crystal Snow Jenne, Prop. PHONE 557 BERT'S offer new tennis court. proposal. but | by submarines has been patented. 3 i the finest in BASTER FOODS—FOR EVERYTHING to lllake a Glorious Dimler TRY BERT’S! “Finestin Fnods”-“l’rices that Please” ““Best in Service” Luscious Tender SWIFT'S PREMIUM m FRESH FROZEN PEAS ........... GRAPE JUICE—Natural Unsweetened Health Drink .. GRAPEFRUIT JUICE—Texas Natural Unsweetened .. Wlmmmgmcm ALE POTATORS 3 SVEET = WAMS 3 ™ 29¢ | EGGS ot i B g3 FORMAY—The Better Shortening .. R e RIS, T e PORK SAUSAGE- PAmfi'fi'lfi the Past TRY THESE! _POUND 29 PURE HONEY ... FIVE POUND PAIL THAN FIFTY VARIETIES: Fruits —— Vegetables "CHOCOLATE ECLAIRS FRESH FROZEN FO0DS Hons - Fuh Bl Seivice 104 — TWO PHONES — Pound 35¢ ‘ _...Carton 20c ully Dressed—Ready for the Roaster OVEN-READY FRESH FROZEN CORN- Pound 45¢ Giant 46 oz. tins 65¢ ....3 bottles 25¢——Case $1.95 A 3 POUND CAN 49¢ _POUND 38¢ ..FIVE POUND PAIL 49¢ Seafocds —— Poultry —— Meats