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eSS = THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1941. i It's Not Our Fault If You Don't Get The Finest Carnations---We Have Millions! Prices In This Ad Effective All Next Week Gold Medal Butter Sweet Cream - - 21bs. 81c C0-0P Special—A—Large EGGS - - 2dozen 75¢c Our Vegetahles are Better hecause we buy the BEST! They are carefully trimmed and washed. THEY ARE PPY( ED LOW! RADISHES GREEN ONIONS . 3 bunches 10c CUCUMQERS . . . Each 15¢ ASPAIAGUS . . 21bs. 25¢ Arizona GRAPEFRUIT, 80 size . Each Sc Del Monte 6 pu;cic tins 65¢ CREAM CORN, 48 picnic tin $4.75 Del Monte 6 No. 2 tins 80¢ CREAM CORN, 24 No. 2 ins $3.10 Del Monte 6-12 oz. tins 85¢ W. K. CORN, 24 12-0z. tins $3.20 6 Vo. Z'/z tln.s $1.35 21 tins $5.35 241 Silver Bar Del Monte Everglade—5 Edl’s CORN ON COB, 24 Del Monte 6 pii'mr tins 69¢ PEAS, 48 picnic lins . $5.45 Del Monte 6 No. 2 tins $1.12 PEAS, 24 No. 2 tins $4.25 20t Fi 49 1b.sack 2 Ib. sack - $1.19 101bh: sack MIRACLE WHIP 29c QUART TOMATOES . . . SPINACH . . PHONE 603 QUA CENTURY GROCERY her’s Flour $2.25 TEA GARDEN 40c Unsweetened Silver Bar APRICOTS, Silver Bar, slice 33¢ Silver Bar PEARS, 24 Del Monte JUICE einz RT 6 No. 2 tins 69¢ 24 No 2. tins $2.75 Kale's—3 seive 6 No. 2 tins 95¢ sack - 24 No. 21ins $3.70 - 8$3.30 $6.55 Even LOWER PBICES can be made to any- one who wishes to PAY CASH for CASE lots. SUGAR ===== Pure Cane 10Ib.sack - - = 50Ib.sack - - 100 1h. 67¢ Del Monte Norwest If you are going to stock up WHY NOT TAKE ADVANTAGE OF BUYING HERE where you can be assured of THE BEST QUALITY . .. THE LOWEST PRICE . .. 20th CE}ITURY SERVICE PEACHES, 24 2% fins Ukulele—Broken PINEAPPLE, 24 2% lins De Luxe PLUMS, 24 2% tins $4.40 fii'l"iv_ FOODS, 24 cans . JUNIOR FOODS, 24 cans . $2.60 CUT BEANS, 24 No. 2ins . $3.05 BEANS, 24 No. 2 tins wnou: BEANS 24 No. 2 fins 4.05 CUT BEANS, 48 picaie tins $4.60 Whole BEANS 48 picnic tins $5.15 Slced BEETS. 4 No 2 ins $2.1 F ORGE T-ME-NOT FLOWER SHOP PHONES--- 357 or Blue 110 Twice Weekly Orders from National Bu-{ reau Call for Double | Drills in Northland Training of National Guard units | in the Territory will become more intensive beginning Monday as a re- sult of the recently received order from the National Guard Bureau calling for two drill meetings weekly instead of the former two. Orders frem the Adjutant Gen- eral's office here indicate the Al- aska Battalion of Guardsmen will start on double drill periods im- mediately. Company A will meet at 8 o'clock on Mondays and Thurs- days, the Headquarters detachment at7:30 o'clock on Wednesdays and 8 o'clock Thursdays, and the Med- ical detachment at 7 o'clock on Tuesdays and 8 o'clock Thursdays. The new orders become effective umm‘dntvlv No. 2 tins $1.39 24 2% tins . $5.48 d, halves, 6 2!, tins $1.10 . $4.35 5 tins $1.19 $4.80 6 No. 2, tins $1.25 2% tins . . $4.90 6 No. 2, tins $1.15 6 No. 2! 12 cans 95¢ $1.85 6 cans 69¢ 6 No. 2 tins. $1.00 North Coast s JuneauBound with the “cans §1.15 $4.50 6 No. 2 tins $1.05 May 9 — Steamer sailed for 10:15 o' 100 pass following Sout 6 picnic tins 61c Ciheing aboard, Juneau: | J. T. Richardson, |cich, Mrs. Eva W Wehren, S. H. A. Swer, Mr. Miss bookec 6 pi( nic tins 67¢ . Joe| Robort Veve and M. Doris Pe 12100 arl Dre 6 No. 2 tins 69¢ inson, Mrs. S. L. man Hall, | Adamoli. Juneau Guard To Now Meet John! nning s . % ey ffcers For DeMolay official in charge of the con-| n of airports from the Unit- | ed States to Whitehorse, arrived in Juneau this morning on the north- bound Yukon and flew to White-| horse shortly afterward on board| a PAA Electra. T Subscribe for The Empire. FOR RENT Juneau Liquor Store Space Will Remodel to Suit A joint installation will be held | tomorrow evening at 7:30 o'clock in |the lodge room of the Scottish Rite | Temple by the Rainbow Girls and | DeMolays. | An election was held by the De- |Molay boys and the following are 1'.0 be installed as officers: " Master Councilor, Clifford Furu- ness; Senior Councilor, Alex Miller; iJumor Councilor, Charles Porter; Senior Deacon, Fred Sorri; Junior |Deacon, Griffith Nordling; Senior |Steward, Harry Sperling; Junior |Steward, Horace Adams; Orator, | Simpson MacKinnon; Sentinel, Har- lold DeRoux; Chaplain, Bob Satre; Tenant. See Percy’s Cafe T |Marshal, Blair Miller; Standard 7 n | Bearer, Donald Hayes; Almoner, Al- WE NOW OFFER fred Brown; 1st Preceptor, Lauder P |McVey; 2nd Preceptor, Bill Dapce- e lclous |vich; 3rd Preceptor, John Talmadge; { |4th Preceptor, Jim Johnson; 5th | Preceptor, Gaylord Hansen; .6th co!hge eese “Precepwr, John Cass; Tth Precep- | tor, Erling Oswald; Scribe, Lee Lu- Made Fresh Daily! |cas, and Treasurer, Jim Glasse. | o .- — Delivered with your milk 1 20 cenis per carion || TRIPS TO COAST And for Those Who Like |\ 70/ piomes were: made 1o the| to Make Their Own | Coast-today as pilots Dean Goodwin Dressing— and Shell’ Simmons left Gastineau ‘Channel for Sitka and other Coast cn“sn wnn towns with six passengers. Goodwin carried Hans Floe to Hawk Inlet, Florence Robinson to! lo cen's l“r carion | Hoonah, Konrad K. Klippert to | Pelican City and Rachel Benfer to - ot | Sitka. He is expected to return uneau mles with four passengers from Sitka, | Simmons carried A. C. Adams to PHONE 638 Excursion Inlet and Norm Cameron - to Hoonah. Full ® An Engine that Can Be Easily Hand Cranked CHARLES G. WARNER CO. Are Announced | PLANES LEAVE FOR INTERIOR AND SEATTLE Two Lodestars Take Off for. States — Two Planes Fly to Fairbanks Pan American Airways dispatched 37 passengers this morning as two Lodestars roared out of Juneau for Boeing Field in Seattle, and an Electra and the Douglas departed for Fairbanks, Passengers for Seattle on the two | Lodestars are W. P. Mills, Jack Winston, Betty Geer, A. A. Ma- tthews, V. F. Robertson, Ben Smith, A. A. McLaren, E. F. Dailey, W. K. Foster, Stan Bennett, Mrs, Dean Stanley, Mrs. E. A. Waxberg, Sig Wein and Dean Stanley. Passengers for Fairbanks are George Hite, Mrs. A, H. Bradford, Mrs. John White, G. C. Carring- | ton, Bill Watkins, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Newton, C. A. Jackson, George Tait, H. E. Berger, M. Sullivan, Joe Crabtree, ‘J, L. McGinn, Mrs. R. Sipe, Mrs. R. McCandless, A. Rainier, Oliver }Metzler, O. L. Wilson and Bentley | Flintoff. Carl Stollberg and F. G. Davis | were passengers to Whitehorse. 'HONOR PAID T0 CAPT. LATHROP AT SEATILE DINNER Business leaders from Seattle, ev- er part of Washington State and Alaska gathered in the Junior Ball- room of the Olympic Hotel April 24 to honor Capt. Austin E. Lathrop, foremost business man of Alaska, says the Alaska Weekly of May 2. More than fifty of Capt. Lath- rop’s closest friends and business as- work in helping built Alaska and _work in helping built Alaska and presented him with an illuminated parchment scroll lauding his lead- ership in the development of the Territory. Darwin Meisnest, Chairman of the Alaska Committee of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, presided at the dinner. Among those who spoke in glowing tribute to Capt. Lathrop were L. W. Baker, General Manager of the Alaska Steamship Company; Arhcie Shiels, of the Pacific Amers: jcan Fisheries; Foster L. McGovern, Assistant_General Manager of the Chamber of Commerce; H. L. Faulk- ner, of Juneau, who flew from San Francisco to be present at the din- ner, and B. F. Shearer, owner of Juneau's Capitol Theatre. Believing he was going to a din- ner. at the home of L. W. Baker, Capt. Lathrop was completely sur- prised when he walked into the Junior Ballroom of the Olympic and saw his many friends gathered to honor him. One Electra is due down from Fairbanks today. Mrs. Rosalie Lun-| dell is the only passenger on| | board. | | —— e —— | | | Judy Hanson Has | Fifth Birthday| | Five-year-old Judy Hanson,| | daugnter of Mr. and Mrs, H. J., Hanson, is celebrating her birth-| |day today at the family home on | Tenth and D Streets. Asked for the occasion were, lCazheMne Delebecque, Becky'l Sharpe, Heather Hollmanpn, Mary Margaret Grisham, Kay Metzgar, | Roberta and Sandy Brown, Bever- {ly and Sandy Junge, Dennis Green,! NAVY PATROL BOMBERS LAND AT AUK BAY Four Navy Patrol Bombers from Sitka landed at Auk Bay last night and are scheduled to return to their |base tomorrow morning. Officers end men of the flgiht are quartered on the converted mine-sweeper Teal. The members of the force came to Juneau this afternoon on chartered Channel busses and will return late {his afternoon or late in the evening. ———r———— CARRINGTON LEAVES Glenn C. Carrington of the Glenn Carrington Company, was a pas-| Mike Grummett, David Mitchcll and Mike Blackwell. | | . Empire Classifieds Pay! j sepger to Fairbanks this morning | on the Douglas. ————————— Subscribe for The Empire. on annual leave, SPECIALDAYFOR | (v ¢he s o, PRAYER SATURDAY On the Hook The king run at Auk Bay is | practically at a stand-still today as no reports come in from s area, other than that : are not striking and that the her Make Appeal fo Help |ozx ot st woc s v e war Su“erers |of runs at Eagle River or Point| | Louisa. { The Seventh-day Adventist Gen- ‘ Marmion Island yielded a nice eral Conference Committee has 30-pounder on herring yesterday designated tomorrow, Saturda paperhanger E. M. Powers re- May 10, as a day when, in all their tyrned with two kings, one the 30- Seventh- Day Adventists fo churches, special prayer shall IJ"'])()IH)(]FX‘ and another smaller one. | offered up to God on behalf of all those who are in distress be-| No word has come from the cause of the war. This special day wanderer officials as to the con- of prayer is in response to an ap-|ditions at Marmion or Point Bi: peal sent out by the organization op, put word among the fishing of which ex-President Herbert Hoo- fiends is that the run has bareiy ver is chief sponsor. ! started with expectations any day. Funds are available with which | to purchase and transport food Banker Joe Brewitt, however, was supplies, buf under the existing 5 member of about 15 fishermen' blockade systems, it to get it to them. is impossible who left for a trip to Marmion The appeal 15 Island last night for an evening that all Christian people in this of strip fishing. He says they country unite in praying “that ghould be striking next Sunday those in authority be directed by around there. There are lots of Divine wisdom to assist these suf- fish, he says, but not enough ex- fering people by a suspension of perjenced fishermen. blockade restrictions or otherwise.” t The sad plight of these starving. On the trout side of the reel, the; millions of Europe appeals strong- phoys from Hasselborg returned late, ly to the hearts of all Christians, yesterday after a two-day trip and| says the ‘“’p""l | they brought back the nicest catch’ e of cutthroat and brooks you ever BILL DOUG S HERE saw, In the ice qu of Pefcy; Cafe today lie 54 fat fish. Straight from Heinz salesman Bill Douglass ar- | the Admiralty lakes. rived from Ketchikan on the north. Member of the party Art Beau-| bound Yukon this morning and js Gin let drop the hint that the stopping at the Gastineau Hotel, |lrout were not caught in Hassel-) LE R A AR |bore, but refused to divulge the HARRY RACE HERE haunts of the 26-inch trout. There are many lakes in and around the stores Hasselborg area to which a fisher- ijn man could hike in a few hours. on the That may be the answer, but . the question still remains, which BT lake? | SIG WEIN DFP:\RTs ! The fishermen say the catch was Sig Wein of the Wein Airways taken on anything from flies to { Harry Race, owner of dr in Ketchikan and Juneau arr Juneau for a short visit northbound Yukon. at Nome, left for Seattle today old hats. They're just not talkinz. on the Lodestar. One of them mentioned even gla-| ———————— cier worms. ATTORNEY TO FAIRBANKS J. L. McGinn, prominent San, Another party is scheduled Lu! Francisco and Fairbanks attorney, make the plane trip into ellq(-n flew to the Golden Heart City to- Hasselborg or Florence tomorrow | day on the Douglas. to see just what makes the fish| — v — tick. The members of the planned IN FISHERIES OFFICE party are Master-fisherman Walter ' Hellan, Lynn Gemmill, Harold! Mrs. Dorothy Baker is working as Bates and Earl Neuru. a clerk in the Fish and Wildlife ————— Service office here during the ab-! A marriage license has been Nued sence of Mrs. @eorgia Gallagher, by U. 8. Commissioner Felix Gray ' who left for the States yesterday io Eugene Edward Butts and Alice [Anna Clark, HALIBUT PRICE, | SOLE U. S, AGENTS: Schieffelin ‘& Co., NEW YORK CITY + IMPORTERS SINCE 1794 THE WEATHER (By the U, S. Weather Bureau) U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU Forecast for Juneau and tv, beginning at 4:30 p.m., May 9: Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday; slightly warmer Saturday: lowe temperature tonight about 40 deg ees; highest Satur 60 degree gentle variable winds. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Partly cloudy tonight and Satur- day; slightly warmér' ‘Saturday; gentle to moderate variabl winds. Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Dixon Enfrance fo Cape Spencer: Moderate westerly to northwester- ly winds, but shifting to southeasterly near Dixon ce U partly cloudy; Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchinbrook: Moderate nort westerly winds; partly cloudy; Cape Hinchinbrook to Resurrect: Bay: Moderate northerly winds; mostly fair; Resurrection Bay ) Kodiak: Moderate variable winds becoming southeasterly Saturds fair with increasing cloudiness Saturday ¥ o LOCAL DATA Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 4:30 p.m. yesterday 30.09 53 50 w 10 Cloudy 4:30 am. today 30.15 44 79 w 2 Overcast Noon today 30.19 53.4 50 WSW 7 Pt. Cldy RADIO REPORTS TODAY Max. tempt Lowest 4:30a.m. Precip. 4:30am Station last 24 hours | temp. tempt. 24 hours Weather Barrow 29 15 15 0 Cloudy Puirbanks 62 | 38 38 0 Pt Clay Nome 33 | 25 27 0 Sldy Dawson 59 | 35 35 0 Anchorage 49 | 40 40 02 Bethel 85 | 34 34 0 St. Paul 39 | 34 37 03 Dutch Harbor .. 42 | 39 40 12 Wosnesenski 3 | 36 36 0 P Kanatak 50 | 43 43 0 Kodiak 49 | 27 0 Cordova 50 | 40 43 08 Atlin 58 34 35 0 Pt. Cldy Juneau 53 | 3 4 T Pt Cldy Sitka 51 42 03 Pt.Cl4 Ketchikan 54 | 41 04 Pt Prince Rupert .. 58 | 41 0 Pt. Cldy Prince George .. 63 | 38 0 Pt. Cld, Edmonton 54 | 32 0 Cloudy Seattle 67 | 40 01 Pt. Cldy Portland 64 | 40 0 Fogz San Francisco .. 72 | 51 0 Pt. Cldy WEATHER SYNO Relatively cool maritime air p evailed over morn and partly cloudy to cloudy ski's were gener ;w*‘l R had fallen during the previous 24 hours at w.xl.nn-rl point st from Southeast Alaska to A1chorage, and over t: Islands and the southern portion o’ the Bering S The gr amount of precipitation was 12 huidredths of an ir whizh recorded at Dutch Harbor. The lowest temperature this mornin 15 degrees, which was reported al Barrow. Scattered to brc clouds with ‘moderate ceilings ani good visibilities prevailed o the Juneau-Ketchikan airway thi; morning. The Friday morning weather chart indicated a center of pressure of 29.68 inches was loca‘'ed at 47 degrees north and degrees west, and was expected t> move slowly eastward E center of 29.68 inches, was locat d at 55 degrees north and 175 de- grees west, with the frontal portio: of the storm extending eastward to near Scotch Cap, and thence sduthwestward into a new low cen- ter of 29.59 ,inches located at 42 de:rees north and 179 degree: This center was expected to increast in intensity and move ab 800 miles northeastward during the next 24 hours. A high pres: center was located over the west:rn portion of Al , and & ond high center of 30.29 inches was located at 33 degrees north and 161 degrees west. Juneau, May 10-—Sunrise 4:44 am., FOREST SVIE | CAA PLANE EQUIPMENT LANDS HERE ON CHANNEL Alask sunset 9:06 p.mn IPMENT Wit BE OVERHAULED The TPorest Service launch Ranger VIT will leavé Juneau fomorrow with a tow for Ketchikan. ‘Equip-| Landing in Gastincau Channel {ment to be takenh south will be from Anchorage late yesterday, a CAA Bellanca Skyrocket arrived with three CAA officials from their Anchorage headquarters. Today the ship took off from the Channel for a round trip to Haines and will fly to Petersburz tomorrow. Purpose of the flights are in- spection trips of airports and radio equipment .in the places wisited. Flying the ship is Capt. Burten W. Davis, and with him are E. C. Stintz and George S. McKean. Capt. Davis is remembered as the pilct who washed out a ¥icetwing NC 5 a year ago and narrowly es- caped death. overhauled at the marine station. The launch Forester is scheduled tc come off the ways of the marine station tomorrow after annual over- haul. —————— PRINCE RUPERT At Prince Rupert today 276,000 pounds of halibut were sold at 9.50 0 9.70 and 7.50 cents. At Ketchikan the halibut price was 830 and 7.20 cents a pound. TSR SRy IN YUKON DIVORCE CASE e Travcling man Gil Rich arrive on the Yukon today after a trip to the South, Rich is staying at the Baranof Hotel. Suit for divorce has been filed in District. Court by Ward M. Johnson against Oris V. Johnson on grounds of non-support and dmrtlon Can’t teach an old dog new tricks? Many’s the man who bas learned about Scolcll from Teacher’s. 86 PROOF TEACHER'S SCOTCH WHIS I\ SKY Lo