Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE SIX Super Market 2 FREE DELIVERIES DAILY 10:30 A. M. and 3 P. M. PHONE 92—95 T;;dm Lé&der CANNED ASPARAGUS HAPPY HOME, Fancy, All Green NIBLETS, Fancy, Tender Green WESCO, Tiny, All Green STANDBY, Fancy, All Green Spears PIONEER, All Green, Cut Spears NATION'S PRIDE, Green Tipped RIALTO, California Green and White Tips BLAZE 0’ GOLD, All Green Spears Drop into George Brothers and see this large shipment of Canned Aspaargus A Special Discount of 5% OFF on Half Case Lots or 10% OFF on Case Lots We Reserve the Right to Limits! \Mrs. Milton Nyman ™ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA Drive Is Over Top; $14,366.25 Tofal Now To date, with more contributions {to be received, the National War Fund Drive on Gastineau Channel 5 1 | es in both the Juneau element- | Ralph J. Paquin of Seattle, Post a Iona ar un | ary and second schools will be dis- |Office inspector, is again in Ju-| | | | i | | | | JUNIOR TRINITY SCHOOL OUT EARLY P. 0. INSPECTOR HERE | ying at the Baranof Hotel. | - - | The Citadel at Quebec has been he Gibra at neau, s an- missed tomorrow, Armistice Day 2 o'clock, according to an nouncement made today by A. B Phillips, Superintendent of Schools. of Americ: called American Legion ARMISTICE DAY | has resulted in a total of $14,366.25, | luncheon today noon at the Baranof | held by the general committee in | SET FOR NOV 17 charge of the campaign, and pre- . sided over by Mrs. John McCormick. The quota for Gastineau Channel| Members of the Junior Trinity was $13,000. | Guild met last night at the apart- Labor, organizations to date con- | ment of Mrs. Lucretia Botsford in tributed $150 with several unions|tne Feldon and completed plans for yet to make their reports. |the doll bazaar to be held Novem- Other organizations, fraternal, .. j7 | civic, etc., contributed $1,105 fihe. sals. will b Held Tr E¥inity Churches contributed $181 R A AB RN €8 bk rdcelved Parish Hall between 10 oclack in %% schiol of 'Juneay, public,|He meming snd 6. g'clock g the parochial and govenment, turned |afternoon, with Mrs. J. C. Ryan in $260 |in charge of arrangements There was no expense involved in| The Guild also scheduled a sal | the drive and the general committee | °f decorated boxes for Christmas | expresses thanks to the newspapers, | Which will be held December il. Alaska Electric Light and |At thas time a doll house award ! Power Company, Columbia Lumber | Will also be made. | Company, Alaska Broadcasting Com-| Next meeting of the Guild will with pany, Juneau Woman's Club and be held December 8, at Trinity Par- the Alaska Steamship Company for |ish Hall | - | Qivertidlng gsits or suilo fine FeoH , ServiceMen - - - - NO CONFERENCE . There will be no Child Health Conference tomorrow, Armistice Day, according to Miss Helen John- NAVYLISTS i L0SS, THRE! g _ DESTROYERS ‘Brings Up to Date All Am- erican Sinkings-Re- | futes Jap Claims (Conuinuea iiom Page One) Civilians the Card and other vessels REUNION STARTS| A four-day Reunion of the Scot- tish Rite Masonic Bodies commenced at the Temple this afternoon and will continue each evening this week, | concluding Saturday evening with the conferring of the 32nd degree in full form. A banquet for all mem- bers and candidates will be served at 6:30 p. m. Saturday Several out of town candidates from Petersburg and Wrangell are here for the work, those from Pet- ersburg having arrived by special boat last evening, accompanied by Frederick Nelson a leading member of the Rite from that city The work this evening will consist of conferring the 14th degree on the class, which will be under the direction of Charles M. Tuckett, | Venearble Master of Alaska Lodge of Perfection. The 18th degree to- | morrow evening will be in charge | of Willis R. Booth, Wise Master of Alaska Chapter of Rose Croix. G' S k Sh planles in the force destroyed “more Iven MOrk JNOWET | Sibmarines than any team i naval | history.” Figures were not given as to the| A 1 o'clock luncheon and stork | shower was given last P after- noon at the West Tenth Street home of Mrs. Peter Oswald in honor of Mrs. Milton Nyman. Co- hosteses for the occasion were Mrs. Olaf Westby and Mrs. Martin Rain Twenty-five friends of the guest of honor were asked to attend and table decorations were carried out in pink and blue. Gifts, piled high in a doll buggy, were presented Mrs Nyman by four-year-old Gaylord Westby - e PETERSBUR: DELEG HERE FOR LODGE TION In Juneau to participate in Ma- | i sonic Lodge rites are F. Nelson, C. G. Anderson, Hugh Jones, Arnold Wasvick, A. R Martins, all of Petersburg. They guests at the Gastineau Hotel. >-oo——— RITES Hall and Magnus | will study and inspect the methods | ‘e number of subs accounted for b; [the force. Previously, however, the| | Navy reported that an unidentified I baby flattop carried out 11 attacks, | definitely sinking t(wo submarines and possibly eight others. i Jap Claims Punctured A naval spokesman said the an-| nouncement of the loss of the de-! troyers Henley and Chevalier brings | up to date all the sinkings of naval | |vessels in the southwest Pacific, | contrary to the claims recently | broadeast from Japan that se American warships were sunk. R SITKA BOUND John Hall, Sanitarian of the De- | | partment of Public Health, plans | | to leave soon for Sitka, where he | | i \ of food handling and the water | | supply system. He plans to leave | BUY WAR BONDS World Service Circle : Meets Friday P. M., The World Service Circle will meet Friday, November 12, at 2 o'clock in the afternoon in the par- lors of the Northern Light Pres- byterian Church. Mrs: C. M. Hirst will present a ! panel diseussion of plans and na- | tional missionary news. Mesdames W. R. Booth and John Rogers will | be co-hostesses for the afternoon. HAINES AND SKAGWAY | OBJECTS OF STUDIES| Capt R. S. Green, Public Health Engineer, will leave by the first available transportation for Skag- | way and Haines, where he will con- duct official business. First on the agenda at Skagway will be the new sewerage system and at Haines a new water supply system will be investigated, along | with other problenis-of public health | in both communities. COMMUNISTS | AREELECTED TO N. Y. COUNCIL PR dri " NEW YORK, Nov. 10.—Benjamin | Drink tinctive quality of delicious .1.] Da Jr., Negro Communist, % refreshment the drink whose election to the new City | W with the tr ; =1 ade-mark Council yesterday appears almost || - “Coca-Cola”, certain, will be the second Com- | | munist to win an election with l]\t" 1 Delicious and completion of tabulation of the | | Rafraching proportional representation ballot | | At & cast on November 2. ! Davis will be one of the four members of the Manhattan dele- | gation to the 17-member Cuun(lll The other Communist is Council- | man Peter Cacchione 9 ——e— NURSE Mary D. Forbes, of San Francisco, U. 8. Public Health Nurse, is a guest at the Gastineau Hotel, i U. HERE l 2 S VO BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY 8Y Juneau Cold Storage Co. as soon as he is able to obtain | ! transportation. | UPPOSE, in the dusk of an English evening, 1,000 huge bombers soar over the Channel and head for Berlin. By the time those planes return to England, their motors will have consumed 2,400,000 { gallons of gasoline! The cost . . . of the gasoline ALONE . « . will be more than $380,000. I'm * “Coca-Cola” known,too,as & “coken | ‘To pay for the gasoline used on ONE such raid, 96,000 Americans would have to invest at least 10 percent of their next pay check in War Bonds! You get a big kick out of reading about those 1,000-plane raids. You know that such raids, if repeated often enough, will soften up the Axis. But ... b | speak for *“Coca-Cola™. I'm a symbol of its lifeand | sparkle. I'm known, too, as *“Coke”. It's short for | “Coca-Cola". | offer you the pause that refreshes. | speak for _O_h_a 2_d thing ... the soft drink with the dis- P.S. Everybody likes to shorten words. You hear “Coke”... the friendly abbreviation for the trade-mark *“Coca-Cola" +++0n every hand. ANCE ELKS' HALL November 11—9:30 P. M. Bob Tew’s Orchestra ADMISSION: 55¢ $1.10 (Including Tax) What are YOU doing to help pay the cost of those raids? (In addition to the gasoline they use, it costs Uncle Sam TWO HUN- DRED MILLION DOLLARS to build 1,000 4-motored bombers ., . . plus the cost of training the 10.000 men who make up their crews!) Modern war is expensive business . . . its cost runsinto fantastic figures. 30,000,000 American wage earners are now putting an average of 10 percent of each pay check into War Bonds every pay day . . . but still it isn’t enough! 2 Our air raids on the Axis are increasing in frequency and intensity. When land opera- tions really get going, the cost will be staggering. Annual Thanksgiving TURKEY GOBBLE of the ELKS in the ELKS’ HALL at 9 o°Clock TONIGHT Publice Invited You've Been There Before ~ Come Again Tonight! ~ How much does it cost to bomb Berlin ? More and more Americans must join the Pay-Roll Savings Plan . . . more than those already in the Pay-Roll Savings Plan must begin to jack up their War Bond purchases . .. must start to invest more than 10 percent! Remember . . . War Bonds are the finest investment in the world today. You get back $4 for every $3 you invest. And . . . the more War Bonds you buy now, the quicker the Axis will be licked . . . and the less the war will cost in the long run. Think it over. And every time you’re tempted to put a nickel in something you don’t absolutely néed—put it in War Bonds instead! KEEP ON BACKING THE ATTACK ! This advertisement is a contribution to America’s all-out war effort by P. E. HARRIS & COMPANY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1943