Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
GEORGE BROTHERS INITIATE per Market | BIG(LASS 2 FREE DELIVEBIES DAILY : 10:30 A. M. and 3 P. M. PHONE 92—95 ay. The candida On to ch-‘ JUST Annlvzn tory Class,” a class being initiated | in all Elk lodges in the Nation this A Big Shipment of SOAP and SOAP POWDERS e PICK YOUR FAVORITE ‘There will be a big the Elks mee IJ\IHN luncheon will be served. — e, /ANB ELECTS | OFFICERS AT NUBORA CAMAY TOILET SOAP OXYDOL PALMOLIVE | RINSO CASHMERE BOUQUET | | CONVENTION DREFT IVORY BAR SOAP | At the annual convention of the | GOLD DUST SWAN Alaska Native Brotherhood held cek at Honah, the following| were elected President, Roy Peratro-| vich, reelected; Grand Vice Presi- dent, Jake Cropley; Grand Trea- surer, the Rev. Walter A. Soboleff; | Grand Secretary, William L. Paul, Jr | All officers neau. | The convention began November [13. The Grand Ball was held Sat- {urday evening and yesterday a Union Church Service was sched- uled with the Rev. Soboleff preach- {ing the sermon. Returning to Juneau Saturday \afternoon on the Institute I, where the following Bureau of Indian Af- NEW EMPlOYEES .|0|N DOLLS AND DRESSES INDIAN AFFAIRS STAFF ~ NOW ON EXHIBITION :cis revresentauives trom e el TR T FOR ]R'N"Y BAZAAR vention: C. M. Hirst, General Su- Miss Elizabeth Terhune, formerly | perintendent; Ray L. Wolfe, Credit with the Unemployment Compensa- Agent; Li rd C. Allen, Supervi- tion, has been employed on a tem-' Delightful to any little girl, and sor of al Welfare and Dr.| porary basis by the Bureau of In-|to some big girls, is the display of George A. Dale, Associate Supervi- dian Affairs as chief clerk. She re-|doils and miniature wardrobes ex-!sor of Educ: places Miss Dolores Boekers, who hibited the first part of this w Also has resigned lin the lows of the Sewing Bas-' Andrew Also accepting a position with the ket Orthodox ‘St Nich Bureau, Mrs. M. Lozell Scudder| The dolls and tiny handmade'Church, who accompanied the group took over her duties today as clerk | wearing apparel will be on sale from here. in the department handling the in-| Wednesday between 10 o'clock in| Secretary of Alaska, E. L .Bartlett, dividual Indian money accounts. the morning and 5 o'clock in the|and Hugh J. Wade, Director of e — afternoon in the Parish hall of the Social Security, also attended a HAAS RETURNS | Holy- Trinity Episcopal Cathedral. |party of the convention, returned Michael J, Haas, Territorial Rep- Members of the Junior Trinity here last week by Coast Guard resentative. of the Department of | GUld dressed the dolls and made poat i Labor, has returned on a north- | ‘e small costumes bound steamer from a bushess trip T et to the States. | BUY WAR BONDS LIFE BUOY WOODBURY’'S —and many others! ALS“ LOTS OF S.0.8. ST GEORGE BROTHERS IVORY FLAKES Iz offi Grand L WOOL PADS elected are from Ju-| 1 was Father Makary aranoff of the Russian .o o - W. A. Pries of Seattle is a guest| at the Baranof Hotel. Have a “Coke”=Aloha No (WELCOME, FRIEND) “Coke = Coca-Cola 1¥s natural for popular names to acquire friendly abbreviations. That's why you hear Coca-Cola called “Coke”. v+ from Honolulu to Hartford Aloba No, says a newly-found acquaintance in Hawaii. Have “Coke”, responds the visiting sailor, and in a jiffy he's made a friend. Around the globe Coca-Cola stands for the pause that refreshes—has become the high-sign of the friendly-minded. ~the global high-sign BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY Juneau Cold Storage Co. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA A message for you.. (Today, John Jones is just an average American, wrestling with all the doubts and worries and problems that beset every one of us right now. But let’s skip ahead 10 years. Let’s look at John Jones then—and listen to him . . .) “SOMET!MES I feel so good it almost scares me. “This house—I wouldn’t swap a shingle off its roof for any other house on earth. This little valley, with the pond down in the hollow at the back, is the spot I like best in all the world. “And they’re mine. Iown ’em. can take ’em away from me. Nobouy “I’ve got a little money coming in, regu- larly. Not much—but enough. AndItell you, when you can go to bed every night with nothing on your mind except the fun you’re going to have tomorrow—that’s as near Heaven as a man gets on this earth! “It wasn’t always so. “Back in ’43—that was our second year of war, when we were really getting into it—I needed cash. Taxes were tough, and then Ellen got sick. Like most everybody else, I was buying War Bonds through the Payroll Plan—and I figured on cashing some of them in. But sick as she was, it was Ellen who talked me out of it. “ ‘Don’t do it, John!’ she said. ‘Please don’t! For the first time in our lives, we're really saving money. It’s wonderful to MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, from 1953 know that every single payday we have more money put aside! John, if we can only keep up this saving, think what it can mean! Maybe someday you won’t have to work. Maybe we can own a home. Andoh, how good it would feel to know that we need never worry about money when we’re old!” “Well, even after she got better, I stayed away ftom the weekly poker game—quit dropping a little cash at the hot spots now and then—gave up some of the things a man feels he has a right to. We made clothes do—cut out fancy foods. Wedidn’t have as much fun for awhile but we paid our taxes and the doctor and—we dxdn’t touch the War Bonds. “We didn’t touch the War Bonds then, or any other time. And I know-this: The world wouldn’t be such a swell place today if we had!” This advertisement is a contribution to Americd’s all-out war cffort by This advertisement is a contribution to America’s all-out war effori by TODD PACKING COMPANY ok >