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PAGE SIX GEORGE BROTHERS PRECINCT CAUCUS IS DRIVE FOR THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA chain in other Southeast Alaska | towns will also start their drive for the fund next week. If solicitors do not contact those wishing to do- nate, the contributions may be left Coliseum Theatre box offices or checks may be sent to the 20th PIONEERSTO | at the 20th Century Theatre or| It is estimated that between" 450,000 and 500,000 persons in the United States are under medical ireatment for cancer. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1943 There IsNo Substitutefor | Newspaper Advertising! - Century general office. | ! ; Super Market | HELD HERE PHONFS 92-95 | | Orders for $2.00 or more will be delivered | Elect 31 Delegates for Di-l FREE | visional Democratic OPA Price-10 1b. bags Sugar 85¢ | Convention | (Christmas Cheer ARRES[' _— The annual c;‘\mp;uun to raise a | 'S Taken i‘"o CUS'OdY Upon | Democrats from the three Juneau spE(IAl_ |precincts and Salmon Creek Pre-|Christmas Cheer Fund for the | . C i " sarsy “cuuns.in sha poneers i e sika vome win ve| - Arrival of Steamer | Union Hall last night electing com- | Started next Monday. . | mitteemen and also delegates who| Dave Gross, who began sponsor- ffom KOdIak |b ba s Su ar |will attend the First Division Diy-| ™€ the cheer fund years and years s . isional convention which will be/| ptor STEUECES that any S | SEATTLE, Dec. 3. — Doris Bell [held on December 17. money, $1_up, will be gratefully | pam 58, was arrested here as PHONE 92 or 95—BETTER VALUES! | |accepted. The fund is sent to the | Crystal Snow Jenne, acting chair-| ; 4 g | v oneers before Christmas Day and {2 S ey 8¢ land posted a $7,500 bond and was DEL MAIZE man, was named permanent chair-{ aqually divided among the oldtimers | 4 man at last night's session :md‘m the Sitka Pioneers' Home so they | then released on a charge she vio- Business and Professional Women's Club ANNUAL BALL BARANOF GOLD ROOM Music by ALL GIRLS’> ORCHESTRA Dancing from 10P. M.101A. M. SATURDAY December 4, 1943 BE STARTED " ALLEGED WHITE Dave Gross Will Begin| SLAVER IS UNDER Campaign fo Raise Admission Per Couple $1.50 includes tax presided during the meeting, whilejcan have a jingle of their own m;luu‘d the White Slave Act | Roy Peratrovich was named as sec-|their pockets at Yule time to do| The woman was ordered to ap- | retary | with just as they choose. Last year | pear in the Federal Court next: Thirty-one delegates were elected.| over $600 was raised in Juneau Monday and plea. She is accused. The following are the delegates|alone. 10! transporting girls to Kodiak, lelected and also thé committeemen All of the theatres in the Gross Alaska, for immoral purposes. {chosen by the delegates from the - T8 3 — |three precincts: First Precinct Delegates—Roy Peratrovich, Crys- Ital Snow Jenne, Garland Boggan, r Olson, Esther Metzgar, . | Os | Ch: s Fox, Allen Shattuck, Elmer pEAS Dfi llle L 3 ‘ans 60( |A. Friend, Alfred Zenger, John i Young, H. R .VanderLeest, Vida 1 , e Bartlett, Minard Mill, Dr. C. C.| OUR VALUE Ceintar. | | Committeemen—Elmer A. Friend, | }Chau’man: Esther Metzgar, .Secre»‘ [l- y, Garland Boggan. Second Precinect ! Doelker, Art Bringdale, G. E. Alnvl TOMATOES - 3 cans§5¢ RIALTO ] ASPARAGUS - 3 cans $1.26 CORNED BEEF |G. A. Doelker. g | Third Precinct | Delegates—John H. Walmer, Cur- ur el lng c tis Shattuck, M. E. Monagle, Beity | McCormick, W. R. Carter, George | Messerschmidt, Jeanette Shepard, oc,pER (AN - | David Ramsay i | Committeemen—Curtis Shattuck, o Pyt . R | Chairman; Jeanette Shepard, Sec- STOCK UP NOW—ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN? retary, W. R. Carter i HUME | Salmon Creek | SPINACH - 4 cans$1.00 _—__—___—.———— FLORIDA GOLD GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 200 cases left $ 38 12 a@ns ---- CLOSE OUT SPECIAL — STOCK UP — ANYTHING CAN HAPPEN! WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES GEORGE BROTHERS PHONES 92-95 $2.00 Orders or Over FREE DELIVERY ENEMY SHIPS ARE SPOTTED, THEN B?MBED “Delegates—Charles Miller, G.- A. jouist, Mrs. Louis Lemieux, Eske| 1Eskesen. Roy Noland. Committeemen — Charles Miller, Chairman; Eske Eskesen, Secretary, Delegates — Evan Mary Haas. Committeemen—E. L. Keithahn, Chairman; Evan Wruck, Secretary, Mrs. Mary Haas .- ELKS MEMORIAL SERVICE T0 BE | ! y—— A message for you...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. ‘And oh, 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 from 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—cutout fancy foods. We didn’t have as much fun for awhile but we paid our. taxes and.the doctor and—we didn’t touch the War Bonds. '~ ' . “We didn’t touch the War Bonds then, or any other time. And I know this: The ge of Elks No. 420! al Memorial Ser- | | vice ock Sunday afternoon in the Elks Hall. The affair will| | be open to the public as has been the custom in years past | Leonard Holmgquist, chairman, an- | nounces that Howard D. Stabler, well-known Juneau attorney, will| deliver the eulogy. Ernest Ehler will| give vocal selections, accompanied | by Carol Beery Davis. “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 sl ?f v;ar, ev;:\den c:; w;re really get!;i;x}g1 into s it—I ne 2 'axes were tough, and Stops Perspiration g then Ellen got sick. Like most everybody | HQUOMETIMES I feel so good it almost clse, I was buying War Bonds through the | scares me. Payroll Plan—and I figured on cashing some * «Thishouse—Iwouldn’tswapashingleoff - of them in. But sick as she was, it was its roof for any other house on earth. This Ellen who talked me out of it.’ little® valley, with the pond down in the “Don’t doit, John!’ she said. ‘Please hollow at the back, is the spot I like best in don’t! For the first time in our lives, we're all the world. really saving money. It’s wonderful to (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 . . .) | New Under-arm { Cream Deodorant 1 hours after Chiang Kai Shek | his wife lunched with Admiral | Mountbatten and a-.score of| 1king military men in the s Club here, the heavv tilel in the dining room collapsed, Ang in a mass of debris, the ble at which they sat. | Brig en. Frederick McCabe of | . Oregon, in charge of the rdered an immediate investi- | but found no evidence " of | P 1. Does not rot dresses — does not irritate skin M | 2. No waiting to dry. Can be used “ » 4 & 2 y. Can be use ‘And they’re mine. Iown’em. Nobou ) (Continued from Page One he party had paused here en-| right after shaving. d ey Ll world wouldn’t be such & swell place today to New Delhi from Chur 3. Instancly stops perspiration for can take ’em away from me. if we had!” } ’ 1 to 3 days. Removes odor from perspiration 4. A pure white, greaseless, stain- less vanishing cream. S. Arrid has been awarded the Approval Seal of The American Institute of Laundering, forbe- | ing harmless to fabrics. Arrid is the largest selling deodorant. Try a jar todayl -ARRID: 39}‘4: jor Also in 59¢ and 10¢ jors I ——————— of Kav ker as a er a after attending the Cairo con- | nce. (In a dispatch from Chungking yesterday it was announced that | Chiang Kai Shek and his wife had Americal | 4yrived there safely) - — southwe: a large tar hits set the tar flames were seen for 50 miles 200 Japs Killed On the ground front troops infiltrated behind the enemy lines near the Allied beachhead at Empress Augusta Bay on Bougain- | About 125,000 men are normal- | ville Island in the porthern Solom- 'y engaged in catching the nation’s ons and killed 200 Japs in a night fish. attack. Enemy ammunition and sup- plies were destroyed in this raid. On Huon Peninsula, Australian troops attacked the Jap's inland jungle positions at Wareo north- west of Finschafen from three sides, 7 after seizing the Song River br idge. .“ cuanG scapep | o Kawser BURIED INDEBRIS . Aesity . .. you owe BY 0“_'._! THOURS g i o your audlence!” U. §. CHINESE BASE IN EAST- ERN INDIA, Nov. 30.—(Delaye VT Fop = 1 Rt ™ , 3 %, % ; YOUVE DONE YOUR BT -~NOW DO YOUR BEST! e §005% YOUR BOND BUYING THROUGH THE Mkall SAVINGS PLAN s $ g — e BUY WAR BONDS This advertisement is a contribution to Amiericd s: all-out war ¢ffort by ; Libby, MeNeill and Libby "t . DANCE BoE 1EW:S ELES ik i sitw 2 DANCE -