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Super Market PHONES 92-95—2 DELIVERIES Orders for Delivery Accepted Up to 2:30 P. M. HONEY BUTTER Package 49« ONIONS—-A-PLENTY 10¢Pound PHONE— WRITE—WIRE US YOUR ORDER EORGE BROTHERS || COL.KILLILEA U.S. BOMBERS ARRIVESHERE HIT VIENNA The arrival of Col. Frank J. Kil- lilea, temporarily assigned to the ‘Territorial headquarters of Selective Service as Procurement Officer, is ! rose. | wore INUPTIAL MASS UNITES COUPLE THIS MORNING Easter lillies blended with color- ful tulip arrangements provided a charming setting this morning for’ the 8 o'clock wedding of Miss Dol-| ores Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee H. Smith of this city, and of Mr. and Mrs. |Coldwater, Ohio. The nuptial mass |was said by the Rev. W. G. LeVas-‘ |seur at the Catholic Church of the| | Nativity. | Wedding music was played by | Mrs. Lillian Uggen and Mrs. Henry |Harmon sang “Ave Maria” |the reading of the vows. | Given in marriage by her father, |the bride wore a tan dress suit with |accessories of green and brown. Her shoulder corsage was of talisman roses. Mrs. Millie Marie Morgan, matron of honor, selected a dress suit in Her accesories were brown and she wore a corsage of white tulips and narcissi. . Mrs. Smith, mother of the bride, dress of moss green with black accessories were pink tulips. Mr., Lee Smith acted as best man and young Sidney Smith as ring- bearer. Both are brothers of the bride. Altar boys were Albert Shaw |and Francis Smith, also a brother of the bride. Following the ceremony, a break- fast was held at the home of Mr. md Mrs. Smith on Glacier High- | way, to which members of the wed- ding party were invited. White ta- pers offset by bright colored tulips, | decorated the table, which was cen-| |Service Circle. Sergeant Herbert Bruns, USA, son| John Bruns of before | and her flowers| __THE DAILY ALASKA FJVIPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA ISERVICE CIRCLE - TO HEAR ABOUT HOLY LAND TRIP Her trip through the Holy Land will be the topic of Mrs. J. C. Coombs' informal talk Friday af- ternoon, when she speaks to. mem- bers and friends of the World's The regular meeting of the so- ciety will begin at 2 o'clock in the parlors of the Northern Light Pres- byterian church. Hostesses for the afternoon are Mrs. T. A. Morgan and Mrs. L. C. Allen. Friends of the church and Circle are invited to attend the meeting. 'WOULDBE ASSASSIN MEXICO CITY, April 12. — Lt | | Amtonio Rojas, wounded while try- | ing to escape after an attempt to | kill Mexican President Camacho, is dead, the Interior Ministry says. | “The 31-year-old artillery lieu- ‘ tenant had been in a grave condi- tion since he was shot last Monday, | | attempt, rifle passed through his body and he died in an army hospital after peritonitis set in,” the official bul- | letin states. ATTENTION REBEKAZS | Regular meeting tonight at Odd ~ ISDEAD] . {a few hours aftér an assassination | The bullet from an nrmy1 \ ( USo SHOW ONTONIGHT The public is invited to attend a performance this evening pro- duced by the U. S. O. Camp Show No. 100, whose production the boys at Duck Creek think is the finest of its kind they have ever seen. The troup, under the direction of Eddie Burnett will begin their var- ied types of entertainment tonight at 8 o'clock in the Juneau Elemen- tary School auditorium. The show 'people, four girls and two ~men are returning to the States after being “on the road” in Alaska for the past nine months, hitting the posts on the Aleutian Islands and elsewhere. On the program are a magician’s display of art, singing and dancing by the girls and accordian music by one of the men. There is no charge for this show. 'MANDERS IS HERE ON CAMPAIGN TRIP John E. Manders, Republican candidate for Delegate to Congress, has arrived from his home town of Anchorage, on a campaign trip, be- fore the primaries of April 25. Mr. Manders is a guest at the Baranof hotel while in Juneau. ———————— At the Baranof Hotel, H, L. Mc-| Connell is here from Anchorage. Phore PIGGLY WIGGLY Phone 18 quaLiry with DEPENDABILITY 24 WE ARE HEADQUARTERS for OCAL EGGS Fresh Beyond a Doubt Not a Peep Out of Any One of ’Em! 85cDozen Plooly wIceLy PHONE 16 or 24 . $2.00 Minimum Orders to be in before 1 P. M. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1944 Food Values FOOD VALUES—Visit BERT'S, the “One- Stop Store”—When Planning Your Meals. You, too, will be impressed with our com- plete stocks, amazed with our large Vege- table and Fruit departments and our low prices, as many house wives have been on their first visit to BERT'S. WHOLE KERNEL CORN 2 @ns 4 5¢ DOZEN CASE $2.49 $4.95 TWODELIVERIES DAILY 10:15 A, M.——2:15 P. M. MINIMUM DELIVERY $2.50 FINER FOODS ALWAYS AT BERT'S! PHONE 105 PHONE 104 CASH GROCERY |tered with a three tier wedding| (Continued from Page One | ge > \cake topped by a tiny bride and groom beneath the traditional wed- |at Rostok and Arnimswalde, near‘dmg bell, |adv. | Stettin. Wild battles streaked thez In order to conserve manpower, gasoline, rubber and equipment, \ TR MATE sy s Seliner s oSk e There isno suhsmuie for newspaper adverhsmg" announced by John L. McCopmick, | Territorial Director of Selective Service. Col. Killilea succeds Elsie B. Simmons, who has resigned. ISABELLE J ORGENSON Secretary Fellows Hall. ‘ Col. Killilea will also act as As- | sistant Director of the Salective | Service for Alaska in the absence | of Mr. McCormick, who has been | called to Washington, D. C., to at- tend a meeting of all State and Territoial’ Directors on May 8, 9 and 10. Col. Killilea is making his first trip to Alaska. He has been with the Selective Service since its in- ception and before coming to Juneau was State Procurement Officer for Massachusetts. — - CHIMNEY FIRE TODAY Shortly before noon today the Juneau Fire Department answered | an alarm at 3-2, and quickly ex- tinguished a chimney fire at the | Martin Apartments near the Home | Boarding House. No damage was reported. | sky, flame even over neutral Swe- den. The Germans lost 126 planes| and at least 58 more were wrecked |on the ground by the Americans in strafing airdromes on the way home. Still another German plane | was downed by the Swedes after it opened fire on Swedish antiaircraft. The loss of the American bomb- ers is the heaviest ever suffered by the Eighth U. S. Air Force. Nine of the American flying giants were forced down in Sweden, but the crews are safe with the excep- tion of one airman who was dead ‘wm-n the plane landed. Three more | heavies are reported to have land- ed in Denmark. Last night RAF heavy bombers | smashed Acchen, Nahhover and 'olhcr objectives in Central Ger- ‘m‘my Nine planns failed to return. Mr. and Mrs. Bruns will leave by plane tomorrow to make their home in Sitka where the groom is sta-, | tioned with the U. S. Signal Corps. PASTOR WOOD BACK Pastor H. L. Wood has just re- | turned in the Mission plane from a consulted with Pastor M. L. Miles on Mission business. He reports that Eldon Coon, with delegates to the convention to be | held in Ketchikan from April 28 to |30. He plans to return by way of Juneau with his party. Miss Madge Muchmore, the Bible | House Secretary, accompanied Pas- tor Wood to Sitka where she visited her sister, Mrs. M. L. Miles. FROM SITKA TRIP week-end trip to Sitka, where he | the Beverly B, will take a group of | | | Heres a very funny thing THIS NAVY FIGHTS THE WAR FOR FOOD about War Bonds T’S A FUNNY THING, but many people I still have the wrong slant on War Bonds. These people think that when they buy a Bond, they’re giving, or donating their money to the war. You might say they have agnn-and- bearit attitude about all their War Bond purchases. - financial backlog—a backlog that will help him do such things as build a home, send his children to school, and travel. ° And, finally, by investing the money that otherwise would be burning a hole in our pockets these days, we’re help- ing to keep down the cost of living. So it’s a very funny thing that some people still think they’re giving their money when they invest it in 2 War Bond. Well, that’s a strange attkude Be- cause while buying Bonds i patriotic, and while it is necessary toshelp the Government pay for planes and tanks and guns, it is not a personal sacrifice. In fact, buying 2 War Bond is just about ‘the most advantageous thing you can possibly do with your money. Why? You couldn’t make a safer invest- ment. The Government itself backs every dollar you invest. And the Government pays a good, sound rate of interest—you get $4 back for every $3 you put in. That means that when the war is over, everybody who’s been buying War Bonds-will have a cemfortable ~ The sweetest music to Q the ears of a North v 7 Country fisherman is the reassuring purr of his ship’s Diesel. He stakes his life upon the extra power to get him out of tight spots. Today, like the ships they serve, Standard Marine Prod- ucts are meeting the supreme its rugged efficiency — so he feeds it clean, uniform, power- packed Standard Diesel Fuel. He knows Standard Diesel Fuel comes to him 1009, clean, without impurities that injure delicate fuel injectors. Uniform in performance, it ignites test. Standard Diesel Fuel, RPM DELD, the Diesel engine lubricant used in Navy subma- rines, Standard Gasolines and gasoline engine oils are helping to write a stirring page in the saga of the Alaska fishing fleet —the navy that fights the war smoothly and cleanly, and has for food. LeZs o/ KEEP BACKING THE ATTACK ! PACIFIC AMERICAN FISHERIES