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PAGE EIGHT ™ RS R e TOM GEORGE invites YOU to the New Chef KAY WILLIAMS D¢ Seafood . . . Steaks Chicken Dinners ~ Dining . . . Dancing Shrimp or Crab Cocktail Fried Spring Chicken (Local) 2.50 T-Bone Steak 2.50 T-Bone Steak (Large) 3.00 Includes Country Club Salad, Spaghetti, Hot Biscuits, Honey, Tea or Coffee 50c Deluxe Dinners New York Cut . 4.00 Filet Mignon 4.00 Porter House 3.50 Frog Legs 3.50 Includes Country Club Salad, ghetti, Hot Biscuits, s&‘::vney, Tea or Coffee Seafoods French Fried Prawns ‘“Tartar Sauce . 2.50 Broiled Lobster Drawn Butter . 3.0C French Fried Oysters Tartar Sauce . 2.50 Includes Country Club Salad, Italian = Spaghetti, Hot Bis- cuits, Honey, Tea or Coffee ¢ - Salads : Shrimp, Crab or Combination 2.00 11 Hot Biscuits, Honey, Tea or Coffee Chinese Foods All Kinds of Sandwiches PAY Ei Have You Tried Our Special Country Club < Breaklast? 2.00 Ham or Bacon and Eggs Hot Biscuits, Honey, French Fries Y LIQUOR STORE IN CONNECTION Open All Night . REMEMBER . . . We Are Open All Night . . . WE AIM TO PLEASE! R TR D | Jim Davis and {Family Here for {Summer’s Fishing ‘ In Juneau on their way to lhe | Davis trap sites, Capt. James V. Airways Monday and were prepar- | 1ing to leave Juneau today by boat. Capt. Davis, whose interests in|the seventh time. oS e PAYCAS]IANBSAVE eSeP Alaska are many, still considers Alaska his home, though he’ has been away from the Territory much | of the time for the last several| years. He looks forward to the time | he can return to Juneau. He has nining interests in southeast Alaska, | n addition to his fisheries interests | and is president of Marine Airways, a partner company in Alaska Coastal. Davis was Speaker of the House! of Representatives in 1943, and had | served in the legislature in 1937, ; 1939 and 1941. “Here is something I'd like to know,” Davis began a question to this reporter. “Why didn’t the De- | partment of Interior practice’ what it preaches when it chose a succes- sor to Don Foster, who I understand | is being transferred? “I am disappointed that Mr. Chapman did not name William Paul Sr, or Roy Peratrovich to head the Alaska Native Service Either of these men would bring to the position a wealth of intel- | ligence and information about the | native people and the requxromcnts of the position.” Capt. Davis had one more sug- gestion of interest: “Though I am a Democrat and have no business suggesting anything to the Republi- can party, I would suggest that the difficult job of replacing Capt. Lathrop as Republican National Committeeman should go to Sid Charles. Cap can't actually be re- placed. His death was a terrific blow to Alaska, his party and his friends of all parties, but I think Sid, an- other old timer, might do all right n there as Natlonal Committee- man.” It was by a narrow margin that Sapt. Davis escaped death last Feb- cuary when he was gored by a Guernsey bull. The accident which securred on his ranch near Seattle oroke four ribs and caused him serious internal injuries. Jimmie and Rolly have only one fault to find with the mnext few weeks they will spend on boats in Alaska waters. They won't be able to play baseball. Jimmie is star fielder of the Greenback boys’ team and Rolly, an ardent admirer of his orother’'s prowess “plays a little, too.” The boys are in the 7th and #th grades at_Coupeville. Reports on Demaris and Anna Lois, both former Juneau school :irls are these: Demmy and her hus- sand, now Capt. and Mrs. Orlan Jean, are on a short trip to Yel- owstone Park, vacationing before Sapt. Dean’s induction into the army. Anna. Lois, former regional aead of the Rainbow Girls and for wo seasons a reporter on The Em- pire, is now Mrs. Don S. Smith. She vas graduated from the University )f California in journalism. Her hus- yand, a recent graduate of Califor- 1ia, is an engineer with Proctor and Gamble at Long Beach, Calif. They aave a year old daughter and re- cently visited the Davis family at their Whidby Island ranch. “There are Alaskans all over Whidby,” Davis said. “Oscar Ander- on, president of the Alaska fish- ermen’s union, is a near neighbor wnd calls whenever he thinks some- hing might be going on in Alaska ‘hat I don't know about. We don’t set far behind on Alaskan affairs.” That would be hard for Jim Davis o do, Member of a pioneer Wash- ngton territory family (his uncle Allen Weir was first secretary of he State of Washington), Jim Davis first came to Alaska in 1911 with s father, Rolly Davis, who had ong been in the northwest fish- ries business. His brother, Don Davis, is manager of Nick Bez' P. E. darris Company and a Whidby Is- land resident. P0LISH LINER'S TWO "PICKUP’ PASSENGERS JAILED IN ENGLAND | SOUTHAMPTON, Eng., Aug. 16 —(—Two Americans who boarded he Polish liner Batory under un- sual circumstances last ‘week were smoved by British police here to-| AVE @ S o PAY CASH S ¢ PAY CASH AND SAVE ¢ $ @ PAY CASHl AND SAVE o $ e PAY CASH AND SAVE lay. Immigration authorities announ- | ed both men will be held inj Vinchester jail until Aug. 30, when hey will be deported aboard the ,atory on her return trip to New| sork. Both were refused ‘per-| nission to land” under the aliens' rder—a technicality. The two are William Jesse New- ‘ on, 26, of New York and Howard Jampbell, 29-year-old stowaway of | Jes Moines, Ia. Newton was taken aboard in the Atlantic Ocean about 100 miles off | iew York after he landed his| ented seaplane alongside the ship | ug. 8. Capt. Jan Cwiklinski said !heI lier told him he lost his way and as almost out of gasoline. “There was not quite half-a-gal- ( on of gasoline in the plane’s| anks,” the captain said. NANT ADS BRING RESULIS Wisconsin Farm Woman Sees Vision For Seventh Time NECEDAH, Wis., Aug. 15—P—A | jDa\,]q and his sons, Jim, Jr., and | back-country farm woman said to- Rolly W., arrived by Pan American |day that ab |she was granted a vision of the| Virgin Mary, appearing @ - (4 = 12 « THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA timated officially at nearly 100,000 persons gathered for the occasion | Mrs. Mary Anna Van Hoof said | the Virgin Mary appeared to her |and told her to “‘Pray and pray | hard. ‘The time is short’”. Capt. Preston McEvoy, chief of the state traffic police detachment said that “nearly 100,000 persons | were jammed into five acres, stand- ing in a blazing sun amid billow- ing clouds of sand, to witness the ‘ scene. Several persons fainted, the stroke of noon to her for A multitude es- 20,000 at midmorning, with more | than and several special trains arriving. | man emerged and knelt alone be- fore the shrine. A loudspeaker in- toned the decades of the rosary. About 60 priests and 30 nuns were ple seemed to be one of quiet rev- at the kneeling wall before the erence. shrine and in front of the multi- tude. | about two to one . i A The crowd had muiltip.ied rx‘omi a hundred chartered buses The gaunt 4l-year-old tarm wu- Coast Iumd lhe \essel ‘The an.n.ude of most of the peo- Women outnumbered men FISHERMAN EVACUATED Ben Wilcox, 56, a member of the crew on the fishing vessel Success was evacuated to Ketchikan by a Guard aircraft yesterday from the Dall Island area afte: injuring his neck in a power shaft WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1950 —— . o Short. Long and Short \OI It Makes Things glarge Next Door Today Mr. and Mrs. Large. No. 24. SUTTON, Eng., Aug. 16 — (P — Until today, there was a series of next-door addresses on Carshalton Road which went like this: No. 18, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Long. | yesterday. All No. 20, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth!lightning struck the stack. Rl ufl/%///(/((((((«%é( P \% At = Your Heinz . KETCHUP No. 2 Can Case of 24 Large Boitle 13¢ 3.10] 27¢ S and W — HAND PEELED SECTIONS — FANCY GRAPEFRUIT No. 2 can 29« LIBBY — BARTLETT PEARS . No.21 can 3¢ SHURFINE — FANCY PACK APPLESAUCENo.2can 20 HILLSDALE — SLICED PINEAPPLE, No. 2 an 30« ROSEDALE — ROYAL ANN CHERRIES No. 303 can 23( CHURCH GRAPE JUICE . Ouarls 49 ORANGE JUICE . . 49 14c SHURFINE — NO. 2 CAN Campbell's TOMATO JUICE TOMATO SouP 2 @ns 25¢ Tastewell PEAS - «« K\\\\\\\\&« S \x\\\\@ 20th Celntury Super Market YES C and H Cane TISSUE|SUGAR 300 Count 50 Ib. sack FROZEN Strawberries 1 ih. pkg. 49 27« $5.95 TEA BAGS, 50 hagbox 59 CORNED BEEF HASH. 39c BROWN SUGAR . . 33 FLOUR . . 5Ib.sack 59 HOME MADE PICKLES 27¢ e PALMOLIVE . . Bar 10 VEL . Large Package 29 $2.75 N /(((((Qg«/// / ‘///// //€<§l////‘((////////§g >)) fal S \< S \\&(‘é MORTON SALT 20 oz. Package Sunshine Hyde Park COOKIES 12 oz. pkg. 10 39 FLOTILL — SOLID PACK TOMATOES No. 23 can 23« SHURFINE — FANCY PACK SPINACH . No.2¢an 1 8¢ SPAGHETTI . ... 17 PORK and BEANS, (an 1 3« LIBBY — DEEP BROWN SWIFT'S VIENNA SAUSAGE (an 19¢ SWIFT’S 3Y oz.can 5% oz can POTTED MEATS 1 0 17c BORDEN—CARNATION—DARIGOLD — CANNED MILK 1 5¢can; 6 cans 8 3¢ OARIGOLD BUTTER Lb. 67¢ BREAKFAST SAUSAGES (an 45¢ FARM FRESH PRODUCE| QUALITY MEAT VALUES A Large Variety =-=-==-== At Lowest Prices Fresh — Crisp LETTUCE TRANSPARENT APPLES . Cahlorma Shaffer — U. S. lo l—!'ancy‘firade POTATOES California — Marsh — Seedless GRAPEFRUIT, Large, Size 64's. 2 for 25¢ Largest — Size 150 ORANGES Fresh — Lean Pound 1 3¢ ~ Pound 10¢ Armour’s Star 10 Ibs. 59( SLAB BACON .Clmce — Marbled — Grain-Fed PRIME RIB ROAST OF BEEF . 79ch. WE HAVE THE FINEST GRADE-A MEATS YOU CAN BUY . AT THE LOWEST PRICES . . . WHY PAY MORE? BONELESS PORK BUTTS, 410 6 Ibs. 59clb. Direct from the Farm 1o You Fresh . . . Dozen 69c/ COUNTRY STYLE SAUSAGE . OVEN READY FRYERS 69¢ lb. 55¢lb. / HSVD AVd @ € ® AAVS GNV.HSVO AV @ § @ / HSVO AVd © & ® ISVD AVd @ FAVS ¢ No. 22, Mr. and Mrs, Alfred Little. % Short’s daughter, Kachleen married Frank ‘The newlyweds are moving into TUNIS, TUNISIA, Lug. 16—(P— Five Tunisian shepherds took ref- uge in a haystack during a storm were killed whe: AY CASII AND SAVE eS8 e PAY CASH AND SAVE = - P !‘ VS GNV HSVD AVd © § @ FAVS o $ o PAY CASH AND SAVE oS e PAY CASH AND SAVE ¢ $ ¢ PAY CASH AND SAVE