The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 26, 1945, Page 3

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SATURDAY, MAY 26, 1945 ~ WANT ADS THE DAILY ALASKA LMPIRL~ JUNhAU Al ASKA FOR SALE | WANTED BUSH and LANE Upright Piano, WANTED: l}npl:asnm, gloomy room coil bed spring, full size; two| mattresses, table tennis set, net,' paddles and two balls. Call at Church of Christ parsonage, 10th and E Streets. | FOR SALE—Several goud Toggen~ burg and Saanen grade milk| goats; also some pure blooded | stock; also young bucks. P. O. Box 2321, Juneau, Alaska. T bKTFF FOR SALE*Bui with closet large enough to accom- modate bedies, Write THE LOD- GER 1t \ary gas engine, 7 to 15-H.P, in good condition. Room 209, Hotel Juneau. SECOND MAID WANTED—:I cham- in private write P. O. ber family. Box 104. maid-waitress) Call 21, or -in gas tank, suitable for 2 or 3-H.P. WANTED—Man or woman for mu Call 6 brand new. at 800, after inboard motor; Joyce Williams p. m. mattress, Phone 244. DOUEBLE BED, and 1 dresser. HOUSE—Cash o Telephone Douglas 48. term: FOR SALE—Light-weight 4-cylin-| der Buda Diesel, 63-HP, mo“ model. Swanson Grocery. i “has (JAS BOAT—"Chechako 9 skates new gear, also new tmllmg‘WANTED Bulldozer man, min gear. $5,500, cash. Call at 806 Willoughby. | rOR .SALE~Hcm]ock dock pflmg“ 18 per ft. FOB Camp, near | Wrangell, plus 4c per ft. towage. Top quality, Elolin Logging Co. Wm. Paul, Jr, Juneau Agent. RESIDENCE on Auk Bay. P“”VIWANTED furnished. Beautiful view. Call 190 or Blue 298. R R T WANTE[. F‘RESH LOCAL EGUS for sale at | Harbor Market. Phone 352. (NCOME VIEW HOME — Three | blocks from Federal Building. Two | “spring | WANTED TO cleaning m., Sully's washing and general Apply before 10 a. Bakery. D TO Y —2- edroom house. Phone 281. s. wSTEADY MALL ROOMERS wanwd at the Haven Rooms. Phone 281. WANTED--Experience an wants job on troller. Apt. F, Kilburn Apts., Douglas. Phone 48, after 5:30 p. m. muckers. See Herb Waugh, St. Eugene Mining Corp., Ltd,, Klein Bldg. Phone 216. WANTED—Janitor. neau Hotel. WANTED — Expex iend Irving's Market. A’;xr)ly (Jasn— d clerk at Full-time driver at Irving’s Market lel pay top price fol all kinds second hand merchan-| dise except clothes. Douglas Trad- ing Post. Phone Douglas 25, P. O. Box 1237, Douglas. large apartments, each with two | | WANTED—Used furniture. 306 Wil- bedrooms, one bachelor apart- | ment. $140 a month income. : $11,800 total price, $6,000 cash my | equity, rest FHA. Will consider good boat or car for portion of cash consideration. Call Bob Henning, Blue 370, for appoint- | ment. i-ROOM FURNISHED HOUSE, oil | stoves; also 5 2-room cabins. In- quire 843 West Ninth Street. ‘BABY PIAY F‘EN" - Uscd only | three times Phone Blue 632. | | FOR SALE—4-Room house & lot, | strictly modern. Full basement, fully furnished. $2,500 cash; $3,000, terms. Phone 035-5 rings. :WEMHER DELAYS |an loughby. Phone 788. SOILPREPARATION (By The Associated Press) Cold, wet weatner nas delayed soil preparation and spring plant- ing throughout the Middle West but present prospects indicate a record: crop of winter wheat and i bumper yields of most other grains, Associated Press dis- closed today. Clearing skies and sharply higher ! temperatures this week relieved the survey fOR@SALE—Troller “Diana”—33 It.| monotony of rain and cold. long, 8% ft. beam, fully equipped. | Crop statisticians estimated that Chrysler Crown marine engine, in some sections of Illinois, second tirst class condition. See Harbor | ,,)y to Jowa as a corn producing Master. 2-ROOM furnished Apt. Oil heat, | hm‘h 513-A Willoughby. FOE RENT — Light housel eepmg Yobms. , Elderly gentleman pre- fegred. Call after 6 p. m. Ellingen HEATED ROOMS. Call after 3 p. m., 315 Gold Street. WINTER RATES, Seaview Apis. 0O}l and wood stoves, lights, laun- ! ¢y, Phone 236. ¥ i | | i | MISCELLANEOUS | PIANOS RENTED—1uned. Ander- | son Shop. THE FIXIT SHOP—General light, mpair work. Phone 567. Perma- I ment. $7.00 Faper Curls, $1 ap Lola Beauty Shop. FPhone 201 816 Decker Way (P you have empty rocms or apts. for desirable people. inform the Gastineau Hotel. "HARBOR MACHINE SHOP | West 11th & F St. GENERATOR WORK and MACHINE WORK LOST AND FOUND LOST—Bunch of keys on cord. | Reward. Return to Empire. F‘_é—UND—Girl’s white gold ring. Owner may have same by identi- fying and paying for this adv. FOUND—Keys attached to leather tag. Owner may have same by identifying and paying for this & adv. PO S v S SR S AT O FOUND — Pair gold-rim glasses. Owner may have same by identi- fying and paying for this adv. FOUND—White gold wedding band. Three chip-diamonds. Owner may have same by identifying and’ paying for this adv. FOUND “Pair “natural” shell- ‘rimmed glasses. Owner may have | same by identifying and paying for this adv. SONS OF NORWAY Meeting tonight at eight ‘in the Odd Fellows Hall. All members are asked to attend. W | SHOES REPAIRED k) WHILE YOU !m Y DAILY MAIL SERVICE Hollywood Shoe Shop T "state, 75 per cent of the crop would " | be in the ground by the end of the FOR RENT pe Towa has about one half its corn that the undersigned administrator | planted. B Flshlng Licenses Bring in Good Sum ZWASHINGTON, May 26—Anglers out for a little recreation chipped in $9,857,299 last year for the privi- ege. This was disclosed by Interior | Secretary Ickes ih his Fish and wildlife Service report for the fiscal year which ended June 30, 1944. The figure is the revenue col- | lected by the 48 states and Alaska from the sale of 7,846,169 fishing ministra'tor. Terms will be cash, and licenses. —— ., — LONG TERM SOLITAIRE MEMPHIS, Tenn. — If there's one 1945. i thing Reiter Webb likes to do, it's (Seal) to play solitaire, the Canfield sys- you who have gone out of the ser- don’t understand that laws have set ticn veterans. erates a huge medical system. of the cal i of our lives. gradually began to realize he'd bet- an ! cperation. 1so he'd in the service. 'feund, i lowing item of real property of this | estate, namely: tem. Webb has been playing the card game since he was a boy, and has kept records. we do a little better grade of PAINTING and PAPERING Many people have asked if we did Residence work and I wish to say we do and are taking care of these jobs as fast as we can possibly get to them. JAMES S. McCLELLAN Phone Douglas 374 He figures he’s First publication, May 5, 1945. inow 37, 141 polnts ahead oi the deck Last publxcat:on May 26, 1945 VETERANS' GUIDE By MAJOR THOMAS M. NIAL ! i D | PSRRIy /2 e®000000e0®s00e0c00ece o WASHINGTON — Maybe some of scccped a hele ‘out of it with a snow plow. Still, h2 had to answer that ques-| Was he nancially able to Jack got to figuring this way: |be was abl> to pay, but he wasn't financially able. cause he had a mortgage on his house, he had a wife and a kid, and he'd practically have to go in hock if he put out mon for his operation and hosplializa- uon. vice to the hazards of civilian life up a system of medical care for all pay? The Veterans’ Administration op- Most hospitals of the system are elaborate and seemingly ibstan- tial, and these are the places where veterans can get medical care when badly n There are gct to be @ So he answered “No” and turn- 2d in Form P-10 tc e V. A. He got his ital ion d cperation. T'll do my best to bore you with a little more of Form P-10 in a later article. But I've sort of jumpead the gun in telling about an able-bodied vice man seeking free medical care in-a V. A. hospital, because the disabled men come 5 That's because an “or erence” has been established. Nat- urally, tke veteran who suffered a disability “incurred in the service” and get a V. A. surgeon to make should be in the first group—there the attack cn the both me throat. scem to be five. I k two pages | But he discovesed lhucs more to|of clocely printed stuff put out by V. A. medical care n just having the Veterans' Adminis ion and service man decide to have an |tiied to boil it down to s f I could |understand it. It was a limitations and we've of them. The medi- care am isn't a complete, frea scheme. Yet, in a way, it comes within bembing range of being a plan to mother our health the rest When ex-T/4 Jack Brown was working at a nice-paying job and or of pref- ter have his tonsils wiped out, he figured he'd just drop in at some Veteran's Administration hospital You s Jack didn’t shoot craps, saved a little money while He was over thirty- | eight and he got out of military harness to inactive duty, because he had a nice job open for him in a war plant back home. Real guml dough, too. He started to save a| couple of dollars now and then. | After awhile he had a sore throat. Then ancther. Sore throats began, to come almost as frequently as Jack’s pay envelope. That is when 'Jack decided it'd be a good idea to have a Vaterans’ Administration surgeon work on him for free. | But Form P-10 stopped him—tem- porarily. Because Form P-10, he had a question which, if answered yes, would bar him from treatment in a V. A. hospital. The question was, “Are you financially able to pay the necessary expenses of hospital or domi 'y care?” | Jack took the form home where he could ponder a bit. If he paid| scme surgeon a fee for the operation, | paid operating room charges, paid for a bed in a hospital for a couple | of days, it would maks his modest bankroll lock like somebody had NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY In the United States Commissioner’s | Court for the Juneau Precinct, Division Number One, Territory of \ Alaska. In the Matter of the E&h(e of MAX ‘ SAUL, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, of said estate will sell at public auc- tion to the highest bidder the fol- The West one-half (1) of Lot One (1), Block Forty-one (41) of the townsite of the Town of Douglas, as shown on the official plat thereof on file in the Gen- eral Land Office, together with one-story frame house situated thereon, and appurtenances be- longing thereto. Said sale will be held at 2:00 P. M. on Monday, May 29, 1945 at the of- fice of the U. S. Commissioner, Room 513 of the Federal Building in Jumau Alaska. The right to reject any and all bids that are not deemed sansfacton is reserved by the ad- ,a quit claim deed by the adminis-| trator will be issued to the purchaser. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, May 5,i FELIX GRAY, U. S. Commissioner and Ex-officio Administrator of the Estate of Max Saul, deceased. P. O. Box 1216 Diesel Engine Repair Welding Fuel System Service Compression Testing Pyrometer Balancing STOCKTON WEBB S3NERIRENIEEEIREEY AL W UEEEEREEINNERENNERNEINNTEEANNN T TNENREERNUSEEY IN SITKA WEBB—FORBES MARINE REPAIRS (AT VITA-FOOD FLOAT) PROPELLER REPAIR and REPITCHING by Michigan Pitch-Block System and Sundstrand Balancer Precicion Valve Grinding and Refacing Modern Precision Insiruments for All Work EFEIREEEENIRNENEE Machine Work Gasoline Engine Repair Carburetor Repair Generator Service Ignition Repair ettt B L T TR LR EP R R BEN FORBES™ EB2FAERRREARRLE: st Tu cut work r 1 giv dre m The mc tough | squure gle you m up. but in my next article T'll the best outline I could TIDES TOMORROW o e May 27, 1945 e e Tide 1:47a.m.: Tide 8:18a.m 1 Tide 14:37 p.m.: Tide 20:17p.m High Low TIDES MONDAY May 28, 1945 lide 2:16a.m.: Tide 8:52a.m.: de 15:10 p.m.: 0:50 p. m CDA AWARD 10U Unavoidably postponed from last the award of a handsome linen tablecloth will be sday at 8:30 p. m. at s Shoe Store, 197 S. Frankl the Cathelic Daughters of incunced tod e area of the Solo- estimated at 17,000 day total 1 1 Islands miles PUBLIC FAREWELL SUNDAY FOR 3 AT SALVATION ARMY Captains Morris and Car- ruthers Transferred- Mrs. Lesher Leaving The Salvation Army will hold a 1 meeting Sunday afternoon in its hall on Willoughby at which time a public l\ll\\(“ to Capt. Gwen Carruthers Capt. Margaret Morris and Mrs. B. Lesher will be held Captains Carruthers and have been the commandi: of the Juneau Corps for year, having succeeded Capt. Ted Dyck in this responsibility. These two young ladies have spent several year s officers of the Salvation Army in Alaska and have now re- ceived -orders to go to California and assume command of the Army's work in Hayward, a few miles south of Oakland. Capt. Morris was stationed in Juneau fo rtwo terms prior to her present appointment, and during these years made many friends who will be sorry to see her go. R Morris officers the past Capt. Carruther: the daughter of Brig. W. J. Carruthers, who' for many years was Divisional Com- mander of Alaska, during the time Salvation Army Headquarters were in Wrangell. She attended the Wrangell schools, and later entered the Salvation Army’s Training Col- a candidate from the Wrangell Corps, Capt. and Mrs. R. B. Lesher came to Juneau 15 years ago and for five years commanded the local Salvation Army work. For the past two and one-half years, Capt Lesher has been engaged in defense werk in Al and in June of this yei will complete his present con- tract in the Aleutians. Mrs. Lesher and their three children, Joan Peggy and Bob, will join Capt Lesher in Seattle, and after a short vacation, they will again take up their Salvation Army work as com- manding officers of a corps in the States. The public attend this service, resentative speakers pate. as is cordially invited to in which rep- will partici- s PAUL KEGAL IN TOWN Paul Kegal, well known oldtimer, was an overnight visitor from the Westward, and left early this morn- ing by plane for the South. R LAWRENCE VISITS Bill Lawrence, of Haines, guest at the Gastineau Hotel. is a People of JUNEAU Dur Givota in e 706 War Loan i $425,000.00 Welll toll the DOES that figure sound big, neighbor ? Well, those Super- forts that are plastering Japan are big—and cost plenty. Battleshlps are big—and cost millions. The job our fighting men are doing is big—and the cost is staggering. So, of course, our job is big. But we can do it if you and every other patriotic American in this city buy a BIGER bond than before . ..or invest a BIGGER portion of income in War Bonds now! Study the chart on the right. Sec what your country ex- pects you to' do in the 7th War Loan. Remember, you are part of America—a part of America’s might! Your Wor Bonds Are Like READY CASH War Bonds are your safest invest- ment. Safe in principal . . . safe in return. You get $4 for every $3 you invest, at maturity. EXPLOSION INARSENAL; ELEVEN DIE EDGEWOOD, Md, May 26— Eleven persons killed and 52 in- jured, three critically, was the toll today of an explosion and fire at historic Edgewood Arsenal, the first major accident there since the start of the war. A special Army Board quiry is investigating the blast which rocked the station, head- quarters c¢f the Army’s Chemical Warfare Service, shortly after 3 p. m. yesterday. It occurred in a building filled with civilian workers assembling and loading two-pound igniter hand grenades. - e MRS. DEVAR HERE Mrs. Dorothy Devar, of Skagway, has arrived in Juneau and is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. L gl o . SEATTLE MEN HERE of In- A. 8. Anderson, Jerry C. Bryant and Phillip R. Ruen, of Seattle, have arrived in Juneau and are guests at the Baranof Hotel. ‘ W"R LOAKM PACIFIC AMERICAN FISHERIES TR0 FU11304PY, Z) B uowspndoQ Amseedy, Jo s9o1dsne oy 39pun posedosd—JuouioSiI0ADE AXSE9LL, 'S IPPO Ue sy WL

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