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PAGE EIGHT nld it to themselves [] [] r figure g that is is not customary deed | tion, Fa a \\w at he based hi ssump- uart on it thai By Harold Bates, Henry Sully, Block Purchased I’HHttl down, art finally \dmn ter no knowledge that (H]bll\ and n Machine Shop Buildir “thm did not add to the proper- This is one of the Imu\t busi- | ties in the time between the two, [xuuhl\ to tak (lm\ll”ls the first of which was property e plans for use of the why the light company has follow- Jude the remodeling of [ed different procedures in its ac- 20th Century store into'counting than those Stuart advo- vy modern bakery, a cates, Faulkner concluded the pre- ew me for the very popular sentation for the company by call- Sully’s Bakery. ;ing Homer Nordling, Eelectrical 3 - =i Engineer - for the Alaska Juneau ! Gold Mining Coempany. Nordling lonly substantiated that the AEL&P | |xm at times, pulled a peak load |from the A-J Generators of 3,000 Light and Power Company rates “00 000 DEED o e with light company cashier C. B (HA[[ENGED BY Holland on the answering end At one point high interest wns[k”““m“ attained by an exchange bovwm-n[ Letters Introduced Local Firms Laud AEL&P Service in Letters Read AEL&P Counsel H. L. Faulkner and; The AEL&P case was then closed at Rate Hearing City Utilities Engineer Walter T. by introduction of additional ex- Stuart hibits, including several letters from Faulkner had introduced a deed|local firms and prominent indivi- to the present company of all ! duals commending the service furn- properties held by a prior Duncan- ‘nhvd them by the ecompany and Corbus-Malony combine, in consid-the equitable rates charged for it eration for $100,000. Stuart chal-jParticularly lauding the service lenged that as an original cost rec-| were letters from the Juneau Cold ord by stating that only shortly Storage and the Juneau Lumber previously the Duncan-Corbus-Ma-|Mills, signed respectively by Wallis Juneau City|lony group had purchased the S. George and Roy Rutherford same properties from Thorpe in-|Both said the dependability of Testimony before the Counecil last night in the hearing s d‘mld( in May, 180€, the second in| e to be congrat-|August of that year. acquired this very, Following Holland's testimony, 0. which was concerned mainly with THL DAILY ALASKA LMPIRF JUNEAU ALASKA standing value to their firms. Other testimonial letters were from three light company competi tors—J. W. McKinley, W. P, John- son and Charles Waynor—and from 'E. E. Ninnis of the Juneau Moto Co., J. S. McKinnon of the Laundry, Allen Shattuck and Ken- yon McLean. Ernest Parsons recei reading of the letters with a cor ment that they have nothing t do with rates. Ithat service rendered should ! considered in rate fixing. Income Tax 46 Percent Final figures given by Holland was that the Income Tax paid the company on its 1945 operati |was $59,604.06; 46.85 percent of its| ‘nr‘r income. Previously Holland had |43.7 percent of the net income 'that years when the return on investment figured 11.6 percent cluding $7,711.99 from merchand ing and more than $8,000 in in-| terest on investments. Faulkner queried Holland on the practlcax aspects of an accounting kyewm——lxke the government’'s—that |would show all the various break- ‘zlowns demanded by Stuart. Reply was that the much larger needed would run operating costs out of bounds. Holland testitied that the com- pany will lose considerablz reven- ues this year from shutdown of| such government projects as the Subport and the fact that the Lum- ber Mills is again set to supply it own juice, but agreed with Smnl that revenues for the first two months of this year show an in- crease of one percent over the sim- being conducted on Alaska Electric: terests for only $25,000 and that' AEL&P service had been of out- ilar 1945 period. BUY A CASE-wmuune== Finest Duality Fruits and Vegetables 2 No. 2 SLICED PINEAPPLE -. - - 3 No, 22 FANCY PEARS ' - o f- /i - value $ .60 value 1.29 3 No. 2%, HOME STYLE PEACHES - - wvalue 1.20 2 No. 2% FANCY APRICOT HALVES - value .78 2 No. 2% BLACK CHERRIES - - - - value 110 2 No. 2% ROYAL ANN CHERRIES - - - value 1.10 2 No. 2% FANCY PLUMS - - - - - value .62 1 No. 2 FANCY BLACKBERRIES - - value .39 1 No.2 FANCY BOYSENBERRIES - - value .43 2No. 2% FANCYFIGS - - - - - - value .78 2 No. 2 FANCY GRAPEFRUIT -- - - value .70 2 No. 2% FANCY FRUIT COCKTAIL - - value .90 24 cans—Total Value, OPA Ceiling Price - - - $9.89 SAVE MORE THAN 12% 1.20 OUR PRICE $8.69 2 No. 2 cans GREEN LIMA BEANS - - - value$ .46 3No.2cans S.and W. SPINACH - - - value .75 4 No. 2cans S. and W. CUT GREEN BEANS - value .92 3 No. 2 cans PUREE TOMATOES - - - value .54 2 No. 2 cans FANCY CREAM COBRN - - value .42 2 No. 2 cans FANCY KERNELCORN - - value .46 4No. 2cans S.and W.PEAS - - - - wvalue 1.00 2 No. 2 cans LIBBY WHOLE BEETS - - value .50 1 pint SAUERKRAUT - - - - - - value .29 1 can MIXED VEGETABLES - - - value .23 24 cans—Value OPA Ceiling Price - - - $T57 SAVE MORE THAN 12% .69 OUR PRICE $4.83 ( A N N E D Dari%);-(rlnafion ( A S E M l I' K i Borden's s4099 TOMATO svwst 4-No.2 - $3.49 JUICE $3.69 pEL MONTE ] 2--46° 02, JUICE $38.149 s.and W 12..46 02, MORNING DELIVERY ...CLOSES 10 A. M. DOUGLAS DELIVERY CLOSES 10 A. M AFTERNOON DELIVERY ..CLOSES 3 l’ MINIMUM DELIVERY . P20t B CASH GROCERY Wages Going Up In reply ‘to Faulkner, added, however, that “there’s no getting away from it,”” 1946 operat- ing costs will be considerably in- creased. He cited approximately $17,000 in wage increases already in effect and negotiations for addi- tional increases pending on the out- come of this rate hearing. The proposed union contract and wage scale were introduced by the company. It was stated last night that the next session, Friday evening at 8 o'clock, will hear the last of the testimony—leaving only the argu- ments by counsél to follow, pro- bably Monday evening. Then the Council will sit down to set tke rates. - GARDEN (LUB STARTS LANDSCAPING STUDY The Juneau Garden Club at their yesterday afternoon laid a course of study in land- sca ardening, with Mrs. Ernest Gru 1g and Mrs. Earl McGinty named to head the committee, and the following members signed up tor the course; Mesdames Linn Forrest, Edith Barras, Floyd Fa- gerson, Hugh Wade, W. J. Walker, H. Kingsbury and Charles For- ward. Two books relating to the sub- ject of landscape gardening were purchased by the club to aid in the study. During the program hour Mrs. Forrest explained the method of starting seed flats, and Miss Ann Coleman gave directions how to construct cold frames and outlined their uses. An Oriental Flower arrangement was displayed by Mrs, Jack Fletch- er, and Mrs. A. F. Zimmerman showed a “charm string” made of seed pods and gourds. Tea was served by the hostesses Mrs. Josephine Boyd and Mrs. Zim- merman. e —— DRINK KING BLACK LABEL! A More Youthful Look parners A B.C Alphabet Bra You can achieve it with a bra that really fits both the dia- phragm and the bust line as it molds the figure into a new young silhouette. o~ % ™ Women's Appaner Baranof Hotel Building “It’s the Nicest Store In Town™ Alaska | Faulkner rejoin-d! said that the 1944 Income Tax was staff | Holland ! el flyrrnenfyreacn SOAP 1946 THURSDAY, MARCH 21, CENTURY D Suver-Markar “Alaska’s Finest” FREE I)ELIVERY 8:30 A. M. to 5:30 P. M. STORE HOURS . DELIVERY SCHEDULE: DAILY JUNEAU DELIVERIES DOUGLAS DELIVERY CLOSES DAILY AT NOON FRIDAY, SATURDAY and MONDAY SPECIALS Grocery Department—~Phone 513 PUREX JELLO® PEARS ¢ FLOUR Half Gallon RASPBERRY ISLE OF GOLD CENTENNIAL BARTLETT SILK SIFTEDR Cleaner and Bleach 3Packages No. 215 tin Finest for Baking 37 14 3’9( 6 for {501bh. 52_99 Ayrrenfiyeserfyerenlips SYRUP OLD DUTCH 8$2.25 ¢ sack A arnifpsrcelifrsmnclifeva § ofsrcelifarmecifessotfva COTTAGE STRING cane i o 4 - CLEANSER CHEESE 3 for BEANS 1 1b., 6 oz. jar KRIS;TQO:‘::R;O\"S ROSE CUT 29 29 Spam—Prem 10:30 A. M., 2:30 P. M., 4 P. M. WHITE KING 30 | 45 1 10 | 49 GREEN BEANS 31c §15¢ G U armcilifprsadlifesraclifs § el otrmcelf el vsrsely e Treel Todized or Plain C 0 M B LARGE SIZE 12 oz. tin 11b., 10 oz. pkg. 16 oz. pkg. WE INVITE YOU to SELECT ihe VERY FINEST in FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES Apples, Oranges, Florida Oranges, Lemons, Limes, Gra pefruit, Pears, Calavos, Rhubarb, Tomatoes, Lettuce, Mustard Greens, Lecks, Green Peppers, Cauliflower, E ndive, Brussel Sprouts, Spinach, Parsley, Radishes, Squash, Rutabagas, Cabbage, Garlic, Onions, New and Old Potatces, Turnips, Carrots, Celery and Green Onions Grapefruit, 2 for 23¢ MEDIU M SIZE Texas Pink . . Full of Juice Ibs. 35¢ RED DELICIOUS Apples 2 FIRM AND JUICY .TUMATOES- Ib. 23¢ FIRM—RIPE READY FOR USF WHOLE . . . HALF or IIUARTEIIS > Lego Lambus 49C Ib.70¢ | POT ROASTS - Ib. 38¢ Ib. 45¢ FRESH RABBIT - SLAB BACON - Ib. 45¢| PORKROASTS - ANY SIZE PIECE—Carsten’s, Armour’s, Frye’s Lean, Meaty Fresh Link Sausage WE HAVE A FBESH SHIPHENT OF SEAFOODS . CRAB ... .Pound 40c SMOKED bALMON RER OYSTERS . B LI _Pints 85¢ FRESH CRAB.MEAT FRESH SHRIMP _Pound $1.30 KIPPERED SALMON . Made in Our Own Kitchen FOR YOUR SUNDAY BREAKFAST Ib. 55¢ Pound 75¢ YV, pkg. T0c _...Pound 75¢