The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 5, 1948, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE SIX WEATHERMAN SMILES ON CLEAN - UP CAMPAIGN Bright Sunshine and Warm Breezes Stimulate Parficipation When the 1948 Juneau Clean-Up Paint-Up, Fix-Up campaign was announced for April 24 it was hoped that weather conditions would favcr the program. With a heavy snow on Saturday night, the first morning the committee was dubious, but not for lor Warm breezes and bright stn- shine, just the type of weather that any alert Chamber of Com- merce would order, came along the next day, honse to the appeal h keeping with the fine New shelv- of one of the wall bstantial in- and materia the store. angement labor front s ¥ T The I 5 . have of € are only a few of many t improvem ent observed. The dc th Ala m- hip Cor are being B ly reno ith new planking wnd | capital invest- ment in improvement is going .to [ malke the aggregate valuation of erties of the city greater than before this campaign started No effort has been made to re- 7 Bt ia o port in the numerous im- IF YOUR biintes js sus- | e made on homes pended by fire, you fage a | hroughout Juneau. The residence serious loss of income be- 5 cause you cannot make or sell your products. w the Re: of fan Church fire a few wee ago, red A sheet-metal : rear t Mi nd tion to t damaged by being re- is Business Interruption In- surance helps do for your business what your busi- ness would have done for itself, if there had been no ga of 3 1 completed s a storage interruption. puilding adjacent to The Empire. Consult this Hartford Thus the report might be extended the general idea is crystal agency about it! In spite of what the pessi- say, progress goes on apace y hand of the distinctive windows through the campaign was the ro- gratify-| I It attracted considerable | Fix ittention. Scheduled for early completion is the Christian Church edifice at 10th and E Streets which will be, cording to «Dr. Homer C. Mur- surfaced with a coat of as- siding. Of general interest is the very thorough going-over given to the municipal ball park grounds Tues- v cvening. evidence, and much work ac- mplished New boards were >d in the fence, the ground s thoroughly cleaned, and the diamond is now ready for the enjoyment of those who did this work, as well as for many others vhio did not. Thus, the extension of the cam- paign for another week gives ev- eryone a chance to do those last minute jobs, and Mayor Hendrick- leclares that the result of the a town as neat and tidy as you wish, and one that should c ; make a pleasing impression on the visitors who come to Juneau dur- ing the tourist season, which is just- at hand. - .o FIFTY - ORE_ ARRIVE BY ALASKA COASTAL Fifty-one persons arrived and 56 left via Alaska Coastal flights to and from Juneau yesterday as fol- lows: 1 From Tulsequah: R. Lindsay, F. Povershock, J. Thilsen, E. Lindsay, G. Dwyer, J. Gibb, Mr. and Mrs. H Parliament, C. Saunders, G. H. Hale, I. J. Burrows, K. P. Knapp, and R Short, From Small Cove: Anderson, Fred i Wendt, James Simyeon. From Skagway: Kay Reed, Ha- zel McLeod, Kenny Reed, Lva Phil- lops, Bill Reed, May George, W. W. Reed, Raymond Peterson and Ron- ald Peterson. Froim Patterson Bay: Gust and Helen Nelson, and Sam Coften. From Sitka: Earl A, Cox, Bud Whitesides, J. Rance Morris,. A. P. Bayne, K. Axelson, Joseph Tassel, cemposition brlck-pntturn-l | A large turn-out was| Trustls ~ JusiBust ~ [nBerlin jis reaping rich harvests for Berlin crooks, and lonesome women are its chief victims. The official Soviet newspaper, “Taegliche Rundschau, surveying | Berlin's crime picture, told Berliners |that petty thefts could be reduced by 50 per cent if people were “more distrustful.” | It had an especially unsympathe- |tc word for man-hungry young wo- /men who “after three dances with |a new acquaintance take him home {and then are astonished if, next jday, he has made off with their |valuables and perhaps part of their | furniture.” + Another trick of “attractive young ! men” who are met through date; .bureaus is to make off with the jcoats of their women companions after they are left in dance hal cloak rooms. Perhaps the most frequent con-| fidence games are played with food ration cards. A “sharpie” will ap- proack a citizen and offer him : plan for getting double his ration on the card. When the guileless per- | son parts wiith his card—it is for good, for the crook never returns. Another well-known“operator” is the fake policeman. Bogus cops dupe citizens into opening their homes for searches which eventually cost them dearly—in foods, tobaccos and ‘mon:{v which are confiscated. | ———-———— 'WALTER GELBACH, | BERLIN—The coniidence game | EYE CUER, KEEPS TABS ON SHIPPING By BILL BALDWIN BALTIMORE-Walter Gelbach's { Waldheim (255) . hes rack of the Juneau Powered °F» Thomas Ripley, N. Haley. From Cobol: John D. Ballard, From Hoonah: Alice Hinchman. From Haines: J. B. Carlyle., iship comes in every day, but he has I)e: to go aboard. Gelbach. Baltimore’s 70-year-old | | | i _SHATTUCK AGENCY INSURANCE + BONDS Junsau. Alaska T these germer were the SHERWOOMN § Neorth Star DAIRY MILEK Now Availabie... eecooeos ASk for It " on sale at B. M. Behrends Co. : ® (astineau Grocery ® © Tarhor Markei n Up, Paint Up,! From Gustavus: Elmer Adams. From Pelican: Dorothy Gillen and ) J. McKinley. | From Excursion Inlet: E. Alizayo, /B. Untilaseo and Billy Duncan. To Gustavus: Gene Chase, Geor- ge Stober, Vern Ray and Carl Hayes. To Pelican: Fred Newburn, Joyce Thompson. To Haines: F. Lawrence, George Stoll, Isabel Metler, Mrs. A. Nelson and D. A. Hoffman. To Sitka: Doris Wallace, Mrs. A. lenn, Mrs. Rita Hemp and Jean Tensen. To Chetham: Ber Wold. To Sitka: ¥an Peterson, Jim Cul- certson, A. Littlefield and Fred | Fredrickson. To Ketchikan: Charles Burdick. To Wrangell: Dave Ferris. | To Hood Bay: F. Anderson, T. E. Birheland and O. Bolme. To Tulsequah: H. Baxter, R. Pa- ron, E. Giddings, M. Eld, E. Berry- man, M. F. McDonald, J. Armstrong, |R T. Trembly, F. Eastman, W. J. Beeson, D W. Burger, G. H. Fur- | ness, L. Smith, P. Millos, H. Camp- bell, Albert Carlson and E. Bach- {man, | R ! \TERIOR WEATHER | Temperatures are warmer . this i merning over the middle Yukon 1 nd Tanana Valley ranging from {19 to 29 degrees. Yesterday the highest temperatures ranged from 130 to 41 degrees. R JUNEAU YACHT CLUB Meets Friday, May 7, 8 p.m., Har- bor Cafe (Fish Face Sam’s). portant meeting. 880 3t Im-| ship lockout, spends eight hours a day thinking, talking and dreaming |akout ships. From a shack on north point, lat the harbor's entrance, he keeps {taks cn port traffic, notifying the {maritime exchange in downtown| i Baltimore of each arrival. | | This gives notice to customs men, {ship chandlers and agents that their | !ship will dock within the hour. Gelbach's travels are by proxy |akoard tramp steamers spotted through his marine glass and duly recorded in his log. He has never| ;been to sea and never wants to go. | “My only trip on the water was | years ,ago on an excursion Loat across Chesapeake Bay,” he says.; “I'm not interested in geing any- | where now." | Gelbach leads a snug life in his nine-foot hut atop an old concrete | {powder house overlooking the har- ihor, where “you can see anything that comes up the bay.” | He goes through the day in a |rocker by the window, warmed by |a kerosene stove, keepinz a lookout for tugs, steamers, barges and tows. Scme 200 vessels move past his win- dow each month. Gelbach identifies each crait through a four-foot telescope trained jon the harbor through one of the narrow slits cut in the walls of the ! shack. Recording the time and the name |or general description of the vessel in his log, Gelbach telephcnes the marine exchange. The reason most ships don’t radio Inews of their impending arrival is that many skippers do nct recognize ithe spot. At night, when Gelbach is Inot on duty, ships may have to dock without much advance notice. - FROM HOLLAND Mr. and Mrs. Henk Osinga :nd their five-month old daugiter ar- rived here this week from Hol- land by way of the Dutch West i Indies. Osinga, a cousin of Ju- ALASKA COASTAL AIRLINES | neauite Ralph A. Treffers, will es- | taklish his family residence here. UPTOWN TICKET THURSDAY, MAY NO WAITING NO LAST MINUTE RUS TICKETS 8:30A.M.1o5P. M. (HANGAR TRAFFIC OFFICE OPEN A ANNOUNCES OPENING OF OFFICE BARANOKF HOTEL 6th H RESERVATIONS ' | morrow noon cn the Baranof Hotel Phone 202 S USUAL) de left Holland two years ago and was employed as a tanker nav- igating officers by the Shell Oil | Comparly in the West Indies un- il he could enter the U. 8. e | MONAGLE ON DUTY ! Territorial Highway Patrolman !John Monagle, former Juneau Po- ihce Chief,, began his duties here yesterday, where he has been per- manently assigned. Monagle - was elieved of nis former duties at Fairbanks and will assist Sergeant cmmett €. «Botelho in handling | tiighway Patrol functions in this area. Monagle and Botelho will | work in. 12 hour shifts to assure censtant patrol. gt SOROPTIMIST CLUB The Soroptimist Club will hold its regular business meetirig to- Terrace. " - e CASE DISMISSED A divorce Buit by Robert D. Johnson against Frances L. John- son has been dismissed in U. 8. District Court here. - e - TACOMA VISITOR Nina Anderson from Tacoma, Wash., is presently in Juneau and '2nd Division Returns Given Delegate Bartlett is still holding a | comfortable lead over challenger | Stock-1009 votes to 365-in returns| received for Nome from 27 out of 31 precincts for the Second. Division in he Alaska primary. ° Republicans, however, showed a harp gain. Almer Peterson is lead- ing his Democratic opponent for | Attorney General, Gerald Willlams, 707 to 504. For Auditor it is: Boyle 350, Deland 270, Goetz 408. Donald MacDenald is leading the field- with 885 for Highway Engineer, with Farnworth 373 votes, and Metcall | 273, trailing. Democrats are strong in the Lez-| islative race. For the Senate, Ed- ward Anderson has 498 and Howard Lyng 441. Leading Republicans are, | Carl Anderson (356) and George‘ For the Territorial House it is:| Democrats, Almer Rydeen 603, Wil-| liam Beltze 512, George Macdsen 441, Frank Degnan 389; Republicans,; ercy Ipalook £87, Frank Joluson , W. W. Laws <30, Chester Mil- ican 393. WISTORY ENGLISH ALPHABETISOVER 5,000 YEARS OLD CINCINNATI—It may come as a surprise but if our word “alphabet” is to ke believed, we are usigg the “ux house” system of writing. i “Our alphabet descends from an- cient Egypt of some 5,000 years ago by way of the Semitic people of the Sinai Peninsula,” says Dr. Ed-| ' A. Henry, University of Cin-| ciniati librarian and authority on| the history of writing and printing. | “Phoenician sailors carried this| alphabet to the Aegean basin and| the Greek people of that area. These Semitic people used as their first written character the picture of an ox head which was called ‘Aleph, the Semitic word for ox. | “The picture itself was very early| conventionalized, so that when the! Greeks took it over as their letter alpha, they did not know it was the word for ox, but from this arose out letter ‘A’ “The second picture sign was that of a house which was called ‘Beth,’| the Semitic word for house. This| sign, conventionalized, became Lhei Greex beta and cur ‘B) “Hence it appears that our word‘ alphabet really means the ox house’ system of writing.” e eee EASTERN STAR ‘ FAMILY DINNER | | |<ashen DOUGLAS NEWS HOME FROM SCHOOL Joe Tassell returnxd home yes- terday from Mt. Edgecumbe via Alaska Coastal Airlines. He has been a student at the school and also a patient at the Orthopedic Hospital. NEWCOMER, JOHN ROYAL Mrs. Alex Demos received a wire yesterday from her son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Orrin Edwards of Skagway, Alaska, that a son weigh- ing 8 pounds and 5 ounces was bern to them, and had been named John Royal. The wire stated that all was well. This is the third child of the Edwards, who have a daughter Shirley Marie, nine years of age, and another son, David Orrin, who is six years cld. Both p ents were bern and scicol i Douglas. ENGAGEMENT According to the Farthest-North Collegian, the monthly publication of the University of Alaska, “it's wedding bells for Frank and irene” both students at the U. Frank Cashen, son of Mrs. Sadie He is engaged to Miss Irene Ol- sen, Other news from tne above nam- ed publication is as follows: On April 15 the following members of the 1947-48 varsity basketball team received Major A awards: Roger Burke, Harry Cashen (of Douglas), Frank Cashen (of Doug- las), Ray DePriest, Ed Huiser, Lor- | en Lansberry, Dick McCormick (of Douglas), and Phil Stern. Dick McCermick earned the ad- dit.onal honor of being voted the team’'s most valuable player, and during the past season gdcted as eam captain. BACCALAUREATE SERVICES It has been announced by Lon is the Frank referred to.| | | FOR SALE A HOME! Not just a roof. Pine- | paneling, fireplace, large living room, 3 bedrooms, furnace, large basement, etc. 10th St. BUY on the Beach—2 large sum- | mer homes, modern, one 4-room, | basement; 2 one-room cabins. Fritz Cove, Point Louisa, Lena’s Beach. , DOUGLAS: 2-bedroom home, mag- nificent marine view, full ce- , ment basement, completely furn- \ | | ished. Also 3-bdr, furnace, furn.; 3-bdr., garage basement. | CAFE, Fountain, central location, real money-maker. Body and fender works. $5,800; 3-mi. Glacier Highway, furn. $1,600: 3-room part. furn. $5,800: 2-bdr. remodeled, Erwin St. NEAR Small Boat Harbor, bricktex 3-bdr. home; large yard and large shop; 2 furn. houses. | STAR HILL: 5-bdr. compl. furn.; ; 3 bdr. modern, furn,, furnace, etc. LADIES ATTENTION: Blouse shop central lccaticn; hat shop, new | stock; at inventory; eral apt. houses. | APPROX. 1,500 down pay. brings ! $400 income apt. house per month. ! APEX, FORRESTER, §18U; 2 can- nerie ing, IMURPHY & MURPHY | REALTORS - ACCOUNTANTS Phone 676 over First National Bank or store, ete. lig 'FCB RENT TWO Rooms {0 steam-heated. Lower rent. 315 Gold St. 656 tf menth with living room privi-| leges. Call Black 442 evenings. 878 3t | WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1948 WeA-N-T A-D-§ FOR SALE $6,800 — Excellent one bedroom house in Casey-Shattuck district. Concrete basement, oil furnace, electric stove. ~ Fully furnished. Only six years old. 3-BEDROOM Home. -Full base- ment, Double plumbihg. Large living room with fireplace. Good location. Fully furnished. Eight years old. DUPLEX—Two large apartments, located in Seatter tract. Less than ten years old. ! NEW two bedroom house on Beh- I | | | | | { =116 HP ngle men by the| chine. Call Red 393. | dAiD\Vl N Acrosonic Rice, School Superintendent, that rtoUT 050 square fest office Saccalaureate Services will be held | Iracklin, 2nd for the Senior Class of Douglas' Iding. Will par-| High School, on Sunday aftrrnoon, | to suit ten-| May 9th, at 2 o'clock in the Doug- | Roberison, phone | las School, with the Rev. Roberti 860 tf| Treat conducting. the _services. Commencement exercis: held cn May 13 at 8 o'clock “in| the Schocl gymnasium. Mrs, El- ten Engstrom will deliver the Ocmmencement address again this FIRE DEPT. MEETING There will be regular meeting oY the Dcuglas Volunteer Fire De- partment Thursday hight accord- ing to announcement made today. - WOMEN OF MOOSE HAVE BRUNCH FOR _TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1 The Eastern Star will give a dinner at the Scottish Rite Temple for Eastern Star members and their families on Tuesday evening, May 11, at 6:30 o'clock, A : members are urged to attend 25 taere will be an obligation meet- g at 8 o'clock. For reservations, call Mrs. Cowling at Red 410 or| Mrs. Brown at Black 484, not later than Sunday, May 9. JUNEAU SOAP BOXERS URGED TO COMPLETE ENTRY REGISTRATION “Let’s go, fellows and complete entry blanks for the Juneau Soap Box races to be held July 18 of this year.” Den Skuse, head of the local race committee, pcints out that only 11 boys have completed and re- turned entry blanks to the Race Drug Store thus far. Boys plan- ning to enter the race should be working on their cars now, and can best do so by following the new construction booklet which is ziven to each contestant when his ontry blank is completed. Hank Harmon, manual training instructor at the high school, en- VISITING DELEGATES Tuesday forenoon Mrs. Betty Cas- person, Senior Regent, Ruth Maurstad, Jr., Graduate Re- gent of Chapter No. 439 of the Wo- men of the Mcose were co-hoste: es at a brunch given in the Iris Room of the Baranof Hotel in hon- or of the visiting Women of the Moose, The honored guests were, Mrs.! Adele Oust, Visalia, Calif., Mrs. Irene Runyan, Sunnyside, Wash. Mrs, Sarah Jensen, Mrs. Cora Mc- Gowon, Mrs. Thelma Bruning all of Ceattle, Wash., Mrs. Ethel Jessup of Tacoma, Wash., and Mrs. Ethel Villesvick of Skagway. A place of honor was set for Mrs. Dorothy Eggleston, who came to Ju- neau to conduct the Academy of Friencship held last’ weekend at the Moose Lodge, and has been ill in St. Ann’s Hospital since her ar- rival. Immediately after the brunch Mrs. Villesvick left for her home in Skagway via Alaska Coastal. R R MISS BETTY HAGGARTY SUMMER HOUSE GUEST and Mrs. | will be NTZZ CLEAN ROOMD weekly o | \iipGGaNy Chickering Spinet raenthly. Crlon'al Eotel. Ph 18 NICE CLEAN steam 736 tf Ro: ROOM; . kifchen privileges. Home Hotel. | MISCELLANEOUS | TWINTER ana rosD, CO. fne. hone 886, ¢ Complete Photographic Supplies | Developing - Printing - Enlarging Artists’ Paints and Materials Blue Printing - Photostats | AVON PRODUCTS representative Ph. Black 475. P.O. Box 762. tf i u i | ? | | rends Avenue. LARGE filled corner lot facing small boat harbor, Suitable com- mercial use. WILLIAM WINN-Phone 234 FORCED BY FATE to sell fam-~ ily jewels. My '46 Olds Hydro~ matic Club Coupe had the lov- ing care of an only child. Phone Black 729 after 6. 880 tf 2 cafes; sev- | MODEL 70, 300 Magnum with scope and loading dies. Arthur Skinner, Home Hotel. 880 2t 37 Chuysler 4-door Sedan, Call Blue 302. 880 Tt falling equip.} pile driv-| 935 PLyMOUTH Sedan, excellent 522. P 879 3t tires, $115. Ph, FOSTORIA Stem plates, Willowme. 2 Green 860 evenings. vz and small design. Ph. 879 tf Johnson Outboard Motor, $200. Phone 166. 379 6t GENERAL Electric washing ma- 879 3t Piano, 3% . old. Ph. ougias 354. 879 tf , AARKER'S Summer Home, fully furnished at Point Lena Beach. Call Red 786 for appoint- ment or drive to location. 79 tf 51200 bugs small troller with two poles; Gray marine engine and zirdie. Used three months, Skiff and herring net included. Call 035 2 long, 1 short. 879 3t Piano, used 5 months. Cost $1050 plus freig Selling $750. Call Mr. Rand, 502. 879 tt ARGUS A2 Camera with 2 Koda- chrcme {ilters and filter ring; like new, $35. Blue 108 or 720 6th Street. 8791 3t RESTAURANT Equipment, eounter and steols, electric grill, coffee urn, etc. Phone 667. 879 3t | NEW 20 ft. by 6 ft. round bottom, square sitern boat for outboard motor. 74 Willoughby Ave. Phone Blue 708. 878 3t i-ROOM House for sale. Call 229, ask for George. 878 3t { GUARANTEED Realistic Perman- ent, $7.50. aper cwls, $1 up Lola’s Beauty Shop. Phone 201. | 315 Decker Way. tr WANTED To Sublet houss or ! 312, evenings. 880 3t apartment or rooms. No children or pets. Ph. Mrs. DeCoite, Gas- mail orders for watches, jewelry, ete. Sell during your spare time to servicemen and their famil- i les at PX prices or lower. Write: { INDEX SALES, 1206 Maple Ave., Los Angeles 15, California. 75 Tt PETERSBURG VISITORS ger, both from Petersb.cg, are now in Juneau and at the Baranof Ho- tel. for summer. Baranof Hotel, Rm.| SERVICEMAN wanted to take air-| VETERAN and wife desire to rent | - 1 tineau Hotel. 879 4t WANTED: Dishwasher. Percy's| Cafe. ' 8178 tf | | Clarence Walters and E. T. Gin-| COMPLETE Boay and | PIANO for sale. FURN. House and lot, West Juneau, less than appraisal value. Good Phene Douglas 985 878 4t FORREST Jome and property, Glacier Highway. 2 car garage. Phene 037, 2 long, 2 short. 878 tf WOOD B-flat Clarinet, excellent condition. Phone 346 after 6 p. Quick sale, $50. 879 x m. 2 bedroom partly house. Auk Bay. 877 12 37 CHEV, good condition, Phone 158. $600 876 t 3 BEDROOM House for sale, 80 6th. Can be scen 2 pm. to o p.n. or call Black 614 for ar.- pointment. £76 6t HOUSE for sale. Phone Black 198, =i 516 6t Phone Black 198. 876 6t Pender Shop Well equipped. Reasonable, Iu- quire Bob-Ben Service, 93 Wil- loughby. 872 tf E l'..au.....% OF MR., MRS. HOUSTON Miss Betty Jean Haggarty, sister courages all boys to register now 50 that work requiring tools in the shop school can be used before the spring semester ends the last of this month. Those intending (o use manual training tools should consult Harmon now. Skuse said he plans a commit- -ee meeting soon and that films of (he Akron race are expected in Juneau before long. ——el P _PLUMBING INSTALLED Plumbing facilities have been re- stored to the Auk Village Recrea- ticnal Area, it was announced toe day by the Admiralty Division of the U. 8. Forest Service. e KETCHIXAN VISITORS Bill Stump, attorney from Ketch- jkan, is in Juneau' and staying at the Baranof Hotel. I. Arensen, also from Ketchikan, is staying at the Gastineau Hotel. KO TRET - | -5 Rt DOUGLAS SCHOOL DISTRICT Federal Judge George W. gFolta has signed an order incorporating the recently elected Douglas Inde- at the Baranof Hotel pendent School Distriet. of Mrs. Warren Houston arrived yesterday aboard the Aleutian and will spend several months visiting here. Miss Haggarty has recently been 2mployed with a construction com- pany in Seattle. Bl B U INCORPORATIONS Three Seattle companies have ‘iled their Articles of Incorporation with Territorial Auditor Frank A. Beyle in order to transact business within Alaska. R. E. Robertson, of Juneau, and Jjchn E. Manders, of Anchorage, were named’ as legal representatives of all three concerns. : The companies are the Calvert Corporation, Trans-Pacific Fishing and Packing Co. and the Pacific Ex- ploration Co. All are engaged. in some phase of the fishing industry. e I NS F.N.FORSZEN TEACHER of Violin—YViola—Cello Bass . Alaska Music Supply, Inc. e NOTICE OF NEW DEADLINE For e DISPLAY ADVERTISING l' Effective Monday, Mar. 29, e i 1948, the deadline for receiv- e ing copy material of dis- play advertising will be four c’elock (4:00) p. m. for the editicn. of The Daily Alaska Empire of the next day. No excepticn. will be made. Mechanical and production considerations make this change necessary (06 @@ 00 0 ¢ 0 00 0 % SEATTLE seevecc e For COMFORT aro SERVICE Dewev W Metudorr Get the NEW vice-Pres WASHINGTO?! and Managing Hautel Director ALASKANS FEEL AT HOME at | 1941 3-ROOM House, 838 Basin Road. 866 tt 11641 %-ton Dodge truck, new mo- tor, new brakes, good rubber; 1941 panel 1-ton Ford truck; 6 used tires T00x20. Ph. 132. 63 t{ BEACH House, $2.500. inq;xire Mr Lloyd Green, Fritz Cove Road 861 1mo NE York ammonia machine fo freezing plant, price $250. Cash or terms; one electric meat grind- er, $100, cash or terms. George Brothers. 853 t Dodge Panel Truck. Good condition. See it at DeHart’s Gro- cery or Ph. 023-4 rings. 849 tf TWO HOUSES near boat harbor Phote Red 765. $43 t1 3 HOUSES unu lot. Inquire Trev or Davis. 94 i HOUSE for sale. Phone Black 198. 864 6t LOST ARD FOUND FOUND: Tie clasp, owner may have same by identifying and pay- ing for adv. 6 3t Per capita use of water in US. city residents has been estimated at 127 gallons a day.

Other pages from this issue: