The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 21, 1949, Page 6

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PAGE SIX e e e ettt NEWS ITEMS FROM SITKA, (Special Cm:f pondence) SITKA, Alaska, Sept. 10 ing in almost tropical heat unique and most unpleasant perience for local nimrods. All game is still high in the mountains and | packing oyt is particularly uncom- fortable with the added obstacie of is exe a) possible heat prostration. Not many | first | deer were brought in L3 weekend. ceremonies for the statue “The Prospector” have Ceen| set for Alaska Day—October 18th Committees will be appointed nex! ‘week to work out appropriate plans for the occasion. Unveiling Mr. and M Clarence Rands announced the engagement of their youngest daughter, Barbara, to Lloyd 5. Hames at a dinner Thurs- day evening for twenty relatives and intimate friends of the Mr, Hames, son of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Hames of Rosalie, Wash., spent the summer here in con- struction work for C. R. Rands Company. Date for the wedding has been set for January 9 after which the couple will return to Washing- ton State University in Pullman to complete their schooling. Both are scphomores. Mrs. John from a watehing < T E 1ompson neymoon Mr. and have returned spent stream MESSAGE FROM GARCIA | the Post i erson i accompan Texas Artist Tells Why It's Smart to Switch to Calvert SAN ANTONIO, Texas— Tony R. Garcia, San Antonio artist and illus- trator, k vs that it’s taste that counts in a whiskey. “Tell everybody,” he says, “that I switched to Calvert be- cause of its rare and excellent taste.” CALVERT RESERVE Blended Whiskey —86.8 Proof—65% Grain Neutral Spirits. Calvert Distillers Corp., New York City H\m(-‘ family. | 1 Yakobi | de The couple graduated from { Sitka High last spring and plan {to leave shortly to enter Washing- | ton state College. Miss Betty Joe Yaw is honor In\wfil at an informal farewell ban- quet given this evening at Sheldon Jackson by fellow members of the ocal C.E. Society, A large group .nl friends has been invited for the jevent. Miss Yaw will leave soon to |enter Lewis and Clark College in ’PoHI\hd Oregon, for her freshman year, Jim Calvin, son of Mr. and Mrs. | Frank Calvin will leave via Alaska Coastal and PAA tomorrow to start ! ‘lnx sophomore year at Washington | State after spending his summer vacation working for the Forest Service and cannery, I L. E. Thiel arrived on the lAhkka after spending more than f a year at the Laurel Beach Sani- itarium in Zeattle. After a period ! of convalescence he plans to re- turn to the Cold Storage Company office where he had been manager luntil his illness. Dr. W. C. Charteris returned by plane Thursday from Great Falls, Montana, where he had been called y the death of his father, James Charteris Sr. Dr. and Mrs. Char- teris left by chartered plane Sun- day morning immediately after re- ceiving word of the passing of his father who owned the Charteris | Hardware Store in Great Falls. | Mrs. Charteris will remain in Seattle for a medical checkup be- fore returning to Sitka. | Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Beckerson left by Totem last week on a two months vacation which will take them as far as Alabama to visit Mrs. Beckerson's family whom she has not seen in almost four years. Mr. Beckerson is an employee of Office while Mrs. Beck- is employed at the Sitka Bazaar. Andersen, Sitka merchant, ed by his son, Wake, left Ly plane lg weekend for Seattle where they will join Mrs. Andersen and daughter, Luella. Wake and Luella will again attend Seattle schools this winter and live with their grandmother, Mrs. Maud Wakefield. Neill Mrs. J. J. Conway and daughter. Maribeth, left by plane Wednesday for their home in Seattle after spending two months at their sum- mer home here. Son Chuck re- mained until Saturday when the cannery season closed, having spent the summer working for his father OUTBOARD MOTORS | repaired—tuned up—winierized Have your motor worked on by an experienced mechanic with special equipment. Costs You Less OUR COIL AND CO for Better Work NDENSER TESTER WILL SAVE YOU FUTURE TROUBLE CHAS. G. WARNER COMPANY Juneau’s Complete Marine Suppliers @ Yes—lighting can when it does such the beauty of your e reeeeeeeed be exciting! . . . Pasticularly wonderful things to enhance home. These Aladdin lamps are lovely to look at—and a well lighted room is lovelier to look at, t0o0. See us about Aladdin’s latest table and floor lamps the next time you go shopping. ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT AND Cheerful Dispensers o 24-hour Elecf POWER CO. f Friendly Dependable trical Service [ s s s annsnnsssssnnnnnasssnas s s oo ol e at the Conway Dock Company and, during the canning season, at the Pyramid Fisheries. Mr. and Mrs. Julius Ferney with their son and daughter left by plane Monday after a Lrief busi- ness visit here. Mr. Ferney, who edited the Sitka Sentinel during the | years’ atsence of Mr. and Mrs. Har- old Veatch will be editor of the Wrangell Sentinel paper for the coming year. Mrs. Marie Forbes left last week- end on a nine months vacation. Starting by plane as far as Juneau, she continued to Skagway by boat— then by train ‘to Whitehorse and | bus along the Alcan to Edmonton {to visit a sister. From there she will | journey to the States to visit many{ relatives and friends with the in-| tention of returhing to her home here sometime next summer. Jack Doran arrived by piane last weekend for a brief visit with| his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stormy Doran. Greater part of the vacation is being spent fishing with his father in local lakes reached only by plane. Mrs. Chuck Peari, with her young son and daughter, returned week from a summer’s visit with her ‘parents in Helena, Montana. Mr. Pearl { O Taxi Company. | der Hemlock presented the Alaska Crippled Children’s Association with a check for $100 in apprecia- surgeon Dr. Phillip Moore for their shipmate Henry Parra who was mortally injured acoard ship and brought to the Orthopedic Hos- i pital for emergency treatment be- | fore being sent to the Marine Hos- pital in Seattle where he. passed away. A new shoe shop—The Cinder- ella Slipper Shop—will soon be opened in the Alaskan Hotel by Mrs. Dorothy Bilbo and Mrs. Kay Taukeneck. Plans for the shop are to cater especially to the hard-to- fit fcot—the double, triple and quadruple A's that have difficulty with the average shoe. Sitka Printing Company received a new Multilith press on the Alaska this week. A small lithographic | press, the Multilith does many | printing jobs with artistic results| impossible on the regular press. i{One of the first jobs will be the pu:lication of the Beta Sigma Phi| Cook Book, illustrated with draw- ings and sketches by Mrs. Robert DeArmond and Mrs. Robert Wheeler, ' | | Mrs. Marie Brightman has re-i cen-cd word of the death of aer| daughter Agnes, Mrs. Wilbur T.| Pentzer of Fresno, Calif, Mrs. Pent- zer had been a patient of the[ Wish-i-ah Sanitorium in Aubrey | for many months but was thought to be recovering. Her husband and| son, John, were being cared for by Mrs. Pentger's sister, Mrs. George Hellerich. | Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wortman, owners of Wortman's Drug Store, left aboard the Alaska on their | first joint vacation in the States. Mrs. Wortman has not visited the States since 1932 and Mr. Wortman | |since 1941. A great many social events were given in farewell, out- standing ‘zeing the no-host party at the Elks Club last Saturday| evening, and a second nc-host af- fair by forty friends at the home| of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth* Nordby‘ Tuesday evening. At the latter the | Wortmans were presented with a complete set of airplane luggage. | Unless overcome with homesick- ness, the Wortmans plan to vaca- tion until after the Christmas kol days. ilARRY O. LOW GOES BACK TO SEATTLF‘, After a busy two weeks with headquarters in Juneau, Harry O. Low of Seattle was a Pan Ameri- can passenger, southbound, yester-| | day. Low, who is supervisor of the False Pass Cannery of P. E. Karr!s‘ and Company, came here incident | to the recent trial of the fishtrap tax suit brought by the Harris Company against the Territory. He was one of the witnesses during the hearing. Since its conclusion| he has made several short business | trips in connection with other can- nery operations. Follow the Cabs to ROSS’ OASIS in Douglas ___for a Good Time MADSEN CYCLE & FISHING SUPPLY {| Pull line of Halibut and Trolling Gear — Many items now at new LOW PRICES Open 9 to 9 Opp. Ball Park e Brownie’s Liquor Sfore Phone 103 139 So. Franklin P. O. Box 2508 last | is owner of the Single | Crewmen of the lighthouse ten-| tion of the work done by orthopedic | | friends. During their absence, the | daughters Shirley and Linda are | staying in town for a month and | home from a foot necessitated a trip into Juneau and |and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Toiva THE DAILY ALASKA EM Pelican Chatter (Special Correspondence) PELICAN, Alaska, Aug. 31—Dur- ing the past week several boats have met with misfortune in this| area but luckily there was no loss| of life nor injuries to any crew members. The well-known Gambier | owned by Walter Remes and J. J. | Lown and packing for Whiz Fish | Products Co. caught fire and burned | 2t Bingham Cove with 10.000 pounds | of fish aboard. The avcr-loaded, seine (zoat Maine belonging to the| Icy Straits Salmon Co. sank in Lisianski Inlet carrying 15,000 | pounds of fish. | At Elocum Arm, the seiner| Chatham owned by Whiz Fish Pro- ducts Co. settled on a rock and‘ | tipped over. The crew took to a‘ life Loat and was picked up by OnEw of the cannery’s tenders brought into Pelican. The boat“ which was carrying 10,000 fish i.s‘ | also a total loss. J. Gottschalk of Juneau lost his| troller the Boomer when it blew| up and burped near Salisbury| Sound. Another troller which was| | completely wrecked was the Shan- | non Belle skippered by H. R. Hollo- | way of Ketchikan when it went taground at the entrance to Latuya Bay. It was also reported that the Fish and Wildlife Service boat, |the Scoter, had gone on the rocks | at Blocum Arm. Accordinz to latest reports, damage was undetermined. | Don Milnes of Booth Fisheries Cerp. came in on his packer the Elsie and reported a good run of | cilvers at Icy Point. He also stated | that fishing conditions are very favoralzle because of the good ‘weather prevailing. In the past few days, four boats have landed bleck cod at the Peli- can Cold 'Storage dock. The Aegir cwned by Frances Hyde brought in 24,000 pounds, the Norland ownad by John Maurstad had 21,000 pounds, the Glacier Bay skippered by Sivert Anderson carried 14,000 |pounds, and the Sentinel owned | by Vincent Anderson came in with 30,000 pounds. i Mr. and Mrs. Jeseph Paddock, long-time residents, are receiving congratulations upon the birth of a| baby daughter on August 25 at St.| Ann’s hospital in Juneau. She has been named Caroline June and joins a sister and two brothers, Vivian, Billy and Charles. Paddock has returned to the fish- ing grounds on his troller the Snuffy after a short visit in Ju- neau with his family and a peek at the new arrival 4 Mis. Mary Bellevi]le, who had planned to spend several more weeks visiting her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. dnd Mrs. Jack Stearns was called home to Martin's Ferry, Ohio, -y the critical illness of her daughter. After a visit of two weeks in Hconah and Juneau, Miss Betty Mcork has returned home. {Traveling south on the gospel boat, the Fair-Tide II, are the Rev. and Mrs. C. C. Personeus and the Rev. and Mrs. C. Byron Personeus who will att®nd the General Coun- cil of the Assemblies of God being held in Seattle at the Civic Audi- torium from 'Zeptember 8 to Sep- tember 15. The Rev. and Mrs. C. C. Personeus plan to return in a month. Their son and his, wife will visit in Bremerton, Washington, be- fore going east to Pennsylvania, Connecticut and New York to spend ceveral months with relatives and ?ev Charles Munch of Juneau is substituting for them. Mrs. Don McGee and young Da- vid have returned from Sitka by plane where they visited Mr. McGee while he was having repairs made on his troller the Shangri-La. For a few days Mrs. Ralph Young Zr. was a visitor at the home of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Max and their family and also visited her son Gibson. She was accompanied home on the Denali by Laura and Elsie Johansen who will be her guests for a short time. and her Mrs. John Breseman have taken an apartment in the Jacd:sen building. Eliz Mork is recovering at injury which Mrs, several days stay in St. Ann's hos- pital. After spending the summer here, Mrs. Mike Goodmand and children, Barbara and John, returned to Seattle by plane. Miss Martha Vanvick of (Seattle is vacationing here with her cousin Anderson. Germain Bulcke of San Fran- cisco, second vice-president of the International Longshoremen’s and Warehousemen's Union, CIO, spent | ward Dull and her son Edward, Jr., | | Amos, PIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA two days in town recently on offi- cial business. Making their home in Sitka are Mr. and Mrs. Valentino Qui. Their house has been rented to Gibson Young. To observe her (‘Icwnth birthday | on August 23, Darlene Schliesman entertained a group of her friends that afternoon at a party. Those in- vited were Kim Torkilsen, Elsie Johansen, Alice May Edgecumbe, and Gloria Christensen. On August 24, the Denali called {with freight for Whiz Fish Pro- ducts Co. Many of the tourists were heard tu declare that Pelican | was one of the most picturesque| and scenic spots they had visited | in their tour of the Territory. ! A circus party was the theme of Mrs. John Enge for her son Arnold’s seccnd birthday on August 26. The guests were seated at a| table having as a centerpiece the| birthday cake topped by a mimia-| ture circus tent and animal crackers, | and individual favors were at each | place. Red 'zalloons, clown place {cards, and the refreshments car- ried cut the circus motif. In the peanut hunt, Kim Torkilsen of the older group ‘won first award and‘ in the young group, Tina Lou| Krugness took first place. Guests at the affair were Mari- | anne and Richard Stamm, Tommy | McGrail, Barbara Goodman, David | McGee, David Fremming, Kim and Shane Torkilsen, Karen and Gordy | Wahto, Tina Lou and John Krug-| ness, and Kenneth Hoyt. Mothers present were Mesdames | Mike Goodman, Keppel Hoyt, Rich-| ard Stamm, John Krugness, Gene | Torkilsen, Don McGee, Elliott| Fremming, and A. M. Wahto. i David Fremming has returned hcme after three months visit with his grandmonther, Mrs. Davis in Juneau. David | Houseguests at tne home of Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Fremming are Mrs, Fremming's sister, Mrs. Ed-| of Juneau. Miss Julia Pond, bookkeeper Iorl Whiz Fish Products Co., at Kodiak | has joined the company's staff | here for the remainder of the sea-| son. | After a months visit with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Waltonen, Mrs. L. C. Pclley and her sons, Roger and Ernest returned by plane to their home in the capitol city. | i Taking advantage of the won- derful weather, Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Soule, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Underhill, Maude Keefe and Don Lorentzen went on a day’s outing in Underhill's boat to Phonograph Cove. ‘The Flemish Knot was in port August 26 and took out 13,000 cases of canned salmon for Whiz Fish Products Co. On official business for their de- partments, Alfred Baker, district sanitarian from Ketchikan, Helen associate nutrition consult- ant with the Alaska Health De- partment, Cyril Zuboff, inspector for the Territorial Department of Labor, and Eino Michaelson of the Federal Department of Labor from Washington, D.C. spent a day here last week. ALASKA RAILROAD IS T0 CELEBRATE ALASKA DAY OCT. 18 ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Sept. 21— (Special) —Alaska Day—marking the 82nd anniversary cof the transter of Alaska from Russia to the United States—will be o:served Oct. 18 at McKinley Park Hotel in line with the custom established by The Alaska Railroad, Col. John P. Johnson, general maxmger of the ARR reveals. Col, Johnson has announced that the celebration will be attended by many prominent civilian and mili- tary leaders from the Territory and leading business and civic leaders from the Northwest. The annual celebration, which is usually climaxed by a “Gay Nineties” ball at McKinley Park Hotel, commemorates the purchase of Alaska in 1867 for the price of $7,200,000. The complete pro- gram is to be announced by Col. Johnson later. It was two years ago that the cele:ration reached high gear. That year the government owned rail- road inaugurated its new stream- line diesel train, the Aurora. Mt. McKinley visitors rode to the ball in a chariot fit for a queen and in luxury never before afforded travelling Alaskans. That year an earthquake rocked Mt. McKinley park hotel at the height of the Gay Nineties ball. FISH LANDINGS A total of 6,000 pounds of salmon were landed this morning from 12 trollers with about 12 more to make landings this afternoon. Another barge load of approximately 160,- 000 pounds of frozen trap caught salmon were loaded out today for 'e Nick Bez cannery at Todd. |caLL Bla;k 935 ér writ Box 2136 | | |GOLD Plated ¥*rank Holton E-flat rusm: W-A -N-T A WEDNES DAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1949 e FOR SALE XSSUE Sprmgfleld Blnck 643. 3 3t — BEDROOM Suite, including maple Led, spring and Restmore mat-; tress, vanity dresser and chest drawers, all matching. Excelmmfli condition. Premier sewing ma- chine, drop leaf, treadle. Several small tables. 1 small General Electric Radio. 1 table model Westinghouse Radio. Apply Phone[ 749 after 6 o'clock 303 uf | '38 BUICK. Cal Caliento. CHILD'S White fur coat, woman's black pony; good condition. See at Hope's 2nd Hand Store. Phone 908. 303 3t 1949 CHEV. “Sedan, nice, reasonable price, family car. Call Black 935 before 5, or 846 after 5 p.m. 23t to S. B. Fisher for Readers Di-| gest Xmas Gift Rates. 302 3t ! 1930 MODEL A Sedan, $150.MUST | SELL BY FRIDAY. Ph. 831, ask| for Don. 302 4c, 1941 MAROON Plymouth 4-docr| Sedan, very reasonable. One| wheel trailer with complete extra | wheel and tire. 633 East St. 02 5t USED Refrigerators for sale. Sever- eral 4 cu. ft. boxes for sale.‘ priced from $65.000 to $95.00. Just ! the thing for small apartment or beach cabin. These won't last! | Come now! Parsons’ Electric Company. 302 3tv saxaphone. Can be put in perfecv., condition for small sum. Call 672! or see at 304 W 3rd St. 02 4t CROSLEY Car; 1947 Conv. body, 1948 motor. Radio, 2 heaters, wat- | er proof. Phone Green 578. 302 2t 1941 NASH club coupe, can be eas- | ily converted to pickup truck. $495.00. 634 Seventh St., after; 5 p. m. All day Saturday. 302 6t RESTAURANT f sale at Sitka. Good waterfront location. New | equipment; 8 booths; 12 stools,] seating capacity 44. Just finish-; ed redecorating. Other businessi interest demands owner’s time is reason for selling. Write Box 702, Sitka, Alaska. 302 6t THREE Bedroom house, living | room, kitchen and bath. Also boat! Valiant. Inquire Epperson’s place on Fritz Cove Road. 302 6t i TWO new 1948 outboard motors at { special low prices; one 12-inch| lathe, like new, bargain. Juneau Welding and Machine Shop. 300tf FOR SALE: Pure bred relstered collie pups. Robert Rooney, Wran-1 gell, Alaska. 300 6t JUST a smnll part of the money | you now spend for fuel will pro—l vide a warm, draft-free home thru modern insulation. Plan now | for winter. Warde A. Johnson,i phone 81. 289 1mo $3600. 4-Bedroom house, mext to) high school. $750 down. H. J.i O’Singa, Box 1261, Douglas. 99 €t 1946 FORD 4‘aoor. 1947 Chev. 2- door; 1949 Dodge Coronet 4-door; 1940 Chrysler; 1937 Plymouth. R. ‘W. Cowling Motor Co. 99 tf 1943.International 1%.-ton K-5 flat- bed truck, excellent conditlun,! $1,000. Madsen’s Cycle and Fish- ing Supply. Phone 914. 96 tf ‘ CHAIR for re-upholstering. Prlcedl low lor quick sale. Ph. 326. 94 tt BOY Scour DISIRI(T COMMITTEE MEETS TOMORROW NIGHT| . With fall activities of the Boy Scouts to be planned, the Gastineau District Committee will meet to- morrow night at 7:45 d’clock in the City Council ChamZers with Curtis Shattuck presiding. Maurice Powers, Boy Scout field executive, returned yesterday from a week’s conference held in Seattle of Scout executives. for Region Eleven. The region comprises Wash- ington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and Alaska. At the meeting, national leaders of Scouting presented information on developments in the Boy Scout organization including the recent age changes. Plans for the National Boy Scout Jamboree to be helq in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania next summer were discussed. Also participating in the con- ference were the three other Alaska field executives of the Alaska Coun- cil who are D. P. Scudder, Ketchi- kan; Russell A. Apple, Fairbanks and Eugene A. Butler, Anchorage. iStopping over in Ketchikan on the return trip, Powers spent a week assisting Boy Scout leaders| there in organizing the annual tinance campaign which is under- way this week. | CHICAGO VISITOR | E. W. Miller and J. H. xeum| of the Kellogg Switchboard and Supply Co., Chicago, are the Baranof Hotel. |LONG Established pusiness, I,PATENTED 5 acres, CAR - BOAT - HOUSE — Al for the price of one—2 bedrooms, hardwood floors, completely fur- nished, basement, furnace, elec- tric kitchen. Move in tomorrow. 4 per cent G. I loan. INCOME property, 12th St., 2 sin- gle apts., or 3-bhdr. home, garage, basement, double plumbing, elec- tric kitchens, large yard, well fur- ! nished. INCOME property, 3rd St., on level, 3 apts. fuinished, basement, fur- nace heat, double plumbing, own- er’s apt. can be used 2-bdr., large living room, etc. NEW houses with FIREPLACES— 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room, garage, basement, hardwood floors, ready Sept. 15. Buy now, select your own color scheme; 2 bdr, with garage, basement, fireplace, on adjoining lot. ALSO 2 bdr. home NEW Douglas, avail- able now. ALL ELIGIBLE FHA. Views, best neighborhoods. DOUGLAS—3 bdrs., electric kitch- en, new furnace, elec. hot water heater, garage, furnished, immed- iately available. | DOUGLAS—Will show M«Jnday,l Sept. 12, 2-bdr. completely re- | decorated, elec. kitchen, com- pletely furnished. Central loca- tion. DOUGLAS: Two other good houses. Details with personal interviews. GLACIER HIWAY - BEACHES Near Douglas, 2 bdr. on PATENT- ED LAND on beach, own water system, price $2,000. Two Houses on acre patented land,‘ $500, balance like rent; $300 takes approx. 4 acres patented | land near airport with house,} partially furnished. Partially ' cleared. s ‘The BEAUTIFUL Fitzpatr. utral heating, life-time alumin- wm roof, % acre land, possible 2 bedrs.; 5 acres patented land, with large house; also 2 summer homes on forest permit land. MURPHY & MURPHY | REALTORS - ACCOUNTANTS Phcne 676 over First l\at.oral Bank , FOR SALE FOR SALE: Welding and body re- | pair shoo suitable for general re- pairs and machine shop work; ick home ! DUP -D-S FOR SALE AN excellent 4 bedroom furnished house with desirable location sell- ing at its building cost of four years ago. Full concrete base- ment, automatic oil heating plant, laundry and partially finished recreation room with fire place, barbecue, kitchen and bath. This space could be changed into an apartment. Large living room with fireplace and thermopane windows. Completely equipped kitchen and dinette. Two bed- room and tile bath on first floor, Two bedrooms and ¢ bath on second floor. Hardwood floors in all rooms. Fully insulated for low maintenance cost. Well planted garden and childrens play yard, Terms can be arranged. 20 HOUSES NOW under construction. Ready for occupancy after Sept. 15. Twa bedrooms with allowance for third. All with full concrete base- ments and garage. Automatic ofl heat. Modern insulation. Hard- wood floors and large view win- dows. Financed by FHA with lib- eral terms. Low down payment. Plans and specifications may be inspected in this office. Office In Alaska Credit Bureau PHONE - - 234 | WILLIAM WINN-Phone 234 Office in Alaska Credit Burcam + BEST neighborhood, near schools, large level yard, large living room, two bedrooms, automatic oil fur- nace, fireplace, good electrical equipment in kitchen, completely furnished. By appointment. BUILDING LOTS, Ski Trail, clear- , level, $650. 'LEX, $5,000. $1,000 down. One kedroom apt. vacant; other 2-bed. Near downtown. !4-Apt. bldg., main Street, possible stores. Also shop and large apt. !3-APT. bldg, good neighborhood. t One 2-bed available immed. ‘sv 500 handles 8 apt. property. $100 plus int. monthly. Clese in. (Two 5-Acre buys at Auke Lake; ! 3-acre at Auk Bay, $3400. TALSO JUNEAU DOUGLAS LIST- INGS —MORE LISTINGS THAN ANY OTHER AGENCY. USED CARS 1947 Packard Sedan .. 1946 Dodge Sedan 1936 Plymouth, '42 Dodge motor ST priced for quick sale far below | value. See Stad Perry, 109 Wil- loughby Ave., alter 4:30 p.m. 28 tf store, grocery and meat marke$ with living quarters. Must settle estate. Ph. 103 or P.O. Box 2596. LOG CABIN 2816 It inside. Hawk Inlet. Call 143. 202 tf 110 VOLT 5 KW Konhler light plant, full set heavy duty storage bat- teries guaranteed 10 years, used three. Now that we have City power, it’s in my way. I dare you to make an offfer. J. P. DeHart, Auk Bay, Alaska. 9 tf good house and garage; $600 down, balance like rent. Blue 212. 88 tf; KINDLING Wood, $5.00 per load. Limited amount. Duck Creek Lumber Co. 288 tf CHINATOWN Cafe, cash or easy payments. Profitable business. Call 796 after 7 p. m. 82 tf 3-BEDROOM Rouse, full basement, furnace heat, fully modern, furm- 1shed or' unfurnished. Ph. 535, ask for Poole between 8 a m. and 5 p.m. 81 tt CRECENT APT., cent-any located; good investment. Call 428. 39 t!l SEVERAL large anu Small Dia- monds. Ferlect stones. Bargain fihces at First National 35 t l"l' boat, 110 hp Universal en- " gine, mavy hull, built 1943. $3200. Ph. Green 403. PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHNA FORMED SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 21—A— Chinese Communist leader Mao Tze-tung today announced in Pei-} pirf; the establishment of “The People’s Republic of China.” The anriouhcement was made be-| fore the openinz ssssion of the! “Chinese Peoples Political Consul- tative Conference.” It was called to establish a reg‘me rivaling the Na- tionalist government. “Internationally,” Mao told the more than 60 delegates, “we must unite with all countries and peoples loving peate and freedofn, first of all the Soviet Union and the new Democratic countries, so that we will not stand alone in our struggle to safeguard the fruits of victory.” A Communist broadcast of the speech was heard by the Associated Press at San Francisco. PELICAN VISITORS W. E. Soule, Mrs. D. C.-White, and Mr. and Mrs, E. Ojaniomi of are guests at|Pelican are guests at the Gastin- eau Hotel, | e PETER WOOD SALES AGENCY 316 4th - - - Telephone 911 LOST AND FOUND LOST: Man's gold wrist watch on Main St., Sat. night. Please call i Red 905. 302 3t |LOST: On Pt. Louisa Beach near Holbrook ¢abin, black silk en- velope purse containing money and eye glasses. Reward. Return to Empire, 302 3t LOST: White gold Hamilton ladies wrist watch in vicinity RR. Ex- press Co. office. Reward. Phone 547. 302 3t FOUND: Lower plate of teeth. In- qulre Empire. 302 tf ~ FORRENT NICE Clean Rooms steam helm‘ 315 Gold St 220 6 STEAMHEATEL 1eooms, weekly @ Monthl;. Colonial Rooms. 69 t WpRIL'XZER Spinit piano for rent Andersén Plano Shop. Ph. 143, AUTO PARTS New - Used - Rebuilt If we haven't got it—we'll get it. Seattle Auto. Wrecking Co. 1950 st Avenue So. 26 tt WANTED DEAFTSMAN msbruments needed, Write Box 756. 303 tt SECOND maid for house cleaning, dish washing, waiting table, ans- wering phone, ironing. Write Governor’s House or ph. 21. 02 6t WANTED: Home for small puppy. Call 315, 302 3t WANTED: 1 or 2 room apartment or house, permanently or for few months, furnished or not. Write P. O. Box 1957. 302 6t WHEN Windows Rattle and the wind«blows under-the door, think of weather stripping and insula- tion. Warde A. Johnson, ‘Phone 299 1mo Caj GIRL wanted as usher. Theatre. u FLEASE: 1 need to rent a home. Robert Rotzler, Juneau Hotel. 941t MISCELLANEQUS CHIROPODIST:—Blue 379, 74 imo GUAR.ANT!!D Realistic Pefman- ent, $750. Paper curls $1 up Lola’s Beauty Shop, Phone 201 315 Decker Way. o HOPES New ana Used Mdss. W m,unnndmhm 214 Phone 900.

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