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PAGE FOUR Daily Alaska Empire Publis lmd every evening except Sunday by mo :MPIRE PRINTING COMPANY and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska scrm EELEN TROY MONSEN DOROTHY TROY LINGO ELMER A. FRIEND ALFRED ZENGER |and draftees. And with an industrial man-power shortage in sight, it is not at all desirable to call up | reservists or National Guard units if that can be { avoided. President | It does not follow that every woman veteran can (ice Proident | . Many who served well in World War II now Managing Editor | business Mansger | .. three or four children to bring up. Others have Entered in the Post Office in Juneau a8 SUBSCRIPTION RATES: six months, $8. By mail, postage paid, at the fol One year, in advance $15.00; ne month, in advance, $1.50. Subscribers will confer a favor if they the Dusiness Office of any fallure or irregularity in the delivery | of thelr papers. Telephones: News Office, 602; MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED six months, in advance, $7.80; | Business Office, 374. Second Class Matter. | useful places in business or f needed where they are. But there will be some who | can get back into uniform without upsetting families of interrupting careesr unduly. They will be wel- come, because they will ease the strain of partial mobilization for a country reluctant to resort to the pattern of total war. ¢ $1.50 per monthi 00 wing rates: will promptly notify PRESS | i The Assoclated Press is exclusively en republicatior wise credited in this paper and also the heretn of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- titled to the use for | PLENTY OF SUGAR local news published | " NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Aia Forth Avenue Blds., Seattle, Wash. — — | Few people will admit the selfish and unpatriotic | ske Newsoapers, 111 [ ctice of hoarding but a frightful number of folk | WOMEN WANTED It might a generation Navy and the Marine Corps both cordial invitation to their service. Among the ranks y Marines” yeomen, to active and “L skills cartographic as storekeepers, assistants, There are multitudes of such jobs to be done at| have seemed unchivalrous and strange ago, but it makes good sense now. The women veterans to return are thousands who have valuable dental radio technicians. | have been buying scarce articles “in order to lay ln |a supply before the hoarders get started.” One of the most senseless forms of this “pre- cautionary buying,” to give it a polite term, is the headlong rush on the sugar counter. The Agriculture Department has just pointed out that there are a billion tons of sugar available in Cuba and the other sugar-producing areas, with no discernible threat of made rationing necessary in World War II. The Department of Agyiculture fixes import quotas, and can permit a much greater volume of sugar shipments into the country at any time. Mean- while, however, the bying rush on the competitive market will drive the price up. And then, quite likely, when millions of householders have their cellars stocked with aging and caking sugar, a state of over- supply will make the price drop considerably. have sent out a former of former Waves Our sympathy goes out to the struggling college graduate, whom the baccalaureate orator recently | tossed onto the sea of life without providing him with ¢|a raft, a Mae West or emergency rations. technicians, industry and are more | submarine interference with sugar shipments such as | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-JUNEAU, ALASKA | JULY 29 Ian Ogg Mrs. Norman Bucy Mrs. Edw. Dull Eileen Doogan Horace Adams JULY 30 Hilma (Ma) Nelson Sharon Day Bob Goldstein Russ Clithero Robert Bonner, Jr. Marian Jahnke o 0o 0 0 0 0 0 o o DURLING PUTS WOMAN SITUATION UP:TO Mrs. 3 E. V. Durling’s column ih¢ the Seattle Post Intelligencer said on i Thursday, “Betty Bello, a long fime reader of this column, is currently appearing with her hus- band, Al, at the Bubble Room Hotel Baranof, Juneau, Alaska. have asked Betty to let us know | if it is true what they say ahuul those lonely bachelors in Alaska. | 8o, young woman, don't start for until we hear from Betty.” Betty and Al Bello are already ] \ e i e et JULY 29, 1930 ’ To visit school centers of western, interior and northern Alaska, L. Breuer, Commissioner of Education, had left on a trip that would He was to go to the Alaska Peninsula, w take the rest of the summer. north as far as Circle and northwest to Nome. For the pleasure of nearly 100 persons on a special excursion to Taku Harbor aboard the Alma, the Juneau City Band furnished the music on the round trip. The crowd reached the cannery about 11 a. m. and enjoyed watching all its operations. Berry-picking and fish- ing occupied the excursionists, and lunch was, of course, an important feature. The Alma returned to Juneau at 6 p. m., after stopping to leave some voyagers at Thane. assistant agent of the U. S. Bureau of Fish- in many years was Capt. M. J. O'Connor, eries, reported that the greatest run of salmon blocking Icy Strait canneries. Tiles for the new Capitol Building made up much of the cargo of !the steamship Queen which docked here from Seattle and wayports. BETTY. AND AL BELLE .. 1l For the first time since the steamship Norco was acquired by the Northland Transportation Company, and after a thorough overhauling Although primarily a frieight- Three arrived for by the new owner, she came to Juneau. er, the Norco had accommodations for 18 passengers. Juneau and there were sfx round-trippers. Weather: High, 64; low, 47; clear. Pt - e & it Daily Lessons in English %, 1. corbon e e~} WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “I imagine you are very {Alaska on a husband hunting tlp |busy these days” Say, “I SUPPOSE you are very busy these days.” pronounce fung- | OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Fungus (singular); !gus, both G’s as in GO. Fungi (plural); pronounce fun-ji, J asin JUG, receiving mail from Durling readers )I In ICE. as R Prize, so far is a song about | { SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1950 Glover's Spruce Delicatessen and” Lockers will be open all three days of the Salmon Derby. Plenty of fresh frozen Tee Harbor herring available for bait. Beans and; bread, too, for the sportsmen who forgot to shop. 66-2t, ALASKA'S KEY POINTS only hours away by Clipper” ey FISHERMEN Stop at the COUNTRY CLUB for breakfast and ainner. Box lunches to go. Open ALL NIGHT!, 66-2t, In The Commissioner’s Court For The Territory of Alaska Division Ntmber One Before ROSS L. HEVEL, U. 8. Commissioner and Ex-Officio Pro- bate Judge, Haines Precinct. - IN THE MATTER OF THE GUARDIANSHIP OF THE PER- SON AND ESTATE' OF EMILY CHISEL, an incompetent. NOTICE OF GUARDIAN'S SALE OF REAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Lucille Wehrer of Haines, Alaska, as guardian of the person and estate of Emily Chisel; an incompetent person, by virtue of a license to sell real property issued by the above-entitled court on July 24, 1950, in the matter of the guard- ianship of the person and estate of Emily Chisel, an incompetent, will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder upon terms herein- H after set forth the real property hereinafter mentioned and de- scribed. The sale will take place on August 28, 1950, at the front door of the U. S. Commissioner’s Office in Haines, Alaska, commencing at 2 o'clock p.m. of that day and con= tinuing:from day to day-until all the hereinafter described property shall have been sold; ©® Fast and frequent Clipper service from Juneau to Nome, Fairbanks, Whitehorse and Ketchikan. Clipper flights daily to Seattle. Aboard the Clippers you enjoy real flying comfort — excellent food, relaxing lounge seats, and traditional Clipper hospitality. For fares and ‘reservationy call Pan American at... BARANOF HOTEL Phone 106 *Trade Marh, Pon Amarican World Aircays, Ine. A eccecccceov0ereseccecccccone AMERTCIN {IRWiLS PAN WoKrLD © WORLD'S MOST EXPERIENCED AIRLING Weather af AIaskaPomIs wun;er also on the Pnctflc Coast, ae 4: !0 The property to be sold and the various military stations in this country. If women\ “Flying to Juneau in June,” which ( OFTEN MISSPELLED: Bazaar (a store for the sale of fancy wares). am. 120th Meridian Time, snd|minimum bids which will be re- are available to fill such billets, the men now on the | job can be sent overseas for combat duty. ilable, it will be necessary to levy just tha are not av “By 2050 the average American man will be seven If women | feet tall” says a biologist. The guy who invariably t |sits in front of us at the movies is 100 years ahead much more intensively on the man power of reservists |of the times. The Washingfon Merry-Go-Round ‘Zontinued from Page One) trouble occurred be- they proposed the common-sense idea of going to court. But when the treaty later got back to the U. S. Senate, the sparks flew. And some Ropublican isolationists called Coolidge, Hughes ) and Kellogg just as v'riolic names ! as McCarthy has called the State | Department. plan. When tween nations, Re I War accompanied Secretary of to the There Consult years later Republican Henry L. Stimson, London naval conference. Stimsqn djid hig bes l‘{,lJUW_OSS a nwulmmw pact—again not a revclutionary proposal. It merely prov that, if war threatened, the United States would agree to “corsult” with the other nations of the world regarding ways of ing war. Stimson made ab- ly no promises or commit- beyond the promise that we 11 merely sit down and talk. mpared with the United Na- of today, the Stimson proposal almost juvenile. But when he L.roposed it privately at London in 1930—just twenty years ago— HerLert Hoov then President of the United E£tates, nearly had Kit- tens. He was so agitated that he called a s conference and em- phatically informed the world that “no c ultative pact has been con- sidered at any time during the course of the London conference.” Simultaneously in London, Sec- cretary Stimson, not knowing that rock-ribbed Republicans were scared stiff over even a tiny bit of inter- national cooperation, was holding his own pr conference stating exac'ly the opposite of his chief in the White House. A consultative pact, he said, was definitely under discussion. In the end, Hoover showed who was The consultative pact was kille and with it the entire naval treaty. Two a n State w ided boss. World War II Begins ye later—1931—the Jap- m d Manchuria and Sec- Stimson once again tried to securz international cooperation to head off what he knew to be the beginning of a world war. And in rt to prod and encourage the League of Nations into a co-oper- ative move to stop war, Stimson took the relatively mild step of ord 13 the U. S, consul in Gen- eva to sit in on council sessions— only an observer. An immediate howl of protest went up from members of Stimson’s own Republican party. They were s0 vigorous, and his chief Herbert Hoover got so nervous, that the U. S. consul was finally replaced by Charles G. Dawes, whom the GOP isolation: trusted. ‘ O anese Europe Cools Even more was the negati ean members of the tions. The French press screamed that they did not want the United States butting into League affairs. ‘The Eritish foreign office, long in sympathy with Japan, deftly un- d,(‘l cut Stimson's crackdowns on Tckyo. Mussolini, fearing his turn would be next, was distinctly cool to American cooperation And Jap diplomats, foreseeing the day when they would go on further aggressions, took diabolical pleasure in ridiculing Stimson, and howeve League of Na- l nothing. e et g et slowly breaking down < COMMUNITY EVENTS machinery of the world. For months, the League debsted But instead of the 48-hour decision made by the United Nations in the Korean crisis, it took one solid year for the League to get a report from an international commission on the Manchurian incident. By that time, it was tpo late. July 30 The Jap warlords were firmly en- 7 am. to 5 pm.—Last day of Sal- trenched. The seeds of World War ., perpy. II were well planted. And, most] ¢y pm_ Busses leave Moose Club important of all, every other would- for Auk Recreation center on an- be aggressor realized that he could} . picnic of Loyal Order of thumb his nose at internationalf ., .- law, and the League would do TODAY With Juneau taking commercial holiday, scores ‘are out fishing on the second day of the Salmon Derby with official check in at July 31 At noon—Lions Club, Baranof. At noon—BPWC meets in Terrace Room, Baranof. At 8 pm.—American Legion, Dug- An age was dying; an age of international optimism, isolationism, and Harding normalcy. An age was dying and Henry L. Stimson struggled almost alone to give it renewed life. »“Leaving a sickbed in’ the spfing}* of 1932, he sailed for Paris de- termined to warn the statesmen of Europe that they were sealing their August 1 At noon—Rotary Club, Baranof. August 2 At noon—Kiwanis Club, Baranof. August 3 At noon—Chamber of Commerce, a woman in Massachusetts would |Bizarre (odd; fantastic). like to have published with Betty and Al's assistance. The friendship between Betty and | SYNONYMS: Knowledge, wisdom, science, information. WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” learning, scholarship, erudition, Let us Ed Durling goes back to the tme| anrease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today’s word: and her father, were fellow news-~ the Los when Durling Frank Taylor, papermen on ‘Times. “Mr. Durling things in his column about d&J and me in those days. Dad had charge of the Times travel bureau and whenever I could, I would go | Auk Bay and Tee Harbor at 5 P.M. (to his office and it was then tHat | I knew Mr, Durling,” Betty said. She has already written to Mr. jDurling about the woman situation in Alaska. What did she say? “Well, ithere were about as many women as there are men; that the short- age of women is in Anchorage and Fairbanks. I asked one man what he thought about it and he asked | |correct. me to tell Mr. Durling that he would like a wife with about nine children, so he could have some income tax deductiops.” Now, when you hear the Hellos the Baranof, all started. At it Juneau in Junz youwll know how Angeles frequently wrote | I told him that in Juneau | to! own doom. Renting a villa at Geneva, he called in the Prime Ministers of Western Europe and argued that Japan's far-away ag- gression against China could be a greater threat to them than any menace ‘n Europe. He urged that tnev take a firm stand to bolster the world's peace machinery in order to head off war in the future. But he failed. 193k vs. lvay Those were dark days in Stim- son’s Villa Besinge on Lake Gen- eva. His room looked out on an old garden sheltered by high trees, in which roosted flocks of birds. And sometimes, when he could not sleep and work dragged endlessly, Stimson stood at his window look- ing out upon the trees and the upon the garden, and remembered the world war days when he was a colonel of artillery in France. Out among the poplars he saw again that line of men from the fields, the factories, the sea, going forward; back. A panorama of his life lay before him then, the latter years| having béen given to rebuilding equity and understanding among the peoples of the world. And he had failed. The importance of Korea is that in exactly the same part of the world, a few miles from the spot where the Jap warlords invaded Manchuria, Russia, twenty years later, has launched her first move in World War III. But this time, the newly formed peace machinery of the world func- § tioned overnight. This time Re- publican senators, previously isol- ationist, supported the United Na- tions. Perhaps it was because Taft, Knowland, and GOP col- leagues had been shouting about Truman's failure in the Far East that caused them to reverse their previous - isolatidr. Whatever the reason, this time both the United Nations ‘and the United States Senate acted’in uni- son. That's why Korea may be a milestone "in the path of a war- weary world toward a day when we can prevent wars altogether. -~ Glover's Spruce Delicatessen and Lockers will be open all three days | of the Salmon Derby. Plenty or\ fresh frozen Tee Harbor herring | available for bait. Beans and bread, too, for the sportsmen who‘ forgot to shop. 66-2t | 3 store buildings for rent or will | remodel into office if desired. 64-tf 1. GOLDSTEIN and the line of women,|for breakfast and dinner. wounded men, exhausted men, going | lunches to go. Opfin ALL NIGHT! Baranof. At 6:30 pm. — Juneau Rifle an.i Pistol Club at Mendenhall Rani MGCTHER BAXTER, LEAVES to continue a six- week round of summer visits with relatives and close friends, Mrs. Nellie Feare of Los Angeles was a Pan Amecrican passenger yester- day for Seattle. Mrs. Feare has been here since Sunday, when she arrived on the Alaska, enjoying her first trip to Alaska and a visit with her daugh- ter, Mrs. Pat Baxter. She stopped at the Baranof Hotel. MRS. FEARE, OF PAT On her way ® eevcecccoecevcoce | | | .' Lockers will be open all three days of the Salmon Derby. Plenty of available for bait. Beans TID High tide Low tide High tide Low tide High tide Low . tide High tide Low tide e o o 0 5 o E TABLE JULY 30 2:19 am,, 0 am., 15:12 p.m., 21:01 pm., 185 -33 16.8 13 JULY 31 . , 181 28 . 169 ft. 21:43 pm., 11 ft. ft. HOSPITAL NOFES Mrs. John Hinchman of Hoonah, moon and the shadows they cast|fresh frozen Tee Harbor herring |Mus. Frank Mosher, and Dorothy and | Riley were admitted to St. Ani’s bread, too, for the sportsmen who i Hospital yesterday. forgot to shop. 66-2t F FISHERMEN P Stop at the COUNTRY CLUB Box 66-2t Crossword Puzzle woatf g5 B : Auricle 18, Arabian chieftain ay out 16. Perennia® ?lanu 11. Related un g 20] Quenches 22. More expensive 34 Considers 26, English cathedral Grae[{ letter 29. Metalworker 81. Soft driok 34 skint Sflllllnderl Slender : Atresh 67. Constellation Tumulmoul order Kind ol bllum 63, H‘lr on an uuTnl s necl . Huge waves 65. Dutch meters 2. 7 fl--- Z Carl Verd and Mrs. 'orbes, arker, dismissed. Katie White of Juneau was ad- | mitted to the Government Hos-! 1. Permits Nobleman Carlson, Mrs. Neil elle Chappell, W. C. J. MacDonald were 3. Mountain nymph 1s becaming Exist 'nk- a ohalr wor "‘mh i fee Chovnlnl tol Celmm 1 boty 6 Bi mm..o. o approval Hindu peasant 5. Redsed platform ¥ 2 de\r(’ h’ gold b Young onions for planting Implement Som of Seth Sorrow | playing something akout flying to |} CONSISTENCY; harmony between things, acts, or statements. “The minister lived and practiced his teachings with great consistency.” MODERN ETIQUETTE oszrra Lee Q. Should a man remove his hat in an elevator? A. It is not considered necessary any more for a man to remove his hat in a business elevator. In elevators in apartments, hotels and clubs, men remove their hats, but in elevators in office buildings and stores they usually do not. These elevators are usually crowded and it is difficult for a man to put up his arm and take off his hat. Q. Is “Dear Sirs” considered a proper salutation to a business | letter? A. No; the term “Gentlemen” should be used. Of course, if the business letter is addressed to an individual, then “Dear Sir" is quite Q. When a man takes a woman to dinner, should he give her order to the waiter before giving his own? A. Yes, always. lOOK and lEAR'N z’f’c. GORDON What is the smallest unit of liquid measurement? Who was the first Democrat to become President of the U. 8.2 What is the hardest, least destructible substance in the human body? How many States have been added to the Union during the 20th cemury" J 5. What species of cat has no tail? # ANSWERS: The minim, about a drop, 1/60 of a fluid drachm. Andrew " Jackson. The dental enamel. Three: Oklahoma in 1907, and New Mexico and Arizona in 1912. Manx. B b e fyrenenflyrmenflyrrmenflyomerflyrenenipreerlyronerlps There is nosubstitute for Newspaner Advertising! HAZEL.FORDE as a paid-up subserfber to-THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING * Preseut this coupon to thg;lsz office of the and receive TWO TICKEIS td see: "BRING 'EM BACK AEIVE" Federal’Tux—1%c Paid by thé Théatre Phone 14—YELLOW'CAR €0.—Phone 22 and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR.YOU and: RETURN YOU to your home with our compliments: WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! : : j Oldest Bank in Alaska 1891—O0ver Half a Century of Banking—1950 The B. M. Behrends Bank Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent COMMERCIAL [ - SAVINGS 5 ceived therefor are as follows: In the Town of Haines Lot 26, Block 1 Lot 27, Block 1 . w Lot 2, Block 4 nnd improve- ments Lot 9, Block 9 and xmprave- ments . Lot 1, Block 10 Lot 11, Block 10 Lot 12, Block 10 Lot 7, Block 13 and im- provements ..... Lot 10, Block Lot 11, Block Lot 12, Block Lot 13 and 14, Block 13 and 48—Partly Cloudy improvements .. ... 5,000.00 X5 51—Rain | Lot 1, Bloek 14 . 600.00 57—Partly Cloudy | Lot 2, Block 14 . 400.00 45—Partly Cloudy | Lot 6, Block 21 . 200.00 . 55—Cloudy | Lot 10, Block 21 .. 200.90 53—Drizzle | Lot 12, Block 21 .. 200.00 48—Cloudly | An undivided % imerest in 50—Rain | Lot 15, Block 21 ... An undivided 2 interest in the N. ’z of Mt 16, Block x Lot 20, Block 21 . Lot 21, Block .21 Near Town of Haines Lots 2 and 3 of Sec. 26, Tp. 28 S. R. 55 E. CRM and the E % of released by the Weather Bureau are as follows: Anchoiage itine 48—OCloudy Annette Island 52—Rain Barrow 33—Partly Cloudy Bethel 46—Cloudy Cordova 48—Rain Dawson .. ... 51—Rain Edmonton 55—Cloudy Fairbanks 44—Partly Cloudy Haines . 50—Rain Havre 59—Cloudy Juneau Axrport 51—Rain 51—Partly Cloudy 55—Rain 43—Cloudy 40—Partly Cloudy | | Kotzebue { McGrath . Nome Northway Petersburg . Portland Prince George | Seattle Sitka Whitehorse Yakutat 40000 50.00 PIANO TUNER Phone 206, Alaska Music 25.00 100.00 200.00 =ippry. U.S. Department of the Interior Division of Territories and Island Possessions Alaska Public Works Program NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS July 25, 1950 Sealed bids will be received by Division of Territories and Island Possesions, Alaska Public Works, Room 115, Community Building, Ju- neau, Alaska, until 5:00 p.m. Pa- cific Standard Time, on August 23, 1950, for the construction of a rein- forced concrete Library Building at Juneau, Alaska. At which time and place the bids will be’ publicly opened and read aloud. Bids received after closing time of bid opening will be returned unopened. Plans and Specifications and are open for public inspection at the District Engineer’s Office, Room 115, Community Building, Juneau, Alaska; at the office of the Associated General Contractors of America, Arctic Building, Seattle, Washington; at the office of the Associated General Contractors of John D. Argetsinger, District En- | gineer, Department of the Interior, |} other proposed contract documents ; NW. %, W. % of NE. %, NE. % of SW. %, NW. % of SE. % of Sec. 35, Tp, 28, S. of R, 55 E. CRM, containing 333.11 acres of land on W. side of Kleheni River approx. 27 miles from Haines, Alaska, form- erly Albert Chisel Homestead ... ..$1,000.00 The N. % of the NE. % and N.E. 3% of N.W. %, Sec. 4, Tp. 29 S. of R. 56 E, CRM, and SE. % of SE. % of Sec. 35, Tp. 28, S. of R. 55 E. CRM, containing 160 acres W. of Kleheni River approx. 27 miles from Haines, Alaska, formerly Goddard Homestead ... ..$1,000.00 Lots 5 and 8. of Sec. 8, Tp. 30, S. of R. 58 E. of CRM containing 44.59 acres approx. 10 ‘miles N. of Haines, Alaska, formerly Dowling Home- stead 1,000.00 Comm., at N.E. Cor. Lot 4, Sec. 26, Tp. 30, S.R. 59 E, CRM, thence westerly along the N. boundary of said Lot 4 to W. boundary, Sec. 28; thence southerly to the N. boundary of Survey 690; thence in an easterly direction along N. boundary Sur. .America, Anchorage, Alaska; at the [ office of the Associated General Contraetors, Suite 112, Multnomah Hotel, Portland, Oregon; at the of- fice of the Salem Contractors Ex- change, Salem, Oregon; and Room 2723, Interior Building, Washing- ton, D.C. A set of such documents may be procured from the office of John D. Argetsinger, District Engineer, at | upon deposit of | Juneau, Alaska, $25.00, all of which will'be returned to bona fide bidders upon the re- turn of the plans and specifications within ten (10) days from date of bid opening. To parties who procure plans and | specifications upon payment of the above-stated amount; and who do not submit a bid, $25.00 will be re- funded upon the return thereof within ten (10) days from the date of the bid opening. No refund will be made for return-after that time. Fach bid must be accofpanied by a satisfactory bid security: (certified check or bid bond) in an amount >f not less than 5 per cent of the total bid. The successful bidder will be re- quired to furnish a performance bond and payment bond, each in the amount of 100 per cent of the contract price. No bid may be withdrawn until thirty (30) days after the scheduled closing time for the receipt of bids. The Government reserves the right to reject any and all bids and to waive informalities with respect thereto. DAN H. WHEELER Assistant Director Run: July 29, Aug. 5, 12, 19, 1950. 690 to the N.E, Cor. Sur. 680; thenge continuing easterly to line betweén 4 and 5 (original Lot 3); thence northerly along said line to NE. Cor. of Lot 4, place of begin- ning, containing approx. 15,64 acres, being & portion of Lot 4, Sec. 26, Tp. 30, S. R. 59 E. CRM, 1/10 mile N. of Haines, Alaska +-$1,000.00 W. #%%f the:N.W. % and SE. % of the NiWy % and Lot 2, Sec. 26, Tp. 30, S.R. 59 E. CRM, containing 13621 acres, situated % mile Ny town of Haines, Alaska .. $4,00000 An undivided % interest in Nug- get Bar Placer'Claim, Sur. No. 1564, containing 160- patented ‘acres " ..$1,000,00 All tracts, lots or:separate parcels will sell for less than $1,000 shall be sold for cash, and all tracts, lots or groups of tracts or lots, as here- inabove separately described, which are sold for $1,000 or more, shall be sold for at least 1/3 cash at the time of sale and the remainder in monthly payments with interest at six ‘percent per annum, with the title of the property transferred to the purchaser and the remaining payments evidenced by promissory note secured by first mortgage on the property sold, to be given to the guardian as security for the re- mainder of the purchase price, The guardian reserves the right to reject any and all bids offered for any portion or all of the above- described real property.’ Dated at Haines, Alaska, this 29th day of July, 1950. LUCILLE WEHRER Guardian. First publication: July 29, 1950. Last publication: August 19, 1950.