The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 16, 1951, Page 6

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PAGE SIX INVITATION TO BID The Alaska Department of Health | announces the invitation to bid for furnishing a fleet insurance policy for public liability and property damage on twenty-five cars oper- ated by the department Intevested bidders may secure bid forms and specifications by calling { of WILLIAM HOLTZINGER, De- at Room 419 in ‘the Territorial Building or writing the Aiaska De- yartment of Hezlth, P. O. Box 1931, Juneau, Alaska. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JU\ AU ALASKA e e vision Number One, Territory of Alaska. In the Matter of the Estate of William Holtzinger, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by the undersigned, United States Commissioner, as Ex-Officio Pro- bate Judge of the above-entitled court, in the matter of the Estate ceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against the said estate, to present their claims with the necessary vouchers and Sealed bids will be received un- til 4:30 p.m., February 26, 1951, and then publicly opened C. EARL ALBRECHT, M.D. Commissioner of Health First Publication: Feb. 9, 1951 Last Publication: Feb. 23, 1951 l Sealed / Notice to Contrs ors: bids will be received by John D. Argetsinger, District Engineer, De- partment of the Interior, Office of Territories, Alaska Public Works, Main Office of Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company, Juneau, Alaska, until 5:00 p.m. Pacific Standard time, on February 28, 1951, for con- structing and equipping of a rein- forced concrete Territorial Office Building in 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 un opened. Plans and Specifications and other proposed contract docu- ments are open for public inspec- tion at the District Engineer’s Of- fice, Alaska-Juneau Gold Mining Co. office, Juneau, Alaska, at the office of the Associated Genera! Contractors of America, Arctic Building, Seattle, Washington, at the office of the Associated General Contractors of America, Anchorage Alaska, Office of Frank A. Metculf Superintendent of Public Works, Territory of Alaska, Federal Build ing, Juneau, Alaska, at the office of the Associated General Con- tractors, Suite 112, Multnomah Hotel, Portland, Oregon, and at: Room 2723, Intericr Building, Wash- ington, D. C. A set of such docu- ments may be procured from the office of John D. Argetsinger, Dis- trict Engineer, at Juneau, Alaska, upon deposit of $25.00, all of which will be refunded to bona fide bid- ders upon the return of the plan: and specifications within ten (10) days from date of bid openin:. To| parties who procure plans and spe- cifications upon payment of the above stated amount, and who dol not submit a bid, $25.00 will be re- | funded upon the return thereof | within ten (10) days from the date, of the bid oféMigt " No réfnd will be made for return after that time.| Each bid must be accompanied by a satisfactory bid security 'cem-] fied check or bid bomd) in an| amount of not less than 5 per cent; of the total bid. The successful{ bidder will be required to furnish a | performance bond and p.\)m?‘n[ bond, each in the amount of 100 per cent of the comtract price. No bid may be withdrawn until thirty (3 days after the scheduled clos- | ing time for the receipt of bids. The Government reserves the right to‘ reject any and all bids and to waive informalities with respect thereto. Lester M. Marx, Controiling Officer. Jan 26 Feb 2-9-16 I’DTICE 7O CREDITORS | Case No. 11-1655 In the United States Commissioner’s Court for Juneau Precinct Di- Hrvm the date of the posting of this [ | questions and I was told that effec- duly verified, within six (6) months nmxrc to Felix Gray, Administrator | w.w.a. at the Hotel Juneau, Juneau, Alaska, the same being the place or the transaction of the business f said estate. GIVEN under this 26th day of January, 1951, Juneau, Alaska. GORDON GRAY, United States Commissioner, and Ex-Officio Probate Judge, Juneau Precinct, Territory of Alaska. (SEAL) First Publication: Jan. 26, 1951. Last Publication: Feb. 16, 1951. my hand and seal at \()TI(E TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that ALASKA PERSONAL SERV- ICE AGENTS has been appointed Administrator W.W.A. of the estate f CHRIST A. MARKIKES, De- ceased, and that all persons are re- quired to present their claims, ifi{ any, with proper vouchers, within | six months from the date hereof, at the office of said administrator and its attorneys, R. E. Robertson, M. E. Monagle and F. O. Eastaugh, at Room 200 Seward Building, Juneau, Alaska. Dated at Juneau, uary 14, 1951, ALASKA PERSONAL SERVICE AGENTS, By M. E. MONAGLE, Vice President. First Publication: Feb. 16, 1951. Alaska, Febr- J until clearance has been obtained. Last Publication: March 9, 1951 ) THESE DAYS --BY-- | GECEGE k. SUKCLEKY INFANTRY FRONT The great debate is to result in| earings before the Senate. A ter- | rific array of bLrass is to be called =5 in uniform, bedecked and em- | Llazoned. The principal witnesses| will be doughboys—infantrymen, | ground troops, Generals Marshall, Eisenhower and Bradley. The Navy had a tough time when Louis John- son was Secretary of Defense; now | b i the ([Navy and the. Air- chyi who are silenced. But infantry alone will not win a war. There are many effective.| if not more effective functional groups: the Air F rtillery, cavalry nething of all the and psychological ag Have you noticed how silent these !branches have been? Have you| noted that during the whole of th great dehate General Hoyt Vander.- berg of the Air Force, who used to| be' quite vocal, has been silent as | though he did not exist? And what | has become of Admiral Forrest| Sherma Have these services no views to pass on to the Congress and to the American people? Well, T have been asking thesc tive December 12, 1950, “no speeches or public announcements will be PHONE Red 372 . . Glacier Construction Co. GENERAL CONTRACTORS New Building — Remodeling — Cabinet Work Safe Electrical Pipe Thawing and. Welding Plumbing © Heafing Oil Burners Telephone 319 Douglas 364 Nights-Red 730 HARRI PLUMBING & HEATING CO. 12th and E Street Your Depesits ARE SAFE BUY and HOLLs UNITED STATES SAVINGS BONDS \ T management of tha back is pledged to conscrva tive operation. The sfety of depositors’ funds s our primary consideration. In addition, the banl is 3 mem- ber of Federal Deporit Insur ance Carporition, which in sures each ot our depositors against |0 w0 & marimum of $10,000. DEPOSITS IN TRIS BANK ARE INSURED FIRST NATIONAL BANK of JUNEAU, ALASEA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION | House, | the | this country, | these men may not speak truth- | fully if the truth contradicts policy. | human | by | prestige by calling the evacuation | Arthur i knowledge of that fact did embar- | been awarded Coast Guard crew- made by armed forces personnel Copies of future speeches, state-) ments, or press releases concerning foreign or military policy must be submitted to this headquarters (Pentagon) for proper clearance. “All personnel, particularly thi overseas, will refrain from making public statements or communicat- ing with news media on military or foreign policy without prior clear- ance with this headquarters. The purpose is not to curtail the flow of information to the American veople but to insure that the in- formation is accurkte and in accord with the policies of the United States Government.” Such instructions have not heen; unusual in recent years, but that last sentence is political nonsense The head of the Air Force or the| Navy is accurate when he respons- ibly testifies before a Congres- sional Committee. Why should one assume that General Hoyt Vanden- i berg or Admiral Forrest Sherman, so testifying under oath, is less responsible and accurate than Gen- rals George Marshall, Dwight Eisenhower or Omar Bradley? Does the infantry have a monopoly of the truth? There was a time when 1l military men sang together as erfectly as a Fred Waring glee club, but apparently those days are gone. It has come to me, in an in- direct manner, perhaps irrespons- ibly, that the following instructions were added to those of December 12: “Officers may, upon their own responsibility and at their own dis- cretion, make remarks concerning unclassified matters of foreign or military policies to selected groups for background purposes only and not for publication, without obtain- ing prior clearance, provided that their remarks are confined to the| Lounds or policies which have been puhblicly announced by the White State or Defense Depart- mer In other words, what is permis- sible is that which has been politi- cally cleared. While Congress gropes | for the facts so that it miay pass| legislation required to defe high-ranking officer of our armed TV have been| gagged, by orders to watch their politics Until these orders are withdrawn, are soldiers and are required by th profession to obey their superiors in a chain of command reaching upward to the President,| who, while a politician, is com- mander-in-chief. Cherefore, the Congress may never have the whole truth in open I . That does not mean that nature, being what it is, s not in some manner, if only rumor, assert itself. For instance, no matter how great an effort was made in Washington lower General MacArthur'’s They he to of Hungnam a Dunkirk, it never was that. Although General Mac- has been criticized by| American and British politicians for béing too precise about the size of the Soviet Chinese army, it is true that General Lin Piao had an army of 500,000 men, even il rass the appeasers in the United Nations. Such facts do get out. A student might even make a comparison hetween the Anzio cam- paign in World War II and the Korean campaign, and the in- fantrymen would be very embar- rassed. But rumor and gossip do no serve as an honestly conducted congressional investigation can. The Juestion then is: Shall we have 1 full hearing or another Pearl Harbor investigation, or worse still, another Tydings Committee? 2cial Correspondence) SITKA, Alaska, Feb, 11.—Correc- ion: Money for the electric organ {or St. Peters-by-the-Sea was not aised by members of St. Peters suild but came from th2 Memorial The City Counecil has been unable o meet for lack of a quorum since wo of the Councilmen, Hope and JeArmond, left to attend the Ter- itorial Legislature. However, it is 10ped that a quorum ean be brought cgether this next week. Delegates named to tl Convention which will meei next month are—Fred Coudingt Everitt Calhoun, Max Workman, Peters, John Osborne, Ivan Rezek and Charles Butcher; alternates are Roland Waurster, Charles Kidd, Al Eberhart and Judson Lanier. The Soroptomists have consented to assist the Lions in entertaining out-of-town delegates and their by giving a tea at the home roptomist Mrs. John Cushing on March 16. The convention dinner will be held at the Mooose Club on March 17, from 6:30 to 9:30. Lions n Sitks 1 11 Letters of Commendation have| men of the Cutter Cahoone by the Commander of the 17th C. G. Dis-] trict, for outstanding service, Those & receiving the award are Lieut, John y, skipper and ten crew S ChM Mason, Edgar Fin- ney, qula(‘e A]exnnder Francis Hollum, Charles Pennington, Billy Evans, LeRoy Ostergaard, Frank Washington, Robert Garrison and Rodger Dewey. The award was given for the out- standing services performed by the| crew, in cooperation with Dr. Phillip | Moore, in bLringing Wilbur Peddie into Mt. Edgecumbe Mospital irom Shelikoff Bay under dangerous and trying conditions. A delay of even | a few hours would iave resulted in the death of the patient. The Women o1 planned a busy schedule for the next two months. On February 17 they will be hostesses at a children’s Valentine party. On the afternoon of February 24 they will hold a food sale and that evening have a formal party with a buffet supper to be served at midnight. And on March 17 they will have their St. Patrick’'s Day party — an annual event which is outstanding on Sitka’s social calendar. The Legion Auxiliary this week | voted to assist the leprosarium in Carville, La., when it was brought| to their attention through an arti in the Readers Digest. They sub- scribed to the colony’s paper Star, and voted a donation to their gaso- line fund. They have scheduled a costume party for Washington’s Birthday, on February 23, with Mrs, James T. Williams in charge of arrangements. The Junior Auxiliary held a! candlelight initiation ceremony Fri- day evening, with Mrs. Dormand McGraw in charge. Those initiated| were: Gale Johnstone, Juanita Wil- liams, Georgene, Janice and Marilyn Krug, Marina and Lydia Panamm'-l koff, After the initiation there was a| Valentine party for the youngsters, | Valentines were exchanged and| mothers of the members were pre- sented with heart-shaped pin- ushions which the youngsters had made. Edna G. Miller, nurse from the | Nome Hospital, arrived by plane Tuesday to join her fiance, George Bascom, son of Mrs. Duke Mitro- viteh. The couple plan to be mar- ried at St. Peters-by-the-Sea on March 10. be Rev. and Mrs. Robert Row- land returned by plane last week- end from a long vacation in the# States. He is pastor of the Church; of Christ and an employee of the Columbia Lumber Company mill. William C. Salt arrived by plane| from Anchorage this week .to join the AN§ on the Island as construc- wzn engineer. Mr, Salt has been in Alaska fcr several years, having supervised construction of the ANS Hospital in Bethel, worked with the Federal Works Agency in Ketchi-| kan, supervised the construction of the Kanakanak Hospital and, most recently, worked for the Alaska Housing Authority in Anchorage. He will be joined by his family, now living in Anchorage, at the end of the school year. Mrs. Robert Wheeler and son Bokhy returned by plane this week from Seattle. Bobby had gone south | to join the Air Force but found enlistments temporarily closed—and Mrs. Wheeler had been called south a family illness. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Trafton eft this week aboard the Fish and wildlife service ship Teal to make heir home in Washington State, ifter two years in Sitka. Mr. rrafton was an ANS employee and Virs. Traiton worked for the Sitka Jentinel. Before coming to Sitka ‘he Traftors lived in Juneau. Ben Bilbo left by plane this week to spend his vacation with his parents in Indiana. Mr. Bilbo is an employee of the Columbia Lumber Company. Mrs. Phillip Moore left by plane this week to meet her hus Dr. Moore, chief surgeon a Orthopedic Hospital, who has been east to attend the orthopedic sur- geons' convention. They will Dr. Moore'’s mother in Portland, Ore., before returning to £i Mr, and Mrs. Enrest £omers re- turned from a three-week vacati in the States. They had picked up a car in Seattle and driven as fay south as San Francisco. Mr. Somers, local manager Columbia Lumber Company, has been transferred to Juneau, where he will serve as assistant to C.L.C. president, Tom Morgan, and Mrs. Somers, will serve as accountant at the Juneau Lumber Mill. The Somers, with their two daughters, Sally and Janet, and her mother, Mrs, Ida Brandt, plan to move to Juneau the middle of next month. visit for Charles Peterson, owner of Bazaar Motors, left by plane this week to join his wife, Nan, who left some weeks ago on a buying trip for their store, the Sitka Ba-| zaar. The Petersons will make a buying trip to San Francisco, before returning to Sitka in about two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Murray LaCour and young son, Junior, left this week Vby b tne Moose have | ! neau for the meeting of the Terri. vacation trip to the' LaCour is an ANS em-; the Island. hort Mr on on a tate plovee Price, home demcastra-' t for the Alaska University arrived this week headquarters ta - ing class ing { Mt. Edgecumbe and or- groug Hall tion age extension service, her Juneau es were held Thurs- for Joseph Littlefield] previous morning at Front Street, and Mrs. John Little- ased was born in 10, . He is survived . his wife Mary Ann nrietta of Mt. Edge- Mrs. Charlotte Youn and ur brothe Ed ,-cumbe, Art and Gregory : {1 Henry of Metlakatl who died the | his home or of Mr. P Calvin daughter of Mr and M Jack Calvin, and a student .t WSC in Pullman, returned home Thursday. Miss Calvin MacPhail College of E@W IGLAS RNEWS IPALOOK 1IN DOUGLAS The Rev. Percy Ipalook of Kot- | zebue, Alaska, will be in charge of the morning worship service of thé Douglas Community Methodist Church this Sunday morning at 11 o'clock. He is a graduate of sheldon Jackson School and Du- Buque University and Seminary has served the Presbyterian Chur- | ches at Wéinwright, Gambell, and Wales, and is now a Chaplain of the National Guard. He is in Ju- ha torial Legislature as a Senator from the Second Division. All resi-| dents of the Douglas area are c: fally invited to the Sunday vice. ser- GIRL SCOUT GOODIE SALE Girl Scouts, Trcop No. 6, will| conduct a goodie sale tomorrow Saturday afternocn at 2 c'clock in the Douglas Drug Store. There will be pies, s and | candies on sale with Scouts { Pusich, Vadra Fleek and Sharon Henkins, in charce. All monies re- ceived whether: by dcnations or Ly sale of their goodies, will go} towards the Douglas Girl Scouts contribution to the Juliette Low| for International Friendship. the Scouts last meeting on Thursday, Mrs. W. R. Peterson at-| tended and talked to the Scouts the care of the skin. At next e will give instruction 1e care of the hair, NS CLUB MEET The Douglas Island Womens Club | ¢ met last Wednesday evening at the rome of Mrs. Elwin Dell. Mrs. Mar- in Pederson was co-hostess dur-' session and fo the moet- i g the evening refreshments following ing. Two new members were wel ’rn:«[l into the club during the evenin Dorothy Mcesch and Erna Kilday.| BROWNIE SCOUTS . The Brownie Scouts met at the home of M Floyd Guertin 3:30 Wednesday afternoon. Presi- dent Brucella Guerin presided. Af- ter roll call, taken by Sherian Guerin, the president awarded Brownie pins to Dorothy Ann Dell Betty Wekb and Victoria Barkdall Sherian Guerin, Barbara Jean Estes, and Brucella Guerin received their second and third year flowers. The meeting adjourned after which a Valentine party was en- joyed by all. i TAKU TRAVELERS Saturday; tomorrow evening, the Taku Travelers will meet again in the Douglas School for an evening of dancing and fun. All couples of the community are invited to attend and be members of the or- ganization which is a community activity. Through the courtesy of the Douglas School Board, plenty of space is provided for as many as care to dance—and in square dancing, the more the me-Ti six to eight squa on the floor, but several mo y be added—so officers want the rest of the community tc avail themselves of this recreation Prior to the regular dancing whick legins at 8 o'clock, callers and those interested in calling or jusl getting advance instructions Wil meet at 7:30. Several dance num- L which will be used on the Spring Festival program, wiil be gone over in the next several meetings. NO QUORUM Stockholders of the Douglas Can- ning Co. Inc., could not produce £ quorum at their stockholders meet- ing last night in City Hall; so nc regular meeting of business coulc be held, CALF WALKS 3 MILES TO DINNER HARDIN, Ill. —(» —Farmer Lou Godar has a calf that won't let go of mama cow's apron strings Time came to wean the calf but it found its way back—even though it was taken three miles away. ! HIGHWAY home, fully [urmshm,‘ " the sea, {the Panama |l ing with relatives FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1951 W-A-N-T A-D-$§ FOR SALE PRONES 676 and 207 NEW listings in Juneau. 4 BEDRCOM house in Tract gvailable Feb. 15 Full basement and furna Unfurn- ished except for stove and refrig- erator. SMALL duplex on 10th near Doug- las Bridge—furnished—good in- come. LOTS—Two on Gold Belt with view—one on South Franklin. MURPHY & MURPHY REALTORS — ACCOUNTANTS *hone 676 over First Nationai Bank ‘Waynor REAL ESTATE ANYWHERE! AIGHLANDS home, 2 or 3 bed- rooms, almost new, xcellent view, conc. bsmt, garage, furn or unfurn, many nice items. WATERFRONT, 3 or 4 bedrooms, conc. bsmt, nice view, well-; planned, near city limits, unfurn. | 2 bedrooms, basmt, view, near, airport, $7,500 bargain. SUMMER cabin, price reduced to i Play FOR SALE NEW LISTING IN JUNEAU— DUPLEX on Star Hill-NO STEPS. 1 bedroom each apartment. Fur- nished. $4000. Very livable log cabin on a very fine lot. BELLE'S CAFE—Juncau's best restaurant-—Make inquiries—Box 2324, William Winn-Phone 234 Office Ya Gastinean Hotel l'(ll SALE 8 GALVENIZED pound. Call 6 pm. c m in 20c 064 after 735-3t 5 Douglas CLEARANCE SALE Pen 9 MM Mauser 22 Rifle with Scope licrafter Portable Boy's Bike Duo-therm Range Band Saw Jointer $1,300 for quigk sale; must be; moved to your own lot nt approx- imate cost of $100. PERFECT country location, next; to store, beach, 3 acres land, ! partly finisheq house with conc. bsmt. worth $3),000 when finished ! Price $12,600. LEVEL bldg. lot, Indian Village. BOAT SHOP, small home, gardens, beach, ae: beautiful wttm" LOG CABIN, 155 acres pat. land near Glacier. $5250. LOTS and acreage of all sizes from 50 foot frontage to 30 acres rang- | ing in price from $600 to $78 Auk Bay, rritz Cove and Lemon: Creek areas. USIN Opportunities and in- vestment property listings also. GOING OUTSIDE? We have an excell chcice or‘ homes and lots in Seattle. Bob Druxman-Phone 891 Fiitz Jove Rd. or 123 Front St. ngs by Ay-pmnlmeni SHORE - LEAVE FOR SEAGOING Auk La STEWARDESS | VANCOUVE! stewardess cettle down—but only on conditions. | She wants a home ovulo'xk“v'l time to entertain her se: faring friends and the chance frrw n occasional short cruise. “I'd settle for that,” brown-haired stewardess, visited all the continents, the seas, and iled through and Suez Canals. Miss Peck, who resumed her maiden name after her husband’s death eight years ago, has spent five years as stewardess on Swedis =nd Norwegian ps. She is 3 her eight-year-old daughter and parents at nearby New Westminster, Although she admits that sea fever is hard to cure, Miss Peck says she's really going to have @ says who has! seen all stab at staying home.” She is look-§ ing for a shore job, preferably ‘something exciting.” “T'd like to remarry, settle ‘down and have my little girl live witk me,” she says. Linda has been stay- in New West- minster. Asked if she would consider 2 proposal from a sailor, she says: hat’s a difficult question to an- swer—I know so much about them.’ Born in Edmonton, she had never seen a ship before she was 21, and was seasick on her first trip to sea She recalls: “Ill always remember the customer who asked me for pie a la mode and coffee. I just turned or my heel and ran.” That was the only time she ha: been bothercd by mal de mer. Sixty-two days is the longest time she ever spent without seeing land The longest time she’s been ashore in the last five years were the nine months she spent working a ifferent jobs in Australia. There she canned fruit in a factory, helper make alarm clocks and looked afte stores for machinery company. CITY MANAGER PLAN GROWS NEW YORK — Seventy-nin¢ American municipalities adopted th council-manager form of govern ment during 1949, it is reported b the National Municipal League -learing house of information fo local civic groups. This brings the total number of places in vuhlc“ the city manager plan is in effec to 958. The league predicted that, the present rate, the council-man- ager plan will become e prevail ing foriu of local government with- in the next decade. —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— {CDDS & ENDS, | i given birth to its 99 (hm | hp Electric Dull Coleman 3 burner Liove vire Recorder & Radio dtion Philco Table Radio 8 MM Movie Camera erything reduced for t Across irom the Call 829. 735-2t Combin- 60.00 . 25.00 40.00 | Cold :Sterage Ollx(e EL stove, & li- 4;7 be- tween 5:15 and 1 ing. 733-t1 lMlch sunflame oil heater, with | e gallon tank and carbure! 5 also lz i COMPLET:! itting room, solid maple like new. 677-1f Blue 950, SITUATION WANTED | WOMAN witn exceptlonal exper- | work and | | merchandising, at preseat employ- ience in newspaper wants work in 693-tt ed in Spokane, Alaska. Azply Empire, ONE CAT—8) KITTENS I'IONG BEACH, Celif. - — Her 14-year-cld part-Pcosian t ha kitter, says enberge » rl Van St if Annabelle—tnat’s it's 'had had a litter of three, she would have reached 100. /The cat khad cnly two this time. “But ,wait until next July,” says Mrs.; Van Steenbergen. “Annabelle has ‘t\\u families onte in March, one in July. name— as usual, FROG IN HIS THROAT both | — Sir.h: mout rd way, fittings in NATHANYA, Israel — Lev has learned to keep hi: shut. He learned the b { while installing sanital la new house in Nathanya. As usual, Lev was working with his mouth open. A little fro: leaped into it and lodged in hit windpipe. Lev almost strangled toj death hefore doctors forced thé frog down into his stomach and gave him castor oil. Re.rigeration Service Radio Repairs Guaranteed Work Reasonable Prices Days 987—Nites Red 858 Arctic Refrigeration TOP QUALITY VALVES IN USED CARS. SPECIAL 1547 Studebaker 1 ton pickup $ 875.00 1943 Mercury 4-door sedan ....... 1,050.00 1937 Plymoutin 4-door sedar ... 1940 Buick 4-door sedan 595.00 600.00 1941 Dodge % ton pickup 525.00 1947 International 1% ton panel ... B.W.Cowling Co. 115 Front Street Phone 57 800.00 50; 170703 i 0| | week. | 0 in the eve- | b ot mhm e Tisa e ey o b FOR SALE THREE NEW LISTINGS MONDAY 1. Beautiful newly renovated home in Douglas. New roof, new Frigi- daire double oven stove, new gidaire refrig, new Frigidaire drier, new Crosley sink, new May- tag washer, new wall-to-wall carpet in lvgroom and dining- room, new irlaid plastic liuolcn'.;\. new Briggs Beautyware batnrs room, *wo bedrooms. Yard. $10,00%, 2. Country “ome on hwy, 3 bed- rooms furi., 3 acres, garage, view, lawn, ,400. . Hwy 2 mi. 2 bedrcom unfin- ished. Large rooms, $8,400. $2,000 down, balance 4%. Monthly total payment $60. $24,000—3 apts fur Owner financed I income $275 up mo. §7,000 dn. 19,500—2 bed unfurn new. Apt. bstm $56 mo.. $5600 dowa. 17,502—3 bed unfurn. Dbi garage, } db! plmbng. $4700. bed furn. Bus . corner Ap®. 65 mo. $3,000 handles. i 14,000—4 apts. $170 mo. inc. 12,0003 bed country. Full bsmt, new auto oil furn. 10,5004 apt. Douglas furn. Inc $210 mo $2000 down 10,000—1 bed 12th. yard, new furn. 8,400—2 bed Hwy, part furn $2000 down bal 4% i 6,000—2 apts 2 bed each $3000 dn ! 50 mo pd by apt 5,250—2 bed furn also apt brings { 20 mo. $1000 down 4,250—2 bed Hwy part furn 4 acres. i Near airport | 2,100—1 bed furn. BUSINESS—Jacobs Buchanan Ma- chine Shop and 8 yr. lease. At entrance Small Boat Harbor. Ma- chine and stock inventory $15,000. | sacrificc for $8,000 to go mining. { Sale includes big contract now in shop. PETER WO0OD Agency 5 Klein Bldg. SCELLANEWS L MBS :mc falling yuu ime tn run far. Be with a GIBRALTAR LTER. Mail $5.00 or plans for model No. 108 ily = size). Combplete ilding instructions, list s needed, list of em- ergency -equipment needed, ‘Write immediately to Pilot Rock Cone struction, Inc., P. O, Box 1461, , Oregon. Tel. 911 b CALIFORNIA VD BARGAINS. Send. 10c for 1 catalog and maps. Pacific Lands Box 2350-DD, Hollywood 28, Calif. N TH® teachings of e Faha'i World Faith mest the vital iszues of to- day by disclosing a mnew and greater future. For information write to Baha'i Faith, Box 1837, Anchorage, Alaska. 1 | I I HOPE’S WE buy sell and trade. Street. Phone 908. FOR SALE USED CARS 1949 Chev. v, Tudor miles, Call Red 302. 917 PLYMOUTH _4-door sedan. Phone Red 965 after 5 pm. 30-10 036 DODGE coupe—new tires a new springs, $350. Phone Black 340 after 5 p.m. 703-t¢ 214 2nd 659-12 Set‘an — 8000 732-6t ! | | I i 1 336 Chev truck, 1% ton stake— heater and spot light, $300. Good condition—Inguire Baroumes apts. 15 FORD cab chassis, '46 Jodge panel. Phone 707, Foster’s ‘I'rans- fer. 648-11 247 Hudson 6, 4-door, in good con- dition. See Jimmie ai Bubble Reom, 679-tf FOR RENT STEAM heated rooms, 315 Gold St. 735-t1 "ARGE office space—Klein Bldg. Call Black 763. 733-tf {ENT-A-SAW-SERVICE. One-man chain saw, new Titan, $20.00 day. Skil-Saw $5.00 day. Call 911 TEAMMFEATED Rooms, weekly o1 Monthly, Colorial Rooms. 68t! T SRR AR/ ha s, S R FURLITZER 8pinit plano for rent Aude:snn F'ano Shop. Ph. 143 WANTED YELIABLE woman to do house- work daily for working couple. Phene 406 Sat. after 2 p.m. 735-2t. VANTED HH JOUPLE desire to rent house or apt. Call R. C. Bentley, Room 209, Hotel Juneau. 734-9t e desires day work by the 734-9t VOMA! hour. Call Blue 1030. NOMAN typist with general office experience. Good steady position with long established Juneau firm. State quahflcnt!ons and ref- erences to Box 953, care of Em- pire. 133-tf e e e s

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