The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 27, 1951, Page 2

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PAGE TWO Heath lo | Be Manager 0f Seals | THESE DAYS | By GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY right, 1051, K King Features | syndicate, Inc.) (C Some Thoughts on Taxes Adam Smith, in discussing taxes n property, wrote: While property remains in the possession of the same person, what- | ev permanent taxes may have imposed upon it, they have een intended to diminish or any part of its capital some part of the en only idea of the income ¢ was not to deprive citizens of | their savings nor to diminish their essions but to raise revenue for | ] the government. The ; imposed by the inequit- taxed president are actually ueingz the possibility of savings i therefore of coming into pos- v {session of property. The present 8 involve not only a redistribu- tion of earned wealth but a con- 1 of ca 'x aimed to abolish love country o that the world revo- would™ come more quickly. s in the United States the of life was that there would ! Le | a constant improyement, so that — | workers would own their own homes, | buy their own urance policies, even go into business for them- selves, Kari Marx really hoped for increased poverty so that the prole- tariat would be more numerous. 1 Amer the aim was to in- crease the middle class; Marx sought to abolish the middle class. Harold Laski put these ideas in thi language: 1t Communists are charged to abolish love of ‘manifesto’ answers can have no coun- ¢ emancipated from mination; with their ion of political power, the between nations will dis- So, also, it will change tra- ideas in religion and philos- Since it puts experience on a will change the ideas ts seek, in h our werld the fc 000 ye on; °s which Marx the accomplishment | n were these (the| ; there were alto- mea n land| rents of bolition of property application of all purpos y proeressive or gradu- ta anid land to publ Al ted in me it 3. Abolition of all right of in- | | ate, by means of a| ith state capital and an exclusive monopoly. ion of the means| of communication and transport in the hands of the state.” (Tt will be noted that since 1848,} when this list was published, many | lled capitalist countries have 's.uvpa(d Marx’s program.) | The income tax is high on the list. The graduated income tax can reduce the individual to a con- stantly lowering standard of living. | - PSS FIELD PROPANE GAS AND APPLIANCE CO. “Gas Has Got It" Walter D. Field — Phone 581 20000000000000000000000¢ Burrows Welding Co. Ol Tanks Flae Extensions Boat Tanks General Welding Box 2983—JUNEAU—Phone 280 LENDED SCOTS WHISKY + 86.8 PROOF RENFIELD IMPORTERS, 1TD., N, Ys . You can get . . ¢« those handy, useful and much-needed SCRATCH PAD in assorted and sizes at only 4 5¢a pound EMPIRE OFFICE Matthews, Jones o Meef Now ST. PAUL, Minn,, Nov. 27— Seattle heavyweight Harry (Kid) Matthews signed a new five-year contract yesterday with his man- ager, Jack Hurley. 1 Matthews, who has been working under oral agréément with Hurley since their contract expired Oct. 4, said the new contract was a pro- tection against offers to switch managers. Matthews expldined a group of Seattle men recently offered him a large sum of money to leave Hurley and come under their managership. He turned the offer down. Matthews is in St. Paul for a fight Thursday night with Maynard Jones of Philadelphia. ' Chilkoof Terminal Co. Reorganized The Port Chilkoot Terminal Co. completed formal reorganization here yesterday and elected officers, Carl Heinmiller was named presi- dent. Other officers are: vice president, Jerry McKinley; treasurer, Betty Jean Heinmiller; secretary, Irene McKinley; board member, Robert Boochever. > Plans are under way for the re- habilitation of the existing dock in the spring, Heinmiller said. It is anticipated that a large volume of freght will move over the dock next year. . 1t can prevent savings by leaving | nothing over after living expenses. | The tax guarantees poverty. When to the income tax is added a complex system of excises and hidden taxes, it is possible for gov- ernment to arrange for an economy which permits the appearances of | high wages and even high prices while all the time the standard of life is being depreciated and the middle class is being squeezed out of existence. In this country, we are now ob- serving precisely this process, par- ticularly as it affects the white collar and professional classes. For them, very little hope of self-im-| provement is left. Their doom is to| find rated jobs in government, jobs | which pay little, permit of no initi- ative, require featherbedding to| curvive and end in a low standard retirement pension. If that is pie in the sky, it certainly is nc. of the American dream. | If- we complain that too many, Americans are on the government payroll, we are in error. For if we permit our white collar and cul- tural classes to be taxed out ofi, opportunity for sell-improvemgnt, they must take government jobs !as no others are available to them, In the past, such Americans made their ‘own opportunitiés out of their ingenuity, their ability to save ox‘I to borrow from their neighbors. They were not inhibited by govern-| ment through taxes. i In a word, the revolution which| the New Deal under Harry Hopkins introduced and the Fair Deal under Leon Keyserling seéks to complete is being accomplished with even greater skill than Lenin exhibited in Russia. The Bolsheviks em- ployed terror and murder and con- fiscation as weapons. ¢ The American revolution is being accomplished by means of taxes, principally the income tax, by pre- meditated wasteful expenditure of the' people’s money, and by depre- ciating tiie currency. And the revo- Jutionists can truthfully. say that it iy done with our conseht. We authorized the revolution by our yotes, S colors \ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Fight Dope By the Associated Press S e lows: i At Scranton, Pa. — Rocky Cas- tellani, 157'¢, Luzerne, Pa., . out- pointed Terry Moore, 159%, figm- more (10). £ At Washington — Gene Smith, 12712, Washington, knocked out Elmer Barksdale, 128, Baltimore (7) At New York — Pat Marcune, 128, Brooklyn, outpointed Charley Mc- | Garrity, 126%, Roswell, Newi¥ork @). Tennessee Keeps Top, Grid Poll NEW YORK, Nov. 27—(=Ten- nessee’s Sugar Bowl-bound Vols en- joy a sweet margin today as the nation’s top team in the Assoclated Press football poll. ‘The undefeated and untied terrors of the south piled up the largest vote of the season to ret.nln“gulr billing as the best in the land. Tennessee amassed 1508 points and drew 92 first-place ballots out of 168 from the sports writers and broadcasters to easily out-distance runnerup Michigan State. The Spartans, boasting the same record as Tennessee, 9-0, colieeted 34 first-place votes and 1,379 points. Maryland, Tennessee’s foe on New Year's Day, came home third with 18 firsts and 1257 points. Illinois, the Big Ten's Rose Bowl represen- tative, climbed from sixth to fourth place with 1,030 points. Stanford- Drops Stanford, Illinois’ Rose Bowl op- ponent, dropped from third to eighth as a result of their 20-7 loss to California. While Stanford remained the only Pacific Coast conference team in the first ten, California, UCLA, Washington State and Southern Califernia rated berths in the sec- ond ten. i California was number 12, UCLA 15, Washington State 18, and South- { ern Cal 20. San Francisco, the | only other western team in the top 20, took over as number 14. ‘The top 10 teams: Points 1. Tennessee (92) (9-0) 1,508 2. Michigan $tate (34) (9-0) 1,879 8. Maryland’ (18) (9-0) 1,257 4. Illinois (4) (8-0-1) 1,030 5. Princeton (4) (9-0) 876 6. Georgia Tech (1) (9-0-1) 727 7. Wisconsin - () (7-1-1) 529 8. Stanford (1) (8-1) 463 9. Baylor (7-1-1) 406 0. Oklahoma (2) (7-2) 206 g | Badminfon Tourney - Starts Next Monday A short meeting was ‘called and the financial report given at the regular play of the Juneau Bad- minton club Monday evening at the high school gymnasium. It was decided a badminton tour- nament should be started next Mon=- day. Those interested who were not present last night should be at the high school gymnasium next Mon- day night to sign up. It will be mixed play and should prove in= teresting. ATTENTION 2 Sequined felt Xmas stockings made by the ladies of P.E.O. will be sold at Bake Sale Friday, November 30, 11:30 am. to 5:00 pm. @b Powers. 975-86 ATTENTION REBEKAHS Injtiation meeting = Wedn November 28 at 8 p.m. I1.O.O.F. hi BERNA WEST, Noble Grand NEW RECORDS New records -ordered every day. The Record Shop. +{or all bids. For Rose Bowl; Fights last night resulted as rol-‘ Teams Picked Who Can Win! PASADENA, Calif., Nov. 27—P— With Stanford and Illinois officially named to meet in the Rose Bowl New Year's Day, spectators were; counting on their fingers today in an effort to predict a winner. Well, no matter how you juggle the arithmetic, the 38th renewal of i the anddaddy of all bowl games ‘riu\ es out, tighter than a new pair of shoes. Even Chuck Taylor, 'Stanford's rookie coach, declined to veniure a forecast. He called the turn on aine straight victories for his team this season, but missed on number 10. “Maybe Illinois will be too i tough to handle,” was all he cared i to say. Coach Red Sanders, whose UCLA | Bruins lost to both Ilinois and Stanford, described the Illini as capable of whipping “anything the Pacific coast can put on the field.” And Coach Howie Odell of Wash- ington, likewise beaten by both, ‘w of the same, albeit more reserved opinion. All of which tends to foreshadow the west coast’s sixth straight drub- bing since it inaugurated its pact with the Big Ten in 1947 — the year Illinois walloped UCLA, 45-14. Maybe you can figure it differ- ently. Not that it proves anything, here’s how the Rose Bowl teams fared against three common op- ponents this season: Stanford Illinois 23 Michigan 13 7 Michigan 0 14 Wash. 7 27 Wash. 20 21 UCLA 7 27 UCLA 13 58 Totals 27 61 Totals 33 INVITATION TO BID The Alaska Department of Health anrounces the Invitation to Bid for; doing necessary overhauling and re- | pairs to the M/S Hygiene. Interested bidders may secure bid forms and specifications by writing | the Alaska Department of Health, P. O. Box 1931, Juneau, Alaska. Sealed bids will be received until | 10:00 a.m. December 14, 1951, and then publicly opened. C. Earl Albrecht, M.D. Commissioner of Health. First Publication: Nov. 27, 1951. Last Publication: Dec. 11, 1951. FOR SALE ON BID 123 3rd Street Rpller Skate & Boxing Equipment November 27, 1951 All Bids Must be Over $1,000.00 amplifier 7 record player microphones skate rest foot locker (lg) I roller skate wheel grinder 1/3 h. p. cash boxes (small) yale locks (door knob and lock! combined) cartons crepe paper skate announcing board and lights) carton skate parts worth) 18 jars shoe cleaner (skate) 60 pr. shoe skates all sizes (Very good condition) 6 pr. shoe skates new 4 pr. shoes only (skate) 130 pr. clamp skates (all sizes) 1 heavy duty punching bag 4 pr. heavy duty punching bag gloves hand wrapping tape sets boxing bag inner tube skipping ropes pr. Loxing shoes boxing ring lamp boxing bag pump boxing medical chest (Ig) general medical chest (sm) pr. boxing gloves Mail Bid to John M. Doogan Box 514, Juneau, Alaska Bids opened 5 p.m. December 20, 1951. 3 10% must accompany all bids. The right is reserved to reject any [ (wire 10 ($200.00 5 1 5 6 1 1 1 1 6 JOHN M. DOOGAN First Publication: Nov. 27, 1951. 3-t weekly—t.f. Plumbing ® Heating Oil Burners Telephone 319 HARRI PLUMBING & HEATING CO. . 12th and E Street FLY SEATTLE $30.00 plus tax Large 50-Passenger Planes De Luxe Air Coach Service SOUTH-BOUND _ NON-STOP Alaska’s Leading Non-Scheduled Airline AIR TRANSPORT Associates Sales Co., Inc. 181 South Franklin:St. Office Hours: 10:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. Nights-Red 730 Phone 177 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING | REAL ESTATE LARGE commercial property — 5 stores and 7 apartments—good location. High income will re-pay purchase price in six years. Termsy from present owner. FISH BUYING station. Located on west coast near Petersburg. This, property includes a general mer- chandise store, liquor store, res- taurant-tavern, U. S. postoffice, Union - Oil agency, docks, boats, scows and a good three bedroom | residential house. The station has | just finished a good season and is in excellent condition. It has netted enough in a single season| to re-pay the entire purchase price. Terms are available to a| person experienced in fish buy-| ing. A trade for a local business would be considered but it has to | be good. BEDROOM furnished house in| Douglas. Full basement. Top con- dition. Sale price of $10,00. Should meet either FHA or veterans ap- praisal. 4 BEDROOM. Located in Highlands near new school. Furnished or un- | heating 3 furnished. Hot water plant. Large double yard. 1 BEDROOM, basement, near hos- pital. BELLES CAFE. Office: Room 14 In Shattuck Bldg. | William Winn-Phone 234 e e ACROSS from airport, 4 lots. One with partially completed building at $2,000. 2 DUPLEXES. 2 Boats. i A CABIN ... $1,100.00 2-BDR. home partly furnished, garage, garden etc. 3.18 pat. land. SEVERAL lots Douglas, Douglas highway and Juneau. PROPERTY Pelican, Tenakee, Sit- ka, Wrangell. MURPHY & MURPHY REALTORS — ACCOUNTANTS Phone 073 over First Netional Bani Gaslinean (hamnel~ Cagers Open Season | With Four Games | * The Gastineau Channel 1951-1952 basketball season opens this eve- ning with doubleheader games at at Juneau and Douglas high school gyms. Game times are called for 7:30 o’clock. Playing in the Juneau gym are the Juneau high school Crimson Bears against MiR®€s in the first game followed by Columbia Lum- bermen pitted with the Country! Club. On the other side of the! channel, the opening game will see ! the Douglas High School Huskies | playing the Coast Guard Cutter Storis aggregation followed by the Imperials tangling with the Alaska Road Commission. ATTENTION Sequined felt Xmas stockings made by the ladies ‘of P.E.O. will be sold at Bake Sale Friday, Nov- Powers. | DELUXE house trailer, $4250. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1951 REAL ESTATE COZY, 2 bedroom home, completely furnished, garage, Douglas.- INCOME properties, good location, excellent rentals. BOAT shop, moderate price. 12th STREET duplex, well furnished two 1 bedroom apartments, garage. BEAUTIFUL large home with ex- cellent view of .Juneau, full bsmt.| many fine features, 2 bedmomsi plus income apt. (W48) GOOD 5 bedroom home, complete- ly furnished, view, basement, FURNISHED small two bedrcom| home, South Franklin. (W19) | ENTIRE ISLAND, 230 acres, easily | accessible year round, good bldgs, TWO beach cabins. $3800, tops. MANY OTHER LISTINGS Bob Druxman-Phone 891 M. J. HAAS - Associate Juneau—128 ®ront Streev Auke Bay—Glacier Highway SRRy FOR SALE SMALL furnished house, large lot, $3850, 947 Pike Street. 975-12 i LOT 6 in Block B of the Townsite | of West Juneau. Price $450. Write Ed Brekhus, Norman, N. Dakota. 975-4t 8 POPE and Gossard Rose Point pattern plates, covered bowl, a gravy boat, etc, 2 pair Chintz drapes, 1 pair hand klocked linen drapes, automatic pop up toaster, | small motor from mixer. Phone | 986 after 6 p.m. 975-3¢ CAMERA, Kodak 35 mm, takes col- | ored pictures, sell or trade for| short wave radio. J. Olson, Little Port Walter. 974-6t | ter and receiver as good as new, for information call Red 917. 974-6t | FOR SALE at DOOGA! JAN- | ITOR SERVICE and SUPPLY, 123 3rd Street, across from Coast | Guard Building. Lamps, office | equipment, cash register, cash koxes, mimeograph machine, light fixtures, tall tables. 974-6t DRUM type oil burner with elec- trol burner. Windows. Reason- able. Charles Warner Co. 972-tf BEFORE you buy your new radio phonograph combination for X- mas—See our beautiful mahogany cabinet 3 speed record chénger.[ Perfect condition. Call Green 7911 or see Bindseil Apts., 112 Gas- tineau Ave. 964-tf ELECTRIC range—Nugget Shop. 953-tt ELEVATOR—Cumplete with motor, switches, automatic stops. Terms. George Brothers. 949-tf PURSE SEINER “Admiralty” 14 by 50 ft. Powered by 165 h.p. G.M. Diesel with complete spare parts, including radio telephone power skiff and complete hali- but gear with 20 skates. For fus- ther information, contact owner REAL ESTATE PETER WOOD AGENCY —$$588$— EACH MONTH—EACH YEAR WE SELL MORE HOMES THAN ALL OTHER AGENTS COMBINED —$88856— I challenge them to list their sales each month—Peter Wood -—$$8888— JUNEAU NEW LISTING—INCOME property. Six apts on Willoughby Ave net $190 monthly. Price $8400; only $2,400 down, owner will finance. 5 1-bedrcom apts and one 2- bedroom.. Also small cafe fully equipped, rent $30 per month., one person can operate. Net over $200 monthly. Price $800. Down- payment of $2,400 will cover bhoth properties. NEW LISTING — Fritz Cove, two bedrooms, furnished, new refrig., oil range, about 3 acres on beach. Very good water supply. $6,800. STAR HILL—$3,150 for 1-bdrm. house with basement. Terms. CARROLL WAY—$3,400 for 1 bdrm house, workshop in basement, new elec equip, clean house on steps. HARRIS ST.—Near St. Ann’s Hosp, Full bsmt. $7,850. EAST ST.—Near St. Ann’s. 3-brdm with nice livingroom and dining g‘o)gm. Hot water heat, bsmt. $12,~ DOUGLAS HOUSE with concrete bsmt, 100x100 lot, view, near school. $6,500. ‘NEW basement, 8-bdrm furnished, garage, next to school. $7,850. LIVE ON YACHT BUILT in 1946 and appraised $13,- 000 then, the VETERAN, a roomy cruiser-yacht, sleeps 3, wonderful hunting and fishing boat. Details upon request. $7,500. jCHICKEN RANCH—Shores 5-acre farm 7 mi Glacier Highway. Small warm- house, can be added onto. Garage. Concrete-floored chicken house 20x116. Acreage cleared for subdividing, all view lots. Only $9,500. CHICKEN RANCH—Shores 40-acre farm 13 mi Glacier Hwy. 1 acre cleared, small trees on remainder. 3 chicken houses 20x100 each. 40 acres includes Dredge Lake turn- off corner. Only $6,000. Terms NORWAY POINT—Four very large lots with view. Next to Ed Keith- ahn. Onc or all. $1500 each. HAINES building lots for investors GLACIER HWY lot in town $1850. OFFICE, store space for rent, en=- trance to Small Boat 'Harbor. KAKE general store, same owner 40 years, PETER WOOD AGENCY No. 3 Kiein Blde. Tel. 911 MISCELLANEOUS SOME sources of annoyance—leak- ing roofs, drafts, sticking doors, sloppy drain board. Get it fixed ember 30, 11:30 a.m. to 5:00 pm. at| George James, Angoon, Alaskw.| 20d be happier. Union carpenter. gl o08-61| Phone 829, 9971-t1 =~ REFRIGERATOR — Excellent | HOPE'S SECOND HAND STORE condition. Contact Parson’s El-| We buy, sell and trade. 214 2nd ectric, 10th and C. 868-t1¢ St. Fhcne 808.. 193-t2 g FOR THE BEST { ! in RECORDED MUSIC 1t's the Record Shop Box 2478—Juneau 4 Famous HEARING AID ONLY ZENITH GIVES YOU ALL THESE: % Exclusive PERMAPHONE * Reserve Battery Switch osition Tone Control * Fingertip Volume Control “ROYAL" AND "suP HEARING w AIDS g euly$7s each Bone Conduction Des.ces Available af Moderate Extra Cost I_o-.niv RETURN PRIVILEGE ALASK Radio SILPEY - Inc. 307 Seward Phone 62 JUNEAU ol -ROYAL" FOR RENT STORES or office space. Best loca- tion, lowest fire insurance rates, clean, warm and new. Menden- hall Apartments. 971-10t NEW- and warm unfurnished bed- room apartments $131.50 and up. Mendenhall Apartments. 971-18 OFFICE space for rent. Klein building. Phone Black 763, -51-i STORE space heated, 1000 square feet. George Brothers. 949-tf 3 BACHELOR apartments . Call Black 700. 943-6t AT T RSP S A EEESS ar E A FURNISHED ROOMS, adjoining bath. Phone 1008 after 5 p.m. (e 0 ke Nt ieladitint - < cls FOR RENT OR LEASE — TWO Dew buildings at entrance Small Boat Harbor. Across from. new school, on City bus, one block from Gla- cler and Douglas busses. Will di- vide into stores, offices, and res- taurant. Also space for other bldgs or businesses. Call or sce Peter Wood, 911. iR ¢ < s Al O STEAM hented rooms, 315 Gold £t 735-t1 AVAILABLE now. Space for rest- aurant or other ousiness. Phone 453. 882-4! S P S T STEAMHEATED Rooms, weekly or Monthly. Colonial Rooms. 69-t WURLITZER Spinet piano for rent Anderson Plano Shop. Ph. 148 See at Mendenhall Apts. Garage. 9971-6¢ DODGE 4 door, new engine, new tires, excellent condition. See Trevor . Davis. 960-t¢ LOST AND FOUND FOUND—Bicycle, call Red 737 Pay ad. 975-3t ‘ HELP WANTEDAlascs Laundry. 758-t4 1 WAITRESS & 1 Fountaln Girl Percy's Cafe. 755-t¢ HELP WANTED FEMALE typist for general office work. Good permanent position ¢ for qualified person. Apply — Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. 970-tf — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — MANES - ALL MODELS PRICED FOR N SPECIAL l 1949 DODGE 4-door Sedan L] 1937 PLYMOUTH 4-door Sedan @ 1950 DODGE 4-door Sedan E.W.Cowling Co. 115 Front Street PHONE 57

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