The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 30, 1933, Page 11

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@man's place in the a THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1933. hr Race Lul Off for Lady Bzrds, Theu- Planes NO INCOME TAX :BEU. MODIFIES Soar at Los Angeles on Equal Terms with Men’s PAID BY KUHN The National Air Races, scheduled for Los Angeles July 1-4 inclusive offer women fliers greater contenders at Los Angeles. LOS ANGELES, June 30.—Wo- viation sun, ramped in other years, draws a front row seat at the national air fraces, which will be run at the mu- hhicipal airport July 1-2-3-4 If there was reason in the past or a feminine complaint about ack of opportunity to win cash lory and whate lse goes with riumphs in aerial speed, 1933 comes forward with a broad wel- come to women as contenders Abundance Chances This Year The races this year will allow (173 A0 Miss Flier to enter, , every event on the Possibly opportun- | forget the dazzling speed which ity will be premature for her abil- | Mrs. Haizlip established at the y, but the chances will be there. | As race time draws near, with one ex- er of Long Beach, that their ranking | come to be accepted. 3 SAID SANDY \MS VEIGH “HOoOT mon /- > HERES A way —g.' KA TO SPEND FOR PRICES ARE DOWN ON THE BesT COAL IN TOWN- RO PPORTUNITY'S BEI.I. 1o opportunity than open in previous meets. This year they can enter virtually every race on parity with men. Gladys O'Donnell (left), who won a $3,000 prize at last year's Cleveland races, and Mrs. Mae Haizlip (right) who in the same meet attained a speed of 255 miles an hour, likely will be among the Flew 255 Miles an Hour Few followers of aviation will races in Cleveland last September two | when she gave a tiny speed ship likely leaders of the dashes against time . Mae Haizlip, wife of the And if she could have found a plane cross-country speed Jimmie Haizlip, of St. Louis, and lenged the men and pn Gladys O’Donnel], air school own- the super closed course classic, the ., graduated Thompson trophy race from the novice class so long ago This year Mrs. Haizlip will have with men has the flying equipment to do all the the gun and flew down a straight- away course at 255 miles an hour. . no doubt she would have chal- eded in speeding she desires. Jimmie We- dell, who grew almost overnight into an outstanding designer and pilot, by sweeping all three place: in the transcontinental dash with his planes, taking one of this him- self, last year, has given her the black-bodied ‘OW” in which her husband flew in 1932 to victory in the cross-country event. Gladys O’Donnell Likely Entrant Gladys O'Donnell, winner of the women’s classic last year, the Aerol trophy race with a purse of $3,000 which she walked away with at a speed of 185476 miles an hour, has kept her plans for 1933 to herself as in the past, but she will be present to worry the men fliers. B, SR L Starting All Over, Couple —Nineteen years ago, when J. W Williams was 65 years old and his wife 55, they lost their last dollar in a busines venture in Arkansas. ‘Today, without benefit of inherit- ance, fortunate speculation, striking oil or any other short cut to wealth, they possess a home, 28 town lots and a savings account. They've accumulated all of it “the hard way,” at first living in a tent, working a rented farm, sell- ing vegetables from door to door until they saved enough money to buy a two-wheeled push cart. FOR ALL Fireworks, Torpedoes, Unrestricted Sale Starts SATURDAY HOLDENVILLE, Okla., June 30.| s or other supplies. Beats Poverty Late in Lifel ||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIl|||||HII|IIII||IIIIIlIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Headquarters 4th of July Firecrackers, Noisemakers JUNEAU DRUG CO. “The Corner Drug Store” IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllIIIIIIIIIII||IHIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIlIlllIlIH IN TWO YEARS Special benale Counsel| Showing Up Another N. Y. Concern WASHINGTON, June 30.—Fer-| dinand Pecora, special counsel for the Senate Banking and Currency Committee, conducting an investi- gation of private banking that be- gan with an examination of J. P. Morgan and Company, said evi- dence secured by him showed that Otto Kuhn, head of the Kuhn- Loeb company, paid no income tax for 1931 and 1932 Pecora said he also expected to submit evidence that the total in- come tax payments of the firm's other partners for those years| was “negligible.” Pecora said he was told by one partner that the originators made a net of $247,000 on the sale of twenty million of Chilean bonds in 1925, now default, on which the risk was passed on to others with- in 24 hours. The investigators are seeking to determine whether Kuhn escaped his income tax by means of “wash sales.” The probers are prepared to re- sume the inquiry into private bank- ing in the fall with the return to J. P. Morgan and Company. The weary Senators planned a quick wind-up of the current in- quiry and will call Kuhn for ques- tioning about stock transactions in 1930 by which he established a $117,000 loss -e- TWO JAPANESE SHIPS VISIT LOCAL WATERS Two Japanese Is will spend| several weeks in the waters of Southwest Alaska this Summer, and one of them will call at several ports in that region, it was an- nounced today by Gov. John W.| Troy. The other vessel will not touch at any port except in case| of emergency or to obtain water| One of the ships, the Hakuho| Maru, is operated by the Japanese Department of Agriculture a.ndI Forestry and has a number of slu~i dents aboard. It will not call at| American ports. ORDER AGAINST PURSE SEINES Opens Large Area in Ko- diak District to Relieve Local Fishermen Waters - in the Kodiak Island fishing area heretofore closed to purse seine fishing are opened to that class of gear in supplementary regulations just issued by the De- partment of Commerce, it was an- nounced today by Capt. M. J O'Connor, Asst. Agent of the Unit- ed States Bureau of Fisheries. It is understood that the modi- fication of the old regulations was recommended by Commissioner Frank T. Bell in order to relieve distress among the fishing popula- tion of the district who have been reported to be in dire want. The Commissioner recently visited the district enroute to the Pribilofs. The new regulations prohibits the use of purse seines over 125 fath- oms in length, which will limit fishing to local boats. They also permit the use of not more than 50 yard as a hook set or anchored gill nets. The use of purse seines will be permitted between Cape Trinity and Cape Alitak, between Cape Karluk and Cape Uyak, and between Cape Uyak and Uyak Post- office. They will also be permitted between Cape Karluk and Cape Uyak from August 15 to August 31. The Commissioner has also open- ed up Chiniw Inlet, Kamishak Bay, to commercial salmon fishing. This is in the Cook Inlet district. e CLAIM OWNERS MUST FILE NOTICES BY NOON ON SATURDAY Owners of mining claims wishing to retain their interests in them and to take advantage of the re- cent law allowing a suspension of assessment work for the year end- ing at noon July 1, 1933, have a few more hours in which to file their | affidavits in the United States | Commissioner’s office in accordance with the law. Under a recent joint resolution of both houses of Congress, all owners of interests in mining loca- The other is the from the Tokyo Fishing Institute.| It will visit Unalaska July 12, St Paul August 4-5, and St. George August 5-6, the Governor has been advised. At the request of the State Department he has asked that every possible courtesy be ex- tended to it. Hakuyo Maru, | - HOLZHEIMER IS TO COME HERE SUNDAY | Judge W. A. Holzheimer, newly appointed United States Attor for the First Division, and 1 Holzheimer, will arrive here f Ketchikan next Sunday on the steamer Alaska, according to ad- vices received here today. He had| been expected here earlier but was| unable to close up his own bus ness interests in Ketchikan as rap-| idly as he had hoped. While he has not announced his plans, it is expected he will t over the office from United Sta tions are relieved of the necessity lof doing the annual labor required for the year ending at noon July |1, 1933, providing, the owner paid no income tax to the Federal Gov- ernment for the year ending De- cember 31, 1932, and further pro- viding that the said owner filed a notice with the recorder for the district in which the claims are situated showing his ownership in the respective claims, the fact that he paid no income tax and that it was his intention to claim the {rights granted by the resolution. The notice must be filed on or Y before noon on July 1, 1933, and the moderate fee for the filing is |$150 for each claim included in the notice Many mining claim owners have | been taking advantage of this law and United States Commissioner | Charles Sey is kept busy during these last few days filing affi- davits for those expecting to re- tain their ownership. ———-— - Attorney H. D. Stabler next M day morning. | Gambling Receipts Drop RENO, June 30—Gambling license | receipts in Reno dropped nearly 25 per cent during 1932 despite the fact that they were collected over a period of two months longer than - S EEAILRRRREREEEARRDRRCCRREGERRARRRRRARRAR in 1931. Last year's collections amounted to $72477, while 1931 netted $98,580. DON’T FORGET Skeeter Cream RENALL IS BEST! Very Effective—Stainless Greaseless 50¢ Large Tube Pleasing Odor Butler Mauro Drug Co. “Express Money Orders ANYTIME™ fllllIIIIIIIlIIIIIINIIII|IIIIII|II||IIIIIIIIIIlIIIlIIlIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIllIIIIIIIIlIIII'IIIlIIIIIIINIIII""IlIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIB SALE! | ASSIGNEE’S SALE OF CARR’S CASH GROCERY STOCK ALL GOODS SOLD AT 309 DISCOUNT FROM LOCAL RETAIL PREVAILING PRICES SALE NOW ON! and continues until all stock sold TERMS--Cash, No Returns, No Exchanges NO DELIVERIES Alaska Personal Service Agents, ASSIGNEE ne Day More Only! IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||II|IIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIlI|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIII||||IIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII O PRICES ARE GOING UP Stock Up Now Before It Is Too Late R.& W.FLOUR, 49 poundbags . ... . . $L75 (Buy now and avoid the government tax of 35 cents) WHITE KING SOAP, 6 barsfor . . . . . . AMOCAT TEA, Y2 pound size . . . . . . 30c (This Canned Peaches, Pears, Plums, extra grade, can 20¢ (Stock up on these—we can get no more at this price) FINE WINES ON SALE NOW GARNICK? 25¢ is the finest India Ceylon on the market) Imported from France—Direct from Mouguin’s Phone 174

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