The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 21, 1934, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

—— THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 21, 1934 (=1} Great Britain rights reserved © 1934, King Fearures Syndicate, Inc.. CAN'T s‘ruRB HIM NOow- SHH — HE'S SLEEPING- WHO, ME ? I BEEN HERE A COUPLA HOURS- YOU WAS. SLEEPIN'~- WHAT ABOUT OUR BIG TRIP SOUTH, SQUIRE ? Gi; © 1934, King Teatures 5 YES-VES - THE SOONER THE BETTER - TSK-TSK- WE CAN LEAVE ANYTIME !! S y Map of Enure Countrv Planned by U. S. Bureau Chief AT WHEEL AUT[] Ray strategic peints to chart the sky. By F. B. COLTON (Associafed Press Secience Writer) 21.—A daily ather three or | the sky, showing 12 in the upper | at oncs, for a plan of in-| y in foreza .Ar four mile: To Chart Air der . this plan, airplanes ther bureau, army and navy will zoom up from airports at 20 to 25 strategic poinis over the United States. They will climb to 17,080 feet or higher, carrying instruments that make an auto- matic record of temperature and meisture of the air from the ground up and back. At the same time small pilot balloons and their drift at different levels watched t,o learn how the air is moving. | The maps made from these data: will fit one above another like the floors. of a building, and will give' an_accurate picture of behavior of the warm and cold masses of air whose movements are the cause of weather changes which government scientists seek to predict. Rcot of All Weather | The meetings of these masses are at the root of all weather, Gregg explains. The warm air, full of moisture, moving up from the south, rides up over an advancing mass of heavy, cold polar air along what is known as a “warm front.” The rising warm air is cooled, its| moisture condenses and falls as) rain or snow. | Meanwhile the cold air is push- ing under the warm air mass on| g another so called “‘cold front.” This | causes another kind of weather short gusty squalls of rain or snow over small areas. Sharp changes of temperaturc and wind direction go with both iakee Inlet on Chichagoff Island, ,no protest is filed in the local land barred by the Statutes. r Macs Analysis” i the name of the plan by which Willis Gregg, new head of the Uni try to improve weather forecasting. ed States Weather Bureau, will Planes will be launched from | verity of such storms depmd upon the wind direction, amount of mois- | ture in the air and the angle of | speed at which the warm air rises. | Much of this, says Gregg, can he predicted by the method of air vwed 16 years as head of weather bureau’s aerological 1 before being appointed the, bureau chief by President! velt. His job was exploration | of upper air secrets and cAi.umi:a-‘ tion of the weather reporting sys= | tem that now serves the 25,00 5 of government-supervised air-| 44 Wi s over the United States. o CARD PARTY | o Fourth of series sponsored by ! Women of Moose, Thursday even- | ing at 7:45 o'clock, Moose Hall. Door prize. Refreshments and good | prizes, Admission 50c. Public in- | vited. e Residents of a Mexican colony east of San Jose built a church of ad:me bricks. , UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. December 18, 1033. Notice is hereby given that J, D. Roop, has made application for a trade and manufacturing site, An- chorage 07524, for a tract of land embraced in U. S. Survey No. 1996, | situate on the north shore of Ten- | containing 14.17 acres, and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska, and if office within the period of publica- tion or thirty days thereafter, any person claiming adversely will be J. LINDLEY GREEN, Register. | First Publication, Jan. 31, 1934. Lnst pubueamon, Apnl 4, 1934, | 'names of farm animals. —adv. | TELL ME - TSK- WHY You WON'T MARRY ME -+ TeK-TeK T-1-- OH - PLEASE I NEED A CHANGE ! STAYING IN ONE SPOT 1S VERY BAD FOR A MAN WHEN Hi 7 THAT'S SWELL- WE CAN SHOVE OFF TOMORROW — T'LL HOP UNHAPPY -~ TSK--TSK DRIVER DOZES My Beauty Hlnt GOES OFF ROAD Two ]acoma 'Vlen Kllled When Care Plunges Over Embankment OLYMPIA, Wash., Feb. 21.—J. T acoma meat market op- | A W Halme» Tacoma kill- Seattle, was s to plunged over Ten minutes kment here today. Hoyer | & month in (raining the muscles believes he became drowsy and this| Of the abdomen will do much to him to let his car run off | help the not-so-perfect figure. Simply contract and r the mu: | cles, slowly and systematically, and afte while improvement should be evident. i ten 20 B0 A0 e TRINITY GUILD sponsor a Lenten 10 from DOROTHY DEARING D Baby Learns Alphabet alphabet, can spell I s himself. He knu\\s vari- ous objects about his home and t Daily Empire Want Ads Pay Daily Cross-word Puzzle 19. Medicinal herb Japanese measure . Hill @weller of ‘Burma . Find' the sum Barked Bury . Military assistant 80. Fleeting or temporary . Wanderer Conditions . Tree or shrub of the genus Alnus . Lid Y. luterpret: archaic . Always: contr. . kmit rays 5. The nuinber ten . Perched . Hard-shelled fruit Aflirmative Not so coarse ACROSS i 1. Soft_drinkss colloq. . Pastries . Charity . Toys . Jump 17. Melody . Not old Y. Steps for crossing a fence . Pedal digits Siamese coing 23, Constellation State of the . ., Unlon: abbr, . Partake Forbid Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle Pecullar 32. 8howering . Masculine Philippine: savage . Open-handed ow Forever 5. Pigpen . Shoshonean Indian . Tayerns | Poultry Degin b vroduct 98, Killed Vi . . Crook . Type of vasesl: 84 Creck tains . Flowering plant Writing Implements e red . Concludea . Sacred Hindu writings . Coler % Beriod of I of light Ko Sor e scale 7 . Evergreen tree . Mongrel dog . Locations . Pronoun ). Nocturnal animal . Ireland . Low place . Supporting iron for an upper mill- stene iln 1 . Singing volce Hawailan wreath . One who feigns sick- 30“ to avoid % . Utter 5. Gollected and stored away secretly sounds PR 68. Superlative ending . Accomplish 72. Therefore DOWN . Small quarrel . Medley . Has the courage e %%HIHII AR flfl%flll/fll!li AEN W/ (3 ul,l uN/ CT I | IIII 1 //duu/ THE SANITARY GROCERY PHONES 83 OR 85 types of weather. Duration end se—l “The Store That lfleasu” PLEASE - GO AWAY - s daily for a perfod of | - By BILLE DE BECK upP 15 “POINTS - ANOTHER 6 _MILLION PROFIT , SQUIRE FARTHINGDALE- SELL-SELL~ EVERYTHING - TM LEAVING FOR SOUTH AFRICA TONIGHT - TS -Tsik- SHE'LL BE SORRY SHE TURNED ME OOWN-, ©TSK -~ TSK-- YOU'VE coT AV:EE ?? L} MPOSGIBLE YOUR INCOME TAX Deduction for Business Expenses Deductions for business- expenses | form a large item in the return of many taxpayers and must have certain qualities to be allowed. Such deductions must be for an ex- diture in copnection with the enance and operation of the payer's business or business properties; it must be an ordinary 2xpense and it must be a necessary expense. Insisting upon the latter qualifications, the Bureau of In- ternal Revenue is upheld by the rd of Tax Appeals and the Ordinary and necessary ex- are only those which are ual and essential in the case of mxlar Lnxpayers. “and da not in- - % 7 WHY - You 7 QU —-xxeelle FOR TWO CENTS \ \ \ \ H i clude extraordinary and nonessen- tial, expenges.” ‘Typical business expenses of a. mercantile establishment are the amounts paid for advertising, bire ‘ul‘ clerks and other employees, rent, light, heat, water, stationery, tele- phone, stamps, property insurance, and delivery expenses. The expenses of a manufacturing business include labor, supplies, re- | pairs, light and heat, power, selling cost, administration, and other similar charges, The fazmer may deduct all amounts. paid in the production harvesting, and marketing of crop including labor, cost of seed and | fertilizer used, cost of minor repairs ( | awelling), and small tools used up | in the course of a year or two. A one business and claim busines) | deductions of each. Sce 35 SN CALL GROiiGi. ANDERSON Expert piano tuning, guaranteed | service. Phone 143. —adv. | b e emsnils Shop In Juneau to farm buildings (other than his| | taxpayer .may conduct more than | [¢ “Tomarmw’s Stykc DQUGLAS || “Tomorie o 'SCHOOL. CLOSES. FOR_ . _ WASHINGTON; lll’l'lIDAY‘ Beslbhing X o dny apitat! B | day in observance of Washington's Birthday, the Douglas school was Jismissed this afternoon until next | Monday morning. Students will \ e sglebrate tonight with a dance in’ the Eagles’ Hall. The Torch So-, ziety_is sponsor of the dance, i ———————— | PUPILS VISIT FOUNDRY. “Junedu’s Own Store” Telephone 62 Telephone 62 Krafft | Cabinet Sho MILLWORK Window, Plate and Auto GLASS Moulding, Paaels and . Hardwood SECOND AT FRANKLIN Service Is Our Motto The Fourth Grade geogmphy class of twelve pupils accompanied by sheir teacher, Miss Thoma, put in the afternoon yesterday at the Treadwell Foundry for a demon-' stration lesson in metallurgical op- sration. Details of the foundry Jrocesses was carefully explained o the class by Superintendent W. 3. Cahill. - CHAMBER MEETING — i | NOW OPEN Douglas Chamber of Commerce| | Commercial: Adjust- il hold its regular meeting this vening in the City Hall, For the { entt& Ra.?nv%n? vy i resent the meetings, are on Wed- | | s mg;urt:an AER lesday instead of Thursday nights.| Room 1--Shattuck Bldg. e X I | BACHE "B“Di CRICAGS [ | We have 5,000 local ratings ROPE, 1 | l i 24 L AL T EHAC AL i Elton Engstrom returned’ home last night on the Alaska after an absence of four weeks during which he yisited in several States as far East ‘as Chicago where he spent some time in the interests of his fish brokerage business. e ‘CARD PARTY VL — The second of the Rebekah card party aenes will be given tomor-/ oW evening in the Odd Fellows' | Hall. Both_ bridge. and whist for event and series prizes are featur- ed, Card playing starts at 8:30 o'clock, VISIT THE Salmon Creek - g PR S Shop in Juneau ERTIT VN " H. S. GRAVES HomeT:I.Hut, écha.unet and | Marx Clothing 423 gt | | | | | | | UNITED Foonca Phone 16 We Dehver Muts——l’hone 16 FEBRUAR %3 L T Is a Month of Bargains the towel had a great idea. The man (or perhaps it was a woman!) who invented And an equally great benefactor was the man (or more likely woman) who conceived the scheme of making towels as colorfully attractive as they are bathingly serviceable. Along about this time of the year, towels also have their plan of moving from bargain counters to thrifty closets. Linen, handkerchiefs and blahkém also beckon the eye and prices soothe the pocketbook Ianuary is a glorious month for bar- gains! The advertisements in your newspaper are important news of the shopping world and they tell an ‘interesting story of quality and price—of tjflingé that are new. pense these advertisements save you? Did you ever pause to consider how much time and ex- You make your own decisions in your own home. You figure the cost to a penny. Then, with the help of these daily messages of economy in your newspaper, you go forth on an adventure of buying and return with exactly what you intended to get. ro o v

Other pages from this issue: