The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 14, 1934, Page 7

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TRAIL PROJECT REGULATIONS ;SALE BEGINS MAY 1; NOW COMPLETED SHIPMENTS CAN BE MADE ANY TIME Links Dupont to Juneau—i Work Is Done During | Winter by ECW Crew | The Thane-Dupont trail, necting the Dupont powder m zipe on the southern end of Gas- tineau Channel to this city, was| completed this week and final in- spection was made of the project| yesterday by Wellman Holbrook. It is a first class foot trail, Mr. Hol- brook said It is three miles long and has three fair-sized bridges spanning the larger streams, one over Sheep Creek. It extends from the south- ern terminus of Glacier Highway | at Thane to the manager's resi-! dence at Dupont. The work was done during the| winter by an ECW crew of ten men under Foreman Alfred Tilson. This crew will be divided between | the force based at the Ebner Mine buildings and Windham Bay, Mr.{ Holbrook said. > con- | | | | | { Daily Empire viant Ads Pay —B3 ALWAYS the latest at COLEMAN’S g~ y) g9 — —_— Dr. A. W. Stewart | DENTIST | Hours 9 am. to 6 p.m. | SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 409, Res. Phone 276 B~ Jones-Stevens Shop | LADIES'—CHILDREN'S I] | READY-TO-WEAR | Seward Street “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” “Junecu's Own Store” GET Your Gold FISH in Bowls ON OUR McKesson Deal JUNEAU Drug Co. “THE CORNER DRUG STOR P 0. Substation No. 1 FREE DELIVERY | of any public school or high school within the Teritory | is pure or straight, blended, rectified, or compounded, and | | where blended, rectified or compounded the character of | . in the Territory of Alaska may be is_suod to any person, | | firm or corporation qualified to do business in Alaska, per-| ! mitting the sale of such beverages in original packages general public. | firm or corporation holding a retail license, unless the said ! liquors, and said records shall be available at all times | lations or under Chapter 71, Session Laws of Alaska 1933, | or to be granted under the provisions of Chapter 71, Ses- C/MON, PEPITA - GIT YOUR SHAWL AN/ LET'S GO- e UNCE QUOR CONTROL BOARD ANNO (Continued from Page One) | — holic liquor, other than beer or wine of 17% or less, in; the premises covered by the license. (2). It shall be unlawful for any licensee to main-| tain curtains, screens, or other obstructions, shading eith- er booths where beer may be consumed or rooms where beer is sold. (3). It shall be unlawful for any licensee to sell any | beer between the hours of 1 o’clock A. M. and 8 o’clock: A. M., or allow any liquor of any kind to be drunk between | the said hours on the premises covered by the said li- cense. (4). Any violation of these regulations shall be deemed a misdemeanor, and upon conviction shall be | punishable as provided in Section 2072, Compiled Laws of Alaska 1913. (Sec. 505. C. L. A. 1933), and shall be construed as prima facie cause for revocation of the said license; and in the event of the revocation of any license, the licensee shall be disqualified from securing a license to sell intoxicating liquor in Alaska for a period of one vear from the date of revocation. | 111. A Retail License to sell hard or distilled liquors may be issued to any person, firm, or to a corporation quali- fied to do business in Alaska. Under this license the sale of such intoxicating liquors is permitted in original packages only, with the United States Internal Revenue stamp unbroken, and no licensee under these regulations shall permit any intoxicating liquors to be sold to any in- toxicated person or habitual drunkard, or to any person under the age of twenty-one years, and the sale of any such intoxicating liquor to any person who is an attendant of A a shall be deemed prima facie evidence that such person is under the age of twenty-one years. All packages are to be labeled, the label to show whether the content the blend or compound and the alcoholic content. thereof, and also the date when made, blended, rectified, or com- pounded. Licenses to retail hard and distilled liquors may be is- sued only to citizens of the United States who have been bona fide residents of Alaska for at least one year, or to firms or corporations who have been qualified for at least| one year to do business in the Territory of Alaska. | A Wholesale License to sell hard or distilled liquors only, with United States Internal Revenue Stamps unbrok- en, to retail dealers only, and not to consumers or to the No wholesale license shall be granted to any person, person, firm or corporation has first relinquished the retail license. Each license, under the provisions hereof, shall keep a complete record of all receipts and sales of intoxicating for the inspection of representatives, of the Territory, and a copy of the same shall be furnished to the Territorjal Board of Liquor Control upon request. The consumption of hard or distilled liquors on the premises covered by any license issued under these regn- MY LEETLE PEPITA~ HOW T LOAF PEPITA cation is regular and satisfactory, it shall be the dutyA of the Secretary of said Board to issue an appropriate license. VI All licenses issued under these regulations are for a period of one year, beginning with the first day of July and ending with the 30th day of June, or until the Legis- ature otherwise provides, and the fees therefor are pay- able in advance; no license shall be issued for less than one- | fourth (1-4) of a year. The fee for a license to sell hard or distilled liquors in the Teritory of Alaska is one hundred dollars ($100.00), and in addition thereto the licensee shall pay to the Treas- urer of Alaska two and one-half percent. (2 1-2%) of the invoice price of all liquor purchased by licensee. For the purpose of this provisiom, the licensee shall submit to the Treasurer of Alaska, within thirty days of receipt of each shipment of intoxicating liquor, all invoices of such liquors shipped to the said licensee for sale by him, and shall remit to the Treasurer of Alaska, with such invoices, the amount of excise tax due under these regulations. Provided, that' the license fee for the sale of hard and distilled liquors on regular passenger boats of not less than two hundred fifty (250) gross tons, U. S. Customs House measurement, plying between Alaska and the States, or between Alaskan ports, is fifty dollars ($50.00), and there shall be no additional excise tax. No such boat is allowed to sell intoxicating liquors of any kind while in any Alaskan port. The fee for a Wholesale License is one hundred dol- lars ($100.00). ; No license issued under the provisions of these regu- lations shall be transferred, except by first securing the consent of the Board of Liquor Control. VIL Every person receiving a license under these regula- tions, shall frame said license under glass and post it in a conspicuous position in his place of business so that anyone entering such premises may easily read such li- cense. VIII All licensees under the provisions of these regulations, shall allow any Federal, Territorial or Municipal officer full opportunity and every facility to examine, at any time during regular business hours, the premises, including store rooms and warehouses where intoxicating liquor is sold or stored and for which a license has been granted. IX. All monies collected by the Secretary of the Board of Liquor Control under the provisions of these regulations, and all excise taxes collected by the Treasurer of the Ter- ritory, shall be deposited in the General Fund of the Terri- tory of Alaska; and fifty per eent. (507 ) of all monies collected within incorporated towns under these regula- tions shall be paid by the Treasurer of the Territory of Alaska to the said incorporated towns, and settlements |under the proyisions of this regulation are to be made quarterly. No other taxes or licenses shall be levied on the manufacture, barter or sale of intoxicating liquors in the Territory of Alaska than those prescribed by the Terri- torial Board of Liquor Control. XI. A violatioh of any of the provisions of these regula- tions shall be deemed a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by imprisonment of not more than one year, or by a fine of not more than five hundred dollars ($500.00), each violation to be considered a separ- ate offense, and any such conviction shall be prima facie cause for revocation of any license issued under these regulations, and no license shall thereafter issue for a period of one year from the date of revocation to any such licensee whose license has been revoked. The manufacture, barter, sale, or possession for sale, of intoxicating liquors in the Territory of Alaska by any person, firm or corporation not having procured a license is forbidden. It shall be the duty of each licensee to see . that this provision is enforced. No license to sell hard or distilled liquors shall be ganted to any person, firm or corporation having a Bever- age Dispensary License issued under the provisions of Section 8, Chapter 71, Séssion Laws of Alaska 1933, un- less the license so issued to the business to be conducted would be on premises separate and apart from the premises covered by a dispensary licfir‘lrse. All applicants for license; other than those granted sion Laws of Alaska 1933, as_supplemented herein, shall file with the Secretary of the Board of Liquor Control the following: : (1). An application in writing, signed by appllpant, giving the name and address of 'such applicant; and if by a corporation, by its officers, or duly authorized age.nt. (2). A description of the particular place for which a license is desired, with reference to street, etc., so that the premises can be definitely located. (3). A statement of the citizenship or corporate qualifications of the applicant. } (4.) A statement that the applicant will personally superintend and manage the business Ticensed and be re- sponsible therefor. : (5.) A list of references as to the integrity and repu- tation of the applicant, and of the desirability of issuing a license for the premises mentioned therein. Each application for a license within any incorporated town must be accompanied by an approval by the City Council or said incorporated town, or by a petition signed by at least fifty (50) reputable citizens of the said town, and a remittance of the license fee. - Before any license is issued for the sale of hard or distilled liquors in the Territory of Alaska, the Board of Liquor Control must be satisfied that the applicant is duly qualified and that the premises are suitable for the proper handling of such liquors, and the said Board of Liquor Control shall be the final arbiter as to whom licenses shall be issued or as to the suitability and l(_)catlon of the prem- ises covered thereby. If the Board finds that the appli- to manufacture, barter or sell such intoxicating liquors, or whose license has terminatetl by revocation or other- wise, shall be deemed guilty ‘of a misdemeanor and is punishable as provided in these regulations. No intoxicating liquors shall be manufactured, barter- ed or sold in the Territory of ska prior to May 1, 1934, and any manufacture, barter or'sale of intoxicating liquor befpre said date, under any licgnse issued under the pro- visions of these regulations, or inder Chapter 71, Session Laws of Alaska 1933, shall be grounds for a revocation of the license and shall also subject the manufacturer, :artgrer, or seller to criminal punishment as provided erein. § XILy The Board of Liguor Conmtrol of the Territory of Alaska reserves the right to suspend or revoke any license issued pursuant to the provisions of these regulations, upon a showing sufficient to safisfy the said Board of the necessity for such suspension or revocation. Any convic- tion, however, by a competent ourt, of a breach of any of these regulations, shall automaticdlly act as a revoca- tion of any license granted heréunder. The Board al®o reserves the right to alter, amend, modify or repeal any of the said regulations. Where any conflict appears betwéen the provisions of tl:nese regulations and the provisiong of Chapter 71, Ses- sion Laws of Alaska 1933, these regulations shall govern. Nothing in these regu]ati_ofia contained shall be con- strued to repeal, modify or abrogate any provision of. law of the United States governing the manufacture, barter, sale or posession of intoxieating Tiquors. v FIRE DEPARTMENT CALLED OUT TWICE IN LAST DAY |be sent i was quicl put out. e ENTERS HOSPITAL A short circuit in an Essex car parked in front of the Gastineau Hotel was credited with causing a{ ¢ slight blaze in the car which ne- cessitated calling out the Juneau attention. ———— Swop ir. Juneau yesterday afternoon. The blaze wulmadlul extinguished with little damage. 3 This morning a small brush fire near Dixon Street caused a call to to the department, but Rudy Belmonte, of Douglas, en- Fire Department at 3:30 o'clock|tered 8t. Ann's Hospital today for GEE WHIZ/ ¥ WOT'S ALLTHE i EXCITEMENT ABOUT? HOLY SMOKE ! 'S SULLY=-~ If Beattie Feathers does as welll on the diamond as he did on the gridfron his athletic future should | be pretty secure. The former Tem | nessee ball carrier is training at | Tampa, Fla., for a tryout with the | Cincinnati Reds. (Associated Press | Photo) 'NEGROES UNIT: FOR PROTECTION OF GAME, FISH| | GEORGETOWN, Ky. April 14. —Believed to be the first and only organization of its kind in the na- tion, an all-negro game and fish protective association has been formed here with a membership of 9. | The members are pledged to uphold and assist in the enforce- ment of all game and fish laws| in the state and to support a con- servation program. Fishing on Sunday will be tabco for members, also to persuade non-member ne- |gro members to let the fish rest| on the Sabbath. | Religious services at the local | church recently were given to ex- plaining the objectives, and the pastor preached & sermon on con- | servation. The colléction ~went to the association’s treasury. | ———— | GUS MESSERSCHMIDT IS i RECUPERATING FROM COLD Gus Messerschmidt is able to be jout again after being ill with a severe cold for the last week. He left St. Ann's Hospital where he was receiving treatment on Friday, jand is greatly improved in health. e, | . Daily Empire Want Ads Pay (U - and they will try| ERsEsRLsITAEONSRaLEm Alaskan Headquarters—Ask for Permanent Rates HOTEL NEW WASHINGTON to dine well .nd rest well at Seattle’s most distinguished ad- dress. Here, you will find, all -¢he modern hotel conveniences ne- cessary to your complete comfort and all those old fashioned ideas of friendliness and hospitality that are necessary to good hotel well operated. % ADOLPH SCHMIDT, Managing Director. LT LT LU T LT LT T PR rp ey At the Primary Election, April 24, 1934, J.P. ANDERSON | CANDIDATE FOR TERRITORIAL HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ON THE Democratic Ticket @1 stand on the platform as adopted at the Divisional Convention held in Juneau last January. @1 have no ax to grind, no pet measures to put over, and am under no political obli- gations to anyone. @ Your support wi VOTE FOR 11 be appreciated. ERICK NESS Twenty-eight Years a Resident CANDIDATE FOR REPRESENTATIVE ON THE DEMOCRATIC. TICKET Subject to the Primary, April 24 MY PLATFORM—*“Alaska for Alaskans” FREE AWARD - Ist $20 2nd $10 3rd $10 in merchandise will be awarded SATURDAY, APRIL 21 Leader Department Store George Bros. Store Open Tonight FIRE ALARM CALLS Third and Franklin, Front and Franklin. Front, near Ferry Way. Front, near Gross Apts. Front, opp. City Wharf. Front, near Sawmill. Front at A. J. Office. Willoughby at Totem Grocery. ‘Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole's Garage. Front and Seward. Front and Maln, Second and Main. Fifth and Seward. Seventh and Main. Fire Hall. Home Boarding House. Gastineau and Rawn Way. Second and Gold. Fourth and Harris. Fifth andd Gold. Fifth and East. Seventh and Gold. PFifth and Kennedy. Ninth, back of power house. Calhoun, opp. Seaview Apts. Distin and Indian. Ninth and Calhoun. Tenth and C. Twelfth, B.P.R. garage. Twelfth and Willoughby. Home Grocery. Seater Tract. R e e e e introduced at the auto shows. o We carry ah the new colors Connors Motor Co., I

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