The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 5, 1936, Page 8

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ROME PREPARES FOR THREAT OF NEW SANCTIONS Fascist Grafid Eouncil Holds Second Meeting with “ Duce INVADERS IN SOUTH MAKE NEW ADVANCE Britain Plans Expansion of Defenses — New Peace Plan ROME, Feb. 5.—The Fascist Grand Coun say it was determined on a “defi- nitely fixed line of counteraction” if Ita is confronted with furt tighten of the League of Na- tions’ sanctions. The nature of the counteract was not obtained from the co ence with Mussolini, which lasted two | half houis, and was the sec hin four days. The coun- , 1 decided that Italy was wise in rejecting the recent Franco-British | 1 | the Italian government | its forces in southern Ethi- have made further advances in the valley of Webbe Gestro GREATER DEFENSE PLANNED ! LONDON, Feb. 5— The British government is said by authoritative source to be considering secret plans for expanding Britain’s system of de- fenses for the empire. | George Lansbury, Labor Member ! of Parliament, drafted a peace reso- | lution which would give an oppor- tunity for debate on all aspects of the Ethiopian war and British de- fenses. — .- | JUNEAU DRAMA | today issued a communique | MIAMI WILL New Déai Starts Co-operativc Farm Col(;i{ leGflME TAX " FILING TIME /W( Urged to Eliminate Making Errors e filing however, t to disregard of mutus nd aXpayer. e of errors. which 1 by age of the THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 5, 1936. IS NOW NEAR Reading of Instructions on - ng the calen- uary 1 and | sys h 16. March se of the filing pe~ falls on Sunday, al- tpayers an additional day it will be s period are filed an- of individual income- e proportion of income subject to the atter contain a consider- JUNEAU DAY ON AIR WILL COME BEFORE CHAMBER Plan Suggested by Glen! Bartlett to Have City | on National Hook-up | A national Juneau Day on the air | will be the subject of interesting dis- n tomorrow noon at the Cham- ber of Commerce luncheon at the Terminal Cafe. Glen C. Bartlett, for- ! merly widely known Juneauite and | now manager of the Willlam Pemn | ng a Juneau broadcast hour on the | Major Bowes amateur program in a | ration-wide hookup, ! The Bowes program features a ity in the nation at each broadcast, wd it is Mr. Bartlett’s thought that Juneau might get such a spot. He has -1 | suggested that the chamber, business the audit would re- houses and other institutions co- perate in backing such a proposi- ion. It might be possible to have 3 \ » rs of computation | ;ome one from Juneau, now in the my@; S i on the face of the tes, represent the city on the ~ ment of more than the | Anthony J. Dimond, former Gov e am; of tax due. In other returns | Thomas Riggs and others, offer mes- Farmsteader plowing t is readily discernible that the tax- | sages. payer has failed.to take advantage | Correspondence with Mr. Bartlett e ; { the personal exemption, The farmsteaders will' ) will be farmed cellectively. < be paid daily wages and will share in the co- One of the most interesting experiments sponsored by the New Deal is the rural collectivist com- munity which is now being established near Omaha, Neb. At Ak-Sarben the resettlement administra- tion has started a co-operative colony modeled along the lines of a Soviet state farm. An 800- acre tract has been set aside, one-third of which tled operative returns. Each colonist will own his own $2,600 home, tool shed and chicken house. These ! buildings are eut at a central location and hauled D¢ in trucks, in knock-down condition, to the plot om| which they are erected, Bures u of Internal turns. Additional information, STEEL SQUARE CLASS RETURN FROM First meeting of the mignt scnool TR|P TD GAL' class in Steel Square will be held this evening in the High School under direction of Mr. Henry Har- mon, assisted by R. L. Rippe of the Carpenters’ Union. BE HOST AT first, advising wage earner, profess credit for dependents, or deduc- from gross income to which he To avoid these and other errors, Revenue wrges careful reading of the instruc- ions on the forms for filing the re- ied. may be obtained at the of- fice of a collector of internal revenue, deputy collector, or an internal reve- nue agent in charge. OPENS THIS EVENING ™, « Turther aid in the prep- oo aration of a correct income-tax re- turn for the year 1935, the Bureau has prepared a series of short news- paper articles, of which this is the |“e sent in shortly after 3 o'clock the salaried man, onal and busi- ness man—in fact, every class of in- on the matter will be read by Act- ng Secretary John Keyser at the 'uncheon. A letter from the Alaska Sportsman also is among the corre- pondence to be taken up tomorrow. Chamber members, returning from he States, who are expected to be 1eard are Dr. Robert Simpson, Wal- if | stein G. Smith, Vice President of the 7irst National Bank, and H. L. Red- ingshafer, Regional Fiscal Agent of ke Forest Service. —— SMOKE CAUSES ALARM Smoke from an overheated oil burner caused an alarm of fire to this afternoon from the home of | 3eorge Hansen, in the Cottage tel in Seattle, has suggested to|standing obligations To | the Chamber that it join in sponsor- 1 benefit to the MRS. J. H. NEWMAN S obs ko \ewman FUNERAL HELD FOR PIONEER Mrs. John H. Newman, President of the American Legion Auxiliary | in Juneau, will accompany her husband, Court Reporter, on the - : il SEATTLE, Wa; Feb. 5.—Charl 5?1‘1,”1 :avvml""r _;0 Kemhl}':a"“ TheY | carlson, 72, Alaska pioncer who dies e *riday on the Victoria. | i, pagy Robles, Cal, January 28, was Mrs. Newman plans to be absent & | pyried here today. s month oi_suifiri__ 1 %arlson spent 42 years in Alaska and owned gold claims on Clear COLONY PAYMENTS MADE |Creek north of Fairbanks, His ramlx | illness attacked him three months after he had arrived in Californis A total of $35,000 has been paid on miscellaneous vouchers to cred- | for the winter, itors of the Matanuska colony by| His niece, Mrs. Disbursing Clerk J. R. Elliott, with and a nephew, Wi more wvouchers expected to arrive |live in Seattle, on the next southbound boat. The e, payments constitute the first of | GOES their kind on the colony's out- | E. J. Reiland Schillings Proa 3 ucts e il | representative, sailed for Skagway SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! | on the Northwestern last night, e W T A S. 8. Calendar, illiam Lindman, e S TO SKAGWAY AFTER 6:00 P. M. ' PHONE ' 226 If your Daily Alaska Empire has not reached you PHONE 226 and a copy will be sent by SPECIAL CARRIER to you IMMEDIATELY. CLUB OFFERED Northwestern W Apartments. There was no damage. | The alarm was sent in from the | J0x at the Home Grocery corner. dividual taxpayer—of his require- e Datball chool schedule at the special re- ments and privileges as interpreted 1C I'ootbal quest of the Carpenters’ Union, the under the latest regulations, rulings, = class is open to anyone wishing to and decisions relating to the in- and Mrs. Robert Simpson re- It will meet every Wed- come-tax law. it- Although continued on the night ness Clz b FINE PROCRAM “Gierd Gt o those e | Orrin Kimball, Louise Blan- ton, Ted Brown, and Others in Playlet A bridegroom searching for a col- lar button and a bride who doesn't like to be managed by the best man furnished Drama Club members an- other of the very entertaining pro grams which have been the order of the evening since the new work- shop sessions were inaugurated ac the beginning of the new year. Orrin Kimball as the groom and | Louise Blanton as the bride were as- sisted in their stage comedy by Frank | Jackson, Mrs. Elizabeth Parker, Ted | Brown, and Mrs. Grover C. Winn. ‘The play was directed by Mrs. Blan- ton. Meeting in the grade school au- | ditorium under President Irvine | Noble, the club last night voted to | Noble, the club last night voted to | postpone decision on the once-or- twice-a-month business sessions un - | til June, heard reports on various workshop activities, and admitted the following persons to club mem- bership: May River, William J. Roberts, Jack Jeffrey, Edith Alexander, A. E Schoettler, G. S. Prucha. It was announced that the Work- shop Session will meet in the mathe- matics room of the high school at | 7:30 o'clock Thursday evening for a lesson in character make-up, to be administered by Grace Vivian Ram- say The Study Session will meet next Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Irvine Noble on Main Street. (N Start the day right on Wings of the Morning —Schilling Coffee! Start right in the kitchen. Start with the right coffee— the correct coffee made specially for the method you use. * Schilling has it for you. Schilling .Coff_ge 8 g Attending Dance turned on the North ay evening. Sk i L California vacation w The class in Blue Printing Read- GRIDLEY IN SEATTLE ich ‘With the mercury hovering about Mrs. Simpson five months ag ng, under the same sponsors, will Ross A. Gridley, State Engineer- zero, it would no doubt be the great- when she accompanied her son and | neat on Monday evening of each |Inspector for the PWA, has arrived est pleasure imaginable for a person daughter, Annabel and Robert, south | weok in Seattle from Washington, D. C.| to spend an evenin 1 Florida. for their entrance into Stanford Uni- e - and wil leave there Saturday for| Think of standing beneath sheiter- LARSON IS HOME BOUND Juneau, according to word received ing palms—thi At spa spending the fall in Sar G 3 ; —_ihere today lmhr stars in a moonlit sky—dream co, Mrs. Simpson escorted| Ray C. Larson, Anchorage lum- o Sl ol of dancing to excellent music amid / bel and Robert on a visit to|berman, and his daughter, _}“‘d SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE 11! all the natural splendor of the trop- | their grandmother, Mrs. Anna Simp- | L. J .Seel are passengers ahoard S oM | SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST: ics. All these features are real and son, in Del Rio, Texas, returning to | the Northwestern enroute will belong to dancers attending San Francisco in time to meet Dr.| Seattle to Anchorage the annual Senior Ball at J-hi gym- Simpsor. there when he ar nasium Friday, February 7 Christmas Eve from Juneau One may go to the Miami Bilt- The family spent the holidays more and enjoy the singing of the the Bay vicinity, later meeting D: | Black-Faced Tenor, and the Har- and Mrs. W. W. Council, Judge an IN ALASKA IT,S or: mony Trio—see the clever dancing Mrs. J. F. Mullen, and the lat of the tapping bell-hops—and dance | two daughters, and journeying with to the rhythmic strains of music by them to attend the Rose Bowl foot- | Miller's Melody Makers. ball game in Pasadena on New Year's ‘The Senior Ball, made possible | Day. | through the efforts of members of | Illness caused Mrs. Simpson to| the class and their adviser, Miss Har- | spend a week in a Portland clinic o riet Cutler, should long be remem- |the return trip. They also visited bered by individuals who attend ths | week in Seattle. affair—whether it be to dance—look | wclmen (BURWASH LANDING | ' 52 DEGREES BELOW S | THAwlNG UF The temperature at Burwash | Landing, which was 17 degrees be- | wATEH PIPES low zero, with a stiff ‘northwest | | enroute from Taku to Fairbanks | by dog team—arrived there yester- | day afternoon, dropped to 52 (!e-r wind blowing, when Mary Joy |grees below zero this morning, ac- | gsseges ot | cording to radio messages received | Thawing of frozen water pipes|from the PAA radio operator at by means of a blow-torch resulted| Burwash Landing by Bob Ellis, lo- | in a fire at the residence of Pastor|cal PAA representative. H. L. Wood, in the Seventh-ds Radio reports received here yes- Adventist Church building at Sec-|terday stated that Miss Joyce in-| ond and Main Streets this morn-|tended to rest at Burwash Landing | ing. At 9:45 am. the Juneau Fire!for a day or two before proceeding | Department responded to an alarm|on the next leg of her trip—Bur-| from the Wood residence, and ex-| wash Landing to Tanana Crossing ‘ tinguished a blaze in the rear wall| - . iy s = of the building and the stair a“‘g('(‘\ll’t‘ a nurse at Ketchikan to In the PoPular Stubby connecting the basement and first| accompany Mrs. Behrends to Ju- floor. Damages were estimated| neau, but as a precautionary meas- at about $25 | ure, Mrs. Behrends was removed Mullen also i it L | to the hospital. MRS BEHRENDS lLL Judge and Mrs. J. F. ® left the steamer and are with Mrs. | WITH SEVERE COLD| Behrends. No direct word was re. el ceived from Ketchikan today re- who was | garding Mrs. Behrends' condition. taken to the hospital at Ketchika R e when the steamer Northwestern ar- | KENNEDY ON N. W. rived there from the south, has a| | severe cold, according to Juneau| George Kennedy, Seward hard- passengers arriving here last night.| ware merchant, is a passenger on At first it ‘was thought feasible to|the Northwestern. EXPORT OR ALE or Regular Bottles ALSO ON TAP AT ALL LEADING DISPENSERS ® ALASKA TRADING CO. John T. McLaughlin, Local Agent (TUSE VELLG INSTEAD OF |ORDINARY KALSOMINE AND GUARRANT EE A SATIS FACTQRY JOR .MADAN » PHONE 10 JUNEAU - YQUNG == 5o HARDWARE (O, Is the Choice of Hundreds Your Choice—on the basis of flavor. And when you choose PEERLESS you'll choose the bread: that hundreds of other women like best! Your Choice—on the basis of purity. And your choice will be backed by hundreds of tests when you pick PEERLESS. Your Choice—for variety . . .- and you’ve the grandest selection in the city to choose from! Take a crunchy French type . . . a raisin-spotted loaf of goodness . . . or a healthy whole wheat special . . . or any of the other delights that PEERLESS bakes so well. But whatever you choose . . . whatever your reason . . . you've the support of hundreds who KNOW that PEERLESS BREAD IS BEST! ALWAYS FRESH! Ask Your Grocer For—— Peerles,s Bread

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