The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 3, 1936, Page 8

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: [} TAX CHANGES SECURITIES AC ARE PROPOSED GETS PRAISE 0 BY ROOSEVELT DR. W. W. COUNGIL Un distributed Corporation | Territorial Commissioner of Profits Levy Among Health Outlines Plans Recommendations for Activity WASHINGTON, March 3.—Sweep- | ing tax law changes, including im- position of a tax on undistributed (Continued from Page One) seems, he said, to be a foregone con- TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1936 | “Mrs. R. H. Williams has been | IMPRUVED SAYS appointed Chairman of Committees 17 in the Parish Hall by the Grad- | uate Nurses of Gastineau Channel, | today. 3 ADpointment was made at last| Demand Charles Goldstein |rickson in the McBride Apartments. |Entire committees will be announc- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE GRADUATE NURSES to complete arrangements for the card party, to be sponsored April JUNEAU BUYER Ifor the benefit of the baby in-|_ e |cubator fund, it was annquncedJMlnk, Other Skins in Good night's meeting of the society, heli| Reports on Return |at the home of Mrs. Waino Hend- | |ed in a later issue of The Empire It was decided The fur market has improved during the last year, and over & period of several years, according that the card | yet made no attempt to exhibit in, the States. Here, in Alaska, I S!!l]‘.‘ I paint, for the prices| V8 Wi LAMBERT SHOW IS NOW OPEN AT NUBGET SHOP Varied Display of Water- ? colors, Etchings, Oils, | Etc., Here for Week Bringing to Juneau a fine cul- tural distillation of authentic Al- everythin, I set on the pictures, and I keep close to things that matter to me— TOVIEW SITKA | BUILDING SITE Action on Replacing Razed Structure Is Seen in Wiener Visit A survey of the site for the pro- posed new Federal Building at Sitka out-of -door things, dogs, trails, mountains, rivers, and caribou steak. The cities don't hold the lever that could pry me loose from Alaska.” - - RICHARDS ON ALASKA ENROUTE TO DAWSON _ | George S. Richards, employed by the Yukon Consolidated Gold Min- | ing Company at Dawson, is al through passenger aboard the Al-! aska from Seattle to Skagway. Mr. MRS. SHEELY RETURNING Mrs. Ross L. Sheely, wife of the Manager of the Matanuska Valley Colonization project, and her daughter, Dorothy, who have been visiting in Arizora for the last several months, are passengers on the Alaska from Seattle to Seward, enroute to their home at Palmer. — e ———— COURTNEY ON ALASKA R. A. Courtney, Anchorage insur- ance broker, is a through passenger ' from Seattle to Seward on the Alaska. RS S e S SAMSON RETURNING HOME Charles Samson, former Fire Chief of Fairbanks, who has spent corporation profits and repeal of | the present graduated corporation income tax, have been recommend- | ed to Congress by President Roose- velt clusion among Democrats and Re- publicans alike. “Even the mosi anti-New Dealers n the Republican ranks feel that the G.OP. will be unable to mster It is estimated that the undis- |a candidate who can defeat i:um,” tributed corporation profits tax said Dr. Council. would yield $1,614,000,000 annually. Visit Rex Deach Also proposed is a processing taX,| Highlights of the Council tour, to be spread broader and thinner which began shortly before chnst—| than those outlawed by the Su- mas, were their attendance, with Dr. | preme Court; a “windfall” tax, t0,and Mrs. Robert Simpson, Mr. and | recover much of the processing|Mrs. J. F. Mullen, and Mary Lee taxes which have been returned to|Council, of the Pasadena Rose Bowl the taxpayers; repeal of the existing i Game; a brief visit with Dr. Coun- capital stock tax; repeal of cor-|cil’s many relati in North Caro- poration excess profits tax. {lina; and a week's stay with Rex Substitute Taxes | Beach, famous Alaskan novelist, at President Roosevelt said the bud- |his winter home in Sebring, Florida. get deficit of $1,017,000,000 cnlled[ “Beach has done a tremendous for an annual permanent taxation amount of advertising for the '_T‘err‘ of $620,000,000, $500,000,000 of wmch.‘rilory since his last summer’s visit,” | he said, represents substitute taxes, Dr. Council declared. “Great stacks and the remainder new taxes not|Of letters: from mining engineers all | hitherto levied. |over the state testify to the interest | The President said he was leay- | created by his re(‘el.n Alaskan arls:r ing to Congress the formualtion of ¢l in the Co‘smupuu(an magazine.” | appropriate taxes. He did not men- | ‘Also_m Florida Dr. and Mrs. (;cun- | tion the specific rate, but said theCil visited David McCulloch, victim | Treasury Department would submit {of a serious accident in the Territory estimates |some years ago, now wintering at| It is ynderstood the Treasury's|E®im Beach, and dined with Com- sroposal will be for a graduated |MAander Dench of the Florida Coast i‘;l averaging about 33'4 |Guard, one-time commander of the | per cent| i s ‘Tallapoosa. on corporate profits. | g IS S | Bad Weather | As to weather: “This is about the | I TRACTOR OPERATIONS |best weather weve run into since| BE DlSPLAYED HER |we left Sebring,” Dr. Council com- |mented. “We hit zero weather in| Florida, and couldn’t motor 30 miles W. P. Jones, Sales Supervisor, west of Charleston, N. C., because of | ond Howard D. Stephens, Alaska snow.” representative for the Caterpillar| The Councils returned to the| Company, arrived on the Alaska nndlcO“fl via New Orleans, El Paso, | are registered at the Gastineau Ho- 'and Bakersfield. tel. They expect to spend a week or ten days in Juneau before con- - tract, auction, pinochle, whist, and pan, appropriate prizes to be given in each division. AL RO PRI T0 STUDY GOLD MINING METHODS Scientists Making Survey of Modern Methods Used in U. S. and Alaska ists accompanied by a technician from New York arrived on the Al- aska this morning to study the modern United States methods of gold production, with particular reference to the Alaska J uneau The party includes: N. Almoian, who serves as interpreter for the party, chemical engineer, employed by the Amtorg Trading Company in New York City; S. Mairanovsky, U. S. 8. R., Moscow, mechanical engineer; Ivan Kap- ein, U. S. S. R, Eastern Siberia, Baley, geologist, and Vassily Soko- lov, U. 8. S. R., Siberia, mining en- ingeer, Three members of the party, Mai- ranovsky, Kapein and Sokolov, left Soviet Russia about two months ago. They were joined by Almoian in New York, and have traveled through mining districts in Colo- gaged in study of the American gold industry. They are interested in all phases of the industry and would 80 on to Fairbanks and the Inter- ior to study placer mining if that industry was now in operation. After a stay here of about a |party should feature tables of con- | RUSSIANS HERE A party of three Russian scient- | rado and California, where they en- | to Charles Goldstein, who arrived on the Alaska from a four weeks' trip to the States. Mink is in very good demand, Mr. Goldstein said, and lynx, otter and muskrats are also’ popular, but red, blue and white fox are not wanted. Condi- tions generally in the States are | good, he said, and the people out- |side are very optimistic. [ Mrs. Goldstein, who accompanied Mr. Goldstein to Seattle and Cali-| }rornia, has been very ill with pneu- | monia, Mr. Goldstein said, but is| |now improving. Mrs. Goldstein is| | now at the home of their daughter, | |Mrs. John Dolginer, in Los An-| geles, and will return to Juneau! {ebout the first of May. While in the States Mr. Gold-| | stein arranged for a series of radio broadcasts {from Station KNX to go on the air every Wednesday might |at 11:40 p.m. or 10:40 p.m., Juneau iime. The broadcasts will deal en-| |tirely with the fur industry, includ-! ing reports on fluctuations in prices | and solicitation of shipments. Mr. | Goldstein spoke on the first broad- | cast. He will leave within a few| |days on a two months' fur-buying| expedition throughout the Interior, traveling entirely by airplane. | Mr. Goldstein reported today that | Capt. William Strong of Tulsequah, | Who is now in the Bear Lake coun- try in Canada, and his partner, Lynch Collison, are representatives of the Charles Goldstein Company. A shipment of pelts purchased for the Goldstein company in the Peace River district by Collison, valued at $150,000 or more, arrived here to-| |day. It is @ very fine coleut: Mr. Goldstein said, and ! lynx, marten, mink and fox pelts. “We plan to make Juneau the fur |center of Alaska,” Mr. Goldstein | said. | ———e—— ! | MASON FUNERAL THURSDAY | Funeral services for Frank Mason, of the Nugget Shop a varied dis- play of water-colors, etchings, oils and a solitary engraving that in 1ska 1 and landscape, T. R. will be made by Edward J. Wiener, = 2 i:l:;:ertucfar:u\s artist ople the In-|Richards reportedb that h? fnew Construction Engineer for the Treas- :"}:; k:; s: ‘::;;:Z;‘:hsfo‘:‘ é:’;:gv r sday i jes| pumping system, broug Tom Department, Procurement Di- N , texior, tday. opens I e B Fairbanks, . his bean Htalid SR Lt oY enroute to Fairbanks, today on the the mine operated by his em- Alaska. Mr. Wiener is a passenger on the | ployers, and will be in charge of ———— Alaska, enroute from San Fran-| |etching “Team-mates,” wherein two | moment along the trail; “Togo,” an| S|immemorably in action. Hjalmar Nordale of Fairbanks dur- ing the forthcoming s¢2son. il SR BT HAS CRUSHED HAND A severe hand injury, suffered when her hand became entangled itself is worth making the journey down Front Street to examine. Meherin Cabin Shown Lambert, who for the past two months has been living in the Ray Day cabin at Auk Bay, has in- cluded iz his exhibit a landscape of that regien and a view of Joe Meherin's cabin that should be of particular local interest. to be brought here on the Alaska from the Wrangell Institute. She is now a patient at the Government Hospital. — .- —— PNEUMONIA PATIENT With the show open only this week—Lambert leaves shortly again for the Interior—and all pictures' Vi 0 v Klawock en- on the exhibit for sale, art-lovers| EWwalter Edenshaw of Klawoc and all who have experienced the|tréd the Government H”,p'mcrs’; actuality of life in the North,|day, suffering from a severe ought hasten to the galleries where of pneumonia. '3 such subjects as these can be seen| FORESTRY BOAT SAILS honesty and vigorously depicted:| The Forest Service boat Ranger “The Dog-Musher's Camp” (water- IX, commanded by Capt. George color); “Crossing the Pass” (water- Saravela, left Ketchikan for Juneau color); “Lonesome Creek Cabin”, yesterday noon. The launch For- (engraving); “Klutina Lake in Sep-|ester, with Forest Examiner Jay tember” (oil); “The Mail Driver” K Williams aboard, left Juneau yester- (water-color), |day for patrol of the Iey Straits re- Has Lived What He Paints |8ion. :msco to Alaska’s first capital. He will make a preliminary report to the - Treasury Department on the requirements of a new structure to Building which burned recently. in a mangle, caused Jean Roberts|Ground tests, location studies and | other technical matters will be in- cluded in the report. | Meanwhile Delegate Anthony J. Dimond. supported by the Division of Territories and Insular Possessions of the Interior Department, is mak- ing efforts in Washington to secure !funds for the new building. i 8% T | DR. CARLSON HERE Dr. R. L. Carlson, Ketchikan op- tician, arrived from Ketchikan on the Alaska, and is registered at the Gastineau Hotel. Ll gl NIELSEN IN TOWN Pedar Nielsen, with the Healy River Coal Corporation at Suntrana, is a passenger aboard the Alaska | for the westward. Lambert has lived the life he| LRATE tells about, and his pictures bristle, with authenticity. Such dogs—or | dog-sleds—as the Saturday Evening Post recently featured on their front-page cover have no place in' his collection. Instead, there is an of his dog pack are seen resting a etching portrait of Leonhard Sep- pala’s famous lead dog; “Crossing the Pass,” a picture of a dog-team And particularly there is “The Yukon Mail Comes Through on Schedule,” an oil color whose only points of composition are a dog- team, a man, and a blizzard, and which must be seen rather than described. It is sufficient to say that Lambert himself carried the replace the 95-year-old Customs ! | BARRACK BOUND HOME James Barrack, Fairbanks hard- | ware merchant, is a passenger on the Alaska enroute from Seattle to Seward. { ., MAYOR GOLDSTEIN ILL Mayor 1. Goldstein was confined & |to his home today with a slight | cotd. o Ry LOURING , GOING WEST Kaj Louring, Pacific Bettlers Supply representative, will sail for Seward today on the Alaska. B O A TR Donald F. Hartzel, Supervisor ot Social Welfare, Bureau of Indian Affairs, sailed for Petersburg on the Northland on a routine inspe- tion trip. ——————— GOES TO KETCHIKAN N. A. McEachran, Schwabacher Brothers representative, left for Ketchikan on the Northland. il R Z — | ond largest producer of gold in the | Thursday afternoon. week the party of scientists will re- | ten vear old, who died at the turn to New York cnroute to Rus- | Government Hosuital Sunday, will sta. be held at the chapel in the C. W, The Soviet Union is now the sec- | Carter Mortuary at 1:30 . ajclock Rev. David world, being second only to South | Waggoner will officate and jnter- Africa. The United States is third|ment will be in Evergreen Ceme- | in volume of guld produced. tery. } ————— i R I GAZALOFF RETURNS HAWKINS ON ALASKA T. W. Hawkins, of Brows and| awkins, Seward mencantile firm, |is aboard the Alaska returning to and pleasure | his home after a visit of several weeks in California. Sam Gazaloff, of the City Club, | H: returned to Juneau aboard the Alas- ka after a business trip south, - = DR. RAE L. CARLSON | depicting snow. Yukon mail an entire winter. He knows what he is trying to express and he makes the spectator know it. Fine Engraving ' The solitary engraving in the col- ledtion is “Lonesome Creek Cabin,” which is everything an engraving should be and which most of those seen -on exhibit are not. It is, | therefore, alone in its class not be- | cause the artist is incapable of that medium but because the lack of an engraving press in the ‘Territory makes necessary the loss of much time in processing. Lambert plans, however, to purchase a press of his own in the near future, and devote some time to the medium, believing —as his one example would seem to prove — that engraving is the one wholly satisfactory method of Oil Sketch “E-Wan” Mentioned last wholly for the including scenes of logging with Night with Full Load | pany, he reported, practically all Brother, Olaf Torkelsen, will be this afternoon, and will sail on aytangages. 49 row afternoon because of 27 tons | i ¥ the crew of the Roedda, are in pos- Schilling the last voyage of the Roedda, and said the vessel was anchored for a few hours near the Hoonah cannery tinuing their commercial tour to the Westward and the Interior. A quantity of motion pictures | Y tractors in all parts of the world, elephants in comparison to ma- chine equipment, will be displayed Y ¢ | here within a few days, Jones said. Va1l Boat Sails Tomol'rgwy tors is being featured by his com- | t Freiah ol rreight models being fully diesel. g e | ATTENTION ELKS | Motorship Roedaa, Capt. Ed. Bach, The funeral services for our late &t Pacific Coast Dock at 2 o'clock : |schedule tomorrow night at 6 o'clock. | hf";m‘“"“ i ‘:’; : L“;’t‘"”z‘ 2°““'f: | Purser Dave Ramsay reported today | 2 an ity b @ i i that no cargo will be accepted on their cars are requested to be inpo.qqs later than 1 o'clock tomor- M‘BOBERITSI IBOY ILL {of transfer cargo brought here by | 2 the steamer Alaska. Harold McRoberts, &chool young- | s ‘ne ‘ooliection of pictures of the pital today for medical treatment. org] Building, taken by members of | session of Purser Ramsay. He re- ported stormy weather throughout ({ I ure !on the outbound trip to await more ° / ifavorable weather. a l a , Passengers aboard the Roedda for | n Juneau were: From Hoonah—Mr. | :irom Tenakee—H. Pogplottie. [ Optometrist AND FIT featuring operations of Caterpillar ST[]RMY TRIP; An entirely new line of 1936 trac- | Sails | from Sitka and way ports, berthed | Wednesday afternoon. All Elks and the dock for shipment aboard the | ster, was admitted to St. Ann's HoS- | ¢yr0 wiien destroyed the Sitka Fed- | /{ k} 'and Mrs. J. E. Dwyer, H. Moses; | (DElicate 10/5 e { the flavor | The wild turkey 15 called the 0’—? i“king of upland game” in North | R 1. Ty SPECIAL! $3.45 $3.45 Good Bye! Leaky, Quick Chilling Hot Water Bottle This Guaranteed Westinghouse 3-Heat {' WARMING PAD should be in every {! home. You'll wait a long time for an- || other bargain like this. DON'T WAIT! | Alaska Electric Light & Power Co, JUNEAU 6 DOUGLAS 18 ART EXHIBITION OF ALASKAN PAINTINGS OILS WATERCOLORS ETCHINGS e By T. R. LAMBERT {Oh Display in Sydney Laurence Room . of the Nugget Shop THIS WEEK ONLY Carolina. | T R e - or call at IS AGAIN IN JUNEAU TO EXAMINE EYES OFFICE AT THE GASTINEAU HOTEL Phone 10 for appointment of Ketchikan GLASSES Room 202 | L e o st CO AL The inexpensive way to keep warm in any weather is to Brand” 1 Ton, delivered 14 Ton, delivered % Ton, delivered burn the “Economy INDIAN EGG-LUMP 4.40 Excellent for FURNACE, RANGE or HEATER [ ] Start your fire with INDIAN then bank with———— "CARBONADO"” The Coal That Makes Other Coals Last Longer [ J PACIFIC COAST COAL —PHONE 412— point of emphasis, is a quick-life oil sketch, “E-Wan in tones of blues, olive-greens, and khaki, of a young native boy. It is perhaps the most purely objective and definite of the artist's work now on exhibit. Seeing it, one| hungers to know what will be said | of it in the great art centers of | |the States, where, as yet, Lambert | has never attempted an exhibit. | Briefly summarized, Lamberts im‘m striking qualities would seeml purity of tone, remarkable quality | of perspective, fine composition, and definiteness about what he wants to say; the latter, which is by far the most necessary to greatness, being {also in Lambert the most highly 1developed. It is not easy to say :Ju_st what are his failings, and such | criticism, even were it given, would |be idle. There are only two kinds of artists ever on exhibition. Those Who are motivated by a technical ability, and who move either emo- tionally or by draftsmanship with- in the limitations of that ability, ‘cnn be found fault with, | tune of many pages of brilliant critical essay; but it wil be a waste of time both for critic and artist since the latter, if 50 motivated, must be lacking j " Rt it g inherently within !,9 8reat art. The other king 4 tists—Lambert is jn this :;:S\:r— Aare moving directly as possible to- ward a goal which the; rather than comprehend; Zhe;e 2: themselves more aware of their limitations than any onlooker could be; and one can only stand back, admire, sometimes with reserva: nz::‘s. what they have done, and :"ill d:]em godspeed in what they Lambert's own creed, as expressed in an interview yesterda, can for him best: 5 i % Road to Art ere is any road to art th: can be counted on with any oeif it is to live utterly what one wants to express, and then to be willing to sacrifice the society of others and the comforts ‘of gre. garious existence to give all one’s energy and emotional strength to its the head, done | to the | 0se qualities necessary | Each puff less acid —Luckies are A LIGHT SMOKE OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO For twenty-five years the research staff of The AmericanTobaccoCompany hasworked ste,ndily to produce a measurably finer cigarette —namely, a cigarette having a mini- mum of volatile components, with an improved richness 'of taste—“A LIGHT SMOKE.” ‘Webelieve that Lucky Strike Cigarettes em- body a number of genuinely basic improve- ments, and that all these improvements combine to produce a superior cigarette —a modern cigarette, a cigarette made of rich, ripe-bodied tobaccos—A Light Smoke. expressipn. . That is why I do not live in cities and why I have as OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED TOBACCO-“IT'S TOASTED"

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