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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1936. B A e R ey with print under DRESSES! EXTRA! Moderate prices. wide, "Juneau’s Lecxdmg proximately sixty per cent over the year 1934, It is interesting to note that the greater part of the increase for the first two months of this year has | been on 1040A income tax returns which are filed by the small salary and kage earning class. The rec- ords so far indicate a substantial gain, however, for zll classes of tax- payers Conditions in Washington and Alasfi Improve Increased Earnings Shown - - o ROY RUTHERFORD BACK :v I)\‘ Income Tax Roy Ruthertord, of the Juneau | 4 . Lumber Mills, returned to Juneau ! A Collections n the Victoria, alter a business :’ trip to Seattle. 3 TACOMA, March 11. — Anothe S Av N : proof of the improved ecor MRS. BURFORD RETURNS condition of the citizens of the St: Mrs. W. K. Burford returned to $1.95 yard. NOVELTY, and 45¢ per yard, B.M.Behrend of Washington and the Territory of Alaska, as shown by their increased earnings during 1935 as is being recorded daily by the 1935 fncome tax collections which are be- ing received with returns filed, Alex. McK. Vierhus, Collector of Internal Revenue, stated tod Collections for were seventy-one per uary, 1935, and for F¥ sixty-five per cent o 1935, or a gross galn two months of approx seven per cent. jons of current income tax for the first two months total $657,- 47542, a gain of £269,258.43 over the collections for the firsi two mon of 1935, The Collector belicves th increase is éven more motable for the reason that the income tax col- gainst 1934, | home aboard the Victoria. Mr. De- | Leo is Assistant Superintendent of the Copper River and Northwestern Jections for the year 1935 were ap- Railway. Juneau from a trip to Bellingham, Wash., where she attended the Iun-‘ eral of her father. e IS OPERATED ON David Wallace underwent a major operation this morning in St. Ann's| | Hospital. — e STREET SIGNS PUT UP Work on erecting the new street signs on Juneau intersections was completed today. - - DE LEOS ON VICTORIA Mr. and Mrs. R. J. DeLeo, of Cordova, are returning to their ki | {of the Bureau of Public Roads, re- l SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE IT! boast about! servative colors dresses. W e Ad Departm§ S ore” Modérate Prices! Newest Tailored Tpes! We bought them early . . fashion trends were definitely established .. . and we managed to get a bargain to You will find them all you could ask for ih style; the mannish influ- ence is noted in the fitted reefers; a touch a gay note sounds from the short swaggers. When it comes to workmanship and quality, we urge you to examine them, for every one o can stand strong serutiny! SUITS are tailored .t perfection . redominate. We take real pride! in being able to give you such out- standing suits at a very moderite ‘eost. Youthtul Short Swaggers! ‘"5 Soon as Con- PURE DYE SILK . . Redingote and Jacket Dresses in dark colors FORMAL and DINNER DRESSES . . in new prints and pastel shades. NEW YARDAGE in WOOLEN FABRICS for suits, dresses, 54 in. LK CREPES, $1.75 yard. PRINTED SILKS, $1.00 yard. . COTTON P Ql'l‘s Aor sport, and housewear, at. 23¢ Cg. Inc. ALASKA PRINCE |BLUE RIBBONS PLANS RETURN | TIE HOP 60LDS T0 TERRITORY [Son of Last Russian Gov- Playoff F.rmy Night at ernor Now Ship's Cap- | 7:30 — Winning Team tain for Grace Line = | . Gets 3 Cases of Beer Alaska’s last prince is. no lunger! Official standings of the Yeams in Prince” but “Mr.”, snd is ready|the Brewers League tournament at to return to Alaska, the land over|the Eiks Alleys, released today, dis- which his father was the last Gov-| close a tied score between the Blue FOR ELK TITLE £OL. RATHJEN ON VIC | col. G. W. Rathjen, Exploration Company official, is a passenger on the Victoria enroute ‘to Fairbanks. ——o—— KELSEYS WESTBOUND Kelsey are passengers aboard the Victoria eircute Vildez. D e ANCHORAGE BANKER HERE .| E. R. Tarwater, Anchorage bank- | er, is a passenger on the Victoria enroute 'to his home after a visit Fairbanks ritorial representative from from Seattle to| in the States. He is a former Ter- Third Division. T S | JOHNSON IN TOWN Chet Johnson, National Grocery |Company representative, arrived R. D. Kelsey, rresident of the|from Petersburg on the Victoria. Valdez Dock Company, and Mrs. | B e | MRS. HELLAN RETURNS | Mrs. Walter G. Hellan, wife of the Deputy U. S. Marshal, returned to Juneau on the Victoria, after |a combined business and pleasure trip to Salem and Portland, Oregon, and Easton, Washington, in which jcity she visited her father. the ernor for Russia. This was revealed today in a let- ter received by the Rev. A. P. Kash- evaroff, from Prince Dmitri Petro- vich Maksoutoff, now a ship’s cap- tain in New, York, in which the roy- al navigator stated: | “My late father ... was the last! { governor © of the ... possessions, ‘nnd during his administration, on the 18th of October, 1867. the trans- fer took place of the Russian pos- Sessions to the United States on the| Island of Sitka in New Archangel,” writes Capt. Maksoutoff. “From! the large family of my father, those remaining alive, are only myself, and my youngster , Barcnes Maria Dmitrovna Flitingoff, w whereabouts I do not know." | Once Fleet Captain | Mr Maksoutoff at on> time was| a captain of the first rank in tre! Black Sea Fléet, lived through the| revolution, and in 1920 managed (o! leave Rus on the ship Vladimar, saving his young son Constafi- and some valuable documents. The documents, many of them at' least, were passed down by his father, and concern Alaska and Sitka. The young son, Constantine, Maksoutoff, is now a chemical en-! gineer with the Atlantic Refining Company in Philadelphia, and it was through a letter from him to his father that “Prince” Maksoutoff learned of Father Kashevaroff. “I have gone through terrible times,” his letter says, “but remem- bering that I by birth am a sea- faring man, I returned to work on the blue sea. I sailed in 1925 as a fireman. It was my good fortune to get aboard an American freighter in 1927 as an ablebodied seaman. Gradually, I arose to the rank of quartermaster, and was employed on the largest steamer, the 59,000-| ten Leviathan. Studying without stop, “at last in January of 1933, I received my American citizenship, and in February of that same year, I passed examination and received my master’s license. Now I am in the service of the Grace Line, which has just sold two steamers to the Alaska Steamship Company . . Citizenship Papers “I have received . .. citizenship papers, not as Prince, but as Mr Maksoutoff “Of course you must remember, how having lost my fatherland, fomily, and all—all; something yet draws me to the place where my father lived, where the grave of my stepfather, the first wife of my father lies. I am the son of his second wife, Princess Maria Vladi- marovni, and I was born in Peters- burg in 1870 . Capt. Maksoutoff is willing give up what he has accumphwhed | and start again at almost anything | “in the beginning”, so that he may return once more to Alaska, where Maksoutoff Castle once stood, and’ .. the graves of the family are now almost. forgotten in the tall grass == on a little knoll in Sitka. ——————— MAYOR GOLDSTEIN BETTER Mayor I. Goldstein, who has been confined to his home for several days with influenza, was reported better today. A Threc Days Cough Is Your Danger Signal Mo matter how many medicines you have tried for, your cough, chest cold or brouchial irritation, you can | get relief now ‘with Crsomu!sion. Serious trotble may be brewing and | | Somethmg New In Smoking Line Announced Now TORONTO, CaRalla, March 1. — W. J. McCoimick, non- smoking physician, has an- nofiticed his inivention of fireless cigarettes, cigars anil pipes; in which tobacco siiokes but never burhs. Siioke by electric heaters, which take advantage of the peculiar differenice betwgen mic- otine and other tobakcco-Form- ing substances are bullt into bowls fok pipes and, for cigars and clgarettes, shaped into ovens into which the entire \ cigar or cigarette is thrust, | The smoker has a plug in the pipe or Hholder to light or for l other electrical connection. | H According 1o Dr. MeCormick, | “the smoke is not so dense as ordinarily and has a diffefent residue.” ———————— M. D. WILLIAMS BACK | M. D, Williams, District Engineer turned to Juneau today after a. month’s visit to the States. e VAN MAVERN RETURNS A. Van Mavern, West Coast Groc- ! ery .representative, - arrived _from| P«.usburg on the Zapora. S eee ' ) LEGISLATURE'S you cannot afford to take a charnce Wwith ..nn hing less than Creonitil- | tion, which goes right to the seat | of t ¢ trouble to aid nature to' soct! d hc;l the inflamed mem- | | Lranes he germ-laden phkgh i . 4 : f!: . Iis loosen:d and ex:pelled, | Even if other remedie. fziled, don’t be dlscourmd PLAN DROPPED Dele Extra Session to Be Asked The possibility of a special session of the Territorial Legislature this when Alaska spring faded today, ate Informs Governor Delegate Anthony J. Dimond in- formed Gov. John W. Troy that the matter has been laid at rest. Delegate Dimond originally sug- gested the special term in order to secure passage of enabling legisla- tion to place Alaska under the bene- fits of the Social Security = Act. However, due to the nearness of the primary elections, and the neces- sity of holding special balloting in order. to hold the spring session, territorial officials proposed that the Security legislation be deferred un- | til the régular term next fall. The Territorial Adnumstnuve Board rmed the delegate of its stand after a speclal meeting early this month. ——et— N. M. Nash, 59, FERA worker, was treated today for a broken wrist, Which he suffered in a fall.| druggm is authorized to guara tee Creomulsion and to refund your | money if you are not satisfied with | Tesuits from the very first bottle. Get Crenrhulsion right now. (Adv.) BELIEVE . That every 'bird can be s plump, so vigorous, and yet so but_battery brood- ing and proper feeding meth- tender . 0ds help guarantee just that. HERE IN JUNEAU! Deliveries made to your home on Wednuduy: and Saturdays i 3 JUST PHONE 488—WE DO THE REST! SMOKY VRLLEY Ribbons and the Hop Golds. A play-off for the title has been scheduled for 7:30 o'clock next Fri- day night—the 13th—and t hree cases of Blue Ribbon and Hop Gold beer will be awarded the winhing team. Players on the Hop Gold are vs. J. T. Petrich;, Garland Boggan, and Martin Lavenik; and the Blue Ribbon players include Donie Tay- lor, Frank Foster, and Ed Radde. Complete standing of the teams Means gentlé but thorough washing. No ity & Phrcint oung‘nr.g, ucving or hflising of clothes. Lo it N° Rflqlll Qd"oultk action Blue Bitbons £33 Pump—Deluxe, One-Control Wringer. Hop. Golds 633 There are many ofher features you'll li Alt Heidelbergs . 600 Olympians 533 GENERAL@ ELECTRIC East Sides 533 ASHER Rainiers - 500 WASHI e s Only $90 Cash nlanders 7 Horlucks 487 : Sl’ .down, balance menthly o e 461 MADE BY GENERAL ELECTRIC AT Golden Glows 333 BRIDGEPORT. CONN. Bipc o iU LEAVES FOR SEATTLE Al Shyman, “répresenting Alaska Distributors, Ine;, sailed for Seattle on the Prinoess Norah. —— WHITELEY% END VlSlT S. W. Whiteley, ‘employed by D. B. Femmer, and Mrs. Whiteley re- turned to Juneau on the Zapora from a two weeks® trip to Peters- burg. iyl JOHN HERMLE RETURNS hn Hermle, <one of -the pro- prietors of ‘the Home Grocéry, re- turned on the Victoria from a com- birfed business and pleasure trip to various Pacific Coast cities. He has been absent a month. UNITED STATES | DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. January 30, 1936, Notice is hereby given that Selma Pademeister, entrywoman, has made proof of her homestead entry, An- chorage 07887, together with her witnesses, Mrs. Linda Anderson and Klaas Grondsma; all of Juneau, Al- aska, ‘for a tract of land situate on the Glacier Highway, one mile northwest of Juneau, Alaska, em- braced in U. S. Survey No. 2130, | containing 0.76 acres, ‘latitude 58 degrees 18’ 25” N. longitude 134 degrees 28’ 01”7 W. and it is now | in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska, and if no protest is filed in the local | land office within the period of pubhcauon or thirty days there- GEORGE A. LINGO, Register. First publication, March 4, 1936. ‘Maska Electric Light & Power Co, JUNEAU 6 DOUGLAS 18 ® Entirely Renovated ® Spotlessly Clean GOOD HOME CCOKING By TOM and MARIE STURGE Specializing in Homr-Made Scups Choice of Ten Drinks included with meals or Sandwiches Open 8 A. M. to 8 P. M. ALWAYS OPEN SUNDAYS Bottled or Drait BEER WINES mncz'r LUNCH | gy = = = = = = = = | = = = = = = = — 1 (P PRESENTING AN ADVANCE & omorrow’s Styles Today” SHOWING OF oats =1 SUits Ina Pleusing Variety of TR AN SR COLORS and STYLES SEE THEM NOW——at lilfi!lllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllflllllmlllllllmmflmlfimmflflllmllllllHIMIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIII »