The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 10, 1937, Page 3

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L e by v v e STARTING TONIGHT at the Show Place of Juneau —ALSO— Pan Handlers Steel and Stone Rockie Fireman Daily Alaska Empire News THE Laws Passed by 13th Temitorial | Legislature | | The following laws have been passed by the Territorial Legisl: ture and approved by the Governor. Others will appear in this column from day to day until all the laws are published H. B. 85—Appropriating $15,000 to jaid the City of Douglas in its re- habi'i.ation program following tt rece... {ire S. B. 17—Providing that names of |candidates not representing any po-| litical party shall be placed on the' official ballot followed by the word “independent.” The application to| ve such name placed upon the| baliot as a candidate for a Terri- torial office sk be signed by not, less than 250 qualified electors of the Territory and filed with the Auditor on or before the first day! of February, and for a Divisional office by 50 qualified electors. H. B. 25—Licensing persons en- gaged in the practice of chiroprac- el PN AR NPT BT SRR O “|the Homemaker's Page heading in ,,,,, A o A DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1937. News “By-l.inc” Tells Seattle That a I ROC By E. Q. ANDERSON SEATTLE, March eattle is | beginning to realize there's a Roos-| | evelt in town. I :h Sunday morning underneath | “The Seattle Post-Intelligencer” there’s another line—‘Anna Roose- velt Boettiger, Director.” That's why the Queen City is get- ting acquainted with the President’s daughter, Back F.D.R. On Court When John Boettiger, her hus- nd, breame pub in Decem- r he told a welcoming banguet: | ‘M wife is my partner in every nse of the word.” Her activities have left no doubt | she has become his “partner” in selling” the Post-Intelligencer, one f the Hearst chain, to Seattle. Regarding the President's Supreme Court proposal, the Post Intelli-| genc said editorially that it/ “agrees with his desire to give the court new blood and new life. “The Supreme Court as now constituted needs chanze,” it con- tended. “There is nothing revolu- tionary about the President's pro- tic in the Territory and prescribing| the requirements necessary to obtain! a license. | e posal. There is real need for an overhauling of the American judic- ial system and the President's pro- CONDARY s birthday ball was an exception to the policy the MOVE PATRONS /ANOTHER TAX COMPOSE JURY RULING MADE TRYING DOGTOR e wade Makes Ao nouncement I'ollowing RPP()I’[ fl‘OlTl }‘I(‘JV(‘.]’!I!_LI ‘ e ‘ Laughter and Song in ““Lit-! tle Miss N()body, New ! Commissioner of Internal Re Jane Withers Play {nue Guy T. Helvering has announ ,,,,,, lea that amounts voluntarily paid Cold-blooded murder for the sake | employees’ tax by an employer, of a guilty love—or an act of com- | Without collecting such amoun passion beyond human law? {from his employees, are not wages Local theatre-goers will have an|Subject to the taxes under Title opportunity to sit in judgment OnEVIII of the Social Security Act, it “The Crime of Dr. Forbes” when K Was made known by Hugh J. Wade, the mew Fox picture opens tonight{il charge of the Alaska Office of at the Capital Theatre. the Social Security Board. Gloria- Stuart, Robert Kent, Hen- Title VIII of the Social Security ry Armetta, J. Edward Bromber Act imposes two taxes, an income Sara Haden and Alan Dinehart are tax on employees and an excise tax featured in this widely heralded °9 employers, both of which became production, the story of which is effective January 1, 1937. The ini- based on a theme new to the screen. |tial rate of each of these taxes is H. B. 27—Requiring the Auditor|posals are sound.” Mrs. Anna Boett , annou d on \,m‘i“.u to make an audit of the books of| Leads Busy Exislence ! o " but not “leading” a social life. That's all Terrxt:m;’i?l iim:(uunn.\ at least| gome of Mrs. Boettiger's time is Washington’s Governor Clarence D. Martin with her, St ol il |spent at her desk in the newspaper |- — = | H. B. 43 — Providing for annual|office, planning her homemaker's 3 part in staff “pep M 11\;.” “4(‘ ubbichdlei A e 5lonve of 30 days for Territorial em-|page ' talking with the women on|rallied wcted her bhusband -f“':“‘ o “I, ;-be il 1 ployees with pay and additional sick |her staff; 3 ress! S, She be I ) that she did |sults to speak for he lhu staff; some in addressing clubs, Her Hinthes ® AT leave of two weeks. church groups and other organiza-|not car lead & “social” life in i By H. B. 45—Providing that all vou-;uong_ Seattle, | i she did want ‘“‘]I()lllt' cou; A j 8 o chers in various departments must|. £ learn t it and become a part |men and on -‘>~~l' bl be approved by the administrative of it. lems; br yings of children, nmm-’ rz[ :hta[ L;jop;:u;,pm .,omn.i At Public Schbol )‘\\,l](p“]:‘ pictures, recip and bock presentation to the Auditor. t 4 { . B. 40—Amending the existing| ; ‘_"? i llaw as to compulsory school at- hiag be 1 army and navy S OF people from ¥ Lawton, close to |tendence between the ages of seven ::ml 16 years with certain exception, {if the child is mentally or physi- |cally incapable of attendance, and! |providing that children residing | more than two miles from a school | all not be required to attend un- | ess transportation is furnished. H. B. 48 — Providing that any| town, village or settlement outside ! limits of incorporated towns, hav- ing a population of 100 or more, and | 130 children between the ages of six' and 17, may ineorporate as a school |district embracing not more than 40: square miles; with the added provis- | {ion that if there are more than 30 ichildren in the district, the dis-' ict may embrace 150 square miles.i S. B. 23—Levying a three per cent tax on the gross production of guld’ land platinum mines in excess of | $10,000, and the following levy on | thelr home here, and the Puget Sound navy yard across the hay at| Bremert { The ni the President’s birth- | day ball they entertained a few| guests Olympic hotel, scene of the t “ They Lave rented a house on| Magnolia Bluff, overlooking Pug(rt“ Sound in the same @ where Eu-| gene O'Neill, the playwright, lived for several we 3 At first they considered sending Mrs. Boettiger children, i 10, and “Buzzie to an exclusive school but later decided to have them atlend the district’s public| school, cuarded, however, by two deteetive PUBLISHER Anna’s husband, John Boetfi- ger, ohject at the moment of Mayor John F. Dore’s smiles, FIRST APPEARANCE Nusband Sings rraise Mrs. Boettiger addressed the Seattle Chamber of commerce The Boetuige pie Riding Club and enjoy ple: { LOST IN FIGHT Kent, a young physician, goes to trial for the alleged murder of Bromberg, a noted scientist engaged in research which he hopes’ will lead to a cure for a fatal spinal disease. | The events leading to Kent’s trial begin when Bromberg, hearing of the excavation of some prehistoric) skeletons in Arizona bearing un-| mistakable symptoms of the dis-| ease, ‘decides to visit the scene and leaves his laboratory and beautiful young wife, Gloria Stuart, in Kent's| care, Just a good little girl who's always in bad! H That's the type of role that mis- chievous Jane Withers has in her new ,heart-warming Fox hit, “Lit-/ tle Miss Nobody,” which comes to- night to' the Coliseum Theatre. Jane is one of the children in the Sunshine Orphanage presided over; by two'kindly matrons, and herineration of their employees. They | pranks continually have her in hot water. ‘When Jane steals a complete din- ner from the back of a grecery wa- gon so that the children will not go hungry on Thanksgiving Day, she is arrested and brought before the juvenile court. The judge, however, decides that Jane’s act was unsel- fish rather than malicious and par- oles her in 'the matron’s custody. She goes on her good behavior for a while, but when she tries to do her bosom pal, Betty Jean Hainey, a good turn, she is discovered and the matrons, misconstruing her act, egretfully decide that she must be sent to the reformatory. But “Little Miss Nobody” has ideas of her own. When the opportunity presents itself, she escapes and finds refuge in the pet shop of Harry Carey, an escaped convict. —————— NOTICE “ Regular meeting of Rebekahs will be held at the Odd Fellows Hall Wednesday, March 10, at 8 p.m. MILDRED CASHEN, Secretary. adv. 1 percent of the wages of the em- the net incomes of other mining | ployee. The law makes provision for |Property: Not over $100,000, three-; the employer to collect the income fourths of one per cent; over $10,000, tax on employees by deducting the 'and not over $20,000, one and one- amount thereol from the wages of |fourth per cent; over $20,000 and |each employee when they are pflld.:"’“.“‘fer $100,000, one and three- After the close of each calendar [{0Urth; over $100,000 and not over i recently at her first public ap- pearance in the city. is publisher of “The Seattle canters in the brushlands north of | Post-Intelligencer.” Seattle. I the south delta of the Yukon river and the mouth of the Kuskokwim river, extending inland as far as the Iditarod country, and with the and it is expected. the proseni own- s will ‘have ‘a quan¥ty shipment of ready for outside consignment the opening of navigation, he WALLIE JOINS [é u; added. | pon | ¢eeding month both the amount of the tax on the employer and, whether or not collected from his employees, ithe amount of the employees’ tax must be paid by the employer to the collector of internal revenue. The taxes with respect to all taxable wages paid by the employer during a calendar month are required to be paid to the collector within the suc- month. Form 8S-1, the monthly return to be used by em- ployers for this purpose, is avail- able at the offiets of all collectors. A number ¢Z employers have made known a desire to pay the employ- ees’ tax under Title VIII without deducting the tax from the remu- have requested a ruling whether the amount so paid by them will itself be subject to the taxes under that title of the Act. The amount of the employees’ tax in such case, if voluntarily p#id by an.employer, is not considered as additional wag- es subject to either the employer’s tax or employees’ tax imposed by Title VIII of the Act. - e PARKERS HERE FOR VISIT Coming to visit their relatives at Strawberry Point near here, Glen R. B. Parker and his mother, Mrs. Edith Parker, arrived in Juneau from the south aboard the Princess Norah. Charles L. Parker came to Ju- neau Monday from Gustavus on the Estebeth to meet them and take them back to Strawberry Point with him, Vi i SCANDINAVIAN NITE! Tonite is Scandinavian Nite at the Northern Beer Parlor! Idaho Moun- taineers furnishing old time Scan- dinavian Music. If you can talk Scandinavian—a free beer between 8 and 9 o’clock! adv. Strange strenge that in all the years - w W nothing has ever taken the place of a cup of delicious coffee. Stranger still that no one has ever duplicated Schilling Flavor. Schilling Coffee é ¢ for Percolator Another one for Drip 1$150,000, three per cent; over $150,- {000 and not over $250,000, four per |cent; over $250,000 and not over, $500,000, five per cent; over $500,-| 1000 and not over $750,000, six per, |cent; over $750,000 and not over| lone million, seven per cent; over a| milion, eight per cent. S. B. 37—Amending the present law to provide that every provision in a conditional sale reserving prop- erty to the seller shall be void as {to any purchaser from or credit \itor of the buyer, who, without no- tice of such provision, purchases the goods or acquires by attachment or levy a lien upon them before the contract or a copy shall be filed, unless such contract or copy is filed within 60 days after the sale. PROSPECTING IS ACTIVE, SECTION BELOW IDITAROD Purchase of Equipment, | Calls F. M. Awe South from Lower Kuskokwim | | F. M. Awe, in charge of the trans- portation of supplies and equipment for the Riley Investment Company,| ywhose operations cover the Iditarod,| Kuskokwim and Good News Bay! districts, is a southbound passenger | aboard the Northwestern for Seat-| tle. He will make his headquarters | in the Puget Sound city until about | April 15, when he expects to return to Flat via Juneau and PAA plane.| While South, Awe will purchase a complete dragline outfit for his| firm, which will be shipped north | via St. Michael immediately upon the opening of navigation. “I have covered the entire lower Kuskokwim, on the Good News Bay side, and the Iditarod country, dur- ing the past few months and when I left there a few days ago, there| were approximately 100 men in the Good News Bay camp actively en- gaged in prospecting — both for platinum and placer gold and from' 125 to 150 men wintering in Bethel awaiting the first signs of Spring to go to their newly staked claims on Fourth of July Creek, which is a tributary to the Tacotna River. From 60 to 75 men are at Akiak, on the Kuskokwim River, and are all interested in a recent placer find about 15 miles from that point, on the Good News Bay side of the river. There are many, many miles of unprospected country between number of prospectors now in the vicinity, anything can happen. In looking back I can liken the pres- ent activity to that experienced dur- ‘ ing the boom days of the Iditarod | and Innoko camps,” Awe said. | About the only active mMing| going on in the Iditarod camp HELPS PREVENT | HOUSE PARTY MANY COLDS | MONTS, France, Mar. 10. — Mrs i * | Wallis Simpson arrived today at tha Especially designed | chatcau De Cande to join a guy aid for nose and | jyse party. She will remain ‘indef- upper throat, where | jnitely, it is said. She drove up in throughout the winter is at the) most colds start, a sedan, believed driven by her| Gus Uttila property on Moore l s 4 p r\ r Siz 4 | host, Herman Rogers. creck, which employs ten men. The B e quartz property formerly operated -y o ook NOTICE by Wm. E. Dunkle and associates| N 4 For special fresh dresscd thickens, is being worked on a small scale,| call Fernmer, phone 114. adv. | | | | CKS VATRO-NOL Coiffures that Reflect the Mode of VANITY BOX’S Flattering New Fashions . . . A new season with new clothes, new hats . . . and new ways to dress your hair! Your make-up from now on must be soft and lustrous . . . for dainty delicacy is in de- mand for Spring! You'll need waves that are appropriate all day long . . . for sports wear, town wear, afternoon wear, and evening formal wear . . . waves that can h,e quickly and smartly arranged . . . waves that “stay put”! You'll find the service you want at THE VANITY BOX. Opening Special—HOT OIL TREATMENT and FINGER WAVE—$1.00 Appointment Phone 371 THE VANITY BOX BEAUTY SALON 807 Goldstein Building Opening Thursday IR AL, r,:w.fla‘.-.rm-t{ 3 TONIGHT Sue SACRIFICED HERSELF FOR A LITTLE ORPHAN THEATRE 7 She gave hor name to her playmate, then she was ‘LitTLe Miz22W\oBoc¢ with JANE WITHERS Jane DARWELL Ralph MORGAN SaraHADEN Harry CAREY Twentieth Century Fox Picture ALSO WHOLESAILING ALONG SWING LATE PARAMOUNT NEWS ONE DIVISION The Vanity Box | BEAUTY SALON 307 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 371 PERSONAL HAIR STYLING el | MADRID, Mar. 10. — Gen. Jose Miaja, directing the Spanish gov- : ernment defense against the major . b Insurgent push from the Northeast,| Ludw‘g N.lson = \(h'vluu\d that three Italian prison-| | wATCHMAKER and JEWELER @ ers captured, admitied one entire| & Italian Division was wiped out in Juneau, Alaska the offensive at Miaja. ) e — * » ! Nozza | EDSON WAVE SHOP | On and after this date, March 9, | Machine and Machineless I will not be responsible for any PERMANENT WAVES debts contracted by my wife, Mrs. l Ask about FREE RADIO Rk Ford, Room 6, Valentine Bldg. Ph. 666 ; adv. l (Sgd.) FRED FORD. NEU-LIFE A Health Product that Paves the Way to Health and Vigor NEU-LIFE halts premature old age and wasted vital- ity by supplying the nerves and glands of the body with the necessary material for their rejuvenation. NEU-LIFE corrects that faltering step, that aged look, that unsteady nerve, those prema- ture gray hairs and makes one feel the spark of youth. Exceedingly rich in Vita- min E. LIFE is sold on a money back guarantee. LOCAL DISTRIBUTOR HEALTH FOODS CENTER 230 Fronklin St. Juneau, Alaska The First National Bank JUNEAU | [ ] CAPITAL—$50.000 SURPLUS— $75.000 [ ] ; COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS ‘ SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2% Paid on Savings Accounts FRESH TENAKEE CRABS EVERY MONDAY California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery

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