The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 11, 1941, Page 3

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Llerer el ONALD YAE.“ 0 NEWS FRONT | PAGE 4 MORE DAYS 0 FILE TAX more days remain for of 1e Departr ment of Inte E er the United Territories men and women bling to get those returns| fisured out while mentally resolving do it earlier next year. yuty Collector of Tnter Wesley C. Overby urg not put off filing until the “or the < a public post office-type table been placed in the hall of the 1 Building outside the Intern- nue Office. There blanks may and filled out. - kans CARTER ARRIVES FROM SITKA BY PLANE MONDAY who 15 now manag- r Bacon 1siness in Sit arrival in Jun > on husiness. Carter will Sitka tomorrow Ernie Ci Wwal plane He to arter, wa terday return London Arms Against Disease the 1940 income tax| _ | with the Sitka venience of late | ITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU Last Times Tonight & Preview Tenight—1:15 A. M. “OUR TOWN" and “THE SIEGE OF WARSAW” Petersons Here From Sitka On - Business Trip Charles Peterson Sitka business man, and.his wife arrived in Ju- |neau by Marine Airways plane yes- terday and are at the Baranof Hotel Peterson operates a bus and tax; business in Sitka and is connected aar. Mr. and Mrs return to ineir W. Peterson plan to home by plane tomorr: SR GG Meeting Tomorrow 0f Women Voters There will be a meeting tomorrow afternoon beginning at 2 o'clock. of the Alaska A: Wonien Voters. The s the Penthouse of the Al Light & Power Co., and Metcalfe will preside. - Empire Classifieds Pay! ] _!planes and the Alaska taking it to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1941. "NEW MOON'" AT CAPITOL SHOW ENDS TONIGHT Nelson Edd; and Jeanefte MacDonald Star in Musi- cale-Romance Here One of the season’s most delight- | ful romantic excursions ends to- | night at the Capitol. It is “New Moon,” the latest Jeanette Mac- Donald-Nelson Eddy film 5 “New Moon" contains all of| those elements that audiences have grown to ex from vehicles fea- turing these two singing favorites The stocy is placed before & colorful setting. It opens on ship- board in the year 1780, travels on| tc gay Mew Orleans dui'ng Mn"mi sras time, hack again for thrilling adventures on the high seas, and from there to a tropic island where a strange assortment of individuals, led by Eddy, set up their own re- public from the remnants of a ship and cargo wrecked in a storm.| | Miss MacDonald's performance | as the high-spirited Marianne de L.}‘m : Beaumanoir ranks undisputedly as| —- 5 g BECGMES BRIDE OF E. E. ROTTLUFF son Eddy finds himself right at| home. In many sequences he dis-| SITKA, Al ful corema: Representative J. Parnell Thomas Milit i plays a delightful gift for comedy, a forte denied lim in some of his earlier films. | were mar atur- Mr, John Ebbing gave IMPROVED MAIL Mail service picked up in a hur-|the bridesmaids wers Mrs. Harr ry the first of this week with Hegdahl and Mrs. Richard Langton Lodestars and the Yukon bringing The Rev. ‘Willis Booth, of in mail from the South and the two yterian Mission school, offic- at the servi b a large of friends of the popula ycung ccuple. The bride’s moth Mrs. Mona Munson, journad frori Seattle for the occ Miss Heien Roan played companiment on the organ for Marian Hussey, sopranc solc Following the services hundred guests afiended ception R vin E. day eve the the ia Seattle. greup « In addition there are heavy shin- s of mail going north on the It is expected that with re- gular vice by the new BPAA Lode- stars the delays of the last few weeks 'will be a thing of the past. - MAN DIES, RESULT - Congressmen' Inspect Uncle Sam’s “Mus¢les” — af'N ok Jerse ary Affairs Committee (left) and Under- Patterson are shown as they inspected a 3 mobile type at the Aberdeen, Md., proving snowstorm which swept the east coast. Mcm to the grounds to inspect the latest U, member of the House retary of War Robert i aft gun of a 2 the blinding s were flown army equipment. Sides of buildings erlal rall- ways: collog. . Burn super- ficially . Tablet . Paid_publle notice . Move shyth- mically ACROSS 2. 1. Product of wood distilla- 30- tien o 8 4. Small fish . Ornamental Kot ":\4 y Grade . Inflict injury in retaliation . Ruhber packing rings for fruit jars Greek letters Waistcoat 2. Articlo of bell Six-iine stanz nited States citizens Knock Shelter 16. Terminating In 3 mals’ hi heraldry With suspicfon Ceremonies 4 grown 20. 2. W 3 ¥ b ( = [@H[Om[-m Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzle DOWN . Good-by . Genus of the Indefinte Biblical priest Worthless dog Uneven Lair B | honey bee . Heedless of consequences . Mode of standing English _colns Demolish . Peer Gynt's A moll{:lel' . Appalling : Baking mizture . S-shaped . Marries . Assistants . Subtie nvisible emanation Vs s Epidemies caused by ‘ero don, though sickness wding in bomb shelters are the dread of Lon- | terday sbeen kept to a minimum thus far. Medical | posts have been eshb{i‘ged in all subway shelters, and first aid treat- | ment is free to all. Hygienic met above, also are being tested. SCHOOLGIRL’S FROCK SHOULD BE SIMPLE, WASHABLE INJURIES IN MINE According to a radio received fo- day by Commissioner of Mines B. D. James Ward. 56, who sus- fractured hip anc other injuries in an ident at the Wil cw Creek Mine at Lucky Shot, died Saturday at an Anchorage Hos- Stewart tained a pital where ‘he had been taken by | plane immediately after the acci- dent | - -, | | HOSPITAL NOTES ! Mr. and Mrs. Fred Orme are the proud parents of a T-pound | ounce baby son born last nignt at St Ann’s Hospital. | Admitted for medical cave at St. Ann’s, Dan Suhkovich entered yes- afternoon. Alice Osborne was a medical ad- | thods of prevention, such as the masks- 'mission today at the Government gather at the Parish Hali for a re Hospital. Star Meeting Will Open Earfilry Tonight The regular. business meeting of the Orde: Eastern Star will be- gin at this evening at the Scottish Rite Temple, instead of the customary 8 o'clock. The 15-minute difference is due to the special initiation ceremony o be exemplified by the Order of | Rainbew Girls, following the rit-, ualistic opening of the Star. The Catholic Women fo | Meet This Evening Tax Returns Meeting tonight at 8 o'clock, the| Catholic' Daughters of America _l Internal Revenue Burea“ gular ‘monthly business session. Mrs ‘ Has Sour(es for che(k_ A. M. Geyer will preside. U D | IR in elinquents COMMISSIONER VISITS b The Bureau of Internal Revenue HSH (REEK S(Hofll‘has at its command many sources |for checking up delinquent tax- Dr.+Jameés Ryan, Commissioner of | payers. One of these is the “in-, Education, made an-official visit to- | formation at source” provision of| |day to the Fish Creek School Dr.!the Internal Revenue Code, under| !Ryan made the trip out the high-|which persons, “in whatever ca-| | | [ | | i | i ito cross the upper channel. There!port on Form 1099, to the Com-| are eleven pupils in the school which | missioner of Internal Revenue at| payments of | | fixed " more. way by bus transferring to a boat pacity acting” are required to re-| . Protuberant part of a cash 3. Harpoon . Mark of ‘bronunclatior . Spear . Precious stone . Deposits of mineral . Flies . Tending to heal . Made a succes- sion of small sounds Restrain Corrosion . Thin coating . One to whom & lease is given . Planet ! Soft mineral . Australian bird: variant | . Kind of starch . Story . Whirl . Wheelsd vshicla | or determinable income another in the calendar year 1940 of $800 or more, If the recipient is married, and is a citizen or resident of the United States, reports need not be made of salary or other compen- sation for personal services unless the payments aggiegate $2,000 or toj of If the marital status of thepayee is considered a single person for the purpose of filing an informa- tion return of salary or ‘other .com- pensation for personal services, Fixed or determinable income in- cludes wages, salaries, royalties, premiums, rent, interest, etc. A separate return of information for each employee is required of em- ployers. The requirements are nof Hmited to periodical payments, but a ‘single payment must be report- Domestic and resident foreign| corporations are Tequired to make| | sion since that time. FAMILY PLAY AT 20TH CENTURY ON LAST TIMES “Brother Rat and a Baby " Boasts Young Cast | of Comedians Heading the cast of “Brother Rat! and a Baby." the comedy ending at the 20th Century Theatre, are Priscilla Lane, Wayne Morris, Jane Bryan, Eddie Albert, Jane Wyman, Ronald Reagan, and l4-months- old Peter B. Good who plays the “Baby" part of the title. Also fea- tured in the cast are Arthur Treacher, Moroni Olsen, Jessie| Busley, Larry Willlams and many others | The story, which was written by |, John Monks, Jr, and Fred F. Finklehoffe, takes up the adven-| tures of the “Brother Rat” charac-| ters just one year after graduation from V.M.I. One of the three erst-! while cadets is alrcady a family man, the other two are just hav-| | {ing girl trouble, “Commencemen?®,” the baby who was born on m‘ndua-' tion day, is the real little trouble- Hop-a-Long Cassidy in maker and his exploits land his mother and father and the nther"l'Aw d lhe PA“PAS' two couples into an hilarious sei of adventures and misadventu o DR. B“'lin I.EAVES ON INSPECTION TRIP The production was directed I, Butler, Assistant Ray Enright, one of Hollywood's ace directors of romantic comedies. | Supervisor of Education for the Office of Indian Affairs, sailed - Saturday on the Mount McKinley WHO IS WHO IN ALASKA e cueoges o, oo, e LEGISLATURE Butler first will visit schools | Yakutat, Cordova and Anchorage. From there she will fly to Sleet- Norman R. Walker |mute and work down the Kusko- Norman R. Walker, of Ketchi- kwim to Bethel, after which she | will visit Seward Peninsula cen=- ters. kan, Democratic Senator for the First Division, was first elected 10 por gale—20x4d-foot uncomplet- the Alaska Territorial Legislature oq building at Pelican City, on in 1932 and has served every ses-'g.ound leased from Pelican Cold Storage Co., designed for apart- Senator Walker was born in Re-| jente laundry and baths. o TOMORROW! WAY OF ALL FLESH' TRE NEW SHOW TONIGHT! Dr. Evelyn NOTICE OF SALE removing gina, Canada, in 1889, with his family to Glascow, Mon- tana, in 1900. He is a naturalized citizen, having obtained his papers in Seattle in 1918. Estate J. WAINO KALLIO, Deceased. By ED WALTONEN, Administrator. See Howard D. Stabler, He was graduated in pharmacy ghattuck Building, from the University of Washington a¢torney for administrator, in 1911. Two years later he came ot north to Ketchikan where he has made his home continuously with the exception of two years he served in the World War, He is owner of the Walker Drug Company in Ketchikan Senator Walker has been active in civic and community affairs in the First City. He has served two terms as Mayor, Senator Walker is married and has two children, William, who is an inspector at the Boeing Air- plane Company, in Seaitle, and {==== Florence, who is the wife of John O'Shea, assayer for the U. 8. Smelting Company in Fairbanks. Senator and Mr. Walker have one grandchild, little Miss Mary Jane O'Shea, who with her mother, is spending a vacation with them n Juneau. adv. WHEN IN NEED OF Diesel Oil—Stove Oil—Your Coal Choice—General Hauling —Storage and Crating CALL US! Juneau Transfer Phone 48—Night Phone 481 - - DR. DALE T0 JOIN SUPERVISOR ON TRAP Dr. Géorge A. Dale, Acting Di- rector of Education ‘for the Office of Indian Affairs, left aboard the Alaska bound for Ketchikan where he will meet Homer How-| ard, Supervisor of Indian Educa-' tion from Washington, D. C. With Mr. Howard, he will ‘make mapec-; tion ‘trips to Indian schools in| Southeast Alaska, chikan, Wrangell, Petersburg, Met- ALL ALIKE? No other ice cream can compare: Wwith JUNEAU DAIRIES'. With any flavor of JUNEAU DAIRIES’ you'll eat every drop! is taught by Harvey Stonemar | Washington, - D. C., |a_ separate report, Form 1099, of | dividends or distributions for each lakatla, Hydaburg, Klawock, Sitka, Angoon and Kake, including Ket-: J U N E A U - Try a classified ad in The Emplze DAIRIE - | individual, citizen, or resident of Ethe United States, resident fiduci- |ary, or a resident partnership any | member of whith s a citizen or| | resident, who was paid $100 or | more during the calendar year 1940. | | All persons or organizations act- |ing at any time during the year 11940 as broker or other agent ih stock, bond, or commodity tran- sactions (including banks = which handle clearing orders for deposi- jtors or custodian accounts) are| | required to file annual returns of information on Form 1100 with | respect to all customers, deposi- tors, or accounts for whom or which the total amount of the sales of securities or commodities, or the total market value of the securities exchanged, is $25,000 nr. more during the calendar year 1940 | and each subsequent calendar year, | with certain exceptions. | { A separate Form 1100 must be | | prepared for each customer, deposi- | | tor, or' account for whom or whicn | business was transacted during the | year, and must show the name and | address and other information pro- | vided for in the form. s | Information returns are carefully : . :‘dhzaked with Individual returns of ‘shoma id washe e ol g o g Above at left is such a frock in striped cot . I nmounnn:nw miliops of doliads| tond :eers\:cekea with, b‘ivnh:u e:l‘lu Our second - : | have been secured as the result of| x;:zc ; csl:‘h er,pe nnwm tion of sports and school ad | the examination of information re- S it “Tncoime ‘tax returns must be filed ons uj L ' ‘blouse * musf :ln}'cnmngut:mahmm *icun'h “Misa a Ct e g, not later than next Saturday, -impo ‘Jong skirted : Sary Carty of Bundles for Britain, Mareh' 15, right. It is in a colorful printed pique with Ao New Yorryh Thg organizati v 2 ion ships thousands of bu: _ of lace-edged organdis. E NI | soldiers and civilians, “Bundles for Britain Birthday | S I Most girls in their early teens are very clothes conscious. It's a turning point from childhood to adulthood. It is apt to be a strain on the family budget if a new wardrobe must be purchased all at one time, but with careful planning smart frocks can be made up at home at very little expense. Pattern companies this spring have paid a great deal of attention ‘to the needs of this age group, and if you take the psychological time to teach your daughter to sew, she will- be enthusiastic About learning to make pretty frocks for herself. eld at the Wi g‘-‘i& ndles to British

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