The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 1, 1943, Page 3

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MONDA MARCH 1 3 1943 'LOVE CAN BE Ippkopkm FUNNY, SHOWN m RoMance $4,062,057 They Al kissed he Bride’ FOR 2 YEAR Stars Douglas-Crawford at Capitol Theatre RAPTUROUS ROMANCE < that will make your heart sfand v still House Ways and Means Committee Brings Columbia’s “They All Kissed the : Bride,” yesterday opened at the Bill Out Today Capitol Theatre to prove—as though proof were necessary!—that Joah (Continued from Page One) JOAN MELVYN Crawford rates premier billing as|__ ~ i S RAWFORD - DOUGLAS of Hollywood's better comed-|printing auditor's report of Board S iennes, that Melvyn Dou of Budget, $500; carrying into e - g of the screen nest romantic com-|fect provisions of insurance laws, edy stars $3000; total, $52,650. Miss Crawford appears as the Treasurer's Office birl in the case, a stuffy tycoon Who| gajovy of Treasurer, $10,000 is forced on a romantic bender and ... ¢ gesistant to Tre : suddenly discovers that making .oh0. calary of chief clerk, $5400; love is more fun than making mon- of two stenograph $9600 ey! Douglas is the lad who kisses jum on Treasurer's surety the bride, One WG '“""'V_' h'ut company bonds, $2500; premium on s the lad responmsible for thej,. ., "¢, assistant to Treasurer sroom also kissing the bride—good- bye! The combination, haughty fe- male and naughty male, leads to the most, uproarious upheaval and for tax collection clerks, $500 to carry into effect School Tax Act —PLUS— $500; printing, postage, office sup- of garinto laughter that ever rocked the Cap-|Ples. etc. $13,000; audit of Terrl- s Dk 10t oreen. torial accounts, $2500; salaries of Roland Young appears to delight-|tax collection clerks and expenses ful perfection as the family barris-|for travel, $17,600; total, $67.800 ho prefers the bar with a Banking Board il: Billie Burke is seen as a Miscellaneous expenses to carry ous dowager; and Allen Jen-|out provisions of banking laws, in- THEATRE kins portrays a rough-and-ready cluding stationery, office expenses, Show Place of Juneau truck driver who teaches Miss Craw- | traveling expenses, $10,000. ford things she never knew about Support of Schools trucking in one of the most hec-| For schools within .incorporated tically hilarious jitterbugging se-|towns and incorporated school di quences ever filmed. | tricts, $951,967; v o of such areas and for special f: | cilities, $500,000; payment of tui- |tion to incorporated towns, $38,000; transportation of pupils, $100,000; | total $1,589,957. | Commissioner of Education Office Salary of Commissioner, $10,000; |salary of deputy commissioner, $7200; salary of accountant, $6000; salary of two assistant clerks, $9000; contingent office expense, $2400; printing and purchasing sup- plies, $200y; publication of courses of study, $2500; printing biennial report of Commissioner, $500; tra- vel expenses of Commissioner and assistant, $5000; expenses of Board of Education, $5000; total, $49,600. University of Alaska Territorial Scholarships, experi- mental work, extension work} ad- ministration and maintenance, $139,840. Highway Engineer’s Office Salary of Highway Engineer and | Superintendent of Public Works, $10,000; contingent office expense, $3000; total, $13,000. Telephone Lines The 16th Amendment to the Con- stitution, giving power to tax in- comes, was adopted in February, 1913, BUY WAR BONDS Gandhi Critically [l | For maintenance of lines, $5000; | for shelter cabins, erection, equi) ment, maintenance, $5000; total, | $10,000. Roads For construction and maintenance f roads, trails, etc., $300,000. Commissioner of Mines Salary of Commissioner, $10,000; | salary of associate mining engineer, $8000; travel and field expense. | $6000; contingent office expense, | $2000; total, $26,000. | Assay Offices and | Plants Salary of assayer and field en- | gineer, Fairbanks, $7200; equipment |and supplies, $2800; total, $10,000. Library and Museum | Salary of Librarian and Curator, assistant, $4200; files, incidentals, |$500; subscriptions and binding of Sampling reported in' serious condition in his K. Gandhi, above, Mohandas w |newspapers, $1000; acquisition of fast. Bulltin from Bombay said, “If the fast is not ended without |rare books, curios, $500; total, $13,- 400. delay, it may be too late to save his life.” This photo of Gandhi was | made last June, at an All-India conference at Wardha. ‘ tation Health and Sani ROOPS BROKE LENINGRAD SIEGE " WHEN RED T F * RUSSIAN ARMORED CARS are shown rolling into the fortress city of Schluesselberg. As long as the Nazis held this key city, they kept Leningrad under siege. Red guns drove the Germans out of Leningrad, sadicg the city’s seventeen-months entrapment, This photo was flashed hv radia te New Vark. | for schools outside | g THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—]JUNEAU ALASKA Salary of Commissioner of Health, and other incidental expenses, $50,- $3600; salaries of assistant com- |000. | missioners of health, $3600; salary [Allowances for Dependent Children | Allowances of secretary to Commissioner of to mothers and cer- | Health, $4440; contingent quarantine | tain other relatives for care of expenses and control of diseases, [ minor children in their own home, $12,000; travel expense of com-!$72,000 | | | Supplementary Appropri or compensation to Ma missioner and assistants, $1000; of- | fice expense, including printing and aret O | postage, $500; rent and main-|Grisham for work performed a! | tenance of office quarters, includ-|the request of the Legislature sub- ing laboratory and branch labora-|sequent to the present session | tory, $10,000; light, power and tele- | thercof, $200; for compensation to | phone, $2,400; care of crippled chil- | Lillian Clements for work per- | dren, $25,000; venereal discase con- {trol in cooperation with Armed Forces and the U. S. Public Health Service, $5000; diagnosis of Tuber~ formed at the request of the Legis- lature subsequent to the present session thereof, $200; for compen- sation to James V. Davis for sup- culosis, $3000; total $70,540. ervising and preparing House Jour- Pioneers’ Home nal subsequent to the present Leg- | General maintenance, including|islature, ten days at $15 per day. |dental and optical work, and oper- | $150; for compensation to O. D. |ations expense, $282530; salary of |Cochran for supervising and pre- superintendent, $7200; insurance, | paring Senate Journal subsequent | $1500; cemetery and landscaping,|to the present Legislature, ten days 2000; transportation of pioneers tolat $15 per day, $150; for salary of Pionee: Home, $7500; salary of [the Chaplain of the Senate, $150; retary, Board of Trustees, $1200; | for salary of the Chaplain of the \salary of treasurer, Board of Trus- | House of Representatives, $150; for tees, $1200; total, $303,130. employment of extra janitors for Enforcement of Liquor Regulations |Senate and House Chambers | Salaries, traveling expenses, cler-] (House Joint Resolution No. 2), ical assistance, contingent office|$400; for supplies and additional xpense, including payment for Ter- i ritorial liquor stamps, $65,000. Rescue and Relief of Lost Persons Rescue and relief of lost persons, as provided in Sections 2111-2116, C.L.A., 1933, $10,000. clerical help, Senate and House (Senate Joint Resolution No. 1), $2400; for expenses of members of Senate and House incurred in mak- ing investigation of Pioneers’ Home at Sitka and Goddard (Senate Joint Aid to Public Libraries Resolution No. 1, $600; for expens- Aid to public libraries, as pro-les of investigation of Department | vided by Sections 1971-1974, C.LA,(of Labor (Senate Joint Resolution 1933, $5000 No. 2), $2500. Section 2. An emer- | Livestock Inspection gency is hereby declared to exist Carrying into effect the pro-}and this Act shall be in full force | | | visions of Sections 625-632, C.L.A,|and effect immediately upon its 1933, $1500. | passage and approval. Primary Elections - To carry out the provisions of the Primary Election Law, $15,000. AlASKA GETS Emergency Appropriation Expenses necessarily incurred in lo(oMoIIvES j carrying out provisions of laws enacted by the Legislature of the ‘;'I‘vrmory and not otherwise pm—i I" coloRADO vided for, $5000. & Bounty on Wolves and Coyotes WASHINGTON, March 1—Three | EL) "“g‘;z’l““yfi“:"““i‘;z;fi; $75,000- i more locomotives have been requi- sitioned from the Colorado Rail- To payment of bounties, $5000. {7oad Company for use in Alaska, Bounty on Hair Seals {Senator E. C. Jackson, Democrat | To payment of bounties, $60,000. 1.0 colorado, said today. | Fisheries Experimental Commission (o jocoribed the machines as the | For continuing work under Chsp.wzs” type which have been opt-mt-' {76, S.LA,, 1087, $20,000. |ing the Denver, Rio Grande West- | Expm‘:::’:[ "':ou(r’g"’;;:(;'y E(vrn trains on the narrow gauge | N {lines in the southwestern part of Board of Pharmacy Fihie- atate; Expenses of board, $500. | He said that with the four en- Boazd ot /Medioal Exsminpey |glm-s taken previously for the same | Expenses .of - board, 4500, {purpose, the line is seriously crip- Board of Accountancy pied Expenses of board, $250. | i Board of Cosmetology | % Expenses of board, $800. | Board of Chiropractic Examiners ?HOIISG paSSGS Bll Expenses of board, $350. | Board of Dental Examiners F A ho g ' Expenses of board, $800. or n( ra e o Aeronautics and Communications H A Buy Light Company Salary of radio technician, $3600 R per annum, $7200; salary of clerk,| WASHINGTON, March 1.— The not to exceed $2100 per annum, House has passed the bill authoriz- $4200; traveling expenses of mdm%mg Anchorage to purchase and technician, $3000; contingent ex-|improve the electric light and pens including office supplies, power system of the Anchorage telegrams, telephone, lights, rent,'Light and Power Company through postage and bond premium, $2300; |a bond issue not to exceed $1,250,- total, $16,700. |000. Before any purchase, however, Alaska Territorial Guard |the proposition must be submitted Salary of the Adjutant General,|to the taxpayers for a bond issue $3600 per annum, $7200; travel ex- for the amount and 50 percent of ~ecnse and transportation of equip- the voters must favor the idea. ment, $15,000; rent of armories and > storerooms, $10,000; total, $32,200. " Territorial Veterinarian (ANADA oK S As provided in Secs. 62 4, C.LA. 1933, as .amended, SLA,| I 1941, Chap. 64, $16,290. | pROSpE( I“G Department of Public Welfare g Expenses of the Board of Public | FoR oll. GAS Welfare, including travel, salaries . 7 and per diem, $6600; administra- R tion, Department of Public Welfare,| OTTAWA, March 1—Two Orders| including salaries, travel expenses,|in Council have been passed to| clerical assistance, office equipment |SPur the prospecting for oil in the and contingent office expense, $71,- ' Yukon and Northwest Territories 1 000; total, $77,600. d‘l’ld have been published in the Old Age Assistance Canad, Ginsstie. j Gl Allowance to certain aged resi- Ona or_der a0 Authorily to. W " | sue permits for prospecting or drill- dents of Alaska, as provided by ing for oil and gas within a 50-mile | law, $590,000. | radius of the discovery of a well by | Relief of Destitution |}, Northwest Company about 45 Relief of needy and indigents, in- | piiec north of Fort Norman. | cluding hospitalization, sanitorium = phe other order made similar | and medical care, transportation ghecial regulations applicable in 43| and necessary care of mentally and | fifty.square feet sections in ' the physically handicapped children, | Hungry Lake districts of the Yukon $250,000. | Territory, affecting the 16,000 square | Board of Children’s Guardians |miles near the MacKenzie River| For care of children as vards of at the mouth of the Thunder and| the Board of Children’s Cwuardians|Caracajou Rivers. I COLOR CARTOON IS PERT TALE | OF LILLIPUTS 20th Cenlu&?FulI-Iength’ Technicolor Feature Is | Movie Innovation Entirely off the beaten track of movie entertainment is Paramount’s ull-length feature Technicolor car oon, “Mr. Bug Goes to Town, which is now showing at the 20th Jentury Theatre “Mr. Bug Goes to Town" describes he adventures of a little commun- ty of people, known to ordinary mortals as insects, who live on a patch of land just forty-five inches (rom Broad They are surround- »d by towering skyscrapers, and while human passersby and their| lighted cigarettes are a constant! menace to them, their entire e: ence is threatened when a new ckyscraper is to be built on l.heir‘ homeland | Hoppity, the grasshopper hero,| goes out into the world to seek a Shangri-La. The desperate hunt for a safe| place to live and the tug-of-love for Honey are the basis for some| remarkable cartoon animation. The! characters are as nearly human as any ever seen. They're practically real people and you'll love them and | hate them—and remember them, because they'll remind you of people| you know. | Among them are “We're the| Couple in the Castle,” “Be My WHERE THE BETTER e American legion Little Baby Bumble Bee,” “Katy-| Did, Katy Didn't” “Tll Dance at| e Your Wedding” and “Boy, Oh| AUX|||a|'y Mee's ‘ Boy!"” —===— | Tomorrow Night ArmyRejeds .. v i s |will hold a regular business meet- leo Durocher\mz tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in the Dugout, and as plans are to be made for observance of the Ameri- can Legion birthday, President M . Alfred Zenger urges a large at- NEW YORK, March 1—Leo Dur-|tendance of members. ocher, 37, manager of the Brook- | e yn Dedgers, has been rejected by | the Army because of a perforated | LABOR DRAFT NOT YET DUE, SAYS McNUTT WASHINGTON, March 1.—Dis- “ agreeing with War Secretary Henry | L. Stimson, Paul V. McNutt, Man- | power Commissioner, today voicedi opposition to compulsory labor draft | legislation now, and told the news- | men at a conference: “There is too | much talk about fo WASHINGTON, March 1. — The | | House Ways and Means Subcom- mittee, on the Pay-As-You-Go | taxation, today voted tentatively to | ;inums(* a 20 percent withholding |tax on taxable income of wage or salary earners effective July 1,1943 D s TIDES TOMORROW | | i Low tide—4:17 am, 46 feet. High tide—10:23 am, 156 feet. i i the people | 1oy tide—5:11 pm., -0.1 feet. R 0D TR URN | High tide—11:40 p.m, 141 feet. Hig | - 2 |JUNIOR CDA WILL MEET TOMORROW | A business meeting of the Jun- lior Catholic Daughters of *America | {will be held tomorrow evening at | 7:30 o'clock at the home of Mary | Atkinson, 816 Dixon Street. Mem- bers are reminded to bring their l.———’rhcls“ sors so they can do their Red Alaska Game Law Change Approved By Vole_in Hous WASHINGTON, March House has passed the bill amend- | Cross work. ing the Alaska Game Laws to per- R e mit military personnel in Alaska WOMAN’S CLUB WILL to obtain hunting licenses after one MEET TOMORROW year’s service there. The regular monthly business meeting of the Juneau Woman's |Club will be held tomorrow at 2 7 ‘ p.m. in the penthouse of the Alas- NEW Y , March 1. — sing BEh, Maitn Ploking ka Light and Power Company. aska Ju i Angietin of* Alaska Juriesu Mme‘.Ph\ns will be announced for activi- stock today is 4, American Can| 78%, Anaconda 28%, Belhlehemlues of the mont..h and regular bus- iness matters discussed. Steel 61';, Commonwealth and o 3 rtiss i 1 e Southern Curtiss Wright 8%, MERIT o SYSTEM IS MOVED STOCK QUOTATIONS OFFICE OF General Motors 477, International Harvester 63, Kennecott 31 7/8, New York Central 13%, Northern Pa- cific 10%, United States Steel 53%, Pound $4.04. ‘The following are today's Dow, Jones averages: industrials 129.44, rails 31.72, utilities 17.35. - In South Africa one white man out of every seven is in the armed forces. The office of the Alaska Merit System has moved to the Seward Building, .Supervisor W. H. Mat- thews, Jr., announced today. All those interested in getting in touch with tht office may call at the new location or phone Matthews at his home for an appointment. ——eee - Free China—the part not occupied | by the Japanese—has a population adv. | of approximately 225 million. ! - Musicians Dance, March 6. SHad T JusT ‘EC\O\)‘."' BOON ADIAT % STaP CRANWN NORE Q0L NECK LKE & SQWRREL LOOKW" TER ACORNS AW OUT W\E T % e Ov BARNEY GOOGLE AND SNUFFY SMITH EROM CORPORAL. ZWWMNSKL WO \NRS LRSS BY W GENERBLS \WINOOW — QBOUT SENDW Now To GREAT BRITAIN ¥ TI0"CENTURY | member of the Calship Vessel staff, | displays one of the cutouts of 2 i " PAGE THREE BIG PICTURES PLAY NOW Worldvilews ‘MEET : JOHN DOE* Voyage to Victory . ATTRACTIVE Dorothy Hamilfon,49; erty ships which are moved foré ward on a map in the office of builders in Los Angeles, in ratio to attendance of workers. It is part of the “voyages u: victory drive” to cut down on al tees. > RUSSELL CLITHERO 1 LEAVES FOR SITKA Russell Clithero, Sitka hotel man~ ager, took an Alaska Coastal Alr- lines plane to Sitka Sunday affer ibeing in Juneau for several days on business. He arrived here last week by plane from Ketchikan affer a hurried trip to the States. o - JUNIOR TRINITY GUILD 4 TO MEET TOMORROW EVE The regular meeting of Jus Trinity Guild will be held in ity Hall tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock, with Mrs. Robert Rice and Mrs. Donald Hanebury as, co-hosts esses. All members are asked to attend. — T ECK - By BILLY DeB - 0T S0 LOWD ¥ PLOKED I A WOT TP BON \S Tt . SHBCKS T HAD NN HEART PLUMS SOT ON GOW' ONER 1O ENGLAND e A oI 4 A

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