The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 7, 1947, Page 5

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 7, 1947 OVER! for the 4 ani FEY AL day 1T'S A GREAT TECHNICOLORFUL SHOW Selid Serenade” Frank Tom Elixabeth and MORGAN - DRAKE-TAYLOR IN TECHNICOLOR! - TOMOREOW — The Best 2-0it Show Ever! with ‘ TOM and JERRY I { THOSE BUMSTEADS B 0NN a0 vt R o A e o s e LB 6. B 1 et o e ER4ITRY P A TIRY wc RRDIIAMCE ¢ SMITH HEATING and APPLIANCE €0, D Seward Street DAY P 176 NIGHT PHONE—GREEN 840 iy a @ ALL FISH BUYERS E WE QUOTE NOTICE NC Laws of Alas ompiled NOT ROM: ED FISHERMAN BOUGHT F r any jperson, 2 1OL the agent of any r or agent of any sociation Sec. EMPLOY PUNISHMENT. 2167. UNLICENS NOR FISH TO B 1t shall be unla for D associa persen, or for the o or corporation knowingly to have in his, their or its employ, or knowin to purchase fish from any fish- erman who is not duly licensed as such under the pro- visions of this article. mn or corpor ic PENALTY. Anyone violating any of the pro- visions of this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction shall be punished by a fine of not less than fifty dollars nor more than two hundred dollars, or by imprisonment for not less than thirty days nor more than one year, or by both such fine and imprisonment, and in addition thereto shall pay to the Territory double the license tax provided by this article and which such fisherman was required to pay to secure a license from the Territory. DEPT. OF TAXATION Box 651 Juneau, Alaska M. P. MULLANEY Tax Commissioner. TRANSPORTATION T e N £ 1 i | LASSIE" CLOSES Compicte 8 WORLD-WIDE | 71209 SHOWPLALE: NEWS | Feature at Am‘ BY AIR 7:55—10:00 2, - EXPRESS ! W,:"“'W e | S | HHELEBD | ADVENTURE! | : B | e able TONIGHT, CAPITOL “The Courage of Lassie,” in Technicolor, is on the screen at the Capitol for the last two times tonight. This is a most interest- ing feature for young and old and stars a dog, with others in a cap-’ able cast, Elizabeth Taylor, Frank Morgan and Tom Drake Tomorrow night, the Capitol will show @ double bill, and Roy horse Trigger in Rogers h “Along Lake an Simms. -— ” CATERPILLAR HAS DEVELOPED MANY NEW PRODUCTIONS terpillar Tractor Co., Peoria, Ill, has placed in production two new Diesel engines and has intro- duced new models of the two Diesel track-type tractors and the two Diesel motor graders which these engines will power, according to an anncunctment today by the North- ern Commercial Co.distributor of Caterpillar” products in this area These new mcdels offer increased power, improved design, new, stronger materials and the results of more than five years of re- search; developments which will bring to users ample power to handle present work loads at in- creased working speeds or increased work loads at present speeds—both factors in providing the power user with a greater earning capacity. Included in the array of new machines are the four-cylinder D315 and the six-cylinder D318 en- gines, new D4 and D6 tractors and new Diesel No. 12 and Diesel No. 112 Motor Graders. The D315 engine has a maximum cutput, with radiator fan and full equipment, of 70 horsepower, while the D218 is similarly rated at 105 hersepower. Both engines are avail- as industrial units, electric sets and marine engines. The new D6 tra r develops 65 drawbar horsepower and 75 belt horsepower, an increase of ten horsepower over comparable figures for the previous model; while the new D4 tractor, with 43 drawbar horsepower and 48 belt horsepower, offe 20 percent increase in work power over the model it replaces. Increases are carried into the new motor graders, the new Diesel No. 12 offering 100 horsepower and the new Diesel No. 112 developing 70 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA THE COURAGE OF LARGE RECEIPTS o Trail,” and “Life With|11,000 with Penny Singleton, Ness, 17,000 pounds; and the Dix- make their on, i ' of land under the act of May 26, |enormous praise. { north shore of Pearl Harbor adjoi~ 1 cove, Alaska, has filed its appl "LST WEEKEND” OF HALIBUT ARE | COMES TONIGHT RECEIVED HERE AT 20TH CENTURY ! Ray Milland was chosen by Para- Five heavily loaded halibut boats lay at the City Float this mount to portray Don Birnam, morning waiting to put ashore a Charles Jackson's te-devilled hero total of 89,000 pounds of halibut. ©f “The Lost Weekend," in the Biggest single catch was brought film adaption of the best seller a Petersburg Which comes to the 20th Century in by the Balder, Theatre tonight craft, which carried 27,000 pounds.| Next was Dan Tweit's Valiant, with| “The Lost Weekend" tells the 2300 pounds of halibut fl“d‘unusu.:! and unforgettable story 3,000 pounds of black cod. The of five days out of a young man's Thelma, under Bernt Allstead, had life—five days of horror and of pounds; the Emma, Tom Such intentely dramatic events to reproduction on the Emil Samuelscn, 14,000 pounds.;“"'"" an accomplishment of rare - - {couragement on the part of the e 5 oducers and rare talent on the rL ,]"_“”‘f""‘fd] thas. 40 l;”‘;fl‘“\par( of the performers. i "l‘;‘.w':i“‘ “;‘:-‘ b i r“"{ Milland, as Don Birnam, whose e ates come {roM weakness for liquor drives him to South America D he rattlesnake adds from two to four rattles every year. - an Emplre the depths of human degradatign, is said to be abcolutely superb in ithe role. L { Jane Wyman will be seen as his |devoted sweetheart, who will not :give up fighting for the man she 'loves, and Phillip Terry plays Mil- 'land's long-suffering brother. Oth- Want-ad! Sell it w " UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Bureau of Land Management jers in the film are Howard da District Land Office Silva, Doris Dowling and Frank Anchorage, Alaska. | Faylen February 25, 1947. The picture was produced by NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION |Charles Brackett and directed by Notice is hereby given that Charles | Billy Wilder. The two men also August Hartman, has made applica- | wrote the screen play—one of the tion for patent to his homesite, !toughest assignments ever tackled, Anchorage serfal 010344, for a tract {but one which should bring them Wilder will be 1034 (48 Stat. 809) designated as ,X'cmcmbored for his “Double In- Iot 3, embraced in U. S. Plat of Sur- demnity,” among other films. vey No. 2450, Tenakee Group of | S - Hemesites, containing 4.25 acres, { When you pay for QUALITY why situated on the N.E. shore of Tcnakee]ngp get the FINEST—Buy FLOR- Inlet, about one mile N.-W. of Ten- ; SHEIM SHOES at Graves. akee, and it is now in the files of { ——M8m8H0— o —— the District Land Office, Anchorage, | OTICE OF APPLICATION Alaska. FOR PATENT Any and all persons claiming ad- | Serial No. 09406 versely any of the above mentioned | REPUBLICATION land should file their claims in the |In the United States Land Office local land office, Anchorage, Alaska, | for the Juneau Land District at within the pericd of publication, or 1 Anchorage, Alaska. thirty days thereafter. | In the Matter of the Application of GEORGE A. LINGO, ) the HIRST - CHICHAGOF MIN- Acting Manager. ING COMPANY, a corporation First publication, March 26, 1947. organized under the laws of the Last publication, May 21, 1947. State of Washingten, for patent b to the ELSINOR, SHAFFER, BERTHA, FRIES, TRINAD, BER- NARD, SHOLIN and RHEA lcde mining claims and the BERTHA MILLSITE, embraced in U. S. Mineral Survey No. 1502 A and B, situated in the Sitka Mining and Recording District, First Division, Territor yof Alaska, at Kimshan Cove on Chichagof Island, and UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Bureau of Land Management District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska February 20, 1947. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION | Notice is hereby given that Carl: Olson has made application for pat- | ent to his homesite, Anchorage Serfal | gorming one continguous group. 011282, under the act of May 26,| NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that 1934 (43 Stat. 809) for a tract of jthe Hirst-Chichagof Mining Com- land described as North Lot “A” Plat i sany 4 corporation organized under of U. S. Survey No. 2518, of the Pearl ( the Jaws of the State of Washington, Harbor Group of Homesites, on{gngge postoffice address is Kimshan ing HE. S.167,containing 487acres, | qjon in the United States Land Of- horsepower. ‘ latitude 58° 28’ 12” N. longitude 134° 148’ W. and it is now in the files of ONE SOI.U"ON | the District Land Office, Anchorage, MEDFORD, Ore, May T.—/® Alaska. Maybe if more people got lost in! Any and all persons claiming ad- the woods, Karl L. Janouch, Rogue | versely any of the above mentioned River National Forest Supervisor, land should file their adverse claims wouldn’t have to complain about|in the local land office, Anchorage, the porcupines. | Alaska, within the period of publica- Janouch says the animals are|tion or thirty days thereafter, or increasing and ecating bark off|they will be barred by the provisions young trees in Butte Falls area. Eof the statutes. The porcupine is protected by GEORGE A. LINGO, state law since it is one animal| Acting Manager. a lost person can kill with a|First publication, March 12, 1047. club for survival fare. Last publication, May 17, 1947. T = oL L H . VETERANS' GUIDE f i : By MAJOR THOMAS M. NIAL I sesssssressessisTaREeE: sesssssssesasesmssseesssss Congress, of course, with an eye toward reducing government ex- penses and cutting taxes, make every effort to check up on | how the VA is spending its money. Today's column is an account of | scme of the testimony I came across in reading over the hearings{ on what's called in Congtess the First, Deficiency Appropriation Bill must | |ef 1947 ‘ “When a fiscai year gets under- {way on July 1, government agen- | cies are given so much money to carry them through that fiscal year. But often this money runs out be- | The talk gets around to VA’s con- tract service. A member of the committee says “Throughout New York State we have a county and state set-up, and in many cases a city set-up fice at Anchorage, Alaska, for a {patent for the BERTHA MILLSITE vey No. 1502 A and 1502 B, situated at Kimshan Cove, Chichagof Island, | Territory of Alaska, First Judicial | Division, Sitka Mining and Record- ing District and more particularly | described as follows: Beginaing at Cor. No. 1, whence U. 8. M. M. No. 1502 bears N 46° 38’ 40”7 W 1896.98 ft.; thence | N 73° 38’ E 217.20 ft. to Cor. No. | 2; thence N* §2° 35" E 67.10 ft. to ! Cor. No. 3; thense S 12° 12 E 340.50 ft. to Cor. No. 4; thence 8 | 70° 07" W 336.00 ft. to Cor. No. 5; thence N 16° 40’ W 287.00 ft. to Cor. No. 6; thence N 42 39’ E | 95.40 ft. to Cor. No. 1, the place | of beginning, containing 2569 | acres; the same being owned and used by applicant as a millsite | in connection with the working | of the Bertha Lode claim, this survey. | | United States Mineral Monument No. 1502, to which this survey is tied, | is marked by a cross (X) on an ex- posed outerop of bedrock on top of | a prominent point six feet above ! the line of mean high tide on the North shore of Kimshan Cove, in Latitude 57° 41’ 20” North, Longi- tude 136° 06’ 45” West, chiseled U. S. M. M. No. 1502, from which a |included within U. S. Mineral Sur- | - whose jeb it is to look after veter- ans' claims and problems. Now we have the Veterans Administration coming in with another set-up | i (the contact service) and I feel | That's what has happened to the | there should be some way in which | Veterans Administration. They've|we could do away with this dupli- irun out of dough and are looking cation.” | for more: | So this is an account of some of it, we are charged with taking cer- | the things General Bradley told the tain services to the veteran, and it House Appropriations Committee was in the law that we should es- when he went up there to put the, tablish such regional and contact | bite on them. offices as were necessary to ad- Just imagine you're sitting in the : minister. committee room. General Bradley! “I have some figures here,” Brad- is in the witness chair. One of the,ley says. “On March 1 the Director committee members is asking himiof the N. Y. State dividion of vet- about reports about some veterans erans’ affairs announced that 95,047 not getting their subsistence allow- . veterans had contacted the New ance checks on time. With all the York local veterans' agencies.” | money being spent by the VA on} ‘Then Bradley goes on to explain | “administrative costs,” he asks, why , that the VA itself had contacted is that? Why can't clerks get those personally more than 372,000 veter- checks out on time? .ans in New York and had been in Bradley answers, “You cannot get touch by telephone with another 110,000 people involved in admin- 93,000. istrative work and expect them all} “I think you have to consider to be 100 percent efficient. [this. too,” centinues the general. “When we get a case like that we |“If we do not answer those ques- try to trace it down. Sometinies the jtions in person we are going to mistake is in our procedure. But | have to answer a lot of them by often we find that we never got a' mail. It is prebably more econom- record from the school the veteran ical to answer them personally is attending. {than it would ke to put on a cleri- “Of course,” Bradley continues,|cal force to write the letters.” “we have to take the blame. We| The argument goes back and found 42 records on the desk in one forth, Congress trying sincerely to college registrar’s office which had find some method of reducing costs, fore the next July 1 and the gov- jernment has to go before Congress iand ask for more money. . . .a de- ! ficiency appropriation. take the blame for not getting|again that to them paid.” reduce costs will really hurt service to veteran General Bradley talks: “As I see been there 78 days. We have to|the VA contending over and over | cross (X) on a cliff face six feet high, chiseled U. 8. M. M. 1502 B. O. | bears North 7° 18’ East 23.70 feet, | and the summit of Doolth Mountain bears South 13° 30" East. These claims are located upon ground unsurveyed except in Min- eral Survey No. 1502 A and B, and extend from the mean high tide line of Kimshan Cove to the submit of | the ridge between Kimshan Cove and Klag Bay, at a maximum eleva- tion of 1770 feet, in approximate Latitude 57° 41’ Notrh; Longiture 136° 07" West. The names of adjoining claims are as follows: Sunday Queen Lode, un- surveyed, Divide Lode, this survey, Frances R. Lode, this survey, and Kay Lode, this survey, but none of the same are includgd in this appli- cation. The Sunday Queen Lode claim, with which a conflict is mentioned herein, is an unpatented claim own- ed by applicant. The total area embraced in the above claims and claimed by the applicant is 2.569 acres. Any and all persons claiming ad- [\'er.sely any of the above described | veins, lodes or premises are required | to file notice of their adverse claims with the Register of the United States Land Office at Anchorage, Alaska, within the period of publica- ition or within eight (8) months | thereafter, or they will be barred by virtue of the provisions of the | | | statutes. s GEORGE A. LINGO in whispers... \Y M1 “MAGNIFICEN ...on¢ of the gres est pictures 1 have ever seen.” s=Lowelia Parsons “POWERIUL.". s must-sec for all adult moviegoers.” wScreehland Magazine “UNFORGFTTABL Laever a dull moment. 0P CENTURY "The Picture You’ll Be Talking About For Years To Come... [Because it dares to open the pages of the savage book that millions ralked about Because it rips five relentless...unforget- s table days from a man’s life and portrays The Lost’ ~Leonard Lyons Starts Tonight them with all the suspenseful power at the screen’s command...in the frankest, most adult film ever to shock across the screen! Because it's an outstanding achievement in motion picture cntertainment! Pariamdint presents ANDJANE WYMAY twist Phillip Terry - Howard da Silva Doris Dowling + Frank Faglen Produced by CHARLES BRACKETT Direted by BILLY WILDER Setuen Piay by Charls Brackes aad Bty Wider, From the Novel by Chares Jackson A Parsmoses T with "ONE OF THE BEST MOVIES EVER MADE.”’ —~Danton Walker "“SPEAKING OF THE WEATHER" NEW COMET MAY BE | SEEN EARLY MAY 20 CAMBRIDGE, Mass., May 7.—® | —A new comet so bright that it| may be seen with ordinary field | glasses when it swings closest to| MACHINISTS LOCAL NO. 514 LATEST WORLD NEWS VIA AIR EXPRESS - -ALS Business Meeting May 8—8 p. m. Moose Hall i the earth on May 20 was reported’ today by the Harvard College ob-| servatory. | Known as the “Comet Rondan-, ima-Bester,” it was discovered carly this year by M. J. Bester of the| Harvard station in Bloemfontein,} | South Africa. and a Czechoslovak- ian astronomer. Harvard. astronomers said the’ {comet was in the eastern sky near| the sun and would be brightest just before sunris> May 20 : R 1 Verdi's operat “Aida” was first performed in Cairo, Egypt, on Dec. 24, 1871. RS RETCEOCACROOE Is Your House : A Targei? | ANY plane, new or old, | may suddenly get out of | cortrol and nose-dive inte your home. The amount of destruction, both inside and outside, can be exten- | sive. To avoid financial loss have your fire insurance policy extended Ask this Hartford Agency about this added protection. Shattuek | Agenecy Seward Street JUNEAU PHONE 249 First publication, March 12, 1947. Tast publication, May 14, 1947, i **But, Mr. Abercrombie, that isn’t what we mean by taking a business trip by Clipper” It's really simple, Mr. A. The valuable time you save going by Clipper means more time right in your own office . . . more time at your destination, too, for business (and for fun). The big, 4-engine Clippers are mighty comfortable, too. You arrive fully relaxed and ready to influence your customers, buy goods or attend meetings. Pan American will gladly help you plan your next business trip. PAv AHERICAN WorLo AIgwArs e J;;/em of { 119477//'11] dfffl! Baranof Hotel Phone 106

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