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MOND: AY, MAY 12, 1947 SHOWPLALE br PITUL, FIGHTING MEN... COURAGEOQCUS WOMEN! A Story of America’s Most Exciting Time and Pcople! . REINDEER HERD ’ IS ABSORBED BY ROVING CARIBOU P | Herbert C. McClellan, Unit Man- azer ¢f the R Service ¢f t Alaska Native Service at Kotzebue teday informed lecal ANS officials that the Shungnak reindeer herd has been absorbed by the mizration of a caribou herd McClellan said this iniormation’ from Marvin Warbelow, local ANS Reindeer Supt. at Shungnak. Warbelow said that many reindeer herds have been similarly threatened this y but that this instance was the first successful incident. Warkelow re- ported that many precautiona: measures had been taken to pre- vent the caribcu from interfering with the reindeer in that area. He that he received said that, this year, caribou are migrating further west than is usual. The Shungnak herd, consisting of five or six hundred deer, was on loan to Evan Commack from a na- tive association. It has now been reduced to 37 head, Warbelow said. EEEE TR RHODE BRINGS IN 2D GRUMMAN FOR FWL SERVICE HERE Clarence J. Rhode, Aircraft Su- pervisor of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, arrived here Sat- urday . with the second of three Grumman airplanes - which have been assigned to the Fish and Wild- life Service in Alaska. Rhode was scheduled to take off, late today for Anchorage where the plane will be put into service. As passengers, Rhode will take with him Charles E. Gillham, Har- old Dobyns, Les Ensign and Gene Bridge. Gill-am ana Dobyns will go to the Kenai Peninsula to hunt predatory animals for about a month. Gillham recently rejoined the F&WL Service to supervise the killing of predatory animals and Dobyns has been loaned to assist Gillham in the Kenai hunt. Dobyns is District Agent for the Fish and Wildlife Service at Pendleton, Ore. Ensign and Bridge are biologist: from the Fisheries Division and are enroute to the F&WL Brooks La- boratory at the headwaters of the Naknek River. S e EMERGENCY FLIGHT MADE EARLY TODAY, COASTAL AIRLINES Alaska Coastal Airlines early this morning made an emergency flight to Tenakee to bring Jim Keehn, seriously ill on the PAF, barge Metabalof to Juneau. The call came in last night, and as soon as it was light this morn- ing, at about 4 o'clock, pilot Har- old Blumquist took the Seabee out. He returned to Juneau with Keehn at about 5 o'clock, and the sick man was taken to St, Ann's Hos-; pital. tor results! — - . Empire Want-ads L= REWARD FOR CAPTURE OF THE DALTON BROTHERS THE JAMES RICHARDS GEORGE "GABBY" The CAPITOL HOUR Delightful Entertainment prescnted i distinctive manner. (Papital Hour starts at 7:20-9:30—Feature a at 7:50-106:00) MORE ACTIVITIES FOR JULY FOURTH BEING LINED UP More ac ¢ being planned for Juneau day Fourth of uly celgbration. Tk celebration committee revealed today that plans are underway to include baseball games on the calen and to issue invitations to out-of-otwn teams to participaté in a three day tour- nament. To extend the show from land and sea and air, the committee has extended an invitation to the Army to send planes to Juneau to take part in an air show. A baby show is also outlined. Chairmen the various mittees named, so far, are: General Chairman: Mayor Waino E. Hendrickson; Finance Commit- tee: Fred Herning; Water Sports: Bob Cowling; Land Sports: Harry Sperling; Publicity: Henry Hogue; Queen’s Contest: Mrs. Lucille John- son; Queen's Activities: Mrs. Cecil Cassler. Added to the General Committee are Bud Nance and Rod Darnell, representing the Rotary Club and the Juneau Merchants Association. AR LA 9 EIGHT HALIBUTERS BRINGBIG CATCHES Eight hallbuv boats today sold catches at the Juneau Cold Stor- age totalling 116,000 pounds. The entire amount was bought by Al- aska Coast Fisheries at 16 and 14 cents. % Largest single catch was brought in by the Aegir, 23,000 pounds, un- der Francis Hyde. Other boats were the Explorer, Magnus Hanson, with 17,000; the Neld, Eli Johnson, 11,- 000 pounds; the Defiance, Frank Olsen, skipper, 18,000 pounds. The Clarice of Hoonah, skipper William Johnson, 20,000 pounds; the Mabel, Ole Jackson, pounds; the Ida II, 4,000 pounds; and the Ocean Queen, under Jim- mie Martin, with 18,000 pounds. ALEUTIAN IN, OUT LATE SAT. NIGHT The steamer A.cuiian of the Al- aska Steamship Company arrive in port from Seward at o'clock Saturday night,- sailing southbound at 12:05 the same night. Approximately 33 students and personnel being transferred from of com- {the Eklutna School near Seward to Mt. Edgecumbe School, barked here. Seventy-five boxes of fresh hali- but were loaded for shipment to Seattle, with 95 boxes left on the dock for lack of time. Seattle-bound passengers disem- Rheta Mitchell, George W. Tuttle, Carl Graham, Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Burford, Roy Watson, J. H. War- ren, J. M. Taylor, Mrs. G. Wells, Mrs. Joe Wells, Alvin Anderson and John Madson. Leaving for Ketchikan were Thomas Brown, Harold Sowder, Mrs, Harold Sowder and V. P. Dickson WIND Height of Waves ROME, May 12—®—Calabria Station Weather Temp. Dir.and Vel. (Sea Condition) were |and other parts of southern Italy !Cape Spencer .- Cloudy 40 swW 4 1 foot Mr. and Mrs. Sam Shabaldak,|were recovermg today from the ef- |Eldred Rock Rain 41 8SW 24 2 feet | fects of an earthquake which rock- | Five Finger Light Cloudy 4 SSE 2 4 feet i ed the area yesterday, killing three | Guard Island .Cloudy 48 SSE 16 1 foot | persons, injuring 40 and causlnglunmln Rock ... Drizzle 42 ENE 5 1 foot | wide damage. ' | Cape Decision .. Cloudy 48 SSE 11 1 foot “ 5,000 | 10:30 | ~ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE— JUNEAU, ALASKA | |A. L. Seagle; from Pelican, G. L. | | @ |OLD WEST STORY EXTENSION OF =t i ¥ d | Max Penroy accompanied one | FEATURE Now AI | | flight of seven children from Ju- ‘ ! 4 § {neau to Mt. Edgecumbe School at | (Apllol THEAIRE L group of 12 children, and Irene | \ ILaskx went with another 12. | | S | Other passengers to Sitka were An exciting dramatization of a TI H. R. Blood, G. Nelson, Mrs. Ir- 1\1\1:1 chapter in the history of " by, J. W. Naber, L. Peterson, Mrs !the cld West is seen in RKO Harry Hagen, Milan Hagen, G Rg\dim Si:?fln;'ulflr mt‘lfldra";“‘ ey Gregorieff, Georgla Hempsmeyer ‘Badman’s Territory,” now on the * Za 3108 3 trill accesn ab s, capitol Theates, | LEIOUSE PUblic LaMOS oM i o e it s s Rendolph Scott and Ann Rich- . Schaffer & ; ards respectively play the hero ml"ee ASkEd fOl’ Ad 2;1)91:0 ::ll;\n”g‘n g:;::‘({u\'.mc th:‘\lxlr‘: and Leroine of the picture, which deals with old events in the Ok- lahoma Panhandle. For forty years passengers from Sitka to Juneau on the weekend trips were Frank Tilson, George Nyman, George for All Territories this area, larger than the state of WAEHINGTO! May 12—® Kamplain, Esther Bacon, Mrs. Ve- Connecticut, was completely law- A House Putlic Lands subcommit- na Crone, B. Canola, Millinee Mor- less because of legal oversights teen was asked today to extend gan, Joe Guy, Barbara Rowland, which left it without any govern- the reclamation Act to cover Al- H. Cotrill, H. B. Rowland, Zalmain mental jurisdiction aska, Hawali, Puerto Rico and the Gross. E. Dalrymple, Roy C. Avrit After epic contlict the region virgin Islands. and Dr. Moore, was included in the newly form- — Raclamation Commissioner Mich-, ¥rom Juneau to Chatham, Jo- ed Territory of Oklahoma in 1890, gel Straus told the committee ir- seph Bowen; to Pelican, Lillian and amid this conflict is played rigation projects particularly are Stearn, Jean Peterson and Chris ihe remance and action of the peeded in Puerto Rico which has Erickson; to Hoonah, G. Mill tiyn. Scott plays a sheriff and cpe of the highest population den- from Lake Florence to Juneau, Miss Richards is a fiery - sities in the world and must im- Bashaperind, F. Robards, O. Ce- paper editor. George port about one-half of its food. cotti and C. Robards. Hayes shares honors with them as e e a genial bandit. or of Alaska and Colin : A train Tobbery by the James president of the Hawailan Board boys, the Daltons' memorable raid of Agricuiture and Forestry. on Cotfeyville, and a frontier| Alaska’'s Governor said little is horserace provide come of the ex-|pow known of reclamation possi- | Other witnesses were the Govern- Lennox, | PACIFICN.W. citing sequences of “Badman’s pilities in Alaska, but that he felt; Territery | investigations should be made by| B S the Bureau of Reclamation | "AVY “URSF \URP 53;33;)8;0 said Hawaii has spcnt; ! k- i ,000, on irrigation projects, 3 Ideveloping more land than any| TACOMA, May 12—®—Two is OBSERVING 39]‘" |comparable area in continental brothers were killed yesterday when their light plane crashed and Lurned shortly after they had United States. The subcommittee postponed ac- i dipped their wings in greeting as ANNIVERSARY MAY 13 ion on the bill. PRt Sy they passed over their suburban May 13, tomorrow, marks ihe Tacoma home. H 39th anniversary of the founding .- & |” They were identified as O"cm" of the Navy Nurse Corps. On COASTAL AlRlI“B Peter Stone, the owner and p.lot, this day all of America will pay his brother, George H tribute to these Florence Night- Stone. i - MAKES 15 FLIGHTS Officers Steve Sabutis and Le ard Bishop, who witnessed the crash from their prowl car, said the plane was flying at about 500 |feet when it suddenly fell. Plane Wrecked Near Anchorage; 3 Hunlers Are Lost Three Days ANCHORAGE, Alaska, May 12.— (M—Lost three days when their plane was wrecked 135 mil frem here, Gene Gough, Ray Grasser and their pilot, James Peffer, re- ngale’s of modern medicine. 'he Navy Nurse Corps was es- tatlished by an act of Congress in 1908 to serve as a nurse unit in the medical department of the W Navy in 1942, Congress passed: Alaska Coastal Airlines reporied a bill giving the members reftive 15 flights over the weekend, in- rank, corresponding to that of |cluding three flights to Sitka with commissioned officers of the Navy. children enroute to Mt. Edgecumbe All nurses in the corps were ap- School of the Alaska Native Ser- pointed by the Surgeon General vice, and one freight load to Tulse- with the approval of the Secretary quah, B. C. of the Nav, ‘The successful can- Six flights altogether were made didate must be an American to Sitka, with planes touching also zen of good character and a grad- at Haines, Skagway, Petersbur uate of a high school. She must Wrangell, Ketchikan, Taku Lodge, be a graduate of an accredited Taku Jarbor, Hoonah, ~ Pelican school of nursing and must te and Tenaki registered in her profession. She must be between the es of 21 ia razier, Georgia Hauser, Mr. turned here over the weekend after and 40 for the reserve corps and and Mrs. S. Chilbeck and A. J. civilian and Army searchers began petween 22 and 28 for the regular Chilbeck; to Haines, Mrs. Cyrus looking for them. They were on a corps, and must be unmarried and Peck, L. E. Lee and Frances Fell; hunting trip. in good health from Skagway to Juneau, V. ——— Nurses serve on foreign stations, Dickson, Tom Dyer and Glen HAPPY E“DING at home, ashore, at sea on hos- Leach; and from Haines, Hal WELBORN, Kansas, May 12.—(® el pas ers were Virgin- pital ships and transports, and in Johnston. { the air with Naval Air Transport Petersburg passengers were Mrs. Service. They have opportunities E. Richardson and Norman Ban- —Hearing that Gleen Masterson, for the specialties of the profes- field; to Ketchikan, Dixie ‘Wood- 11, had fallen in a pond, 20 Wel- sion such as anesthesia, dietetics, burn, Ruth Ryden, Leonard Hop- born volunteer firemen sped to and physical therapy, and for exe- kins, Henry Willlams and Pete his father's form yesterday with cutive and administrative work. At Gilmore; from Ketchikan to Ju- a resuscitator. all times, in all duties, their para- neau, G. McDonald, Mrs. Harry The pond, nine feet deep, balk- ed efforts at rescue by wading, so From Wrangell to Juneau, Allan the men feverishly tore a break Marcum, George Johnson and in the dam with crowbars, spades Robert Martin; from Petersburg, and rails to drain the pond. M. A. Casden; from Tulsequah to As the water flowed out, Glenn Juneau, William Frazer; from came trudging down a road. Hoonah, Felix Toner; from Tena-, “Gee,” he exclaimed, “are you kee, Mrs. O. G. Slagle and Mrs. looking for me?” | mount responsibility is teaching. Hagan and Milan Hagen. They must train the members of the Hospital Corps to do all the nursing aboard combat ships and in stations$ where it is not prac- ticable to ‘have women nurses. COALITION GOVT. IS FORTHCOMING U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU JUNEAU, ALASKA WEATHER BULLETIN | DATA FOR 24 EOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M,, 120TH MERIDIAN TIME FOR JAPANESE o semp. | TODAY | | last | Lowest 4:30am. 24hrs. Weather at TOKYO, 2P o Station 24 hrs* | temp. temy Precip. 4:30a.m. . i g M:ayme; Wil reeive | Anchorage .85 31 31 Trace Pt Cloudy equal representation in the forth- |BATTOW o 1¢ 14 A Clear coming coalition cabinet, which will Bethel oA 3 | e Oloudy be pledged to adopt tight Sta‘w‘(lor(.ova 46 35 35 15 Pt. Cloudy control of key industries, political | D2Wson i | % P . e Drizzle BRders detied today, Edmonton 6 | o w 0 Cloudy Whether the premiership will go | Fairbanks b5 35 ot [ Cloudy 4 the Socialists, who hold a Haines . hed 38 30 41 Cloudy plurality in the diet, remained un- |Havre 63 41 4 0 Pt. Cloudy answered after this second meeting | Juneau Airport 46 38 39 66 Rain to form a coalition ~government.| Ketchikan 52 | 3 40 98 Pt. Cloudy The Conservative cabinet. headed Kodiak 47, '} 30 3 01 Pt. Cloudy by Premier Shigeru Yoshida will|Kotzebue % | 3 31 Trace Cloudy Tesign May 20. Los Angeles 6 | 55 55 0 Cloudy e | McGrath 45 | 38 38 07 Cloudy | Nome 417 | 34 35 Trace Rain Northway . 48 33 38 . Cloudy Auslk'A“ TREAIY | Petersburg ... 46 | 31 39 "t .62 Rain | Portland 5 | 44 45 (] Cloudy IS 'I'AKE“ up BY Prince George ... 18 | 3 42 Trace Cloudy | Prince Rupert ... | 47 40 83 Showers { Seattle 63 | 43 50 0 Cloudy i BIG - 4 powERS | Sitka 48 | 38 38 72 Rain 1 Whitehorse 51 | 31 31 05 Cloudy ‘Yakutat ¢ 51 36 37 51 Pt. Cloudy VIENNA, May 12—(P—Repre- | *—(4:30 a. m. yesterday vo 4:30 a. m. today) sentatives of the United States,| wEATHER SYNOPSIS: The storm located over the Aleutian chain Britain, Russia and France assem- | yesterday has moved into the northern Gulf of Alaska during the night bled here today to take up work onang is causing an extensive southerly to southwesterly flow of moist |the Austrian treaty where the Big | air over Southeast Alaska. Skies cleared slightly yesterday afternoon and Four Foreign Ministers left off at!eyening after a storm front moved across*us but the flow of moist air heir recent Moscow conference. |guring the night increased the cloudiness and thickened. the layers con- The main jssues to be resolved | giderably. The large high pressure center in the Pacific west of the (were the definition of German as- | gtates and south of Alaska is pushing slightly northward. At the momané sets in Austria and Yugoslavia re-|ywe have no important storms along the Aleutian chain and there is a parations demands. | good chance that by tomorrow or the next day the high cell to the south- 5 Pt 8 west of us will bring slightly drier air and our cloudiness will decrease. ,SOUTHERN "' Alv Skies are mostly cloudy over the interior of Alaska with temperatures mostly 30 to 50 degrees. Numerous rain showers are reported over the Western States with temperatures slightly below normal. | MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN | Reports from Marine Stauons at 1:30 P. M. today | R s i SR ! MARINE FORECAST FOR PERIOD ENDING TUESDAY EVE- The first commercial sulfur pro-! NING: Protected waters of Southeast Alaska and the outside waters duction in modern times was in| from Dixon Entrance to Yakutat—southerly to southeasterly winds 10 to Sicily during the 15th century. |25 miles per hour shifting to southerly and southwesterly less than 20 RO b 4 W | miles per hour by Monday evening. Continued cloudy with intermitters e FEmpire Want-ads for nnm!arain Rev. Goodman WALLACEBEERYIS Goodman ¥esruees i Is Stricken; ~arzomicentupy LAST TIME L] L] Wallace Beery and Binnie Bar- ‘lhl‘ first time in “Barbary Coast —_— Gent,” the new M-G-M film at 3 + Ithe 20th Century Theatre tonight. Episcopal Archdean Emeri- “Burbary const Gent~ is o story of San Francisco’s Barbary Coast fus of Alaska Passes On SEATTLE, May venerable Rev. Frederic and early Nevada gold-field days. Miss Barnes plays Lil Damish, owner of a Barbary Coast “refin- ed” gambling house, who {5 in The love with Beery W. Good-| Beery returns to the type of role man, 71, Episcopal Archdeacon that has made him a favorite emeritus of Arctic Alaska, was With movie-goers everywhere. He stricken with a fatal heart attack POrtrays a two-gun bunco artlst in a grocery store here Saturday. WhO turns into a 1880 Robin Hood. Frances Rafferty and Bruce Kel- 12—(P— AN M-G-M PICTURE Starts Tomorrow Famed for his missionary work with the natives of Northern Al- 1088 have the romantic leads in aska from 1925 until about five this feature | vears ago, Archdeacon Goodman 7 EO A N was at Port Townsend for a time after returning to the States and then came to Seattle. He was an Honorable Canon of Saint Mark's Cathedral here. | Among the publications that| brought him widespread attention | IN (ALIFORNIA was an Eskimo language transla- tion of the Episcopal prayer book.i Joel D. Van Are1, former well- He served churches in many parts known resident of Juneau, passed of Canada and the United States onatLoma Linda, Calif., Saturday before going to Alaska. His head-|according to a radiogram received J.D. VAN ATTA PASSES AWAY SOL LESSER presents quarters there for many years was by W. H. Biggs, Secretary of the at Tigara, Point Hope |Juneau Lodge of Elks, of which RSP 4 R R 1V:-.n Atta was a member. Funeral iservices will be held at Redlands, |Calif,, at 11 o'clock Tuesday from BRITISH ROYALTY o iy "V sulh |survived by his widow, Mrs. Sarah BA(K I“ ENG[A"D' |Van Atta, 433 Central, Loma Lin- ¥ lda. MoNAR(H (HEERED‘ Van Atta, born in Hocking County, Ohio, April 6, 1870, had ot by been a barber for 63 years. In LONDON, May 12.—It is exactly June he was known as the poeti- 10 years ago to the day that Brit- ¢al barber and about every two ons cheered the purple and ermine months he would carry an “ad” ceremony of the coronation of Written in poetry, in the Em- King George. pire, telling of the merits of his Selected Short Subjects Latest Air Express News Today, they again cheer jp Silver Fox Barber Shop. For ry 2 578 monarch, this time on his arr years he had a barber shop on home with his family from a threc- Front Street, and previous to @ ) .. leaving for Anchorage, several YOU'LL LOOK BETTER IN months tour of South Africa. Cccasionally, during the absence YeAr go, he was located on South [ d of the royal family, there has been E"’ "kr““] S‘E‘f“ “"; bkl o7 g criticism along the lines that it Per of the Seventh Day Adventists, v basked in warmth and comfort Dis shop was losed on Saturday (T while Britons at home were going buf opened on Sundays. m"" through a severe winter. But ex-| Van Atta, becides barbering, op- 1‘"-0"’ \y J, cept for the Communist Daily erated a violin repair shop and TROUSERS \vays/ Worker, which - kisced-off the WAS @n expert in that line. homecoming with a very brief ac-| During his long residence in Ju- ASK YOUR DEALER count, there was no evidence of Deau, he was for many years ¢ « any coldness or hostility today. C};:plnnll ”; "l:e‘ E"‘: Locllqge. P o R A TR Thoud ohE 1 e close s shop here an housands of persons jammed the Andhorage. ant from.. REATTLES. Ay 12.—®—The parade route in London to cheer moved to end applaud the King, Queen and there went South two Princesses. It was a colorful California. display as the royal family rode ©On March 7, this year, Van Atta through Whitehall in an open Wrote to Secretary Biggs and in- coach drawn by grey horses with timated he was not in the best scarlet-clad postillions. of health, but was still barbering, Even the weather smiled be- Wished the best of luck to Elks nignly, with the sun Lreaking and “pray for me.” through for the occasion. | Van Atta was also a member of ‘The London press greeted the of Silver Bow Lodge of the Odd bedy of Angus E. McArthur, Jr, Yakima pilot of a helicopter which crashed in Lake Union last Wed- nesday, was recovered Saturday by harbor patrolmeén, W and located in i YELLOW CAB King with satisfied expressions Fellows in Juneau. | ki AR, | that he had proved himself a suc- | | Phflle cessful salesman in the Empire.. SEATTLE, May 12—(P— Four ‘The impression is that the royal‘dapnnese‘mnm\ed Liberty ships South African tour checked senti- were to arrive here today for a ment in the Dominisn for seces- group vessel delivery. The seamen sion from the British Common- will be transferred to the barracks 22 wealth. |ship John C. Ainsworth and will ey {sail to Cathlamet where the ship Chicle, the chief ingredient of will dwait a full load of “re- 24-hour Dependable Service chewing gum, is obtained from the|turnees” before sailing pvack toi l Sapodilla tree. | Japan. '-E'umunummnunmnuu|||||mi|'|i'|mml'ilunumu’muimmmlm||||||m||um||'|iufimmmmanmg IN ACCORDANCE WITH CHAPTER 38, SESSION LAWS OF ALASKA, 1943, NOTICE AND DEMAND T0 PAY SCHOOL TAX FOR 1947 IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL THOSE TAXABLE UNDER THE LAW WHO MUST PAY SCHOOL TAX: All male and female persons over 21 and under 55 years of age must pay the school tax ($5.00 for each person); a female person who is unemployed and who depends for her support entirely on her husband is not required to pay the tax; persons in the active military or naval service of the United States, paupers, insane persons and those cared for by the Territory or who are permanently injured, infirm, maimed or crippled are also exempt. WHEN PAYABLE: The tax is payable after the first of January in each year. It must be paid to the Tax Commissioner upon demand. If no demand is made for pay- ment, it must, nevertheless be paid to the Tax Commissioner or his authorized deputy within the time, prescribed by law. Please remember that no demand or notice is re- quired to be made or given; but, as indicated, if such demand is made, the tax must be paid immediately. A penalty of 50% will attach if the tax is not paid within the allotted time. EMPLOYER MUST FURNISH LIST OF EMPLOYEES AND PAY TAX. Whenever requested by the Tax Commissioner or his authorized deputy any employer who has must furnish a list of people working for him. who are subject to the payment of the tax, his or its employees together with the age of each of them to the collector, and must pay the tax due from each of them. When such payment is made by the employer, the col- lector must give him a School Tax receipt for each tax paid and the amount thereof may be deducted from the employee's wages. DOUBLE PAYMENT OR PAYMENT BY MISTAKE: Any person who pays the tax when he or she is not liable therefor, or if it is paid by an employer for his employee when such employee is not subject thereto, has the right to claim refund of the amount paid; such person should first request the school tax collector to msk? such refund and if this cannot be done, he should forward such request to the Tax Commissioner at Juneau, giving his receipt number. Upon receipt of such request the Tax Commissioner will investigate and if he finds that the tax was paid by mistake, he will make the refund immediately. Remember that request for refund must be made not later than ninety days after the end of the calendar year during which the tax was paid. NON-RESIDENTS SUBJECT TO TAX, The Tax is payable by non-residents as well as residents. If the non-resident is merely a sight-seer or tourist, he or she is not required to pay the tax; but if he or she comes to the Territory for the purpose of en- gaging in business or employment and actually does so, though not a resident, he or she becomes liable for the payment of the tax. PURPOSE FOR WHICH TAX IS LEV education of the children of Alaska. MAIL YOUR REMITTANCE TO THE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION, Box 651, Juneau, Alaska DO IT NOW AND AVOID PENALTIES DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION Box 651 Juneau, Alaska M. P. MULLANEY, Tax Commissioner. lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIII|||I|IIII|IIIIIIIIIII|I|||I||“M|I|I|IILIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIh 1ED: This tax is collected to assist in the OO OO 7l i