The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 21, 1946, Page 5

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| TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1946 THE DAILY ALASKA EMP. TONIGHT HELD OVER!ITIZY 1 )y BY APPOINTMENT ONLY! BARBARA HENRY STANWYCK < FOMDA Belo To e with EDGAR BUCHANAN i COMPLETE SHOWS START Tumonnowl ° 7:15--9:30 FEATURE AT 7 SHOWPLAEE o¥ CARiTH New Type Qil Burning Automatic Water Heater o, WELL MANAGED HOMES . EXCLUSIVE HOTELS FIRST CLASS RESTAURANTS FULLY AUTOMATX NO ELECTRICITY REQUIRED We just received a shipment of Sunbeau WATER HEATERS. Enjoy the comforts and ECONOMY of ample hot water at the turn of the faucet, with this BETTER OIL BURNING Water Heater. Only a I“"\" will be available this season — GET YOURS NOW ! Smith 0il Burner Service PHONE 476 214 Second Street ATTENTION V.F. W. MEMBERS and WIVES SPECIAL MEETING AT THE JEEP CLUB TUESDAY NIGHT All Members and Wives or Girl Friends PLEASE ATTEND " Ketchikan (Ametis * Korchikan Mo s . 'FAIRBANKS. - FARBANKS. BRONZE SHAFTING — STERN BEARINGS — PROPELLORS ‘GRAY MARINE ENGINES SALES and SERVICE . Juneau Welding and Machine Shop OII. BURNERS PLUMBING HEATING Smith 0il Burner Service 214 SECOND STREET DAY PHONE 476 Ti;ere Is No Substitute for Newspaper Advertising! VETERANS are more than - NOW ATCAPITOL; | - CLOSES TONIGHT | =.u.ts'sovdec” i i out, that's a joke, son, but Meet the bride who wouldn't stay they wouldn't mind dou- !for breakfast! Meet the groom who bling up with Movie Ac- | married his doctor . . . she had a| tredb Margharite LS8 |bedside manner that would cure man. The American Vet- |what ails any man! Meet the lov- erans committee has se- ! {able, laughable “Lady Eve” couple lected her as “The girl | —Barbara Stanwyck and Henry \}'\th whom we would most Fonda in the gayest, giddiest love~ like to share a home un- |and-laugh romp of the season! der the Wyatt housing pro- | ! It's Columbia’s “You Belong To gram.” (International) Me,” hectic, hilarious story which proves that one mans mate is an- |other mans poison! Wesley Rug- |gles produced and directed the com- |edy from Claude Binyon's scintillant screen play. | ‘This feature closes tonight at the |Capitol Theatre. ||37 PASSENGERS ARE | *|" FLOWN WEST BY PNA | Pacific Northern Airlines flew {two sections on the Anchorage-Ju- |neau run yesterday. | Leaving for the Westward City |with Captain Joe Morris, First Of- | {ficer Cawley and Stewardess Doro- | thy Mather were: John Wilson, La- | vina Adrian, Fred Gepner, Richard (Schuman, George Schuman, A. ° Chimlar, B. Cuthbertson, Phillip /Nelson, Charles Sanders, June | Spears, Jane Spears, Virginia Spears, Gordon Phillips, Mrs. R. Busner; to Yakutat: Ray McFar- lane. | From Anchorage: Cupp, Lois Ritchie, | son. | Flying to Anchorage with Cap-! |tain Robert Des Marias, First Offi- | Mrs. Glen R. M. John- ALL THIS---AND A HOUSE, UNEAU, ALASKA T00 !0pen House, Tea, - At Govt. Hospifal Is Wg[AIiended Approximately 150 guests, includ- ing Commissioner of Health Dr. CA‘ Earl Albrecht, and ceveral visiting | nurses here to attend the Territor- |ial Department of Health Institute, were present at the annual open i house and tea given by the Govern- |ment Hospital staff yesterday. { | Feature of the afternoon was a 1displny of patients’ arts and crafts| ~ |(work which netted a preliminary| i |$25 for the hospitalized craftsmen. | I Mrs. Albert Rusch, occupational| | therapy director, said several ar- | ticles, including crocheted baby sets, | | beaded baby booties, moccasins, | |table covers, beaded belts and| iwrist-walch bands, carved .and| | painted totem poles and tinted scenic photographs remain to be {sold and probably will raise the to- | tal ekhibit profits before the end, lof the week. Mrs. Rusch added |that work of patients has raised more than $1,000 during the last | year. | Mrs. Bess Winn, Secretary of the | | Tuberculosis Association, sent flow-| lers to brighten the TB wards for| |the occasion. The material with; | which the patients work also was | furnished by the Association several | months ago. : | j Feminine patients, from 10-year-} |old Winnifred Johns to her motker, | | also hospitelized, do needle and bead | iwork, while the male patients con- . | centrate more on wood carvlng." |leather work and photo tinting. Hostesses at yesterday's open |house were Miss Pauline Meredith, | | chief nurse, and Mrs. Hazel Holmes, __ | head nurse. | Presiding at the tea table in t | coursa of the afternoon were: Mrs. cer Frank Mullen and Stewardess [& == | Dorothy Barry were: Irene Rasmus- [ son, Harry Fiedler, Edwin Eargle, ‘li William Campbell, Ed Blanco; to [y Naknek: D. Miller, Emil Peterson, [ Kilton Butler, Percy Evans, J. Siro- tek, Roy Carlson, Gene Connors, ERANS' GUIDE By MAJOR THOMAS M. NIAL Don Foster, Mrs. Mary Brown, Mrs James Smith, Mrs. Max Van Sandt, Mrs. Walter Soboleff, Mrs. Jake| Cropley, Mrs. Fred Geeslin, Mrs. | Ernest Gruening and Miss Priscilla | Parker. Dr. Max Van Sandt, M., D., the hospital's staff doctor, also Edna Connors, John Weeks, Victor Sssssssscsssssessssaese Jonke, Charles Durkin, Harold Nelson, George Sea, B. Sigtrig, Frank' Davis, Clarence Davis, Will- iam Johnson. FACTIONS IN CHINA CENSURED {Continued from Page Ome) You don’t need to read this col- umn today. Honest, itTl bore you. It's about the choices or options available to the beneficiary on a Na- tional Eervice Life Insurance pol- icy. Catching a waiter's eye is diffi- cult, but not as hard as writing about NSLI choices or options. I don’t know any simple way of ex- plaining them. But here goes. Let's use Joe Veteran as an ex- ample. He died. He carried $10,000 worth of National Service Life In- surance and had been paying the premiums right along. | His widow, Jane, age 26, is the beneficiary. Joe's brother, Fred, is a “contingent” beneficiary; that is,' attacking the Nationalist 13th Army Fred would be paid, if Jare died in the Peipiao area. The Commun- before all the insurance payments ists were reported driving toward Or benefits were paid to her. Chaoyang, Pingchuan, Linyuan and Jane doesn’t get the $10,000 of Chinling after having captured insurance in a lump sum. She has Peipiao. f a choice of two methods of pay- (Nationalist spokesmen issued a ment — Options 1 and 2. warning to the Communists that She can collect $55.10 every month unless the Red advance was halted for 20 years. two Nationalist armies flanking Je- about $13,200. hol Province on the east and west 20 vears, then Fred, could counterattack. beneficiary, would get the balance - of the payments. That's Option 1. jWive;)f Naval and Military Aides fo . Be Honored Friday Mrs. Ernest Gruening will enter- tain at an “At Home” Friday af- ternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock, at the Governor’s House, honoring Mrs. Edward P. Chester, Jr, wife of Lieut. Commander . Chester, and Mrs. Geoffrey Goss, wife of Capt. Goss, recently appointed naval and military aides to the Governor. \choose, if she liked it better. realizes that at her age, 25, a wo- 38 more years. Yet if she takes Option 1, she'll be only 45 when the payments stop. | | | | | every month for the rest of her life. If she lives ‘her expected 38 more years, or if she lives 138 years, she’ll still keep getting $3620 a month. That's Option 2. There’s a further guarantee un- der Option 2. It's what's called a “value of the policy” guaranty. This Mrs. Chester, Jr., arrived here & guaranty is given if Jane dies be- short time ago, and Mrs, Goss is fore she’s received enough pay- expected to arrive Thursday. ]ments to total to $10,000, the value R PO - 0. b 58 of the policy. - If that happened, BOY FOR YOUNGS !then Fred (the contingent Lenefic- Mr. and Mrs. Newton Young be- iary) would collect the monthly | came parents of an 8 pound 15 payments until a a total of $10,000 ounce boy at 3:30 a.m. today in St. had been paid. Ann’s Hospital. | 2 : : 35 MOVIES " AP Newsfeatures 5 SIXY_Y years ago, a seven-year-old pickaninny who had been raised by his slave grandmother danced onto a stage in Richmond, Va., and took the first step in a career that was to make the name of Bill Robinson famous. From dancing for pen- hies in the streets, young Bill tapped his way on to the big-time Vavdeville circuits, appearances ot highspots like Tony Pastor’s, man has a life-expectancy of about | | ficiary. That's be a total of IS just a little more. If she doesn't live| the contingent | eneficialles, then payments (f he gaetory, all rights, title and interest | | Jane would have another plan to| She |80 to the wife (or husband of an gng other improvements located on | tion. Therefore, she can play it safe,! if she wants to, by collecting $36.20 | Now let's ook at the two op-| was present; and Mrs, Margit Wu-| kich, a Red Cross Nurse's Aide, pre- sided over the hospital guest book | and was most helpful during the afternoon. Among the guests present wer? tions available for a beneficiary who is over 30 when the insured veteran dies. Let's bring Joe Veteran back to life for a few years. Joe keeps his $10,000 policy in force. He dies in 1956, His widow, Jane (beneficiary) Dr: J. A. Smith, M. Di assistant| . a5 . P . director of the Department ofj is then 35. Fred, his brother, is h: h F B Publie | still contingent beneficiary. :"fi:h' ::::s:rlron'\ w':cn:‘;'e“, prow Jane still would have two choices D:. L. Gehrig, M. D, tuberculosis '05“0"5' as "l’] ho wshe wanted to consultant for the Public Health | collect on the hsurandi. Both gervice, would give her a life income, but| ther:‘: some difference as to pay- | CABARET DANCE menip; Saturday evening, May 25 for Option 1 would pay Jane $42 a gis nndyLndles gnly. ghone 12 ;g;r;:’hrmr ll::e. Option 2 would pay ' for reservation. (276-t1) : or e. -~ — - There's a veason-for the differ- NOTICE OF SALE ence. It lies in the guaranty that| NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that is given Fred, the contingent bene- | o) Wednesday, June 12, 1946 at 2:00 | cia Option 1 guarantees a p M. at the office of the United minimum of 120 monthly payments. ' gtates Commissioner, No. 513 Fed- | Option 2 guxramees»that the value‘erm Building, Juneau, Alaska, the of the policy (in this case $10,000) | commissioner as Administrator of will 1‘7; paid. {iile Estate of Archie A. Fraser, de- Dow'gegive up at this point. There ceased, will offer for sale at public |auction to the highest bidder for If Joe Veteran has named NO cqgh, jf such bid is deemed satis- SV A VN dies) go to relatives in what 15 ,¢ the sald estate to the following | termed an “order of devolution."|qegeribed property-to-wit: Two one That just means payments would | story frame cabins and a frame shed ex-GI Jane), then to a child or| gomestead No. 1 Lode Claim, and all children, then to a parent or par-|gtwctures, and improvements ‘on ents, and then to brothers or sis- pomestead No. 2 Lode Claim, both | ters. That's all there is to devolu- ; of said mining claims are unpatent- pord |ed and have been held by location , he arrangement of the settle-| gince 1935, and are situated at Hawk ments or options I've outlined Will ynjer near and on the West side of be changed if the National Service Crystal Falls Creek, on Admiralty Life Insurance Act amendments are rgand, and wgether’ with all furn- ever adopted. Theyre now some- jshings, house-hold equipment and where in an avalanche of propos-|y,ols now contained in the above als to Congress. ! mises. Il watch this amendment situa- | ca:i:;, s:;‘edtsp;;de m;cordlnx Yo dkve ] tion and let you know when any-\m satisfy the debts and claims thing happens. | against said estate. | GIVEN UNDER MY HAND AND » | OFFICIAL SEAL THIS 20th day of | _® | May ,1946, at Juneaw Alaska. (SEAL) FELIX GRAY, United States Commissioner and Administrator of the Estate of Archie A. Fraser, deceased. ® | First publication, May 21, 1946. ® | Last publication, June 11, 1946. TIDE TABLE MAY 22 High tide 5:05 a.m., 14.0 ft. Low tide 12:06 p.m., 1.7 ft. High tide 18:35 p.m., 12.2ft. o & o 0 & o o 0o ) 1939 STAGE 4 1946 NIGHT and in the movies and on the legitimate stage. Above are some of the highlights of his career. Left to right, with George Cooper in their vaudeville act; dancing with Shirley Temple in “The Little Colonel;” as the star of the “Hot Mikado,” which played Broadway and the World's Fair, and as he appears at the Zan- itold a reporter he considered BROADWAY HIT IS SCREEN FEATURE N OW PLAYING! AT 207H CENTURY e CHERRY BLONDE | “Something For The Boys,” the sensational, long-run Broadway mu- | sical that critics acclaimed as the| {show:“that made Broadway a better | place to laugh in,” is now on the| iscrecn at the 20th Century, in 20th {Century-Fox's brilliant Technicolor |, tlimization, starring Carmen Mir- % . anda, Michael O'Shea and Vivian| Blaine Avith an outstanding, sup- | AR porting cast. ¢ There is everything in this pro- gl duction to please all movie fans, 6“4") comedy; pretty girls and song hits galore. Action movies from start to fadeaway. .o 11.5. POINTS OFFENSIVE FORPEACE Byrnes Ca"fi 6n Russia fo. Stop Blocking Euro- pean Seftlements CARR MIRAN MICHAEL 0'SHEA - BLAINE COMETHING FOR THE ggyg (Continued jrom Page One) Byrnes said, “that the aggregate sentimen of mankind cannot penetra | Progress Disappointing Of the Paris meeting he said that progress toward peace settlements —— - in Europe had been “disappoint- ingly small” but that some progress had tz2en made — chiefly in clari- fying issues and letting the gov- ernments of the four powers know where they stand with relation to cach other. While most early Congressional reaction to Byrnes' speech was fa- vorable, Senator Pepper (D-Fla) it Card Beverage (:o Wholesale 805 10th St. PHONE 216—DAY or NIGHT for MIXERS or SODA POP Empire Want Ads bring results! a report on “another failure.” “They may think they started an ‘offensive for peace’,” Pepper as- serted, “but they started it with a broadaxe. The Russians are not| going to make peace as long as they think the United States and Great | Britain are trying to make a peace | that will serve their nationalistic| interests alone.” —_———e— LAST WEEK { For eye examin®tions. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson will be leaving Ju- neau the end of this week and will | accept appointments unfil Saturday | evening only. Phone 636 { for ap-! pointments. (275-t) | S SEATTLE RANGES | NOW BEING MADE! ® CALROD UNITS Super-fast heat for famous “Speed-Cooking.” » TEL-A-COOK LIGHTS Color Indicators for every cooking speed, ® TRIPL-OVEN ‘Three ovens in oge. ® NO-STAIN VENT Keeps your kitchen walls and curtaing cleanes, We've got all the informati your nfw Gmmmxhqflgozs&nadd‘: ngk e right mow! Come in and see the of the great new cts about features, prices, models . . . get all the going to be “First come and delivery dates. new ranges, 30 get your Don't wait I ! Ie ——dnt‘uw:”’ :l:g"dnu‘ osder in wow! . zibar_in New_York_now, where he is still going strong at 67, Alaska Electric Light & Power Co.. PHONE 616

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