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SATURDAY, JANUARY 11, 1947 | Henry MORGAN Atline JUDGE Rosemary DeCAMP Wally BROWN SHOWPLALE oF YOUNG LOVERS THRILLING TO THE JOYS OF EXCITING L OVE! “THE GOLDEN HUNCH"”.—John Nesbitts’ Passing Parade “THE UNWELCOME GUEST” — Barney Bear Color Cartoon UNIVERSAL NEWS—Highlights of New Year’s Bowl Games FEATURE SUNDAY STARTS !/ E’s T 4 The GAVYEST Of Juneawn’s always a good time at the CAPITOL COCKTAIL BAR ® DANCING EVERY NIGHT Every Drink Mixed Right ‘Music by JIMMY GREGG @ MERV PLUM and ROY EATON ‘Zomhies on Broadway' 6:10 — 5 | 3 at home THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE — JUNEAU, ALASKA 25 TONIGHT!? AND VETERANS' GUIDE By MAJOR THOMAS M. NIAL - SssEssessssasEsEiEIeE |\ Any day now, according to those overworked “reliakle sources,” the Vetcrans Administration will get around to sending a special new form to all veterans training on Ithe job or going to school under {the GI Bill This form will do one thing— |enable the VA to figure out how |full $65 or $90 a month subsis- tence allowance, and how much 2ach veteran will get who isn't en- |titl2d to the full amount. | The form is VA 7-1963, When' you get it, don't delay, don't hes-; |itate, don't throw it away. If you ldon't fill it in and send it back to| |your regional office your allowance }“‘ill disappear as fast as Spring’s| 'last snowflake. i | Public Law 679 is the reason for| {the forms. That law, as most every | ex-servicer knows, limits the total ‘mcome any veteran-trainee can |get from his subsistence allowance (to $175 or $200. Of course there's nothing in the law to prohibit a| 1veternn from making as much as, he can, wages alone. But if his ]wages are more than $110 a month 'he won't get the full allowance. | | The only way the VA ‘can find, {out how much each trainee is mak-| ing is to send out the forms and |get them back with the dope down lin black and white. i | The law was passed last August.| At the end of that month the VA |enclosed a blue slip of paper with! leach subsistance allowance check.! | The same thing was done in Sep-| temker and October. Veterans get-| iting the blue slips were asked to! (record their earnings and send the |slips back to the VA. | Yet 150,000 veterans didn't do it.| |They threw away the little slipsi lof paper and didn’t cut the VA in/ ion the scoop. ! The result — their allowances |stopped- and stayed stopped until |they notified the VA what their| earnings were during those three |months. i 2 Of course, il you were on vaca- | I‘tlun in August, or if you hadn't yet entered training, you never got one| of those slips. But when you went | |back to school or your job-training program you filled out another iform. You had to. { But no matter which form you got tangled up with then, you'll get/ 10:20 [this new Form 7-1963 from now on,| Senate as the White House dis- | clock ! | (der the GI Bill will get it - COMEDY DRAMA, CAPITOL'S BILL jord exactly what you've earned the | previous four months and what you! {expect to earn during the follow-| |ing four months. The VA will send the form to you every four months, Joan Fontaine emerges in one of |if you are in a job-training situa- | her most brilliant roles as the|tion, every semester if you are in| young wife in RKO Radio’s new|school or college. | romantic comedy-drama, "Fx'om! A scheme has been worked out| This Day Forward.” Playing op-|by the VA so that not all trainees| posite her is brilliant young Mark will be briefed on their earnings Stevens, in his first screen role of [at the same time. Here's the way/ any sequence. This picture is|it1l work, as I get the picture: | at the Capitol Sunday. First to get the form (and it The story covers the married|Should be any day now) will be life of a youns couple from 1937 |those whose C-number ends in 0f to the present day. Susan and Bill|[OF 1. While they're in training| Cummings are just an ordinary|they can expect to get the form| American couple. Susan has a job |¢8Ch January, May and September. | with a publisher and Bill is a|Next come vets with C-numbers turret-lathe worke. Bill is deter-|ending in 3 or 3. They’ll be getting| mined that he and Susan shall me I:er;nmgaczmpeh:::r? T:k!“ have security when they marry. ' A ary, ne Susan’s in-laws, the fantastic Bees- |3nd October. You can figure W'% ley family, do not have securicy,“’h'3 res_t.,- and as a consequence, life for them is just one domestic brawl after another. With this example before him, Bill is for waiting, but Susan sets his fears at rest, and thcy! are married. The youngsters have more than | the usual share of discouragements, and their love is often sorely test- ed. Bill is occasionally laid off,| new jobs are hard to find, and Su- san often has to carry the whole load. Once he comes home drunk and quarrelsome, but Susan guides them through the crisis. This is the starter for a most interesting story. i of the Territory 3 H 8 F g many veterans are entitled to the s Custodian of confidence... born of a thorough knowledge Sewm doesn't it? the scuttle g will repenl 679 later. I'm U it's safe t ere i t s repealed one who'll w that at all the put u But dor lame it on the The VA has but Congress puts the laws on the statute Look " P. B.: Wben you get y fill it out ar end it ba VA — quick | e - COMPLAINT IS MADE .., ON OVERCHARGE 0 SEATTLE, Jan. 11—The Chamber of Commerce said today it had a complaint from a Fair- banks, Alask vipper that he was overcharged by the Province of Al- berta on chipments over the Alasl Highway and that the Chamber’s Washington, D. C,, office had noti- fied the State Department | Leo Hardy anks, reportad he is being ov ed one cant per ton mile for u: the 950 miles of the highway through Alterta, the Chambe! He claimed that the overcharge makes it unprofita for him to ship freight from G Falls, Mont,, to Fairbanks The Chamber's Alaska Commit- Seattle tee, headed by M. Dederer, has ask-| ed the Chamber of Commerce at Edmonton tc lock into the rates.| The Chamber's Washington office said the te Department an- nounced that it was ready to in-| vestigate the charges. - - NOMINATIONS WASHING1ON, Jan. 11 Presi- dent Truman today formally nom- inated former Senator Warren Aus- in of Vermont as United States tin member of the United Nations ’Commlhsn-u on Atomic Energy. Austin’s appointment went to the resigned last Saturday from the % On this form you'll have to rcc-;U—N Atomic post, had arranged to ATTEN .ION LOG confer ‘with Mr. Truman this aft-, ernoen (3:30 p.m. EST). Austin also has been nominated United States Representative to the United Nations and its Se- curity Counc! position he has held under a recess appointment. as “The T ghway Patrol announces = that March 15, 1947, has been set as the deadline date W to secure 1947 automobile license plates. | Territorial driver's license are due January 1, 1947. This license is for two years or until December 31, 1948. Receipts for driver's license d turned over to the Territorial Board of Road Commissioner's by the Bureau of Taxation for use in road construction and operation of the Highway Patrol. Jan, 10-11-13.° know-NowW <= T made th novel t Gene " VA. of the early form | ysual and shock-charged plots ever to the to reach the sc Vincent Price, who precipitates the dramatic situations in the thrilling story. AY f E‘GHT Walter Huston is in the cast and Revere, Spring Byington and little| Connie . Above Politics fo | college. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY Juneau Cold Storage Co., Inc. Baranof Hotel AIRLINES.. Phone 667 i AT 20TH CENTURY n all the power tha Bringing to the trange emotion and best-sel Anya Seton of the most widely-discu arring 0 the agerly-awaited new film presented y Darryl F. Zanuck, opens tonight it the 20th Century Theatre The gripping romantic drama is set against the background of the »d and Jonwy time. b . f our ney turbulent anti-rent rebellion period 19th Century. It en- iminister the 1aw. | folds the story of a secret love that Lrought with it a world of rapture and terror in one of the most un- en Gene Tierne appearance in the/ “Dragonwyck’ role of comes fresh on the heels rallenging Teamed with Miss Tierney is [/ i | | others are Glenn Langan, Anne Marshall = Republicans Rise i | | | Help Democrats WASHINGTON, Jan. 11—Repub- | lican Senators rose above politics | teday to help a bunch of Democra- ! tic youths work their way through | Until the end of the present aca- demic year they have decided to continue on the payroll students who received Democratic patron- age jobs as Capitol elevator opera- | t | te 1d policemen, When the school year June, so do the jobs. i Senator Cain (R-Wash.), a mem- ber of the Senate Personnel Com- mittee, disclosed the de: to a reporter today. The number of jobs involved could not be deter- | mined immediately. | > ! ATTENTION EASTERN STARS | ends i Public Joint Installation -with Masonic Lodge, Monday, January | 13, 8 o'clock. Annual business meet- ing, Tuesday, January 14, 8 o- am-2t. i ERE with logs for sale ccntact Juncau Lumber Mills. Wil buy from 100,000 ft. to 10,000,000~ feet. For further particulars Juneau Lumber Mills. 433-tf. ( COLISEUM DOUGLAS TONIGHT “A WALK IN THE SUN" SUNDAY "INCENDIARY BLONDE" tar————r————— see SHOWS AT 7 ATINEE i) CUVREE & A iNa o &) 2V JATURE 7:8 38-—=9:43 —_— led that /ed to rapture and terror! “A woman should get a man first... then want him!" Secret thoughts that to secret loye. .. P | ]Drwgmmwwigfi From the Walter HUSTON - PRICE - LANGAN ANNE REVERE - SPRING BYINGTON CONNIE MARSHALL - HENRY MORGAN Written for the Screen and Directed by IN THE NEW Highlights of Al Bowl ——— Novel by Anya Seton with Vincent Glenn ok [ TONIGHT and JOSEPH L. MANKIEWICZ Football GGames GROSS, CENTURY.FOX* 201}. FAIR PLAY SPECIAL ELECTION, Monday, Jan. 20th FOR REPRESENTATIVE, FRANK G. JOHNSON This vacancy caused by death of Frank D, Price, of Sitka, belengs outside of the cities ¢f Juneau and Ketchikan, both cities now having 8 out of the 11 seats in the Alaska Legislature from this district. We have 12 seats. Vote for FRANK G. JOHNSON No official ballots furnished—WRITE HIS NAME IN This ad paid for in interest of Fair Play and Representation. ALASKA TAXPAYERS LEAGUE (Paid adverisement) The Triangle Cleaners Clean and Bright . .. .. S WE NOW HAVE 48-HOUR SERVICE JUST CALL 3 0 7 as a Sunrise Triangle Clean- ing service insures your appearance. PAGE FIVE