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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, 1948 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE-JU ' G #¢ ALENDAR GIRL" FEATURE STARTS 8:00 — 10:10 e U il WAL e 5 S5 Gal PATRICK * Keony BAKER ™ $ ELLISON - IRENE RICH 'mr!!&'&?umrp}r’ggyn .Jkl.’guE SNOVA + GUS SCHILLING Added Attraction THISIS = AMERICA | the Night," of This is America ser- NEAU, ALASKA === ught MusicaL, s | VETERAN By MAJOR THOMAS I, NIAL = §' GUIDE e P T L T T L T L - NOW AT CAPITOL Republic’s gay young musical, A number of regular Navy men “Calendar Girl," is the feature op- 8ré getting transferred to the Fleet ening at the Capitol Theatre to-|Reserve these days night. I'm not familiar with how this Heralded as an engaging miscel- particular service matter operates, lany of lilting tunes, gay and ten- but it seems Fleet Reservists can, der romances, and hilarious humor, {il} 2ertain cases, go on retainer pay it should live up to the type of en-|They get a check from the Navy tertainment that is expected of its each month—it can be as much as producer-director Allan Dwan half their base pay plus longevity— Jane Frazee has the title role of |and they can be called back to ac- the girl who poses for a calendar in | tive duty any time the Navy wants. the early 1900's, and thereby pe-| The question I'm getting from comes enmeshed in a tangle of ro-|these Swabbies is: “If T sign up for mance, intrigue and parental dxsapfilrfllningmn-!he-joh or for school | provel. William Marshall and Jane 8nd college education, w.ll my re-| Ellison portray the two young mm‘u‘nner pay be counted as income in who ,are pursuing her—one of them | [18uring "he, smounk: of subsisteron gay, irresponsible and wealthy, the‘allownnce I'm entitled to?” other earnest, serious and sincere.! The answer is no, it won't. Only Gail Patrick, always sultr) citing, is the “other girl,” a. very is counted when dealing with those ‘temp:mg dish of feminine menace. A more mature and more hilarious love story is carried by Victor M- | Laglen and Irene Rich, who play, | respectively, the heroine's father | g husband is not working, He and ‘a Greenwich Village lfl“dl“dy'1drnv&'< a large compensation check Very young love also is represented,!from the VA every month and with Kenny Baker playing apposite spends it on liquor and other wo- Republic’s vivid young ingenue, Ja- ' men, not on running his household. et Martin ITs 1t pessible for me to get some of The added fenture is “Whistle in tnat pension legally so I can go on S5 | keeping house for him?” ' s ‘The VA says yes, it absolutely is Produced by Frederic Ullman, Jr. | pogsible, Cetial e’ Tacta fousihes ;:f!‘l‘_zi;”““l'::‘: ;;“;‘h:"‘;z; ‘}’;“r”:‘;‘l‘;‘d and notify your nearest VA regional s story ¥ o/ ’ Raies p 100 years of railroading to the el v e L) S screen. TIA director Larry O'Rellly: yico_connected disability compensa- turns his camera on the yards and o, 3 shops, follows a fast freight cross- | country, and reveals for the first % 5 z stion from “disgusted ex-GI'": time the intricate make-up and ser-| S¢S bl i e IT bought & house under the GI Bill ; {and used only $1,250 of my guaran- i 1[8(‘. I can sell that house now, pay {back the .loan in full and buy SPRING (oN(ERI |anotner one in the country. But I'm Y |told that even if T do pay back the puBlI( SCHoolS ‘loan in full I cannot get another 5 e B FOR EDUCATION, Nurses, stenographers, dentists, teachers, accountants and many other professional and highly skil- led workers are needed throuzhout the country. There is a particular need for these services in Alaska. lowance. you The annual spring concert oy the vocal and instrumental groups of the Juneau Public Schools will be given at the high school on Frida,v} evening, April 23. As usual, there is' no admission charge and the public is cordially invited to attend. Miss Monica Farley, who has charge of the vocal groups, will pre- sent a mixed chorus of some 50 and ex- the money earned from work done | i ceilings imposed on wages plus al- | | Query from & southern housewife: | portionment of your husband's ser- | | |GI Bill - with the full $4,000 |guarantee. Is that right?" | | Sure it's right. If you use the GI I Bill loan provisions to buy the other house the maximum guarantee you can get i | Query from W. B, Scranton, | Penna Can the employment of- |fice refuse a veteran his readjust- | ment nce just because the | vete quit his last job without |what the employment office calls “good cause".” Yes. The law says that in such a case the veteran can be refused readjustment allowance (unemploy- | ment | under the GI BilD for |the weck during which he quit the Job and for four following weeks Question from Miss V. G., Evans- ville, Ind.: “Your column once said ‘If the owner of a terminal leave bond dies before the bond matures the 1d reverts to the veteran's wife and children. If he has none it goes back to the Treasury Depart- ment and is cancelled. “Iin't there any way for that! bond to go to the dependent mother jof a veteran if the veteran dies be- fore the bond matures?” b column you read said: “If he has no wife or children the bond |goes to his parents. And if he has no parents it goes back to the Treasury Department and is can-| celled | | There's besn no change. | 1y | Query from V! A. B,, New Orleans |“I entered the Army Dec. B, 1943, was honorably disscharged Sept. 7,! | 1945 and have no service-connected | | disability. T am now 41. Will my | wife and daughter get a pension in the event of my death?” | | Not as the law now stands. You'd| have to have a service-connected disability for them to be eligilble for a death pension. i | Mt. Edgecumbe vocational school | | near Sitka, are accepted from any part of the Territory. However, if| |a student is just entering high school and lives in the area nearest | the White Mountain school he is usually asked to complete the first two years of his high school course at White Mountain. Students are admitted to White Mountain and Mt Edgecumbe vocational schools who have completed the highest elementary school grade offered in their local village, have PAGE FIVE [Ny 5 h R SHOWS AT 7:25 - 9:30 "DILLINGER" | CRIME FEATURE AT 20TH CENTURY That “the wages of sin is death” is convincingly shown in “Dillinger,” the exciting Monogram drama which covers the: criminal life of the notorious gangster who was classified ten years ago by the FBI as Public Enemy No. 1 Tais hair-raising film comes to| the 20th Century Theatre angl\fi with Lawrence Tierney in the title| role of John Dillinger, and other! important parts in the hands of} Edmund Lowe, Anne Jeffreys, Elisha | Cook, Jr., Ralph Lewis mmmu; Ciannelli and Mare Lawrence | first crime and imprisonment, an | @ progresses with mounting excite- | ment through jail breaks, bank rob- | beries, a headlong escape from offi-| cers at a hideout in the Wisconsin woods, a nearly fatal train robbery and the eventual ambush by the/ FBI as the gangster leader emerges from a Chicago motion picture tlw-‘l | | | o MONOGRAM The story begins with Dilling: PICTURE Miniature . . Scenic . . March of Time Latest World NEWS Via Air Express MRS. MacMILLAN IS FAREWELL GUEST AT lcan Federation of Soroptimist Clubs {at Bend, Oregon, on April 23, 24 and 126, and will be the first Soroptimist frem Alaska to attend a convention in the states. The party was a special treat for Soroptimists whose meetings have atre, betrayed to the special agents by the notorious “woman in red.” will be repayable t ganization when due. To date loans have been granted; SCROPTIMIST CLUB | e / WO" | Members of the Soroptimist Club | been mostly confined to the noon en. Of these 14 graduated mr.:” Juneau were guests last night at | heur, and visiting and games were college, 11 are business college vyt B ja farewell party given by Nina Bar- | entered into with great zest i N 8 ‘\I preotu o €l Wwho is to leave for the states on luncheon and delidhted the group by B e i g | Thursday. for . 1 wosk's, vneation {AHOWIRG Fisth NS Sdiction, of e ¢ 2y | showing them her collection of ex- payng their loans. The i \nisite ns payng thelr loans. The total amount |~y e she is south Mrs. MacMil- | Guisite linens - ot money loanded to date Is 834891 l1an will sépresent the Juneau Sorop- | S s‘fw ot some Joans |timists at their spring conference' Genuine Levrs, now avaflable at d s , @ ugh st S | o Northwe egl or! ' have run as high as $1200 and $1300 f()r,th‘ Nf.llh\\(.\t m“m",,f‘r,,[\,m“ Casler’s. “th)“t»l per student. Forty two students have | repaid their log in full, the amount repaid being $23,987. Only 1 per cent of all the money loansd is considerad uncollectable as this amount represents loan due from former students who have died. the Native or-| . .. there's a volume of pleasure in this Kentucky . “In aquit:n w ioans the Alaska Native Service has assisted Grace Lincoln, an Eskimo from Kotzebue and Lorraine Phillips, a Thlineit irom Yakutat, in securing three year scholarships to attend tne Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa., where they are now in training to qualify as registered nurses. The head of the Nurses” Training School of the Pennsylvania Hospit- al reports very favorably upon their progress. Annie Gunner, foermer W.ite Mountain student, is in her best-seller voices, Highlights of the voeal num- bers to be given are the ever popu- lar “Rosary” by Nevin, the “Glow ‘Worin” by Lincke, the negro spirit- ual “Steal Away” arranged by Noble WA g Cain, and “If I Loved You" from Alaska Native young men and wo-/passed a satisfactory physical ex-!second year of nurse’s training at men are urged to take advantage of |amination which includes a chest the Seattle College of Nursing in the opportunities for higher euu-}x-l’ny and who are recommended|Seattle. Many, teachers and stenog- catinn which are available to therh|ny their local teacher, minister or|raphers in the Alaska Native Ser- through the Alaska Native Service other person. Mt. Edgecumbe - and the United States Indian Ser-|in addition to veeztional > 2,/ of those loans.” vice. The training available should jacademic courses cf aiiber and | | vice secured their training by means You'll never be a hermit—if you serve ouo HERMITAGE WAKE UP YOUR LATEST NEWS VIA AIR EXPRESS e Cl t K ” ‘sang “Ave Maria." The | ch was f: the Hu H Ol t 1 iage. The brid ceremony Of Whlte J\Noerr:e: go“v]m z}m\:vrhslf: slipp:r sartlm? h I, Ch h | Eugenie designed, with a hizgh neck- line and buttoned d the front A' Cat 0 l( ur( | with ';Xi;y ;hlc:sati:vkl):nons, with — long leg-of-mutton sleeves ending 1 ints at the hands. The bouf- Before an altar banked with l":“ r:nlzw;;rst Rf’ell (iomm:a slm.ede bo%‘i‘ce baskets of white gladioli, Miss RO~ |4, o cathedral train, and her veil, berta Clement, daughter of MIS. ¢ finger tip length fell from a white Winifred Harris, of Boise, Id’h&‘ satin crown with a chin strap of became the f?;?: 1&2 bf:’k;l:’r o pearls. She carried a corsage of red 9:30 o'clock in the Catholic Church P : of Nativity. The Rev. Robert Wha-{ Miss Della Ripolli, who was maid len read the double ring ceremeny. of honor, wore a gown of white The wedding music Was played | chiffon with inlaid Chantilly lace by Mrs. Lillian Uggen, she played | panels, with an off the shoulder “Loves Old Sweet Song,” and also |neckline and a bolero of matching . ) - e lace. Her Juliet cap was of ruffled lace and caught at the temples with pink carnations. Her colonial bou- ;quet was of pink roses, white sweet |peas and narcissus tied with pink satin streamers. Carousel by Rodgers, and the vocal solo “Lullaby” by Brahms. All of the vocal numbers promise to be very pleasing, for they have “au- dience appeal.” Combined Band Program ‘The high spot of the band pro-1 gram will no doubt be the combined ! high school, Junior band, and Be- ginner’s Band totaling 52 players. This group of 52 musicians will play four numbers. The Beginner's Band numbering 35 players and aug-| mented by the Third Junior Band members will make its second pub- lic appearance. A bass solo, clarinet solo, as well as a clarinet duet, trom- bone duet, and a flute and violin duet will be given by members of the Beginners and Junior Band. The latter group of 38 players is well balanced in instrumentation, ex- cept for a shortage of two more French Horn players, The bass sec- tion is nearly an “ideal” bass sec-, 'tion, for it contains two sousaphone players, a beritone sax and bass enable many of the Native young men and women to enter these well ments of the leading colleges and | Casler's. paid occupations where so many opportunities exist, according George L. Dale, Director of Educa- tion ANS, “Appltcants should be 4 or more Native blood and between the ages of 14 and 21. In rare instances par- ticularly well qualified applicants oyer the age of 21 will be considered. “Applicants who are high school graduates can apply at once for college loans. If there is no Alaska Native Service representative in their community they should write to vhe ' General Superintendent, Alaska Native Service at Juneau, for application forms. Special ex- aminations and physical examina- tions are given to determine the applicant’s final eligibility to re- ceive a loan. “Students who are not high school graduates should see the rearest Alaska Native Service teacher or to| LIVER BILE— Without Calomel—And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morping Rarin’ to Go The liver should pour out about 2 pints of bile juice into your bowels every day. If this bile 1a not flowing freely, your lood may no digest. It may just decay in the bowels. Then * gas bloate up your stomach. You get con- nifited. You feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk. It t‘:m those mild, gentle Carter’s Little Liver Pills to get these 2 pints of bile flow- iég'lrnly to make yo\lmlao:""llphlnd ng;" today. ive in maki hfl-l;o:‘( .Alk(orClfln"lufihuv-' Pills, 33¢ at any drugstore. . P —————————— FRED R. WOLF Electrical Contractor Fouse Wiring OUR SPECIALTY Box 2132 Black 379 Brownie's Liquor Store Phone 103 139 So. Franklin John M. Daugherty was best man. Ushers were Elwin Messer and Frank Parsons. After the ceremony a wedding breakfast was served in | the Iris Room of the Baranot Hotel. The bride’s table was decorated with a white cloth centered by the two tiered wedding cake topped with a miniature bride and groom under an arch of silver leaves and sclarinet player, It is in turn counter- | write to the General Superinten- balanced by four trombones and one dent requesting admission to the baritone. | Alaska Native Service boarding | “The High School Band program ' school at White Mountain or Mi will cffer music that should appeal Edgecumbe, Alaska. The White to all types of music taste. The first Mountain school serves the Norton number on its program is a well- Sound, Seward Peninsula, Kotze- Jknown concert waltz very cleverly bue Sound and Arctic area. Admis- ,arranged in the form of a concert sion to this school is also made march. The band will play a re- from the Lower Yukon and Bethel cently released new overture as well | vicinities. | tiny silver wedding bell. Surround- as a minuet, a tone poem, a reverie,| Applicaticns for admission to the ing the cake was a bouquet of pink| " yooo) novelty, and a wellknown Sl T ! tulips, jonquils and white sweet peas, tune as played in seven different sud tall -white tapess. countries and other light composi- | Guests at the wedding breakfast| ; . . 4 novelties. were: Mrs. Lillian Uggen, the Rev. Robert Whalen, Elwin Messer, Ev- Massed Band g |elyn Hastings, Mr. and Mrs. Frank| Following are some interesting Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. John C.{facts: The-.average age of the com- | Daugherty, Miss Della Ripolli, John|tined beginners and junior band| | M. Daugherty, Mrs. Keller, mother|is 12% years] nearly one-half ofi{ iof the groom, Mrs, Harris, mother,the beginners are sixth graders, and 'of the bride, and the guests of hon- fnumber 35 layers all together; be- or. ginners were started in the mtddle [ Mr. and Mrs Keller have not|of October and. some' as late as | made .plans for a honeymoon but | January. Beginners and junior band {will take a late summer vacation.|total 38 players and might rightly They both are employed at the B.lbe called a grade school band, for| | *P. O. Box 2596 ——————————— Bader Accounting Service RUTH BADER Accounting—Tax Reports Secretarial 3 Valentine Bldg., Telephone 919 H. S. GRAVES The Clothing Man LEVI'S OVERALLS for Boys Widest Selection of LIQOUORS -PHONE 399 M. Behrends Department Store. JESSIE STEVENS GOES " SOUTH ON BUYING TRIP | Mrs. Jessie Stevens is a passen- ger south on the Princess Norah on a buying trip in the states. She is accompanied by her daughter, Mrs. Robert Hoopes from Fairbanks. Seawil_l for Nome Is Given Approva WASHINGTON, April 14—®— The House Public Works Committee approved a bill yesterday authoriz- ing the construction of a seawall at | Nome, Alaska. the instrumentation is quite com- plete. When all the -players are put together, there will be 52 gsters in the “Massed Band.” Al Ven- tur is director of the various bands. e HOSPITAL NOTES Admitted to St. Ann's yesterday were Mrs. Andrew Hanson of Pe- tersburg and Basil Riley for medical trea‘ment. ’ Those discharged were, Mfs. Earl Ritter and baby girl; Mrs. William Smith and baby girl; Edward Dick and G. Leo Cyr, At the Government Hospital, Mary Adams of Kake was admitted for medical treatment. * —— IN FROM SITKA Oliver Colby of Sitka is staying at the Hotel Juneau. | range to meet the entic:. = require- | universities of the United States. ] THE LOAN PLAN “Students who nave finished high | schooi and are granted a loan to| |attend college usually receive In:m.&i from $150 to $300 per a school year. | They are expected to attend a col-| lege or university of recognized| standing. The loan is available to them only so long as their work meets a satisfactory standard. The loans extend from one to four years,| depending .upon the type cof course which a student is following. Stu-| !dents are expected to provide their! own . transportation from their homes to the college. The loan fund can apply on tuition, books supplies, | board and room and other necces- sary expenses of attending college. “Students are expected to start| repayments on their loans approxi- mately six months after completing their course of training. Loans carry a very low rate of interest and the time allowed for repayment is very generous. Loans which are not re- paid in due time, however, become collectable through the Department of Justice, if necessary. | “Plans are now underway whereby loans may be made from funds pro- |vided by the various Native stores land other industries. These loans will bear a low rate of interest and National Distillers Products Corporation, New rork « Kentucky Whiskey A Blend « 86 Proof « 65% Grain Neutral Soirits now avallable at 840 tf Genuine Le 25 F0R 17.50 Yes,We MeanIt! because that’: OUR ANNIVERSARY OFFER A $25.00 ”Roil” Machinless OIL PERMANENT WAVE FOR ONLY-8$17.50 That’s our way of saying “THANK YOU”. Our practical expression of appreciation for the fine patronage you have given The Baranof Beauty Salon during the year starting April 14, 1947, when we took over the business. This Offer for ONE Week ONLY Beginning Monday, we will give you one of these popular treatments at our reduced Special Anniversary Offer Price. All work is performed with oil. No drying out of hair afterwards. Your hair remains soft and lustrous. The maximum in comfort and super- latively fine grooming is yours with a “ROIL” $25.00 wave at only $17.50. But remember, it is for ONE WEEK ONLY so phone 538 NOW for YOUR RESERVATION, and save at this reduced price. The Baranof Beauty Salon MRS. ILAH PARMENTER, Proprietor Assisted by MRS. FLOSSIE FORAN, Beautician (Open Evénings by Appointment)