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-—n PAGE EIGHT DUNLAP, MAGORTY WIN FIRST AWARDS BY KIWANIS (LUB A tradition wa; started to: the Baranof Hote Gold Re n presentation by the Juneau wanis Club of the National Arion Foundation Award to two members H of the Class of '49, Juneau High School. On behalf of the club, President James McClellan gave the music awards to Clair Dunlap and Jerry * Magorty for excellence in band and choral work, respectively. The Kiwanis Club will make the presentation annually to the stu- dent selected in each field by a ccmmittee of school officials and music instructors Each of the happy young received a bronze medal and matching lapel pin on which legendary poet-musician, Arion, pictured riding the dolphin that, so men a is mythology has it, carried him ashore in a miraculous escape from K danger. Both boys acknowledged their awards in brief little ing credit to their hig structors, Miss Beatrice McNeely, | choral director, and Joe Shotner, band director. They also were in-! h school troduced. Telection of Arion award recip- ients is based on unusually high requirements. These include better- than-average scholarship, outstand- | ing co-operation, general musician- ship, performance, attendance, am- kition, diligence, insp! ion to others, personal habits and “quali- 1.cations to carry on best tra- ditions of the school.” The award will be made annually to graduating students in the two iranches of music founda- tion provides for a similar award for orchestral work, where there 1s such a school activity.) Dunlap has been student leader of the band for a r, airecting for rehearsals, at assemblies and basketball games. He alo is a| member of the Juneau City Band. Dunlap plays the bass clarinet, | baritone saxophone and piary. He | plans to major in music at college. | Magorty, according to Miss Mc- | Neely, is always dependable and has done outstanding choral work | for four years. His baritone voice has been heard in the Juneau Men's Chorus, | as well as on student programs. He was unable to participate in this| year’s operetta, but has had lead-| ing roles in earlier ones. Magorty, | whose name is much heard this! season in another activity caseball | —plans to work a year, then go to | college. Bill Winn, seated at the speaker's | place of honor to the right of the | club president, had come prepared | to tell of his recent European trip. However, due to the length of the | award ceremony, which included | picture-taking by Member Eckley | K. Guetin, there were only three | minutes left for the “main event.” After a hasty. huddle, Px'esidemi Jim announced that Winn had, agreed to make the complete talk | next week, rather than cut it to such a shred. NO STORY HOUR TO BE HELD SATURDAY There will be no story hour at| the Public Library during vacation | Bible Schools and Scout Camps. Notice will be given when the! Story Hour is resumed. | Mrs. Robert Dunn has told the stories to the younger group of| children. Mrs. Robert Bell has at-| tended many mornings looking at- | ter the childrens’ wraps. | ——— | Now is the tuue to put your fur coats in storage. We have the only cold fur vault in Juneau. Come to our office. Chas. Goldstein and Co. 91 uf " Coming Friday night to thel Country Club, new Hollywood Floor Show Attraction! Are You Cominz cut? 1t | | KINY AT 7:00 P. M MONDAY WEDNE DAY the | | ncon with students ] i s | ties stand in line aboard the liner President Wilson as it cisco (May 14), brin; g them from Communis! e ihre tened Shanghai. passports for clearance by immigiation authorilies. (P Wirephoto. AFTER 34 YEARS Impressed with the growth, the potential possibilities ot A. is Dr. Henry Roecloud, regional rep- | resentative of the Northwest Divis- on of the U. S. Indian Bureau, who | has spent the past week in South- | ast Alaska, returning here atter a! 34-year absence. ! Dr. Roecloud, who is a graduate | ' of Yale University with his doctor- ate in anthropology and a Wine- bago Indian, left aboard Pan Amer- | can yesterday afte 1 bound for stop at Metlakatla on Annette | nd before returning to home offices in Portland While here, he appeared as Com- | mencement speaker at the Mt.| Edgecumbe ANS school at Sitza and cted as baccalaureate speaker for| Sheldon Jackson Junior College. ! Dr. Roecloud reported being ve favorably impressed with ANS Mt Edgecumbe medical and edumuonal% programs. He described as unique ! in the country, the correlated pro- | gram of rehabilitation and educa-. ion particularly for orthopedic and | tuberculosis patients in the M:.| Edgecumbe institution. While never having been to Sitka before, Dr. Roecloud recalls having n in Juneau, Haines and Skag- way and southern Alaskan cities back in the pioneering days of 1915. | JUNEAU SCHOOLS END 48-49 TERM All Juneau puklic schools closed | up shop for the summer today at] and taculty a members looking forward to a more than three-month vacation trom rooms. First day of school for the 1949- 50 term will be Tuesday, September 6, with first faculty meetings sche- duled for September 2. Schools were open for tew hours this mcrning as grade reports were handed out and books and equipment turned in, then it was all over for the 48-49 session a MAKE POPPY WREATHS Tomorrow at the Dugout. Volun- teers welcome. Tatoo marks can be removed only by removing the skin itself ——— - ———— What are Your | Jewels Worth? NOT THAT we really want to know but merely to make you realize what you would lose if a burglar stole them. What protection have vou against such loss? Burglary Insurance will indemnify you for their loss, Shattuek Agency Seward Street Phone 249 Juneau v | I "BA.(iK TO AlASKrAV Retfurn fo Alaska Is Big Thrill, Says Dorothy Crawford Derethy Crawford, monclogist ¢ pearing at the 20th Century Theate: tonight under the auspices of the Juneau Concert Asseciation, said to- day that her return trip to Alaska is one of the big thrills ot a fuil season c¢f appearance throughout the count Miss Crawford, who was received with warm approval here last year. s making her final appearance tor the season and will return from here to her home in San Francisco. She arrived yesterday aboard Pan American Airways, coming from her last performance at St. Paul, Minn., where her audience was 12,009 wmembers of the St. Paul Women's [nstitute. Miss Crawfcrd is not the first member of her tamily to make th: trek to the north. Her father, James C. Crawford, now near 90 years of age, came to Alaska as ¢ correspordent for the Portland Ore- gonian during the turn of the cen- tury rush for gold. Appearance tonight of Miss Craw- ford marks the close of the Ju- neau Concert Association season. The program will begin at 8:30. NEW Miss Edna Miller of Vancouver, BC. arrived on the Princess Louise for duty at St. Ann’s hospital as the new surgical nurse. She came from London 18 months ago and since then has been at the Childrens Hospital in Vancouver, NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned was on the 17 day of May ,1949, duly appointed Administrator of the estate of Annie Hodikoff, deceased. All persons having claims against the estate of deceased will present them, with proper vouchers and duly verified, to the undersigned at Juneau, Alaska, within six (6) months from the date of this notice. Dated at Junezu, Alaska, May 17, 1649. R. BOOCHEVER, Administrator. First publication, May 18, 1949. Last publication, June 8, 1949. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR | Shéngliai Evacuees Reach U. 5. | -| scout camp Sunday by seven Sitka !viding the latter group is able to | have the largest contingent, with | RC 1 steams up San Fran- | Most of the passengers iold their | POPPY WREATHS 0 | BE MADE TOMORROW: | TURNOUT IS' WANTED Poppy wreaths are to be made | tcmorrow by the members ot the| | American Legion Auxiliary and| their friends. Work will start atj the American Legion Dugout at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning and will| continue through the afterncon and| !irto the evening if necessary. The Auxiliary women want all| members to show up sometime dur- | ing the working hours and give a| and. A potluck luncheon will be| served. | The wreaths are for business { houses and other places and orders| |have been or will be placed for, { them. This afternoon at 5 o'clock over‘ RINY and at the same hour tomor- | Mernice Murphy will ‘broad- | a story of wreath service and! equest for orders. | PAN AM CLIPPERS CARRY 35 TUESDAY Thirty-five passengers - pwere g;ts in | a*oard Pan American fli and out of Juneau yesterday as| follows: | From Seattle: Marion Funk, Les- lie Miller, William Nance, Dorothy | Crawford, Earl Bright, M. Shell,| John Landro, Peter Lathrikis, Lyell Ream, Floris McLarén, Berijamin Sztuk, Walter Walsh, Wayne Doo- little, G. E. Bassett. | To Fairbanks: Jack Boulet, Harold White, Al Anderson, George, Jones, Howard Lyng, and Mrs. Clif- ford Smith. | To Seattle: Gertrude Palmer,| Roberta Bell, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Winstead, Jack P. Palmer, R. V.| Buker, Frank Carson, John Aiken, R. S. @llen, Jean Allen,J. E. Stobbs, | H. Hallette, J. M. Hicks. To Annette: Dr. Henry Roecloud. A suit of armor in the Metro- ‘poma'n Museum of Art is made of | 219 steel plates held together by | 1,400 rivets and 85 straps. | Coming Friday night to the| | Ccuntry Club, new Hollywood Floor | Show Attraction! Are You Coming| cat? 1t RRRRRRRS super-permanent Superchrome o Fill the “51” pen with this Then watch! For Superchrome has took 17 years to 5 colors are up to n ordinary inks, as long as the paper ting pair exclusively for it. dries as you write. a special formula it achieve. In addition, all 60% more brilliant tha and they stay brilliant lasts. Try this dry-wisl Prices: Quink 25¢ and 35¢, ink made Each word oday. Superchrome 50¢ M, Wis, U. 5. A a7set | scoutmaster, has three of its mem- | Eagle River camp. | Credit Bureau of Juneau, has re- | turned from Seattle where she at- | tended a four-day conference of some 600 credit bureau and ccllec- | tion service managers and credit| granters. This meeting of credit | and collection executives was spon- sored by the Eighth District of the' v —— WEDNESDAY, MAY 25,1949 Associated Credit America, The general theme of the con- sumer credit conference was: “How to better serve credit granters and the credit seeking public.” Topics discussed at the meeting were: Consumer credit conditions in 1949; credit and collection trends and management problems. Credit executives from the states of Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana were present, also execu- tives from British Columbia, Al- berta and Saskatchewan, Canada, as well as from Alaska. The meetings provided inspira- tion and new ideas which resuited from contacts with leading credit executives from the northwest. Bureaus of BOY SCOUTS WILL LEAVE FOR CAMP NEXT SUNDAY PM. Fifty Juneau and Douglas toy will be joined at Eagle River scouts boys and their Scoutmaster, pro- work out the problem of transpor- tation to Juneau. The American Legion troop 613, Chester Zenger, Scoutmaster, will 24 of its members on hand for the two-weeks camp. Troop 23, spon- cored by the Episcopal Church, will have 18 boys in camp, according to reservations made to date. Chuck Buttrey is Scoutmaster of this troop. Douglas Volunteer Firemen's trcop 610 has five boys registered for camp, with the possibility ot ceveral others also attending. The Juneau Lions Ciub troop 614, with the Rev. Walter Soboleff, acting ELKS GOING TO TWO MEETINGS MONTHLY There will be a regular mee.ng of Juneau Lodge No. 420, B. P. O. Elks tonight at 8 o'clock. Atter the regular business session motion pictures of land and waterfowl shooting will be shown. These pic- tures were produced by Field and Stream Magazine and are being shown by ccurtesy of the Juneau Gun Club. This will be wie last weekly meet- ing of the Elks until September. During June, July and August meetings will be held on the second and fourth Wednesdays of each month. with reservations for the TS Boys will leave Juneau and Doug- las at 12:30 p.m., Sunday, going to the end of the Eagle River Road in transportation arranged ty their | own troop. First meal to be served at the camp will be supper Sunday night, according to scout executive Maurice Powers. Each scout will pack in his own equipment, with the exception of bedding rolls or bags, which will be | picked up at 9 am., Friday morn- ing in Juneau. It is expected that h boy will carry in a reasonable pack this year, since last year several sent all of -their equipment Ly boat and this was not consid- | ered as good scouting for the campers, Each troop is to hike into camp as a unit, and boys are not to attempt to go into camp before the arrival time of 2 p.m. Sunday afternoon, since facilities and lead- | crship will not be there to receive them any earlier. Parents and friends are invited te visit the camp on Sunday, June | 5. which is regular “Visitors' Day” fcr the camp, Powers said. HAVE YOU AN PLORER'S FOREHEAD ? HIGH, SHARPLY CURVED FURROWS REVEAL LOVE FOR NEW EXPERIENCES. OWNER WILL RAIGE AN APPRECIATIVE EYEBROW OVER A *DOUBLE-RICH" CREAM OF KENTUCKY MANHATTAN { SUE KENNEDY BACK | FROM CREDIT MEET Alaska Sune Kennedy, of the Fine Blended Whiskey, 86 Proof, 70% grain neutral spirits. © 1948, Schenley Dist. Corp., N. Y. Ex-281 'i GGN SNOW WHITE SHIRTS INatl0:00 . . . .. .. ... 0OUTat4:00 DIAPER SERVICE $2.50 per week Reliable and Satisfactory Work Make Snow White Service Phone 299 Ask Your Neighbors Who Patronize ?Snnw White Laundry You HAve It When You N;go I by Gin EXpres®: Your best bet for quick delivery Is Alr Express + ++ fast, dependable service by Alaska Coastal, @t low, economical rates. Your letter or wire te your merchant, requesting delivery by Air Ex- press, assures you of having your merchandise when you most need it (hréugh to completion, says Me “AYB & WHIIEI.EV 3 fcmk:‘ ]}:glggngh “the ;x‘:hzau; will & i e -4 3 GET'CONTRACT FOR ™ |5 v, e e o TEE HARBOR ROAD The 750-foot strip of road con- nects the highway and the ferry S ramp. At the bid-opening this morning in the office of Frank L. Metcalf, Highway Engineer, the low bid was the only bid, and conformed to estimates for the Tee Harbor ramp road. Hayes and Whiteley Enterprise of EARL BRIGHT HERE _Earl Bright, Fish and Wildlile Service vessel supervisor, arrived from S_eame yesterday, coming to get the fisheries patrol fleet in Juneau bid $3345, and will be|shape for summer duty. awarded the contract. .. .. ... ., After he finishes his work in Ju- Constructigh " is, fo {start’ the first fnéau, Bright Jwill go’ o to Sitk of the week, and will be pushed| Wrangell and Ketchikan. pillows blankets...even an electric razor or baby kit. You feel completely “at home” ina big 4-engine Clipper % : For frequent, dependable service call ... BARANOF HOTEL — PHONE 106 21w AnERICAN é":;;\ Worio Atewars 7| *Trade Mark," Pam Amarican Airways, Inc. “h ,”““fi‘-’ TO SEATTLE « HAWAII * ROUND-THE-WORLD ¢ KETCHIKAN: | JUNEAU ‘© WHITEHORSE * FAIRBANKS * NOME WELCOM Visitors of Juneau To The Nugget Shop Famous for CURIOS A visit to the Nugget Shop will acquaint you with much of the native lore of Alaska through the many native artifacts on display, | including genuine Native-made TOTEMS BASKETWARE MOCCASINS NUGGET JEWELRY - POLAR BEAR RUGS Antique Jewelry, China and Art Objects _ Eskimo and Indian ANTIQUES and RELICS .. . See the PAINTINGS by ALASKAN ARTISTS : A Large Selection of Books on Alaska by Noted Authors Alfil:: Souvenir Handkerchiefs, Table Cloths, Scarves and many others includ- ing Albums, Paintings and Photographs. The Gift Headquarters of a Thousand Happy Surprises. o Let us Wrap and Mail for you the Gifis you choose for your friends . Come-in and browse around The NUGGET SHOP /117 ¢ j@dytsedved by mail are given prompt and i Ay chinsdn careful attention ¥