The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 25, 1943, Page 2

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TEN COMPLETE RED CROSS NUTRITION COURSE LAST NIGHT 3 | The last meeting of Nutri- | tion class held in the Government School for the past few weeks con- have the the vened last evening. Classes been conducted by Lydia Fohn- Hansen of the Extension Service the in co- University of Alaska operation with the Red Cross and t Indian Affairs. Ten regularly and will| tes for the se and will University Ex- Short Course. completing the course were: Margaret Borbridge, Margorie Crop- ley, Mabel Cropley, Daisy Hayes, Ruth Hayes, Dorothy Jack, Mar- aret Wanamaker, Eva Wilson and Mabel Morgan, Supervisor of Nurs- es and Elvira irstad, Public Health Nurse of the Indian Bureau L vear several classes were nheld in Native villages but this is first class that has completed e entire course and are entitled to the Red Cross Certificate. Sim- will be held wherever sufficient to make it ilar classes attendance is worth while FIFTY ARRIVE FROM SOUTH: EIGHT LEAVE Seattle last ni Henry I. Besancon, Lloyd C.| Beckworth, Fordyce E. Hall, Don- ald E. Kurtz, Bert A. Linne, Chatles ! E. Land, William W. MicDrnald | Melvin C. Markham, Maurice Moore, Erl B. Onsolen; Mrs: Mildred Z.| Onsoien, William H. Oden. | George Rogers, William A. Rudd Frank A. Spahn, John H. Alvord,| Luther Adcox, Marvin B. Ander-| son Arrivals from were Carlisle D. Casperson, Roben, H. Casperson, Elmer R. Currie, An- dre P. Dembowski, Herbert G. Drews. ! Artie G. Ermeloff, Frederick Fink- bainer, Joseph Hart, James L. Hay- den, Lloyd Herrick, Edwin E. Kalis- ta, Leonard E. Olbert, Thomas G. McKee, Lester Moore, M. N. Etter, Albert Schroetter, Paul H. Shoe- maker, Glen S. Shuman, Joe N. Tertorice, Virgil Van Alstine, Oscar L. Wheeler and Earl Willlams. | Passengers arriving from South- east Alaska ports were, from Ketch- ikan, Miss Margaret A. Conrardy;| from Wrangell: N. Simraise and T. Wing; from Petersburg: Miss Wilma J. Russell, N. A. McEachran, Howard Jenson, A. L. Florence, W. G. Steear, Mrs. Josephine Steear and Mrs. M. Twete Leaving here for Sitka were: Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dolphin, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hagerup and daugh- ter, George Ward, J. C. Finnegan and Mrs. J. S. Jeffrey. ————— THEY HAVE WALKED, TOO DANVILLE, N. Y.—You can't stop the Livonia High 8chool basketball team! Recently, a heavy snow storm | threatened to keep them from a‘ game. The boys engaged a sleigh. Previously, the cagers had to hitch | hike to a game on the back of a truck. How fo Relieve, Bronchitis | Creomulsion relieves promptly be- cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in- flamed bronchial mucous mem- branes, Tell your druggist to sell you & botile of Creomulsion with the un- derstanding you must like the way it qulckly allays the cough ar you are to have your monéy back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chesf Colds, Bionchitis TRIANGLE CLEANERS ew Location Junecu Laundry Building * “for better appearance” PHONE |worked out |may apply to his commanding of- HAWAIIAN HOSPITALITY_pvt. August Budsig, at a'party in Honolulu for more than (olleges Are o Play PERRY CARL IS New Roles After War; | e;m;,e':avye\;li!!alzelp‘ AWAITING EXAM Perry Carl, former radio ,an- (Continued from Page One) nouncer, has applied for entrance P lin the Army Air Corps, Chicago, portance than winning the war. |but must wait arrival of the Ju- As for lhosei \'Dufllg I“e’:ll’l:\ t:‘v‘;‘“;hmgu registration papers before his late 'teens and early Uwel |application can be considered, his are on their way toward degrees! 3 or working on them, the Army and‘;‘;h‘a"'flwzgf; &;l i ghakion Navy are going to give them every g S . y e ossible opportunity to make good.' In the meantime it will be nec- pqse essary for him to wait for the next h all the details aren't AL Jvfl some rules and Army draft, expected during the regulations are clarifying the situ- Next few days. Then if he can pass the stiff physical examination he ation. First, any enlisted man (whether he has had college work Will proceed to Fort Sheridan for orders, Service Men Can Secure Camp Show ficer for college training. If he has the stuff, he will be' assigned to some college for probably a max- imum of 2 1/2 years or that por- tion of it which it takes to get this| degree V5T g pAILY ALASKA Eibike jUREAD ALASKA Milwaukee, Wis., and Mapuana Bishaw put on an impromptu hula dance 500 Wisconsin servicemen stationed in Hawaii. DR. L. SALAZAR T0 ASSUME POST AT GOVT. HOSP. Dr. Louis E. Salazar will arrive soon to take up his duties as head of the Government Hospital here, Dr. Jacob P. Eberhardt, medical director for the Territorial Bureau of Indian Affairs, announced today. Dr. Salazar replaces Dr. H. J. Powers, who with Mrs. Powers re- turned to Los Angeles, early in December, where he was to enter the U. S. Army service with the Medical Corps. The new resident physician of the Juneau Government Hospital has had a wide experience with the 2 Bureau of Indian Affairs hospital§ over the Territory and is thorughly familiar with the organization. After many years without a va-{ he and the past cation, spent the States, prior to his assumption his family have several weeks in tions, the extent of cooperation of- fered by faculties, etc. Students will be under military supervision and will ‘be uniformed and paid ($50 a moih or more and muimonanceb,‘f Successful completion of courses' will not mean that the graduates, become officers. Some will be select- | ed for Officers Candidate Schools; some will be non-commissioned technicians; some may be assigned immediately to civilian work | - Sweden Has Lost 166 Ships in War : 4 STOCKHOLM — Since the out- break of thegwar until the end of 1942, Sweden’s merchant marine| lost a total of 166 vessels, of 447,365 | gross tons, including ten nshmg‘ boats of 601 gross tons. In addition | 1011 persons lost their lives, ac- cording to a report by the Swedish Board of Trade. | The first pertoleum well in the United States was opened at Titus- nue Pa, on Augusz 27 1859. | moved across Lake Washington. HERE COMES MR HOARDER -ME MAGGIE'ME—DARLIN‘- NEIGHBOR-| WONDER WHAT wiLL | - HE WANT S TO BORROW NOW ? ME N\é%u"‘sl N?UFS{%? gaj?%’é- BY GOL\TYfl’LL FIX IT SO HE FEEL LIKE HEARIN' 'LL BE WON'T EVEN COME A LITTLE MUSIC- DELIGHTED/! IN THE HOUSE— )f’““ | He' may make this application Sk“s by wn"ng of duties in Juneau. The doctor during or at the completion of his will be accompanied by his family basic military training. Most 'teen- ) SR . |and expects to establish a home age and slightly older young men| NEW YORK, Feb. 25.— Georgia|q, m?me(ilu!(‘ly upon their ar® now in the ROTC, Army Enlisted Sothern, musical comedy dancer ., Reserve, or Naval Enlisted Reserve|dnd comedienne, has set herself up may be called into service to under- 45 @ one-woman committee to see Lo o\ go their basic training, but it isn't that service men who want to put 'RESIDENTS CONFINED apparent yet that this is to be an On their own camp shows have TO HOMES WITH FLU inflexible rule. adequate material. Ntk Bl Q‘ H“ I L el Medical, dental and vetevinary She has compiled a booklet of ;lm?l ;n( X r..“ ir ¥ urfm .‘uf students in the AER are t» be sketches and comedy bits which| O confined to their home with |called at completion of the spring|need a minimum of stage direction, | *ttacks of mild influenza. ; b el A e gt ; Also on the sick list is Capt. semester but after basic training lighting and costumes. - {will be returned to complete their| Service men who write her in Roger Su-ven.fon. of the U, 8. § studies. The same will appiy toc f the Music Box Theater, New | 31 Corps office here many premedical students, but not| York, obtain the material free, e all > . Modern Belgium became an in- L Empire Classifieds Pny' dvpendem nation in 1830. Under most circumstances stu- R | dents assigned by the Army will have no choice as to what colleges wash'n lon s (rewm n I F r ' p | they attend. Assignments will be e o I s ra( I‘e | made on a basis of availability, courses offered, attendance condi- With an unusually small turnout of men due to war- job and the call ofthearmed furces, the University of Washington Huskies had less than 100 men reporting for the first ynrkont. Here eight-man shells N D T N —. THURSDAY FEBRUARY 25, 1943 ey iy ] | l DE N IVE Earl Ovington made the first air| i mail flight in U. & history on Sep- | i tember 23, 1911. | T n E " CHILDREN FROM | e ~ JUVENILEBILL | naBSTE "SK; g | The Juvenile Bill was’amended in Tanned Nlow | L l E the Senate yesterday afternoon to n‘: a5 : :’:‘l:: and alt make its provisions apply only to e 2 ) children not eligible for the bene-|{ VALCAUDA S TEMEARY <} Alaska Trassportatien fits of the Office of Indian Affairs, | » WASHINGTON | Company thus eliminating native children | ) % from the bill and relieving the| Territory of what might have been | THE SAILINGS FROM PIER ' |an additional burden on the tax- BABAN“F GEATTLE payers. g | It was brought out in the discus- | Alaska’s Largest Apartment b3S Hotel * EVE_RY ROOM WITH TUB sion that an administrative directive | from the Secretary of the Interior'| forbids the Office of Indian Affairs | REFRIGERATION from caring for native children if | and SHOWER é the State or Territory has a law - providing for this. The bill, as in- troduced in the House by Rep. Ha vey Smith, did not draw the ¢ line. | Senators in favor of the amend- | ment thought that if Indian chil-| dren were included in the act, too| heavy a burden would have to be| carried by the Territory at a time! when expenditures should be kept at a minimum. | At the same time, however, the| question of the constitutionality of the amendment was considered and | several legal authorities were of the | opinion that the. amendment, if challenged in the courts, might be | held unconstitutional. Senators N. R. Walker, A. P. Walker and Hjal- mar Nordale voted against it. Senatoy N. R. Walker added an| amendment by unanimous consent, providing that if any parts of the act be declared unconstitutional, shall not affect the remainder oI‘ the act. H The bill will come up soon for | final passage. Reasonable Rates * Phone 800 FLY -P.AA fo SEATTLE - WHITEHORSE D. B. FEMMER—AGENT NIGHT 312 PHONE 114 (ANTEEN (lASS 10 . SERVE PRACTICE T oo FAIRBANKS - NOME lu"(“ IOMORROW Mrs. Lorena Weiss has joined | the Baranof Hotel staff as switch | board- operator, taking the place | of Miss Shirley Kemmer who is|j to leave soon for the south, | | Members of the Red Cross Can- ten Aide course which has been underway here for the last two weeks, will serve a practice meal to members of the group at the fl final meeting tomorrow. ‘While the 10-hour canteen course | ends tomorrow, a number of those who have been taking it have re- ! quested that it be extended 10 hours in order that they may qualify for full canteen work. It is planned to continue the classes for this purpose and the time at which additional classes will be held is to be decided at. tomorrow’s meeting. R e HOSPITAL NOTES BETHEL P_AN AMERICAN AIRWAYS for mmm # S‘I’OHAONS 131 Phone 106 Butler-Mauro Drug Co. | YOU CAN FLY JUNEAU to So. Franklin ) § ‘,hd( Tu}'kxch and John ,B Sul- T“NE l“ KINY 5 4 s Srom 2o Hoit | Toursaays, 0 0 1057, [l | + Anchorage Kodiak Fairbanks Mrs. Ear] Miller and baby girl left | NN Yakutat valdez Nome St. Ann's Hospital yesterday and re- + . S K b il Cordova Seward Bristol Bay Kuskokwim and Yukon Points Wednesday Friday Sunday Mrs ¥ M Lily Edwards this morning | became the mother of a baby girl, | | born at the Government Hospital. | 9 | (+~ Frances Brown has been admitted | | to the Government Hospital for 7 i R | on seare. Marjorie and Rosie Howard, sis- ALASKA STAR AIRLINES Phone 667 ters, were discharged this morning jfrom the Government Hospital. Elizabeth James was a recent out- | going patient at Hospital. the Government | " Office BARANOF HOTEL NORTHLAND TRANSPORTATION COMPANY § ) Declare your independence of a wintez sun that fails you! Get a General Electric Sun- lamp and have a tan re; less of the lack of sunli t. Day or night—in any weat —snap on a G-E Sunlamp while you shave, dress or read. This lamp, in just six minutes, gives you the ultra- violet benefits of two hours under the winter sun. Come in now. Get 2 G-E Sunlamp for yourself and your family. Look as if you just came from from the ch—all winter long! ght Phone 23 Freii Model LM4 priced at $37.50 | Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. _ Phone 6 M ALASKA COASTAL Allll‘lts Alaska———Passengers, Mail, Serving Scutheast SITKA TR[P—Seheduled Daily at 9:30 A. M. XEEN k B I Hawk Pel- Kim- Chicha- BY GEORGE MCMANUS Inlet Hoonah goon 'remxee Todd ican shan gof Sitka Juneau ..$ 8 $10 $18 $18 $18 418 $18 $18 Sitka . 18 18 m 18 18 10 10 THAT FIXED HIM- Chichagof 18 10 18 10 18 10, 5 BUT MAYEBE | Kimshan 18 10 18 10 18 w HAVE MADE A Pelican - 18 10 18 18 MISTAKE - HE Todd ... 18 18 10 10 MAY HAVE Tenakee .. 10 }: 10 WANTED THE :Inaoon - 1: ! Express Rate: 10 cents per yound—Minimum Charge 6% Round Trip Fare: Twice One-Way Fare, less 10% SCHEDULED MONDAY and THURSDAY Ketchikan ‘Wrangell Petersburg !Juneau .. $45.00 $35:00 $30.00 Petersburg 30.00 10.00 wnngeu 20.00 : 25¢ per pound—Minimum of $1.00 to ketchikan - zxpuu mu 10¢ per pound—Minimum of 60c ‘o Petersburg and Wrangell FOR, INFORMATION ON TRIPS TO BAINES, HASSELBORG, SKAGWAY, TAKU IODGE: an 512 Above rates applicable when passe nger traffic warrants Schedules and Rates Subject to C hange Without Notice.

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