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PAGLE TWO INTRODUCING MRS. EDWARD D. LARSEN he Orient jade earrings and such it’s| Larsen hypnotized - to Alaska, The stol » white peacocks o white peaks of Alaske n easy choice actording to Mrs ard D. Larsen of the Office Price Administration here {Mrs. Larsen (who was not Mrs Before Glacierland, Mrs. Larsen at that time, however) re- Larsen d urn to alized that she wanted to be a roll- China, which left befors|ing stone and, goal of goals, roll the war. o the show busines Actually cocks she Knowing nothing apout proic remembers S0 NOS y were in sional dancing she headed east Japan (Fujiya Hotel, Miyanoshita) |—with the help of a genuine, but they ware lovely and together king-sized rabbit's foot—lanc with S} cosmopolitan gaie-|{a New York chorus ‘line ty, the of Pek-| Later—the rabbit's f Temple blogsomms, | ing 1 ds had M then she cam ¥ ts in Oregon when 0! saw to 1 she Just the white p - Ig bidden Gard: Ball teac nein 1er- R®TMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU JUNEAU, ALASKA WEATHER BULLETIN DATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M1, 120TH MERIDIAN TIME Max. temp. TODAY last Lowest 24 hr Precip. 03 Trace U. 8. DEPA Weather at 4:30am 4:30am ethel Cordova Dawson Edmonton “airbatks Haines unean uneau Airpert iSetchikan iZotzebue Grath Rain Clear Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Rain Cloudy Clear Cloudy Drizzle Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy rthw s of the northern Guif cf rainfall during the pas overcast with only and h hich nerally received no rai ‘\l RINE WEATHER BUL hs I"I‘l‘\' Reports from Marine Statfons at 12:30 P. M. Today ht of Wares (Sea Condition) 1 foot d Vel 10 Weather Temp, Di Clear Clo! Pt Station ldied Rock » Finger 1 1dy Cloudy Cloudy fant 4 1 3 Zero Zero 10 Zero | 6 Retreat i Cloudy 4‘7 swW MARINE FORECAST FOR THE PERIOD ENDING THURSDAY FVENING: Protected waters of Southeast Alaska—variable winds gener- utherly 15 miles ver hour. Cutside W Dixen Entrance o xynuuflnutiv terly winds!1s mil p hour. Clc v with rain be- ginninz Thursday morning except in southern portion; fog in coast areas t P extreme THE OIL BURNER You Have Been Waiting For S HERE? If your present burner is worn out: REPLACE IT NOW,WITH A NEW WILLIAMS OIL-O-MATIC. We have standard sizes on hand for immediate installation. More homes are heated by Oil-O- Matic jhan any other make automatic burner. . i e Smith Qil Burner Service- “OIL HEAT THAT SATISFIES—PLUS SERVICE” PHONE 476 214 Second Street T e T T T T T oy 2 ATTENTION--ELKS? INFORMAL CABARET DANCE Saturday, May 25 MATHERY'S ORCHESTRA FOR ELKS and LADIES Tickets available from Emblem Club members or Steward at the Club Make Table Reservations by Friday Noon PHONE 112 " Dancing Starts at 10 P. M. ntertainment . MARECHA — SO HULA DANCER FREE LUNCH " THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU ALASKA > WE sed to one of the Schuberts nd thence into a ballroom specialty team. As “Andree” of “Force and An- dree” she twinkled and glided down the east coast, through Mexico City and Bermuda, and across the drink to London. The team later dancec through all the major cities on the Continent, except Berlin and Vienna |Mrs. Larsen bitterly regrets miss- ing Vienna. Force and Andree” broke up on their return to New York and An- dree came back to the Pacific " Coast — specifically to the Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer Studios in Holly- ; wood. As a script girl she worked with Playwright Lillian Hellman, Sat- iMist Dorothy Parker and such screen personalities at Merle Ober- Gary Cooper and Brian Aherne It was glamorous, but letters from friends in the Orient lured Mrs, Larsen from Merle, Brian and even Gary. She left San Francisco on the Tatsura Maru in 1940. Of her year in the Orient, Larsen says “I only scratched of that fascinating world The Japanese already had occu- pied Pcking and were jailing Brit- ish subjects and Shanghai had n bombed when Mrs. Larsen ar- ved. Despite the threatening at- mosphere 2 found Peking a fab- ulous ¢ and even the Japanese at work preserving the dazzling Forbiddzn Gardens. Mrs. Larsen was planning a trip down the China coast when the American Consulat2 advised;immed- iate raturn to the United States. sailed for home in the late of 1941, at M:2tro-Goldwyn-Mayer and busy on a war short entitled “Why We Fight,” Mrs. Larsen was of] a job with a construction company in Whitehorse. With the exception of six weeks cutside she hes been in the North- land cinee, Jiving in Kodiak, An- chorage and now Juneau. She ar- rived kere last December. said the life of a rolling stone is wonderful if you finally roll to halt in a completely satisfactory },l‘m\ to m.ay on Mrs. surface the the part of NURSES INSTITUTE |Ra!e lncreasei DISCUSSES PUBLIC HEALTH PROBLEMS Problems facing nursing form an integral part of the problems fac- ing public health as a whole, said Miss Pearl Mclver, Chief Nurs Consultant of the U. 8. Public Health Service at Bethesda, Mary-, land, speaking this morning before yoppers last October had been in t;’:m;q‘g:gré:z;‘:“:} 9 e Teth effect for the full year it would third-day session. here. have been nvccsm\r\‘ L? l_ncxfase She said that developments in freight and ;Tassefmex “(‘;“C,‘.',“cs the general health which affect pub- g I,l"' Su“hflfgt 164 .,‘3‘ l;.e“é lic health nursing include: and without the surcharge 35.0 1.A country-wide expansion of P&t preventive and health p'cmunlnml Big services. ““ 2.Adoption of prepai edical 5 b care p]lam which r‘wigl fi“q‘l"‘;;l‘h', have to be increased -1354? percent services of public health nurses in to balance expense with income. the Home ‘el of - the Kitk. | The Agriculture Department was 3. An expansion in hospital and suthorized to intervene in the health center developments with em- | Bearing on its plea that agricultur- phasis on greater coordination be- terests “will be directly and tween ths community hospitals and ersely affected by any increase public health agencies. in rates for transportation cf farm Immediate needs in public health Products. nursing include: ” 1. Many more public health nur 5. To render a complete public bealth nursing program we nced at least one nurse per each 2,000 of the population. Considering num- bers only, Alaska, with a ratio of abcut one nurse por each 2,500 population, is more adeguately cov- cred than most of the states. How- er, difficult travel, sparsely settled arcas, and a high disease rate must be concidered also when estimating needs. | 2. Better qualified nurses. A suc- cessful health nurse must have a e sound education in - professional e qursing plus a thorough knowledge' o rain beginning Thursday of the field of public health. { © morning. Cocler = Thu 3. Closer coordination between o ¢ ¢ @ ¢ © .0 © © o o the work of the public health nur- PURLEER L0 P ses and that of the nurses in the 1n java it is believed that if a hospitals so that there will con- hyshand will slit the wife’s robe um;]ity in the nursing care given yijth from throat to each patient. hem she will Besides Miss Mclver, nursss at- po froe ie pains of child- teriding the Institute are as follow birth. Mrs. Winifred Porter, Calitornia State Health Cept, Dorothy K.! Is Profested At {Continued [rom Page One) Boost To Balance ht traffic only, with ad- said, rates would Oon diticr > o WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. WEATHEK SUREAU) Temperatures for 24-Hour Period 6:30 0'Clock This Morning e« o o In Juneau—Maximum minimum, 41. At Airport minimum, 37. [+ 59; Maximum, 59; WEATHER FORECAST (Juneau and Vicinity) Cloudy tonight with light ®eceececsescccsccse o from > HERE BESS (ROSS § BRINGS ! TIDINGS OF SECOND | DIVISION ELECTION Bess Cross, of Kotzebue, Second Divisian Representative now assur- ed of a Democratic nomination for the Senate, has arrived from her home Division enroute to the States a buying trip for her chain n( 3ering Coast trading posts. Mrs. Cross brought unofficial primary election tidings from the last large precinct’ still unreported in the Second Division—the St. Lawrence Island community of Gambell. She is well satisfied with her own showing at Gambeli where she collected all 60 Democratic votes cast. Frank Whaley, incum- bent who for a time was pressing Mrs. Cross closely for the second Senate spot, received no Gambell votes according to reports reaching her. In the contested race for the Democratic Commissioner of Labor nomination, Mrs, Cross reports that C. Johnson cut further into Walter P, Sharpe’s narrow lead by carrying 43 Gambell votes against 17 cast for Sharpe. Although previcus advices reach- ing Juneau had indicated that Gambell was the last Second Di- | vision precinct not reported, Mrs. E 'DR. ALBRECHT WILL D i Whitney, Marie Dorsey, Margaret| Louio DE FLORIAN BELE Bixby, Juneau; Sister Mary Bert- : hold and Sister Mary Epiphan: of yesterday from the River Biv ity Hoghital. Tunehts: Mrs. Tiey-He (lans Jo spend eSversl Magnhild Bogu?, Mrs. Nancy Wet- days in Juneau and then return to mare and Geneviave Sheridan, A. N, His home. He is a guest ‘at the 8., Ketchikan; . Verna Huge and Gastineau Hotel. Mary Hankins, Sitka; Catherine ¢ Smulling, the Hygien2; Esther Ba-| FROM THE STATES con, Wrangell, and Priscilla’ Park-. Arrivals from the States regist- er, and Mary Jacobs, both with the ering at the Baranof are: Walter Alaska Native Se 2, Juncau. B. Seelig, Washington, D. C.; Lois e . Wharton, Mrs. Kelly Larson, F. M. NORWAY'S WORST i~ ° * e PLANE ACCIDENT TAKES 13 LIVES OSLO, Norway, May 22.—Thir- teen persons were killed today in Norway's worst, flying accident when ADN.L. (Norwegian Airline Company) Junkers plane crashed into Osle Fjord soon after leaving Fornebu Airfield near Oslo. The Swedish painter Isaac Grunewald and the Norwegian au- thor Ronald Fangen were among the victims. e e——— T, Alaskan ' FLAVOR-ite for over 30 years “Spices and Extracts e N = URE FOODS ":.“‘"“ SEATTLE, WASINGTON © BE SPEAKER AT (C| Dr. S. Earl Albrecht, Territorial Wash. Hearing . | e s ) ) RAY WITH HiS GUITAR Cross says that the up-Kobuk com- : Commisioner of Health, will be ’l':l.\llrlll(‘l}. :)(r Shungnak is also yet to' guest speaker at the Chamber of € ard from. Commerce lunicheon-meeting to- SO0 | morrow noon in the Baranof Gold VEIS Io DRAw FoR ‘R‘:;rm Albrecht, recently refurned CATERPILLAR 8 A. M. from Washington, will speak on jhis trip to the States, and report & lon progress that has been made i dTl:;\. D!hse (’Sa“[:;{)\: im;rzr:::&zshs; toward the establishment of a Tu- Juneau Sales List No 4 is available ?:r'yc““’s‘s FoNeL i e e""‘ Hhe hilke “Has ¥ nnouncle)g and a Taku Post, Veterans of Foreign ' drcw'nv “will .heflheld at 8 o'clock Wars, will speak on the 1946 Bud- Bene dy Poppy Day to be sponsored by sharp tomorrow morning from the % the VFW Friday. names of those who have registered i their desire to buy this tractor. ;' COASTAL AIRLINES IN, OUT YESTERDAY Alaska Coasial Airlines flew the following yesterday: to Sitka, Bruce Hart, Earl Thatcher, B. Hempstead, M. Neilsen, Mrs. A. Kliennat, J. ! Hoots, S. Spurkland, Andy Har- lund, R. W. Johnson, E. Sharrod, |3, R. Clark; from Sitka, Sara Termwald, Carol Harington, Luke ' Little, Mrs. N. Shafer, Qle Ness; to Hoonah, G. Einstead, A. Bandro; from Hoonah, V. Logan, O. Heiz- | nan, Fred Miller, E. Isturis; to Pel-| ican, J. Cooper, J. Hopen; from Pelican, ' Jim Lindegarde, Joan Walker. L. C. Bivlowe; to Wrangell, ! M. Miller, L. M. Owens, Mrs. R._ bchwartz, i At Elks' Hall ONLY! N P e e BENEFIT DANCE A benefit dance to be held Fri- day night at the AB. Hall has| been anricunced, with the wearer of a memorial poppy beinz admitted. Albert Peterson has voluntecred his services with the accordion. There will be square dancing as well as modern dancing. — e FROM KETCHIKAN Bess Meyer of Ketchikan arriv- ed here yesterday. She is szagn! » g at the Baranof. B SR O, FROM KODIAK Lt. Comdr. E. S. Fletcher of Ko~ diak 1s a guect at the Bai:ed hi A o A o TR The adminisirator of veterans ai- airs said 80 percent of those al- veady taking courses were in educa- icnal institutions with the others in trainine-on-the-job. | “This tidal wave has, in places, engulfed our universities,” he said in an address at the National Con- ference of social work. “Veteran students already hnve challenged our educational institu- tions to see to it that their edu- cation of training shall not be de- nied by lack of planning and ex-! pansion to care for these swollen | loads.” | 700,000 VETS ARE TAKING TRAINING COURSES; 61 BILL BUFFALO, N. Y., May 22—Gen-| eral Omar N. Bradley said today 700,000 veterans are taking training tourses under the GI Bill of Rights and nearly 2,000,000 others have in- dicated they may be planning addi- tional training and education. e e o o e | l | | i ] DNESDAY, MAY 22, 1946 | New—Used—Rebuilt AUTO PARTS Motors, Transmissions, Gener- ators, Starters, Carburators, Shock Absorbers, Chev. Knee Action Units, and a million other parts—1925 to 1943, ‘We Mail and Ship Promptly Seattle Auto Wrecking Co. | 1950—1st Avenue South Seattle, Wash. a SMART ... WESKET or JERKIN SUITS in Spring’s Lovely Pastel Colors in 1009, Wool 0 i Rayon and 50% Wool Jersey 17.95 and 14.95 JUNIOR SIZES 9—17 AS NEW PLASTIC PURSES in Colors 5 JONES -STEVENS The House of Swansdown [ lh vy SR NS e ... time out for sociable vefresbment All work and no-play is nobody’s idea of fun. So the whole family brightens up when Dad sounds off with Have a Coke and the frosty bottles are passed 'round. Everybody relazes for sociable refreshment and the friendly pause. After that the job gets'easier, goes quicker BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY Juneau Cold Storage Co. ) s e e e o SO “Coca-Cola” and its abbreviation " are the registered trade- luct of The Coca-Cola Company. . © 1946 The CC Co, >