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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 30, 1928. oy 1 T - X 3 T e e U T e Aluminum Inventor Honored by Oberlin Where Discovery Made Parlor Furnaces Monarch Ranges We can save you money on stoves. Juneau Y oung Hardware Co. EVH o ERRING PRINTED CREPES DE CHINE, FIGURED GHIFFON AND GEORGETTE: §; sii b vt i PRINTER SIK VOILES, G M R S & s = g Oberlin College today will dedicate a tablet to the memory of Charles M. Hall who workel his way erough the institution by beating carpets and mowing lawns, and left it $12,000,000 when he died. He discovesed the electrolytic process of mn.k!ng aluminum in a shed which may be seen at he rear of the home (above). T_he tablet will be placed on the cormer wall cf the home. Hall is pic- tured as he looked in his student days. but would lay up a great fortunc. T T ¥ A gorgeous array PLAIN CREPES e g, b ey, saEy b & 3 of sik, suitable for every need, very fing, qmdy.,, values up to $3.25 the yard—spet- ially priced this week at— $1.95 & uYee e vo rel the yard e T TR B. M. Behrends Co., lnc “The Home of Beau Monde Silks” . mem"afi(er_@‘ By LOUISE BENNETT WEAVER {REFRESHENTS FOR HALLOWE'EN Panrorn Balls +ittuts Apples Cider Ll wiches Coffeo cun I Ple Topped with "hiphea Cream th Cider Zoek Whint Fudge Nut BHHd Sandwiches . Peht Salad Sogated Popcotn and Nuts Puripkin Ple Cottee A Jellied Fruit Balad, Colored Yellow Brown fitead Sandwiches Orange Bherbet Gold Cakes . Cottee POPCORN BALLS (TEN) 2 guarts treshly popped corn 1 etip mugat 3% cup molnsses or sorghum 2 tableapoonis vinegar % eup whler 1 tablespoon butter % padon - soda. W iy ipect the . popeorn and ‘dfs /all unpopped kernels; Mix; the A?A”. inolasses; winegar ‘water jand bittter. Cook, withyut stirting, ovet & maderdte fir Atil « small portfol slowly, poured into cold water becomes brittle, “Add the 80da ahd mix woll and pour over the popeorn. Mix thorousshly with & lotig handled spoon until the sytup has become well blended with the éorn. Let stand until cpol enough to handle and thon take up by dfuls and press into badls fp the palms of the hands, Popeorn bills quickly lose their freshmess and should not stand mote thin two or three hours. The corn may bé. popped previously if when ready to be . jn balls may be rehcated in 8 ovefl, Do uot salt the pobeorn to be used in balls. i GHNUTS (Light, spiey ones) sugat fat, melted. e ‘nutmeg. powder. sugar. Add the for 2 minutes, Add » ust cnough to blend, ‘Too much | nMxing, handling of rolling will Hnukfl, the doughnuts to become tough When the ingredients*are mixed, | place upon a well fldured boatd and roll out until tha dough, fs | ofie-third of an noh thitk. Fry | 11 “deep, hot fat untl] wll Browhned on the under side, tirm %ith fork and brown the other aldé Reimove |on a fork and let dfip. . Place on yedge side by side oh d sobt paper | which will absotb Aty -suiplus | fat When cool the dduglihuts | may be covered with' pbidered |sugar and stored in an earthen. ware jar or the cobky box. Some ! persons prefer to sugar the dough- 'nuts when ready for setving. Suggestions For Hallowe'en Make small butter balls Into pumpkin shapes and fhsert stalks of parsley for the Ktemd. Dip a stick into melted chocolate and mark faees on popeorn ba'le apples, cookies, cakes and round wafers. Make jack o' lantern faces on red apples by cutting through the thin red skin. 'Smith Free attd With' Press; ‘Official ! e (Continuen trot flu One.) sy id Ban, esman’’ R T T TP ” 1 ¥ , -4 PARIS — Inconspleuousness jg! hardly & ebaraeteristic of some Bt the mow ewening gowns. A. black.| taffeth Bown of ofrmal charactes. green tagdbta, malized Facing and for- BaYs: printed on .the panels at either sidd, with iri decollet low. | keop, from print the &ontidential and personal remarks passed in the discussions. Presaging unprintable statements by “This is off the record,” he has rovealed to them some of the in- | nermost scerets of hls political land exccutivo strategy. He has allowed himselfl to be quoted di- rect upon virtually all of the im- portant questions of his ddminis. tration, and he has verbally un- dertaken teo amswer virtually all the questicns shot at him from po- litically , speaking—beth friendly and’ unfriendly newspaper editors. Informal Meetings In contrast to the highly formal meeotings with the correspondents in Washington, the Albany confer. ences have beem both informal oand gay. For Instance, during the campaign, he frequently met the news men .in the executive mansion. They would sit in a cirele about the easy chair in which he—more often than not— would curl up with his legs aeross jother of the correspondents would (come the questions, 2 “Will yowcomment. on 8o and So's statement, Governor?’ How It's Done “Yes, 1 believe—" and he would |launch into a detailed discussion of the question involved. Perhaps’ some bit of the information would be confidential, somcthing he could not say for publication st the time. “This part is .off the record,” he would remark, and then without turther ado, he would | plunge ahead with some state- ment which gave the newspaper. men a complete understanding. of the sitnation for their information and background, but which would have been, at least, highly embar- rassing to the governor if printed, Sometimes the governor has re. galed the writers for an hour or 80 with interesting stories anmd anecdotes ‘recalled by some point in their talk, acting out the parts of the characters in the stories. e is an excellent mimic and ecarries le,lng mix!its arms, Then fron one or anA‘over from his amateur theatrical at Boernhfd et Cie is faced with | E taffota “f harmony. The. skirt. has ch‘:lm‘r ¥ ¥ hemline. The back ‘f * | ¥ ‘daysthe sbility which made fiim [#n outetanding -membor of the garist theataical casts in bis youth. T . i i Chimney sparkd from the Frye. Bruhn store bufiding, caused a 'fire alarm to be furned in about fid. night last: night. There wad’ ho ‘resulting ' Hlaze, ‘The appaifitus that answered the call rétuttod to the fire house.after investiffit. e i caer Gaos mas, Eazde—Empite, OBERLIN, 0. Oct. 30.—A boy ‘who worked his way through Qber- lin College by mowing lawns and beating carpels, and-left ft $12,. 000,000 when he died, was hon. oted here today The boy who died in 1914, was Charles M. Hall He invented the modern process of making alumi. num The program today .also marked the 100th anniversary of the discovery of aluminum which Hall made commercially possible. Oberlin - Alumni a: a in all parts of the world were asked to meot and honor the memory of the institution’s mest distinguished graduat2 Meémorial Tablet memorial to Hall will be tablet, placed en the houso in the tear of which he worked in a shad. Hall found the key to the pro Feb. 23, 1886, He at once Prof« r Jewett, his old m in chemlstty, now dead, and ett’s good memory of later resulted in Hall law suit - involving owne. the fabulously important proc The tablet on the he College and . Pleasant veiled today, reads “In This House, arles Martin Hall discovered the electrolytic process of making aluminum, Fob. 23, 1886, the year following his graduation from Oberlin College, thus making available for industry |a metal long known but little used.” The told ntor un- Life Story The life story of the earnest young student of chemistry is fle- tidn in cvery dey life. Professor Jewett took care fore he died to record his assogia- tlon with Hall. He recalled him as a boy of 14, coming to his laboratory to buy test tubes with tioney he had scraped together, One day in class; said Jowett, he remarked to. his students that f anybne. could peffect a process [whereby aluminumi could be made an a commercial seale he not only .woild B8 a benefictor to the world, ‘| OFFICER bo- | i The professor’s memolrs quote Hall as saying: “‘I'm going for that meta “I've Got It!” Six months later Hall came to the laboratory and sald: “Profes- sor, I've got it.” In his hand lay a dozen little globules of alumi- num, the first ever made by the electrelytic process in this coun. try. Jewett pulled out his watch and noted that he had a class. “Return,” he told the student, “in two hours and tell me all | about it.” A few months later the same | invention was achieved by Paul L. V. Heroult, in France. Contro. versy over who was firét with the invention led to court actlon, which Hall won, mestly because of testi. " mony of his old protessor. Hall loved his Alma Mater with a devotion that always found ex- pression in gifts, and when he died the great sum was willed to it. e COTTRELL TRANSFERRED SOUTH Warrant Officer F. B. Cottrell, lerk on the Coast Guard Cut- ter Unalga, has been transferred to the base at Oakland, Cal. H. C. Scholl from base headquarters at San Francisco, will “sucveed Mr. Cottrell, who léaves on the Yukon for Seattle, tohight where he will join his family and all will go south and make their home in Oakland. | To all persons cunverned: My wife, Mrs. Lillian Bahrt, has left my home, and 1 have made settlement of all property rights with her and she has ex- ecuted an agreement not to hold me responsible for any of her debts in the future. 1 will there- fore not be responsible for, any !debts incurred by the siid Lillian ,Bahrt from and after the Sth day of September, 1928. . HENRY L. HAHRT. PAY 25%. DOWN AND THE BALANCE IN 5 MONTHS IN THE SPECIAL BUDGET PLAN FEATURED BY GORDON’S b BB v Natural $217.50 to $250/ Muskrat Godes Gtray Cargcpl soith a}‘«‘;& Very Specia ¥ fs 3 Mendoza Beaver. with Fox Collar, alse. .lurge $117.50 to smfii@z' . aes 3 Cocoa Squirrelette Coats—Fox Collar, Suede Trimr'ned $125.00 Purpose Pacific Coast Coal Co. H. G. WALMSLEY, Agent Phone 412 MAKE YOUR DQLLARS EXERT g THEMSELVES ° in the buying of your groceries. The best foods do-not cost any more. A good house- keeper says they cost less when you buy them at our Quality Grocery. Harmony in family life is best pre- served by serving fine, well cooked food and saving money. CALIFORNIA GROCERY Free delivery three times daily ‘ PHONE 478 “Best in Evirything” Yes, there will come a day when you are going to have clectric light and power. ‘There is no question about it. It is onc of those improvements that is to come, because it is too good : useful a service for the farmer | out. Delco-Light users morc ‘than 300,000, #rid th being addcdeach yedr. foo, and you know you aré. installing Delco-Light any fofiger? Phoné, write or call us foday and W. P. JOHNSON AGENT Juneau, Alaska Phone No. 1