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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, DEC. 4, 1933. By GEORGE McMANUS OH,HELLO-MAZIE- YEAH - TO-NIGHT- BE READY AT SEVEN- I'LL BE —— BRINGING UP FATHER IOWLISTEN- MY SON-DONT YOUL REALIZE YOU HAVE YOUR FUTURE BEFORE YOU?I'M SPENOIN' THIS MONEY TO GIVE YOU A FINE COLLEGE EDUCATION - | WANT TO YOU'RE OLD ENOCUGH TO SEE THAT- 7 THIS SILLY RUNNIN' AROUND 15 A W INDOW CLEANING WASTE OF TIME AN'YOU SHOULD SPEND YOUR TIME STUDYIN- I'M GLAD YOU ARE TAKIN' THIS TO 1 DONT WANT TO MAKE You FEEL BAD- 1 SEE HOW-WHAT | HAVE SAID 15 AFFECTIN' YOU- BUT ITS FER YOUR OWN GOOD- THERE GOES THE PHONE- SEE WHO THAT 15~ BE PROUD OF You- HEART — \ THERE IN MY CAR AND WELL GO PLACES - HARVESTER I DEAD, HICAGD The Klawock project is not yet| definitely settled. Mr. Gordon con- | \lexander Legge, First ferred with them on the matter and the residents are now consid- ering three proposals — a supple- mentary water supply system, a | sewer system, and a hydro-electric | plant. The last would be a co- i;puranve project and require some | expenditure on the part of the| which is not certain it can the necessary funds. Hoonah, in order to clear the | t-of-way for the Gartina High- | way project, the bureau will have | " |to construct a new teacherage and nurses's quarters. This work prob- ably will start within the next ‘Lhrcc weeks. | Loeal officials of the bureau are now completing the Public Works !program and work in several South- |east Alaska projects will start in |the near future, Mr. Gordon said MOOSE WILL GIVE | DANCE WEDNESDAY| i The Moose Lodge will give a ;d;r.cv next Wednesday evening in | | Moose Hall. The Krane Orchestra | has been secured for the occasion |and the committee promises every- |body who attends a regular Moose |zood time. * i .- — | PARTY RETURNS FROM { WEEK’S HUNTING TRIP ON SATURDAY NIGHT After being away for the last | week on a hunting trip to Tracy Arm, Simpson MacKinnon, J. W.| Gucker, Steve Ward and Oscar | Oberg, returned on the latter’s boat, Hyperian, on Saturday even- ing. The weather during the entire trip was very severe, with rain,| snow and fog making it difficult to travel, Mr. MacKinnon said. Park authorities announced that more persons visited Mt. Lassen in California this year than in any preceding single year. (Continuea rrom Page One.) LALEXANDER LEGGE he was born on a farm in Duane County, Wisconsin, January 13, 1866. The only systematic education he had was three months in a grade school at the county seat. dren, Hard Knocks caid his school was “in- | quent His eflucation came by T knocks and experience. In 1881 he went to Nebraska and for ten years, worked from farm to farm. He came to know farmers intimately. Then he went to Omaha. He went ahead rapidly wtih the Me- Cormick company. In 1889 he was brought into Chicago as man- ager of the collection department. Tn 1902, when the International Harvester Company was formed by merger of the McCormick and the Deering and other interests, the farm boy became assistant manag- | er or domestic sales. From then on his rise took him | through the offices of AssistantK General Manager, General Manag er, Vice-President and, on June 2,| 1923, sident, succeeding Harold F. McCormick at a reputed an-| nual salary of $100,000. GORDON FINDS SITUATION BAD AMONG INDIANS He f leturns from Survey— Prepares to Launch Relief Programs Now, Chesterfields are made by high-speed machines | cigarettes (Continued from Page One) | crhools with a view of supplement- ing it where it is needed. A special | .rfort will be made this year, he id, to bring the schools of South- | ost Alaska up to a standard that | will be on a par with the best elerientary schools in the States. Conditions Not Good With the exception of Metla- | katla, conditions in the Indian| ccmmunities are not good, Mr. Gor- | This is due to the poor | i Most of and tastes better. from that source and many of the people are in want. In Metlakatla due to a successful fishing season | the residents are fairly prosperous. T is net true of the Indian Chesterfield. ement at Ketchikan where the situation is said to be acute. Kla- wock and Hydaburg, while not in bad shape as Ketchikan, arc feeling the pinch of depression,| and Hoonah is about on a par with them, Mr. Gordon said. With the work to be done by the Service at Klawock and it is believed they will ough the winter in satis- chape. With the forthcom- d construction and some | s to the school plant at Hoocnch, conditions there will im- prove materially. Laying Water Line At Hydaburg, Mr. Gordon said, the Indian Service is putting in a water system for the town, which includes laying four miles of pipe. At the present time the water \ thing that goes int: as test all materials © 1933, Liccerr & Mvms Toscco Co, | tem of economic relations without | Y the use of long steel ovens —drying machines of the most modern type—and by age- ing the leaf tobacco for 30 months—Ilike wine is aged— Chesterfield tobacco is milder Only pure cigarette paper— the best made—is used for And to make sure that every- is just right, expert chemists | | two oysters, holding in place with toothpicks. Arrange “pigs” in shal- | low pan and broil or bake in mod- | erate oven until bacon has be- | come crisp. Baste several times | with melted hacon fat as this will son the oysters as well as cause them to brown. Serve on toast, allowing 2 “pigs” to a portion. Gar- nish with parsley. Corn A La Southern 2 cups canned corn, 1 cup crack- er crumbs, 1-3 cup butter melted, 1 egg, 1 cup milk, % teaspoon | salt, % teaspoon paprika, % tea- | spoon celery salt, 1 tablespoon of PHILADELPHIA, Pa. Dec., 4| CPOPPed green peppers. = Mix ingredients. Pour into but- Geén. Hugh S. Johnson, NRA Ad- A " ministrattor, at a mass meeting tered baking dish and bake 25 here Tast Saturday night said: | Tnutes in moderate oven. Serve “This time above all is the time mpf“sh :; L b'aked, to be faithful and fair.” | imientos can replace the green 4 s if desired Gen. Johnson said both _labor | PePPETS 1 2 and industry had plenty fo com-| w;ldofl Salad, Molded plain about on NRA operations, t pa(é i Iemon-f;a;ij?red gela- but the thing to do is to correct | 'R mixture, 2 cups boiling water, the mistakes, adding that it is im- ;;3:”2?{)" ‘1"'"&';5333“:‘ l;;p:&:. possible to inaugurate a new sys- | ciip - diced apples, 4:3'cup b making mistakes ‘Cflelryv % cup d)c;.ed canned pine- “I bellevs with all my heart|2PPle: % cup nuts. R | Pour water over the gelatin mix- that NRA will lead us out of our f e difficulties and 1 believe about| tUre and stir until dissolved. Add lemon juice, salt and paprika. ninety percent of the people €ar-; qu51ang alow to thicken a little. ',:f;‘z;“:‘fo"f {6 will” sald the Ad- Jy4 gnples, celery .and piheapple. e i Pour into mild and chill until | stiff. Unmold on Tettuce, sprinkle | with nuts and surround with salad 5 | dressing. Serve. {3 cups berries, 2 tablespoons of ? :E DAY flour, ' teaspoon nutmeg, % tea- tablespoon lemon juice, 3 table- spoons water, 3 tablespoons but- ter. The Menu | gredients. Pour into unbaked pie in Blankets Buttered Beets Shell. Cover with a top crust and Corn a la Southern bake 10 minutes in hot oven. Low- Waldorf Salad Molded | moderate oven. Cranberry Pie Cotfze | ST R eany ‘ Only about 10,000 barberry plants 24 large oysters, 6 pieces toast,|six months of 1933 for prevention thin strips bacon. of black-stem rust, as contrasted Arrange strips of bacon around |with 2,500,000 in previous years. spoon cinnamon, 1'; cups sugar, 1 DINNER FOR FOUR | Blend berries with rest of in- Bread Plum Jelly er fire and bake 25 minutes .in Pigs in Blankets | were destroyed in Illinois the first BEN, JOHNSON PRAISES NRA AS DELIVERER Declares Present Time Isi for Faithful and Fair Treatment a2 Pigs 12 Not so long ago practically all cigarettes were made by hand that turn out 750 cigarettes a minute, and the are practically not touched by hand. in any way in the manufacture. Chesterfields are made and packed in clean, up-to-date fac- tories, where the air is changed every 4% minutes. The mois- ture-proof package, wrapped in Du Pont’s No. 300 Cellophane —the best made—reaches you just as if you went by the fac- tory door. In a letter to us, an emi- nent scientist says: “Chesterfield Cigarettes are just as pure as the water you drink.” o Chesterfield that are used 66 | Chesterfield cigarettes are | water you as the as pure HAS NO FEAR ABOUT FUTURE Declares HENot Afrai to Die—Beats Bride of 2 Weeks to Death | ALBUQUERQUE. New Mexico, Dec. ¢—Carl W. Wickman, charged | with murder in the death of his fourth wife, and the third, who | died under circumstances which caused investigations, told the news men that he was not afraid to dic. District Attorney T. J. Mabry |said Wickman confessed he beat |his bride of two weeks to death |with a tire tool. Wickman denied responsibility for | the deaths of two previous wives. His first divorced him. Wickman first insisted his fourth wife was killed by a hit-and-run driver. ALASKA AIR EXPRESS HANGAR BREAKS LOOSE IS ADRIFT IN CHANNEL Shortly before 3 o'clock thi afternoon the log airplane hangar recently constructed by the Alaska Air Express, broke loose from its moorings near the Commercial Dock and drifted rapidly toward Douglas Island, in the terrific wind storm prevailing, it was reported. | No one was in the hangar at| the time it broke loose and the Lockheed plane, which is uper—yj ated by the company in this vicin- | fty, is safely anchored near the| beach toward Salmon Creek, ac-| cording to Mrs. Thyra Merrill, of- | ficer of the company. | Several boats had put out in an | attempt to rescue the hangar but | had not succeeded at press time. | _d/w/fCigarettes % | | ust OPERATING ROOM, RADIO SERVICE, IS BEING MOVED TODAY The operating room of the United | State Signal Corps Radio Office, for over a year situated on the| 4‘ | \ \ PHONE 485 fifth floor of the Territorial and s Federal Building, has been moved and is now located in the office on the first floor. The radio offices are now brought together in the large main room, both receiving and delivery depart- ments being in the room with the operating force. The station out the Glacier High- way is now fully equipped and in operation also. i —————— | MRS. GERTRUDE F. THOMPSON | IS IMPROVING IN HEALTH Mrs. Gertrude F. Thompson, who left for the south for her health several weeks ago, is progressing satisfactorily and is under the care of the Virginia Mason Clinic in Seattle, according to word received ' by friends in Juneau. She is a| patient at the Virginia Mason | Hospital. : ——,—— 1 A. F. KNIGHT SERIOUSLY ILL IN TACOMA, WASH,, IS WORD RECEIVED HERE A. F. Knight, of the Juneau| Marble Works, who went south| early last month for his health, is seriously ill in Tacoma, Wash- ington, according to word received from Mrs. Knight by her daughter, Mrs. H. F. Sully. { e, HOLBROOK GOES TO WINDHAM TO INSPECT NEW TRAIL WORK To inspect tH® trail work being done at Windham Bay by an ECW trail crew, Wellman Holbrook, For- est Examiner, United States For- est Service, left here last Baturday on the Ranger IV, He will return here after completing the inspec- tion. | CHRISTM FRESH FRUITS-VEGETABLES ALWAYS CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 PROMPT DELIVERY “Ready-to-Mail” AS FRAMED PICTURES The most popular Alaska picture ever made “LIGHTS O’ JUNEAU” and other new subjects Complete line Golden Glow Christmas Greeting Cards Winter and Pond Co. “Everything in Photography” [P WHITE LINE CABS 25 cents in City Telephone 444 White Line Cab and Ambulance Co. A Checking Account At This Bank o o safeguard your funds until they are needed o o facilitate the handling of your finances o o help you save time, avoi venience. o o provide legal receipts for every payment, in the form of can- celled checks. Put your personal finances on a sound businesslike basis - - have a Checking Account at this bank. It pays to pay by check! First National Bank ncon- e, FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. drink” IDEAL PAINT SHOP If I's Paint We Have It! PHONE 54 Wendt & Garster UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 THE TREND is toward “ELECTROL”-of course! Harri Machine S[\op Plumbing Heating Sheet Metal