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THE DAN.Y ALASKA EMPIRE WEDNESDAY, NOV. 20, 1935 COOKING CLASS DEMONSTRATION HELD THURSDAY Mrs. Crone Will Prepare Thanksgiving Menu— Salad, Turkey, Pie How properly to dress and bake turkey, and a variety of dressings accompany the Thanksgiving will be demonstrated to Ju- neau and Douglas women tomorrow afternoon, when Mrs. presents the third in a series of cook- ing lessons for housewives spon- sored by the Vocational Education Department of the Territorial Schools. The demonstration will open in the Northern Light Presbyterian 1:30 o'clock. | Church promptly at Look at him! Perky as a peacock! And why not— with Wings of the Morning in his Schilling cup. Try Schilling Coffee. 1t's a sturdy Coffee. It's dependable—not fickle. Make it with reasonable care, and it “comes through* with delicious regularity. Schilling Coffee There are two Schilling Coffees. One for percolator. One for drip. C. N. Crone| There will be nots attendants are and paper. In of a turkey, two kinds of vegetables, one salad, cranberry sauce and three kinds of pie and hot rolls will be included in the menu. Pumpkin pie with coffee will lx‘ served those who attend. Presentation demonstrations is made possible by the courtesy of the following Jlln(‘au Alaska Electric Ligit and which s ®iies the firms Power Company, electric range; ery, which furnishes the materials; the Pay'n Takit Meat Department, which will furnish the turkey. The Juneau Frock Shop and Guy Smtih's Drug Store are contribut- ing special prizes to be given away during the afternoon EGYPTIANS SET STRIKE AGAINST to be taken and ed to take penm, addition to the pl(‘s(‘n'atlon of these rlupulm‘ the California Groc-| GREAT BRITAIN Entire Country to Join in One-Day Demonstra- tion Tomorrow CAIRO, Egypt, Nov. 20.—Coinci- jent with the British naval maneuv- ers at Alexandria tomorrow, all ver- nacular newspapers and Egyptian lawyers declared a one-day strike as The newspaper strike is also aimed ! part Pasha for his refusal to resign as| Premier and Minister of the In- terior. Student demonstrators have an- nounced their intention of purading | |the streets and forcing the shop-/ | keepers to close. PILOTS SEEKING ~ MISSING FLIER .: 'TURKS GALORE WAIT AT ELKS SHOOT TONIGHT Huge Throng Will Toss Darts for Fat Thanks- 1 giving Birds | No 1ess than 150 turkeys will be taken home by visitors to the Elks’ | Hall Auditorium tonight, where the B. P. O. E. is staging its annual { Turkey Shoot. A crowd of nearly 250 is expected at the affair, to which the public ¢ is invited. The birds will be awarded to winners of the dart games, pro- ceeds from which will go to the Elks’ Thanksgiving Fund. The turkeys were furnished by all local markets. The “shoot” will start promptly at nine p.m., after the regular lodge meeting has been concluded. Re- freshments will be served during the evening Those in charge of the gala turkey festival are: Martin Jorgensen, chair- man; M. H. Sides, H. C. Redman, C. H. MacSpadden, J. H. Walmer, M. E. Monagle, H. VanderLeest, Rob- ert Kaufmann, Arthur Adams, N. C Banfield and Robert Burns. PSP |MRS. J. W. CLARK IS | HOSTESS TO WOMEN |Fine Arts, spoke on | ciation,” < X | Inaugurating the first of a series a part of an anti-British program.!or entertainments, to be held at members’ homes, the Juneau Wom- as a protest against Nessim | {en’s Club met yesterday afternoon on the boat Alma, as guests of Mrs. J. W. Clark. Speaker of the afternoon was Miss |Mildred Keaton, Travelling Nurse, who spoke interestingly on “The Es- ,kimo Christmas.” Mrs. Genevieve Van Dugteren, Chairman of the Department of “Music Appre- with particular emphasis on the origin of the negro spirit- Pumpkin pie and coffee were sened and an enjoyable social hour ollowed. Assisting Mr. Clark in her \duues as hostess were Mrs. J. M CHEYENNE, Wyo, Nov. 20— cpace Club President, and Mrs. S | Frank Kurtz, widely-known young pilot and recent record-seeker, was, Graves. | —————————— the object of a spectacular air search east of Cheyenne today after being | unreported for more than 24 hours. He is feared to have crashed in! LEAVES ST. ANN'S Mrs. John Wilson, who has been | the treacherous mountain country convalescing from an operation, was stretching toward Utah. DEPEND ON IT... She is hoping jor FOR CHR TMAS discharged from St. Ann’s today. No matter how much she has, no matter how much she gets, she wlll get a thrill out of lingerie! Shop With Us Before You Buy CHRISTMAS shoppers, take cheer! Pure silk lingerie has not soared out of sight. It's within reach of most poc your best friends can be the best of lingerie. Lace ored styles . .. LINGERIE is particularly adapted to send your friends at Christmas time—either by We wrap for forwarding mail or express. still ketbooks . . . and remembered with trimmed and tail- all pastel shades and white. s Bloomers, Dancettes, Panties, Combinations, +Gowns, Pajamas, ,and Gown Ensembles. Use Our Convenient Lay-Away Plan Nighties, Costume Slips “Tomorrow’s Styles Today Juneau’s Own Store CHAMBER NOMINATES EXECUTIVE OFFICERS | The names of at least sever, men | who will accept nomination as’mem- bers of the Executive Board of the | Chamber of Commerce will be re- ported by the nominating committee, NATIONAL TAX vog e GETS APPROVAL G. Smith, and H. L. Faulkner, at the | Secretary Morgenthaul Chamber of Commerce luncheon |. which will be held tomorrow at kmc Makes Stat?ment on F. D. R.’s Plan CONFERENCE ON Governor of Oldahoma Loses Page in Speech: TULSA, Okla., Nov. 20.—Gov. E. W. ,of Women Voters, read several pages or his speech, and then paused. “I'm ..orry, he said, “but the next | page is lost.” He ad-libbed for a mo- 'ment and went ahead. “Poor Taste” Hit Terminal Cafe. Nomination from the" Communications regarding airmail| WASHINGTON, Nov. 20. — Ap-| will be read at the luncheon by Sec- 'etary Curtis Shattuck. | for a national tax conference, Sec- T T | retary of Treasury Morgenthau told the officials attending the United States Conference of Mayors, that| | cases, made cost of collection far in UF K ILL' N G HER { excess of what was collected. Secretary Morgenthau said he was | looking forward to a full discussion | i FATHER’STUNNE‘D"’“‘E’ public officials at a meeting Idurmg the winter. Motion to Set Aside Ver-! dict and for New Trial | sates ana some for the Federal, | Government,” said Secretary Mor- genthau. WISE, Virginia, Nov. 20—Edith Maxwell has been convicted of first| degree murder of her father, Trigg| i Maxwell, by a Cumberland Moun- | ¢ 25 years in the state penitentiary. Miss Maxwell, 21-year-old school teacher, looked incredulously at her | brother Earl and then burst into| tears, stunned at the verdict. | COLUMBUS, Ohio, Nov. 20.—Fed- Judge H. A. W. Skeen said he eral Judge Benson W. Hough, aged would grant the defense attorneys | 60, Colonel of the Rainbow Division several days in which to put.in writ- | during the World War, died at hi: and grant a new trial. W. W. Dotson, the girl's uncle, de- \ fense counsel, said he will carry the | appeal to the highest court if the not granted. ‘The girl's mother, Mrs. Anne Max- well, under joint indictment in the | murder case, will be tried next The girl testified she struck herI father, who was drunk, with a wom- ! an’s high heeled shoe when he at- | tempted to whip her for staying ouL\ floor will also be in order. plauding President Roosevelt’s plan GIRL GUNVIBTED overlapping tax systems, in many | of the problems with Mayors and | | cities, some for counties, some for Is to Be Made tain jury which fixed punishment at | DIES IN EAST ing a motion to set the verdict asid: “Cm? here last night. motion to set aside the verdict is| March. late. S | H. W. THOMPSON HERE | AS BOOKKEEPER FOR the “peak of poor taste” was listed THOMAS HARDWARE CO. among transgressions against the law ifor protecting national symbols—a |* “There must be outlined certain| zones of taxes, some exclusively for | ' Marland, speaking before the League | No Nobel Peace Prize Award to |Be Made This Year OSLO, Nmay, Nov. 20—There will be no Nobel Peace prize award this year, the committee announced. No explanation was given but on previcus occasions the committee has refrained from making the award on the grounds no individual merited the honor. CONTRIBUTIONS 'TORED CROSS ~ GROWING DAILY Committee Plans 100% | Sign-up of Employed Per- sons by Thanksgiving With tne rea uross Drive today | | venturing upon its second week, ‘workers report the sum already col- 1ected to fall just $150 short of the w 1934 Juneau total. There are still ten days remaining |to the drive; and the committee, chaered by the ready response, hopes yet to secure a ‘100 percent signup of employed persons in this locality. Half Remains Here | 1t is pointed out by the local com~ | | mittee that only 50 cents of each contribution gogs to the National Red Cross. The rest of the money donated remains in Juneau and vi- nity, where it is of direct and prac- cal benefit to the local needy. Occasionally, it is true, Juneau has | been called to cope with other Alas- | | kan emergencies. Such was the' case tof the Nome fire a year ago, when |the Juneau Red Cross raised $1800 | to meet the crisis. In the majority | |of cases, however, the Juneau con- | | tributor to the Red Cross has the! }sausfaction of knowing that desti-| !tute residents of his own town are i receiving the benefits of what he has | been able to give. . | Needy ‘Assisted Supplying blankets to survivors of | ‘a recent Juneau fire; providing teflth; | treatment and eye-glasses for needy {halibut liver tablets to school chil- | dren unable to afford this necessary ' “bottled sunshine”; aiding the city GRANGE PLANS PROGRAM FOR COMING YEAR Marginal Lands, Utility- | Holding Companies, But- | ter Substitutes, Policies | SACRAMENTO, Cal, Nov. 20.— |Removal of margipal lands from competitive production and elimina- tion of needless utility-holding com- panies have been added to the poli- cies of the National Grange for next year. ! The Grange urged expansion of producer-consumer cooperatives, in- \posmon of a five cent per pound | tax on butter substitutes, and speed- 'mg up of the campaign for safety education in schools to cut down | automobile fatalities. ALAMEDA BASE OF NAVY GRAFT ALAMEDA, Cal, Nov. 20. — The local airport with 500 adjoining acres of tidelands has been selected for a huge naval plane base, Repre- sentative Albert H. Carter announced today. Leases were executed at a closed session of the Alameda City Council last night. The airport is the home of the famous China Clipper, and other planes on the great trans-Pacific run. Ferry Boat Strikers _To Negotiate Today SEATTLE, Nov. 20. — Ferry boat strikers are meeting today to con- sider negotiations for settlement of the conflict. Operators are expected to submit proposals for action by strikers. HEAFFE RS H. W. Thompson, bookkeper and {leaflet with printed pictures of an|to procure the services of a Red| accountant, formerly of Seattle, has | Englishman, a Frenchman, an Ital-|Cross nurse and financing regular | taken residence here, and is em-|ian, and a Russian which, when fold- | medical examinations for the Sitka | ployed in the office of the Thomas ed over, showed a picture of Adolf Territorial Schdols, these are part Hardware Conipany. IHitlcr. of the routine business of the Red Mr. Thompson, with years of ex-| AT G AN Y | Cross chapter in Juneau. perience in bookkeeping and u:-! An estimated 1,000 crows were Persons who may have been missed counting, was accompanied to Ju- killed in a single blast of dynamite by Red Cross collectors are asked neau by Mrs. Thompson. They are et off in a rookery on an island | to communicate with A. B. Phillips, | living on Calhoun Avenue. in the Rogue River in Oregon. |Chairman of the Drive, or with mem- | Accmd;’”';o“’;m TRONE ey |bers of the committee, of which . e s | i is Copra Shipments Up ' |nepartment of Agriculture, thel o o o0 -ocrien 1s the head. APIA, Samoa—Shipments of - country'’s hay crop in 1934 was| e TR pra, one of Western Samoa’s prin- about 67 per cent of the average BOUND FOR SWEDEN -ipal exports, will show a heavy in- yearly yield. | crease for 1935. In the first nine —— - H. Goranson is a passenger from months of the year nearly 40,000 Special Delivery to Douglas Daily Juneau aboard the Princess Norah' tons were shipped. 2:30 P, Telephone 442, adv. enroute to Gothenburg, Sweden. | | HE two-way fountain pen—normally held it gives your regular stroke, turn it over and you gu @ fine, dolicate line. Patented BALANCE shape avoids writing fatigue. Platinum IN the chanvel assures instant writing. Iridium point meaps lifetime wear. Sheaffer’s Lifetime pens are unconditionally guaranteed for the life of their owners, ex- cept against loss and wilful damage.* Beau- tifully finished in various colours. No finer gift for holiday or special occasion than this Sheaffer’s Feathertouch Pen—the world's finest writing instrument! “Subject only to a AT LEADING STATIONERY AND JEWELRY STORES small service fee of 35¢ for duties, in- surance and ad- ministration ex - penses. BERLIN—What Nazi papers call|children; distributing cod liver and e R A SHEAFFER’S Feathertouch Pens Headquarters will be found at Butler, Mauro Drug Co. THE REXALL STORE “Express Money Orders Anytime”