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e SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU TONIGHT Y1 DAFFY: 00FY 2% DELIGHTFULLY INSANE! EXTRA!! March of Time “The News Behind the News” “Daily Alaska Empire’s Talking Reporter "ALICE BRADY GAIL PATRICK Eugene PALLETTE A Universal Picture Champion Putterbf_fer Backstops for Sen. Borah By SIGRID ARNE (AP Feature Service Writer) WASHINGTON, April 12. — It is Cora Rubin's slate-blue e and faint smile that people meet wher they d into the office of Sena- tor William E. Borah of Idaho with a brand-new plan to save the world Ten-ic-one they tell Miss Rubin instead, and she passes the plan on to the Senator in a condensed form, hecause he cant see all the peo- ple, read all the letters or take all the phone calls that have come his way since he became the Senate's outstanding man on foreign rela- tions. She’s a champion “putter- offer 29 Years On Job Miss Rubin “got a job and kept it” 29 years ago. Borah had just come to Congress. She was a fr faced, efficient young woman with @ business-college diploma who had been -hired as stenographer; Since 1908 she has swung between Wash- ington 2nd Boise. In late years her mother comes with her. Once Miss Rubin became so cur-' - SECRETARIAL DEAN For 29 years pink-cheeked Cora Rubin has served as secretary to Idaho’s lion, Senator William E. Borah. She has a staff of five assistants. DUFRESNE BACK FROM MEETINGS IN'S.E. ALASK e Tt 9o SAE ey 1 to - go| Official- Meets -with: Sports- over the mail. She sorts it into six| men and Trapping Group boxes; one for farmers and ranch- ‘s ers back home, one for veterans’ —Pictures Are Shown {roubles, one for the League of Na- 1 ¥ ¥ {ions and so on. All day long her Executive Officer Frank Dufresne staff phones or calls personally on of the Alaska Game Commission re- governmen! departments to nn_tturned to Juneau yesterday on the swer that mail. |Commission vessel Grizzly Bear No lunch for Miss Rubin. No &fter an official irip to Southeast cigarettes. No minutes out for gos-|Alaska points. At Ketchikan, the of- sip with other secretaries. No re-|1iclal spoke before the Alaska laxing sport on Sunday. She’s al- SPortsmen’s Association and also most as much a “lone wolf” as her appeared before sportsmen and employer. trappers in Wrangell and Peters- She smiles down at her 150 bure. pounds, five feet six, and asks.| Some 500 persons were in atten- “Well do I look undernourished, dance at the Ketchikan session even if T do have no lunches?” which was featured by a showing Dresses Conservatively |of wild life pictures provided by When the Senator is active in a the Biological Survey. Among those Senate fight, she listens from the introduced was Miss Mary - Joyce gallery so she can run_the office Of Juneau and Twin Lodge, who was without asking tpo many questions. Ketchikan visiting with Mr. and The fight over the League of Na- Mrs. Robert E. Ellis. tions was the high-point in Wash-| At Wrangell he met with a group ington life for her. of sportsmen and also some 30 ious about events in Russia that she took a trip over for a logk-see. But that’s about the only time she has left the job in three decades. She is the dean of senatorial sec- retéries. She was one of the few women in Senatorial offices when she came here, and she still is one of the few serving as office man- agers for Senators. She has a staff | of five, two of them men. | IN THIS CITY THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, APRIL | POWELL BUTTLES| WHILE DODGING) DIZZY BULLOCKS |Raymond-Sothern Republic | Team in “Walking on Air” at Coliseum My Man Godfrey” is a ga benair mddern comedy, light as istledown, madder and merrier n a million March hares me eriit the multiclicati Univ “rsal laugh 1o Powell, and Carcle Lombard the Capitol Theatre now. sereen story relates the ad- {ventures of W. m Powell, por- ying a kutler the delightfully Bullock family. One daugh- played by Carole Lombard, in love with him. Her sister ries to have him jailed. The maid falls in love with him, too. The mother likes him, but she has a !parlor pet of her own. The fun gets faster and more furious every second, with laughs |bursting like bombshells. The cast includes such excellent players as | Alice Brady, Gail Patrick, Jean Dix- on, Eugene Pallette, Ann Mowbray Mischa Auer and Robert Light. Thc \picture was made by Gregory L |cava, one of Hollywood's foremost |directors Having proved their success as & romantic team in “Hooray for Love" last season, Gene Raymond and Ann /Sothern are together again ai the Coliseum Theatre in RKO Radio’s |“Walking On Air,” a high-speed saga of a rocky romance, enhanced with several tuneful melodies. Miss Sothern displays her vivac- ity and her talent for high comedy an obstreperous Beverly Hills heiress bent on marrying the wrong man. Raymond shines in the part of an engaging and ingenious col- lege graduate who, about to face |the world penniless, hires himself out to pose as an insufferable !French Count. Henry Stephenson enacts role of Miss Sothern's father, while Jessie Ralph plays the part of a sympathetic aunt. In addition, the cast includes Gordon Jones, Georze Meeker, Alan Curtis, Anita Colby, Maxine Jennings, Patricia Wilder, George Andre Beranger and Charles Coleman. Joseph Santley directed, Edward Kaufman producing R PRESBYTERIAL - ENDS SESSION as the with Bass Resolutions Thanking Those Who Made Event Most Successful One | | | | The Saturday morning session of | |the Alaska Presbyterial was opened {by Mrs. John A. Glasse who led the devotionals. | Dr. Sofia Chiefetz gave an inter- | esting health talk, especially em-| phasizing child welfare. The sec-| ond speaker was Mrs. William Paul | {whose title was “Total Abstinence.”| These talks were greatly appre- | ciated and enjoyed by the members. | ; Mrs. A. D. Swagger, Mrs. Donald | |Christiansen and Mrs. Verue Swan- | {son were appointed a committee to| meet with a committee from the ‘Presbytery to consult on an in-| (crease of workers on the Prince- | ton. | At the conclusion of its session | the Courtesy Committee of the | { Presbyterial passed the following | resolution: We, the delegates of the Alaska | Presbyterial Society in its 10th an- ‘nual session at Juneau, Alaska, | Wish to express our gratitude to Ithe Salvation Army and Adjutant | |Tanner for the use of the army ci- tadel; | To the ladies of the First Presby-| terian Church and the Martha So- ciety of the Northern Light Presby- |terian Church for the excellent meals served to us; | We thank the music committee, choirs and organist, the soloists, | Lieut. Morris, Miss Whittier, Mrs. Paddock and Carl Click for their| music. Also Dr. Chiefetz and Mrs. {William Paul for their inspiring | talks; We also thank the Presbytery for Sh-h! Here’ POTATO SALAD POINTERS Individual pertions of potate sa nished with a slice of hard-boiled nearby. R GEORGE ce Writer) The resourceful housewife will plan her Sunday dinner so she can count on tasty left-overs to , serve on Monday. If she is very skilifui she may even plot to disguise those left-overs so that not even the most finicky members of her family can recognize them. may be used in a number of en- ticing ways, Diced boiled potatoes, mixed with celery, hard-boiled eggs, sea- sonings and salad dressing become a substantial salad that will be wel- comed at either luncheon or dinner. Or such potatoes may be sliced and browned in fat, hash-browned with onions or added to a cream sauce. (Mixed with a cream sauce, toppefl but buttered crumbs and baked thd become potatoes “au gratin.”) Potato Crogueties Potatoes also may be used in croquettes of various kinds. Com- bined with fish, chopped or diced meats or fowl they may be deeps fried and seérved with or without & cream sauce. It is often possible to serve over roasts or fowl which been re -heated — providing the meatless bones are removed and any dried-out portions are carved out. But it is generally better to serve them cold and sliced, diced and used in hash, stew or pot-pie, or mixed into salad or sandwich fillings — not ‘to mention the de- licious meat loaves which may be prepared from them. Left-Over Vegetables A cream or cheese sauce makes an effective and delicious disguise for many left - over vegetables. Such vegetables may also be added to mushrooms, hard-boiled eggs or ce or spaghetti in many instances. Mixed with meats, fish or fowl they can be shaped into appetizing turn- overs or pies which may form the main part of the meal. Pe: beans, celery, okra, cauliflower, carrots, spinach and onions are also suit- able for use in soups. Fruits Make Appetizer One of the best ways in which to use slightly dried-out cake is to serve it covered with a fruit sauce made of either fresh or stewed fruits. Left-over fruiis themselves may be put into a gelatin mixture and served as an appetizer or a salad. Here's a recipe that makes use of a wide variety of left-overs. It is very flexible, since any number of vegetables may be substituted for those specified and almost any type of meat may be used, 3 Monday Night Pot Pie 1'% cups diced cooked meat; 2 cup cooked peas; & cup gravy; 2 tablespoons minced on- ions; 2 tablespoons minced cel- ery; % teaspoon salt; 4 tea- spoon pepper; 1 teaspoon minc- ed parsley; 1% cups mashed po- tatoes; 2 tablesoons cream; 1 egg yolk. . Mix the yolk, cream and potatoes.. Place on top of the rest of the in- gredients which have been com- left- have meund of salad dressing in the center may be supplenentied by Sunday lad—made of left egg, topped by a s/tip of gr RALPH INCE Indians in Fort KILLED IN AUTO CRASH Left - over potatoes, especially, Motion Picture Director Have Ple Dies in Accident—Wife | Was Driving Car LONDON, April 12.—Ralph Ince, 50, motion picture actor and dire i tor, was killed Sunday when 1| nobile driven by his wife struck | an iron standard in Kensington. | Mrs. Ince sustained lacerations. | Ince was connected with the mo- tion picture indust for many years before coming to! England three ye ago to direct| for Warner Brothers. { With his brother, the late Thomas| Ince, he directed many pictures in| the earlier days starring Charles Ray and Douglas McLean. e PLANS CUTTING ROLLS OF WPA WASHINGTON, Ajril 12—Wil- liam Green, President of the Amer- ican Federation of Labor, said to- day the Government is one million| short in caring for unemployed. | The announcement followed the| statement of Harry L. Hopkins,| WPA Administrator, that he is planning to trim the WPA rolls of 2,160,000 to 1,600,000 by July 1 | State and local authorities are also protesting, Green said. The AFL President said there were 9- 722,000 unemployed in February. GLAGIER FRONT SUDDENLY DROPS Westward Miner, in Row-| boat at Time, Nearly Loses His Life SEWARD, Alaska, April 12.—A companied by a crashing roar li an earthquake, a mile of the glac-| ier formation on McCarthy Glacier| broke. off into a lagoon on April 3. Water was splashed across a three- mile reef into Nuka Bay. Bob Evans, a miner, in a boat at the time, narrowly escaped drown- ing, according to advices received here. | SURVEY TENDER HERE | TO CHART TAKU INLET| Scheduled to spend nearly afl the summer season making surveys of Taku Inlet, the U. S. Coast and| and placed on a large s eni pepper and sprinkled with paprika. an additional bow! of dressing placed 2, 1937. Left-Overs e § THEATRE LKIN LAST TIMES TONIGHT SN, | Il Y 3 \ ¥ ALSO "5 Troue—stenger. ALSO Than Fiction 3 BURGLARIES AT ANCHORAGE ANCHORAGE, Alaska, April 12. Burglars have entered three es- tablishments here in the last several days 5 3 | The burglars took $30 worth of | dental gold from Dentist Kenneth Yukfl“ u'st"ct | Pierce, small change from a filling fon and stamps and other arti- cles from the office of the Super- a c a“y urs intendent of Schools. | | ing plate—are gar- The | | S b i i | | | In all othree places they left oth- er articles of value. D e | [ » FAIRBANKS, Alaska, April 12 !" Lahur strlte Arrivals here report marten and other fur catches are so plentiful in| the Fort Yukon districts this year| 2 that dance halls and movies there Truculent lead and zinc workers are enjoying a boom. |returned to their jobs here today The Indians are lavishly buying in a tense atmosphere after a bloody n}?' of Money— Dance Halls, Movies Enjoying Boom PICKET, Oklahoma, April 12 in Hollywood | canned salmon and sawed wood in-|weekend in which eight men and! stead of using home-smoked salmon'a boy were wounded. or hustling their own wood. | The unaffiliated group announc- The Indians are also taking nu-|ed determination to prevent the merous airplane joyrides and feast-| Committee of Industrial Organi- ing on airplane eggs flown in by|zation from unionizing workers. plane instead of the highly flavored! Members of the Tri-State Union old Gobi Desert variety received on [tmarched on the CIO headquarters the last. steamer last fall. lat Galena, Kansas and gunfire was ————— returned. ! RO NoM.I N ATED " s M;?lfi?resbytery WASHINGTON, April 12—Presi-| ANCHORAGE, Alaska, April 12. dent Roosevelt today nommawd(—The Rev. John E. Youel, of Fair- William Sears, former Democratic|banks, has been elected moderator Congressman from Florida, as alof the Yukon Presbytery, of the 'SIX HALIBUTERS SELL AT SEATTLE | SEATTLE, April 12. — Halibut arrivals, catches and sales today are |as follows: ! From the western banks—McKin- ley 33,000 pounds, Eclipse 33,000 pounds, both selling for 9% and 8 cents a pound:; Portlock 31,000 pounds, 9% and 8% cents; Seattle 83,000 pounds, 8°; and 8 cents. From the local banks—Fréya 15,- 000 pounds, 12 and § cents; Presi- dent. 8,000 poi 11y and 9% cents. ? S eee — Warning Is Issued by Police Department PPromiscuous shooting by young- sters with BB guns is warned against by Chief of Police Roy Hoff= man. Already one lad has been in- jured. There is a city ordinance prohibiting shooting within the city limits with any sort of a gun. Lately youngsters have been shoot- ing in the Evergreen Bowl and also reports have been received of broken windows, caused by BB shots in other sections of the eity. Parents are urged by Chief Hoff- jman to warn their children of the ordinance and any youngster found |shootlna within the eity limits will /have his gun confiscated. | Chief Hoffman also warns chil- dren to remain away from the old {mine shaft on the hillside adja- :(-ent to Evergreen Bowl. | - e ' GEORGE GOES SOUTH ' Joe George, of George Brothers, |is a passenger south on the Princess 'Norah to purchase equipment for the firm's new liquor establish= ment. member of the Tariff Commission, IPrcabyLermn Church. Employment furnished in the off season QUES'I'ION¥ How does the Canned Salmon Industry help to provide off-season employment for Alaskans? ANSWER: Salmon canning is essentially a seasonal business. The fish must be packed during a very short part of the year. Yet hundreds of men are employed each fall and spring, making preparations for the approaching fishing season. Modernizing or rebuilding canneries, repairing boats and other floating equipment, cutting piling and lum- ber for construction and box shook, manulactuying wire netting, mining coaPand providing other necessary supplies for the salmon industry, [furnish thousands of man-days’ employment in Alaska during the off season. trappers. The pictures also were Uheir cooperation in our evangel- Geodetie Survey tender Wesdahl Her pink-and - white triangular {ace is soft and feminine. She usu- ally is dressed in -sométhing dark conservative. A “dressmaker fixes her up, and snorts at Miss Rubin with a needle in her hand. “You're pitiful trying to sew,” says, the dressmaker, and. Miss Rubin concurs meekly, because she thinks| a working woman, like a working | man, should do her job we]l and not worry too much about other things. That's about as far as she goes |shown there as well as Petersburg. ,OLhers appearing at the. Petersburg | | meeting were Warden H. R. Sarber | and F. W. Gabler of the Ketchikan | sportsmen’s group. Mr. Gabler| came on to Juneau with Mr. Du- fresne on the Grizzly Bear. H S e HALIBUT SOLD HERE Two halibut boats, the Dalene, | Capt. S. E. Anderson, and the El- |fin, Capt. Nels Bjerkness, , arrived istic plans; We thank the Digest Committee for its daily summing up of the work done; We thank Mrs. R. W. Bender for | the kind invitation to a reception | at the Governor's mansion; We are especially gratified to our hosts, who so graciously opened their homes to us; To our out-going President, Mrs. David Waggoner, who for nine years has so wonderfully served us, we are lovingly grateful; cn the men-women question, |back in port here over the week- “Women are people,” she says.'end, and this morning sold their “If they work well, they hold jobs. catches on the Juneau exchange. We heartily thank the daily press |for their kind cooperation. bined and arranged in a shallow buttered baking dish. Bake 20 min-~ utes in a moderate oven. ANNUAL CLEAN-UP POSTERS MADE BY GRADE STUDENTS Under the direction of Miss Ruth Coffin art instructor in the public schools, posters on the annual clean up campaign are being made in practically all grades. The posters emphasize the fact that the campaign begins April 19 arrived in port here early this morn- ing from Seattle, where she left| last Tuesday. | The = Wesdahl, commanded by Lieut. H. Arnold Karo, was here a good part of last summer also. At} that time she charted Gastineau Channel, Other officers aboard the tender are: Lieut. George E. Mor-| ris and Ensign D. H. Konichek. The | Wesdahl is just over seventy feet| in length and carries a crew o(!‘ 12 men. She is now moored at the Government Float, by the Alaska- Juneau Rock Dump. Lieut. Morris’ wife arrived here | OPEN FACE SALMON PINEAPPLE SALAD ¥ tsp. 2 cups (1 1b.) Canned Salmon 2 tsps. 1 cup chopped celery . 1'tbsp. chopped green onions 1 tsp. salt pepper . lemon juice Mayonnaise 6 slices of pineapple Combine flaked salmon with celery, onion and seasonings. Chill. At serv- ing time, mix with mayonnaise and pile on pineapple slices on crisp salad greens. Serve garnished with radishes or almond-stuffed olives, and Bl Suentiic aboard the steatts celery sticks stuffed with cheese. Pass mayonnaise. Serves 6. | ;:mm;:::,o{ g R This recipe is typical of those appearing in the national magazine advertising of the Canned Salmon Industry ——— - Same way with men.” |"Both catches were bid in by the| Bespectfully, The Courtesy Com- Tt — {Marlyn Fish Company at 675 and Mittee, Mrs. E. E. Bromley, Mrs. \ NOTICE [480 cents. The Dalene had 10,000 | Wiliam Tamaree. |pounds, and the Elfin 6,000 pounds. R s 257 Roy Thomas is no longer em-| - HAGER TO SITKA ployed by the Snow White Laundry. | GOES ON VISIT | C. B. Hager, .who has been em- All accounts payable at Snow White | Mr§. T. Cashen is. a passenger Ploved by the Bureau bf Public Laundry Office. {soum aboard the Princess: Norah |Roads at Hyder, is in ‘Juneau en|Several of the business men have turned to Juneau yesterday by PAA (Signed) ‘on a visit with relatives and cxp,flsirouw to Sitka where he will be|caught the spirit of the idea early plane from Fairbanks after a busi- Snow White Laundry Co. to be absent several months. maintenance foreman for the BPR.|and are already decorating. |ness trip to the Interior, g S @ . ‘ i at which lim{ city trucks will be hauling away surplus gatherings of the year. Many of the stores are cooperat- ing in the annual campaign of| MRS. CAWTHORNE BACK clean-up, fix-up and paint-up by Mrs, Mary Cawthorne of the Ter- | creating novel window displays. | ritorial Department of Health re- adv.