The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 29, 1937, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1937 The sure ivzy (‘7\@ question about it! T wider-brim, lower-crown STETSON HATS to smartiess! "his new Stetson with its lines is “tops” for style. Priced at $7.50 B.M. Behrends Co., Inc. Juneau's Leading R TS T N L. ). of town today as the PWA Food Writer T%" How 7 Department Store to Fix Tasty, and Also Inexpensive Meat Loaf - E E MRS. ALEXANDER GEOR AP Feat rvice Writer A few simple tricks a mea f a nondescript comibine s favori on- sed in pre- paring ert from one of the fami First, the 1 well-blended of at I var f se whic a ings—no one nounced. Second, the ingredients well-mixed and the loaf pressed or molded s t separate during cookir slices cut after it is cook ven. In the tl be enough 1 make 100 pro- hould be | firmly it won't| and the will be| sre should | we in ike loaf tof If it is too solid to di-| lace. ible. will be difficult it pal avy it Use Fresh Meats 4 Meat used in the loaf should be fresh and have a good flavor. In- expensive cuts are just as satisfac-| as the more exp tions, since grinding meat tender | "hree meats—beef, veal and pork | loaf shown in . A number of varia- An all-veal loaf asty. So is a li-beef loaf. But a little variety generally better. | Consequently, smoked ham may be | in place of the beef or recipe given Mix Meats Well In preparing the loaf the were mixed thoroughly to give = well-blended, velvety texture. Three hard-cooked eggs were placed end to end in the center—to lend a dec- C ive touch to the loaf when it is cut in slices [ After the combination had cooked ' r thirty minutes in a covered pan a moderate oven, two slices of | and two tablespoonsful of were placed on top of it and numerous other | tory make may be made used veal in the mea SHAPING THE CACY TO INTERIOR After nearly two days in Juneau, following his arrival fr south aboard the steamer A Robert J. Cacy, operator of the F; Trading Company. contin:.~d turn journey to tie Interior day afterncon aboard tra plane, Mr. Cacy 1 E s be been in L ‘SIMMONS TRIES CHICHAGOF HOP AGAIN TODAY Hospital Case at Mining| Camp Forces Attémpts to Battle Weather With the same five passengers |aboard with whom he unsuccessfully |attempted to fly to Chicagof Tues- {day morning and again yesterday, | enoon, Pilot Sheldon Simmons iput the Alaska Air Transport Lock- |heed Vega seaplane into the air i this afternoon, at 2:30 o'clock, and pointed her once more toward the island mining camp. mmons was to return to Juneau | | this afternoon with a sick person | among his passengers to Juneau. The necessity for bringing the stricken man into the hospital here |was the main urge behind Sim- mons attempts to break through,the wall of bad weather to Chicagof, | Passengers leaving Juneau for | Chichagof with Simmons were: E. 1J. Rice, Frank Biddlecombe, E.. Stal- |lings, F. Poirier, and Lee Samuelsoi. Weather stopped Simmons on_ his it to Twin Glacier Lodge yes- rday afternoon, last evening, and! ain this morning | " INTERRUPTED AT KETCHIK | | Business and Main Resi-| denial Districts Cut | by PWAProject | KETCHIKAN, Alaska, April 29— | More than half of this city’'s 4,400 | population is cut off from the main |street project closed the only lhor-‘ |oughfare connecting the business {and main residential districts. Only | feot traffic is allowed between the | |two_ distriets. | ) ‘not cost a cent. ToKeep Young 'BEAUTY. IN REPOSE ' By ADELAIDE KERR NEW YORK, April Z.—Here is a beauty prescription which does It is a favorite of the most beau- tiful women on the confinent and the most famous actresses in the world. Unless it is included in the regime, beauty cannot be retained. Yet many American women ignore it so completely that they defeat the . very ends which they spend hundreds of dollars trying to at- tain, It is simply—relax and rest During the years I spent in Eu- irope as Feature Editor of The As- |sociated Press . Paris bureau I learned the beauty secrets of some of the lovliest women on the con- tinent. Virtually all of them know the value of repose. Eight hours sleep every night and a hali an hour’s daily rest either after lun- cheon or before dinner is as much a part of their beauty regimes cold cream. | Beauty Ritual as Firemen have stationed some| equipment on each side in case of emergencies. | The street is closed from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. except for one hour at noon her face with riourishing cream, do the telling. Here is the ritual one of them follows every day: Before she dresses for the evening | she removes all makeup, covers and Beauiful, Learn How to Rest and Relax Jane Pickens, stage and radio songbird, who know (he beauty value of rest, relaxes after a m: before an evening performance in a glamorous peigncir of deep blue velvet, Mary Ta INGTON, Aprii 2).—Mary s office is really that between her two pink ears, incidentzally, are covered with long Garbo-ish locks of wavy, auburn hair. She'’s chasing the idea of helping housewives get a hundred pennies worth for every dollar spent. That means a concentrated job of sift- ing the reports of government e perts, trade journals and spe: organizations all over the country She puts the information gathers into a big-weekly magazine |“The Consumers’ Guide,” publish- jed by the Department of Agricul- iture. The magazine came to life (four ars ago when the government ;d[‘(:ld(’d to give the consumer a break by telling him what he was | buying Cut To The Pattern It took a special sort of person‘to And there relishes may be used to give a crusty, Which is not long enough for heavy iayes a relaxing warm bath and,|S.cnder. voung Mary Taylor ovel savory topping.) The housewife who budgets he time will pian to cook other things 1t the same time the loaf is in the n. Foods which she may serve with the meat loaf include escal- loped potatoes, escalloped corn, baked squash and baked potatc A pudding or other baked dessert which requires the same cooking temperature as the loaf also may be selected. Savory Meat Loaf (Serves Eight ) 1 pound beef round; % pound veal round; % pound pork butts; 2/3 cup crumbs; 1 tea- spoon salt; % teaspoon paprika; seasoning; uncooked eggs; 3 hard-cooked eggs; 2 bacon slices; 2 tablespoons chili sauce; 1 cup boiling water. Have the meat ground thorough- ly. Add the crumbs, salt, paprika and other seasonings. Add the un- cooked eggs and knead the loaf the mixture is 1% inches thick (as illustrated). Add the cooked eggs and roll the meat up and over them. Pat the ends and top well Place the loaf in a small baking pan. Add half the water and put n a lid. Bake 30 minutes in a rnod- oven. Baste twice. Add the and the rest of bake 30 minute to a s ; plat- erate bacon wa Carefully r of move ter Suggested Seasonings (These Give The Delicate Flavor) ablespoons minced onions; 3 tablespoons minced green pep- pers; 4 tablespoons minced cel- ery; 1 teaspoon minced parsley; 1. cup water; % teaspoon salt. Mix the ingredients and simmer 10 minutes in a covered pan. Add, liquid and all, to the meat mixture. 4 | ports. ADDING SEASONINGS States for the winter and is now re- turning north to supervise his stores at Fairbanks, Chatanika, and Circle Hot Springs, during the summer season. - - NOTICE Lur special fresh dressed chickens, call Femmer, phone 114. adv. imm‘(cham deliveries. | The project will take several weeks to finish. { o e e b [ BRITISH BASE UNDER ATT |so on up to her head until she is' AcK {into the mattress. She lies so until BY TRIBESMEN ieaie | Fanatics Raid Military| Camp — Revolt Re- ported in Progress ! SIMLA, India, April 29.~Fanati-| tribesmen raided the Brimh! military camp at Waziristan last night, leaving 22 dead or injured.! | Reports received from the north-| west border of the Province said' ¢ sec-|until well blended. Pat out until more than 6000 British soldiers| are in the district to quell the re-| volt. - | H f ) |frazzled nerves and a lack of poise| WHAT'S THIS? (s Gosh, It Begins to Look! Tough for About 200 | Years from Now NEWARK, N. J., April 29.—Scien- tists of the WPA on soil projects| said agriculture in the United dtates will die from its own neglect with- in 200 years and the population will| follow suit unless something is dene right now to prevent soil eros-! ion. ESTEBETH OUT TO... SITKA LAST NIGHT WITH MUCH CARGO' | With Oliver Drange, Leo E.| | Young, and Ann Comer among her | outbound passengers, and. with a large cargo, the Davis Transporta- tion Company motorship. Estebeth, Capt. G. Gustafson, got away from |Juneau at her scheduled time of 6 |o'clock last evening, on her regular weekly mail run to Sitka and way — e ATE END 0 SPRING SEMESTER | Three events which mark ap- proach to the close of the 1937 spring semester at the Juneau schools will take place tomorrow. The Totem, Juneau high .school year book is to be distributed dur- ing the day. The final issue of the J Bird will be presented. | All students except senlors will |register for attendance at school next fall, after massaging the cream Lzhtly into her face, lies down with pads of cotton saturated with ice-cold water over her eyes. Lying flat, she begins consciously| to relax, first the toes, then the foot, the ankle, the knee joint end so limp she seems to have sunk it is time for dressing, which she begins by taking a ccld shower and dashing cold water over her face. She says it took her nearly six months to learn to relax complete- ly in that fashion, but that she |regards it as the most important |beauty ritual in her entire regime. so refreshed is she afterward in body, face and mind. American women have a tenden- ¢y, to rush about much more than continental women, whether their days revolve about a bousehold, a social program or a career. The majority of them plan twice as many things as they can do—then try to wedge in.a little shopping or “beauty” massage for good meas- ure... The result. is a weary face, —none of which make for beauty. Think ‘Black’ Try budgeting .your day for a while —, scheduling just what you know you can accomplish, without| racing to keep pace with appoint- ments, Three or four times a day, relax, completely in your chair for a,few moments, close your eyes and think “black.” It will do much to banish fatigue from mind and body and keep both feeling fresh. When you go to bed, shut off your thoughts, as you turn out the light. (The day is ended and to- morrow will be another one.) Open your window from the top, so that drafts will not strike you, make sure the sheets are smooth, and the bedding light and warm. Relax and go to sleep. s A MANY PRES LECTURE cm V. CRONE % FOR A lirie group of women assem- bled ‘this afternoon in the Northern Light Presbyterjan Church for the [ . demonstration presented by Mrs..Vena L. Crone.. Meat and salad dishes were dem-| several des- onstrated, as well as Prizes were awarded to the follow- ing: Mrs. Hans Loken, Mrs. Frank Olson;, Mrs. Mills, Mrs. Harry Wat- son, Mrs. Jessie Harmon, Mrs, C. F. Vassar, Mrs. G. E. Lackey, Mrs. L. Sullivan, Mrs. Ella H. Still, Mrs. Harry Jensen, Mrs. Julius Moeller, Mrs, Olaf Larson, Mrs. Earle Hun- ter, and Mrs. Alex Kiloh. Mrs. Crone will repeat the dem- onstration at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Northern Light Presbyterian Church, —— T:7 an Empire ad. at the Bureau of Foreign and Do- imestic Commerce cut to the pat- {tern. She hadn't known it, but her |previous ten years had been spent getting ready for the job. She started at Mt. Holyoke stu- dying social service. Then she became labor editor on “The New York Ev- ening Post” for two years. When the job folded, she trotted off to the University of Wisconsin to study economics. Her summers were spent n factories packing safe! razor blades, making notebooks and stu- dying labor history in the making | Taught at Bryn Mawr } Wisconsin over, nt a sum- imer at Bryn Mawr teaching fac- tory women'’s classes. Then she went |to Cleveland for two years to edit lof all things “The Locomotive |Engineers’ Journal” and to start |classes for women in the garment | factories. | After Cleveland came a year at {the London Scheol of Economics, | ;and two years in Spain newspaper- ing. Then she moved to the De- partment of Commerce, and “The Consumers’ Guide” appeared | In four years the Guide has grown from nothing to 100,000 cir- an assistant THREATENED WITH DEATH ASTORIA, Oregon, April 29. — Capt. F. S. Elfving, Columbia River operator, said today two fishermen threatened to shoot him if his ferry damaged. their nets. i Recently a gillnetter won a judge- | destruction of section of net caught in a propeller last summer. “The fishermen now think they own the river,” Capt. Elfving pro- tested. Fishing returns dropped about 10 | percent’ today, compared with yes- terday’s big catch. However they are | still far above the average, someg 'flshermen getting more than half | a ton. | D INDIAN BUREAU OFFICIALS OFF FOR INTERIOR ©On a survey of Indian stations in| the Interior and Westward, Educa- tion Director Willard Beatty of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Washing- ton, D. C. accompanied by Mrs. 'BeattyA C. M. Hirst, Education Di- | Irector for Alaska, and Hans Stamm, |architectural engineer, left here on the PAA plane yesterday afternoon for Fairbanks. Director Beatty is making a sur-E vey of the Territory with the view of carrying out a five-year school| and hospital building program in the Territory. a | Twelve nee and lor’s Profession Is Protecting Consume VALUES SLEUTH The government hired Mary Taylor to tell American con- sumers how they could get {he most for their dollars. culation, telling women how to judge good € nat grade of canned peaches and peas to buy, what or- ar e the most vitamins. Gets Resulls Consumers’ nizations are pri p all over the country. s Taylor denies that her hand fans the flames, but while her mag- azine has grown, this has come about mers’ problems a 12,000 home economics The American Standards As- sociation has organized a com- mittee on consumers’ Manufacturers are beginning to put really informative labels- on sheets, blankets and rugs. Women’s clubs are holding consumers’ study clubs. Dozens of cities have con- sumers’ councils that are wag- ing battles for cleaner milk, lower bread prices. VOITA QUITS AT MATANUSKA Has No Complaint but Wife Unable to Adjust Her- self to Country needs, PALMER, Alaska, April 29.——Tom ment against the ferry company for | VOU?, formerly of Pine City, Min-| nesota, has withdrawn from the Matanuska Colony. He said he has no complaint to make, but his wife is unable to become adjusted to the country. 12,000 VOTE, STRIKE 1SSUE ABERDEEN, Wash., April 29. — thousand southwest Wash- ington lumber workers begin voting today whether to strike for higher wages and recognition of the union as a bargaining agency. The vote will be tabulated mnext Tuesday. Federal Bureau of Investigation Moves; Seattle Headquarters| SEATTLE, April 29.—State head- quarters of the Federal Bureau of Investigation were opened here to- day. Agents assigned to the Matt- (son kidnaping and slaying case were | transferred here. U. §. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAD THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau, Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, boginning at 4 p.m., April 29. Showers, mixed with snow flursies at infervals, tonight and Fri- day; moderate to fresh east and ssutheast winds. LOCAL DATA Tewal. Humidity Wind Velocity ~Weather 33 66 SE 13 Lt. Snow 20.50 40 36 NE 16 Cioudy 2044 44 43 SE 9 Lt.R.&S. CABLE AND RADIG REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4p.m. Lowestda.m. 4am. Precip. 4am. temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather 3 34 10 0 Clear 23 — 2 14 8 16 4 15 18 Barometer 29.68 Station Atka Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks | Dawsan St. Paul iDu'.(‘h Harbor ;Kndiak | Cordova |Juneaun Eitka | Ketchikan | Prince Rupert | Edmonton | Seattle Portland |8an Francisco New York .. Washington 42 Cloudy 16 6 40 16 4 4“4 . 44 62 52 .. 54 58 60 56 50 10 G 60 48 54 4 WEATHER CONDITION AT 8 A. M. TODAY i Seattle (airport), partly cloudy, temperature, 42; Blaine, cloudy, 140; Vietoria, clear, 50; Alert Bay, cl>udy, 40; Bull Harbor, cloudy, 41; | Langara, showers, 40; Prince Rupert, raining, 40; Ketchikan, rain and snow, 37; Craig, cloudy, 42; Wrangell, raining, 40; Petersburg, rainin 139; Sitka, raining, 39; Soapstone Point, snowing, 38; Juneau, snowin 189; Radioville, cloudy, 38; Skagway, cloudy, 42; Cape St. Elias, clear, 86; Cordova, partly cloudy, 39; Chitina, clear, 32; McCarthy, clear, Anchorage, clear, 34: Fairbanks, partly cloudy, 28; Hot !prings, pa cioudy, 30; Tanana, cloudy, 16; Ruby, clear, 9; Nulato, clear, 12; Ka tag, clear, 8; Unalakleet, partly cloudy, 4; Flat, clear, 3. * April 30, Juneau—Sunrise, 4:10 a.m.; sunset, 7:46 p.m. WEATHER SXNOPSIS Low barometric pressure continued this morning from Barrow southward to British Columbia and throughout the Mackenzie vall southward to Alberta, there being a storm area centered over the Gi of ‘Alaska near Yakutat, the lowest reported pressure being 29 inche: High pressure prevailed from the Seward Peninsula soithward to the Hawaiian and Midway Islands, the crest being 30.80 inches near Atka. This general pressure distribution has been attended by precipitation from Southeast Alaska southward t> British Columbia, also over the | southern Bering Sea and by generally fair weather over remainder of Alaska. Unseasonably cool weather continued throughout Alaska, especially so over the Bering Sea region, Nome and Bethel reported 4 above and \Barrow 2 above. The lowest temperature at Fairbanks last night was |22 degrees and the highest yesterday was 34 degrees. | ngram (]pgn; | R . Here Saturday the late populac songs. Each lesson tuper- vised and graded by professional teachers. You sccomplish in months what formerly Speakers Will Discuss Ac-|| tivities Before Students and Over Radio | By proclamauon of the President | of the United States, Saturday is to be observed as May Day, Child Health Day, opening a five day pro- gram of special health activities, | sponsored in Alaska by the Terri- | | torial Department of Health. In charge of the program for Ju- neau is Mrs. Marie Drake, working ! with Mrs: E. M. Polley, chairman of the special program for the entire Territory. | At Juneau High School tomorrow, Dr. John A. Carswell, Territorial | | epidemiologist, will speak at 11 am., | laddressing students on “Child! |Health.” A special health program | ‘wi]l be held in the grade school be- | (ginning at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow. | They Chamber of Commerce, the | | Rotary Club, and the American Le- ' |gion are all sponsoring the Child | Health program, which is also to be |marked by radio discussion. E. M. !Polley of the American Legion is to speak over station KINY at 8:05 |Saturday, discussing health i activities. Other speakers are to be | fg announced shortly. On Wednesday, May 5, as a part of the Child Health program, the Territorial Department of Health is § giving free immunization against diphtheria at the Juneau schools, to | children: from: six months old to 16 | | vears, who have not been protected heretofore. 40 44 ’ 60 48 52 56 Rain Pt. Clay Pt. €ldy Cle: Clear Clear | i 4 0 o0 5 id yoars. For beginners er advanced students. MIRACLE CHORD DETECTOR | PLAY CHORDS AT ONCE M FOR YOUR COPY TODAY EVIOUS MUSICAL TRAINING BROADWAY SCHODL- MUSIC Bl sroncivar tmtarie D5 . TACOMA, WaSH. S ) MOOSE OFFICERS = | T0 BE INS Installation of officers will be held at the meeting of the Loyal Order |of Moose tomorrow. evening, the |services to be held in Moose Hall. | Ed Rodenberg Jr. will be installed as Distator; Fridolph Erickson, Vice Dictator; Thomas Hughes, Prelate; John Pastl, Treasurer; G. A. Bald- | | win, Secretary; Ed Rodenberg, Trus- | tee; William Bergstrand, Delegate.[ | A large attendance is expected at |the meeting. | | | | l For finer baking Juneau-Yofing Hardware Co. Sleep on Spring Air @

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