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4 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JULY 12, 1937 NEGLIGES- PAJAMAS Fashion is the breath of life to us . . we live for it and with it twenty-four hours evety day. Just stop and think for g moment how dull YOUR life would be without the ex- citement of new clothes. HOUSE COATS are the last word in negliges. These coats come in a variety of fabrics and colors. Sizes 14 to 42. Prices $5.95 to $16.50 LOUNGING PAJAMAS in Satin Striped Taffeta and Printed Silk— $7.50 and up Sizes 14 to 44 B. M. Behrends Co. Inc. JUNEAU'S LEADING DEPARTMENT STORE * 3 bling pleasant coniections and sip- at one cioth in a favorite res- : H | ping inexhaustible cups of java. a e‘ n' erl" taurans. | There was the time a friend took The late Ring wrdner, a fastid-|him to Junch and after an hour’s . . ious diner, once spent 72 hours atichat, got up and went away. Sev- Passl" In N Y his table in a 45th Street cafe, eX-'eryl days later the friend came| & B3y |a 45th Stieet cafe, explaining that!pack and Lardner was still there. such a was not too long for| a man who wanted to re stay It's like this,” Lardner explain- SAVOr led, “I know the manager and he’s the men Asserts Tucker i & 1ot | T)inere | But today one seizes a waiter by!consumes several hours over break- The Majority of Diners|in. amm shouts an order, guips it fadt’ siote. Chiest &ré ofién Tete Order, Then Gulp — Few |down and hurries axuy. The answerturbed over the Fiske deliberation TR s is that leisure, like 1. ender and old'for not wishing to appear rude, Observe Good Old Ds Y€ llace, is a word that sounds nice but!they attempt to go along in his doesn’t mean much in an age when Jejsurely manner. But by time you NEW YORK, July 12 -Table Ini- life rushes past like a river in spring 'have finished breakfast, read the tering has almost becony: a lost axt flood 4 I morning paper telephoned the office in New Yorl ough Guthrie Mc t was Ring who really wa$ con-!and perhaps indulged in a brisk turn Clintie, Dwi, iske, Christor bt it by and watch life and uround the block, he is only finish- Morley an t e ‘ly by—if we were/ing his orange julce. “Dining is to the 10le | seate a fav "ite resaurant nib- sych a pleasure that I try to pro- ractice ol passing —llong it indefinitely,” he confesses. | Guthrie McClintic, the producer, lis another whose breakfast is a {ritual lasting several hours. He will read several plays between cereal tand eggs. Charlie MacArthur might |also be classed as one who leliber- ates over his food, although this is not always the case, Charlie is such an omniverous talker that he !really doesn’'t get a chance to make » é%é ,an? s’ hoice delicacies on a first class|letting me spend my vacation here.” | u. | P : Seatitle Sta FOUR CATHOLIC PRIESTS HERE Brother of Joe Thibodeau | Visiting in Juneau This Week Motoring from |to Seattle where they boarded the, Mount McKinley for Alaska, four| Cathalic prietts, one of whom is the Rev. Anthony Thibodeau, brother of Joe Thibodeau of Juneau, arrived, !here Saturday night for a few days’, visit i Accompanying Rev. Thibodeau are Rev. Alphonse Trottier, Rev. Odon Archambeau, and Rev. P. A.! Granger. | | Rev. Thibodeau is a teacher of Freneh literature in the preparatory |college of the Assumption Seminary, Assumption, Quebec, while Rev. Tro- tier is an English teacher there, lRuv. Archbeau is a parish priest lin the village of Crab Tree, Quebec, 'and Rev. Granger is a member of the Dominican Order from Mon- (treal. Yesterday at the Shrine to St. Terese, Rev. Thibodeau said mass in the retreat house, with Robert Thibodeau, his nephew, as server, becoming the first priest outside of the Vicarate of Alaska to say mass at the Shrine. The Rey. Trottier and Rev. Archambeau alternated in mass at the Church of the nativity. The four priests are being enter- tained by Joe Thibodeau during 'their stay in Juneau, and were guests at the ball game yesterday in Douglas. They are planning a fishing trip with Mr. Thibodeau Before leaving for Juneau they stopped for a short time at Lake Louise and Banff. A picket line of 50 men was throw when Ame Jurisdie! of circulation employees. The pap FAMOUS SONG WRITER E0ES ~ ONVACATION George Tj;cker Recalls, | Story of Joe Howard, .1 Just 30 Years Ago By GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK, July 12.—It was just two minutes before midnight when Joe Howard, motioning a red cap toward his bags, saun tered through Grand Central terminal Miss Louisiana i { and boarded a fast train for | Té The old | song writer, who i swas pegging { tear - jerkers { when Tin Pan I Alley wasn't even a foot-path, was Y se heading south. “( It may be that MV the name Howard, confronting you suddenly in cold type, doesn’t mean much . . . But it will when you thirik back and remember he wrote “T Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now?" | * * * o There’s a legend about that son and how it came to be written. How- ard and some friends were strength- ening themselves against the rigors of Chicago’s bitter cold (this in 1904) at the Golden Horseshoe bar of the old Brevoort. | It was a Friday night. Into the bar came a couple of college boys in turtle-neck sweaters and small caps. One of the lads was {in a distressing manner. ried a much-read letter in his hand, | “ a letter from his girl informing him | that the jig was up, insofar as he| Gussie Short | First state-wide winner selected to enter the annual national beauty pageant at Atlantic City in September is Gussie Short, ican Newspaper Guild members went on strike during o nal dispute with the Teamsters' Union over organizaition day of the strike with a skeleton crew of non-guild members, picture shows part of the picket line in front of the Star Building. |gifts. r Picketed n about the eattie Star Building er published successfully the first This teaching her . ever . T wonder who's how . .. I wonder if she . . tells him of me . .. " That was more than 30 years ago! The song, the most stickily senti- mental ballad ever turned out, set the style for ballads then. It's still| being sung. Wha$ brought all this up was the trick of fate that deposited me in Grand Central at the identical moment when Joe, ticket in hand, tossed his luggage to a porter and marched off toward his train. The porter could not have known who Howard was. Yet, as he trudged| along, he was humming an old fa- miliar tune. The one that goes: “I wonder who'’s kissing her now .. .” $. o e Frank Black’s recent fan gift of a tiny ivory model piano has proved costly, So many friends have ad- mired it, that Black has had to have almost 100 reproductions made as Although the Irish are reputed a dominant race in New York, they are numerically only fifth. The Jews and Ttalians have the largest popu- lations. The average length of time any- body lives in the Times Square dis~ trict is 11 months, T e N RO John L. Kayser of Toledo, O, whose hobby is flower gardening,! has 160 varieties of blooming iris in’ his yard. {50; Bull Harbor, foggy, 55; Triple Island, raining; Iangara Island, rai U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinily, beginning at 4 p.m., July 12. Rain tonight and Tuesday; gentle to moderate southerly winds. LOCAL DATA Time psarom:ter Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weathee 4 pm. yesty 3017 « 66 47 By Cloudy 4 a.m. today 30.10 56 82 Calm 0 Cloudy Noon today 30.05 63 65 8 8 Cloudy CABLE AND RADIO REPO».TS TODAY Max. temp. Lowest*4am. #am. Precip. 4am. Station last 24 hours temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weather Anchorage M 47 —_ — 0 N Barrow 50 38 38 22 0 Clear Nome 64 48 50 4 0 Pt. Cldy Bethel 64 | 52 52 4 0 Clondy Fairbanks 84 | 50 56 4 0 Pt. Cldy Dawson 78 56 56 0 0 Cloudy St. Paul % 56 | 42 46 10 0 Cloudy Duteh Harbor 50 48 50 6 T Cloudy Kodiak 50 48 48 4 16 Rain Cordova 68 | 48 48 0 0 Clear Juneau .. 69 | 55 56 0 T Cloudy Sitka 64 | 53 — i A2 o Ketchikan 62 54 54 4 18 Rain Prince Rupert 64 | 56 56 10 32 Rain | Edmonton 6 48 48 4 0 Clear Seattle % 56 56 4 0 Clear Portland 80 60 60 6 0 Cloudy San Francisco 62 52 54 4 0 Cloudy | {New_York 88 | 0 4 101 Cloudy Washington 94 | 0 s 4 12 Pt Cdy WEATHER CONDITION AT 8 A. M. TODAY Seattle 4_airl)om, cloudy, témperature 58; Blaine, partly cloudy, 56: Victoria, clear, 55; Kafmloops, partly cloudy, 64; Alert Bay, foggy, ing, 55; Prince Rupert, raining, °53;, Ketchikan, misting 56; Crai raining, 59; Wrangell, cloudy, 59; Petersburg, cloudy, 57; Sitka, cloudy, 57; Tenakee, cloudy; Port Althorp, cloudy; Radioville, clous dy, 58; Soapstone Point, cloudy, 54; ; Juneau, cloudy, 57; Skagway, cloudy, 53; Cordova, clear, 56; Yakataga, clear; Chitina, clear, 58; Mc- Carthy, clear, 50; Valdez, clear, 60; Anchorage, partly cloudy, 59; Por- tage, clear, 66; Fairbanks, cloudy, 64; Ruby, partly cloudy, 60; Nulato, clear, 70; Flat, partly cloudy, 57; Ohogamute, partly cloudy, 60. Juneau, Julf§ 13. — Sunrise, 3:13 a.m.; sunset, 8:57 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS The barometric pressure was high this mornnng along the coast from the Prince William Sound region southeastward to Oregon thence southwestward to the Hawaiian Islands, the crest being 3050 inches over the.Pacific Ocean at latitude 42 degrees and longitude 140 degrees. Rains were reported over Kodiak Island and over the south- ern portion of Sowtheast Alaska and northern British Columbia while generally fair weather prevailed over the Prince William Sound re- gion and the interior of Alaska. Fog was reported this morning along the coast from Petersburg southward to Alert Bay. Flood of Rocks Today, Sutter lives among rocks, {on top of rocks and between rocks. {In 18 months, persons who read the |story sent or brought him more |than 200 tons of stones. In a single {day more than 50 tons arrived by mail truck and on the rear seats of visitors’ sedans. Rocks from every state in " Bargained For . ,:g\,; Y union, from 22 countries, ai F A o {1 |continents and 14 volcanoes July 12.—Wel- scattered over the garden. o the t; are TACOMA, Wash,, ter Sutter needs no one to convince him of the power of the press. In the Middle Af : e ¥ R | E > Ages dancing the He already has 1,000 tons of proof. | i paniella was thought to cure in- .Tw.u yoars agn,_.thc I\fsoclmcd‘s ity induced by the bite of the Press FvatuAe‘ Service Ai.lstubuted 2 /large European spiders. Hence the story concerning Sutter's rock gar-|, .. tarantula den, to which visitors were admit-| s TR N ted only if they brought rocks to! add to the collection. A recent survey estimated that At that time his garden consisted 431,000 donors presented between of one small waterfall and some $50,000,000 and $100,000,000 in out- 200 or 300 rocks he had collected right gifts to higher education in himself. 1936. Vital facts that sell Canned food Salmon PEASANT DIRNDLS FOR DEBUTANTE The dirndl, which has traveled so far in the fashion world since it Jeft its Austrian birthplace, has now been adapted to beach and play clothes for the American deb. Coral and white striped cotton print _piakes the frock, whose design is reminiscent of the Austrian peasant costume and blue and white cotton print makes the shorts worn A*fl. {away with his food. Omnce In a| giriking brunet who will represent |night club a steak was set before | Louisiana. She is a sophomore | this Irish gadabout, but 40 minutes| at Louisiana State Normal, 18 |later Charlie was still talking, and| years old and is from Winns- |yha yj udes of life, querl | the waiter courteously removed it, boro, La. wonder who's kissing her now? supplanting it with a fresh, hot one. | b Al BT | MacArthur never knew it until his | Howard heard the question. Sud- | companion told him the next day. he , was concerned. She had stepped out | jand got herself another beau. | His pal, bitterly reflecting upon | 13 s | Sweden has 12,057 university stu- denly borrowed a peneil, and | Another who feels keenly oh this {dents, of whom 3,360 attend the there, at the Golden Horseshoe bar, | subject is Christopher Morley. He| University Upsala, oldest and larg- he began to write on a scrap of 'is the founder of the Three Hours | est institution of its kind in the brown paper: 3 | iFur Lunch Club. country. “I wonder who's kissing her now Blast of Fireworks Kzils F we ; E fatally and beauty parior in Nampa, Idaho. Fire chief L. T. Lessinger said children where the fireworis were piled in display, apparently set it off acciden- the drug store, estimated his loss at $20,000. playing at the front ef tally. E. L. Drake, proprietor QUESTION: What do leading food authorities say about Alaska’s Canned Salmon? ANSWER: Canned Salmon contains a greater variety of important nutrients than almost any other food, noted authorities agree. High grade protein to give us staying power, rebuild muscles and tissue. Calcium and phosphorus to keep teeth and bones sound and healthy. The rare *‘sunshine”’ vitamin D and *“‘protective’’ vitamins Aand G. Todine which helps to prevent goitre. All these diet essentials are present in Alaska’s Canned Salmon. Canned Salmon advertising is carrying these vital food facts into millions of U.S. homes this year, promoting the use of Alaska’s major food product. Like every other family in the Territory yours is sure to share in, the benefits from the wider use of Canned Salmon— better times for Alaska. SAI.MbN SALAD SUPREME WITH TOMATO ASPIC Ring mold of tomatp aspic 1 tbsp. lemon juice 2 cups (1 1b.) Canned Salmon Seasonings 1 cup cooked green peas Mayonnaise 1 tbsp. chopped green pepper Cottage cheese Chill until firm. Unmold and flaked in large pieces with s — then chilling. Make your favorite tomato aspie in large ring mold. pile center with salmon salad, made by mixing salmon d peas, green pepper, lemon juice, mayonnaise and seasoning: Decorate with salad greens and pimento-stuffed ofives. Place seasoned cottage cheese around mold with fork. Pass mayonnaise and French This recipe is typical of those appearing in the Canned Salmon Industry's navional magazine advertising dressing. Serves 6 to 8.