The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 6, 1937, Page 3

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8 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 6, 1937 ‘Night Waitress Will Be Film at Capitol Tonight g0t Grahitis, Cardon Jones Play in Lead- ing Roles Juneau The Show Place of i from Transplanting his prow Theatre. is Margot G me, noted English ctress, who appeared in the leading femi- nine role in RKO's prize photoplay of 19 “The Informer.” “Night Waitress is the story of young sea skipper and an unfol tunate girl who meet on the col ful 'San Francisco waterfront and become involved with the attempt of a dangerous gang to recover stolen \hinmcm of gold bullion. BRDWNS SOUTH George Brown for tonight at Playing opposite the Capitol Jone: er member of - ind established a weekly ne \per and exciting ro RKO W A hounded gisl...fight. the iron to the silver screen b P : Gordon Jones, former football ing for love in a water- . o g ek ik SEE HER of the University of Cali- g oo e B8 Los Angeles, plays his first YDRAMATIC STORY! le in RKO Radio’s thrill] § it Waitress.” starling Here Are Some QUICKLY-COOKED FEAST Lamb chops, cauliflower make a once in jig time, side before it is turned. well-rounded By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE AP Feature Service Writer Quick changes in the weather, the arrival of unexpected guests or squee in an extra engag The Empire staff; his wife the ment will give the hostess who h with wffnmvlr " 4[\ P]('W”mn[ also (mi‘ll few quick tricks up her sleeve a N i |the staff; the 6-months old son|chance to shine. S\ MARGOT Tony, and “Bob” the canine nurse| All she has to do is survey the \{\ GRRHRME maid, passed through Juneau on contents of the pantry and refrig- A the Alaska from Fairbanks bound [efator — and, presto, she'll know 7% \‘E/ GORDON for San Francisco to spend the win- |exactly what to do! \\I J o N E s ter. They will return north in the| She can work magic, for in- Spring stance, with a left-over roast and The Browns left here a some odds and ends of cooked / H“n_,hmb,lflmon( last June. They went to Seldovia |vegetables. If the day is warm Il go into a meat and lenough they Tricks sliced pineapple, stalks of asparagus and portions of meal that may be grilled all at Each item should be allowed to brown well on one ‘808" BARTLETT APPOINTED TO PLAN COUNCIL : }W l”\llfl\t\ n /\]d}vl\dl] N(llll(’d '.',X(‘('U“V(‘ 5( ('l'(‘[il]'V 0{ { ‘W ]( kY 1‘01 xal /\L,en(y (Continuea rrom Page One) | to prepare the plan and this com-|fore the newness wears off and it @ card party for Eagles and the Sevite Bithe drama A3 in the thriving Cook Inlet town and |vegetable 1 —ora \(-:vuhlvi . s Picture were making good when the strike 'salad to- accompany sliced meat.|have planning councils with tech- of a gitl alone in a tied up steamers and they were|If it's chilly (l‘n‘_\';v actly ‘the |nically trained staffs to study their world of men prevented from getting newsprint. [thing for pot pie, hash, or|local economic problems. In this against the law! Directed by Lew Landers They closed up shop and went to amed mixtures to top steaming|connection it will be recalled Con- Associate Producer, Joseph Henry Steele Fairbanks where Brown has been|home-made biscuits. gress recently passed a concurrent ~— engaged with his brother-in-law in | Sidh D Motser Gbhe resolution requesting the President ALSO Coming—TFriday-Saturday | the bus and motor u-:m\pun..mu: srilled foods are favorites with|t0 Prepare and submit before Feb- Man Sampson WORILI I’RLMIP R business, | quick-trick hostesses. They take a |iuery 1, 1 a preliminary plan tan Waterfront of Walter Wanger's — [little planning, to be sure. Bug!for the development of natural re- Stranger Than Fiction “VOGUES OF 19387 dropped a Texas league single to|they can be served on short order, S0UT¢es and a system of mosi need- Wanted a Master “I's . rare {hpedt for left. Bartell lined out to Hoag. |What's more, grilled combinations I public works in Alaska. More F. M-G-M News Juneau's Theatregoers” No run, one hit, no errors, one eliminate the bother of side dishes, #1d more Congress and the State | ey e . left on base. | Here are just a few suggestions; Lezislatures are discharging piece- L YANKEES—Southpaw Al Smith| Quick trick No. 1: Top tomato Menl consideration of requests for ‘ took the mound for the Giants. halves with crushed pineapple and funds for resource development and PLAY BY PLAY [confub between the umpires and |fovseni'i's hosie run to the Jit | then sprinkle them with choese, €21ing for all round plans that X Terry it was decided Gum- | fie1q stands. Gomez lined out to Arrange them on a shallow pan, S1OW how one project affects an- (Contitied Trois Page Onw bert would take the mound in-|pi 6 “Grosetti lined out to Ott.Place sweet potato halves around O!h¢r and which should be han- 2 stead of (J,ummfnvva;wm:, 1":('m|m|- Rotte Tt Gk Wi Nsove. st And WAN A i Eounns ed first. . §Egets UEaREL. Wihitel for an| ope run, one hit, no errors, nonie (buttered green beans. Spriv Alaska Plan tell dropped. sthe.-hall - sand. was | ¢ scoring Hoag 1 sending | 1.0t on ba i combination Teethe thitter and The Council hopes to study and charged. with an error as Gomez Selkitk to third. Coffman replaced NINTH INNING jseasonings and then stick it into prepare reports with recommenda- scrambled back safely Gumbert. Gomez walked. GIANTS—Ot fanned out. Leiber |the oven to broil for fifteen min- tions during the nex| two years as to left, filling the basc to Moore. Roife walke 000~ Lvied ot Ao DiMaguto, | Ripgle s a considerable number of the more singled to left, scoring Gomez and itk yacross the. plate. DI- | 20 L T e ot o | Stuffed Pineapple sportant problems of ‘Territorial Crosetti while Rolfe went to third e flied to Leiber. Cobgy | ecariy grounded oWt 101 quick trick No. 2: Stuff pineap- development, but at first will be and DiMaggio to ig| Seven runs, five hits, two errors, | O Th Lo rors, one Ple slices with figs, prunes, dates or fully occupled in drafting recom- # was_intentionally S loft on base. 70 CHOM O nuts. Place them in a shallow pan mendations and supporting state- singled through Whitehead, SEVENTH INNING - it 4 and surround them with sliced ments for consideration in connec- Rolfe and leaving the GIANTS — Ripple flied out to IDAHO COUPLE bananas and peach halves. Bri tion with the Alaska plan called Hoag grounded to O forced | goag, McCarthy rolled out, Gomez| In Seward last week the tops with a third of a cup of for in the concurrent resolution out DiMaggio at the plate. Selkirk |, Gen Mancuso flied out to| Gecich of Idaho became the bride PrOWD sugar mixed with four table- mentioned above. The President to right, scor Gehrig and | pivagoio, of Ry Prandls’ Fames ‘also of FPoonsful of melted butter and a i instructed the National and sent H to g No runs, no hits, no errors, none | Idaho, who has been 1'“ Seward | \ird of a cup of orange juice. Let source Committee in Washington Hubbell was rep! by Bt on bk for the past several months, |that combination broil for ten min- hander Dick Coffman. The an-| yANKEES—Gehrig walked. Dick-| Mr. James is employed as a car- Utes—and watch the eyes of your mitice has asked the Alaska Ter-| ::fx“zm or }; ,,,,w‘d that Harry Gum-|ey walked. Hoag hit into a double | penter in construction of the Ar. fAmily or guests light up when it's ritorial Council to make recommen-| wou! pitch and after a long play, Ott to Whitehead to Mc- |cade building in Seward. f»(‘l'\'l’vd on a hot platter! ! (l}l((()l]& (lmlvrvf]m:( the views ng the | G ad Clibsle - fokihnd - A | i o i | Quick trick No. 3: Put six links Territory. This is an exceptional Selkirk out, Bartell to McCarthy. | SAILING PUT OVER of sausage in a shallow pan or on opportunity for the people of Alas-| No runs, no hits, one left on base. EIGHTH INNING DO errors, Sailing of the motorship Estebeth Yield quicker to the Sitka and way ports has been for Poultice- Vapnr ncunn of % | delayed until Friday evening instead Cy;sr(:on.os v s GIANTS—Whitehead flied out to | of Wednesday evening. adv. VAPGCRUB | DiMaggio. Berger, batting for Coff- PROVED BV FRCLLHULER | man, flied out to Dl\h\g;,lo Moore | Try Top Notch Chili—15c. adv. Subscribe for The Empire NOW and get full report of Great Baseball Classic a grill. Surround them with lmll‘ a cup of mushrooms, tomatoes and one cup of cooked uliflower. Pour over the combi- |nation a seasoning made of chop- ped ripe olives added to about a fourth of a cup of French dress- ‘ing. Broiling time: fifteen minutes. | Grilled Ham Slices | Quick trick No. 4: Grill slices of |ham or lamb or pork chops for ten | minutes or so — ;s,hgmly browned. Top them with halves of cooked prunes and orange |slices and surround them with halvcs of pears. Use a basting 'made of a third of a cup of orange Julce. a fourth of a cup of lemon | namon about every three minutes. | Additional broiling time needed to brown the fruil about ten min- utes. “R”-month quick trick: Dip oys- ters in melted butter and let them broil for ten minutes. Serve them with cabbage or relish salad, but- tered asparagus — or some other | ereen vegetable, hot rolls, apple | pie, cheese and coffee, pi SR Today's News Today.—Empire. el UNITED STATES DI‘ PARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office P Anchorage, Alaska. August 6, 1937. Notice is hereby given that Silas Dalton, entryman, together with his witngsses Matthew Laurence ’and Charles Fawcett, has made final proof on his homestead, An- chorage 06672, for a tract of land embraced in U. S. Survey No. 2124, situated on Port Frederick within |Survey No. 1899, Hoonah elimina- tion from Tongass National Forest, in latitude 58 degrees 06’ 20” N. longitude 135 degrees 26° W. con- taining 5.82 acres, and it is now in the files of the U. 8. Land Office, Anchorage, and if no protest is filed in the local land office within the period of publication or thirty days thereafter, said final proof {will be accepted and final certifi- cate issued. GEORGE A. LINGO, chi.slu | First publication, Sept. 15, LLast publication, Nov. 10, 1937. until they are | juice and one teaspoonful of cin-| ka to get consideration of lhmr! f ideas on things to be done to pro-| mote the permanent development of the Territory and the Cmmcxl‘ expects to confer with local public| agencies Chambers of Commerce, and individuals in drafting the ma- terial to be submitted. Mr. Bart-| lett will doubtless want to start| work at once on this important Alaska planning activity.” MINER SOUTH BOUND Lee Raymond of the Bremner mine is a southbound passenger on the steamer Alaska. enroute to San Francisco. S About 60000 fewer pers on farms in the United States at the beginning of 1937 than a year earlier. The farm population on January 1 of this year 5 31, 729 000 IIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIHlIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIlIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIH | Lunt {ing it. . . SHOW SEASON or Hurried Hostesses HAS STARTED | IN NEW YORK Sprint from October (o Christmas Begins A Great Time By GEORGE W YORK, Oct. 6. ew York's most son is beginning. It is the sprint from October till Christmas, with new plays jostling one another like apples in a barrel and the winter TUCKER ‘What is by exciting sea- festivities boiling up with exuber-! ance of a thousand singing kettles. Néw snow and fresh plays and exciting first nights, Frost plumes in the air and football and people come alive. . . . Theatrical critics bursting from stage doors at 11:10 pm. and grabbing hac in a rush to get their reviews into | print before dead-line. . . . Always it seems that fall brings the most tingling experiences. . . . It is the season that, in retrospect, | crystalizes the sum of good times. . I remember a Saturday after- noon in November, a day calling for turning maple screaming stadiums, with pennants flying and bands playing. .. . You muld ~mo|l the last nutty fragrance That was the after- noon saw Osgood Perking in “Good- Bw Again.” ever forget that day, or Osgood Perkin. or that play, I remember a Monday night in y winter. . . . Six inches of new as on the sidewalks and in . It was still white SNOW W the streets. and brittely and untouched by the | and the with the mud discoloration dirt and tangible any big city defiles and makes ugly | saw | new snow. ... On that night T “Accent on Youth,” which, through a welter of good plays and bad, re- mains as vivid as a badge. . There were three of us and we walked home in the snow, quoting the lines and laugh- ing like dolts over amusing situa- tions in the play. “Twentieth Century,” the Hecht | and MacArthur play, with its lu- natic producer (in the play), and its insane press-agent (in the play), to whom everyone was either a foul Corsican or a foul Aztec. . “Reunion in Vienna,” with Alfr and Lynn Fontanne, . “Dinner at Eight.” “Design | for Living.” “The Children’s Hour.” . All these, and othe which were bright golden butter- balls of triumphs, and each repre sented, to this observer, at leas an exciting day in the swiftest, most, breath-taking, and tingling af all seasons—the winter show sea son in New York, Now we have another new sea- son, new like a bright new coin, d 20-1to be spun and flipped into the|las Inn. air and caught again and again be- (slips away from us without some-| how our knowing how or when. It will be a period of haunting the West Forties, for there is where most of the theatres are to be found, and of fine, dusty snow beating down on tiaras and tall silk hats (as the doorman hands them down from their cabs. . . . And of the rise of first curtains and the hush- ed quiet as the actors come on, and as the burst of chatter and the rush for the foyers as the between- act curtains come ringing down.... It is an excitement amounting | almost to a subdued hysteria and it touches New York as an October breeze might touch the hair of a young girl. . . . There is no escap- . And this correspondent, wants to. - for one, nev WALLSTEDT IN JUNEAU S. Wallstedt, local broker, return- ed on the Alaska after a traveling trip to the Westward and Interior where he called on the trade. FIRE PREVI‘II‘I'IOII WEEK o afeguard Your Property by eliminating hazards which may cause fire — clean up your attic, basement and garage; chimneys and electrical appartus. CARRY ADEQUATE INSURANCE, as an additional safequard, so if you do have a fire, the loss will be Allen Shattuc ours, not yours. Phone 2 49 i leaves and| . I will nev- | in- | which | policeman’s COLISEUM Tibbett Sings In Feature Hit | cxsr mos o ~ Now, Coliseum | rawraes “Under Your Spell” Ends Tl“flm | Juneau Showing | Tonight 1 music e ;' | Al classica fs not good and all swing music not bad ac- cording to Lawrence Tibbett who sings both types in his latest Twen- g tieth Century-Fox picture “Under \ \ o Your Spell” showing tonight at the ‘ Coliseum Theatre, “The only way to judge singers land songs is to judge if they do well the job tiey out to perform,” Tibbett set “There are singers of WENDY IARRI! classical songs who have no little / GREGORY RATOFF prestige who leave their audiences 7] i bsolutely cold And Jolson singing \ Akmu‘g‘!‘ns“"!n ‘S‘nlm,‘«' 1?‘)\-' I&‘ x‘nnl'x:. flll.‘ a rf_:nl.‘ j...4Oto Ludwig Preminger £ | artist than these near-greats ever have been” In listing his musical favorites, the famous Bartitone says that dus-| ky Bill Robinson, the tap dancer,| jand Toscanini, the Italian conduct- |or, have the best senses of rhythm A strarige combination, but Tibbett, who should know, insists that thi) Vincent Lopez and Orchestra “Charlie McCarty” Ted Husing—Late News spirit showh by the Island since the recent fire. During their visit in Douglas, where Mr. Bradley had often stay- ed during his childhood, the San Franciscans were the dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pearce. e e | TEACHER VISITS HEAR | | M™iss Agnes Schlosser who has l been teaching in the Territorial | is true. Wendy Barrie, Gregory Ratoff and | Arthur Treacher are featured in the (famous baritone’s supporting cast. { RRMERTIR L T | 4= —————‘l- DOUGLAS | | N E ws schools and last year at Crooked | Creek arrived here on the Alaska and will stop over a week for the Fra next boat before continuing on PUSICH, WALLE south for a vacation in the States, FORREST TO BE WEDED - | " OFFICIALS TO KETCHIKAN The marriage of Miss Helen Pu- U. 8. Marshal William T. Mahon- e o Mr] s Wallen ‘W'ml"'.d Fm'“;""j ey and Federal Court Clerk Robert WUl e MLSENNG () (e D"““i 45| Coughlin sailed on the steamer Al Catholic Church tomorrow morning aska this morning for Ketchikan on at 9 o'clock, the Rev. Budde offic-|,or0ia) pusiness in connection with iating. The ceremony will be pub-|{y . dotes. ChtaRb. lic as well as a reception for the il Inewlyweds which will take place at BOWLING TONIGHT (the Pusich home in the evening at| . mederals and United Food {7:30 o'clock. All friends are in- tangle tonight at 7:30 o'clock on the ited to go to the wedding and re-| grfinswick alleys in the Commercial “‘l’“"“ League tourney. i Al el e SHOWER IS TO HONOR Try Tnp Notch Lllnch—35c adv. ! NEWLYWEDS TONIGHT | Mesdames J. O. Kirkham and Er- f\.m Hachmeister will be hostesses {at a shower to be given for Mr: Clarence Walters, the former Miss Geneva Feero, in the Parish Hall lthis evening. About fifty guests ‘l‘l\'f‘ been invited and bridge will ‘(nlml‘nn them. D F.0.E. CARD PARTY 4‘ Regular meeting of Douglas Aerie $117 F.O.E, was held Monday eve- ning and was a social session for |the members following at the Doug- It was planned during ithe course of the evening to hold | HEL] |Auxiliary after their next regular mocung Monday, Oct. 18. - eee YOUNG MEN RETURN Harold Wilson, nephew of Ed An- drews, arrived here this morning from Fairbanks for a week's visit |before proceeding south to spend the winter at the home of his folks in Seattle, During the almost two years that Wilson has been West- ward, he worked for a time for the Seims-Spokane Company near Sew- ard, at Kenai and also for the Al- aska Road Commission at Fair- | banks. Benhart Savikko came in the first |of the week from a season of suc- cessful hunting operations near Hoonah. After a hunting trip, he expects to continue trolling, until later in the Fall. SR BRADLEYS VISIT DOUGLAS Mr. and Mrs. Worthen Bradley, who left for the south yesterday |on the Princess Louise, were visitors |in Douglas prior to their departure ’and expressed enl.huslum for the Way above the crowd...when it comes to downright goodness. Schilling Flavor only comes in Schilling Coffee. It's Wings of the Morning! Schilling Coffee One for Percolator—another one for Drip or Glass Maker. inspect your L INSURANCE — BONDS

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