The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 22, 1937, Page 2

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O THE (SH _B.M. Behrends Co., Inc. “Juneau’s Leading i S | DR. CHEIFETZ RETURNS FROM. OFFICIAL TRIP \Maternal and Child Health Director Arrives on | Dr. Sonia Chiefetz, Acting Ma- ternal and Child Health Director,| Territorial Department of Health, returned on the Yukon today from an extensive trip in behalf of ma- ternal and child health work in Kodiak and the Interior, Nearly seven hundred children came under Dr. Chiefetz's observa- tion, and about 400 school children were examined by her in commun- ities where there were no doctors. in these communities. Dr. Chiefetz was also called upon to render nu- merous medical services. Kodiak and nearby islands pre- sent a crying need for permanent local medical help, Dr. Chiefetz| states, confirming the general op- linion for the urgent need of a hos- pital in Kodiak. During the trip to the Westward, |Dr. Chiefetz was the guest speaker lat the welfare breakfast of the American Legion convention in An- chorage. | RPN S S MONOGLE IS New Patterns .75 to $5.95 shrunk broad- in sack or belted with elastic waist. unging or sleeping. 1 Department Store” DUEISCSRCe D Man Hangs Self WDETROIT. — The Maroz, fifty-three, father (‘E‘ildr(’xl was found hany barn in the rear of hi sald he had been drinki eral days. He left no note body of John f seven in a Police g for sev THANKSGIV in a charmingly appointc occasion and beautiful F add pleasure to the event. CATCHES 19 COYO' TABOOED BY NEW YORKERS Only Posers or Nitwits Wear Them Now—=Some- thing New in Big City Tom Moore recently took 19 coy- ote ns intp Anchorage to claim his apiece bounty. He had caught the coyotes near his cabin at Mile 14 on the Anchorage-Matanuska | highway. ING DINNER d dining room is a joyful URNITURE and DISHES By GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK, Nov. 22.—This lowni seems to have rejected the monnclvvf A few years ago the more daring| of the tycoons, social captains, and professional first nighters adopted | the single glass as the last major| Yukon (L DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, mo o. TRANSLATED FROM THE Here is Helen Cookman’s America coat, made of deep taupe wool wit presssed pleats. It is fastened dow tons and trimmed with a Russian togue goes with it. achievement in linking old world there is a trained chef. His warcs culture to the new. But that w: include delectables which the deli DES | 2 MSHIENT RUSSIAN MONDAY, NOV. 22, 1937. ANTON JENSEN, 57, DIES HERE TODAY A { Anton Jensen, 57, passed away at | St. Ann’s Hospital this noon fol-| lowing an illness which has confined him to the Hospital for the past| three weeks. { Mr. Jensen, a prospector, arrived in town a short time ago suffering from tuberculosis. ! -, -— AT THE HOTELS ¥ | L Gastineau | W. A. Sherman, Mr. and Mrs.! Robert Casey, J. Hill, J. P. Walker, | Juneau; Miss L. Newman, Valdcz;; Albert Buffo, Edgar Sommerville, agle; Sonia Chiefetz, Juneau. | Alaskan Bachelor Joe. Young, Croooked Creek; E. R. Rubie, Haines; C. B. Shipman, New York; James Goodrich and !wife, and Ole Goldstus. ! RN MR Strike at Home ; PHILADELPHIA —Burglars broke {into the office of the Crime Pre-| vention Association during the night and took $300, the Rev. Thomas A. Meryweather, executive secretary of the organization, reported to po- lice. —— e — | MARY SPERLING HONORED ‘ Mary Sperling was honored at a birthday party Friday evening, wRken a dozen guests were assembled at the Harry Sperling residence for an evening of games. DEWEY SAILS SOUTH | | Carelton H. Dewey, who has been | | lin Juneau for the past several |months, in charge of the work of WPA artists here from Washington, . sailed for the south aboard !the Yukon. He is enroute to Wash- ington, D. C., and his home in Vir- ginia. e | MISS FEKSON SALES | Miss left for the |south aboard the Yukon following ‘a stay in Juneau since last summer !when shé arrived to put on sale her |specially designed Alaskan scarves. IShe is returning to her home in | Pasadena where she is a high school |teacher. DREDGE EXPERT ™ "~ n version of the Russian Cossack h side fullness springing from un- n the front with self-covered but- stone marten scarf. A steep black a Yorker was assailed by hard time shrinking incomes, b m t a time when the ordinary New catessen store would never have |the very choicest of shellfish foods. already prepared . It specializes in the hreasts of chickens and phea- Its hors d'oeuvres are It is really, a Christmas pudding of fabu- and the poss ility of being thrown out of work. Then came the upswing and the Sants. . . . nonocle was swept overboard with [numberless ang exciting. . . MALAY BOUND Charles Webb, dredge expert for IN BLAST AT M Injurdd in a blast at the Alaska Juneau mine, Saturday night, Roy Bennett is recovering at St. Ann’s Hospital where he is confined for treatment of a broken arm and burns about the face. He was ad- U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinily, beginning at 4 pam., Nov. 22: Rain, mixed with snow, tonight and Tuesday; strong easterly winds. Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Rain tonight and Tues- day, except rain, mixed with snow over Gastineau Channel, and show over Lynn Canal and Icy Stralt; strong easterly winds, gales over Dix- on Entrance and Cross Sound and northeast and north gales over Lynn Canal and northern portion of Chatham Strait. Forecast of winds along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Easterly gales tonight and Tuesday from Dixon Entrance to Yakutat and strong east to north winds from Yakutat to Cape Hinchinbrook. LOCAL DATA Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 31 9 SW 4 39 66 SE 12 36 63 E 10 Lt.Snow: | RADIO REPORTS | TODAY } Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4am. temp. temp. veloeity 24 hrs. Weather 13 -10 Time 4 pm. yest'y 4 am. today Noon today Barometer 29.71 29.37 29.33 Wealtl Cloudy Lt R&S. | Max. temp. last 24 hours 23 2 18 10 2 8 36 38 36 36 40 . 48 . 48 . 52 14 . 54 52 64 40 . 38 Station Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert . Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco ... New York +Washington ‘1 WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 A. M. TODAY Seattle (airport), raining, temperature 50; Blaine, raining, 46; Victoria, cloudy, 4%; Alert Bay, raining, 41; Bull Harhor, raining, 45; Triple Island, raining; Langara Island, 47; Prince Rupert, raining, 47; Ketchikan, raining, 48; Craig, raining, 44; Wrangell, raining, 42; Petersburg, raining, 44; Sitka, cloudy, 48; Hawk Inlet, snowing; Hoon- |ah, snowing; Soapstone Point, clouly, 35; Juneau, raining, 38; Skag- way, showing, 26; St. Elias, cloudy, 37; Cordova, cloudy, 36; Chitina, | clear, -12; McCarthy, clear, -18; Anchorage, cloudy, 16; Fairbanks, part- }1,\' cloudy, -3; Nenana, clear, 14; Ruby, clear, -2; Nulato, clear, -3; Flat, clear, -4. Juneau, Nov. 11. — Sunrise, 8:05 a.m.; sunset, 3:27 p.m, = Clear Clear Snow Clear Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Lt.R. & S. Rain cloug:lr Clou 28 28 WEATHER SYNOPSTS, A storm area of marked intensity was centered this morning from the Guilf of Alaska southward to Oregon, the lowest reported pres- |sure being 28.80 inches over the Pacific Ocean at latitude 32 degrees and longitude 138 degrees. High pressure prevailed over northwestern Canada and over northern Alaska, the crest being 30.66 inches at Fort Norman. A steep barometric pressure gradient existed this morning between the interior valleys of wesiern Canada and the immediate coast line from Cordova southwar to Oregon. | This general pressure distribution has been attended Ly precipitation along the ¢oasta? re- gion from the Gulf of Alaska southward to Oregon, also over north- western Canada, an¢ by fair weather from Fairbanks westward to Nome. It was colde; last night over the Bering Sea region and the Alas- kan-Canadian Arctic coast, the lowest reported temperature being 20 degrees below zero at Oopper Mine. the depression. Whereas one former- | 1y encountered half a dozen in an|lous delicacies, stuffed and ready for the Yuba dredge people of San mitted to the hospital at 10:45 Sat- Francisco, follows the tracks of gold He conferred with Territorial Commissioner of Mines B. D. Stew- COAL MINE NOT TO % - " - o TIFUNERRRBAER NN AR LR R R R L P R PR R R EYESEET { LEREERE T ¢ N . in Colonial Maple as low as EIGHT-PIECE SUITE in Walnut—Table, Bt 811 MANY STYLES OF DINING TABLES as well as the popular DINETTES in walnut, mahog- any and maple, and oper Add color and charm to yc FLORAL ART FLOWERS the most perfect ar Asters, Roses, Car 'DISHES and See the New Johnson Bros. English Pattern—POWDER BLUE Goblets, Cockiails, Sherbets, Wines and Oyster Cockiail Glasses I STOCK Barbara—Vogue ROASTERS in all sizes and MIXING BOWLS IN OPE!® Everything in the way « and COOKIN Beautiful VASES and L charm to JUNEAU - YOUNG HARDWARE CO. evening—sometimes worn by .xm-;““" l’l""‘m"“j- cere persons but frequently by the| posers and brash nitwits who want- | ed to assume the nonchalance of a George Arliss—there remains now This happened to a New some lawarded him $2,000. no trace of it. I haven't seen a single one in over a year. In the first hey-day of the! monocle’s affluence in New York the cocktail bars were the magnets| to which they were attracted. And: surprisingly enough nobody booed | or stared uncouthly. Perhaps they were too preoccupied with what! spectre the morrow held. But I wouldn’t want to walk into any New York bar with one on now— it would become a target for a| fusillade. of abuse. . * » are showing a large ty of suites in mahog- v, walnut and maple. 8-PIECE SUITES $90.00 . iffet and 6 Chairs for 0.00 o I The founder of New York’s first| French provisions counter—an inno- | vation which has caught on quickly here—is Chales LeSeuer, the unpre- dictable son of an unpredictable family which kas left its trademark in more than one corner of the world Let me rehash a fragment of the LeSeuer family history for you: Charles’ great-great grandfather was one of France's greatest paint- jers. . . Another branch of the (family founded a famous musical | conservatory there. Charles ‘himself was born on the Isle of |Jersey. . . . His family moved to Minnesota and in no time a county, a mountain, a lake, and a town |bore the family name. Then Charley LeSeuer broke ‘away from the Minnesota hold- |ings, came to New York, and de- |veloped into an executive of the jworld-famous Park & Tilford com- ipany. He is supervisor of all the _ 6.00 Jslorcs of that international chain. | He is also Joan Crawford’s uncle. You'll remember her name once was |LeSeuer, pronounced Le-Swar. PR Now he has introduced to New York the last word in de luxe deli- catessens, which is what the French |provision counter really is. But there is this distinction: There is no clerk behind the counter. The man 1 stock DINING CHAIRS. ur table with a bouquet of tificial flowers made, nations and Dahlias TN NRNNRNEES IR EARSEEREE NN EEESETEREDNEEERE GLASSWARE Many attractive open patterns to select from. stock Sterling Rose, 32-piece set $8.00 -. 8.00 L3 Dogwood, 32-piece set Gretna Green, 32-piece t Melody, 32 April, 32-piece set . 8.00 - 8.50 -piece set | outside. . s e A poke in the eye and a bloody nose doesn't always spell defeat. York scribe the courts time ago and - MRS. HYNER SOUTH Mrs. Glenn Hyner, wife of the Alaska Steamship Company assist- ant agent here, left for the south on the Yukon to spend the holidays ., — ‘G. M. Marchand, Postal Inspector from Seward, is a passenger on the Yukon this morning for Seattle. He is being transferred to the States. e e The United States patent office has operated for three years with- out costing the treasury a single dime. HHTITEEEEEEEEReThaIn Get the Jum Food GENERAL i 3 food budget every & |IERESEXRFSNEREERE T T T REFRIGERATORS will save you money on higher food prices of Fall and Winter. Choose your GE now and save extra dollars on your Sold on Convenient Terms Alaska Electric Light & Power Company Juneau—Douglas—Alaska urday by ambulance. earth, ( RUTHERFORD OUT He accompanied the big dredge' Roy Rutherford, manager of the shipped to Goodnews Bay this sum- juneau Lumber Mills, took passage mer for the Goodnews Bay Mining on the Yukon to join his family Company and stayed there to see jn Seattle for Thanksgiving dinner, the big boat in ope ion and work- - e e — ing “very satisfactorily” on the 10th!| Gem smuggling, once estimated of this month. to be a $50,000,000 business, has de- From San Francisco, after check- clined in recent years seekers to many corners of the OPEN UNTIL AFTER FIRST OF JANUARY Oscar Anderson, Superintendent ed, of the Evans-Jones coal mine in which an explosion recently killed 14 ] men, is a southbound traveler on| Modern airplane power plants @ the Yukon, going to California for a weigh about two pounds for each ' rest. horsepower produced. jart when the vessel was in port and indications are it will be after the first of the year before operations are resumed at the mine, he report- e ing in at headquarters, Charlie — — Webb dredgeman, will head for the| Malay States where he will aid in setting up another Yuba gold| | dredge. ¢ - DAVI Mr. and Mrs. Jim Davis took passage on the steamer Yukon this morning for Seattle. They will be gone from the city for an indefin- ite length of time. B s News Today.—Empire. | | | Today I ! mazE: p on Higher Prices ELECTRIC tising influences U. P UVEERERTRR AT EEA IET AT RN R NS NNRE R month. ity for Alaska famili Sabmon A »f DISHES, GLASSWARE G UTENSILS AMPS to add beauty and yvour table. measure of radio set performance. A FACTORY TUNE-UP will make your radio “Sound like New" Let us renew the performance of your radio set. Don't miss the rich musical tones and distant stations your set was built to receive — for the lack of accurate adjustment. "'inhodo-lhy" Servicer it can be quickly Phone Us Today JUNEAU RADIO SERVICE 122 Second St., Next to San Francisco Bakery With our new “made like new. Our Prices Are Lowest for Satisfaction Guar/antud 2 cups (11b.) Canne: 24 cup shortening 2 cups flour 2 cooking apples Brown sugar Tomato catsup To white sauce, add scrap: ture, reserving 1 cup sal ation. Make pastry by £33 ped parsley, chopped hard-cooked eggs, 15 tsp. salt, dash paprika. Drain and flake Canned Salmon and add to mix- -~ How Canned Salmon advertising affects prosperity here QUESTION: Cax the advertising of Canned Salmon help bring greater prosperity to the Territory? y ANSWER: Yes. The job of Canned Salmon advertising in the States is to increase the use of Alaska’s greatest food product. If this adver- S. residents to eat just one more pound of Canned Salmon per year than they eat now, Alaska’s annual pack will be en- tirely consumed. Result: a more stable market for Canned Salmon, more money coming into the Territory, greater prosperity and secur- €s. ecpe of the Week SALMON PUFFLES WITH SPICED APPLE RINGS 1 cup medium white sauce 1 thsp. scraped onion 1 tbsp. chopped parsley 2 chopped hard-cooked eggs ening into flour and ! tsp. salt; add enough cold water to barely hold mix- ture together. Chill pastry, roll thin, cut into six 5-inch squares or rounds. Place a large spoonful of salmon mixture on half of each piece, fold over, seal edges with fork. Make three slits across each turnover, insert a salmon flake in each slit. Glaze tops with equal parts egg yolk and milk. Bake in hot oven (450° F.) for 20 min. . For apple rings, core apples, and cut into thirds across apple. Place rings in baking pan; cover each with 2 tbsps. brown sugar, 1 thsp. tomato catsup. Bake in moderate oven (350° F.) for 30 min. turning apples often. Serve hot or cold. Serves 6. d Salmon ed onion, chop- mon for decor- cutting short- This recipe is typical of those appearing in the national magazine advertising of the Canned Salmon Industry All Work Fully Guaranteed 60 Days A |

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