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Lincoln's State Papers Are Still Held-Out, Mystery WASHINGTON. M thotigh 73 years have passed since A 'Si)orts Suit Is Supposed to Be Abie ¢o Take It! - the death of Abraham Lincoln, it I be nine and a half more be- historians and Lincoln ad- rs will see his White House famous collection of state rs will not be unsealed until y, 1947, The late Robert T. Lincoln, the ;reat President’s son, deeded the yapers in 1922 to the Library ess as their custodian for the American people with the stipula- ion that they not be made avail- to investigators for 25 years. Library is preparing the on for preservation and is filing and indexing documents ingluding let- from the martyr President to bers of his cabinet, various ex- ve officers and others high and in the life of the nation during "Sixties - — : troublous Movie Aspirant Weds Asquith Kin LONDON, Mar. 3. — Diana “Di- di” Battye, twenty-one, movie as- pirant, whose nine-day disappear- ance last June mystified all Eng- land, has been married to Michael Henry Asquith, grandson of Mar- got Countess of Oxford and As- quith. When the former Miss Battye vanished it was feared she had been kidnaped, but early one morn- ing, nine days later, she was found in strange clothing on the doorstep of young Asquith’s mother’s home, sobbing and suffering from loss of | memory. | This Spring’s SPORT SUIT. CAN REALLY TAKE IT! R — Whether you're a candid camera sguatter | or a bus catcher or the man behind the Gulf s“fleam i desk ... you need a suit that can take it! | BEHRENDS' sport suits have everything for style, quality, and long wear. See them now today! 325& and up FAMOUS MICHAELS-STERN — VALUEFIRST CLOTHE Expeditionls Being Furmed\ BERGEN, Norway, Mar. 3. — A‘ Norwegian professor, Bjorn Hel‘ land-Hansen, is organizing an in- | ternational expedition to investigate | the Gulf stream. It will include | scientists from Norway, United| States, Denmark, Scotland and Ger- | P ———————————————————— e gt il D —— N many, and will sail in the ship i ' el _4 o9 ° “Armaur Hansen” in May or June. “Juneau’s Leading Depariment Store” Jflh" B“" saeklng ; Redfern Searcher i Is Dead in Jungle IZ ar aylrs GEORGETOWN, British Guiana LONDON, Mar, 8 - An acufe : B S e DU FRCTRINLY & & shortage of Arablan musicians has| R B A ; added to the troubles of John Bull in | b4 B '0X Ol oston, Mass., men i A |his efforts to offset Italian radio| _} the Waldeck expedition, had died propaganda by BBG broadcasts to| s on Devil’s Hole Tsland, deep in the Irig Byt and i [ imn'.,]n \;.;:;-(:1|m ex n had European muslc “acceptable to‘ ity i v 4 all educated Arabs” will be used E The P.‘(p?dlll()n. ./\md” ”::(/M,“v”: for the most part. Meanwhile the : J. Waldeck, American explorer, has soardh Ghikmtiss For "Aiate Whastan M been searching for Paul Redfern play s iz Har (te). 1ibat (ride f long missing American aviator. lin), or tabl (drum). e Paul Robeson, Jr., son of the Ne- 5 -ro singer, is attending school in Sk""ks Sfltlm ‘ “ Moscow because Russia, his father | | i waid; is the only one of eight coun- tries investigated could work and pla f race prejudice - where the boy without In Snooty District = OAKLAND, Cal, Mar. 3. — ResH dents of the fashionable Upper | Park boulevard district, in a hilly section overlooking San Francisco |bay, have applied to the city to rid the neighborhood of skunks, One of the wooded canyons near- by has long been the home of a. tain few skunks, H. G. Porter, a house- | d of 11,000 feet. holder, explained, but recently the animals have multjplied rapidly. o o Bl Mr. DAN LHAMON and Mr. W. H. KIRKLIN of the NORTHERN COMMERCIAL CO. | ., ™ Bovire dassiids son “Alaska” by Lester D. Henc Caughfa Cold? To help end it quicker, rub throat and ehest with rson Nancy Hall Cha ( Washington we’d“%u Sha learned of his title lust prior 1o the wedding, > s> highest, railway line in Eu- runs up the Jungfrau moun-| in Switzerland to an altitude The rope in TIreland. oo of he does it for as much at the Guuneau Hotel CHAMBER ASKS FIREBOAT FOR LOGAL HARBOR Dufresne Says Trapping License May Be Harder to Get It was sugge Commerce Percy’s Cafe have fireboat ¢ Danger of s was poinied of the . Propased L ey giio summed up the business of cent Commission meeting Indian Trappers Oanpl..m “The Indian has compisir all parts of the Territory, fresne. “White men have beer ing him from his trap comers have been cleaning o game. The white man takes as much fur as the India the re- he can make where the Ir does it for subsistence money “The only remedy to this influx of new and undesirable parties, as far as the Commission was abe to deurmine was a possible amend- to the Commission laws whgreby it would require a man to live in Alaska three years before he could apply for resident trapper’s li- cense.” Dufresne further said that there will probably be less restrictions on duck shooting next fall than last year with ducks showing general in- crease the country over. Officers of the United States Coast Guard cutter Haida were | guests at the luncheon. Those of- ficers present were Dr. @ E. Bing- {'ham, Lieutenant R. G. Foutter, En- |sign R. D. Dean, Ensign G. L. Rollins, Ensign R. R. Waesche, all introduced by Lieutenant Comman- der N. G Rlcketts SEN. WALKER THINKS TOKY0 PULLING STALL Ketchikan Man Just Back from Trip to Washing- ton on Dimond Bill (Contintied” from Page One) such a measure!” T far 1 see.” Senator Walker, whose one hour on the floor was highly praised in Washington circles, spent two week: ust a stall as |in the political hub. He feels that | ! there is : strong chance of the Di- mond Bill passing and says there is no.open atfack on the measure. He is leaving for Ketchikan tonight on the Northland and is a guest fifim sramlma LYNN, est great: | nor Goguen, mother. of eleve-n liv- | ing. children and great-grandmother of . twenty-four, although she is but "fifty-five years old. T \ at FAIRBANKS s The Duke of Lancaster seized the throne of England and acceded | ’ ? : Ann Early Also—-Mr. W. P. JONES Barr FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE as Henry IV while Richard IT was Owner-Operator “If Your Hair Is Not _{ CATERPILLAR TRACTOR CO. A ! ARE IN JUNEAU THIS WEEK AT THE L GASTINEAU HOTEL Gifted Hands i They have with them pictures and ROYAL BEA Their Permanents are so on the nerves and hair; beautifully lasting in resu]u: ' considerable detailed information of value to any person who is inter- SN o e o e N easy and to make. What's more, ‘able substitute for STRIPES ARE SMART Stripes appear in the spring mode. with cleckwise pleats, is topped by and brown. With Steaming g > A STEAMING CHOWDER _ By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE AP Feature Service Writer Serve clam chowder as fling at Old Man Winter It’s filling enough to be in itself. It's easy a final a meal and economical it is a suit- meat during Lent. There arestwo types of clam chow- der, each quite different from the other. One is the New England, and its devotees scoff at its rival, Man- hattan clam chowder. The Man- hattan, they say, is nothing but vegetable soup with a clam or two { added to change its name. We'll not take sides. Here are re- cipes for each. Try them yourself. PFirst, a New England chowder to serve four persons: Heat a fourth of a cup of chopped salt perk in butter or cooking oil. Add two tablespoons of minced on- jons and cook until they're light brown. Then add a fourth of a cup each of chopped celery and green pepper. ; Next mix in one cup of diced raw potatoes, a third of a teaspoon of salt and two cups of boiling water. Cover and let boil gently until the potatoes are tender when tested “'nh a fork. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1938. MODES of the MOMENT by Adelaide Kerr A rust colered weol skirt designed a fitted jacket siriped in beige, rust Vertically striped pockets make a teiling accent. | Send Windy, Cold Winter Away Clam Chowder as Use No. 1 can of clams or a pint | of fresh onés. Strain off the liquor, heat and add it to the cooking po- tato mixture. (Note never cocok the clams with the potatoes.) Chop the clams or cut them inio small pieces and add them to a sauce made in this mannex Mix (wo tablespoons flour with two tablespoons of buLber Add a fourth of a teaspoon of paprika and two cups of milk. Cook sauce and clams toether slowly for five minutes. Add to the potato mixture and serve at once. Manhattan, sometimes called New York chowder involves using to- .mato juice in place of the milk in/ the sauce mixture. Leftover cooked vegetables—corn, peas, green beans, ice or pimientos—may be added but care should be taken not to add so much that’ the clam flavor will be obscured. Clams and oysters may be com- bined 50-50 in chowder. For a rich- er chowder use a third of a cup of cream as a substitute for that amount of milk in the regular recipe. Sprinkle a tablespoon of minced parsley or grated carrot over the top of each bowlful of chowder as, you serve it, 1 U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU « THE WEATHER A (By the U, S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicin'ty, bogzinning at 4 p.m., March 3: Partly cloudy tonight and Friday; gentle to moderate easterly winds. Weather forecast for Soufheas: Alaska: Partly cloudy tonight and Friday; gentle to moderate easterl, winds except moderate to fresh over Dixon Entrance, Clarence Stra , Frederick Sound and Chathan Strait and moderate to fresh north ri; winds over Lynn Canal. Forecast of winds along the Coast ¢f the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate | to fresh easterly winds along the co.t from Dixon Entrance to Cap. Hinchinbreok LOCAL DATA Time Barometer mp. Humidity Wird Velocity Weathes 4 pm. yest'y 2963 55 35 sW 3 Clear 4 a.m. today 29.59 35 91 E 3 Clear Ncen' teday 26.62 51 151 w 4 Clear RADIO REPGRTS | TODAY Max. temr. | Lowest 4a.m. 4am. Precip dam. Station last 24 hours | tenp. temp. velocity 25bhrs Weathe Atka 28 d 26 16 72 Snow Anchorage . 48 3 0 Barrow 110 -14 14 0 Cles Nome 44 25 10 k1) Cloudy Bethel 38 24 4 0 Clear Fairbanks 50 12 4 0 Clear Dawson 20 0 0 0 Clear Si. Paul 28 26 4 04 Pt .Clay Dutch Harbor 32 32 6 A2 Cloudy Kod 40 36 14 T Pt.Cldy Caordova 52 36 0 97 Rain Juneau 56 33 35 3 0 Clear Sitka £ is3 | 36 £ — 0 £ Ketchikan 54 38 38 4 0 Clear Prince Rupert 54 40 42 4 0 Cloudy Edmonton 24 20 20 4 \J Cloudy Seattle 58 | 48 48 4 03 Clear Portland 58 48 48 4 08 Cloudy San Francisco 60 48 48 4 21 Rain New York 52 38 a8 12 T Cloudy Washington 63 H 52 G T Cloudy WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY Stattle (airport), partly ¢loudy. temperature, 38; Blaine, clear, 38, Victor partly cloudy, 42; Alert Biy, cloudy, 37; Bull Harhor, partty cloudy, 40; Triple Island, cloudy; Langara Island, cloudy, 41; Prince Rupert, partly cloudy, 38; Ketchika1, partly cloudy, 37; Craig, partly cloudy, 37, Wrangell, partly cloud -, 38; Petersburg, clear, 3! Sitk cloudy, 38; Hoonah, clear, 28; Radisville, cloudy, - 41; Skagway. clear, 43; Juneau, clear, 34; Cape Hinchinbrook, clear, 35; Cape St. Elias, clear, 36; Cordova, cloudy, 36; Chitina, cloudy,- 28; McCarthy, clear, 20; Anchorage, foggy, 25; Fairban] partly cloudy, 15; Nenana, clear, 14; Tanana, clear, 18; Hot Spring ., partly cloudy, 14: Ruby, cloudy, 20; Nulato, cloudy, mute, clear, 28. Juneau, March 4. — Sunrise, 6:4) am.; 14; Unalakleet, cloudy, 27; Flat, clear, 14; Ohoga- sunset, 5:37 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS A large trough of low barometric pressure extended from the Ber- ing Sea and Alaska southeast to the Rocky Mountain states this morning with one central pressure of 28.98 inches at Dutch Harbor and another of 29.00 at latitude 46 degrees north, longitude 136 degrees west. The barometer was moderat:ly high from the Canadian Arctic Coast to Lake Superior and also over the Pacific Ocean northeast of the Hawaiian Islands. Light to moderate precipitation fell from the Aleutian Islands to Cordova, over Puget Sound area and at San Francisco. Temperatures over interior and southeastern Alaska were still well above normal, Fairbanks reaching a maximum of 50 degrees | stcldaJ Juneau, 56 degrees and K2 lchkal 54 degrees. Poor Tahlues Fire Chief's Auto oo, eo e - 100 Hot for Thief Lily, pet cat of Mx\.\ Annin Han- sche, has been left $5000 in her = mistress’ will, but it looks like the | CHIGAGO, Mar. 3—A thief who fadeout for all L poor rela- stole an automobile from a dark tions. | garage at the home of Charles Madsen in suburban Harvey, saw red when he drove the car out into For years some dozen alley cats hung around the Mansche home the light. He quickly abandoned il ! when, to his surprise, he found it and were fed regularly. Ignored in the will, these cats now face star- painted 2 bright red and bore fire department insignia. Madsen is vation and Humane Officer H. J. Winters is considering rounding up and chloroforming them. chief of the Harvey department. e 3 - - - The first European university Yellow is the ideal color for a was founded in the ninth centur;| “blackboard” and blue is the best at Salerno for the study of nn-dl- chalk to use on it, British experi- cine. menters report. V. A. “Dave” Davenport Has Assumed the Duties of General Manager of the New Alaskan Hotel S P JUNEAU i Mr. Davenport extends a welcome to his old friends to enjoy his hospitality in the New Alaskan Hotel. MONDAYS TO YOQU General @ Electric Washing cMachine $7.00 Down Monthly $7. 00 1938 Models Now in Stock Improved Mono-Control Wringer. Powerful General Electic Motor. No Oiling—No Greasing. Fast Washing Activator. Sold on Convenient Terms Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. ALASKE- 4 JUNEAU——- DOUGLAS