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3.95 Still hunting for a smart Fall hat? Come really to BEHRENDS today and see these fashion ERS! Pert tricones, off - face berets, HEADLIN- flared halos, dramatic profile brims that swirl upwards . . . SWoop downwards, tiny toques . . . excitingly flattering hats you'll love! All flirtatiously trimmed . . . your choice is B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. “Juneau’s, Leading Department Store” VACCINE RECEIVED ON ALASKA CLIPPER Vaccine for the mallpox, to be usced for the chil- dren at Kotzebue, previous to the pening of schonl, was received on the Alaska Clipper Sunday. The precious package made a trip in several days days, that ordinarily prevention of E - - = = = E = = = = = E = E = = E = = = = = = E £ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, AUGUST 29, 1938. CLIPPER SHIP [Modern Cooks Can’t Improve “Fur Daughters” WINDS UP 3RD | ()n»(;_'mnd:motlwr’s Jam Recipes Is Given Praise S. E. Robbins Makes First| Flight as Captain of Big Amphibian After completion of an uneventful third trial flight Sunday over the Seattle to Juneau air route, the Pan American Airways Alaska Clipper returned to Seattle today, taking off at 8:30 am The plane was skippered by PAA Pilot S. E. Robbins, who now carries the title of Captain. The clipper ’arrived at the PAA Ajrport at 5:15 Sunday afternoon. Approximately 50 pounds of air express was brought in on the clipper and several pounds carried out, Jerry Jones, PAA pilot, was a passenger south as was S. Kauff- man, assistant to the Chief En-| gineer for Pan American, who has | been making a PAA tour of Alaska. | Jones will take his annual vaca- | tion and will then enter training| at Alameda, Cal., for service on the | Seattle to Juneau run “ | MORE TEST FLIGHTS ‘ The Civil Aeronautics Authority | today announced to the Associated Press in Washington, D. C., that it has continued in force the order recently issued by the Secretary of | Commerge through the Bureau of | Air Commerce permitting Pan Am- | erican to make 10 experimental | flights between Seattle and Juneau. ' Officials explained that the| {authority granted Pan American | were | | Crystallized ginger and luscious r jam By Mrs. ALEXANDER GEOR( AP Feature Service Writer Although newfangled cookery has supplanted many old-time methods and made possible saving many hours of labor, grandmother’s reci- pes still are favorites in many fami- lies—and deservedly. Especially choice are many of her takes around two weeks to compleLe,{Ah‘wsys expired when the new Civil | recipes for canning, particularly Leaving Indianapolis, the vaccine traveled to Seattle by airmail, from where it was picked up by the clip- per ship, arriving here yesterday. From here it will be shipped by Electra airmail to Fairbanks and Nome, where where it will be sent to its desination in time to “spoil | Aeronautics Act become effective Jand made it necessary to renew the jautlmrizauon in order that’ Pan American might continue its prov- all sorts of conserves, butters and| |ing flights ! Farmers' cooperative associations ”mve added more than a half-mil-| jams and preserves. Pears were one of her favorites She spiced them, made them into jams—headliners among spreads A Pear Chutney She considered pear chutney the thing to serve with c just the last few days of vacation for!lion members to their ranks in the|yoasts, fowl or hot breads, Kotzebue's school kids.” Be “BUG-RUG-SNUG” Local Craftsmen Will Do the Work An FHA Loan Will Pay for It. BE "WINTER-PROOF" THROUGH A LONG-TIME LOAN AT LOW INTEREST AND FINANCING CHARGES ———— PAY AS YOUR BUDGET SAYS. IT'S EASY—JUST ASK ABOUT FHA NOW! FHA DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE | past decade. = Here'’s how to prepare it: Cook together, until thick, eight cups of diced pears, two cup: raising, half a cup of chopped onions, one tablespoon of celery seed, three tablespoons of salt, one cup of granulated sugar, a fourth of a teaspoon of pepper and three cups of vinegar. It will take au hour or more for it to thicken. Stir it frequently to prevent scorching When it's done pour your chutney into sterilized jars and seal it at once, Pear conserve is another leading spread. There are all sorts of ways to make it. Medley Pear Conserve goes like this: Mix together eight cups of sliced pears, six cups of sliced peaches and four cups of sliced quine Add half a cup of lemon juice, a third of a cup of orange juice, one table- spoon of grated orange rind, iwo teaspoons of grated lemon rind and four cups of water. Cook slowly until the fruits are sofi. Add twelve cups of granulated sugar. Boil gent- ly until the conserve thickens. Pour into sterilized jars and seal when cold. (Hint for using Medley Pear Conserfe: Mix it with cottage cheese—to use in filling Graham bread sandwiches.) Pear Preserves Pear preserve, 100, makes a tempting topping for breads — or of gives a tasty finish to salads or des- | serts. Make it this way Peel, quarter and slice pears un- til you have eight cupsful. Boil two| cups of water and six cups of gran- ulated sugar together for five min- | utes. Add the pears and cook them | slowly for 15 minutes. Then add a foyrth of a eup of bark cinnamon and twelve whole cloves — loosely tied in a white cotton bag. Allow to simmer for an hour. Remove spice bag and pour conserves into sterilized jars. Seal immediately, 5 HALIBUTERS SEATTLE, Aug. 29.—The follow- |ing halibuters = arrived and sold here today: From the western banks—Vansee, 0,000 pounds; Recnvgx-y. 25,000 pounds, Sylvia, 29,000 pounds, Pol- aris, 40,000 pounds, selling for an average of 10% and 9 cents a pound. From the local banks—-Lane with 2,000 poungs, selling for 12 cents. RUPERT PRICES Total sales of halibut at Prince | Rupert today was 159,000 pounds, selling for 8.30 to 9 and 6 cents. e Try The Empire classifieds for results. RUSHED TO JUNEAU For Its Second Engage- - ment of Entire Nation! L e SELL, SEATTLE ipe pears are a fine team for the pot. MISS NIELSEN BETROTHED 0 0. ADDLEMAN | Announcement of Popular Young Couple Is Re- vealed Today Announcement was made today of the engagement of Miss Christina Nielson, daughter of Mr. and M: H. Nielson, of this eity, to Orrin Addleman, son of Mr. and Mrs. H Addleman, of Springfield, Neb. Miss Nielson was born in Juneau, and graduated from the Juneau High School with the class of nine- teen thirty-seven, and has lived in this city the greater part of her life. Mr. Addleman is from Spring- field, Neb., and came to this eity from St. Helens, Ore., over ago. He is a member of the Lodge and the Elks and for the past three months has been an employee of the Juneau Dairies, Inc, The wedding of the popular you couple will take place in this city sometime early in October, follow- ing which they plan to make their home in Juneau e DELL COOPER OFF T0 SOUTH Dell Cooper, wellknown operator with the Signal €orps, United States Army, is a passenger aboard the Al- aska for Seattle where he will short- ly leave the service after 14 years. It is quite probable he will go to San Francisco with his wife and | children and become attached to some commercial radio or tele- graph company, and he may re- turn to Juneau. Cooper has been in the Signal Corps service singe. the old ecable days when the office was at the corner of Main and Front and while not stationed continuously in Ju- neau has been Signal Corps opera- tor for 14 years. He made a host of | friends here as well as elsewhere| in Alaska during his “trick: . s Al ? MRS. LARSSON RETURNS Elks Mrs. George Larsson returned to Juneau on the North Coast this morning, following a three months’ visit in the south, during which |time she visited in Seattle and Seaside, Oregon. Mrs. Grant Bald- win, who accompanied her daughter | south, three months ago, will re- main in the states. a year| baseball team, | As Sp[endid Film | *“Always in Trouble™ Is An- other Release Just Out from Hollywood By HOLLYWOQD, Aug. 29.—It's an- | other Family Week in pictures—and | what a family we have in “Four| Daughters!” | It's a good honest picture, with some of the best acting seen in the | past few hundred reels. I'm afraid | it's also an artistic triumph, but don't let that scare you. Claude Rains is the music-teacher father of four girls—Priscilla, Rose- mary and Lola Lane, and Gale Page. Priscilla’s the voungest. She| | can’t imagine ever getting married. Lola’s the eldest—she wants to mar- | ry money and have things. Rose- |mary is the girl who can't be bothered much, either with beaux or with her singing. Gale Page is the sister who dreams of a “knight in shining armor” — but has for| | her steady the bumbling Dick Foran from the florist’s shop. May Robson, as Aunt Etta, is all the rest of the family—until Jeffrey Lynn comes to town and, what with |his winning ways, moves right in. All the girls, even Lola who has her rich and bumbling Prank McHugh, fall for Jeffrey. ROBBIN COONS | | Then one day Priscilla announces that she and Jeff are going to be !married. Three things happen: Lola says she’s going to marry her Frank right now; Rosemary an- |nounces she’s going away to study | voice seriously after all; and Gale| | Page just weeps. | Into the story now breezes — or| |maybe strikes like lightning would | |be better—John Garfield. He's the |lad the fates always frowned on, | |kicked around. He's cynical, sar-| |donic, crude but Priscilla gets | under his skin. And just before Priscilla and Jeff are getting mar- |ried, Priscilla learns how Gale Page | |wept, and so— s It's a believable, human movie, |loaded with human touches, some; humorous, some pathetic. It's from | Fannie Hursts's “Sister Act” and Michael Curtiz directed it with a ;s,\'mpalheuc touch you scarcely ex- ect from a fellow who's done| “Charge of the Light Brigade” and | “Robin Hood” and other bloody, swashbuckling tales. { Three discoveries to list are Gar- | field, a lad who knows acting; Lynn, | a pleasant leading man, and Pris- | |cilla Lane, who surprised every- , {body with a convincing job against some formidable competition® Gale Page is splendid too, and Rains and Robson deliver as usual. You won’t be disappointed in “Four Daughters,” You won't mind “Always in Trouble,” either, if you're a Jane| ! Withers fan. It's like most of the| other Withers films that have put her among the first ten stars at the box-office. It isn't good, and it's not as bad as it might be. | Janes' family in this one is a newly rich gang. Ambitious mother (Nina Bryant), with heiress daugh- ter (Jean Rogers) and downtrodden | papa (Andrew Tombes). Mamma wants papa to stop working and | IJoin her in climbing the social lad-“ (der. Little Jane (who as usual sees | {all and knows all) knows that papa 'has to keep on working to be happy. She rings in one of papa’s clerks (Robert Kellard) and before her {plot is done they're all, except papa, shipwrecked on an island and threatened with kidnaping by gang- sters. Jane, as usual, thinks up ways to get them out. Eddie Collins, the funny little fellow, helps along with his old-time vaydeville “mugging.” I'm afraid, fond as I am of Jane,| that she muggs more than usual. R TRUCKERS WILL MEET ROCKETS THIS EVENING Softballers will watch the league leading Truckers attempt to defend the title rush of the Rockets to- night in Evergreen Bowl. The game is called for 6:30 to- night and may decide the cham. pionship. | RENTAL VALUE INSURANCE—at low cost—is designed to reim- burse you for what you would be obliged to pay for living quarters if you are forced from your home by fire. RENT INSUBRANCE—also &t low cost—will reimburse you for loss of income from rented property if your tenants are forced to move because of fire damage. Y paid by the insurance company Don't put it OFF—put it- ON! our rental income will continue— until the premises are restored. SHATTUCK AGENCY PHONE 249 Office——New York Life U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHEK BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. §. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juncau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Aug. 29: Cloudy tonight, Tuesday cloudy with showers; gentle to moderate southerly winds tonight, increasing Tuesday. Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Cloudy tonight, Tuesday cloudy, with showers; gentle to moderate southerly winds tonight, in- creasing Tuesday, becoming moderate to fresh over Lynn Canal Forecast of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate southerly winds tonight and Tuesd §° from Dixon Entrance to Cape Hinchinbrook, becoming fresh to strong Tuesday from Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchinbrook. LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Fumidity Wind Velncity 30.09 80 s 6 3012 90 ] 3017 L ki w RADIO REPORTS TODAY Low st 4a.m. 4a.m. Preclp. tem) temn. velocity 24 hes, 46 46 4 51 z 34 48 48 56 50 46 Thae 3:30 pm. yest'y 3:30 a.m. today Noon today Wearhes Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy 55 52 1 58 5 | Max. temp. | last 24 hours | 50 4am. Weather Cloudy Station Atka Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka | Ketchikan | Prince Rupert | Edmonton { Seattle | X | | Cloudy Lt. Rain Cloudy Lt. Rain Cloudy Rain Cloudy Clear Cloudy Cloudy Clear Pt. Cidy Clear Clear Portland San Francisco New York 66 Washington | 64 WEATHER CONDITIONS AT 8 AM. TODAY Seattle (airport), clear, temperature, 48; Blaine, clear, 46; Vic- toria, clear, 53; Alert Bay, partly cloudy, 55; Bull Harbor, partly clou- dy, 50; Prince Rupert, cloudy, 54; Ketchikan, cloudy, 57; Craig, cloudy, 60; Wrangell, cloudy, 53; Petersburg, cloudy, 53; Sitka, clou- dy, 54; Cape Spencer, cloudy, 49; Hoonah, foggy; Hawk Inlet, cloudy, 54; Tenakee, cloudy, 62; Port Althorp, cloudy; Hood Bay, cloudy, 52; Radioville, cloudy, 57; Juneau, cloudy, 53; Skagway, cloudy, 52; Haines, cloudy; Tulsequah, cloudy, 54; Yakutat, cloudy, 53; Cape Hinchinbrook, cloudy, 53; Cape S!. Elias, partly cloudly, 52; Cordova, cloudy, 50; Chitina, clear, 50; McCarthy, clear, 44; Anchorage, clou- dy, 54; Portage, cloudy, 52; Fairbanks, cloudy, 51; Hot Springs, rain- ing, 55; Tanana, cloudy, 57; Ruby. cloudy, 52; Nulato, cloudy, 46; Kal- tag, cloudy, 48; McGrath, cloudy, 52; Flat, raining, 48; Crooked Creek, raining, 52; Stuyahok, cloudy, 46; Bethel, cloudy, 48; Platinum, fog- gy; Golovin, cloudy, 50; Solomon, cloudy, 58; Council, cloudy, 57; Nome, cloudy, 51. Juneau, Aug. 30.—Sunrise, 4:53 a.m.; sunset, 7:07 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS The barometric pressure was relatively high this morning from the Gulf of Alaska southward to the Pacific Coast states, the crest being 30.12 inches at Cordova and Juneau. A storm area prevailed over the ‘Bering Sea region, the lowest reported pressure being 29.40 inches a short distance north of Atka. This general pressure distribution has been attended by precipitation over the interior and western portions of Alaska and by cloudy weather from the Prince William Sound re- gion southward to British Columbi Cloudy Clear Clear wralasscl mon Democratic TERRITORIAL and DIVISIONAL Oscar 6. Olson Candidate for | Anthony J. (Tony) Re-election as PIM O TERRITORIAL For Delegate to Congress TREASURER For Territorial Senator: HENRY RODEN, Juneau For Territorial Representatives: JAMES V. DAVIS, Juneau A.P, WALKER, Craig J. P, ANDERSON, Juneau JOHN McCORMICK, Juneau The Democratic Ticket Is Interested in the Welfare of Both Business and Labor VOTE IT STRAIGHT! ON SEPTEMBER 13. (Paid Advertisement) There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising