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Brilliantly pretty prinis — and they'll stay that way because theyre washable! Vivid tiny or splashy florals, panel prints, tailored motifs, strip- ed -effeciz--PLUS a wide range of luscious pastels, newy, black! Easy-to-sew fabric—tested for resist- ance to slippage. Start sewing—start saving today. B.M. Behien&s "JUNEAU'S LEADIN | ideals” chief of Bureau of Naviga, | battle force in June, relieving aval War College in Newport, Rear Admiral James O. Richardson (le ft\ tion, will become commander of the U. Admiral E, C. Kalbfus who will head the R. L. Captain Johu Henry Towers (right), now tant chief of the Bureau of Aeronautics, will become chief of that bureau with rank of vear admira!, relieving Rear Admiral Arthur B. Cook, who will become commander of the naval aircraft scouting force. REV!VA N!GHTS (A?FQL SCREEN - “\ ,"’c‘;‘.i"LT‘LL;‘Z‘;‘;U‘; Yous 'II\r picture will open on Friday ev- l'er instead of the regular Sunday pe: 'mance, and will continue lhluuflh to Tuesday. It will be the | first five continuous days run e | given a picture in Juneau, Mr. Be; ‘ stated. Dwarfs, furiher &d Mr. Beale announc- trical innovation for Juneau is promised by Beale for Another thes Juneau's First Five-Day Picture Run Here Next Month {Hogs Rooting Back Into Drought Area MARYSVILLE, Kans., March 28 | —Marshall county is helping its farmers return to the hog business from which they were by | drought in recent years The county has purchased 12 brood sows and they are loaned to farmers for brood purpose The bcno\\or may keep all but two of v.he ptgs farrowed ‘Charles D. Beale, inannger ur the Capitol Theatre in th: morning expressed m..‘unmhm\ at the enthusiastic response. accorded his new practice of week]y “revivals’ of old picturé hits. The new practice | last week with a return showing wOf “It happened One Night" and drew generous support, he declared. —e Among other hits scheduled to be | “revived” here during the coming few weeks is Wadt, Dispey’s cartoon | epic “Snow wmte and lhe Smen forced A little canary sits snugly in cockpit on back of her speedy pigeon ex press 2ll set for 20-mile flight from New Jersey to St. Clare York, for presentation to Margaret Gillen, 10, a pati marks opening of National Wild Life W e R BB Co., Inc. G DEPARTMENT oTORE"” THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 1939. Lent Kind fo Food Budgels But Taxes Cook's Ingenuily; Say, JustTry S‘almon Mousse ¥ yard a~r&- e DENVER, March’ 28 -~'A" purge from schools “and ‘colleges of “so- called eéduéators who preach that we are all”wrong in our democratic was advocated by Stephen F. Chadwick, National ~Amerfean Legion Commander. The Legion commander, address- ing a banquet audience from four Denver American ‘Legion ‘posts, as- serted: “Let us be unénding in driving these murderers and destroyers from | our educational centers. We should unmask’ them for what they are— murderers of the youths" whose minds they poison.” Chadwick asserted teaching poli- cles in schools and colleges were res- ponsible “for the afmy of misguid- ed youth who enlisted in the intern- al strife wa; ;yn in Spain,” - e — ROTARY DINNER DANCE WILL BE HELD SATURDAY No-Host anale Carmval Affair Scheduled for Baranof Hofel Rotarians and Rotary Anns will celebrate April Fool's Day with ‘a carnival dance Saturday evefiing at the Baranof Hotel. The affair will be a private no- host dinner dance, which only Clhib members and their invited' guests will attend. Rod Darnell, Keith Wildes and Jud Whittier comprise the commit~ tee which is making arrangements for the 'dance. At today's Rotary Tuncheon 4t was announced that the Club exec- | utive committee will meet at the Baranof for Juncheon” every Friday from now until ‘the District Con- | ference here May 18-19-20. } Bert Caro haé been appointed temporary Chairman of the Sports Committee for the conference, in the absence ¢ ‘pr, W. W. Council. | (CC CLERK WSI James Jidge, . . Chiet Clerk for ‘the CCC at Fairbariks, Has resfgned’ ef- i{and the remains are 'at the Charles . | W Carter "Mortuary. ‘Chamberlam Tells House| | Commons this afternoon that MRS, PALMER PASSES AWAY HERE TODAY long Time Resident of Ju- neau Succumbs fo Lin- gering IHness ! KA. J. Palmer, well known | Junean ‘pioneer woman and owner |of the"Occidental Hotel on' Front | Street, passed away at the home of her daugliter, Mrs. 'D. J. Sinclair, | this forenoon, as the result of a |lingering illness, which had kept |her confined to her bed for the past seven months. | Mrs. Palmer was born on October 217, 1872, at Grass Valley; Colorado, |and in' 1879 came north 'to Sitka with her parents, Mr. and'Mrs. D |Prior. In 1881 the family moved |te Juneau and six years later Mrs. | Palmer was* married t0* John Olds. | After’ the death’of her first hu |banid, Mrs. Palmer married Dr. A. 1n #his city 'in" 1917, VShe ¥ survived by ‘her husband, | by ‘het three daughters, Mrs. C. E. Mathews, of Grand Junction, Colo., and Mrs. D, J. Sinclair, of Juneau, #nd &'son; ‘Harry Olds, of this city. ghe’ is ‘also survived -by seven grantichildren, Lila Sinclair,’ Shir- | ley - and ‘Donina Olds, all living in Juneau, and Dolly and Claris Car- penter, ‘of ‘Seattle, ‘and Myra Ann and' John Lester Mathews, of Grand Junction, - Colo. ‘No~detinite” arvangements as to funeral “services have been made All daughters” were at the bed- side of their gnother when shni (Qn!emmon Hifler Moves J: Palmer, the wedding takmg pl-\r‘c-‘ Cirpenter, of' Seattls, Mrs. A. L.| Here’s an attractive way to serve a Lenten meal—molding your salad loaf into a shape that fits its name. scour COUNCIL T0 ELECT NEW OFFICERS HERE . District Chairmran Burdick Calls Meeting for Tomorrow By MRS. ALEXANDER GLORGE AP Feature Service Writer Lent, with its meatless meals, is a boon to home budget balancers.| And the clever housewife knows| how to cut food costs without skimp- | ing on food values or appeal ‘ She gives old standbys new slants. | for Example | SAVORY F | For four servin ed hard-cooked of savory white sauc in two tablespoons e of chopped green peppers, onions, celery and parsley. Pour this mixture over two cups of cooked noodles in a shallow,| Men buttered casserole. Sprinkle the top | Will me | generously with grated cheese and | Chambers tomorrow eve CASSEROLE , combine four slic- | with two cups then blend iting neil in; t 7:30 Boy Juneau interested at the in Cc of Common-He Is Con- | sulliing Other Govis. | | | LONDON, Marc¢h 28. Chamberlain’ told * the — Promier | House of the British ‘Governnient is “actively | continuing negotiations with other Governments” to keep Hitler from | further aggression The Premier added: “The House | of Commons will not expect me 10 make statements’ which cannot be completed until we are in posses- | sion of ‘final views of ‘other Gqv- | | ernments’ ‘concerned.” The announcement by the Pre- | mier ‘followed statements by the | Government's spokesman to the ef- fect that Great Britain felt that further trade- relations with Ger- many ‘are “impossible.” The “’spokesman * also said the British | Government is planning | huge financial loans: and subsidies |to shipping interests to fit mer- chant vessels- for possible use in wartime -and that the Government is also considering increasing the ’rerrlwrial Army of Home Defen- g4 1 Funeral Senlces Thursday Affernoon Tentative - -funeral arrangements for Mrs. H. R. Shepard, who passed away last week in Seattle are made for Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Services will be conducted by Dean C. E. Rice at the Holy Trinity Cathedral, and interment will follow in the Elks plot of Evergreen Cemetery. - Mrs. B :B.’ Neiding, daughter of un. -Shepard, accompanied ‘the re- | maihs to Juneauw and arrived this morning on the steamer North Sea. Punetal services are pending the arrival 6f Mts. Shepard’s' eldest Son, fectivée March '31° to", accept omz employment, it was’ nnndun ed today, by the Forest Service _heére, Judge, a Brother of Paul Judge, District Ranger of the Admifal y Division, éntered tHe COC as an el rollee and ‘after ‘a 'year's servi ,w promoted jast éeptember to the lerk rw:»l;xon is' place is to be ke by Cal " Butler. IS POISONE‘ BY x £ LEAD; wrm w' FROM BEING SHOT CHICAGO, March 28.—Wheh the City Council received u"$313 clifm’ from Policeman Willigm O'Brien, covering hospital treatments ‘for’ lead poisoning the aldermeén wnnteu to know who shot ‘him. “He didn't get shot,” said the finance chairman. “He was potsond handling cartridges on the police' pistol range.” The claim was al- lowed, J. G. Shepard, who 15 now at White- horse~ awaiting~ favorable weather for his veturn to this city by plane. " | "HospriTAL NoTES . M. D. Williams was admitted Ani’s' Hospital last night for medlcal care. v Mrs. R. Lindqulst and baby girl, Patricia Gristin, left St. Ann’s Hos- pital this morning for their home in the Grand Apartments. Einar Solley was dismisssed from surgical care at St. Ann’s Hospital| last night. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pratt are the | parents of a baby girl, born this morning at the Government Hos- pital. John Marks' was admitted for medical attention at the Govern- ment Hospital this morning. |in two cups For Mrs. Shepard, Chairman ary-Trea- ounced today by present District buttered crumbs and bake 20 min- | 0°¢lock to elect a Distric utes in a moderate oven Vice (‘“”“'““ . STUFFED 1 SLICES: They | Surer, it make a ‘flavorful main course for|Charles G | dinner. Sclect any preferred fish | Chairman E _ {and stft the slices with a filling| The new of * aftloets cwill made this way: Brown threé table- | formulate policies and outline a pro- spoonis each of onions and celery in | gram for Boy £ aclivides here three tablespoons butter. Pour i the coming yi of cubed bread and half e a cup of cooked macaroni. Add four gge v tablespoons of chili sauce for addi- "Iamna Trout S | tional flavor and moisture. Spread on Nemesis Through Juneau |a one-pound slice of fish and cover with another slice. Spread the top |slice with melted butte h"m()n Ray ‘McDonald and George Ken- nedy, prominent Anchorage Sports- | juice and - chopped parsle; Ah:)u( 50 minutes in a moderate m(n.; men, went through on the today, Baste several times with three table- Outside. spoons of butter in half a cup of McDonald, ru(‘.in station manager, was ar Burd of boiling water. SHRIMPS CREOLE: This dish will keep any dinner or luncheon from becoming commonplace. Here's { how to make enough for six: Brown | Yukon | homeward bound after a visit | four tablespoons of chopped onions, | three tablespoons of chopped grucrr peppers and half a cup of dlced celery in five tablespoons of buttm Add two cups of cleaned shrimps 1nd‘ simmer three minutes. Sprinkle wnm‘ four tablespoons of flour, half a tea~ | spoon of salt, one-fourth teaspoon | of paprika and one-eighth te. oon! of cayenne. When well mixed, pour | in two cups of milk. Simmer five| " minutes, add four tablespoons of | catsup and cook for a minute. Serve | these shrimps, poured over hot rice | or toast. Or use them for filling and | surrounding a macaroni or noodle | ring | CORN MUSHROOM SOUFFLE: | This novelty has all the q\mlm- cations for a perfect Lenten dish.! | You make it like this: Melt f()l"'v tablespoons butter, add four table- | spoens flour and when mixed, pour in a cup of milk. Cook slowly until! very thick. Stir constantly. Blend in one cup cooked mushrooms, four | egg yolks and seasonings (salt, pep- | per, celery salt, chopped onions and‘, parsley). Beat for twa minutes. Fold | in four bvaten egg whites, Mix light- ly and pour the mixture into a butt- | 4 ered baking dish. Bake one hour in| a slow oven. Cheese sauce with a few chopped pimientos in it goes with| this souffke o u may prefer a reg- } ular savory mushroom saueee. Here is a recipe for a salmon mousse, that should serve ten: 1 package lemon-flavored gelatin, 1% cups hot water, z tablespoons | vinegar, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 cup flaked salmon, cup-diced cucumber (slight- ly salted and drained), % cup may- onnaise, '. cup heavy cream. Dissolve gelatin in hot water. Add vinegar and salt. Combine salmon, cucumber and mayonnaise. When ‘gelatin is cold and syrupy, fold in ‘cream, whipped thick and shiny, but not stiff. Fold in salmon mixture. Chill - until slightly thickened. Turn into mold. Chill until firm. Unntold ion crisp lettuce. Garnish with addi- tional mayonnaise. May be served with cucumber sauce made by fold- ing % teaspoon salt, dash of pepper, 2 tablespoons vinegar and 1 cucum- ber, chopped and drained, into half a cup of cream, whipped. e —— REBEKAH'S FOOD SALE Saturday, April 1, at Hollmann's Pharhacy; starting at 10 am, adv. MODES o/tfie U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Junean and vicinily, 28: Rain tonight and Wednesday; moderate to fresh southeast winds. Weather forecast for Svutheast Alaska: Rain tonight and Wed- nesday except snow along the upper Alaska-Canadian boundary; mod- erate to fresh southeast winds, except fresh to strong over Dixon En- trance, Clarence Strait, Frederick Sound and Chatham Strait, and fresh to strong southerly over Lynn Canal. #orecast cf winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Fresh to strong southeast winds along the coast from Dixon Entrance to Cape Hinchinbrock tonight and Wednesday, beginning at 3:30 pam., March LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 30.17 89 SE 9 30.25 87 E 11 30.12 86 E 18 RADIO REPORTS TODAY Lowest 4am. 4am. Precip. temp, temp velocity 24 hrs. 16 42 24 Weather Lt. Snow Lt. Rain Mod. R'n Time 3:30 p.m,, yest'y 3:30 a.m. today Noon ‘today 4am. ‘Weather Rain Cloudy Snow Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Mazx. tempt. Station last 24 hours Atka, Anchorage Nome Bethel Fairbanks Dawson St. Paul Dutch aHrbor Kodiak Cordova. . Juneau Sitka . Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco New York Washington 2 w2 8 |l conBol Cloudy Rain Rain Eallok = Cloudy Clear Cloudy Clear Clear Cloudy Rain Cloudy aow | R WEATHER SYNOPSIS The barometer was still low this morning over the Bering Sea, the northeast portion of the north Pacific Ocean, the Gulf of Al- aska and all the Territory except the southeastern portion with the lowest reported pressure, 28.20 inches, north of St. Paul Island. Mod- erately high air pressure extended from Southeast Alaska and coastal British Columbia over the mid-Pacific to the Hawaiian Islands. While light to moderate precipitation fell over western Alaska and along the coast of southern Alaska to Queen Charlotte Islands, fair weather pre- vailed over the rest of the field of observation. Temperatures were considerably warmer over the western and interior portions of the Ter- ritory last night with little change over other districts. Juneau, March 29.—Sunrise, 5 138 'am.; sunset, 6:33 p.m. is reputed to be the first white man to hook into a famous Iliamna Lake trout, largest of the species in the world Kennedy is in the hardware busi- | ness. The two conferred here today with Frank Dufresne, Executive Officer of the Alaska Game Commission. They are to take care of a shipment of pheasants which the commission is importing into the Territory for plzm(lng Heavy Rain Follows Snow Into Juneau Pelting rain, which measured 1.1 inches in the U. S. Weather Bureau gauge here between 9 o'clock this morning and 2 o'clock this after- noon, was Juneau's lot today. The rainfall is one of the heaviest B o of the winter—or spring, if the cal- endar is to be consulted. I.EGION ]'o MARK l Most of the snow which came in | an unseasonable fall over the week- tonight and Wednesday. An Army Day observance will be held at next Monday's American Legion meeting here, George Gul-‘ lufsen, -Adjutant of Alford John | Bradford Post, announced today. William O. Johnson is Chairman | Temple at 8 o'clock by | of the committee planning the Army | of the Order of Eastern Star. An Day program. He will be assisted by‘ entertainment feature has been Tra A. “Bud” Anderson, John E.|Planned to follow the ritualistic ses- Pegues and Waino Hendrickson. sion., e — Births in Portugal last September numbered 14,956 as against . 8234 deaths. Intiation is to be held tonight in | the lodge room of the Scottish Rite members BEL SRR Japanese chemusts are attempting to make synthetic tobacco from the soya benn MOMENT by Adelaide Kerr HUNDREDS of sheer white lingerie tiocuses are going to chureh with new spring suits on Easter mogrmng A crisp chllar and whigpe® cream frills of eyelet embroidered organdy ac- cent the white batiste blouse woen with a stilped worsted suit at the left. The other bleuse (21so of white batiste) is trimmed with tucksed organdie inserts and frivolous little lace frills.