The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 18, 1939, Page 2

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2 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1939 ——————————————————— oo - - SKIRTS FOR SPR!MG NIGHTSCANBEFULL OR SLIM; EVENING MODE AGREED ON MOOSE UNCRATED, = & e TR PRI RIVI ' - STILL MUST BE THE WEATHER : 1 = [ By ADE l %2 3 1 | [ (By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) | AP Fashion Editor " A K E N UPSIMRS‘ Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., April 18: | e | | Cloudy with occasional rain tonight and -Wednesday; moderate south- A Wide-skirted frocks and slim ones | | — | erly winds. | walk in the great pageant of eve- | H 1 2 Weather forecast for Somtheast Alaska: Cloudy with occasional | ning clothes which have arrwvd‘ E Beau“ful Spetlm en Ai rain tonight and Wednesday; mederate southerly winds except fresh | with the new spring mode. i over Dixon Entrance, Chatham Strait, I y Designs and. acoents feflect the | I § " fracts ThrOngS fo e 9 rait,; SIS TR Pouri. ) adh L Byin fashions and frivolities of some of | i H Forecast of winds long tne Coact of the Gulf of Alaska: Fresh to 5% makt romatife womien of utfier| [ ; Corridor Today e At o e s s | coast from Dixon Entrance to Cape Hinchinbrook. ’ | Paris ‘and New York designers | Uncrated, but not yet safely mov- ' ¥ both display ‘many ' wide-skirted | ed to its new home in the Terri- | LOCAL DATA . y o | frocks, {n such sheer fabrics as | torial museum, & giant moose stood Time _ parometer Temo. Humidity Wind Velocity iWeather silk organdy, marquisefte and net, | all day today in the corridor of the 3:30 p.m. yest'y 30.21 43 ;lx 8! 5 t. Rain LR | whose full frothy skifts move with | Federal Building here. | | 230 am. today .. 3038 41 84§ 10 t. Rain a swishing grace. Sonie ate dotted The moose, taller than a man at|}Ndon today 3041 42 84 s 14 Lt. Rain | with tiny flowers, others have bod- its shoulder and having an antler RADIO REPORTS ¥ ices shirred with black velvet rib- spread of better than 55 inches, was | % | TODAY § :bm.‘s a la 1§80 and one even has | taken in the Tonzona section o‘n th Max. tempt. | Lowest 4a.m. 4am. Precip. 4 lm. » garlands of red currants and green north side of the Alaska Range west| guapon last 24 Bours | temp. temp. velodity 24 his. We leaves hung on the skirt. Among |of McKinley Park, sent t6 the Atka 38 1 a4 36 6 1 Lt Bain them some hooped skirts appear. Smithsonian Institute at Washing- Anchorage i 36 b i -0 .l, 4 "oy | |ton for mounting and returned to i ! & e 18 g apeed | There are also a number of Juneau by way of the Panama Can- | Nomer 1 s 4 11 “Lt.Spow - | fairly full-skirted eotton frocks, al. ¢ BN b r & » 01 - cloudy made of dottéd muslin or swiss, Tonight 10 men will attempt to| Fairbanks 92 & a8 8 0 Cloudy * | and designed with deémure high | | carry the huge specimen up the| Dawson 8 o el 4 o Cloudy necks and puffed sleeves that give | Federal Building stairway two stories | St Paul 34 % 34 4 .14 Cloudy them a schoolgirl charm. Under | | to the museum. Dutch Harbor bt | & 38 g 08 Mod.R'n | some of these swish pefticoats of | | " The moose was uncrated on the| Kodiak 38 | " 38 8 01 Clear eyelet-embroidered muslih. | front steps of the building yestérday | Gordova 40 | 32 32 12 30 Mod. sn. | Slim frocks are fewer in number | | afternoon and finally, after much | Juneau 44 | 40 1 10 17 Lt.Rain | this spring, but the fashion world | [ twisting, up-ending and turning, | Sitka 417 | 39 - — 02 ,. | has its eye on them, both because | | squeezed through the front door. Ketchikan 48 | 38 40 4 .01 Cloudy *'¢ |of their contrasting line and | It proved to be a beautifully | Prince Rupert 50 40 40 4 20 Cloudy of their possible influence on the | mounted speciment. Edmonton 64 38 42 8 0 Cloudy | fall mode. Among the ‘most striking | | The moose was shot by William N.| Seattle 8 | 50 50 6 0 Clear | are high-waisted, puff-sleeved Di- | Beach and J. Watson Webb and | Portland 82 | 56 56 6 0 Clear ~ & | rectoire gowns, ‘'designed of soft gray | transported from Washington to Ju-| San Francisco 72 48 48 10 0 Cloudy | or pink crepe and embroidered in| | neau through the courtesy of E. T.| New York 46 40 42 16 25 Lt. Rain | paillettes. These' often are accom- Stannard, President. of the Kenne-| Washington a6 1 41 46 4 35 . 1§ Rath | panied by a long scarf draped across cott Copper Company. the shoulders. 1 e — | WEATHER SYNOPSIS { Gypsy frocks lend color and ro- TO CORDOVA | An aréa of high barometric pressure overlay Southeast ~Alaska, ¢ | mance to the dinner mode. Most of H. Nieder, of Marcus and Nieder, | Southwestern Canada, the Pacific Northwest and the adjacent Pa- | them combine a blouse of white lin- metal scrappers of Seattle, passed| ¢ific Ocean this morning with a center of 3054 inches off Vancouver iy - gerie or'a bright chiffon with a full| through Juneau on the Alaska to-| Island. A trough of low air pressure covered the rest of Alaska, the plaid or striped taffeta skirt. Some- | day, bound for Cordova to take over | Bering Sea and northern Canada with ' the lowest reported pressire, times they are worn with necklaces a large quantity of old Kennecott! 29.12 inches at Nome. Light to moderate precipitation occurred during o) of clinking gold'gypsy coins. | | equipment. | the last 24 hours over western and southern Alaska and along the coast Among the'’outstanding WIaps 4 poic erdion of the full-skirted evening frock is designed by Gaston —————— I of northern British Columbia with fair weather prevailing along the faf gt s o oy bm'»"hm’,d of navy biue net. White pique flowers “blossom” over its bodice and | TO WOODCHOPPER | coast of northern British Columbia with fair weather “prevailing over cape! c.ts of organdy or faille, tied kirt | Keith Roberts, mining engineer, | the interior of Alaska, the rest of western and southern Canada and \f[‘li""""i“' > under the chin. There °7F™ = i SR A is an Alaska passenger through Ju_,& over the West Coast states. Temperatures were warmer along the Al- I‘nl? \‘:(]il?t(‘((‘] :l;::)l;vr of long, fitted : fiest today for Se ’d. He will mkc[ aska Railroad last night with other portions cf the Territory showing . PR oninue e we o PERHAPS NEW HANGING TO BE [rail transter to Fairbanks and then| little change. color arn(l rorlnanre fiatin r(;t.u‘ulm | ivlr();:;:c:‘m||”\ oy e ey Juneau, April 19.—Sunrise, 4:39 a.m.; sunset, 7:21 p.m. . » is one of the slim high -waisted Directoire evening frocks de- |swing from the waistlines of satin 5 | | area, e g silver paillettes. terfly bows embroidered on the & 1 - Chitmeraier 15 INMAKING FoR JUNEAUNEs LET SPRING DRIFT INTO YOUR MENUS A o 5 el re on’ hands g dglgaof satin| * i s £ . flf ‘éifi figs. | i ki1 S PR A ; i Brifish Beaufy Hafes Nazis e yeiigioF " i Haore o Kttintmtcias - QN DELICATELY FLAVORED FLOAT DISHES : g 1 : Wildness He May Be Be Excuted Here for , g ~ 1 So She Is Working in U. S. Red Sensafion Slaying &l " . 2 AP Feature Service Sports Writer | in' half a century if Nelson Charles, PP WASHINGTON, April 18.—Ahoth-| TAMPA, Fla. April 18.—Fasy-go- | Ketchikan native who was convicted er avenue of trade between the Uni- | iIng Deacon Will McKechnie has last week of first degree murder, is | ted States and South ‘America is WBY with' young - pitehers. not saved from the noose by Presi- foreseen as the Department of Com- e has a knack of taking a youhg- dential action - merce officials began a survey of ster’s swing apart and finding out Charles, 37 years old, will be hang- A Laiih American’ production: of ctif-| Why :he can’t.slit one across the ed either here in the yard of the E ios and novelties. plate. old courthcuse or somewhere in the American dealers are reported | Last spring the deliberate Deacon at the discretion of U. 8. seeking néw sources of supply for had'a Dutchman down here named |Marshal William T. Mahoney. specialty products previously pur- Vander Meer. The kid had If he hangs here, he will be the i chased from Europe and the Orient. | promise for a couple of years but first man to be executed in Juneau Secretary of Commerce Hopkins he hever knew whether the ball was | since 1884 when a group of miners| L ordered a survey to determine if going across the dish or up in the lynched two natives. There has certain amounts of these items can stands. So McKechnie began never been a legal hanging in Ju- ! bm;m’: South American monkeying around with his delivery. neau, as nearly as oldtimers can| P o i of war. And the result was the pitching remember. 2 y: " sensation of the year — Johnny, An old gallows is believed to be M ¢ Vander Meer, the double no-hit kid. in the equipment of the law officers u I Another Ace? here someplace. It was prepared e A The Cincinnati skipper is working | twice for convicted murderers but I; wo“me & on . another \youngster this spring never used ! Yy b and it is just possible that Lloyd Two Cheat, Gallows | 4 Albert (Whitey) Moore may be the! A Japanese named Saito, who| P o- Humv bright hurling star of the Nahonal'};mm a young white man at Dun- | League next summer. | das Bay by slitting him from should- | ¥ . I | Moore is the ;ame age as Johnnyfer to thigh with a big knife while LheL . . . . * . 'but is a right hander with a good|victim was being held by two other| Fresh fruit and delicate ¢ are blended in this ban: fine spring-time dessert. -~ Seeks '0 D(av{ J'I“ e Na fast ball. He's been knocking around | Japanese, was sentenced to hang | ' i o s dujiaceshieh THAL S0 . Py e, : E i = ' pro ball for five years and spent all but his sentence was committed to | tion CIOS.EI’ 0 R_ome {of . last season with the Reds. Hellife imprisonment by President Wil- | By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE | por a berry or fruit mixture, PIACE | oo Berhn AXIS only worked 90 innings but he won son in 1913. AP Feature Service Writer a layer of fresh or canned fruit in| i \ | guries and lost four with an earn-| In 1916 a notorious cutthroat| Floats, favorite desseris as far 8 dish and cover with the eustard. | _ ed yun average of 350 against Van- ' Krause was sentenced to hang for back ‘as George Washington's day, | Chill and when ready to serve, top v ; Bt A ROME, April 18—Premier Mus- | ger Meer's 3.12. killing a number of. men and drop- |still are among the highly-rated | With islands of whipped cream or FREEMAN-MITFGRD ROMILLY AND HER HUSBAND, solini is seekh}g» to draw Hungary| As was the case with Vander Meer, | ping them overboard in Gastineau | dishes. with balls of ice cream. Peaches, . FEMOND. SHE'S THE “BYACK S . OF TRERRGER. FRo. DT anmE_-Berlm axis ‘whifey's trouble is Jack of control. Channel. He broke jail and rowed These creamy custards come into, 8Pricots, pears, pineapple, bananas N A while his rewspaper said the Roose- | Or it has been. McKechnic has in a boat to Admiralty Island. There | their own around Easter time, when | and oranges make delightful blends. £ velt peace plea has already been |changed his delivery a bit, ordeing he was shot and killed. | eggs are less costly and there is a| You can mix melted chocilate, SELERE e e rejected decisively by the Italian him to throw overhand. And Whitey| A man named Homer Bird, who | call for puddings that are delicately cocoanut, candied fruits or nuts with 124 -l S 8 i ; o A horoughly already. She won't tal |Pational conscience. | claims it has given him better con- killed two men in the Interior, was | flavored and textured. the custard after it has been cooked bee:xn;::;i-w;‘i).\;“fi: # n”»-“i}‘;\'.’,;‘,’ '* | much about her sisters, but she says |, Hudgarian, officials, l)‘)eudc(:odbx trol. found guilty after three trials and | Glass Instead of China % *;dd it to what ever topping you Nerdic type, and has been honored |1'S Quite natural for her family to Premier Teleky, visited Rome ay He looked swell when 81}* collab- hanged at Sitka in 190T. That is | Floating Island, a popular Muunt:pre fer. AL BN &k b autographed cuas ka |De Pro-Nazi—“because most of the and the Prentier issued 3 statement orated with rookie Gene lhun}pgon the only legal hanging ih South- | Vernon sweet, is ace high in many | t"le on S e 2 SBDer -olnes An HORR S e |saying hb ‘is ‘s Sincete friend and |from Columbia, 8. C.. in pitching a east Alaska in the memories of | homes today. This recipe uses up) Angel food and sponge cake slices | : admirer ‘of .Italy., : | io-hit game against Brooklyn which | pioneers. egg yolks, leftover, possibly from come in very handy to use with | » Freeman-Mittord is mar- and Esmond landed pocdiys. |the Reds won 5-0. Whitey pitched The Ketchikan slayer was found |angel food cake. . Beat eight egg floats. For a superlative float, line led to Sir Oswald Mosley, British here ad $400. Now they are SrAIMTEC AT | the first six innings, struck out two | guilty of killing his mother-in-law, | yolks, add third of a cup of granu-| & dish with cake slices, cover with ». f#scist leader, and has brought up established in a tiny Greenwich Vil- ju“EAm AT ’ | men and walked only one. Cecilia Johnson. The jury refused | lated sugar, two tablespoons of flour, | thin layer of fruit and pour the Hep children to greet visitors with lage apartment, Jessica has her job g s Fast Ball Faster |to recommend against the death | an eighth of a teaspoon of salt and, custard in. Chill and top with whip- y a“Heil Hitler! ! and Esm hinks he may get one u w M“I“G 6“ ¢ | Moore is 10 pounds heavier than| penalty. three cups of milk, Cook the mixture Ped cream, slightly sweetened and ¥But young sister Jessica mna any day advertising or journal- & » last year and he thinks this has| AER SN DA in a double boiler until it thickens flavored. L] a,volunteer for loyalist Spain, and ism,” he says with a wave of i 2d |added ‘more speed to his fast one. | . | slightly. Be careful not to over- For something different, cover the now is selling dressés in a hand GIVEN DE(RE | He figures that better control, ad-,D A"(E . |cook it of 1t may curdlle, As soon Iloat with marshmallows and set Ayenue shop—the “black sheep” of muey iy they will go home if . | @itional speed and the year’s ex-| R I" F“.Ms as the pudding thickens, take it out' under a broiler five minutes to the Freeman-Mitfords. ds e b G Pt m'_‘“‘m o8 * “0 | perfence with the Reds should com- | of the hot water and ‘beat it for a' brown the top. Then chill and when “Bhe and her husband, Eeme A N e SEATTLE, April 18-—Three Ju- bineto ake him a winning tosser | SAYS SHE'S BR'DE minute, then pour in a teaspoon of | ready to serve garnish with candied | Romilly, a tiephew of Winston Chur- | qerry1 _ except the landlord neau students were among the 203 |this yeag. Hi | vanilla and @ quarter of a-teaspoon | Orange strings. » chill, arrived in mid-March 0 €OD- yonant end Esmond fifty cen receiving degrees, teaching diplomas | ““The 6-foot-1, 185-pound blond 'is each of almond and lemon extracts,! Here is 'a recipe for a banana tipe Wi aaveptyieN ithiat ted. that they may become eitigens ‘e certificates Trom the University s newlywed and he's doubly anxious| HOLLYWOOD, April 18. — The| Pour the cooked custard into a| busterscoteh -float that will serve| U two years ago when both were 19 o BB & 3 of Washington at the end of the to'have a good season for the litfle| film dancer Novita announces that|glass dish (glass ones seem to do | ¢ight 1 package butterscotch aexaw-y After having known each other only winiter quarter. Tady. | she is the bride of the crooning Irish | better than china). Top with the, root pudding; 3 cups milk; 2 ban-l thgee days, they eloped “to “France William L. Paul Jr., was awarded | ‘Whitéy came very close to joining | pugilist Jack Doyle. floating islands—beaten egg. whites., anas, sliced; 2 egg whites; 3 table- | ok Wealthy Lord Redesdale—he’s Jes- « Bachelor of Arts degree; Roy I.|Vander Meer in the no-hit purnde; Novita said she and Doyle were | Beat two egg whites until stiff, pour | SPoons granulated sugar. | siea’s father—sent a destroyer to J Bachelor of Science and jast year. He held the Boston Bees married last Saturday by a justice|in five tablespoons of confectioher Mix butterscotch pudding and| bring her back. But she was toc Anne Simpkins, Bachelor of | higless for 7 2-3 innings last July but [of the peace at Ensenada, Mexico. |sugar and beat until creamy. Dip a | milk. Cook over a low fire, stirring much in Jove with anti-fascist Es- £ e in Home Economics. |they managed to nick him for a| The dancer said she returned to|spoon info cold water and then into | constantly until it thickens and boils i mond. So she hasn't seen her s | couple of ‘safeties. | Hollyowood alone because she was|the egg-white mixture and push off up once. Remove from fire and pour | y fsther since. Taae ii6 ¢ (“ith Moore going great aloig]due at the studio. Doyle has.been|on top of slightly boiling water. into serving dish (o cool Just before s The two have been on their ow YAKOBI nl“a ' !@ith Vander Meer, Paul Derringer, living at Tia Juana, Mexico since|Cover and cook five minutes. Care-' Serving. top with s_liced bananas and “r -3 since then. Lee Grissom and Buckly Walters,| he was deporfed last December. fully remove with.a slotted spoon | meringue made with egg whites and 3 down in sout! ‘I’owm ]‘0 po ]‘ the Reds will have just about the| S and let the islands float on the, SUgar. ceeded to carn Cf |best pitching corps in the senior| CARSON CITY. Nev. April 18.—|custard. The cooking removes any| R % T T | Smr—l:h '1;1 ’«lf‘m ts Japt. Tom Smith’s motorship Ya- | circuit. Another youngster who may.‘l‘llevmiat emfil]os_e: Wh]o take tips|raw eggy taste. TO VALDEZ MINE | 2 = FIR 10 46 London kobi, foun, in that group is Thompson. If’s'given to their employees must 014 Style Touch { | @ “We lived in a h on the wc:t ‘:S;?:no‘: afifl’flgfi :lq?ute a Junglp fit"om Columbia, §. €., henceforth post notices to that ef-| For an old-fashioned touch, cut Ralph Merrill, Valdez area min- SPRING TRAINING “ lars a day,” says Jessica proudly Saturday after being missing ten |to the majors but he may make jt.|feet in their business establish- [some bright-colored and tart-flavor- ing man, passed through Juneau on | at Unlversity of Pittsburgh finds “For both of us, I mean. Meals and | .o, > /s, was being towed to Juneau|He won 16 and lost 9 last year and ments. ed jelly (plum, crabapple, currant) the Alaska, returning to the hills Charlie Bowser ‘(above) taking E e Sclided A s afternoon at press time by |McKechnie sold on him. | Gov. E. P. Carville has siened o [into half-inch cubes and dot over for the summer. [ ;:’;,:’,,‘;:::’de,;";‘;‘,‘“‘s“ > She’s pretty and 4 and, V. Donner, who's a di- | Henry Museth on the DuUpoco. e legislative act requiring -that such | the top. Some people like the islands ——————— land who resigned, he said, ..;:: sflent most of the tim: me of color movies, was one Museth went to Smith's ald ‘yes- RETURNS TO SKAGWAY employers display signs reading: |mixed through the custard, so press PAUL RETURNS | cause athletic conditions at Pitt . talks so much. She quiie ca the judges who recently | terday along with Ralph Reischl on| Mrs; D. A. Story, visiting in Ju-| “Notice: Tips given employees|several down with a spoon so their e | had become intolerable.” about the Amer Y Col. Roscoe Turner as | the Treva C. It was planned at|neau for several days, left aboard!pelong to management.” snowy peaks will show through. William Paul returned to Juneau| Sae s a3 BT 7% Wants to see all the America’s hand“somet‘ aviator | that time to pull the Yakobi from |the Alaska for her home in Skag-; The new law was sponsored by| There are different kinds of floats on the Alaska this morning Ircm} p " they've explored New Yo Y * Jihe beach on last night's high tide,” Wa¥s lme assembly committee on labor.|—fruit, cocoanut, chocolate and nut, Ketchikdh, s Try an-Empire.ad, ~ T

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