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B T T T L LT T T LT TP T P T I LA E R FALL FOODS AND CLEVER COOKS MAKE A GAY HALLOWE'EN PARTY I'pt Ssticks in clea 2——Carefully dip each into syrup, HERE'S A TREAT EVERYBODY LIKES AND ONE PROGRAM—APPLES ON STICKS, VMRS, ALEXANDER GEORGT AP Feature Service Writer he time to 1 be easy to e and best me Hal- concoc- by ) faces on stuffed this Hallowe'en way: Carefully cut off the tops of firm, ripe tomatoes, Scoop out the centers and stuff them with a well seascned shrimp or cheese ;alad. Replace the tops and stick in stems of green peppers. (To resemble small pumpkins,) You san use this same idea, with ap- ples, but stuff them with fruit salad or cream cheese mixed with celery, marshmallows, dates nd salad dressing, 3—When dry, arrange on plates for serving. make cha , too, o for this heliday. lads Mcuid crange gelatin in orange Unmould them on let- tuce and stick in green candy stems. Garnish with yellow cheese in tiny pumpkin shapes. on any salad green and mayonnaise. for your party, mould atin in an inch-thick it out two-inch eircles them with s, dates aud skins, Ser candied fruit s nutmeats, canape tidbits: green pepper strip: hopped beets and pic d in a shallow roun xl pan them well. Remove stems, and stick pointed end of lollipop stick into the THAT FITS RIGHT INTO A HALLOWE'EN PARTY stem end of each apple. Boil molasses, sugar, water, vine- gar, and salt, without stirring | ceated, place “apple, dn oo | (ARMI(HAE[ RETURNS | £ Bud Capmichagl, Who has bec | over at SitRa in ‘the offices of Co- lumbia Gumber for the Pist sev eral wecks, came in abBard th Alaska Air Transport , Lockhee last night. | prosperous” and everyone is look- ing forward to an inereased meas- ure of prosperity when work be- |gins on the Sitka naval alr bas - D IN FROM LIGHT Nick Kasheyaroff, who has been | keeping the light at Cape Fanshaw | the Gastineau Hotel, LR Y NOME MAN SOUTH Bud Curtis, who has been in ler Alaska. He expects to spend the 'mnter in Seattle. R lig rost it with orange icing| ENROUTE TO TACO‘VM nd decorate it - with :ehogolate| Charles ‘German, of Nome Creek drops { passed through Juneau on the ; steamer Alaska and is enroute to Tacoma, Here’s a speciai nuuday pump- kin pie: Bake a pumpkin pie in a cake pan or deep pie dish. TO KETCHIKAN Cool, then transfer it to a serv- | R. J. Sommers, of the Sommers ing platter and generously | construction Company, and C. H cpread with sweetened, flavored |Kile, of the same firm, are pas- whipped cream ‘with some bro- |sengers for Ketchikan aboard the ken peeans and black Walnut |Alaska. meats in it—chopped candied I RV, - O ginger; too, if you're sure the TOURING S. E. ALASKA guests like ginger. There are three round irippers If you are planning refresh- jaboard the North Sea, Norman ments only, for your party, | Davis, Robert Davis and Mrs. Clara spiced fruit, cider punch or | E. Breakey. cranberry juice is very refresh- e ing. Sugared doughnuts, or dcughnuts lightly frosted and | then vrolled in chopped nut meats and cocoanut are grand. Finish off your .light refresh- ——————— BRIDE-ELECT TO SEATTLE Miss Marie Winklebleck, daughter of Mrs. Charles McDowell of Fair- | banks, passed through Juneau on |the steamer Alaska enroute to Se- ments with a large bowl of freshly popped corn and a bas- ket of grapes and shiny red ap- ples. Apples on sticks: 12 to 16 ripe red apples; 2/3 cup attle where she is to become the brxde of Ray Douglas of thac city - NOONAN HERE Dan Noonan, coming in from the Westward on the Alaska, is a guest at the Gastineau Hotel, and calling on his trade today s QSRR Y FROM VANCOUVER 1/3. teaspoon salt; 2 tahlespoons Mr. and.-Mrs. George - Miller butter; 2 teaspoons vanilla Vancouver, Wash., are guests at the Wash the apples thoroughly, dry Baranof. Hotel. pure New Orleans molasses; 14 nulated sugar; 1/3 teaspoon vin to 270 degrees F.—or until it becomes brittle when, tried in cold water. | Remove from. fire and add butter and vanilla. Dip apples into the sy- rup, being careful to.cover entire surface with the glaze. When well blossom end down, on a sheet of waxed paper to FROM STAY AT SITKA, Carmichael says Sitka is “looking | Nome, is a passenger on the steam- | of the real builders of | JUDGE JAMES ° WICKERSHAM Former Delegate Passes Away atHospital Early Today Continyed = suge One) v the sctting aside of Section 33 each township in the Tanana for the support of the edu- 1 institution; and authoriz- - erection of the Territorial deral Building at Juneau Editor, Author T Judge Wick: m edited eight 5 of the Alaska Law Reports, and is the author of “Old Yukon,” 1 comprehensive historical work of 514 pages, published last year. No man ‘was more widely known came in on the North Sea and is at | in Alaska than Judge Wickersham. In the course of his political and| judicial activities he visited every | | part of the Territory. Memorial services will be held for Judge Wickersham at 2 o'clock | Thursday afternoon at the Charles W. Carter Chapel here. The body will be taken south by Mrs. Wick- | ham on the vessel North Sea | Thursday night for cremation at Tacoma. Tributes | Commenting on the death of Judge Wickersham, Gov. John W.| Troy said today: *“ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUFSDAY OCT. 24, 1939 T | T | 1 DEAD AT 82 & s MR. CHIANG —when dapper “Mr: Chiang” (above) Larrived at New York from Eu- rope he was given the freedom of the rt by I'edcr’kl autho , ties, nor 3 It itkay | - Poruiand !“'New York . A very able man, | * a good lawyer and an earnest Al-| - askan, Judge Wickersham also wa one of the best informed people in the Territory on the history of | a. I join the community in ering my sincerest sympathy to Wickersham and his son.” er Governor (.tJI‘L'A‘ A much to its progre vast knowledge of Al Luewory. The record leaving are going to deal of interest for to come.” Collector of Customs James J Connors said: “I wish to express my heart-felt sympathy to Mrs. Wickersham, The Judge was one| of the grand old pioneers of Al- aska. He always had the inter- ests of the Territory at heart and made one of the finest judges we ever had. I esteem him as one of Alaska.” - e Emphe Want Ads Bring Results. generatior . years in Fairbanks, is on the Alaska | | This Nazi medal for valor has re- | placed the Iron Cross of Imperial Germany, which Corporal Adolf Hitler won in the first world war. The medal is struck in bronze, silver and gold for varying degrees of bravery under fire. -+ DUNLOP BACK Herb Dunlop came up from Wrangell aboard the steamer Yu- kon. He is at the Gastineau Hotel. { - Cordova a.. U. 8. DEPARTMENT Ol-‘ AGmClTI.Tm WEATHER nmny THE WEATHER (By the U, 8. Weuflur Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and v(clnlly. beginning at 3:30 p.m., Oct. 24: Partly cloudy ‘tonight. raib . Wedpesday; gentle to moderate variable winds, mostly northwesterly. Minimum tonight about 34 degrees. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Increasing cloudiness tonight, light rain beginning early ‘Wednesday, except light snow over the northern portion; gentle to moderate northerly. wm¢s wnlght be- coming southerly Wednesday. Forecast of winds along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Moderate to fresh winds will continue over the Gulf of Alaska. Winds along the coast from Dixon Engrance to Cape Spencer will be moderate to fresh mnortherly tonight, becoming sonthwesterly Wed- nesday; from Cape Spencer to Cape Hinchinbrook, variable tonight but mostly moderate northerly, becoming southerly Wednesday; from Cape Hinchinbtook to Kodiak moderate tp fresh 'southerly, probably increasing Wednesday. LOCAL WTA Time 3:30 p.m. yest’y 3:30 am. todiy Noon today Barometer Temo. Humidity wina Vqloclty 30.30 37 53 y W -3 30.20 33 59 S 8 30.19 40 47 SwW 3 Weather Clear Cloudy Clear RADIO REPORTS X “ TODAY Max. tempt. Lowea 3:30a.m. . Precip. Station last .24, hours temp. temp. 24 hours Anchorage ... § T 24 " Barrow 26 30 Nome 33 35 Bethel ... 34 36 Fairbanks g 20 23 Duteh Harbor .. 43 44 Kodiak 34 35 31 3:3Ca.m. Weather Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Snow Cloudy Pt. Cldy Clear ‘Juneau ... Cloudy Ketchikan - Seattle * ‘Clear Pt. Cldy Pt. Cldy Rain Pt. Cldy San Franeisco | WEATHER SYNOPSIS A region of above mormal prossure extended this morning, from a tenter of high pressure over the interior of Alaska thence south- ward to another center located in the Gulf of Alaska. The high- est reported pressure ;af JFaighanks was 30.30 inches and 3050 inches at latitude 44 degrees and longitude 144 degrees. An extensive low pressure area was centered over the state of Idaho and another dis- turbance was indefinitely = located south of the Aleutians. Gen- erally- cloudy weather prevailed over interior Alaska with light to moderate siow 'reported oveér the railroad belt and clear and cool weather continued over the entire Southeast Alaska. Juneau, Oct, 25—Sunrise,, 6:57 a.m.; sunset, 4:30 pm. ©O’SHEA FROM FAIRBANKS banks and is enroute south on the Albert O’Shea, who has spent six | steamer Alaska. Hardy will join his wife and daughter in Seattle and remaip, entering the advertising profession, e e bound for Enumclaw to visit with his parents. He has just comp.leted‘ a season as superintendent of the Boundary Dredging Company's op- erations on Canyon, Creek in the | Fortymile. e, MOLYNEUX BACK J.-C. Molyneux; Swift, represen- tative, came in on the Yukon from | FAIRBANKS COUPLE SOUTH Mr. and, Mrs.;E.; A. Cleveland, 'young Fairbanks couple, are en- route to Tacoma on the steamer Al- aska. He was connected with the West Coast Grocery Company in the Golden Heart City. e ———— FORTYMILERS ON ALASKA R .t W | Mr. and Mrs. Axel Brogger, oper- TO JOIN FAMILY | ator of the Boundary Roadhouse in Carl Hardy, clerk at the McIntosh | Fortymile, are passengers on the Al- and Kubon Drug Store, left Fair-|aska bound outSide for the winter. Petersburg after a short business trip there. "“"l""llIHIIHHHHHHIIIlMllllllmIIIIIHIIIIIMHIIlllllIIIIIIHIIHMIIIIIIHII|IlllIllIlIlIlIlHlIIIIIIIlllllIIIHIllllllIlIIllmlIIIIIllllllllIlINIIHIIIIIIIIIHHHIIIIIIIII||||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllillllllllllllII'IIIII|IIIIIlIIIlIIIIIllHlIlllliillimllmllllll|IIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIllIIillll|IIIIIIIIlllIIIIIHIHIIHIIIIII"IilllfilllITIII]lIIIIJlIl]IIIlIIII'" Now Being BPetermined by the Alasku Census Siores you will be given a ticket on which youcan guess the census number — each store will give prizes fo its winning contestants. B. M. BEI[REN]DS and GEORGE BROS. PAY’N TAKIT ;nds Nov. 15th A = L. 3. All entries must be turned in fo the participating merchants or to The Empire office by 5 P. M. Nov. 15, 1939 4. In case of tie, tying contestants will draw to determine the winner. The person losing the draw will be the win- W}Ih each $Iypurchase at the {ollow;ng J uneau TheStamefic‘nthéCflhlest Today Are: Contest Here Arethe Simplqllyles of The Empire Census Contest: Population to be estimated is that of the City of Juneau The total as announced by the Bureau of Census will beused in decldmg the winners. 2. Estimates may be made only on ihe entry blanks furnished by the participating merchants. ner of the next prize in order. 5. Employees of The Daily Alaska Empire, of the participafing merchants or of the BUREAU OF CENSUS arenot ehgxble for the conlesl 6. Decision of the judges is to be considered final. Prizes are given to winners by each merchant as his own individual contest. Entry Ticket with Each $1 Purchase at any of the above stores. llllIlllllllllIIlllllIIIIIIIlIIllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllIlIIIlllIllIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIlIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII]IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllfllll]llIIIIIHIIIIIlllllllIIIIIlIIIIjIIIIIIIIII]IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IllllllIIIIIIIIIl|IIIllllllIllllllIIllIlllIllII]}llflHl_lilllIlllllllmk. -One Census i R A X i A e e 8 (T 3 & i i