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" For Economy, with Flavor, Try Ove " This casserole dish has a New Orieg By MRS. ALE XANDER GEORGE 4P Feature Service Writer is under wa ecm to reta al can parcd in one tooking and often the main course can be served in the taking dish good own and put it into and bake th ound Joaf 30 minu with peele pickle relis a cup of boiling wat the vege cooking of help brow more For a ham loaf, subst Macaroni and squash, corn bread and apple pudding. Top that with a fruit i and a beverage. Or base a dinner on a chee uffle. Its baking partners can be sweet potatoes, glazed pine- apple slices, biscuits and pudding. Serve a cabbage salad and a hot beverage with that combination. The ultimate in oven din based on a roast. Pick t and then ceok these with it alloped tomatoes, squash, bis- cuits or rolls and an upside down fruit dessert. A tray of relishes, a good gravy and plenty of hot coffe and you're right out in front our In this, you cook the main part of the meal in one dish Seleet your largest casserole. Dip pork or chops in flour and sprinkle them with season- ings. Arrang> them in the cas- serole and cove them with sliced raw potatoes mixed with flour, seasoning and but Surround with peeled or scooped out and stuffed corn or soft seasoned bread Add % inch of water. Cov the casserole and bake 1 heur in a moderate oven. Uncover during the last 15 nutes of cooking to brown the p. Bake with this any fresh or ca i fruit and a cottage pudding Serve the pudding with a fruit caramel or chocolate sauce. Casserole New Orleans One can condensed chicken gumb soup; 2 cups cocked ri chicken, diced; % cup ham 2 tablespoons chopped pim: Cut chicken and ham into quarter- inch dices. Combine cooked rice, | diced chicken, diced ham anc chopped pimientos. Add the chicken gumbo soup. Mix and put into a but- tered srole—one large one or five individual casseroles. Pineapple Ring Top Five slices pineapple; 15 cloves; 5 teaspoons brown 5 teaspoons butter. with wh sugar; on top of kle 1 teaspoon brown sugar, dot with 1 teaspocn butl: add ‘three whole.| cloves, Place the casser erate @75°F.) oven fo; utes until thoroughly heate pineapple rings are glazed — e The Book ALASKA, Revised and Evlarced, Now On Sale; 5100 ) P Rrwe s basis and a Hawaiian top. As Fair Closed for Winter as James Dnscg}l_pncks;wny ghor;le_q e tele » exhibit at the New York World’s Fair as the great exhi- :;L;:r‘; ‘J]::Zfln'};:\m’c Iwint(*r. Nearly 26,000,000 paid admissions were recorded. The fair is to reopen May 25, 1940, Genevieve Scheer takes inventory Mummers Mark Fair’ In faney costume and comic dress 1,500 Mummers from Philadelphia stage a gay parade at the New York World's Fair as the big show pre- pared to close for the winter. The trylon and perisphere can be seen at ieft., The Mummers are famous for their elaborate annual parades. Brooms of British Navy A}e Minesweeping is an important part of keeping sea lanes open for traffic, and here is a flotilla of British minesweepers at work somewhere off the English coast in this radiopheto from London. Blackball signals 2top the foremast of the nearest vessel show she is actually at work, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 15 n Meéls IDOESN’]’ I_IVE 1‘ “Hero” Sentenced for Fire Shown Sweeping il ALONE NOW; FT IS GREAT LIFE & ‘Marjorie Hillis Admits Married Bliss Is All fo Candy In 19 Marjorie Hillis wro.> “You might as well face the fact early in the game that if, at 40, you are living alonme, you will probably still be livirg alonc, or wishing you could, at fifty, sixty, seventy and even eighty.” Then on August 1 this year she matried. Here Joan Durham tells what she says today. By JOAN DURHAM AP Feature Service Writer NEW YORK, Nov. 15. alone and liking it may ha but married life ha. ys Marjorie Hillis H.) Roulston, 49-yea Living its even (Mr Id Tt will soon be three months since the once-busy authoress retircd private life as a housewife and aban- |doned a career 'that had brought | her fame and a modest fortunc | “At the moment I can barel | member that I once led such a lif | the radiant bride of the wealthy 65- | year-old Brooklyn chain store | chant said as she put on a litt { lipstick preparatory to havinz 1 photograph taken. ‘ “I'm almost oo contented.” | There was real warmth in her | voice, sparkle in her eyes, and a genuine flush on her cheeks as she told of her honeymoon in Eurcpe and talked about the joys of running a hcme. She Dresses the Part Even her costume reflec new cutlook on life. The war wool jersey dress lent color t face. She also wore a lu brewn fur stole, a light beaver (she got that in Paris—from S and diamend bracelets that matched large diamend engagement and wed- ding rings “I was simcere when I said in m bo X ed my small ment and entertaining this is different “You know T always was ed in a house and me never had so much time or equipment before—and i ing.” X What does she do all day—now that she has given up her writing and public appear- to Stanton Cheesman, 17, indefinite term in the the fire. how he rescued Ellen Gorman, hat midtown in ances? “Oh, T plan the meals and I fix the flowers. We have some really beautiful gardens and flowers at the house out at Huntington “I always have breakfast at 7:30 with my husband and drive to the station with him to catch the 8:12. “No, I don't drive myself. The chauffeur does. I haven't driven ever since I had a little Ford and lived with my family in Bronxville. “And I still haven't gotten caught up with my letter-writing. People were so nice when we were married. The letters ran into the hundreds, | I guess.” “Just Mrs. Roulston” How about reading . . . and en- tertaining . . . or cooking, mayke? “I've done a little reading. Nothing very serious, although I did finish “Grapes of Wrath” on my way back from Europe. “Yes, we have done quite a little entertaining. No big parties. Just small dinners—and weekends when people come out. “No, I can’t honestly | learning to cook.” | What does she plan for the win- | ter? | | Pirst, they’ll move from the Roul- ston estate out in Huntington, Long Island, to the big house in Brook- : lyn. After that she plans to be “just : | Mrs. Roulston.” | 8 : il gugiges MARRIAGE LICENSE William Georgi, British engineer, of the Rhineland High Commission, “We're here for good,” he said, Things are hopeless there and will say T'm A marriage license was issued to- day by U. S. Commissioner Felix Gray to William Stephen MecCurry " and Sophie Marie Daubel. e ——— . i | GRID GAL_7o show where ] her interest lies during gridiron son, Jean Blaine, Chicago, wears tiny football shoes. She's 8 descendant of Sames G. Biaine, political figure HAVANA FIGHTS SHANTY TOWNS | | | | HAVANA. Nov | capital has three “snanty | puilt of palm leaves, flat | cans and bits of scrap hum . | have existed for riedic press camp. | When a fourth got | suburban Marianao in the vicin | the aristocratic Havana Yacht Club. the anguished screams of members reached the ears of the department of sanitation. Shanties built in the neighborhood of the famed National Casino of Cuba have already been closed and of Clayton, rescuing five children from their burning he Annandale The youth is shown as he demonsirat 2, one of the five childs Quits Europe as “Hopeless” e L S The children are Dorothea, 17; § | ing 939. U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Junzau and vicinity, beginning at 3 Cloudy, light snow beginning late tonight, Thursday; m te to fresh southeasterly ture tonight about 30 degrees Forecast for Southeast Alaska oA L :30 pa 0w, cha winds; 1 Nov. to - re tempera- Northern pertion—Light snow to- night, changing to rain Thursday, except light snow Thursday over e extreme northeastern portion; moderate to fresh southeasterly winds tonight, becoming southerly Thursday, except moderate to resh northerly tonight over Lynn Canal. Southern portion — Rain tenight and Thursday; moderate to fresh southerly winds. st or wmnes along the coast of the Gulf of Alas] low pressure area which appeared to be approaching the G f Alaska, will cause increasing winds over the western portion of the Gulf tonight and Thursday. The winds along the coast from Dixon Entrance to Sitka will be moderate to fresh southe Sitka to Cape Hinchinbrook, moderate fresh easterly; and Cape Hinchinbrook Kodiak, fresh northerly tonight, becomin to strong northeasterly Thursday LOCAL DATA Temd Humidity wina Velocity Weather 34 42 NI Cloud 33 82 w 2 c 35 53 SE RADIO REPORTS | TODAY | Lowest 8:30a.m. Precip. temp. temp. 24 hours from from + fresh to to rime Barometer 30 Noon pm. yest am. today ud Cloudy today Max. tempt. last 24 hours | 21 -8 18 3:3Cam Station Weather Anchorage Barrow Nome Bethel Fairbanks Paul h Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan ttle Portland San Francisco Snow Cloudy R Cloudy Trace Trace 0 1.23 Cloudy Cloudy Fog Clo | N. J, aimed a hero after WEATHER SYNOPS ance of moderate int:nsity was indefinitely 1 1g in the Gulf of Alaska, with the lowest pressure estimated to be about 29.30 inches, while a mjre intense urbanc over the Aleutians, was approaching Dutc) Harbor, and apparently advan ing eastward. The weather was cloudy over and over most sections of Southeas the southern portion o ned rise, , was sentey i & ki 3 dis located thi Reformatory on & cha d on the day ¢ the Gulf of Alaska, to moderate Partly cloudy the ccast of Alaska, Southeas the t am.; Alaska. . A over ove U. S. Debt mg i fiillian‘ With Just Four More fo Go THE NATIONAL DEBT IN BILLIONS UF DOLLARS World War soldier and former membez arrives in New York with his family. “and my children are going to be Amer- i it . They couldn’t get a decent start anywhere in Europe now, il pe o be for the next thirty or forty years.” Mary, 13, and Henry, 8. yed by the national following complaints. were too readliy visible to and the ise has been that resi of the new shanty wn” near the yacht club will be evicted Health authorities xpressed the fear of ese local water or sanitary - BAKER !N TOWN police 1917 1930 1934 1939 1919 1937 By The AP Feature Service Before America’s entry into the World War the national debt stood well under 2 billions. Two years of war shot it up to more than 26 billions. In the next decade it sank to a little over 16 billions. But four years of depression drove the debt beyond the war level. Three years later it stood at 36 billion. Then on October 27, 1939, it passed the 41 billion mark. The treasury’s borrowing limit is 45. o :pidemics start- ich are ficilities in t without | There is no substituie for Newspaper Advertising J. Baker, piano specialist, ar- rived on the Alaska and is regis- tered at the Gastineau Hotel. Powerful Sweden Maneuvers as Russ Eye Finland Sweden, unwarlike northern land of the Nobel Peace Prize, dusted off its defensive equipment recently for the most extensive military maneuvers in years as Soviet Russia began threatening its neighbor, Finland, in an attempt to dominate the Baltic. Photo shows Swedish eight-ton tanks, capable of 28 miles an hour, rumbling over terrain deep in early winter snow in vicinity of Steckholm during the maneuvers.