The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 22, 1940, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

S |||m‘ll|mlllll“lllllllllfllIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|I|I|llllll'liilIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIHIIHMIIIIHIflIIIIIIIII!IIIHHIIMIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIHHIIIIHIIHHIIIIIIIII 2 WASHINGTON WAS A DIFFERENT MAN EVERY TIME HIS PORTRAIT WASMADE e e —— —— ——— PROVING THEY ARE HARD T0 BE SUBDUED, Guenlla Warfare Comm ues:in Various; Sec- . tions of Land WARSAW, Feb, 22.—Guerilla wa fare continues in various sectio of Poland, although the Gen occupation is now several months old. The Carpathian Mountains ar |a region which lends itself well and other forms of ill The inhabitants have the ndvantavw of knowing every pass and valley. i Around the Augustow and ig\xeri]ln warfare continues. The German Governor-Gener- al's staff seems to suspect that tl | illegal activity is being conducted | |from a center, presumably War B saw. At any rate, recent events in the former Polish capital seem to have been chiefly those of persons who might conceivabli belong to | an 'legul orgamzanon ! "NORTH AMEBI(AN WAY"" HELD UP AS EXAMPLE T0 WORLD ’PfilE Kielce ‘\/loum,n ns WILLIAMS made this picture in Bialowisza, 1794 for the Masonic Lodge, Alex- andria Va., wheu- it |emnin JUHN TRUMBUIL ted a full length (from i h paint- of“the CHAKLE: ed this taker in 1780 .Off for Propaganda “Bombing” Tou fOR WOMEN IN NAZILAND AiPe Talkative Females Slart Something fhonher- . cor B 2o o man Law Invoked Gronvel sa o cood exampic o {he rest of the world today in the relation between the Dominion and the United States. Cromwell said that the set by the iwo nations in peacel: and friendly negotiation cof difficulties offered some hope a permanent settlement of the world’s disputes after the VIENNA, Feb. 22. — Talkative women deprived themselves of the chance of buying silk stockings. Othmar Taeubele of Vienna,! owner of a dry-goods store, W well supplied with silk stockings when the rationing set in. Unable ple to withstand the plgg. of. his fair | Tpe . 04" gromwell: “The Nor sex customers, and in disregard . e SR of official ders. Taeubele freely American way of settling d f official orders, Aaeubele ITEOW 1. arpitration shouid be wo silk stockings. news spread rapidly all making his business » such proportions that the his This elsewhere.” DEVICE INVENTED by curious. As a re- Taeunete was amested and 10 FIND SPIKES re closed. nder present regulations every IN LUMBER 106S man woman is entitled to buy v y four pairs of stockings an- g 5 ¢ . ? ¢ A device for detecting spikes anc | nually, for which 16 points froni other midtal ‘objects buriemiigh A ..y | he othing card totalling ‘ohe ' s ey o Members of the British Royn! Air Force load a fighting plane witk 10 CHHIE i 0‘&1“"““01'“ has been developed by the For propaganda leaflets before taking off for a “bombing” flight over Vienna | Dundred PO E % e ice. e been almost entirely con. | year. are clipped. In addition, Metal objects in logs are poten- and Prague. Allied air offensives to date ha fined to attacks on civilian morale with these leaflets, German girl or woman may two more pairs of stockings. ese, however, they have to| leav- | every 3. N _{o F tial causes of costly and sometim fatal saw-smash accidents. The device was developed for 3 . 7 | part with another 16 points, by the Northeastern Timber Sal- Y o U 5 A N T G g w R 0 N G ing but 68 to cover the rest ofyage Administration because an un- their needs. usually high percentage of down 38 hurricane fence nails, sugar sap ythe timber hit by the was, found to conceal hammock hooks, spikes, sprouts, and even sections of blades. The detector was designgd and built in the Forest Service Radio Laboratory at Portland, Oregon. with a A= @IL BURNER | THE BIGGEST BURNER INSTALLATIONS IN JUNEAU ARE RAYS! d Fr Third, Memher oI Family Hangs Self SAN JOSE, Feb. 22 —The t.blrd member of his family to die in the same way, Alfred . Anderson,| 57, hanged himself, Deputy Coro- ner Irving Minahan reportes - Minahan said Andersonis Iq(.her U S HRM BU".DS rusta b i i ok o s i weotner | PLANT FOR MAKING SYNTHETIC RUBBER here is no substitute for Newspaper Advertisine |ox, ieohi e yenisi|HE. IlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIHIHIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIllIIIIIIllllllllllll!'||IIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllll||| | A special report in the New York | Times says the rights to a new pro- Phone 374 for T PRINTING FOR EVERY PURPOSE REc.us RICE & AHLERS PHONE 24 | mercial scale have been acquired by .Slandnrd Oil of New Jersey. The | process was developed by the oil >ccmpnny and the German chemical company, I. G. Farbenindustrie. _As a beginning, Standard of New Jersey will construct at one of it: refineries a plant capable of pro~‘ ducing 2,000 tons of synthetic rubber annually. The plant will nmbab]y_ be in operation this year. The cost| of making the synthetic product will{ | compare favorably with what the rubber-manufacturing companies| now are paying for crude rubber. With a gradual expansion of facili- ties, it is seid, the synthetic pro- duct can be manufactured at slight- ly less than 20 cents a pound. . HAV{P!ANE 1§ | it I m‘mfifiu THE EMPIRE PLA“ DOES IT BEST! CRAFTSMANSHIP is the \ word that best expresses the quality of printing wak thal e el S, IN FROM SITKA and that means complete Lt. Cmdr. Joseph Cronin of the Sitka Naval Air Base, flew to Ju- “No nor too THE EMPIRE Plant to handle. satisfaction’ for you job is too big small for | plane, and Sitka businessman Pros | Ganty a passenger. Cronin landed at Auk Bay 'cause of heavy Taku winds on the harbor. After conferring with | tache 8. J. MacKinnon |Cronin and Ganty will the Historic Cny JUN UBOW[ERS N IN EIRST. Phone 571 for full information. mmmmmmummmmnmmmmuuu I naval at- Lt Cmdr return to EAPEET & ISEA KEX AT YGUR SERVICE HERE THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE See Us for Printing ® handbills ® business forms ©® letterheads © invoices ® account books ©® announcements ' post- ers” ® business cards ® BERY 07 “IPHENT TERS AUD ARE ALWAYS Juneau Elks bowlers gained 15 3 games. ehikan 862 Junean, Alaska Phone 314 AR IIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIllllllllIIIlIIIIIlllIIIIlliiIl’I Ketchikan each rolled 190, [ neau this afternoon with a Navy|S be- | qfll ATCH TODAY e o s i Koski of Juneau was high man |utes. with 196, Daniels and Maloca of |cooked eggs and here is a meat THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, FEB. 22, 1940. ARTURO CANDANCETO | ANOTHER KIND OF TUNE Mr. ane wirs. Arturo Godoy a day or two after Arturo lasted 15 gruelling rounds with The Chilean did seme f3 he wants another waltz with the and his wife would like to earn some Homesteaders, & ‘Modern Style Ia., Feb. GRANGER, 2. Nearly four-fifths of the inal 50 fam- ilies who moved into the Federal Homestead P t here in 1925 still are occupying the acres the Rt. Rev. Msg L G1 t Catholic priest and patron of th project. has revealed The settlement entered its fifih vear of occupancy recently. Pur- chase of the land and constructio of the homes W financed $200,000 of Federal Families es a year are buying the places under long-term contracts. Surrounding each home is land of five acres or less. Most of the families forme lived in coal mining camps. money The government is a tremendous ~ beneficiary of the project, the mon- sig: said. “Besides the gains in social values, the government is getting its investment back.” Added to the project landscape last fall was a community house The monsignor said the settlers also have increased the efficiency of their co-operative unit through purchase of a tractor and through group purchasing of canning equip- ment. SRS R Tea Was Eskimo Cash WAHINGTON, Feb. 22. — Alas- ka natives a century agoused blocks of tea for money, according to Dr. Alexander secretary of the Smithsonian In- stitution. In asking a House appropriations subcommittee for funds for pre- servation of collections, he exhibit- ed one of the tea block: “About 100 years ago Russian traders coming over to what was then their territory in Alaska to purchase fur from the Eskimos used for money or exchange blocks of pressed tea like the one I have here,” Dr. Wetmore said. “The natives took these blocks and used them for trade among themselves, so that they really passed as cur- rency among them. And at the need they broke them up \d — - Stuffed acorn squash halves is pins additional lead over Ketchikan something new. Bake the squash in the first of this armmonns three | 30 minutes moderate oven spinach in a then fill with creamed - Scores were Juneau 877 and Ket-|celery or green beans. Cover with puttered erumbs and bake 20 min- Garnish with sliced hard- | substitute with an assured future. are sho 1 rning less than $1,200 Wetmore, assistant ‘ cing in a New Joe Louis. and now says champic Meantime, he says he money team INTS T@ nee If you serve a lot of sese in your family pays to it a pound or more at a time. Keep it vell wrapped in ed paper and it in the 1 It will fresh for a long time. If your kitchen doesn’t get much light. paint it a light color. You be delighted how much more ful and bright it becomes. p dainty curtains, pushed back from the windows, to let in as much sun- 1 possible. You can have zay act ries and utensils to C e tint, It has been proved that thick resilent pads placed under rugs tly lengthen the life of the The pads are not expensive, > it might be worth while to con- rugs - them when you get new your cakes to rise the pans are not pans that are heavy their shape; store s0 they will not get carefully wpe juice flip is grand on a cold fter outdoor sports. This will four or so people: Simmer for 10 minutes, covered, 3 cups of grape Juice, cup orange juice, 'i cup leman juice, '2 cup water, 2 table- poons bark cinnamon and 8 whole cloves. Strain and serve piping hot in mugs or thick tumblers. up ba kp(l hath or pork with candied orange crescents. Cut cres- cents from flattened orange peels. sure a cupful, cover with water add '; teaspoon salt. Simmer, covered, 30 minutes. Drain in cold wate and r in 2-3 cup granulated suzar and cup water. Simmer until the syrup has been absorbed. Stir with a fork to prevent sticking Arrange on the meat, holdiiig them Dress in place with whole cloves. The cloves help out the flavor. a filling for G Apple butter ham crackers will make a good be- tween-meal snack or a lunch box filler for the youngsters. Its health- ful, too For something different, try mincemeat-filled cook Spread 3- inch round sugar cooky dough with prepared mincemeat. Fold over and press the edges and prick the tops with a fork. Bake 10 minutes in a moderate oven. This is a cooky change welcomed for the lunch boxes—men especially like them. If some yolk gets into the white when youre breaking an egg, take a piece of shell and lightly touch the yolk with it. The yolk will adhere and can be easily re- . moved U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Feb. 22: cloudy tonight, increasing cloudiness Friday; minimum tem- tonight about 28 degrees, moderate northeasterly wind. perature Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Cloudy tonight and Friday, mod- northerly winds, becoming easterly over the southern portion; ghtly colder over the extreme northern portion tonight. Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska Winds from Dixon Entrance to Kodiak will continue moderate to fresh east to northeasterly LOCAL DATA Humidity Wind Velocity Weather Time Barometer 71emp. 3:30 p.m. yest'y 30.31 36 67 w 9 Cloudy 0 a.m. today 30.22 34 29 NE 18 Pt. Cldy Neoon today 30.18 32 27 NE 15 Pt. Cldy RADIO REPORTS | TODAY Max. tempt. Lowest 3:30a.m. Precip. 3:30a.m. Station last 24 hours temp. temp, 24 hours Weather Anchorage 32 22 24 0 Clear Barrow =11 =21 0 Cle Nome 34 | 32 s Cloudy Bethel 42 | 33 0 Clear Fairbanks 19 =10 0 Clear St, Paul 36 34 02 Rain Dutch Harbor 41 41 1.56 Rain Kediak 40 32 01 Foggy Cordova 38 | 31 0 Clear Juneau 38 34 0 Pt.Cldy -~ Sitka 43 0 Ketchikan 42 35 0 Cloudy Seattle 58 43 0 Cloudy Portland 54 43 0 Cloudy San Francisco 60 54 0 Cloudy 3" WEATHER SYNOPSIS Very high pressure has persisted over a large area extending over all of Alaska and the Yukon Territory with a maximum pres- sure of 31 inches over Barrow. The intense western disturbanc was indefinitely located over the Aleutian Islands. Pressure was also low off the coast of Calif a. Weather continued partl cloudy over of Alaska, except cloudy with rain over the Aleu- ians and Temperatures were zhtly over the Int . 23. T4 a sunset 5:15 pm by rescuing his |)(\H'ul comms battle of Sa Jd n A[ H But W cnly a few d: n of his )‘"m 5m L AND BE SAFE 55 - from hington - - = JUDGE DISCHARGES CON-TOSSING JUD) . Gallen Aero Cly untain skipping ski plane s only P Their special plane leaves air- * W SWinE ports near the railroad and main s commercial air lines and. skims| EICHMOND, Ky, Feb across snow-covered Alps which few Judge H. Church commercial planes would risk cross- |cnarged a twelve-man ju ing to the resorts of the Enga- |stern reprimand after learning, D¢ dine, {said, that two of the jurors had It is equipped with landing skis|tossed a coin (o arrive at an ac- drl room only for the pilot, two |quittal verdic cers and three pairs of skis.| “Tt is an awful thing," Judg The extra pair is for the pilot— |said. “that the pitch of a com should just in case. ermine the fate of a person on The plane’s top speed is 180 k.p.h gL T net want such juror (112 mp.h.) and it can land on any to serve in this court.” flat stretch of ground over 40 yards e verdict freed Mrs. Jane Webb in length—which is a good thing v, of Floyd County, charged with in Alpine country. x-paid liquor, > o s District Attorney John T. Metcalf told Judge Ford | ‘evaral hours after the verdict was BISHOP SEEKING | ooried i e "nac seamea ven members of the panel had voled for acquittal and two held out for ~cnviction 1y, he said, the two |agreead to toss a coin to decide | whether they would join the ma- | Jority. T0 ADVANCE THE KINGDOM OF GOD ELY, England, Feb. 22—Dr. Ber- | nard Heywood, 68-year-old Angli-| can Bishop of Ely, has offered m\ move from his rambling bishop’s “palace” to a modest eight-room house and give up a quarter of his| $16,000 income “to advance tthe ltrolmen cautiously kingdom of God.” IEversolP‘s smokehouse with dra Bishop Heywood, who has seven |guns, kicked open the door and or- children, said he lived - | dered the man inside to emerge. called palace” that could “almost| oyt stepped Eversole. The officers accommodate the inhabitants of fl‘apologlzed amall yillage.” | A neighbor explained she thought Suggesting that the church “to-| pyersole and his wife had gone to day seems' to the average man to|s theatre and notified police when belong to the privileged classes,” the | sha saw someone in the smoke- bishop said every diocesan bishop | hoyse. should be set free to vacate his pal-| Eversole said he remained home aace, surrendering enough of his|to put up 8 newly-butchered hog. income to enable the church to SRl > keep up the house for some relig-| Quick and thrifty for - MenIaIHazayd HAZARD, Ky., Feb. 22.—Two pa- approached a meal— jous or philanthropic purpose. pour a can of plain baked beans R IR into a buttered, shallow baking 0 oRED lA'I'E dish. Cover with sliced frankfur- “ Sgge ters and a few minced onions Slip into the oven while the rest SAN F'ERNANDO Cal., Feb, 22.|of the meal preparations are tak- It was back in 1898 that Arthur | ing place. In 20 minutes the dish ” D Faschell dls'.mgmshed hlmself wm ~be- done. Newly appointed Solicitor Genenl Francis Bndd!e left d Af General Robert H. Jackson go over Jackson’s first cn(se be)!o:: Lhetfla;l';:g States Supreme Court as they are presented to the tribunal,,

Other pages from this issue: