The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 28, 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)

SPECIAL DESSERTS SAVE THE DAY W/HFN WINTER MEALS SEEM DRAB Fruits and pastry are combined in this Hvl ida-inspired dessert. By MRS. AL DER GEORGE (., 0iner 1 cup dark display masculine gallantry toward AP Feature Service Writer nd 1/3 cup flour, add a women drivers, R salt, 2 egg yolks, 1': cups milk The board announced it would Now's the time to do a little 5 4 piachoons putter, Cook slowly open the civic center to parking rustling about for new dessertideas. ., i constantly until very to alleviate the shopping-parking Mid-winter meals, for some reason,| y...my adq 1 teapsoon vewnilla problem. “And as a special con- have a way of gefting on the drab| ,ng pouy ingo buttered bakin dish. cession to the ladies, who have so side. They need enlivening—and gpyppge with 1/3 cup & 1 pe- much trouble getting into and out desserts that are different KnOW| oung (or any other nuts) andcover of parking places” said the an- s B with a meringue made by beating nouncement, “we're going to make A Butly igue, flavored Wilh | g oo whites until stiff and beat- the parking stalls 20 feet long in- HIQWD SUgar: aid cinnamon ing in 4 tablespoons granulated stead of the usual 18 feet.” A PERcs or; Dineapple one-crust DIe| gyops “untll Fety read Feminine response was sudden a new interest. Broken nut meats, . over the caramel and devastating. Among the quotes blended with some honey, is a re- sprinkle with a fe that ‘came from women were freshing tepper for @ baked orig iipepaon efanamo 10 these: * cottage pudding. And if you DOUr| pinyies jn g glow oven. Cool and If theyre going to put in big- caramel sauce over a flully SNOW oo,yo pigin or with a little cream. ger parking spaces let them put pudding, you'll have something S them in for the men!™ i e ey Sk Fruit Ambrosia is delightfully ~ “Why, I never heard such a slap e different and refreshing. Mix at women drivers.” Try this MERINGUE FRUIT together 2 eups sliced oranges, “Women can get into a tight COMPOTE. Assemble any fruit 1 cup sliced pears, 1/3 ¢ parking place with equal if ot blends you like—black cherries honey (strained) and 2 tabl more ease than men.” and pears, oranges and banan- spoons lemon juice. Arrange in “Why, T've been driving since as or apriccts and pineapple a glass dish and sprinkle with before some of the Park Board are good mixers. Arrange them toasted cocoanut. Chill. members were out of short pants!" in a shallow, buttered baking = - dish and spread with a sweet- | Here is how to make a F ened meringuc flavored With & copbler, recipe serves six ' little grated lemon and orange 2 cups grapefruii sections Ban no' er peels, and small amounts of | pint blackber: H almend and vanilla estracts. 34 cup su . Bake 15 minutes in a slow oven. & lakironns flour . Serve it warm or chilled m.h Y Ehioen femon: julbe uslon one a cmstard savce, 'z teaspoon cinna n wlittng At Temon extefots, Kt Beons bt 2 I 1 cup flour 1 Here is a delightful SWEE 1. teaspoons phosphate baking DALLAS, T reb, 28—There ROLL paiterned after the g wasn't more mud in Flanders fashioned fruit rell. Roll Tow grains salt fields than usual when American biscuit dough 'z inck thick, sp - tablespoons shortening scldiers fought there. It just seemed it with butter, “rown suga: Milk like more, says Dr. Edwin J. Fos_~ namon and nut Toll, sp Wash and pick over blackberrie of Southern Methodist Uni- more of the sugar mixture U Decl and segment grapefruit. Place Versity T it and bake 25 minu a mOd- §n oblong pan. Combine sugar and Dr. Foscue heard so many asser- erate oven. This when g blespor flou pour over tions that the heavy cannonading served with fr a ) 4 crapefruit, Sprinkle Of World War days brought a a thin lemo: itk i e and cinnamon, deluge, he decided to investigate P g " scientifically. gl |LI0 T mele M O ing climatological data, he cup o paking powder and cup: A, Cut i shortening. Addenough combiled the true story of rainfall at the Western Front and found: Pal t i The four years of the ‘conflict to make soft dough. on o ghtly floured board and cut granuiaied Tato 1ds. Arrange diamonds Were not unusually rainy, In fact, 3 tablespoon: Bake in moderately the first two years were only | over teaspocn grated slightly above normal and theé last' y 4 Lot oven (375 degrees F.) 25-30 teaspocn grated lemon rind and e or until b;‘own Serve with [Wo, when the American hx‘oops 2 eggs. Beat well and mix in o0 0 o were in France, were below DOr 1'% cups cubed oranges. Drop : mal. Hence, the detonation of high WEAKER SEX IS AROUSED AP FEATURE SERVICE OKLAHOMA OITY, Okla., Feb explosives seemingly had no influ- ence upon the total precipitation. B portions from a spoon into decp hot fat and fry 3 minutes un- til well browned. Serve imme- Ciately with Melba Sauce. To make the sauce, mix 1 cup granulated sugar, 3 tablespoons flour, 5 teaspcon salt, 2 table- speons lemon juice, 1 cup rasp- berrics, ': cup raspberry juice or water and 2 tablespoons but- ter, Ccok slewly and stir con- WARD N. L. Troast TROAST TO On 2 business trip, Seward on a business trip. e — (-.\ZI\LUFF GOES Sam Gazaloff is for WBS’I‘ i stantly until a creamy sance forms. Serve warm. 28.—It’'s been a long time since steamer Alaska. This CARAMEL CREAM rates| anything back-fired as loudly as ——— > Mix the City Park Board's attempt to Emnire Want Ads Bl'lnl Lesults. high and it is easy to make AIN’S ENTRI ES IN SKY RACE_These are powerful Vickers Wellinglon lan(- ".‘ i which British-approved caption says “are of {ype which regularly fly over Germany.” is a passenger aboard the Alaska, a pnssenger‘] ocal District Committee of t} from Juneau to Seward aboard the Of the By Ship Is Storm Tossed With Rudder Broke Repairs Finally Made After Eight Hours - Coast Guard Escort SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Feb. 28 After mcre than eight hours be- ing tcssed about on a stormy sea, the lumber schooner Claremont with 24 persons aboard, finally made temporary repairs to a disabled rud- der and is now proceeding on the |course from Grays Farbor south to a California port. The Coast Guard cutter Shawnee is escorting the Claremont S SEEKING RELEASE :Forfy locke_‘m Ancient (itadel - Are Facing Death, They Claim THE HAGUE, Feb. 28. — Forty Czechoslovak refugees, who are lodked in an ancient citadel over- looking Budapest, have sent plead- ing letters addressed to neutral legations asking for help. The letters were signed by a number of formerly prominent per- sons identifying themselves as for- mer Czechoslovakian army officers college professors, and university students, They implored that neutrals in- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 28, 1940. Thm Ice Plunges 4 to Death Two Billys InNew York Famous Ones Both Operate Eating Estab- lishments Dating from | "Way Back ‘ By GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK, l\‘b 26.—There are two Bill es- tablishments go back a back to that little oid New York | tercede in their behalf lest they the mellow, sentimental be returned to Bohemia which grandfather per- would prubabl) mean certain death s with & nostalgic One is » Cconden, whos Adpappy chael, built the famous old mvm Saloon b in 1870. The for 55 years has been a dictalor to The old Gasignt Saloon, wh (HAR@E is really a restaurant, is still on =8 8 e from the East LOS ANGE[ES Cal., Feb. 23.— It was set up 70 Socialite Dr. George Dazey wept o ago by Grandpap Condor the witness stand as he told a jury desigr T success was of finding his wife’'s body in the| bz that no res- gas filled garage of their home in|taurant could the victuals October, 1935 ! were tasty and c Consequent- The Santa Mouica physician said [1y, moderns rub eyes when that Mrs, Dazey had been in poor|perusing the old menus of those health and despondent since thejearly days. Steaks were 25 cents. birth of a son, four months before Liquor was a dime a throw. You her death. lgave your order and you drank He said that both he and other|your ale by the flare of the old ph ians had diagnosed her ail-|gas lights. ment as an incurable disease. — Dr. Dazey is charged with murder-| Well, it isn't much changed to- ing his wife by drugging her and|day, except as to prices. You 1t carrying her to the garage to die.|get a good steak for a quarter ar A Coroner’s jury at the time of|longer, but $3 will get you a first her death held that the woman|vate dinner, for two, with ail the committed suicide. The case was opened last fall with presentation of new evidence to the Grand Jury. Dr. Dazey was in- dicted on first degree murder charg- es. i RS SE(OHD 0F SCour a RIFLE CLASSES 10 BETOMORROW P.M. { AL AD The second meeting of the class of Boy and Sea Scouts taking the course in the proper use and care of | rifle will be held at 7:30 o'clock tomorrow night in the High School Gymnasium, This course is sponsored by i the Scouts and is being conducted by tJ’ny Willlams with cooperation from |o£ncers of the Coast Guard cutter | Haida. ery Scout who likes to shoot a rifle, and most of them do, is invited I'to attend. Safety precautions, proper | form in shooting, and care of a rifle inre to be covered in detml HUNIER WHO SHOT j MAN FOR BEAR PlEADS GUILTY John Ronnlng who shot and wounded Chris Samuelson at Farra- gut Bay last July 30 when he mis- took him for a bear, today pleaded guilty in District Court to an in- dictment charging him with careless use of firearms. Sentence will be imposed by Judge George F. Alexander. — e JURY TRIAL OF RALPH CORDERO STARTS MONDAY ‘Trial of Ralph Cordero on a charge of assault with a dangerous weapon will start in District Cowrt at 10 o'clock Monday morning. Until then | the jury panel has been excused. | >, I Empire classifieds pay. | trimmings. The fare is still served across the original rough board: There is the same massive, blac walnut bar, with its far-flung mir- ror and its reflected whisky bo tles. The present Billy still u his grandpup’s big old eyesore of an icebox, and tine only light you get still comes from the original gas-jets. Now for Billy No, 2: In the old days his dad, the, original Billy, had a little slip of a place down close to the water- front where he sold all the oysters you could eat for a dime. The Tammany boys used to drop by, and the impresarios of the day came too. And the fame of Billy the Oysterman began to grow. Billy was a biuff, big-hearted Englishman with walrus mus- taches and an abidi1g faith in the witure of the oyster industry. He wanted his son, the present Billy, (o take up the oyster knife, but young Billy had ideas about real estate until the panic of 1907 caught him up and flung him back on his old man's doorstep. He hasn't strayed since. He has served something like 64,000,000 of the things since taking over shop. Billy has a fine big place uptown now, where almost everybody who craves edibles of the sea goes soon- er or later. In the years that he has -bossed the joint, presidential candidates, governors, stars, and diplomats of all nations have con- sulted him on questions of sea- ‘ood He likes to recall a strange trio old ds a fellow named William that frequented his place in the Fox, a clothes sponger, and two companions, who were mostly broke but who dreamed of the fortune they would scme day win in the movies. One night Fox's shop burned, and he never went back to it. He went on from there to his adveniures in the films. Billy today is a thoughtful, semewhat stout about the middle, | proprietor. You see him strolling about his restaurant, puffing big brown stogies, having a bite now and then. But he never touches oysters. Not that he doesn't like | them: he does. But. being con(.m- Driving acr over Lake ton and Put-in-Bay, wife, dren, Dr. G by th into the lake These Woigon ¥ utlies e between Port Clin Ohio, with h Loretta (inset), and two chil am was blinde e bliz which swept the ast and plunged through thin ict All four were drowned :d the lurk ‘ | s a natural ice bridge | two cars esc ing death. ually surrounded by them, he has built up a sort of immunity to |them. In all his de: gs with oysters, not a single pearl of value as he ev nd - | Success of | RedsDuefo Mound Stars CINCINNATI, O., Feb. 23—The Reds’ ar can be traced i th Proof is that they held the club’s oppenents to the t x‘umber of runs of any team The Phillies inst them in mes, an average of 2.91 runs e, and the Bees scored 68 inst them, an average of 3.09 runs per game. Thirteen of the Phils’ runs came in one game, leav- ing 54 runs for the remaining 21 games Spelling Bee Held By Cathoixc Women A ng b“ highlighted last night's 1 meeting of the Cath- olic Daughters of America held at the Parish Hall. Hono for the contest were won by Mrs. A. M. Geyer and Mrs. J. Herrington. Sometime in the near future a wool filled "satin quilt, made by . Delia Dull, will be awarded to e lucky member of the Catho- Daughters of America or a member of the Parish. Announcement was made that e study club would meet Marcn 4 at 2 o'clock at the home of Mrs. A. M. Geyer. Tomorrow at 1:30 o'- clock dessert luncheon will be served at the home of Mrs. . L. McDonald for members of the afternoon sewing club. lrresisiibléar Yields fo Immovable Duty Assistant Fire Chief J. S. Mac- Kinnon didn’t turn out for the 2-1 call to the Indian Village this after- noon. He was serving on a jury in U. S. Commissioner's Court when the alarm sounded and could not be excused. For his services all day on the jury he will receive a fee of $1, the same amount he would have re- ceived for answering the fire call. —,— INDIAN HOUSE FIRE Another Indian dwelling roof in the village caught fire this after- noon and firemen were called to the 2-1 box. Damage was limited to a few shingles. — e MRS. LOVE HOMEBOUND Mrs. Max Love, of Fairbanks, who arrived here aboard the Yukon and was the house guest of Mrs. E. J. White during her brief visit, left for the Westward aboard the Alaska. PR F e AIL TO SITKA Among those sailing for Sitka on the North Coast were account- ant James Cooper, architect Har- old Foss and carpenter Paul Mor- gan. ol .- How To Relieve Bronchitis HERE ST cont on e mus- ial the bronch! Lubes. Soes right ln the SRR aden phlegm, increase st aid nature to e an efin Taw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sel you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding that you are to like | the way it quickly allays the or you are to have your money c REOMULSION ughs, Chest Colds, Bronchi 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. 28: Fair, continued cold tonight and Thursday; minimum temperature about 10 degrees tonight; moderate, occasionally fresh northeaster- ly winds. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Fair, continued cold tonight and Thursday, except cloudy and warmer with light snow over the southern portion Thursday. Moderate northerly wind except fresh to strong over sound and straits and Lynn Canal. Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska. Fresh east to northeast winds from Dixon Entrance to Kodiak, but becoming strong to gale force easterly wind vicinity of Dixon En- trance late tonight and Thursday. LOCAL DATA Time Barometer 1emp. Humidity Wind Velocity = Weather 3:30 p.m. yest'y 29.75 15 42 sSwW 1 Clear 3:30 am. today 29.78 12 26 NE 13 Clear Ncon today 29.69 13 30 NE 15 Clear RADIO REPORTS | TODAY Max. tempt. | Lowest 3:30a.m. Precip. 3:30a.m. Station last 24 hours | temp. temp. 24hours Weather Atka 39 34 3% 02 Cloudy Anchorage 25 8 13 [ Pt. Cldy Barrow -5 | =12 -5 0 Cloudy Nome 24 1 1 0 Clear Bethel 19 9 15 01 Cloud Fairbanks 17 -14 -14 [ St. Paul 23 15 15 T Dutch Harbor .. 40 32 32 13 Kodiak 31 28 31 ey Cordova 30 i 24 25 07 Juneau 16 10 12 0 Sitka 27 11 [ Ketchikan 31 20 21 0 Clear Seattle 50 43 46 49 Cloudy Portland 58 48 50 113 Rain San Francisco .. 61 56 56 1.14 Rain WEATHER SYNOPSIS The disturbance that was some distance west of California yes terday this morning has increased in intensity with the lowest pres- sure 28.656 inches reported about 400 miles off the Washington and regon coast. Strong southeast winds and moderate to heavy rain attended this disturbance over an area extending from Vancouver Island to the southern portion of California. The nearly station- ary western disturbance was located about 400 miles southwest of Dutch Harbor with the lowest pressure about 2854 inches. Cloudy weather “with light snow prevailed over the Aleutians to Cor- dova, otherwise weather continued clear to partly cloudy and cold over the rest of Alaska. Juneau, Feb. 29.—Sunrise 6:57 a.m sunset 5:20 pm Cleaners, and Mrs. Darnell, returned last night on the steamer North 0 ARNELLS | Coast after vacationing in the States END vACAT'ON for the past several weeks. They 1 spent some time with friends and relatives in Oregon and California. Try an Empire ad. S Rod Darnell, of the Triangle: Hollywood Sights And Sounds i By Robbin Coons. HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Feb. 28.—Walter Wanger, man, is engaged in a noble experiment. writers, working together, for him to make a movie. The movie is “Personal History.” Vincent Sheean wrote account of his newspapering adventures abroad when Europe setting the stage for hell to break loose, and Wanger bought film right shortly thereafter. Sheean’s book was not film fic! and Wanger needed a script to carry the title. He had in min up-to-the-minute background, with an American reporter thick of it Writer John Howard Lawson was first up at bat. He wrote a thrilling tale involving oppression of Jews in Germany, the Spanish civil war, the Communist element in France—all red-hot topics. Then Lawsn went east to wrte a play, and Wanger wasn't ready to make the picture, and time and tide—and history—swept on Back in Hollywood, Lawson revised his story: the limelight was off Nazi oppression of the Jews, the Spanish war had ended, but now Hitler had marched into Austria and had been to Munich. “There,” said Lawson, and went east again. But history turned whirling dervish. Wanger called in writer John Meehan. Meehan, trying to keep up with Hitler and Stalin and the rest, wrote three new versions—and then there was Poland, and the second World War. the producing He is seeing whether six can tether time and tide long enough the was the tion an in the That was when Alfred Hitchcock, the director, took over. Hitchcock and five other writers—his wife Alma Reville, and Joan Harrison, and Charles Bennett, and James Hilton for dramatic WELCOME! charming hestessess give thoughtful guests who bring gifts of deliclous Van Duyn Candles. Little atter.tions make you & NOW AT Perey’s "must come" guest. Try it} FRES . fi) exclusivel / ) I ] /) X Y 4 CHOCOLATES ! C UYN CHCCOLATE SHOPS stuff and Robert Benchley for comedy—have been piercing the script together-—a story, by now, in which an American news- paper character on a roving assignment in Europe meets adven- tures that won't be changed, essentially, even if Hitler should bomb the Kremlin. Nelson Eddy. the singing man, wouldn’t be the type for sonal History” but he was a newspaperman himself once. In Philadelphia, and he worked on three papers in three vears. Funniest, most typical cub yarn he tells is the one about the time he was covering baseball and took a notion to do a “color story” on the bleachers during a game at the Athleties’ “Per- park. It was a fine, a very fine story, he thought, and he walked in to tell the sports editor all about it—with drama and gestures. “That’s swell, Mr Belasco,” said the editor, “but what about THIS?" And he held up an earlier edition of an opposition sheet, the bannerline of which read: “Riot at Athletics’ Ball Park!"” Sometimes this passion for authenticity in the moves can be embarrasing. There was that business about “The House of the Seven Gables.” Universal went to a heap of trouble to copy the original gabled house of the Hawthorne novel, and the duplicate built on the sets was a lovely thing. And then they cast Vincent Price (6 feet 4 inches tall) as the male lead—in a house that wasn't built for giants, and es- pecially not for the screen “lighting” of glants. W)

Other pages from this issue: