The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 27, 1932, Page 7

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: THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE TUESDAY, SEPT. 27, 1932 CHAMPION WRESTLER PASSES RESTLESS CONDITION uN\MPRO\/ED DE\_\RIOU5 : L 7. éhe Didn’t Seék BARNEY GOOGLL AND SPARK PLUG a Movie .Io_b;i Movies Sought Jacquie Lyn B Little Jacquie Lyn, 4, didn’t experi¢nce the trouble in becoming a movie actress that many girls de. So many asked why she wasn't in films that her mother decided ors took a liking to Jacquie and HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Sept. 27.— When you see 4-year-old Jacquie Byr on the screen you may,pal know it bu® you're really watching two' actressas. One, of course, in Jacquie, who bas already proved her genius as a trouper. The other is Gauzy ‘Wings, You won't see Gauzy Wings, ac- for she is, as Jacquie ex- the good fairy in her heart. with large blue eyes| Jacquie, and golden curls, was one of those ! rare childrcn who are almost forc- | ed into movie-acting by du‘ecwrs‘ and producers. She has been something of a prodigy since her pirth—in Iondon 1928—according to her mother, ¢ Eve Lyn. Mrs. Ly» and her mother brought Jacquie to America when she was 15 months old, and they soon movel to Los Angeles. Here so many people askéd her mgther ¢ why Jacquie wasn't in films that she decided to try them. She was ‘he child who appeared with Elisa Lendi in “Wickid.” Af- ter that other studios called for ber, and aow tract to - §lal Roach, a member of his “Our Gang.” An active, perfectly mannered child,, Jaequ‘ has a reputation about ~the loL for knowing her, lines and those of other players as well after only one réhearsal. She has teen known to prompt ' Stan Laur:l and Oliver Hardy from ‘the sidélnes if by chance they forgot them while making “Pack Up'. Your = Troubles” their ~new, { feature. She be}an “talking,” aver her mother and grandmother, at the | age of six. months, and, she al-| " teady knows her alphabet and how to spell simple words. ————— i il | ‘l HOUSEHOLD HINTS | | A4 o . To' rémdve medicine” stains from sheets or linen, make a paste of fuller's earth and ammonia and apply to the stain. Leave till dry, then' wash the stained parts in cold water. Afterwards wash the articles in the ordinary way. Use starch for cleaning soiled wall paper. Sprinkle liberal quan-{ tities over a damp cloth and apply to the paper, working with a t:ix'-4 cular movement. Particular atten- tion should be given to parts that are badly soiled. Remember when you buy new! baking dishes to put them into cold | water -and” bring this slowly to a‘ boil, thenm leave the dishes, cas- seréles -or other /articles in this until the water is cold. This will} in ~September, | she is under con-| maybe she should be. The direct- now she’s under contract. NOTRE DAME. NOW AIMING " AT BIG GATE SOUTH BEND, Ind., Sept. 27.— | Notre Dame, whose football teams for a decade have gone about pil- ing up mileage and attendance records, expects an upturn in tick- et office reports for the coming season. J. Arthur Haley, business man- ager of athletics has predicted (the 1932 Ramblers will play to at least 50,000 more admissions than ‘did last year's team. | Changes in locale of three games —with Southern California, Navy| and Pitt—are expected to account | for the increase. Through a near- capacity throng of 53,000 saw the Trojans here last year, 105,000 may be crowded into the Los Angeles Coliseum. The Navy game has been trans- planted into the new Clevelana !municipal stadium at the invita- tion of Mayor Ray Miller, ‘a Notre Dame alumnus, and a sellout crowd there of 80,000 would exceed by 15,000 the number which saw the |tilt at Baltimore last pear. Pitt drew 35000 here a year ago, but from 55,000 to 65,000 will turn out, Haley says, to see the Irish perform at Pittsbirgh. The Kan- sas stadium at Lawrence holds 7,- 1000 more than saw WPennsylvania any here last autumn. On the other hand, Haley says, there will be losses on the North- | western game—which 70,000 saw in Chicago last year compared to a maximum expectation of 65,000 here |this November—and the Carnegis 1Tech game, which attracted 45,000 (at Pittsburgh last year but comes back here this season. Even subtracting anticipated | losses, however, Haley finds indi- |cated a net gain of approximately 150,000 for the season. — o —— CRIME INVADES TINY STATE DADUZ, Liechtenstein, Sept. 27.— Crime has invaded this petite principality, forcing the Govern- iment to organize its first police force. Until two Tecent burgln:leu.l the first in Vaduz's history, three constables maintained order, {throughout the tiny State. ——o——— AUSTRALIAN BLACKS SCARCER CANBERRA—A new census re- veals only 10,000 wild aborigines in Australia, the total of the full- 'blooded blacks being 60,000. In, , which once sheltered big saveimsny a cracked dish. ehig ~A—v¢—“"——' mdpapmm-nv"‘bom roving tribes, only 40 are left. The’ wild blacks are in Western Aus- tralia, DANNER VIS iy i et CALL MR GOOGLE -~ TELL AIM MIES LEE 1S "THE ONLY ONE Tmany, Mr, mnnet found. There President Von ~ Hindenburg finds his most consistent and loyal sun- port. 'The leaders and the com- mon pecple have no love for Hit |ler and his ‘aims, and are support- |ing von Hindenburg: Expects Beer Soon Germany expects that the manu- facture and sale of beer in the United States will soon be legal- ized again and are making prep- arations to help supply some of |the local demand, according to ;Mr Danner. Thousands of new beer barrels have already been manufactured for shipment to this FORMER GERMAN HOME 60 DAYS {Local Dalry Owner Visits| Mother at Old Home First Time in 18 Years south Germany are not so dis- gally. tressing as has been painted, ac-| A report that-.he had been ser- | cording to George Danner, owner | jously injured preceded Mr. Dan- iof the Mendenhall Dairy, Who Te-iner to his old hime. His mother turned home late last' week after haq received a letter from Ju- )2 60-day visit in Munich and vic-|neau, he said, telling her that !inity, It was his first® visit thers mMys. Danner had hbeen kidnap>d | fm 18 years and every minute Of ang attacked and in an effort to| it was highly enjoyed. escue her Mr. Danner had been He visited his aged mother, Mrs. | struck down and dangerously hurt. Theresa Danner, who recenllyw I. was sometime before he was | celebrated her 82nd birthday, 3"d‘abu to convince his mother it was his ~wife's mother, Mrs. Maria|a)] a hoax. Meier, both of whom reside near Absent Three Months Munich. | He was absent from here more Farmers D oWell |than three months. He had in- South German farmers are much tended to spend his vacation in better off than thoze in the United |California buf it was too hot for States, Mr. Danner said. The for-|comfort. He spent ten days in mer are able to sell all they can|Seattle, a briefer time in Califor- produce, and buyers come right nia then headed for New York out to the farms to get the crops.|where he sailed for Bremen. They work harder than in the; From Bremen he went direct old days but they get along bet-|to Munich. H had booked passage ter than was to have been ex-|for the August sailing of the fa- reriod. No one hears of tax| mous lyiner Bremen but was nob sales of farming land there. The|able to make the connection. He |farmer can and does carn enough |came home via New York and di- to pay the taxes and has enough [rect from there to Seattle. \left for his beer and other simple luxuries of life. PACIFIC RETURNS FROM PORT ALEXANDER Prices too, are better than in Reporting an uneventful voyage, America. A good, fat cow for the market will bring $100 in American the motorship' Pacific, Capt. Paul Kegel, returned yesterday to Ju- money. Eggs sell for two cents each in the same coin. Other pro- neau from Port Alexander and way ports. She brought to this city duce, too, is higher than in this country. | Judge V. A. Paine, who had becn to Kake on business. Handling Unempioyment The German government is hand- ling unemployment in fairly good shape. It has a dole system fi-| nanced by levies on the wages and salaris of those employed. | Those out of work in each com- ! munity are housed and fed in!] central buildings. TIn Munich a large five-story building is occu- pied by them. - There isn't much unemployment there or, in fact, anywhere in South Germany as it is an agricultural section. In North Germany, the industrial re- gion, the great body of the idle are concentrated. It is estimated that 5,000,000 persons are without Jobs in the entire country. Pclitically Gone Wiid In everything except politics, Mr. Danner said, the Germans are sane and conscrvative. But they have gone wild politically. There are 32 separate and distinct parties in the nation, none of which can command a working ma]nmy.‘ Leaders of thought have seen the unwisdom of this condition and are moving now to bring aboul the consolidation of many and abandonment . of others. Hitlerism isn’'t popular in South e family. - solf and _pencil But if it were’t for her grocer, who supplies those things she used to make herself, chances are that even with Votes of Efirtlw Whtzng Let Sheaffer. pens help you do better and fiste: work. Ideas flow freely. whet a2 pen travels with the tireles! ease of a SHEAFFER LIFETIME®| omestic conditions at least in' country when it can be done le- || | | [ | The massage should be gentle and | By BILLE DE BECK ND WHILE BARNEY PACES THE CITY STREETS, HIS '_"é\\f‘;loDC IN A WHIRL OF MISERY, S NOT KNOW THAT ANQTHER DEJECTED M OL MARSE LEE OF GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, PASSES BY - FRANTICALLY SEARCHING FOR HIS GRAND-DAUG - MISS GEORGIA “EE. — |vamzsts Spend My Beauty Hmt ; Summer Seeking i ] Observatory Site 18 'AUSTIN, Tex., Sept. 27.—D. Elvey and I' G. Mehlin of ‘the Yerkes Observatory, with a camping outfit and’ instruments from both the and Mount Wilson Observ- have ' spent ' the summer in the Dayls’ Mountains of West- | Texas hunting a site for a million- dollar astromical laboratary. Moncy 'for the oYservatory was left to the ®niversity of Texas by |the late Willam McDonald, Paris, Tex., banker Tesis now are being made to {find the most suitable place for it. Atmospheric, “seeing” tests, tem- {pera‘ure tests and numerous others |having a bearing on astromical observations are being made. The | University of Texas is at Austin but it is possible the observatory will e located in West Texas he- '3}3& DOROTHY WILSON Many people have the habit, as' I have, of raising their eyebrows when they talk and thereby creas- {ing the skin. The right massage, I find, is helpful to anamasmoom forehead. At bedtime after cleansing my face, I apply massage cream and massage for five minutes. I place the middle finger of each hand at the bridge of my nose and draw | them upward and outward, repeat- Midget Mother inf several times. Then T begin an up-and-down massage with both | MINNEAPQLIS, Minn., Sept. 27. middle fingers from the right side, —VheD a stranger knooks at the |of ‘the forehead across to the lefr DOMe of Mis. Thomas Leslie and |she’ comes #0 the door, she is al- | ways prepared for a dialogue like this: “Is your mother home?" “I'm the mothér here.” tnvre and the clear atmosphere. {Child, 2, Weighs Half as Much as light. Finally I wipe off excess cream and pat an astringent skin tonic. ., six inches tall. Her daughter, who is 23 months old, weighs half as much as she does, and is as ‘ay &s'an evarage child PEERLESS BREAD LOWERS YOUR FOOD BILL COST. Equal rights were on the way long before Women Suf- frage was taken seriously. Women began releasing themselves from the bondage of kitchen slayery in the latter part of the last century. Instead of baking bread they bought! bakers’ bread. And today, ‘the American woman plays golf, joins clubs and with nll has more time than befcre to-devote to her for WMw there would still be no equal rights. Peerless Bread is one of the foods yéur grocer sells in Quantity. PEE] BREAD | Peerless Bakery " 4 4 of her age. Willlam l?aul, Ke‘_m‘k‘"' Ern- | atrs, Leslia, once a frouper with est ,Mohn, Chichagof; Beverly Ol- 1o midget . 4%t h sen, Bremerton, Wash.; Mrs., Max get act, pl‘esldesaover er M, Smith, Skagway. makes most of her and propares meals Aiaskan for her husband, who is nearly six vH. Gierkey, Chichagof; F. R feet tall. Patrick, Endicott. | Years ago she did all the ccok- J Zynda Ing for her father and seven roth- .mdge and: Mrs. James Wicker- ers, all over six feet, so she Is sham. i familiar with household activities. teaspoon salt, 1 cup milk, 2% cups pastry flour, '3 teaspoons ‘baking powder, 2 egg whites, beaten. Cream the butter and. sugar. |Add yolks, vanilla, salt, milk, flour |and baking powder. Bake 2 min- |utes. Fold in egg whites. Pour |into 2 layer qake pans fitted with | waxed papers. Bake 20 minutes in {moderate oven. Add filling. Filling cup sugar, 4 tablespoons flour, By MRS, A DINNER MENU Creamed Fggs and Mushrooms % ALEXANDER GEORGE Buttered Beets 14 tablespoon salt, 2 eggs, 1% cups Bread Grape Jelly Imilk, 1 teaspoon vanilla, % tea- Ttalian Salad spoon lemon extract. Boston Cream Pie Coffee Blend sugar, flour and salt. Add eggs and milk. Cook in double boiler until thick and creamy. Stir frequently. Add extracts and cool. Use as filling between cake layers. ——ll s Creamed Eggs and Mushrooms (Serving Six) 6 tablespoons butter, 6 table- | spdomis’ flour, 2 cups milk, 1 tea-! spoon salt, % teaspoon paprik: ! % teaspoon celery salt, 4 tab F‘"fn,‘?.r’ of Siseocmbie cmm\‘-y{N spoons chopped cooked green pep- |C., have received $18,870 for live- ers, 4 tablespoons chopped pim- ‘flwck and poultry sold through lentos. &' hard ked eggs diced, thelr local association this year. 1 cup cooked mushrooms, 6 pieces o hot toast, buttered. g : gl ADVERTISE YOUR creamy sauce forms. Stir con- stantly. Add seasonings, eggs and in the \Y iT WAN | mushrooms. Cook 2 minutes. Pour over ‘toast which has been ar- ranged on serving platter. Italian Salad 8 pieces lettuce, ' cup sliced cu- cumbers, . can French dressing, | t tablespoons chopped ripe olives, 4 tablespoons pickle relish. " Mix dressings, olives and relish. | Pour over cucumbers, which have | been arranged on lettuce. Serve at once. Chill all ingredients be- fore combining them. Boston Cream Pie % cup butter, 1 cup sugar, égg yolks, 1 teaspoon vanilla, % n the 0 |cause of the mountainous xpgfon EVERY SCOTCHMAN In Town Should Use a GENERAL ELECTRIC VACUUM CLEANER Full value for thie price—Free Trial Alaska Electric Light and Power Co.. JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUCLA?—Pbone 18 THE GROCER AND EQUAL RIGHTS FOR WOMEN Use Alaska Lumber JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS PHONE 338 CALIFORNIA GROCERY Fresh Fruits and Vegetables PHONE 478 BAILEY’S SPECIAL Every Night from 8 P. M. LCHICKEN NOODLES It’s the loaf that made mother stop baking. ESS i ‘sk:yow grocer v Lo meot and CHOP SUEY BAILEY’S CAFE ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO ¥QUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:29 Your Alaska Laundry s TELEPHONE 15

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