The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 28, 1932, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MOPDAY,"NOV. 28, 1932. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG AT? VA NEVER JTOCKo, r w:s.\.,“;g. B8iIG Wo HEARC -n-% TOE ancK:R ? 1S VY Fo ANY WHO THINKS ' HE'S A RASSLER < AND HE SUS' HIT TOWN — —— VA BETTER DIG A HOLE peR sSuLLyY 0 BEFORE \T‘S ALL RIGHT. ALL RIGHT . BUT IF YA Bume INTO HWM , T'M GONNA SEE THAT A YOURE ABLE By BILLE DE BECK C'MON . DO SUMP'N ABOUT 1T -- o=ad 1932, King Fearures Syndicate, fac., Grear Britain rights ceserved Novaap EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the cecond of gix articies on Precident - Eleet Franklin - D. dm,ts in hls cvery-day llie, h!s traits of character, hic philo- ccphies and interests.) By WALTER T. BROWN (Accociated Press Staff Writer who Accompanied Roosevelt on His Campaign ALBANY, dent-Elect Franklin D. Roosevelt has many interests but few hob- bies. He is a stamp collector of tenown and his collection of books N. Y., Nov. 28.—Presi- on the navies of the world is no- table. The last few years have been such busy ones that Mr. Roosavelt has not been able to devote much time to the stamps. Occasionally however, he has when he goes over his stamp books. The President-Elect carries on @ correspondence with stamp col- lectors he never has met. An In- dianapolis youth has written to Mr. Roosevelt for several years. He first wrote him gbout a rare stamp in the Roosevelt collection. an hour open' 'When the Democratic standard-‘ bearér wisited Indianapolis, the young stamp collector managed w shake his hand. Mr. Roosevelt rides and swlms Before he was stricken with in-| fantjle paralysis he was a golfer. Poker playing President-Elect's diversions before the business of statecraft occupied his time. Occasionally on the year- 1y trips to Warm Springs, Ga., he . would sit in with newspaper cor- respondents accompanying him. A 1lasting tribute to his card playing ability is & row of straight flush hands on the wall of an clusive club near Washington. There are seven of these hands and that is all that have been held in the club. Two of these are labeled Roosevelt.” “F. D.' e My Beauty Hlnt was one of the!| this situation HIS INTERESTS PCO AND HOBBIES _———— President-Elect Frankin D. some of the things he affairs of State. messt) SThwos .‘&I\\‘ LECTS STames AND NAVAL BOOKS il S .0 Rocsevelt is shown above doing finds time for when he isn’'t busy with What $ Tlus? It No Perfect Faces in Filmland! HTTLUYWOCD, Cal, Nov. 28.—| Believe it o1 not, but there’s a big scarcity of perfect faces in Hollywood. In fact, none has been found so far. Maybe it's @ bit startling, but is revealed by a newly-invented face-measuring de- vioe which also tells how to fix fauny noses and eyes and chins 50 the camera won't know the dif- ference. The instrument, designed by Pecr end Ern Westmore and Max Fac- tor, film make-up men, takes fa- cial measurements and then shows what certain features SRould be concealed or enhanced. Takes Form of Face The device consists of innumer- | able pleces of flexible tape, held in HEDDA HOPPER ‘The abbreviated hats of today expose the hair almost as much as though the wearer were hai- less. ‘Wigh the way hats now have of tipping over on one side, almost the entire sidé of the head is seen. This makes us wear the hair close to the head on one side and fluffed out over the other. For the exposed side an effective way of dressing the hair is to have two rolls of curls, one just abgve the ear and the other to take gare of the hair ends. — - — VISITOR TO ALASKA, SISTER OF ALASKAN, PASSES IN SEATTLE|"% A visitor to Alaska last summer, a sisf of James L. Galen, of Cord passed away in Seattle) recenfly. The Seattle Dally Times. of recent date says: Mrs. Thomas H. Carter, 70 yeatrs old, widow cf United States Senat- or Carter and socially prominent in Washington, D. C., died early today at Providence Hospital, where she has been since September 15, when she fell out of a“chair in her hotel room and broke her hip. Pneumonia developed. Her sister, Mrs. Thomas J. Walk- place by tiny set screws. It is| fitted oyver the entire head and dace and is regulated in such a way that the metal strips are pressed to take the form of the face. For instance, if tnis scientific aid to beauty correction shows the nose of the subject is ever so slightly crooked the Westmores know what to do to make it ap- pear straiglit. They shade one side of the offending organ with brown powder. If it is disclosed the ¢yes are too small, they can be enlarged (for the camera) by shaping the €ve brows in a certain fashion In much the same manner, large eyes can be made to seem smal- ler. How Beauty is Gauged The correct facial proportions, accurdmg to beauty experts’ stand- ’I‘he nose should be the same length as the depth of the fore- Just Can’t Be! ing device. It’s an instrument used in Hollywood to calibrate beauty. At the moment Shiela Terry js being tested. The de- vice has revealed there are no perfect faces in Hollywood. |head, and should equal the dis- .tlnee between the base of the {nose and the tip of the chin. The eyes should be separated by a space the width of the eye. | The corners of the mouth should Lnot extend beyond -the distance of the pupils of the eye. The revealing pleces of tape ave been gatheréd around many famous screen Ws.. “out”; none, say the Westmores, has all the correct propongom Territory and, until the time at her marriage at St. Paul in 1886, was a witness of the stirring events that went into that region's early history. She lived in Helena when it was called Last Chance Gulch. 1912 she was elected president 0! the National Pederation of Cath- olic Women’s Charitable Organiza- tions. She is survived by her sister and | two brothers, Judge Albert Galen of Helena, Mont., and James L. er of Butte, Monts who had been|Galen of Cordoya, Alaska; two| with Mrs. Carter since her injury,;sons, John and Hugn, in Wash- will accompany the body to Wash- |ington, D. |C. Senator Carter died ington. |7 *§/¥| twenty-one years ago. Mrs. Carter was here for a| Senator Carter was author of the month’s business visit following a|Carter Code, which made Alaska a pleasure trip to Alaska. territory in 1900 and which is the A native of Oregon, Mrs. Carter |basis “for territorial law in the rpent her glflhood in Montana W MAKES RECORD | { ticular part apply a piece or cloth 1that has been wrung out. in very No, this isn’t a new hair 03- b ON NAT FL[l(lR Douglas Playe rs Geltmg Ready for First Game | on December 8 During the past week the Na- tatorium floor has hbeen relined and put in shape for the coming basketball season and tonight prac- tice will begin hgrder than ever. An effort is being made to line up the first game for Thursday, December 8 with the 1922 D. H. S Alumni feam, practically all the members of which are located on ‘the channel at the present. time. ——————— - | MRS. MARTIN IN HOSPITAL E { Becoming rather worse after sev- eral days illness with a bad cold, Mrs. Andrew Marlin was taken to {St. ‘Ann’s hospital last eyening for treatment. Her condition, while not serious, was quite bad. | ——————— R. C. DRIVE STARTS 1 Rev. J. W. Cadwell, head of the jlocal drive for the Red Cross this. year, began. intensive work today to solicit the people of the island,' Imr their support of the org:mlzaA' tion. e i | NOTICE ’ Aurora Encampment A-1 I. O. O. F. will confer the Golden Rule Degree in I. O. O. F. Hall, Juneau, ion Tuesday evening, November 29. ed to be present. L. W. KILBURN, | Scribe. | ————— | HELPFUL HINTS Sometimes & colored pottery bowl gets broken, but it can be mended | very eflectlvaly with sealing-wax in ‘the same shade. Provided the powl, jug or other article does (not have ta hold hot liquids, this . method will serve admirably. I . | When a cake sticks to the tin| turn it upside down and cover| the bottom and side of the tin) with a real damp cloth; this will| loosen the cake. If a shoe pinches at any par- hot water. This will cause the leather to expand, bringing in- stant relief. Lemon juice cleans glazed tiles quickly and well if followed by a polishing with skimmed milk, -oo = Georgla will hoia its third State- | wide election December 3, when 1,800 Justices of -the Peace -are chosen. DRIV IN GOLF ¢ YOUNGSTOWN, O, Nov. 28.— i To Steve Churchill goes the honor of the season in the district. Churchill scored his ace om a |kole 280 yards long, and moreover it was a blind hole: Driving off, he lost sight of the iball as it sailed over the hul S0 he shot another one. dt was not until he reached the green that he discovered the- first ball had lodged in the cup. Ay e Ama 1 of making the longest hole-in-one BB, PRACTICE & STARTING NOW ¢ All Encampment members request- ..~ il FIRST BISCUIT 18 KEEPbAKL D(ulv Cross-word Puzzle ACROss 1. d 18 18, 21 Biblical well Teutonic god Solution of Saturday’s Puzzle Exists Mark indicat- uiD N ing the soft P i de sound of the BIOMIA | {D] L R W v > [0 —[Z > |Aim Mo M| <|m ERRELS D person letter € Malictous »_u for burning Large deer R\uh f the 5 e 26 Product of natural dis- 2>~ N> 0 . Mountain near anclent . tillation . French pro- ul 2. | R D ~|m[x[m {4 wn|m|O|~— |o|> O[> PIONN™M|O|~|4|m oy . Unit of wire measurement Traveled part of a highway . Hair oint- ment Kind of dog . Prevent Drag . a eagle . Dutch measure of length 41. Babylonfan god 49. Relieve . Stalned 52. American editor 54. Distant . Peacock butterfly N ngun Actéd as an at- tendant in a store o|m|e [B|m[ZMANO[= | m|0[Z N» % o=~ R 1{LIE OIDIE . Guided . Fit for culti- vation " Put in another 53. Beset In am- 2. flower cons bush 3. tainer B5. Unfasten § Reasonabie 3 Lon;z narrow prward inlet of the : Wing Negative Poftover and 8. m, o 4 m ¥4 DOWN . Part of a church Summon Thing of little importance Pr {mplement 601 sew together - Escape by sub: 00, terfuge lll%” et tneredulity Narrate T 7F | 1 /i W P “1 0 i 4 7 . Ill% l fl.ll Study your tongue. According to INGLEWOOD, Cal—Mrs. W. E. ‘a French scientist, if long, it de- Henry has the first biscuit she ever [ notes frankness; if broad, expan- baked and it is still in a good | siveness; if narrow, concentration, state of presérvation. It has reach- | and if long and wide, a weakness ed the age of 37 years. | for gossiping. * 'This Winter— Califor Rail fares lowest in years Think about it for a minute—warm sunshine and rest. Palm trees. Fun in fascinating San Francisco, Los Angeles, ~ San Diego, Days in the kindly desert sun at Palm Springs. Gay days at Agua Caliente. And new low fares, beginning at $33.29 (ofie-way) from Vancouver, B, C, to Los Angeles, $24 from Port- lapd, $27.50 from Seattle, good in coaches or in tourist sleeping - cars, (plus berth). For further information, write to #B. C TAYLOR, GENERAL AGENT thern Pacific AVENUE, SEA'ITI.E, WASHINGTON i n‘fl: give ness and I mnmhuub'uhm , most costly rugs. L NOW ON DISPLAY 3 (rlgm) of Pomand. Ore., who says he unwlmngly cisco parade in ngy, (left) convicted e men. (Associated Paul Calligot placed a bomb which killed 10 psrsons in a San 1916, visited San Quentin prison to see Tom Moy of the crime, Attorney Irvin Goodman is with § Préss Photo) DISTINCTIVE! DIFFERENT! SOLD BY— and Imprinted by THE EMPIRE Printing Co. L lzde) : PHONE 374 And Our Representative . Wil Call! Or See Them at the Empire Office! We are serving many customers, assuring them of Prompt Service, Fair Prices and GOOD COAL. PHONE. 412

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