The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 7, 1933, Page 3

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THE DAIL! ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY AUGUST 77 |933- | Looks Lil& Hollywood is Gomg ‘Nudist T 8 STARS IN ONE PIC'I'IIRE (The_season’s’ greatest cast in a ‘storythat pulses with the romance, lexcitement and gayety of a big State Fair... A love idyll between ‘a country lass and a reporter.. . Father and Mother busy winning 'prizes ... Son finding adventure with a car- mival girl who loved | Louis¢ Dresser Victor Jory A'l‘E FAIR HURRY' HURRY! T Two More Showings HENRY KING Only PRODUCTION Tonight and e Capitol STATE FAIR Helps for Housewives DISH-WASHING ARGUMENT MAY CONVINCE DAUGHTER bridge game. Or if you want something more substantial, try hamburger balls broiled in the a child does not like helping | Oven with a piece of bacon over with the dishes the maternal house | €ach. wife can receive more willing as- | T sistance by appealing to the sense| BRIGHTENING UP SLIPPERS of fairness by explaining that| Black satin slippers will be neither does she enjoy washing |brighter and have a newer look if dishes but that they must be done. | Wiped with a cloth, dipped in am- By giving a child a pretty little | monia, which has been wrung very apron and giving her a “play- | thoroughly. name” when assisting with. house- hold duties there will be more pleasure in these tasks and more of a spirit of acting a part. Cocoanut sprinkled over fruit cocktails or fruit deserts gives a very “cooling effect” for summer serving. SUMMER CAMP GUIDE There are summer camps all over the country within the price range of almost any family bud- get. A guide in finding a camp for your child may be obtained by writing to the Family Consultation Bureau, Teachers' College, Colum- bia University, * and requesting the booklet called “Summer Camps, a Guide for Parents.” To aid in preventing diced fruit | from going to the bottom of a| gelatin mold, chill the fruit and‘ | add it when the gelatin mixture has partly congealed. To give better results in pas- try, have all utensils and ingred- ients chilled before starting to| work. Cookie and pie doughs should be handled as little as pos- sible. | AFTER THE GAME Small frankfurters, skinned, with broiled bacon around them placed in rolls, make substantial refresh- ments after. the informal evening My Beauty Hint‘= Since pie crust shrinks when baked, it should be loosely placed on the pie pan. STRANGE CODE FOR AIRCRAFT CLEVELAND, O., Aug. 7.=~“Nes- tor, éclipse, woodward, starlight, edgémont, watkins, etna, wabash.” These are some of the odd code words developed for use of aircraft wireless operators in communicat- ing with ground stations. Thus an airplane operator broad- casting, “etigement 50 at 1,500 | C A-V-U,” would inform the ground { opemtor that he was eastbound | out of Detroit, at an altitude of | 1500 feet, and that ceiling, or height of the clouds, and visibility were unlimited. A westbound pilot would use the code word, “woodward.” ‘“Nestor” is north bound out of Cincinnati, “starlight” south bound. Between Cleveland and Toledo key words are “eclipse” for east, and “wat- kins” for west. “Etna” and “wa- bash” identify planes on the Cleve- land-Albany route. Sl o MARGARET STRAND I spend cvery moment I pos- sibly can out of doors, drinking tn" sunshine and fresh' air.” T've been told, of course, that sun and wind are bad for the complexion, but personally, I'd rather have na- turally rosy cheeks and bright, cparkling eyes than the smooth- est skin in the world. Buf, I believé, too, in caring for my ¢tomplexion. — e | Advertisements in today’s Empire tell you how much foods, clothing and household needs will east you before you go shopping. BEER Argentina imported greater quan- tities of beverages, tobacco, chemi- cal and pharmaceutical products during the first quarter of 1933 {than in the same period last year. BEER BLUE RIBBON BUDWEISER ACME BLATZ CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 Prompt Delivery Store Open Tonight Juneau Cash Grocery CASH AND CARRY -~ Corner-Second and Seward Free Delivery Phone 58 { CAPITOL HAS “State Fair” | the * Capitol | again tonight and Tuesday and ap- ,those of Craven as a country store | fully photographed and handsome- 'ly mounted, {$107,710; ' | pation BIG FEATURE SHOWING NOW/ with Large Cast Is on Tonight and Tomorrow Surpassing in entertainment val- ues and supreme in characteriza- tion, Fox Film's eagerly awaited “State Fair” measures up to every- thing that could be expected from the winning combination of great star cast and great story. The picture opened yéstérday at and will be shown pears deéstined to establish new records, hoth in audience attend- | ance and enjoyment. Miss Gaynor as Margy, Rogers as Abel Frake, Lew Ayres as the reporter, Sally Eilers as the tra- peze artist, Foster as Waynz Frake and Miss Dresser as Melissa Frake are perfect in thsir various roles. Other performances which leave no room for improvement arz keeper and Jory as a carnival stand barker. Authentic in atmpsphere, beauti- "State Fair” possesses every quality that goes to make a picture great. Without question, it ranks as one of the screen’s really outstanding achievements. COMEDY KING ALSO PRINCE OF TAXPAYERS | | e | LOS ANGELES, Cal, Aug. T—| Prosaic Ed Hopkins, the County Assessor who delights in juggling! ngurefi with ten digits, has this to} siy about the personal fortunes of the Hollywood film celebrities. Charles Chaplin, wistful person ality of screen comedies, has tax-! able wealth amouting to $2961,- 560, censisting of stocks, bonds and solvent creaits. Mary Pickford, estranged wife of globe-trotting Douglas Fairbanks, has $1,653,630, and Fairbanks, him- | self, $1,056,970; Ruth Howland, nne~ time serial star, $6,310; Tom Mix, Norma Shearer, $163,775, and Wallace Beery, $29,980. E. L. Dohe the oil ma s on the assessor’s roll for $25 ! The appraisals for the coming fiscal year represent approximate-| ly 50 per cent of the market value| of both real and personal prop- erty, and do not include any prop- erties owned or controlled by the taxpayers outside Los Angeles, County. CORAL ISLANDS ARE TAKEN OVER Japan Deeply Concerned as France Acts—In- vestigation Is On TOKYO, Aug. 7—An investiga- tion to determine whether Japan would be justified in contesting France's recently announced occu- of nine hitherto ownerless coral islands is being conducted by the Foreign Office. i The islands, which lie between | the Philippinés dnd French Indo- China at 11 degrees north and 113 east, include Thitu and Twin Islands, to which the nearest large occupied area is Palawan. A Foreign Office spokesman re- vealed that several Japanese trad- ers are interested in a guano and phosphate collecting enterprise in- termittently carried on in these and neighboring islands. AR R BERNHOFER GOES TO WRANGELL ON BUSINESS J. B. Bernhofer of the Harri Machine Shop left on the Norco Sunday morning for Wrangell to install an Bleetrol oil burrer in the Wrangell Hotel. ——————— Go window shopping in your easy chair. Read the advertisements. Pfunder’s Tablets Sole Agents Butler Mauro | Council, New pictures from playgrounas depicted in the two center views. with Claire Trévor; LIMIT SET ON | FREE LUNCHES ATBEERSHOPS SEATTLE, Aug. 7.—The License Committee of the City Council ‘has {taken a firm stand against smoked herring and potato salad at beer | ! dispensaries. The committee did, | however, agree on an ordinance permitting potato chips, salted pea- nuts, cheese crackers, pretzels and teothpicks to be served free at beer dispensaries. y This is as far as the Council Committee will go in the d\rcctlon of the free lunch. V. C. Webster, President of the asked Corporation Coul A. C. Van Soelen to prepare an amendment along this line .md‘mm restaurants from 1:30 aam. Sundays also to selling days prohibit beer after and a.m. week- | 2 nnlr§5 BANCROFT IS FEATURED AT THE COLISEUM {“Lady and (lwl" Is on for Last Times Tonight | | t P 1y house | 2 | “Lady | croft’s 1. opéned la iseum Theatr | last times toni, | . Bancroft has | amusing, and at one of the most hun 1 his career in the pic he is suddenly called cide betw2en continui as. a not-so-big “big shady areas just we way, or becoming the fo of the 12-year-old son friend Playing petite rdboik and ne opposite the h Wynne Gibson, 1 | is decision 15 Also Starret( | Compton t Charles Gleanson, Joyce John Wayne. - oo and of photoplay favorites look like views from a nudist camp, such asg that lower left: George O'Brien on the tennis courts Jean Parker; Top left: ht: Boots Mallory; below upper rig! the beer accompanies food twice the value of the purchase price of the beer. - The amendment also | would raise the license¢ fee for restaurants that have standing bars \'hcre no stools are provided to| $300, an addition of $100 over and above the regular fee for restau- rants and lunch counter .- —— *TORY WRITER ON GOVERNMENT BOAT| Miss Elizibeth Burroughs, rene of Tundra To and other books and short stories, is a passenger aboard the North Star in port last Friday night. Last year she c¢onducted a Bureau of Education school at Akutan, Alas- ka, and is going north for duty again this year. “Irene of Tun- dra Towers” is an Alaskan book, and she is at present engaged jn “doing” a book on the history *of” Alaska for which she has been gathering material for the past years. author R Ab SR S Ol The ads bring you the informa- LAKINA 1S DUE st Angnmsur S BEING URGED and Sk\{'vu is due to return | cLEmsoN coLLEGE, s ©.E ere Wednesd: rnoon. She s taking the route of the North- | Aug. 7.—If people knew the prop- use of their time there : Martha Sleepér, ern with the exception of Sit- 11 not and to al- The Lakina “probably wi | ca all at Wrangell, Petersburg Ketchikan on the return irip s she will be running on the same scheat er Ieisure would be less crowded conditions|Seat s and nerve sani- f"l")‘ T. P. Vaughan,) 'h€ '\.m ian, which is du 5 o'clock’ tomorrow recreation southbound. | | in state hospit tariums, says camp and specialis o “lemson Coc E pe: should have some special form of amusement he says, which mind from the daily athletic D ALEUTIAN IS DUE son, young or old car- ries the rou- | He recommends | Steamer .M"ulmn is due to ar- ot 3 in port tomorrow alfternoon youth, and that ever. . 3 Ylat 5 oclock from the Westward school should nave recreational|the yukon calls at Skagway work for each student rather than |southbound from the Westward to for a few, which he says is the|pick up the Frank Reedy Texas condition in some institutions. Tour party Vaughan says most people must' — e be taught how to enjoy their leis-| To sell! To sclll! Advertising 1s rec- tine. reation for a Ltion ‘LbuuL quality, style and price ure time. /your best bet now. COLISEUM LAST 'TIME TONIGHT Bfll(ROH' WITH WYNNE GIBSON - CHARLES STARRETY JAMES GLEASON | { LADY=<GENT’ —Coming— “MAKE ME A STAR” _____—__J VISITING GUEST IS ENTERTAINED AT BEACH HOME Mrs. Christine Lindholm, of Los Ang; the eles, Aleutian, Ca. who is leaving om was the honor guest at a party given Saturday eVening, at Juds ding, son, Ingm A beautinn by pre: prize. the John and men. to TUESDAY AFTERNOON G. I Mr mother at Corralitos, other at Santa Cruz, 30 miles dis- five hours born taint, sely. Alaska, the summer Lena Beach cabin of Frank vening was pleasantly spent g brid > honor m, F nan ted Mrs, house has and Mrs. Green Green, ge guest Mesdames Reichl, her Those present, be- were: Miss Lindstrom, Berg, Bod- Hansen, Osburn, Satre, Carl- Jackson, Bloomguist and souvenir was the ladies as guest Lindholm has guest of Mr. during enjoyed This is her second visit been and Mrs. the summer, stay im- her first being made some fourteen years ago. Carlson received first prige prize. eshments were served Bloomquist and Mrs. hostess: ngman rs, of twin later. Jackson the e — Ray Austin Gillham Is the daughters, Cal.,, one and the V\@ dont mean é// //m lo tell you what to do. We have 70 1Jea gf domf/ that . . v Butwe have a cigarette that is milder and tastes better and we Co, the cigarette that's MILDER the cigarette that TASTES BETTER

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