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g — THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, S/\]URDAY NOV. 11, 1933 | COMING SUNDAY She's the queen of our nursery ...and the queen of our hearts! Andarewe all tied in knots tel- ling ‘A Bedtime Story’ to HER! — Gay Maurice and his latest pal...a doorstep babyright on the threshold of your heart. ER. HELEN TWELVETREES EDWARD EVERETT HORTON ADRIENNE AMES * BABY LEROY MlDNlGHT PREVIEW TONIGHT 1:10 A. M. ATTEND THE MATINEE SUNDAY—2 P. M. Adults 25¢ Children 10c THEATRE Bt b RACKETY RAX Last Times Tonight VICTOR MacLAGLEN LOW SCORES AR 8:30 W. S. PEKOVICH AND MRS, Wwild PEKOVICH LEAVE HERE ON WAY TO NEW YORK Bcer Parlors vs. Alaska Press; :uuock Alaska-Juneau Vvs. | cats. Individual scores made last night follow: W. S. Pekovich, mining man of Butchers this vicinity, who has interests . latest CHEVALIER IS, IN NEW ROLE Gay Love Maklng, Lulla- bies Keep Star Busy in ‘A Bedtime Story’ A new Maurice Chevalier—al combination of the gay and dnbond‘ air Maurice we know and a new Chevalier of bedroom slippers and| fireside romance—makes his ap- pearance in of the French star's fea- tures, which opens at the Capitol Theatre tomorrow. In “A Bedtime Story,” Maurice is cast as a Paris man-about-| town ®ho returns from a voyage abroad to his beloved Paris for the first time since the war. He be-| gins his first evening by making dates for 9 and 11 and for 1o'clock with three charming girls, since his fiance does not expect him| Plans Bumped His plans go awry when he finds that someone has abandon- ed a year-old baby in his auto- mobile, His first reaction, which | he mmediately puts into effect, is but by the time the offi- | cers arrive, he has become so in- | trigued with the he decides to keep it. ! Efforts of the valet and Chev- | alier to care for the baby until a nurse ordered from an agency | arrives, furnish one amusing se- | quence after another. But the away, | nurse arrives and his first evening |at home is spent singing lullabys| ' to the baby while the threecharm- to call the police to take the ‘¢hild | “A Bedtime Story,”|i | for twenty-four hours. | i | i youngster that | supplied with a musical accompan- “The Big Drive’ Made Upl‘ of Official Film of Eight other and a time. | continuity of this gigan story lof 45 cameramen’s lives | The Big Drive, h its pr i mi i hi sation, and has received more fa- of the motion picture 1l be rolled back! whijle and intensely Inter hown to Juneau audiences. ! .egion, Alfred John Bradford Post No. 4, is a war picture, but never has there been such a war picture authenticity. , war. The Lusitania PIGTURE 1" ng port for the last 'En«l.c other events that have a!l compiled from official gov jer showing in Chicago, immed- vorable comment than any Nations Is at Coliseum e at the Coliseum m”‘:“flpmc,mm “The Big Drive,” which is be- every foot | this | shown UF wURLn wAR | their important connections in th | ment film, built at the sacrif jately became a nation-wid> sen- picture of its type in the history I late news reel completes t when “The Big Drive” is} sponsored by the American M E N U S the stamp of ) llywood soldiers in f: but the unsung, unknown! °s who marched forth to fight to die. Official Film The picture has ben made r'om‘ a collection of official war films| ured from the War Department >s of eight nations which| participated in the World War by A. L. Rule, the producer. Mr.| Rule, himself a veteran of the Ex- peditionary Forces, has spent the| t fourteen years in getting to- r the pictures. They have! arranged in sequence and By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE TAMALE PIE Breakfast Grapefruit Ready Cooked Wheat Buttered Graham Toast Coffee Luncheon Cream of Celery Soup Pickles Chocolate Cookies Dinner Buttered Spinach Butter French Dressing Coffee Cereal Jam Crackers Tea Tamale Pie Bread Head Lettuce Prune Pudding : samale Pie iment. 1, cup corn meal, % teaspoon No one, it is safe to venture,|salt, 2 cups water, 2 cups toma- could view “The Big Drive” with-|toes, 2 tablespoons cliopped green out a stirring of the emotions. It| peppers, 2 tablespoons chopped recalls those splendid days of|green onions,2 tablespoons chopped America’s participation, when a| celery, 2 tablespoons chopped pim- nation threw itself wholehearted-| jentos, 4 ripe olives choppéd, !¢ ly into the task of bringing about|cup grated cheese, % teaspoon pep- E per, 1 cup chopped cooked beef. been | ers waiting for their dates, rave, land descend | the morning. | Confusion ensues, when he finds |one of the girls is the wife of his | valet, and in the midst of 1t, his | fiancee calls to insist that ! come to her estate for a week-end | party to announce their engage- | ment. A merry climax is reached when on him outraged in| he | {in this No picture of record has ever| Add salt to water and when boasted a cast of equal fame to|boiling slowly add corn meal. Boil compare with the endless parade 20 minutes, stirring frequently of outstanding personalities found| Pour cornmeal mixture infto bot- World War film at thel tom and sides of baking dish.- M Coliseum. 3811 the rest of ingredients, ex- The cast, with its background|cepting cheese and pour into dish. | of millions of soldiers of every na- | Sprinkle with cheese and bake 25 that participated in this| minutes in moderate oven. Canned of all wars, has names| tomato soup can be used in place to every man, woman and|of the tomatoes. tion greatest known Chevalier, baby, nurse and vaiet, appear at the chateau of the fi-| ances, played by Gertrude al, for the par Helen Twelvetrees, has the p: Cip | posite Chevali the outstanding Everett Horton, as the nurs and others Adrienne Aries, | Baby Leroy, Beity Lorraine and| hofen, German flying ace; the fu-|until mixture | Leah Ray. “Rackety Rax” Tonight Victor McLaglen, Greta Nissen,| Nell O'Day, Allan Mich- | the | of France feminine role op-| shing of in| manders of nation’s forc cast are Edwmdhm Dinehart ‘and|recorded in this great film, ter | Arthur Pierson will bring tears of mirth to the eyes of audien | at the Capitol Theatre in “Rackety | | Rax” for the last time tonight | 1t is a hilarious and satirical football picture, in which two ri- val gangsters decide to clean up| and get their share of the big gate child [ Prune Pudding Germany's Kaiser and his son,| 2 cups prune pulp, 1 cup sugar, Crown Prince, are shown di-| % cup prune juice, 2 tablespoons ecting the German troops. Foch|lemon juice, 4 teaspoon salt Haig of England, P r-| 5 egg whites, beaten, % teaspoon the United State (‘t)mA‘baka powder. direc & Remove seeds from prunes, add Allied strategy. High lights| sugar, prune juice and lemon j that include the funeral of Richt-|and cook slowly, stirring constant thickens. Cool. Fold neral of the first American sol-|in rest of ingredients, pour into diers killed in action and count-| buttered baking dish (glass pre- s other importanf events are|ferred). Set in a pan of hot wa- and bake 50 minutes in slow Woodrow Wilson addresses the| oven Cool and serve plain or Congress of the United States, de-] with cream — THE ALFORD JOPN BRADFORD POST NO. 4 OF THE AMERICAN LEGION PRESENT THE ROAD SHOW AND._, TONIGHT Doors Open 7 P. M. FIREWORKS—BOYS". DRUM AND BUGLE CORPS ADMISSION Adults 40c Children 10c The St. Michael Dnve—Battle of the Argonne Warfare at Verduns—Ypres SE FEATURE, BOWL receipts from the football games 170—431 134—405 157453 at Funter Bay, and Mrs. Pekovich, left here on the Yukon on their way to New York City in the in- terest of his properties. D . 124 137 154 117 167 137 Brunswick 188 156 . 156 116 160 131 ——————— | | SAM BAKER LEAVES ON | TRIP TO S. E. ALASKA | Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Kirk, prom- | CITIES ABOARD YUKON | inent residents of Juneau, who left | here early in October for the east B. Schmitz Worth J. Nello In order to do it, they start thei own colleges, with their gorillas, gangsters, wrestlers and chorus girls as the students, the result is a riot. { Included in the programs are| news reels and selected shorts. — . — ALL AUTHENTIC! €e SCOBEE First 154—496 | 158—430 | 165_456| MR. AND MRS. W. B. KIRK RETURN TO SEATTLE FRO: VISIT TO EASTERN STATES E. Galao MATCHES FRIDAY Games in City League Meet| gl - Scheduled for Tonight and TOmOrYOW JAMES S. M:SRGAN SERIOUSLY ILL IN SAN DIEGO, CALIF. Low scores prevailed in the bowl- | IS WORD RECEIVED HERE ing matches played in the City| > Hae o b : . League tournament at the Bruns-| Sam Baker merchandise broker, 1 e eftend ¢he World Ser i left on the Yukon for a business s baseball games and the World's wick alleys last night. The high-| " " | Fair in Chicago, have returned to est total was made by E. Galao | trip fo Petersburg. He will also of the Brumswick three, whose|Visit the other cities of Southeast ;eflttle im; ere gl:‘sts a}c the i | Clar¢ B three game total was 496. Alaska. | aremont AN R, SOl The schedule ® calls for two - matches tonight and two Sunday LIGHTS GO OUT || HOLD XOUN night as follows: Saturday, 7:30 o'clock, Legion of Moose vs. Miners; 8:30 o'clock, James S. Morgan, former resi- | dent and business man of Juneau is seriously ill in San Diego, near which ecity Mrs. Morgan and he have made their home for the last ten years, according to word re- ceived by Mrs. H. E. Morgan from| her husband, Lieut. Mergan, who is with his parents in San Diego.| Mr. Morgan, who has not been| well for some time, was recently| taken from his home at Lakeside,| California, to the hospital in San Diego, and is believed to have| contracted tuberculosis in addition to a paralysis of .the nerves which has affected his facial muscles. - OSCAR R. HART ARRIVES FROM WESTWARD TRIP CLOSED Armistice Day CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 PROMPT DELIVERY FORBIDDEN VALLEY S’!‘l{(),\'i;ll(b”) of an unconquered tribe, its winding streams and — et Please hold your Catholic Bazaar Mrs. 8. A. Light and her chil- Hope Chest tickets until Saturday, | dren, Ardele and Jack, left on the November 25. —adv. Moose vs. Wild Cats. | steamer Yukon for Seattle for an —o——— Sunday, 0 o'clock, Capitol! indefinite stay. I SHOP IN JUNEAU nIlIIII||IIlIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII]IIIlllllllllllllg Watch This Space Every Saturday! After an extensive business trip to the Westward and Interior, Os- car R. Hart, merchandise broker| and representative of Eloeser-Hay: neman, of San Francisco, arrived in Juneau on the Yukon. HOW ELKS HALL TONIGHT Musie by J immie Steele’s “Revelers” ‘The money you spend on a washwoman 52 times a year; the cost of soap and wash- ing utensils that have to be frequently replaced; the wear and tear on clothes far greater oy home methods; the possible illness due to unsanitary processes or over- taxing of your own vitality . .. just add these up and then compare the result with our low-priced laundry serv- e Lawndry impenetrable brush made it a veritable fortress against invaders | who constantly risked an ambush by the hostile residents. wd Curt TexnYsoN plunged into this rugged wilderness to bring an i | ternational crook to justice and to solve the mystery of Sonya NichoLs" who, for the first time, brought Jove and hope of real romance into llh life. William Byron Mowery is author of the serial FORBIDDEN VAL\ LEY, starting Monday, November 13. THE EMPIRE 000 T DANCING 9:30 ADMISSION $1.00 SEE “THE BIG DRIVE” — COLISE Foc L T THE SANITARY GROCERY PHONES 83 OR 8 . #The Store That' Pleases” ... i iuu