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THE DAILY ALASKA/EMPIRE. MONDAY, JUNE 18, 1934. SIZZLING WITH ACTION! Exploding With LAUGHS! The beautiful star of ‘‘Red- Headed Woman” bursts on the screen now in the big laugh-riot of the year! IT’S HOT— IS SIZ- ZLING— . IT’S A WOW! ADDED Walt Disney Silly Symphony PIED PIPER with FRANK. MORGAN FRANCKOT TONE PAT O’BRIEN UNA MERKEL TED HEALY A Metro-Goldwyn- Mayer Picture [1 teaspoon vanilla, ' teaspoon salt, MENHS TUDAY | 2-3 cup boiled rice, 2 tablespoons | butter. ,,,,, Mix ingredients and pour into| By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE |buttered baking dish. Bake 50| Cool with GOOSEBERRY JAM RECIPE (An old-fashioned favorite) Meals Serving Four minutes in very slow oven. and chill. Serve plain or cream. Breakfast Clip this: for your file. Grapefruls Gooseberry Jam s Cooz_el"teim:\}om et 8 cups gooseberries, 1 cup water, 3 8 cups sugar, 1 teaspoon cinna- Sott; “Oboked "Eggs mon, ' teaspoon cloves, % tea- Buttered Toast Coffee Luncheon Vegetable Salad Graham Bread Rhubard Sauce Orange Cookies Tea Dinner Braised Beef Creamed Asparagus Bread Plum Jelly Cabbage Salad Baked Rice Pudding spoon salt, 1- tablespoon lemon juice. Carefully select berries and re- move stems. Add rest of dients, cook slowly and stir fre- quently until the mixture becomes { thick and jelly-like. Pour into sterilized jars; when cool, seal with melted paraffin, i< {H. B. MADLAND WITH Coffee | Braised Beef | BROKERAGE COMPANY 1% pounds top round beef, 1-3/ cup flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 5 table-| H. B. Madland, well known sales- spoons fat, 1% cups water, 1 cup|/man, who represented the Seattle Hardware Company for many years in the Interior of Alaska, and Jlater managed the McGrath store in Sitka, is now representing the brokerage firm of Carrington and Jones. Mr. Madland arrived in Ketchikan on the recent trip of the Yukon, .- — CHADWICK IS DEAD diced carrots, 2 tablespoons chop- ped onions, 2 tablespoons chopped celery. Wipe beef with damp cloth and cut meat into one-inch pieces. Roll in flour, sprinkle with salt. Brown in fat heated in frying pan or kettle. Add water and lid, cook| 20 minutes. Stir frequently; add rest of ingredients, cook 10 min- utes. Mix 2 tablespoons flour with | 2 tablespoons butter and add to, H. A. Chadwick, for years pub- mixture; cook until creamy and a!lisher of the Seattle Argus, weekly, little thick. Stir constantly. died suddenly at his summer home Baked ' Rice Pudding at Lake Crescent, in the Olympics, 3 eggs, 2-3 cup sugar, 2 cups milk,] Washington. Tuesday Specials! é : STRAWBERRIES 2 boxes 25¢ .APRICOTS 2 pouhds 25¢ AT THE GARDEN PATCH BUSY UNPACKING NEW GOODS LEADER DEPT. STORE ot George Brothers ingre- | 1 | \ “|a tough kid to beat.from now on. | wood film life which closes tonight | equally as fast, | A GREAT FIGHTER PASSES | | erwise, SCREEN STAR PLUNGED INTO WOE BY AGENT Jean Harlow, Lee Tracy,| Showing Tonight as Act- | ress and Press Agent For the first time Jean Harlow, and Lee Tracy—two of the picture | world's most colorful personalities —are starred together in “Bomb- shell,” the picturization of Holly- at the Capitol Theatre. Jean Harlow as Lola Burns is a sensational and glamorous film! star who has been made famous by the genius of her press agent,| Lee Tracy. It is this publicity that ‘plunges Miss Harlow into all of the woes! | that beset her throughout the ac-| tion of the screen story—ner head-; {line love affairs, her revolts with the studio executives, her worries | with Rer trouble-making family| and the additional woes heaped upon her by movie-crazed fanatics.| The supporting cast features such | competent players as Frank Mor-| gan, Franchot Tone, Pat O'Brien,! Una Merkel, Ted Tealy, Ivan Lebe-| deff, sobel Jewell, Louise Beavers,| Leonard Carey, Mary Forbes, C.! Aubrey smu‘w and June Brev\stor. * SLANTS. ‘What, Giants, the- brothers Dean—Paul and Diz~ “|zy—who seem about to justify the I asked several of the is the difference between spring training boast that they | would do most of the pitching for; the Cardinals this season? | Dizzy, most of them agreed, is‘ still much the tougher of the two' Oklahomans, chiefly for the rea-| son that greater experience has/ helped him gain better control.! But Paul, they also told me, is| even more confi-| dent than his brother and 'may! The Newark, N. J., City Commis- | sion plans to buy the house in| which Stephen Crane, author of | “The Red Badge of Courage,’ was | born and to convert it into a re-|j creational center for children. | turn out to be the better pitcher| in the long run. | “After beating Hubbell, Paul! took over the broadcasting rights| for the entire family,” laughed one | of the Giants. “He's going to he{ The release of Burleigh Grimes by the Cardinals came as a sur-| prise to baseball men who had| noted the effective relief work done | by the last of the spitball flingers. | The answer is that the Cards just| didn’'t have room for the veteran of 18 major league pitching cam- paigns, with so many young men| coming along fast enough to earn regular jobs. Old Burleigh will be missed. He was one of the last and greatest of' the real fighters in baseball, a rough and tumble guy who never knew what it meant to quit and| who never gave the opposition an even break, if he could avoid it. He dusted them off, fought for ev-! ery advantage he .could get and| never was more dangerous than when put in a tight spot. Grimes lived baseball with ev- ery thought and fibre. When it was all over he was ready to con- tinue the debate, verbally or oth-| with anybody who chose| to give him an argument. He scaled the heights in 1931 when he blanked the Athletics in one game | and beat them again in the sev- enth and deciding battle of that memorable world series. I can see| him yet, standing in the center of a popeyed crowd in the hotel lob-| by, holding forth on how he stopped | Foxx, S8immons, Cochrane and the rest. l TRADING LUCK RUNS OUT With George Watkins, the out- fielder, on the bench and Watson Clark, the former Brooklyn left- hander, unable to show a return to useful form, Colonel Terry's trad- ing luck hasn’t been so good. This wasn’t what influenced him to abandon tentative negotiations with Chicago and Cincinnati for replacements, calculated to bolster his infield and pitching staff, but he has decided at any rate to gamble with what he has on hand and in the hospital, for the bal- ance of the National League sched- ule. ‘Terry isn’t the only manager who Has had deals turn a bit sour this year. The Red Sox, the Tigers and the White Sox, all of whom invested heavily in Philadelphia “ivory,” are still wondering wheth- er or not they were “taken in” by the old master, Connie Mack. The Chicago Cubs so far have sliced the biggest dividend through the purchase of clouting Chuck Klein. He is everything they ad- vertised him to be and is well on the way to a new National League home run record, if, indeed he does not take a real crack at Ruth's major league mark of 60. R Old newspapers for sale at Em: Office. _ Daily Cross-word Puzzle [\ACROSS ;' ', Solution of Sllurday': Puzzle 8. Pmemng 1. Was afraid ) 9. Oh gxhu 7. Flight - Qpening 13. Make certain E%ggmm Nl v Do eorgs™ 14. Incarnation 2 Gets up \ 15 List 0. Contemptible 10. Carded tabrio ook OF 11. Six obstruct 18 Symbol- for . Brilliantly ool colored bird 19, Chilis - Lrazem, 21, Belonging to thers him 1. Natives of:.. 22, Selt | 24. First man ' %'“'."oarm'“ 25 Explosive violin 2, plovice Tracks ot . Prospered Rty S bl 25, Tapering solids o o 29, Roman road Blllllrd stick 30. Lack of heat LT TALA 8L E‘vomtlcnv.r- 4} 1-:1,,, DOWN 35. Mernnra%‘lla 8. Yoleante vents &, Philipine A ¥ 37. Hard Deet fat 4. m;fifi:fi? fa ARINE snm 'u‘ 3 88, Expose to speaker 2. Sufficien, 5'h Stana Wolstare 43, Frofioked 3. Donkey Dy 39. Native metal- 50. The universe 4. Wagon track’ Khfigol moss bearing 51, Best girl 5. Befare | Devoured compound 5% Representa= & 5 47, Wine. 40. A son of Noah tives iy ! Mysell W fiflnl i fll N dEEEEN ANEEEE N IR. COCKBURN WILL DOUGLAS | OPEN INN AT SITKA NE WS Robert Cockburn, for many years a resident of Juneau is leaving for Sitka, where he is building the , Thimbleberry Inn located 3'2 miles { from Sitka on the new road leading through the national park, This is« Sitka’s first recreation center featuring, beer, dances and Supt. W. E. Cahill, of Treadwell, lunches. Lumber for the building, is enroute south on the Northland which is to be 24 feet by 40 feet, which left a couple of days ago, was purchased from the Juneau for his annual vacation. He is ILumber Mills. taking his car with him and to-| A captive hair seal will adorn gether with his wife and daughter, an outdoor pool at the entrance who are already south, he plans (o the Inn. to make a tour through several:* ——— - l, W ol CAHILL GETS AWAY FOR EXTENDED VACATION EAGLE RIVER l BRIDGE OPENS MINING REGION Suspension B\ idge Across River Is Completed— Now Open to Traffic The suspension bridge aross Eagle River, giving direct access to that | mining district from this city, has |been completed and the structure {is now open to traffic, it was an- | nounced today by Wellman Hol- | brook, Acting Regional Forester. It | |is designed for foot traffic only.| | The bridge crosses the river from |the bluff at the end of Glacier Highway and is about 350 feet’ |long. The span is 220 feet long. It is constructed of special wire |cable seven-eights of an inch in diameter and has three-foot timber tread. Lighter cables form the hand-rails and woven wire between them and the tread forms a basket to steady the tread and protects' the traffic. The bridge is anchor- ed both up and downstream. It is anchored on the south side to heavy railroad iron sunk into the rock Ccliff several feet deep, and suspended from a tripod on !ho‘ north side. \ Bill Fromholz, who had charge of the constiruction is moving this | week across Eagle River and with a a crew of six men will reconstruct the trail from the end of Glacier | Highway to the Boy Scout camp. - BURDICK LEAVES TODAY ON TRIP OF INSPECTION' To inspect ECW trail work and look after other business, District Forest Ranger Charles Burdick left | here today on the Ranger IX for | Stephens Passage, and Lynn Canal points. He will go to Windham Bay and Mole Harbor, inspecting trail work and taking out camp supplies, and go to Skagway later on’ routine work. 1 - - DONNA JEAN LAPPIN HAS ‘ TONSILECTOMY AT ST. ANN'S; | Donna Jean Lappin is a pauenc] at St. Ann's Hospital where she" was operated upon this morning | for the removal of her tonsils. NEW TELE WE DIRECTORY | A new telephone book will be | issued by us about July 1 and all | advertisers will please see that | their ad copy is in our hands not later than June 25. Thank you. JUNEAU AND DOUGLAS | TELEPHONE COMPANY. | | adv, states, also visit the Century of nRrS, NIEMI LEAVES FOR Progress exposition at Chicago.i VISIT AT FORMER HOME They expect to return in about two months. Mrs. Sam Niemi is a passenger B e S s south on the Alaska for Seattle TEMPORARILY AT TREADWELL from where she will go to her former home in Astoria, Oregon, Erwin Hachemister Las taken up for a visit. Mrs. Niemi expects his abode in the Cahill residence to return to Juneau within five at Treadwell where he will main- weeks or so. tain his bachelor quarters during (i = 2 PP Writes on Salt the latter's absence. PR LOS ANGELES, Cal--larry E., Anderson, expert penman at 26, 0. E. S. PICNIC POSTPONED UNTL WEATHER FAVORABLE }o¢ written 53 legible letters on a grain of salt With rain, the prediction for Sunday, the Eastern Star picnic planned for yesterday was called off late Saturday, to be held next Sunday if the weather permits. RERIC BY MRS. HOLMER CONVALESCING Mrs. Chas. Holmer is the guart of Mrs. Glen Kirkham during her recuperation ‘period from a recent operation. She is reported well on the road to complete recovery . Daily Empire Want Ads Pay HEADQUARTERS for Vaeation Needs b Butler Mauro Drug Co. "Ewhmyoflm , ., Anytime” Phone 134 Free Delivery P il U NIVER‘SAL [ Bond and Mortgage || Corporation | Valentine Bldg. Phone 508 | Investment Service | | | ,H.S.GRAVES | “The Clothing Man” Home of Hart, Schaffner and | | Marx Clothing (B enhall Dairy - 5 Products ©® Quality @ Modern Plant @ Reliable Service VISIT US! | teur |eisco. for ters in that city. Betty Compton Will Appear in British. Film LONDON, June 18.—Betty Comp-| ton, actress wife of Jimmy Walker, 1 has started work in Warner Broth- | rs' studio a® Teddington as lead- | ing lady in a picture, “The Rich- | est Girl in the World,” she revealed today. The wife of New York's former mayor, who has been living quietl; with him in suburban Dorking, ap-| peared vastly pleased with the prospect. e gl FORMER TREADWELL ATHLETE REVISTS OLD FRIENDS HERE After an absence of 21 years, Herbert (Bert) E. Manners, one- time Treadwell athlete, returned for a brief visit with old friends, mak- ing the roundtrip on the steamer Alaska. He was accompanied by Mrs. Manners and their daughter, Virginia, who are seeing Alaska | for the first time. { ) Manners was employed at; Treadwell from 1910 to 1913. He| was amember of its baseball teams, | played handball and was an ama- | boxer of note. He was met| here by Jack Wilson who motored | with him and his family to Men-1 denhall Glacier, and looked up all| of the oldtimers with whom Man- ners was acquainted during his .previous residence. He has been living in San Fran- many years. He is the| Associate Manager of the N1honal Automobile Club with headquart- “The pleasantest years of my life were spent here on Gastineau Channel and I am glad to get back even. for so short a visit. The next time we will stay longer,” he said, S e Mining Lucation votices at Emi- pire office. Hidden Souls BUREAU OF MISSING PERSONS w nh b Lewis ' Stofle, Bette Davis, Pat 0’Brien ALSO Me and My Pal The Soda Squirt Silvery Moon Late News 25° 600 ' SEATS ANY TIME In a variety of color- ings and prices JUNEAU Drug Co. ''HE CORNER DRUG STORE"] P O. Sabstation No. 1 — HOLLYWOOD l SHOE P Whtls U Walt