The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 22, 1935, Page 23

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1 8.'-vfl be a mighty good time to get your county agent to tell you what to raise next year instead of corn and hogs. Or to get your hand in at chess. By the way, I'll have all those big low tables covered with games. T'll bet there are sets of anagrams |and cribbage just going to waste in { your attic—" “There are!” cried Dave, “and wouldn't it be fun, mom, to get out our old phonograph to show the fellows? We got some good records, Grinstead |55 L “‘Yes, but hurry, so you can wash < the dishes while I use the phone. There's going to be so much going on in that church, we'll be falling over z { 4 the time was ripe to 12t £ et i o f > ambitions have thieir | OUFfamily had attended ORHSMAS | gqop otner'fo get into it é childi (The sequel to that Gmgor Rmrvr.s Now ( an Tlmnl. a happy ending: some months ago Mrs. Rogers found Marie , whose film stories >, and got her a job as Gin- o 1 Osbo; Mother for lh at Emphatic “No™ gor's stand-im. “l n Dance Centest So Ginger did not become a child Mrs. Rogers took & job on a paper in Fort Worth, Tex., and in Texas that Ginger, just at when her mother had d to have her t to college ton contest, and a And it was L‘nn HML her mother, | who had kept her from child star- GINGER ROGERS once was playmate of that famous little star of the silents, Baby Marie. Now she can thank her mother for € mphatically “No!” to all offe make Ginger a prodigy also. The hto fortunee of such young- sters have been 3 invariably bad. Exa; ple: Ginger, today, is one of the major screen favorites and Baby Marie, now Marie Os- borne, recendly was given a job as her “gtand-in.” Frances pent her last $200—the ervices at the church on the brow had dhenged: hands|or-ue il g ‘z"u-\' tad o set. | Tvis just a “little brown church,” a Hiting SLage S€57 | hut of recent years it has been mod- Ginger’s act 2 ernized with a furnace, and work Gonsidering that Madge Fons, | table and sand piles in the Sunday s g : ool rooms. The grown-ups like - to maks (0 grace i "_lk €S, 1U14¢ better smce there are more and would seem that Ginger owes a lot | D bigger oil lamps. What else are you doing at your| “If there were no God it would be And Hold All— for just a minute while we call— MERRY CHRISTMAS! - Bus Depot Confectionery PERCY REYNOLDS, Proprietor mother’s decisive ‘‘N 7 ‘huich this week?” asked Uncle Joe|necessary to invent him,” sald a 15 he spread his napkin and looked | well-known writer. There is no 1 ard the turkey. Uncle Joe is a|Santa Claus in our grown-up world, New En~land minister, with his eyes | but we have found we needed him as set on heaven: but he does|one of the mast’ beloved characters ; lin the world of childhood, which v nothing else,” mother an-|is peopled with legends of the child’s sred. “What would we have at the own making. The enchanting be- Wit ent years open house at | church besides Sunday services and |lief in Santa and his reindeer, his | breakfast Christmas morning has/ths Christmas sermon, since we ve‘paunch and his pack filled with g more and more popu- |left off Wu(h\esday night prayer |toys will never hurt a child. The t all started when friends and | meeting? cynical grown-ups, who have too s dropped in to bring gifts| “Tell you what I'd do if it were my completely lost their belief in him replied uncle, watching fa-{and his kind, need your help. rel and found t the family still at table. Mother | ther ca “I'd keep the place warm | - e — | SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE IT! S foa S-S S fom S foc S o3 . another pot of coffee, urged all this wéek." S v ¥ s to join the family, and| Brother jumped. “You wouldn't! , " S e T cst. pleasant soclal] expect me to go to church every day, | st drctrc e o I o S B e fee g m&mfihfi% ms was born Nowadays the sir?” :& hostess prepares for an in-| “T'd fix it so you couldn't stay| /g number at the holiday Al i - I LITTLE CHAIRS M Small chairs are easily fashioned m soap boxes. One box, a straight I of wood for the back, a coat of bright paint, is the simplest for- mula. This may be elaborated upon ) to the extent of dad's time and skill See what you can do with your hands our hands, a little wood inexpensive paint. Tt will be a happy Christmas, for our hands can put love and the Christmas spirit in- s s0 much more easi can be instilled into an unworked-upon present - away. Would you turn down a chance | PRETTY CUSTOM KEEPS UP at an old-fashioned taffy pull? The custom of placing lighted “Then, since your mother doesn’t 2 les in the windows on Christmas have to get you off to school this > in Germantown, Philadelphia, * you leaving me out, Joe')' terruptedly for over 50 years e lata-rising members | church | 1In the silent days Lela Rogers | r at the old Balboa stu- She got $75 a week and es included 1 non-auth By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 21 might have happened Rogers' career if in ear had become the bab; have been? It was only Ginger’s ¢ What Else Are You Doing at Your Church?” Asked Uncle Joe her dat dramat! dio (R-K-O ed father, laying down the carv- nd reap el |ing tools. | wards of her SHOP IN JUNEAU! Not by any means! This would in e bl @ S Rdnc e b R e e k:: ‘/w?a-’éarfiq- b dne B e e S e D %h—}; | EVERY DAY: MAY YOUR OLD YEAR HOPES é COME TRUE IN THE NEW AND A GRAND § E% £ LUCK AND HAPPINESS i 14 T e MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL 2 T For a Real Phone 94 NOW! For Christmas Day or Christmas Eve DELIVERY as you desire "lq &q' - Beg Merry Christmas! uneau Cold Storage { . ~ i | ompany i : —SINCE 1903— e ;m&fimhhhhmhh%h?m Juneau Ice Cream Parlors PERCY REYNOLDS, Manager L] 3 p in -p—iy By D T e B @ S e e B B B B B B Jea o e T o

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