The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 14, 1937, Page 3

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SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU —LAST TIMES TONIGHT— ¢ Joe Milton Berle Parkyakarkus Harriet Hiliiard William Brady Jerome Cowan Thelma Leeds » 100 naonw facos An Edward Small Production Directed by Leigh Jason RKQ RAD!IO PICTURE Our Short Subjects Are the Talk of the Town! MIDNIGHT PREVIEW “QUALITY STREET” NEW FACES T0 END SHOWING HERE TONIGHT Musical Comedy Brings New Stars to Capi- tol Theatre her sweetheart’s ability to write a successful play, pretty Harriet Hilllard plunges her last $15,000 to back his show. This| |oceurs in RKO Radio’s filmusical, !"New Faces of 1937," featuring other popular radio personali Joe Penner, Believing in the Capitol Theatre Playing opposite Miss Hilliard in a romantic role is William Brady, whose highly pleasing tenor voice, which is heard in several of the new songs, written especially for the ishow Hollywood’s topnotch com- | posers. bers in which the principals appear, and a score of “new faces,” in nov- elty acts of every description are introduced. A chorus adds to the color of the production. From the entertainment mar the country come such novelty acts as Lowe, Hite & Stanley, dancers and comics; Derry Deane, violin prodi |Eddie Rio and Brothers, dancer {Loria Brothers, Mexican entertain- arkyakarkus and Mil-{ ton Berle, concluding tonight at| There are five production num- | lers; Tommy Mack, Bert Gordon jand Patricia (Honey Chile) Wilder, radio stars; the Chocolateers, nez: | dancers; Katherine Brent, and Do {othey Roberts, singers; the Four ‘Playboys. rhythm group; Carrol lKing, ballerina; and Patsy Lee Par- sons, singer and dancer. Lazy Man’ Paradise ROCHESTER, N.Y.,Dec.14.—Ra- dio engineers in session here were given a preview of future electronic conveniences for home and industry in a paper and demonstration given by S. W. Seeley, H. B. Deal and C. W. Kimball of the Radio Corpora- tion of America laboratories. By means of a newly developed “teledynamic” device, the paper ex- plained, it was possible to control from any point in a building a great variety of devices remotely located s one in a series of arti- | cles in which famous chefs re- | veal the secrets and menus | which have given their cockery | world-wide renown. H By The AP Feature Serviee Fred Johnson is a dapper fellow, with a man-about-town but he ican turn out as tasty a Yorkshire pudding as ever soothed a British palate. | For 11 years Johnson has been ,chet at the very English Keen's Chop House, which for many more rs than that has catered to Man- tan’s gourmets. Johnson had his first instruction in cookery at Gramby grammar school in Liverpool. He served a three-year apprenticeship under his father at the Blackburn-Arms and Grove hotels there and at Simp- son’s in London. He went to Egypt and was chef in the Sheppeard’s hotel in Cairo. “A lot of people don't know how to use Yorkshire pudding,” says Johnson. “On the other side, it is ¢ without the use of any connecting served with roast beef or as a des- wires other than the regular light- ing circuit. By plugging the control device into a convenient electrical outlet, win- dows can be closed, furnaces started, lamps lighted, fans started, ma- | chines controlled and radios can be | tuned from another room, - ~ OFF STAGE Ursuls Seiler (above), 22, dancer and singer in a Broadway show, has a license for commercial flyi Seeley said. MAN IS SHOT AIDING COPS TORONTO, Ont., Dec. 14—Never again will Reginald Young lend a| sert.” The Recipe This famous dish from John Bull's kitchens is a lot like the good old American fritter, Johnson ex- plains. Its batter is made of: 1 cup of flour 2 eggs 1% teaspoonful powder 14 teaspoonful of salt Milk enough (o form creamy paste | 1t is cooked in the pan in which the beef is roasted. Natural juices of the beef are run through a strainer and then poured back into {the pan. Add the batter and cook for 30 minutes. To serve the pudding as a des- of baking a Yorkshire Pudding Ea As Pie for Fred Jolinson ED JOHNSON EATS ONE OF HIS OWN MEALS | POLICE MAKE AMMUNITION GRAND RAPID: who made h budget hindered tment O'Malley wi : pistol prac- Superi {recently 39,000 [ from re {sin ith the n would have cost - Bachelor Posing s Now Resented AHOMA CITY, Dec new 14 —You | married men had better begin pol- | wedding rings right O.M. M P AB | ishing off—the S. F is your P how is girl to look out for {unless she joins the { Prevention of Marrt |as Bachelors? | Or, as Miss Arnett, past president of klahoma Busi- " | ness Professional Women's COMMAND the working her interests O for the Men Posin and I know have much time to waste. We to know right off whetl {is married or not.” | Miss Arnett, one of the founders l'of the strictly spontaneous organ- said new recruits are being up dail | The society’s credo: “That all married men be compelled to wear wedding rings.” - oo Here Come the Bride, 1 In a Glass-Bottom Boat ! SILVER SPRINGS, Fla., Dec. 14 Vari-colored fish were among the guests at a wedding here recently Edwin Boyd, 18, of Orlando, mar- ried Miss Letha Phelan, 16, of | Umatilla, in a ass-bottomed boat | while their frie d on and | fish watched from water be- low. Anna Neagle, British picture | star, .returned to England to | appear in 2 command perform- ance before King George VI, said she would do scenes from “Victoria the Great.” gl the Enjoy Your Spot of Tea Here’s News About Pots Examine Many in ok 2,600 1 for a 1l case innkeeper and id find 1 taken nd of source of have muitl worthw 1 down mountain gorges to the tru - oo i the materials used i chief ad it r he deep k road. shing Square Singing Tabooed Dee, 14— ng in Per- Sphereial gliss and colored pottery are some of in those new American teapots. By MARY DAVIS GILLIES Prepared by MeCall's Magazine for the Empire LOS ANGELES, Cal the going e| B g L 4 { s ¢ R in wave forgotten for more British drinking ) But we do not have to be British | E 2 )i in cur teapots and ac For park parties, we still can have our silver | : ; iRk o service or fine porcelain, but for of Lola’s |steady tea-toping, we have teapots | ooy which not only a w, but are distinctively American | All gl round and e mo: ypular of the {you boil the water in it, put in the pout from it it mono- in~ and the talk Aative, the city 'nying the manager ociation, for community 'y Sunday we than ever tea was the edict commis n in ¢ Lola Dawidsc R A onduct Square evi essories. elpt also | cheerful i - - A trainman on the Louisville & | Nashville Railroad tossed & board word “Chatsworth,” off n going through a small set- tlement in north Georgia. Later, when residents decided to apply for postoffice, they selected the name ard for the town new pot |teaball and the tea You can grammed | Another 1, of poli d white the have plain or tr reund electri-| ed teapot i chromium with handle and it is by creamer and sugar bowl just as round. Nothing could be more at home at a Sunday night upper or on a buffet table. Pottery teapots, domestic im- ported, come in many col One i - shaped, with gracefully curved spout and handle, with| |eres and bowl to match or in| contrast. If you take tea for break- this pot comes in tray size. Mexico sends us amusir and colorful pots — a pir ple in| tawny yellow and dark green, and a soft green pot with an Aztec idol on the side. If you succumb to n this winter, you will like the squat glass mug designed for erving the invigorating new drink of tea, lemon, cloves and cinnamon e FOOD-SEWING Dorcas food and Wednesday afternoon Credit Bureau, next First onal matched K : Your Intestines WANT to Be Regular or 1f your intestines could talk, they'd tell you that common constipation ! comes from NEGLECT. 1 meals too often omit Nature's “regulators”— the laxative parts of wheat. You can avoid ting Kell L -Bran does TWO things, First, 16 bulk.” It absorbs water and a sponge—this waters OVER EGYPT as queen soon 17.it reign Miss Farida Zul- ficar, 17, who on Jan, 20 will be- come bride of that nation’s 18- year-old ruler, King Farouk. SACRAMENTO, Dec. 14—Figures just compiled show last year's gold production in California was $37,- 1as5 aids_elimination, And 710,470, second, Vitamin +B—the vita recent but Frank C. Jordan < g's All-Bran is a crunchy, veteran Secretary of State, went to cereal. Eat it with milk or [old records to find pioneers in 1852 e ‘»fl‘,”‘;n{:"‘tf:t";’t‘l” ‘G‘gg";’{‘%liongf extracted $81,194700 worth of gold. LARLY, Eat two tablespoons of Afls And they didn't exactly have| Bran and drink plenty of water. If you modern machinery either. .. the ski-ball ears, do this every day you can avoid com= mon constipation—and cathartics, tool | Every grocer sells All-Bran, Made by i 3 adv, “Alaska” by Lester D, Henderson. | Kellogg in Battle Creek. 'hand to the police. His reward for sert, sprinkle it with powdered sugar ¢ % 4 {helping them catch an auto thief and add a little lemon Jjuice. } % WA % e \was a bullet in the chest. Another specialty of Chef John-' | Young and his wife were looking son is mutton chops . . . five inches over a house they considered buying thick and broiled over a charcoal ,when two fugitive auto thieves fire. He has prepared them for |dashed past them, police in full hundreds of headline names, too, cry behind. Realizing that the quar- from Captain Jimmy Mollison to ry was about to escape over a fence President Eamon de Valera. H |at the end of the street, the auto; “We serve English mutton chops _ _ 'salesman grappled with Vernon in their natural juices,” he ¥ ecfi]fiflgféems"ofmé&}:; ;av}:‘g’;;mtzley, one of the pair. {“with an eight-inch Idaho potato, | 3 . b Constable Bill Mitchell chose this chutney or pickled walnuts and a new required subject—traffic safe- ¢ ‘arf-and-arf. The combina-{ ty. One period a week is devoted to moment to open fire from the police mug o g ] car, and his first bullet dropped the tion is guaranteed to fix you up for| Traffic Study Required the studies of physical and mental 3 cheraoterlstics of ths’ SMYdE: driver |V oD iet CHEL ‘LN, and pedestrian responsibilities; | pound driving practices; social and economic value of the automobile, and how to drive. — ee- Try an Empire ad. i COSTS LITTLE MORE! SHAVES CLEANER FASTER CLOSER heawer Race, Drugs NicHOLL Harry COLISEUM LAST TIMES TONIGHT “SILENT BARRIER with RICHARD ARLEN LILLI PALMER 92 —Plus— SELECTED SHORTS THAT PLEASE |a week.” Cotligst Liguid =i Is Heavy Water LONDON, Dec. 14. — Scientists here are experimenting with the world’s most expensive, and as yet, | most mysterious liquid, heavy water. As yet only a curiosity, but be- lieved to have countless uses in in- | dustry, agriculture and medicine, | labout six thimblefuls are being| manufactured daily at the Billing- ham-on-Trees factories of the Im-i perial Chemical Industries. Costing $50 a gram, the formula of heavy water is D20 instead of H20, and is composed of unusually heavy hydrogen atoms. Modern Solomon Married to 14 SUPERIOR, Neb., Dec. 14 — A record case of polygamy is reported | from the town of Galatz, where | fifty-two-year-old Vasile Florea was | ‘arrested on a charge of having| |fourteen wives and twenty-nine, |children in various parts of Ru- mania. A commercial traveler, Florea was found out when Mitritza, his young- est wife, decided to divorce him. Her lawyers allegedly found out about Vasile’s wholesale matrimon- you're planning English-style chops, says Johnson. The full loin will weigh 24-25 pounds. It will make four or five chops. The size of the chop is apt to fool! you, however. You can't eat the bone| and most people don’t eat the fat.} That leaves only the middle, section. The housewife who doesn’t have| a charcoal fire can cook her mun.onl chops “English style” by: { 1. Searing them under a hot| flame. ! 2. Then putting them in the oven to broil 40 minutes or so. | | | You have to buy a whole loin when | | | ! | 3. Seasoning the chops with a lit- tle butter, peper and salt. | She can cook her baked potatoes —which should be unusually large —at the same time, since they, too, | will require approximately 40 min- utes. e — FOUR MEN ARE STATIONED AT FAIRBANKS 8.0. PLANT Four men are working at the Fairbanks plant of the Standard 0il Company this winter: O. J. Reinseth, agent, Trygve Storm, Ar- nold F. Anderson, and John Hoem, Standard Dil Co. employees work| an eight-hour day, five-day week Most of their winter work is to sup- ply aviation gas to Fairbanks fliers ., FAIRBANKS WOMAN DIES | Mrs. James Peacock, 25-year-old Fairbanks resident, died recently in Fairbanks from pneumonia, survived by her 15 months old daughter, and her husband. ial ventures. DRI oo . i Try an Empire ad. — v Try The Empire classifieds for lresum. e YY— There will be no pink ties on the Christmas tree at the White House this year. Such was the remark of Mrs. Roosevelt when she pur- chased a half dozen cravats for the president while shopping at Norris, Tenn., during her lecture tour. She explained that several ties she had given the president last year which were on the pink side had never been worn by him. " “Boy! I can breathe now!” Just a few drops of Vicks Va-tro-nol up each nostril reduces swollen membranes, clears stufiiness, brings prompt relief. Used in time, helps prevent many colds. Vicks VATRON REGULAR S1zE 30c¢ DOUBLE QUANTITY 50¢ £ FOR HOME OR BUSINESS REFRIGERATION SERVICE and REPAIRS DOWN THE AGES- GIFTS OF SILVER have represented the best! We have a nice selection of di- verse articles too numerous to mention —— at fair prices. SEE THIS SILVER BEFORE YOU BUY Open Evenings Phone 34 Our Refrigeration Expert, JOHN HOUK, is equipped to give you Quick, Efficient Service at reasonable cost. Rice & Ahlers Company

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