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of arl y C MrSI Hflwa tu the flute, harp, and cello. Noted Cellist Is Graduate Soloist of the musical soiree to Le préseiited by the Boreas Trio, Mon- day evening, Temple will be Edythe Reily Rowe. whose accomplishments as a ’cellist have brought her renown through- out the west. Mrs. Rowe, who will be heard with Helen Arlene Parrott, Carol | b { THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1938. NAVY FLYING STORY STARS WENDY BARRIE “Wings Over Honolulu” Ends Tonight at Cap- itol Theatre Show Place of Juneau NiNG5 OVER | ST | Does a man owe a greater loy-| |ality to his country than to hi | wife? That dramatic question con- fronts Ray Milland in Universal's| flying story “Wings Over | Hcnoluln,” ending its Juneau en- B A RR | E | zagement tonight at the Capitol Theatre, with Milland and the love- ly Wendy Barrie in leading roles. How the question is answered before a Navy court martial provides one of the highlights of the production navy s & WENDY RAY MILLAND (Leading Man in “'Three Smart Girls’’) * KENT TAYLOR * WILLIAM GARGAN POLLY ROWLES . Hinds » Mary Phillips ¢ Joyce Compton s Louise &m"'|0¢n?n-;dnw?nl M&Iadz Clara Blandick MIDNIGHT PREVIEW “NIGHT KEY” and “RIDE RANG COMING SATURDAY The Show Place ¢f Juneau tic navy backgrounds. More than 4,000 men and offi- cers appear in “Wings Over Hono- | lulu.” Capt. P. N. L. Bellinger and a " b the Navy acted as technical advis- | ers. The airplane carrier U.8.8. Ran- zer and the transport Chaumont were filmed in several sequences. WOMEN ARE SHOWN HOW to Juneau last October and has since been enthusiastically received by Gastineau Channel music audi- cences. On ning. the program, Monday eve she will play two unusual num- bers by Abram Chasins, “Nocturne, clusive line of melody, imaginative; Homoresque Hebra igu modern bold, rhythmical Prize duate of the Royal Con- servatory of Brussels, Belgium, Mrs Rowe was chosen by Cesar Thom son, noted violinist, to take part in cne of the (wo string quartets whicl | he coached during the entire sea- son. In Washington, D.C. she wa a member of the Fine Arts Club. and for three seasons, she was & member of the Barbour Piano Quar- | 3 tet, with headquarters in San Diego. By GFORGE TUCKER Cal. The Keeney-Rowe trio was ac-| NEW YORK, April 28. — You tive in California for seyen years blame the likes of Gladys Brunel, and among other activities in which | lady, if that $500 spring coat looks| Mrs. Rowe took part was the work |like a million on the model but like the Trio Charmont, combining |30 cents on you. You can blame her, but it really of the San Diego!isn’t her fault. Nor the model's Chamber Music Society, Mrs. uo“r"nor the coat’s. Actually, it may not presented all well known sonatas|be yours, but it probably is. or ‘cello and piano, including those| That's why so many wives, debs of Saint-Saens, Rachmaninoff, |and aspiring mannequins go to Gretchaninoff. Grieg, Beethoven, |schools for mod Straus, etc. She was also in the| And so Miss Brunel—French and| Brahms Piano Quartet for several|in her early thirties—does her best| years. |to show women how to come douw Attendance at the concert on stairs elegantly (pertly, demurely, Monday evening is being planncd |vivaciously) instead of tripping over | by a large number of Gastineau|the fifth step and landing at the Channel residents, and several so-|bottom in a heap of limbs, lace and cial affairs will be given preceeding !lingerie. and following the soiree. e HELD FOR OBSERVATION Modeling Now Taught— Makes One Pert, De- mure, Vivacious Leopold STOKOWSKI Adolphe Menjou « Alice Brady « Mischa Aver As a membe Be Soloist of Concert Monday of Royal Conservatory of Brussels To a couple of housewives who confessed their husbands had rather look upon Myrna Loy in a fur coat Ben Wilson, who has been living | than upon themselves in cliging silk | at Douglas but is formerly from |jersey, Miss Brunel replied: “You Tenakee, was brought to the Fed-|must learn not to lope across a room | eral jail in Juneau last night and |blindly, shove out a hand, and say | is being held for observation on an|‘Howdy, Butch.’ If you do, you not| insanity charge. |only look like an animated saw-| horse—your out-stretched hand might conceivably end up in the punch bowl instead of in the other! person’s hand. “Then there is the matter 0() walking. Imagaine you are carrying| a basket of eggs on your h:ead—bm.i | easily. To walk carefully is to walk |erect, even glidingly, but never | swaggeringly. Use the hands jud-| in the Scottish Rite violinist, and Beery Davis, pianist, came curve | Lt. Comdr. Valentine Schaeffer of } | Dizzy Dun which was filmed against authen- . JUNE WEDDING of John Roosevelt, youngest son of the President, and Anne.Lindsay Clark, seen battling a Boston breeze, MYSTERY PLAY . IS ON SGREEN [& 4;; SEUM MK l\nn(‘ ()wmmn, Ros( oe {arns Star in “Mur- der Goes to College™ office e scene of Goes to story large un the College a rightly myst with Lyr Overman and Roscoe Karns, ends tenight at the Coliseum Thea tre. The victim is a found a way to control racket by mathematic the su Lar head of of a crim Murder professor wh the polic the policy Crabb Marsha Hur g Anthony Nace, her fis { 5& o eral professors who wer i P ) ) % ;S 'ad man’s debt Overman as a private detectiv finds the murderer in this with the aid of Karns, a newspaj man B Overman been regarded as niest n in many Allwyn, t yrofessos wife i It f groun and Karns hs among the motion pictures fc but they a team before. Mi. Hunt rted on the road tardom in the recent v College Holiday.” fur A Poramount Picture wi ROSCOE KAR MARSHA HU? LARRY CRABBE $ss L LYNMNE OVERMAN JUNEAU HIGH ESSAY GONTEST : I8 TO ELECT ppizE WINNERS © year have n ppeared a ‘RIDERS OF LAST TIMES TONIGHT TONIGHT is THE BIG H!GHT OUR SHORT "EATURES— Melody Girl Your Cash Toon Cartoon ‘heck Terry ARTING TOMORROW Don Feature LIC WEDDIN and THE DAWN" tablish ve wild flow= 1 Steamship 1d June win st t tourists as well to us, pleasure r oitizer will be held in tiny church in Nahant, Mass. She is the daughter of Mrs. F. Haven Clark, widow of a wealthy Boston banker. |ELKS ARRANGE FOR ibe a sta did you ever hear of | out a spring mpaign? Brunel points study modelir to pirouette ses study modeling and debutantes. Miss actresses up on stance, restaurant hoste So do smart, wivs And modeling, explains this young | % than woman, is sometl more posing in panties and showing white | |teeth in a big smile; Gaul, because it is divided into three | parts—tashion, photographic art. And the model must be thing of an exhibitionist, and s rt Photographic models make the most, money, and come fame. But their careers arve They click, they flame like over the night; then they are Girls who madel clothing move, live, talk are far more esting. And their profe is much longer Which, in the something that ered. short tarlets inte ional lifc final analysi i should be consid- >-se - 4 HALIBUTERS SELL, SEATTLE - on with- | out that even brush , exits. Hotel| Wilson | Richard McDonald meeting of ti it is a bit like and | chairm some- | | be invited. into quicker safety forgot who the Yukon to Anchorage. The l'Mxmu(u.\ that there are JUU 000 miles of more than a third iciously to accentuate the SEATTLE, /\I)nl 28—The follow- of the body and fit of the gOWN.|jno palibuters arrived today and |Put one foot so, the other so, 10/ golq their catches: [turn gracefully. Carry the head at prom the western banks—Electra | this angle for an entrance of state; | ‘ 47,000 pounds, selling at 7 and 6% at that angle for arriving at an|cents a pound; Portlock 40,000 informal function.” pounds, 7 and 6 cents. There is more; much more. There| From the local bar is a whole school of thought and 000 pounds and Califor action, of which calisthenics are not | pcunds, both selling for the least part. Graceful models stroll cents, up and down her studio. At regular |- intervals her own models go bu('k | to school. This ls quite nec Viking 13,- - CLEAN UP with BETTER LIGHT _ Lightmaster } $2.60 Election of s(u(k‘v\( body at Juneau High School i at the school with ballc following candidates For student body James Lemieux, Grant Wendell Schneider, and Guerin For student body vice Keith Petrich, Claude and Frank Parsons For student body secretary: Kath- erine Torkelsen and Mildred Web- ster. Peter Warner officers being hel¢ ig on e’ Junior Chamber of Com- merce Sp()ll\’()i S (‘(Y!l]l eli- BASEBALL DANCE, MOTHERS’ PROGRAM president Ritte Eckley better Junean a Mot of the in Which to Live” upon which more were than 200 students of the sixth, sev-| N¢ r enth and eighth grades of the pub- R lic schools wrote in the Juneau Chamber of Commerce essay test, now completed One boy suggested the abolition o all coal and oil stoves and puttit hould in electric heating plants through- this, b out, thereby ridding the town of premis soot. Another recommended soot- burners on all stoves to be made compulsory. But the prize winner were not selected from this group not but rather from the essays attempt- ing to depict beauty for Juneau Dorothy Ricketts, first prize win- ner, wrote, “It is up to every indi- vidual to make Juneau a beautifui city. Everyone should make an ef- “How to M: Beautiful Place the topic Foster, S. J. Paul Jr and John Clark initiated by the Benevolent tective Order of lodge 1 MacSpadden, president Helgesen, at the L , ' presi L. (Dol Gray named Mot s Day pro- sponsored by the con- and Lola La Paugh will head the J-Bird staff next year, while election is for associate editor positions. Two of the following will be chosen: Keith Reischl, Betty Wilcox, and Sue Stewart. For business manager of Juneau safety pro- the J-Bird, Harley irner and and the date for the baseball Harry Watkins are candidates. was set for May 7 . - - g SR e MRS. CAUTHORNE RETURNS M'DERMOTT SAILS Ind ) be i public wi in charge Dan Ralston, 8, to which the The committee headed by you ed on a “could would BB city.” Mrs. Mary K. Cauthorne, Advisory and Maternal Child Health nur returned on the steamer Yukon, after traveling to Washington, D.C., | fort to keep his house, yard, street where she was in attendance at and neighborhood clean. Rubbi | health conventions, also attended is a fire hazard, invites dise s by Dr. W. W. Council, Territorial|and is unsightly. The surroundin Commerce Commissioner of Health. of Juneau are gorgeous. Keep Ju- more than Mrs. Cauthorne visited in Rich- neau up to these high standards.” highways in the mond, Va., her former home, and Second prize winner, Jim Wilcos, ! America alone has stopped in Fairfax and Alexandria | wrote, “Within this natural setting Idm'mg her vacation in the States. ‘nl snow-clad mountains and E. McDermott, Vice-President Lumber Mills, left Westward on the steam for a short business trip neau a mond park. T employ - D Department of The Nordlir of which Lode Qualified experts have proved that Seagram’s 5 and 7 Crown | are better tasting than the famous blended whiskies of the old days NEW OFFICERS aRe aNNOUNCED J. It would tion /\m(mg Students cant lots Othe aber. instead of help beautify propert too conspicnous places ple m: ‘One appearance of wutified, stated third prize winne attracted \pperance.” will be striking if we le ed Violet Paul honorable mention award: r honorable Patr g, Grace Said Patricia, given Berg our city." who deface y_are poor citizens. not only ut es clean . ividuals should D bage wrote be pls aintained flower gardens add a touch of beauty to the thing better city,” ed to Juneau.” committee in charge - > and placer location noticey tur- for sale at The Empire Office. Juneau can Margaret “And in y this the people of the United to Juneay make our city look mucih led off the old va- ind planted grass seed,” who won one mention awards i Betty Berg and Raymond “Playgrounds, streets to play on would public They refrain from doing their own Be sure and do part,” sugge jted Betty. “Garl - Grace, ed in convenient but If peo- that would make Ju- remarked Ray- “would be to have a public t would give work to the un- . and would add beauty was composed of Bob Phillips, Griffith 1g and Simpson McKinnon. | | | Brighten Your Life With Better Light Simply attach a Silvray adapter to your present fixture. In a split second you will have light of the most modern indirect type. Silvray uses the new silver bowl lamp and gives a soft even light . . . . no glare . . . . no shadow. Prices range from $2.60 to $6.50 LIGHT IS CHEAP————_SIGHT IS PRICELESS Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. JUNEAU—ALASKA—DOUGLAS POUDRE LWl i The perfect powder for those’ who demand ultra quality. It is smoothly adherent to the skin and gives a perfect mat finish. It is faintly scented wiih the most elusive odor and has been created in four- teen shades to match every skintone .7.7. $3abox HARRY RACE DRUGGIST ELIZABETH ARDEN h Avenue * New York + Elizabeth Arden Ltd. . Elizabeth Arden S.A. Elizabeth Arden G.m.b.H. At a cost of $25 a quart, Seagram recently collected different brands of blended whiskies—famous pre- mium whiskies of the old days... and asked its staff of qualified ex- perts to compare them, side by side, with Crowns. The result? Crowns were judged far superior to every single brand ...smoother, milder, better tasting. Craftsmanship counts! For four generations the House of Seagram has been famous for the skill of its master blenders. That's why the finer taste of Crowns is so popular today! Ac- tually, over 129 million bottles of Crowns in all sizes have been sold since 1934, At the bar or wherever you buy —think before you drink...say Seagram’s and be surel Copr. 1938, Seagram-Distillers Corp.— Fxecutive Offices: New York Scrown