The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 30, 1938, Page 3

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Show Place of Juneau THEATR = SAMUEL GOLDWYN presents Starring SYLVIA SIDNEY JOEL McCREA ‘with HUMPHREY BOGART The record-run stage triumph mes an’ even greater film} Released through United Artists OUR SHORT SUBJECTS ARE THE TALK OF THE TOWN HINTS TO HOUSEWIVES Never put woodenware directly over the heat to dry. That causes the wood to warp, and perhaps to crack, Thoroughly dry it, how- ever, before putting it in a cup- board, since it may mildew if you store it too soon. Let it stand in a room of moderate temperature, or near the stove. finished your work, wash the gloves, on your hands. Then pull them off up to dry. barb juire to favorite punch recipe your Wear cotton gtov gers cut off—when you iron will keep v heat from getting to your hands “Snowballs” make a refreshing v len Jenkins is seen as Hunk, “Bab summer dessert. Roll two-inch balls Spiced vinegar lends a piquant ro.c's” henchman, and Billy Halop, of ice cream in cocoanut. Work flavor to meat and fish sauces or Gapriel Dell, Bobby Jordan, Huntz quickly and serve the balls in “box- Salad dressings.. To make it miX Hall, Leo Gorcey and Bernard Puns- es” of angel food or sponge cake. three cups of vinegar, one teaspoon | jey the Dead End kids from the |of salt, half a teaspoon each of| original New York stage cast, are| Sewing box hint: Put different Mmustard, cinnamon, cloves, celery|seen again in their unforgetable sized buttons on large safety pins. The various sizes will then be dis- tinguishable at a glance. together for two minutes. Strain little Ginger Johnston, Corpus Christi, Tex., and Mo Cover veal chops with grapflmn‘and store in a covered jar in the MRS' G' C' JONES; 1 Marguerite Joyce), Waco, Tex. Mona (or Marguerite) is 6 feet 11¢ sections and then broil them 15 min- | Tefligerator. | MRS. Z. E. WAUGH, inches tall. They're in a chorus bound for London. utes. Baste several times with the Aol by o e drippings that cooks out of the meat.| To determine the freshness of ON BOARD DENALI By JACK STINNETT |and has worked steadily in cho- fish, see that the gills are red, the| Mrs. G. C. Jones, former Juneau AP Feature Service Writer {ruses ever since. Heavy sports skirts often are hard |scales stick close together, the eyes resident, passed through the Capi- NEW YORK, May 30. In the| Mona Lisa, whose real name is on hosiery. To prevent runs and stop | are bright and bulging, the fish is| tal City Saturday evening on board night club and theatre chorus busi- | Marguerite Joyce, Waco, Texas, 6 that “scratchy” feeling sew a two-|free fromr too strong an odor, the|the steamer Denali on her way to ness, all tall girls work. feet, 1 inches, with Rose’s sa inch facing of thing silk on the in- | flesh looks clear and is firm to the| Sitka, where she will join her hus- Not only is 6-foot height an | Manar how in Fort Worth and side of the skirt hem. touch. band, Capt. G. C. Jones, commander advantage to a chorus girl, but the |New York and transferring to her Rubber gloves are a great pro-| — of the Coast and Geodetic Survey demand for really tall chorines far new job without losing a day’s pay. tection when doing garden or house An unusual and tasty glaze for boat Explorer. exceeds the supply. | ‘Mary Lou Graham, Seattle, Wash,, EXPERIENCED TRAVELERS have found low eost, but high comfort and convenience in the new. individual reelining chair coaches on the roller-bearing— NORTH COAST LIMITED You'll be delighted with the roominess of these coaches = the large wash rooms and lounges with running water and full-length mirrors. Plenty of space and restful furniture for relaxation. These coaches are — COMPLETELY AIR-CONDITIONED You may have “Famously Good” meals in the diner from 50c; or fresh lunch tray service at your chair., Slightly higher fares in modern Pullman Tourist of Standard Pullman Sleepers and Observation-Club cars. KARL K. KATZ Mteska Represemtative, 200 Smith Towes, Seattls N PACIFIC RY e s tah Lump ook FOR CAMP OR BOAT AT BUNKERS ——CALL AND GET IT! Diamond Smithing Coal Finest grade obtainable for any purpose for which blacksmith coal is used.. PACIFIC COAST COAL CoO. N O W!| WCREA STAR work. They must be treated care-|which set records in its Broadway fully, however. As soon as you have wrong side out, rinse and hang them | as Use maple syrup dr strained honey as sweetening for fruit punches in | summer. Add a little strained rhu-| fruit —witn the fin- That r hands free of cal- louses, and will prevent some of the ped, paprika, mace and crushed bay leaf, four parsley sprigs and two tablespoons of granulated sugar. Boil | PER SACK THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MAY 30, 1938. SIDNEY AND INDEADEND' Waterfront Drama Is at Capitol Tonight and Tomorrow Twenty-four hours of throbbing life in @ city street, paved with rich- es and poverty, comedy and tragedy, romance and heart-aches, thunde: acress the screen in Samue! Gol wyr's production of “Dead End, which began last night at the Capi- tol Theatre * §ylvia Sidney and Joel McCrea are starred at the head of a great cast in this powerful human story based on the stage hit by Sidney Kingsicy as produced by Norman Bel Geddes, run and then was cheered from , Coast to Coast. Miss Sidney has her greatest role Drina, the girl who valiantly fought a losing battle to keep her little brother Tommy from the gangster’s fate ahead of him and to raise them both out of the slums. McCrea is seen as Dave, the poor | architect she loved, who dreamed of tearing down all the tenements in the world, and loved the beautiful Kay, played by Wendy Barrie, who had found a way out of the slums into penthouse luxury Humphrey Bogart plays Face Martin,” the killer. Claire Trevor plays Francey, “Baby Al- characterizations of Tommy, “T.B.” S TYP “Angel,” “Dippy,” “Spit,” and Milty Little chorus girls are cute, big on The reason is that tall girls are more stunning on the stage than This is Mrs. Jones’ first trip to Al- aska in 16 years, having previously lived in Juneau. Capt. and Mrs. short ones, say chqrus directors Jones plan to reside in Sitka for the They wear clothes better, are more summer, leaving for Wrangell graceful, and are more command some time in the fall. ing in appearance. Their duties Accompanying Mrs. Jones on her rarely involve real dancing, but by journey is Mrs. Z. E. Waugh, from weaving through rhythmic dance | Florida, this being Mrs. Waugh's patterns, they lend glamor to the | first trip to the north. S8he will also chorus numbers | Join her husband at Sitka, who is a Chorus Equity estimates there are Jjunior officer on board the Ex- girls in the United States ! plorer. of stepping into chorus AN S AN with probably 1,000 of them False Teeth Bit in New York City. Yet Owner in Throat “There are only 18 chorus girls dance GARNER, Ta, May 30. — Gt“orm-‘m New York six feet tall or tall- for a could Eckhart's false teeth bit him in the O HAle savs, tand Hier e oo | throat following a highway accident ““ay CmPployed. - thres “milss cast of here. ‘Of course, it takes more than A resident of Redwood Falls, Min- | JUst stature. Beauty and good fig- nesota, Eckhart’s automobile over- ures are requisites, but if a tall girl | turned. His false teeth fell out, then 15 Sufficiently endowed, she won't have to worry.” clamped togeth s b 5 Siamped together as he fell agailst| "1 ooy yoar ne sent a chorus of 16 |abroad. The girls were all about five feet, three inches tall. Both on jobs, living Georgie Hale, producer and director, seeking six-footers chorus to send to London, find only four. Height’'s Not All !ham may be made by mixing one Ecup of dark brown sugar, a third- of-a-cup of orange marmalade, three tablespoons of vinegar and | one teaspoon of powdered cloves. | Spread the mixture over the cooked | meat, then bake it for 15 minutes in | a moderate oven. Serve it warm or | cold. only complaints were that the girls were too short. “Englishmen like 'em tall,” says Hale, “because the tall American show girl sets a mark that the British would like to have his ladies shoot at. Most English woman are tall, you know, but those with grace and beauty are the excep- tions, not the rule.” Big and Little This year Hale's chorus is com- posed of eight girls of average height and four who are six feet or more. The four are: Bunny Waters, Santa Monica, Calif., “the tallest | showgirl in New York,” 6 feet, 2% iinches, two years in the chorus and | “never out, of a job yet.” | Anita Arden, Brooklyn, 6 feet, 2 | inches, who started work in Billy | Rose’s “Jumbo” three years ago| Want to help keep your stra: berries plump and red when they a: cooked? Add a teaspoon of vinegar | to each two cups of berries. But re- member, prolonzed cooking will des. roy color, flavor and téxture of berries whatever you do. Coal the continent and in London, the ¢, Six-F (;()t Chorus Girls re are both kinds— isa (really in demand. ¥ 6 feet, a Washington graduate almost a the train soon as she stepped off a“ week net (British ineome paid) against approximately New York. ———e——— Fats “Egasactly” Five Dozen Egg KNOXVILLE, Tenn Cacklings of congratulations through the streets when Robert Sauls appears, and friends ask if he feels like laying a bet. The city’s man-of-the-moment declared him- self in fine feather over his na- tional fame. Robert Sauls ate five dozen eggs at a single setting. He won a con- test in which the runner-up, Perry Sorwin, absolved a mere forty-two eggs, boiled and poached. Mr. Sauls expressed astonish- ment at the ease of the victor) May 30. — echo dozen a not consider five gar- gantuan repast. - e - THE BOOK OF ALASKA WILD FLOWERS By ADA WHITE SHARPLES Residents and visitors to Alaska have had the same experience of seeing whole fields of wild flowers with no book or guide to aid in iden- tifying them. With more than one hundred and fifty photographs, the book is a thing of beauty as well as a prac- tical guide. The book is also a clever solution of the gift problem; what to give that is useful, beautiful, lasting and economical. For sale at the NUGGET SHOP. Price $3.25. adv. Try an Empire ad. AND RECEIVE TWO J. A. Martin AS A PAID-UP SUBSCRIBER TO The Daily Alaska Empire is invited to present this coupon tonight at the box office of ““CAPITOL THEATRE TICKETS TO SEE “DEAD END” Your Name Mzy Appear—WATCH THIS SPACE irls 'SAN QUENTIN' Havo No .I«;If W orries PR|SUN DRAMA | ton MacLane as University | who was signed by Hale For 12 weeks they will make $60 tax in ENDS TONIGHT George O'Brien and Ann Sheridan Co-staired in I)()\\('I‘flll ]'illl] About as powerful a melodram as the screens have reflected in ¢ considerable period is “San Quen- fornia penitentiary, v 1 had it first local showing yesterday at the Coliseum Theatr Quentin"—Pat O'Brie s Captain of the Yarc the man whe he takes and who hates him for it Humphrey ! se jc Bogart a " CINDERELLA syt soner; Joseph wyer as r lay before yest i wal other; Joseph King as the Warden % Hollywood confee. 4 Breaks for freedom? Certainly! lers for ice ci A Yet at the same tim g BUSINESS Is I gotting T throughout the stern tale a nice r around $18 note of romance, with the lovely Before that g red-haired Ann Sheridan ifs in- Christmas | piroo spiration tore, followed | ) g Pat O'Brien is seen first as an five-and-ten, o ko ex-Army captain appointed to By ROBBIN GOONS s Erin doss, s it “Aoliay command of the prison yard in the s O o The | department y hope he can, with square dealing,| HOLLWOOD, Cal, May 30—IN€| .o yoning he K e maintain discipline, which has slack- | Oinderella business is picking up. ures: B v ik ened through the old-school meth-| For a tme Hollywood wouldn'j; . oo, ghe - «pg m owera ods of MacLane, who has been de- | °Ven 100k at the fabled herolne Un- |y, wygar dqaqay v+ o & i moted. less she'd been in a Broadway bit, Fact is, T ‘alw ey xe o8 Just before taking the job, Pat ‘oured in stock, or actress—but o ¢ Yymrot) goes to a night club and meets Ann, |Some little theater experience With| o os ,q Wb or il a blues-singer. She doesn't know her to Hoilywood question.” > what he does. She's bitter about| The old silent film custom of % i prisons because her brother, Red— |100king behind five-and dime coun-| o & AR who is Humphrey Bogart—I just | ters, in restaurant kitchens, in barbe paople kopt ¥ s ; o been sentenced to San Quentin hops for "”“)’“"‘_'l movie SWrs | by bictures, hu one she Pat doesn't reveal his job. was forgotten. People like took seriously w rent Who Ann visits her brother. She is studios said arily-—cou talk. | came e with nd seen passing money to him and| You had to have training, and long | S8 KOS o el is summoned hefore the Captain. | years of it, to be a talkie actor or g “our Gnog gy oo iy The Captain has been good to actress ? oo e fon r & TOGTEEOIE Red, really trying to str n| They were forgetting that Garbo o on B0 %o o him out. He puts Red on a road once worked in a barber shop, and | RS BIE O . gang that Clara Bow was a Brooklyn kid |, —r o bt Red and some others make a with her picture in a auty con- }' wai & Big aron successful break. What happens test. Each in her way, was a OIn=|qpoccan ® Lo f then leads up to the powerful derella, just as later on was Alice climax of “San Quentin.” White, a studio seript clerk &dell's MecHiaks" BHE Kl g Last year Lana Turner got a break | g 0%~ F A i 1 MISS SYLVIA BERG Ju rI‘A & .‘mnl' kid h‘[yfl‘(,l"n i 84 the lot. Brat 3.1 3 HONORED SATURDAY ‘ricn Margaret Tatlichet, o stuaio | code® Boy § ; R g named Philip ¥ 1von In honor of the birthday of Mi o e el \’»'«y,‘:;\(tv,u““”l]‘lxli:::r:]n‘x: Rusgles GOBEE TSl i Sylvia Berg, & party was given Sat-|came Arleen Whelan, little redhe s W ; g il o o] b - g | picture was 1 R < urday evening at the home of Miss|who as a manicurist held many|ioceeqyor for o W el i« Louise Skinner, on West Ténth| hands without dreaming that ome|p .. cho fs oy i d Street day ‘d be holding Warner Bax-| gne’ thinks Prig T o Refreshments were served, after ter's heroine of “Kidnaped | im to get plac 00 which the guests attended the Firc Moving Up | men’s Ball in Douglas. The in Drew, formerly| Paul Muni (¢ Those attending the fair know Raye. | tests for ‘“‘Scan e | Miss Edith Lindegard, Mis Erin blondish, is get-| patience rowice i Karinen, Miss Yvonne Perry, Miss ting place and she’s the ep-|hid away, leasin $ | Pat Hussey, Miss Helen Allen, Miss itome of Cinderellas as Hollywood |she pleased ' Anita Porter, Miss Helen Beistline, has known them from the first.|movie work : f Robert Turner, Jimmy Young, Glen Yesterday a minor stock player,|a fiend for tevs & iny & Bush, Gerald Bodding, P. J. Whitely, | doing “atmosphere” work on the|weeks to each 2 R. C. Berg, Herb McClain, Dean sets, today she's the one girl in| Lewis Stone w 1 plaher Williams, Maynardo Walstrom, Bert | “Sing You Sinners” with Bing Cros- |ely for a certain role I iLre = Berthold, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Fos- by and Fred MacMurray. Tomorrow |ly hapg orotime— the script ter, the guest of honor, and the host- | she's one of two girls opposite Ron- | clerk discovered !¢ LA ess. You'll get a kick out of owning and living in a modern home! The extra conveniences will bring a world of comfort, too. START LIVING IN YOUR MODERN HOME THIS YEAR! FHA Credit Plan COL is your big op- portunity to fi- nance your al- terations. LIBERAL TERMS! (e FOUGHT Fop | oy OF A LAUCHING g, ‘. WD THE BURN/NG HATE OF EACH or,.,l,:( > 4 |ald Coleman in “If I Were King, Put the Sweet in “Home Sweet He:: LUMBER CO. Juneau—Sitka JUNEAU TELEPHONE 587 U NIE AU"S e OWNED_AND -OPERATED By _W.1 GROSH) N Juncau's Greatest Show Value \ NOW HOWING e he other bein: at least brought tom, the stock rla’ ¢ | for the wrong p et DERN z‘-s! 1 e” Money spent on modern- izing increases the re-sale value of your home. Best of all, prices right new are within your income! Advice Frea Any momber of experienzed :tm will furnish esti- mates and su3 tions. ton {. W o LOAN PLAN! UMBIA

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