The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 13, 1938, Page 3

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Ken Murray’s real name is Kenneth A. Doncourt—and the A. (this is his secret sorrow) stands for Abner. | Congressman Dcmes He'’s Red 'COMEDY FEMURED Vito Marcantonio Sam Baron Branding Sam Baron an “unmitigated liar, sentative Vito Marcantonio of New York » newly elected Repre- ked for an opportunity to testify before the Dies committee in Washington to reply to the former Socialist newspaperman’s charges that he headed the Inter- national Labor Defense, which Baron called a “Communist front organization.” Baron said he had resigned from the Socialist party 80 he might appear before the committee investigating un-American nLHVlllcfi ‘as an individual onlv.” SUSANNAH WESLEYS | NORLITEMEN TURKEY 10 BE ENTERTAINED DINNER IS TONIGHT Tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 At 6 o'clock tonight in the Par- o'clos Mrs. J. Edward Knight will »ss with a Christmas party | lors of the Northern Light Presby- to munm s of the Susannah Wes- | (crian Church, Mrs. Vena Crone will ley Circ thod Decorations depicting the in the st Church of the| have one of her famous turkey din- prepared for the monthly iering of Norlitemen group parsonage Christ- a the mas season will add to the ho Charles W. Hawkesworth is guest spirit during the afterncon, and speaker for the occassion. Stanley lowing a short regular busines or, will sing several solos, sion, the se present will sew boxes for children of the Sunday School. - aa d Robert White will present violin clections during the evening, both being accompanied at the piano by ! Miss Cynthia Batson Try an Empire e ————————— e T watmeeseeer e et e T T T T T R T T T s COI.ISEUI’II “BWNiD.-AND ' ODERATED 5 Juneau's Greatest Show Value AT COLISEUM WILL END HERE MNM’JHT 4 ’!a Eddie Cantor Star of "Ali' Baba Goes to Town” Now Playing T TIMES TONIGHP:« A Cant Io of laughs, a gr Fas a thousand and one night rlainment in one! Fldie Cantor really goes to town n ! first picture for hit-mak Tw I Century-F “Ali Goos to Town,” featuring Tony Mar- n. Roland Young, June Lang, Lou- | ise Hevick and thousands of others, | ending tonight at the Coliseum The- | atr g an tmuenal and macnificent com- | HIS first pieture for hit - binat of curpriseful and side- | 20fh Century-Fox .. .the biggest splitting comedy, new Gordon and| g uhnfish eithitFevermddot Revel song hits, beautiful girls, exo- | v dances and thrilling spectacles, | “Ali Baba Goes to Town" marks the beginning of a new and important | phase in Eddie Cantor’s brilliant | career [ Millions will hang on to their tur- | bans as they see Eddie turn Bagdad n into Gag-dad, hear Tony sing to| June under the desert moon, see hundreds of Oriental darlings, hear | B the Raymond Scott Quintet when | BES@INNEY VYN 3I\] thty turn the heat on swing, see : £ the 1938-model magic carpet and | EGINIIN VIR (OIVINIE hundreds of other hi-de-highlights in the greatest mirth-musical in | JUNE LANG hilarity history, which is further —ALSO— | enriched by a revolutionary new | Selected Short S\Ibledl threc-tone ~tinted process ->oe India and China combined pro- world’s rice. the chief duce two-thirds oI th Salt and, dates are | produets. 0[ the. Sahara duert HosriTAL No7ES Andrew Blom was admitted last | ght to St. Ann's Hospital from | Kennecott for medical care. \ EXT I IN GIFT BOX John Burwash left | for Sitka on| the North Coast after having been a patient at St. Ann's Hospital for| 2 the past several months. | $2 95 pERS » ° Michael Regents was a medical dismissal from St. Ann’s Hospital HBLEPnonr He left for the south steamer Alaska. last evening. n board the HOSIERY Mrs. C. E. Carlson was ir caded }‘amfly Shoe yesterday at the Ann's Hosp for a fractured wrist. ALASKANA, By Marie Drake, 500, et T ——— The Daily Alaska Empire Presents-— SHORT TALKS ON ADVERTISING (FIFTH SERIES) Precpared by the Bureau of Research and Education, Advertising Federation of Amerion The Mop and Its Pals Number 12 Tt is about time to speak a kind word for the mop, that Cinderella of household uten- whose family history reaches back farther than the scrub-women of King Solo- mon’s Temple. The mop is an ancient and honorable symbol of cleanliness at any prl('(- With its modern companions of the cleaning cl L it stands for social progress and eman- cipation from household drudgery. sils, How many women give due credit to that wonderful invention, the dustless mop? With a few flicks of your wrist, the fluffy contraption flits about on your waxed floor, restoring shiny cleanliness between the time the doorbell rings and the unexpected com- pany walks in. The man who first made and advertised this boon to housekeepers de- serves a medal for distinguished service. One of the best things about the mop is the company it keeps. Its close companion, the vacnum cleaner, saves hours and hours of hard labor every week in the year. In place of ten million housewives beating rugs in the back yard, ten thousand workmen are now busy in factories, making vacuum cleaners for them and earning wages for themselves and their families. Another highly useful member of the household clan of cleaners is the washing Although taken pretty much for wnted nowadays, the power washer has wwed wear and tear on more millions of h minine backs, fingers, and tempers than has almost anything else you can think of. Neither the vacuum cleaner nor the power washing machine would ever have become a common household appliance if these articles chine. n had not been advertised. Women would not have known about their advantages. The first washing machines did not spread very fast throughout the country, because they were not advertised much, and they were not improved rapidly, either. But when advertising got on the job, then housewives really became washing-machine- conscious and they certainly did buy them. Manufacturers sold more washers and could afford to put more money into the work of designing improvements. In this way adver- tising gave jobs to inventors, with the result that today’s washing machine is as modern as a new eight-cylinder automobile, and it is streamlined too. National advertising is absolutely the only way new inventions can be popularized quick- ly and at relatively small expense for each unit. The cost of advertising vacuum sweep- ers and washing machines is only about 3 per cent of the price of each article, which is extremely small compared with the amount of other costs saved through the use of ad- vertising. The total selling expense would be much higher if these articles were not advertised, and consumers would have to pay more. This is also true of many other popular N work-saving utensils, Making housework ier is one of the regular jobs of advertis- ) ind the list of work-savers that it has in- ‘e into the average American home ¢ And one of the best things about it is that advertising pays for itself by being a very efficient salesman. Advertising actu- ally lowers the cost of many useful articles. ing. 'md Tess. Copyright 1938, Advertis ing Federation of Amerrcse ’ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, DEC. 13, 1938. MUSICAL SUCCESS "SKI CHASE" 10 | TIMES ENDING TONIGHT, BE SHOWMN HERE s | CAPITOL SCREEN b pi Juneau Club Secures Pic- ! fure fo Promote Sport U 0¥ 2 i IT'S TUNEFUL DeaNna Durbln Smgs in This Saéf p n il cron [ AND MERRY! | Adain in "Mad g | ] The famous picture “Ski O Ahom MLSI( | produced in Austria to feature the > | romantic Leni Riefenstahl and the | Watch out for little girls who cross | .. qq nous Hannes Schneider will their fingers and close their eyes|p. presented at the Capitol Theatre when they tell you anything by the Juneau Ski Club next Friday That may be a national habit|gt photh a midnicht preview and 3 | m. voungsters after ”f‘ y havé | aveninig: showin |seen Deanna Durbin in her new\ i ica full ler feature, the plol | Universal picture, “Mad About Mu- | o¢ which is woven around the’ ate jsic.” Deanna resorts to that means|yompy of these famous skiers to . | whe mw‘: she ’v‘ |!~>.1 ..:n ; th .]m‘A utwit their pursuer of | ture which ends tonight at the Capi-| ground and Hare through the most ~h Theatre { scenic section of the Austrian Alps. | This film, produced by Joseph|qye pa Hourids 1§ composed ot Pasternak and directed by Norman| .. instructors from the skiing Taurcg, presents D 25 & SW- | genters of the world who have gone — i — - dent at a s' school in Swilzer- |y, (he Schneider school to perfect % land. Her mother, played by Gail|y.ir technique and recel s SOk technique and receive the cov ) LW 2 LATE NEWS OF THE DAY Patrick, is a Hollywood movie star, | i.q Sehneider certificate for teach- MIDNIGHT who acts glamorous ingenue roles g pe picture shows the greatest MDNIGET THE LONE WOLF OF PARIS | |117 oottty i st 1, 71 miirs s o £ ledge she is a widow with a daush-|sepniiea for one performance ter of high school age. All the other | { = girls at the school have noted fath-| M'* R;::"‘i )l,'f;,l el B i ers, so Deanna invents an explorer | * %1CHE \'\_(m‘““ i Ve v At dad. for herseif and tells the @irls| g, . ment races on the Continent ‘.\ll stories abnm him. Then Herbert ind 15 fow in Hollywood studying [nis manservant, arthar xn\rl\rr\;_‘mmf‘ TR IS ke | Desnna adopts Marshall as her dad- | - =0 . S50 FH | | c by HAaal developing a incomparabie ' Federal Labor Union, 20904 |av and soon has him entangled in | (S ey orutionized the sport and g rouz] ithin th srasp o - . Each time Miss Durbin tells “‘f;y”l‘uh\"l[‘]‘“M'M g f‘{,‘p‘..lm’,’,‘--"],- T a N I G H T 7 . 00 | particularly bouncing lie, she closes | h;““ o \f n i ‘1‘1”‘ R % g . 1"!“1: S ‘_"::H:,”l’ G I'",f\l‘ll‘l“l‘;‘,l where he trained the nucleus for the Lihe does mot. mean. what she is|2Tmy, ski brigades, and returning A.7.0F L.HALL |ihe does ot man what, she i infoh Lo Angels nd New York ', ginal wil wqugh et il performed on crushed icesin Holly- i R ‘."- oy N wood Bowl and Madison Square it Garden to breathless crowds of m— | mirer 'Christmas Dinner 0 Sapee of e 4l 1 Wik t LEATHER JACKETS $9 50 1 coast were returned to the Atlantie st e ront gquawier e ilk lning. | O . large exhibitors making it necessary .~ ALL wooL NAVY SHIBT ot $5 00 | I W ” A" d d for the Club to secure the picture & | direct from New York through the You'll Say— th“ a Shi Dout i [ § e enae | booking agents of the Capitol Thea- pocket. Absolutely fast na ue ‘ T tre fabric; waterproof. Approximately sixty persons werel - an advance ticket sale started UVEBCOATS Navy I |present last evening for the annuall,qay o assure the Juneau Ski dark | Christmas dinner and public ini Olub of & profit on its most expensive Formerly $19—New tion ceremonies of the Business and | a4 ambitious endeavor to promote S e Y Wi | Professional Women's Club, held in{ eiing on Gastineau Channel “ R R Y s THE YOUNG ME SHOP | the social room of the Methodist st A > % Church 247 South Franklin | Evergreens and lighted . tapers LIEKS GOINC formed attractive centerpieces for & £ the banquet tables, and at each in-| H. J. Lieks, Superintendent of dividual place was found a gift in|Mount McKinley Park 3 Christmas wrappings by his wife and baby passenger (o] ywoo Slgllt_f Afld Soufldj Miss Caroline Todd, president of |south on the steamer Alaska to re- the club, greeted those present,|main until after the holidays. By Robbin Coons while Mrs. Pearl Burford acted as! toastmistress for th ecasion i HOLLYWOOD, Cal.. Dec. 13.—They've about given up trying ,\\\ '(l-‘,',,,“,,,\_,, l,m :n..',‘ 4\:‘,“ Een to “glamorize” Pauline Moore. And if they'd ask me, which they by the Rev. David Waggoner, who ”'/111/ /.\‘ )‘!HH‘ won't, I'd say “Fine! stressed the thought of “peace on Hollywood glamor is all risht, in its way. It used to be th earth good will to men N I b ] % girl who didn't have it didn't have IT, either. But you can't Mrs. Florence Breed, field adviser ews L. oo that any more and be truthful for the ional Tuberculosis As- By The AP Feature Service This Pauline Moore, of course, is a hopeless case. She's sweet Eclation, Shake, DR AL CRcHIng and pretty and she looks a little like Norma Shearer. She looks £ \:"' 5 ‘:“‘”“: “"“/{‘”“ 3| [ 18, and they he can act. After a couple of years of minor “.,‘,., 3 ;-\pll‘nlml\l'v”l:l‘:vm‘\:mk ;::n:- Toles, 6RB 48 DY her chance as the rc > lead in “The done throughout the Territory un- | Three Musketeers,”-and that is why they want to turn on the der this program. | guns and spray her well g Initiation of candidates by Mrs Bul what does she do? She talks about her baby. Eleven John McCormick, with the ! months old. And then she gets around, casually, to mentioning | tance of Mrs. William Paul, the baby's sister. Oh. yes, she has two children. Both girls, and | held- | - such fun. The older is three. And her husband? Oh, yes, he's [| The dinner was prepared by wo-| Jefferson Machamer, the artist. | men of the Methodist Church, and g7 | the following members of the Ep- EEEY | worth League assisted during 3 i G SRR S e C et i [l e I'm really 24. It's funny—but Warner Baxter thought I was "ter- | Minnie Rogers, Miss Louise Peter- | ribly young too. Tl never forget—they sent me over to take a || son, Miss Gloria White and Miss Ha- 5 3 test with him—for ‘Slave Ship'—and he took one look at me and ||zl Fields. Etacl;ques‘hon C;’““” 20; (”lfl;‘ refus it. It broke my heart—I Vo % g R R part of a two-part question, ‘j.sw-m do il ‘| broke my heart. Put that was two years ago. | | 4 score of 60'is fair, 80, good. + ¢\ She laughs; it wasn't a very serious heartbreak. | And what does she do between pictures, as now? “Well, it isn’t ! 1. This is Gen. Franz Ritter o by ¥ i 4 A ! | von Epp. What is his job? What 3 very intovesting—but I'm making over clothes, letting out hems. claim did he make for Ger- . You know how it is, every mother has a drawer full of things Il | | many? to mend, and I—T'm just getting around to a frightful accumula- Without Calomei — And You'll Jump Out 2. Whisky groduction has in- tion of stuff. ... They s0 quickly, don't they?” of Bul Full of Vim and Vigor. creased stea" ily since repeal. . The glammer-chaser by this time is weak. “Uh-huh, they do.” u i | Tr;e:r lnls':.t n Ambition? “Well. T'd 11k bR 3 s , | . To what youthful mon- s S i lg‘iffilx"“ffi’ff‘:gff‘j s’s funny B g b g 1 | archs was a girl recently born? YR B rokeWbatad. Yok 4. Where are the wcl)‘rld‘a Doisoned and you feel sour, largest stockyards? W h a t B s o ks sk, { ©UA mere bowel movement dosin’t caused a tie-up there recently? all i‘,r 40(3 the cause. It takes v}u;,‘fhmm.{ r‘t(-l:; | 5. What state did the Presi- R Ak eat feel s dent charge with failure to co- | tle, yet | | operate with the government in | . 1 l d b making ey 3 the ey { | public works? | Carter er Pills on the red packs | you can gel soup, salaa beverage and sce. Tetuse anyihing ol Frice 3. | e T, AnSWers ) dessert as well as a wide selection of . .yt . entrees — it's really the finest plate lunc}leon % Junea“ 8 | FORES l WOOD ' | CUT BY LOCAL UNEMPLOYED e o o e e oot Saoses B | : ‘ NOW OFFERED business—you feel you have to stay in it until you've done at least e one GOOD thing—and then I suppose you hate to iet go so you ~ keep on. . . . Have YOU any children?” ! 0 F R So I say again, it's fine. It’s not, as we say, very good copy. | It's too normal, too up-and-up. to be in the least sensational. | Or isn't it? Come to think of it, Miss Pauline Moore is practically $7.5 I er C0r a freak—of normality. Maybe they ought to put her in a glass . case and exhibit her—once a week—for the benefit of all the - ) A s t town'’s pathetic little scatterbrains who wear themselves out trying (3 rICks dehvered and Clll n to be “different,” or “exotic,” or “glamorous!” T [ 22 o lengths to your order. i Sally Berkeley is the brunette's friend. She puts a shine on thb dark-haired actresses. On their hair, in the right places, so WOOD IS MIXED DRY AND GREEN itll have a lively glow for the camera as sometimes it doesn't | naturaily. She’s on the “Gambling Ship” set, gilding Helen Mack, and you ALL nETun“s rnu“ SALE or can see il’s a sort of gold paste she uses. Secret, she says. First tried it on Lupe Velez, has frequently burnished the tresses of Ann woon Go To ““BMPLOYED Dvorak and Evelyn Venable. Off-scgeen, says Sally, it isn't practical because too obvious. ““ wuo cu’r IT. Obvious or subtlc, Lupe liked it. Lupe does what she likes. “She ‘used to wear it cveuv\hexe d 327 \ Phone Your Order— B e ————————————————————————————————————————————— e ———————— ———————————————————————— .

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