The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 19, 1939, Page 2

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- And How Would You Like Your W;il;eii; Si Old-Fashioned? ¥ Black an flair for showmanship have ¢ of the drive-in spots to the f scantiness of attire the cigarette girls, like the one parade. By AP Feature Look up long enough from your ham and eggs and you'll notice wait- resses are wearing some mighty nifty outfits. Smart cafe men Goii up their help now with as much care as if the were a floor show in fact vhey sometimes call them that Many restaurateurs change styles with the Easter fashion parade and again in the autumn. Others change the scenery every month. And pro- prietors of drive-in eating places know that pretty, smartly-uniformed “car-hops”’ can flag down a lot of traffic for them. The demand for attractive cos- tumes has created a substantial sup- ply industry with up-to-the-minute designers, colored catalogs and showrooms. J. D. Alschuler, supply house executive, s: street styles influence waitresses’ styles, and cites color as the big develop- ment of the last few years. The long sleeves and conventional black and white once the universal cos- tume is worn now only in con- servative places at dinner time. Beauty operators, elevator girls, and others have switched to swing- ier costumes. But theyre all far behind their scantily clad night ciub sisters of the “cigarettes, cigars?” chant. SAWYERS GOING Service a Los Angeles 10 WINDHAM BAY Mr. and Mrs. Jim Sawyer, of Sawyer's Landing in Windham Bay, will go out to their home there for about three weeks' vacation on the next trip of the Dart The Sawyers have been expect- ing friends from Chicago who will =,,-visit at the landing for a time. & white, with long sleeves, used to be the standard waitress costume. But restaurant men with a anged all that. Now the girls wear costumes ranging from the slack suits arm-girl costumes of the places with that homey touch. But for flair and THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, 1939. MONDAY, JUNE 19, r!fi Without Straps? to and “about | around said they got the largest | wa an injury. ACROSS Coated with érbss'wofd I;uzzl; Solution of Saturday’s Puzzle 2. Steeps 17. Fruit drinks: collog. metal . Instrument . Landed for driving or beating properties Threatens . Withdraw . “Lily maid of Astolat” . Broad street: abbr. . Gaze ., Number of 7. Angl money of things col- lectively account . Japanese . Explosive evice /1. Fuss . Confines Systematized knowledge . Gates measure . Partook of - meal . Dutch city 34. Traverses . Growing out . Followers of 36, Entreaty . Pole thrown an early theologian in Gaelic games . Packed for shipment 50. River: Spanish 51, Cutting wit Happenings 55. Annoy 56, Facuities of perception DOWN 1. Baby carriage: collog. 2. Priestly of Israi . Go before Surround . Covers the top of Roman bronze . Native of Serbia . Rubber. tree Degrade tribe el Al dEEEEE 7/l AEEd AuE JEEE i 1] ddauuEE 488 e | [ e Jddan duE Jddd JEN dEE Y n . Point of the 3 crescent Egyptian solar isk gy imoon . Wings . Favorites Eagles Ceremony Foreman 48, Exist . Night before an event 2. Pronoun English letter . Palm lily 5. Bitter vetch 6. Particulars Egret 8 Malt liquor 9. Mother 10. Measure of distance 11. Sufficient: poetic el At Hd/ dun Wl B |ed im Wrangell where she is em- Cruelty | (alendar Is Winner NEW YORK, June 19.—Whenever het husband was cruel to her, Mrs. Frances MacGarguhar, forty-seven, | of Newark, N. J., took out the cal- | endar she kept hidden in a bureau drawer, and made a circled nota- tion, The calendar, chief evidence in her suit for separate maintenance | against her husband, David, sixty- | sevén, read in part: “January 28.—Blackened my eye because I bought a 15-cent cake and | did not turn over the change. | “March 13—He tripped me and tried to kick me through a window. the bathtub. “June 12—He chased me with a | hammer. “September 18—I went to the hos- pital for an appendicitis operation. He said he would not pay the bill and did not return to him.” Advisory Master Herr decided in the wife's favor, and ordered the husband, in lieu of alimony, to turn over to her a house in West Orange. N. J., and the stock of the toy shop they ran in East Orange. Warns (oeds Not fo Copy Movie Stars ISTANBUL, Turkey, June 19. — Girls at schools and universities in Turkey have been warned of- ficially that they must not try to look like movie stars. The Ministry of Education has issued a notice, which is being cir- culated to all educational estab- lishments in the country, laying| down instructions regarding the personal appearance of Turkey’s young people. “Turkish school boys and school | girls,” it says, “must wear their hair in a manner becoming to the dig- nity of Turkish youth and suited to the military training to which | they are subjected. College girls particularly must cease trying to emulate movie stars.” | Headmasters and headmistresses are ordered to make sure that boys cropped; and that girls abstain from having their hair waved, curled,| dyed or otherwise than ‘“natural.”| Girls are also forbidden to use| lipstick, powder, face cream or oth- | er forms of make-up. They must! not wear silk stockings. Frequently inspections by high of- | ficials of the ministry of education, it is announced, will take place and any defaulters—especially teachers, who are slack in enforcing these rules—will be “severely dealt with.”; il o (laims Paul Revere Had Soulh Rival KNOXVILLE, Tenn., June 19.— Dr. Paul E. Wald says research con- vinceés him the Revolutionary War | ride of Jack Jouett, largely over- | looked by. writers of history, eclipses that of Paul Revere. Jouett, son of a Virginia inn- keeper, dashed 40 mileés to Monti- cello one night in 1780 to warn Thomas Jefferson that “the British are coming.” “Certainly Jack Jouett's ride eclipses that of Paul Revere in dif- ficulty and in importance,” says Dr. Walp, University of Tennessee pro- fessor. “Had Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence, been: capturéd by the British at that crucial time when fortunes of war were going against the Americans, it would have been most humiliating and would have resulted in great demiagé t6 the morale of the patriots.” Jouett encountered British sol- @iers at a tavern in Louisa County, Va. He doused his head and clothes in whisky and feigned drunken- néss until the soldiers left. Then he set out through the wilderness first to warn Jefferson and then on to Charlottesville to spread the warn- ing to the Virginia Legislature. - EMPLOYED AT WRANGELL Margie Zehm, graduate of the Petersburg High School, has locat- ployed at the Amoerican Bakery. Sh is a sister of Mrs. Nels Stens- land, whose husband owns the bakery. - PHEASANT EGGS INCUBATED ‘The Manchurian pheasant eges, 'which' the Alaska Game Commission recéived from the States, are now béing incubated at the Petersburg “March 26—He knocked me imul “November 6—1I left the hospital b Geraldine Still Reigning As Turkey's Style Queen ISTAN [ still is | her pretty las when she Her new title, and b d Alb; a queen heads carrie ruled the ven her by scciety women, is “Istanbul of Fashion.” It indicates can girl has | the pitiful figure of la only two days foreed to flee t how th mapped by the Italian v The 24 and her | the ex-King Zog, tos smartest, most | the European g | rived from C They dash through in swanky limousines ne was ¢ |wedding gift from Adolf Hitl Swift police cars loaded with bod | guards company them | Smart dressmakers and ha ers she employs find that C patronage brings them a rust |of customers anxious to follow what | ever vogue she may sef. | The royal couple are said to b planning to spend the summer in private villa on Prinee’s Island it the Sea of Marmara, contradictin reports they will reside in yland |1t is said they want to set for peaceful lives here, hoping {relaxation soon of police security | measures — especially when the; | move to the villa Istanbul society says Gera | toendness for gaiety doesn’t ir | with her duties as a moth Ishe's at the hotel is part |ed from Skandar, her baby who wa {“Crown Prince of the Albanians {only two days. > oo The Book ALASKA, Revised and Enlarged. Now On Sale: $1.00. ter when they ar- , May 3 the have their hair neatly and closely |’ MARRIAGE MART_This sample of love-making didn’t quite convince pretty Mille. Irene Tassignon, 25, who presided over Belgium’s annual “marriage market” at Ecaussines. At this market young Belgian men seek wives and women seck husbands. Fishing fashions are coming to light, since more women have learned how to handle tackle. This white-flecked blue cotton suit, worn by a Experimental Fur Station. They from Earl Carroll's Cafe in Hollywood, still lead the TURNER LAKERS 'BOB MARSHALL Three Juneau trout fishermen, Ed Jaho Fred Heister and Russell MI. Doo"ERAK Cc went Turner Lake ove the weekend had only “fair”| i 43 Y81 . Vacationing Forester Due S Tomorrow on Way fo £ e Arclic Village SElnov" pA(K'"G Headed back into the Arctic to F'RM FII.ES w"“ have another crack at climbing Mount Doonerak which he believes TERRITORY AUDITOR to be the nignest mountain in North | America, above the Arctic Circle, Qualifying to do business s alp \rarchall is due here tomorrow corporation in the Territory of Al- to take plane for Fairbanks and aska, the Red Mountain Packers, Wiseman. Inc., has filed a copy of its incor-| “yeo chan Chief of Rereation and poration papers with Auditor Frank p.. e ¢on ‘the U. S. Forest Service, Boyle [is best known as author of the The firm, a Washington corpora- |, oo "« aretic Village,” a sociological tion with principal offices at Se-| 4o of Eekimo life, which was & attle, named Charles H. Sharp of |poc caner a few yea}s ago, Wise- | Seldovia as Alaska agent. |man is the “Arctic Village” of the | % R TR book. | M B o EAU Last year after an official field 'D. M R S trip in Alaska was completed, Mar- | shall returned to Wiseman on va- | ' DIES I" Som“ cation and attempted to scale Doon- | (erak highest peak in the Endicott | BELLINGHAM, Wash., June 19.— Mountains of the Brooks Range.| Dwight M. Brosseau, 69, auditor of Due to bad wgst.her and loss of the Pacific American Fisheries for 'supplies and equipment when his| the past 38 years, is dead here. |boat capsized in a river accident, iy R Marshall failed-to reach the top of REVOLT AMONG HORSES? Doonerak, which is believed to be | BOULDER, Colo—It's an epi- somewhere between 10,000 and 12,000 | demic. Three occupants of neigh- feet high. boring rooms in a Boulder hospital, This year he is coming back, all had broken legs and each of the again on vacation, to have another | fractures was suffered when the pa-'try. He will be in the Territory | tient was thown from a saddle ghout a month. horse. And near Boulder a farmer Before bécoming attached to the in bed with the same kind of porest Service, Marshall was with the Department of the Interior as Chief Forester for the Office of Indian Affairs. AID, U. S. TRADE MIAMI, June 19.—In the wake of Uncle Sam’s foreign trade “invest- ments' in South America, made | with loans totaling millions of dol- | lars, a new network of rapid com- munication by air between the two hemispheres has been laid from | lthe geographical gateway of Miani. | Spanning the Caribbean twice weekly from Miami to Panama, | Clipper ships of the Pan American Airways system connect with Pan' American-Grace Airways ships that | wing southward through Quito, Ecuador, Lima, Peru, down the Pa- cific Coast to Santiago, Chile, ana over the Andes to La Paz Bolvia and Buenos Aires, Argentina. New air mail, passenger and ex- | press schedules also have been' |started across the north coast of South America, with d&ily flights !each way between Maracaibo, Ven- lezuela and Port of Spain, Trinidad. More than 53,000 miles of flying per month has been addéa to the |network, drawing thé United States |end its Pan-American neighbors closer together. With South Ameriéan trade a prize plum in the international !market at the present, the new air service gives Uncle Sam an ifi:lde] track on expanding forefgn -om-| 'merce with nafions far removed’ from the scénes of Eufopean com- flict. | A MOOSE COMES 0UT | QUESNEL;, B.C., June 19:—Amoose charged Ivan Oroft’s car on the Quesnal-Prince George highway 24/ miles north of here—but ceme out second best. Groft went to the hos- pital wtih glass cuts and his car jwas damaged, but the moose died. weré placed in incubators May 20 and it takes 24 days for them to hatch, Miami fisherwoman, is fastened with lures and topped by a brimmed hat of the same fabric whose chin-strap is caught with a float. The bag is of fish net. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Burcau) Yorccast for Juneau and Vieinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m. June 19: showers, tonight and Tuesday; gentle to moderate south- for Southeast Alaska: Cloudy, with showers, tonight and gentle to nmoderate southarly winds, except moderate to fresh st of winds along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Mod- ind south winds t-onight and Tuesday from Dixon » Hinchinbrook. LOCAL DATA Humidity Wind Velocity a0 SE 14 92 w 2 58 55 w 8 RADIO REPORTS 1 \ TODAY 3:30am. Precip. temp. 24 hours 40 50 40 2 40 50 64 40 42 46 48 Weather Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Tine sarometer { Tivest temp. 2:30 am Weathzr Cloudy Lt. R Clear Clear Cloudy C Lt. Rain Cloudy Cloudy Cloudy Clouds Cloudy tempt 50 » 46 46 19 &7 48 46 40 56 Cloudy Cloudy Clear Cloudy Cloudsy Clear Cloudy Cloudy 50 48 40 56 nikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San F New Yor Washington 56 52 62 62 56 52 60 60 WEATHER SYNOPSIS Low baromelric pressure prevailed morning throughout Al- aska and .o the Gulf of Alaska, the lowest reported pressure beine 29,60 inches at Fairbanks. High pressure prevailed over the Pacific Ocean between the Pacific Northwest States and the Hawaiian Islands. This general pressure diztribution has been attended by precipitation over most of Alaska and southward to Oregon. Thunder storms occurred yesterday over the Tanana and upper Yukon Valleys. Juneau, June 20.—Sunrise, 2:53 a.m.; sunset, 9:1¢ pm. this Own Trap FAMOUS INDIVIDUAL CHICKEN PIE For LUNCHEON at the BARANOT LAS CRUCES, ™. M, June 19.— And who do you think was one of the first to get a tag when Mayor Sam Klein ordered police to “en- force the traffic laws to the let- | ter?” The mayor himself. He had an excuse but the justice of the peace didn't think it was good enough and the mayor paid $1 The charge was overtime parking > Try an Empire ad. | THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL! DRESS SHIRTS $2.50 value $1.75 | AL— e, | THE SHOE DOCTOR CANADIAN WHISKEY Imported by WORLD IMPORTERS, INC, Seattle I A A NN Wtonogr (FORMERLY BIG VAN'S) ?78 So. Franklin St. HOT MEALS ON HOT DAYS but a cool kitchen wiways—with a GENERAL ELECTRIC RANGE ® Swift, clean, peaetrating heat of G-E Hi-Speed CALROD Hestisg dizecily iato the fecd!, not all Inits go room!You can cook lete dinner ca even th= hottest ¢f days withou ising the ki ture even 59 and SEATTLE PRICES 1Y JUNEAU 1spen less time in the kiichen, teo. WE PAY THE FREIGHT Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Sales and Service-—PHONE 616 JUNEAU—ALASKA——DOUGLAS A LOT OF PROTECTION FOR A LITTLE Meore and more home-owners are coming to realize that fire is rot the only hazard they have to worry about. That's why so many are taking advantage of the “whole- sale" protection afforded by the Extended Coverage En- dorsement, which covers damage by windstorm, hail, explosion, falling aircraft,“wild” vehicles, riot and smoke. You'll be amazed to learn how little it costs. N ©1ns 0. N A Office—New York Life SHATTUCK AGENCY Telephone 249

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