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. {NEE hands, LIN G—For those idle ' ane Houge recommerids " a major project like this hand- crocheted ‘evening diess. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE THURSDAY, JAN 18, 1940 you must look your charming best —and the surest way to do justice to your beauty is to crown it with ....... wave. Hell ftell you BLACKOUTS ARE BOMBS. B F|VE BOM (AUSE FOR NEw tractive—and he'll mean it. M ADVERTISEMENTS - it W™ * AT 3 — a negative way: Infernal Contraptions Lo- e “Don't blame the war. Blame stalc! [ | AP Feature foot acid. Was there ever such| z | maddening agony as the slow lOl"! cated in Ham and NEW YORK, Jan. 18—An old|ture of tired and aching feet? As Eag Office friend of mine who is in NOt-s0-|the day Wears on, pavements secm gg merrie England, has just sent me|harder, your shoes seem smaller,, a batch of British newspapers with| your poor swollen .feet 'wince at the beauty hints and advertise-|every step. [} lice have begun an investig ments for beauty products carefuliy| “Oh, this wartime. walking, muf of the source of five crud: red-penciled, so I wouldn't miss| moan! But the real cause of foot! powder bombs found in an office them | troubles isn't the war. Tt's stale SAN MATEO, Cal. Jan fcrme occupied by worker They show that war has not|foot acid choking the pores of the Ham and Egg Old Age Pension siowed down cosmetic manufac-|your feet, piling up in the mus- Pian turers. They may be indicative of|-cies, leading to painful corms and The office had been the pension proposal in last Nov other things, too, but they're in-1callouses.” @ teresting, anyway, so I'm passing| Even soldiers aren't beyond the w samples: | reach of people with beauty prep- tion > blackout has given one ad-{arations to sell. Here's the appeal The bombs were found in a verti a new angle. Look: of a maker of hair tonic and shav- cleset by a workman redecorating For blackout eyestrain. Eye-|ing lotions: the office strain is on the increase. . New “For men on Active Service. A Police Chief Burks said each conditions are subjecting - your tin. . of .in your pack is in- bomb W filled with powder, and to unusual tasks, Peeringivnlug,bk Try is for shaving, before had a two-foot fuse attached. A'and straining through long hours| Jathering.” paper bag held a quantity of pow- of blackout, screwing up your| And so they go. There’s a mas- der left over after filling the eyes when you suddenly emerge|cara “that doesn't moisten orstreak bombs. Bu: d that the Ham from the dark into bright lights| under gas masks,’ a lotion recom- and Egg workers who occupied the' ggain, spending normal sleeping] mended for “war-worked hands.’ office were from Los / | hours on duty, walking through|and more. War, it seems, creates Local Ham and streets lined with dusty sandbags| beauty pmblems too. gested that the bo: nt- . —all these things are leaving AR A ed in the office | your eyes sore and strained and discredit the pepsior | uncasy Subway - riding New -Yorkers - | ‘Give your eyes the . i spend two to three weeks a year To give a little extra zip to d!treatment NOW, before more vye underground. ad savory mayonnaise!strain brings serious damage to = | over the top during the last 10| your eyes | minutes of the cooking. This ap- H one that aims to make]|crop of Florida. | plies to fish cooked on top the furloughs more pleasant: , e - - 7 stove or in the oven. J epare mr HIS leflve' Of course. Fmplrgw m;m Dunlls 1 an R Oranges are the most. valuable glll.lll-lrmiI!lilllll>lilrl_llN!lrflllllllnlliii‘“ "hl‘!IINI'IIIIIIIIllIIIIIIlIIIIIlIIIIIIlIIIIIIIlIIII|I|lIIIllbIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIHIIIHIII"' = = = H = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = £ E = = = E = = = = = £ = = E = § = = = g = = = E THE DRA OF THE WORLD lf{t Is Under Your Eyes! Every day a mighty pageant untolds . . . an intense drama more ollhrfln- 4 than any play that was ever produced. It is life! Its mysteriés thrills, its sorrows daily claim our attention . . . daily add interest to our individual lives. It is vital! Gripping! Dramatic! THE EMPIRE brings vou this. Through ils pages marches life with all its infinite variations of tone . . . life makes the news. Read THE EMPIRE with this'in mind %' eep ihe gigantic world panorama that makes THE EMPIRE uppermost. With this perspective you'll enjoy THE EMPIRE more than ever before! The Daily Alaska Empire Juneaw’s Newspuper Mfllmfl“flfllmfllmlflllfllmIlllllmHmllllllllIIIHIHIHI!!HHII!!III!lllII{HIIfllllIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII|HIHIHIHI|IIHII|I|IIIIIllIHIHlIlIII“IIIIIIIlIII‘"mIIIIIIIIHIIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIHIIIIIllllllIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII UL PLEPNT IlllmlllllllllllllllIIIlllIlllllIIIllllllIllllllllllmlllllllllllllll||IIlllIllllllHIIIIllIIIlllIIIllImflHHIllllllIlllllllllIlIllIlHMflMflllHIfllllllm il ake! b . DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU “k THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Sureau) Actress Who Wed Powell Forecast for Junean and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Jan. 18: Mostly iy with occasional light rain tonight and ¥ tle to moder variable winds, Minimum temperature tonigh Forvcast for Southeast Alaska: = Intel ex in perature, Gentle to mader = scast winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska. The winds ov the Gulf of ka and along the 1 con- 1e moderate 1 ut sterly 3 LOCAL DAT5 Barometer Temn Humidity wina Veloeity Weather 30.20 40 73 ESE 8 I 30.30 93 sW 2 Rai 30.24 92 w 4 Cloud RADIO REPORTS TODAY Max. tempt. | Lowest 3:30a.n 3:3Cam last 24 houre | temp temp. 24 hours Weather 35 25 30 0 Cloud, -2 -10 0 Clou A Nome -6 -22 -19 0 Pt. Clc 8 | -6 8 0 ci 17 19 0 (o) 8 -1 03 Blow.st 40 1.01 R 41 3 40 1.81 Rain 45 36 39 I R 2 | 36 37 22 Rain 51 41 0 : ‘ 42 03 : 42 0 Clo and | 38 0 Clo ¢ San Franci 54 10 ° C WEATHES essure cont YNOPSIS this morning over with lowest repo h pressure and the Alsulians ar Duteh Har bo. The I ) lay over the upper M: 1 ley ward. Precipitation nas been genel along coastal Aleutians south2astward to Vancouver Island, lly fair weather prevailed over the interior of Alaska A southeasterly cale prevailed last night at Duich was warmer last nigh r the interior of Alaska and Seward Peni Juneau, Jan. 19 Mrs. William Poweil 31 am.; sunset, 3:51 pm , 21, screen actress whose year-old screen veteran. 1 memberst Here is a new picture of Diana Le surprise marriage to William Powell, still is the talk of the TRUCEIS EXTENDED home of Mrs. Fred Campen on Feb- ruary 6. George Phillips will ided that the | be hostess for the ! sor a Girls Club. - - - PHIA, T ) ,\1‘41:; e \x;‘\‘ \'1 \v! b “;,'\‘ ,:I‘,““‘!‘EWH\”,]’ wrehased Arbitration Continues in!Vinson St 5. M- it Wi San Francisco Port , on Dotz o Tie_up Jobnstone. M SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, Jan —The truce nded the long Francisco port tieup ha tended by employers union. The truce days of negot the sien of the issues to Dean of the University of Oregon School fer arbitration A 1 meet of nego scheduled for Friday. Tt probably will be bitration if an WASHINGTON man Vinson Commit d proposed a h billion 1 dollar cut S that are CLE Wear Longer! TS Send YOUR GAR TRIANG T} h Workmanship and i reached this wes Py whether lonashoreme of work by th D shou! receive surance berefit Empicy tained a res order I I the payments, nds that L e for the dock were avail-|T D g 5 cizose s = ' X % i DES MOMENT| Fastlinerls of the | ¢ ) BRI by Adelaide Kerr Planned for \ % { ‘ ‘ | p | anamerian | SEATTLE, Jan. . ft Corporatior Pan American Air to submit pla | clipper | 1 The 4 3 said prepesed new shiy be for service c thr the sub-stratosphe: It would have a cruising speed of 300 miles ‘ hour at an altitude of 15,000 feet. | Boeing has built many of the clip-| per planes now in service over both the Atlantic and the Pacific, i - | Tea Fetes Wives of Forest § Men ‘ ores ervuce en; In compliment to wives of new| L officials of the Forest Service of-| fice here, a tea was given this af-| ternoon between 3 and 5 o'clock | at the Seventh Street home of Mrs. Wellman Holbrook. Guests of honor were Mrs, Al-j vin Blackerby, Mrs. William Parke, | - Mrs. A. E. Glover and Mrs. Johnj Brillhart. | Assisting Mrs. Holbrook as host- | esses for the occasion were Mrs. Harold Smith, Mrs. Harry Spe ling, Miss Sally Shafer and Mis: Pear] Peterson. The tea table was charmingly centered with an arrangement of tulips with matching yellow and orchid tapers. Members of the For-| |\ 0 b0 frock that's going places during the winter season. Herman Tappe designed it of silver-em- est Service and their wives called during the afternoon. S el The Camp Fire Girls have a momborship of 250,000, broidered pale blue net and trimmed its decolletage with softly curled ostrich of the same tone. Its wear- er carries an ostrich muff from which swings a great spray of orchids. Of course, it is dollars to dough- nuts this costume will not be seen in Juneau but it will interest the women readers anyway as to what is going on “somewhere down there.”