The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 23, 1941, Page 3

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THE GLORIQ w Information Please | Cartoon —- News ACROS§ . Turf 10. iroup of puplls 00D 2. Rubber tree 3. Great Lake . Topaz hum- ming bird T & 39. Depart Incline the head . Leave empty . Article . Cook slowly Hindu ar apart y 4 . Ruminan animal . Tilt . In twofold Night before degree well a loosely medan Vehicle on runners Drink slowly Main point Solution Of Saturday’'s Puzzle | DOWN 4. Young 1. Irrational person mathematical 6. Cr quantity 6. S 2. Medley 2. Appoint as agent » of wor- in " v Zealand tree ‘ ale des- | cendant { 8 Go furtively | 9. 8 | 10. 7. M At a tip or L Sweetening Scoteh we hing Abandon Decomposed t | hundreds of Indians would be | maintaining THE. DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1941 ACTION THRILLER KIT CARSON" AT CAPITOL THEATRE Jon Hall and Lynn Bari Lead Cast in Story of Famous Scouf Showing at the and again Tuesd thrilling story of Carson.” It was filmed against the spec- tacular backdrop that is Monument LValley in Kayenta, Arizona, 180 miles from the nearest railroad sta- tion. Directed by George B. Seitz the stellar cast of “Kit Carson’ includes Jon Hall, Lynn Bari, Dar Andrews, Harold Huber. It some in the Capitol will rontier toni be life the Kit Ward Bo and unwinds of the spectacul episodes life of the at Ame an adventurer who joined for wit! John C. Fremont to sur and map the shortest overland route to | california, in the days when travel | often meant fierce attacks from the | Indians and the merciless slaughter | of women and children. When Preducer Small decided on Kayenta as his location site, he sent his aides to consult | council of five elders who rule of the Navajo Nation they had been informed that n action - story r in building the cam; it and then workine as extras in the picture itself, they made the recommendation which as necessary before the superin- tendent from the United States In- dian Servicé could give his al for the picture to be graphed on the Navajo reservation - - - employment 1 photo- 'Luncheon Honors Mrs. Wm. Parke s. William Parke, who is leav for the south, was the t of honor at a luncheon given Mrs. John Brillhart at her home Twelfth Street today, . Beautiful wild roses decorated the table and an afternoon of brid followed luncheon Guests were the Mesdames A | Glover, V. R. Farrell, George Sund- borg, Wellinan Holbrook, W. | Chipperfield, Hawley Sterling, Har- old Smith, L. E. Iverson, Lynn For- rest, Alva Blackerby, Tom Gardner {E. M. Polley, the honer and the hostess. R BONDS HOSTS, t soon cn % guest of -herlegs are welded fo irt and become an integ- rai part of the washer. No bolts or rivets to loosen. The Togs will not become wobbly. Walded legs are only one of the many features that will olways make you glad {and the hosts. SMALL DINNER | Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Bond were | hosts at an informal dinner at their | ¢ | home in the Fosbee last Satu evening in honor of the birthdays , of Mrs. George Sundborg and Mr. Bond. | An evening of bridge followed ; dinner and Mr. George Sundborg won high honors. The guests included Mr. and Mrs George Sundborg, Mr. and M Warren Eveland, Mrs. J. Steele Culbertson, Mr. Kenneth Hilgedick, Ay ¢ € I — o pprov- | Mcunt F |8, F | huge The Dafly Alaska Emplre has the tions. | ~vapst naild riveylation of any Al- e MODE_No heat wave can keep that minx, Fashion, from having furs for summer wear, This mink cape created by Dein- Bacher has a smart double- banded “ruffle” at the hem. with the — Longest Day s Observed Midnizht beach parties, climbs to ind trips to many e enjoyed Saturday erying” the longest day ar. The Glacier Highwa >d by hundreds from early afternoon to ea 11 enjoying was very sther f 5 aut pl ning there the little ummer homes, not night many fires wer Sunday house c and it was Highway when outdoors T njoyed when the alsc kend and every 1e seemed t in the quiet w 5 were part were be sun empting edin rm hine. n Son of Brig. Gen. Buckner Honored and ex- "FLOWING GOLD" IS NOW FEATURE AT 20TH CENTURY Pat 0'Brien, Johnny Blake and Frances Farmer Starred in Movie love ¢ il he 20t fience he ftusti Hea « » Gold,” a lusty saga of iventure in the western ., made its local debut at 1 Cent hat 1 t of the O’'Brien, vely Frar talented triumve roles to the hilt, ng their performances to the ‘e iting tempo of plot and direction. O'Brien is seen as Hap O'Connor a capable eil foreman, while Ga ield is cast as Joh B e, young 10clast, friendle and alone in the world. He ha cidentally killed a man, and the ensuing ships endured have caused him to wear a perennial chip on his shoulder. He and O'Brien meet in a westers boom town, and despite occasional tlashes of temperament, become af- tracted to each other. When Hap meets with a serious drilling acci- fent, Johnny takes over as fore- man Additional trouble begins when the mg drifter and the gruff oil foreman fall in love with Linda Chalmers, played Frances Far- mer. But the show and gzet t ‘of the thriller which is on and again tomorrow T SIDEWALK BEING s John ne: I'bi lay thei see BUILT ON NINTH, City Street Department workmen under direction of Foreman Bert Lybeck today started work on istruction of a four-foot wooden sidewalk on West Ninth Street. The walk will extend 500 feet, from E Street almost to the Channel. The City has just completed re- newing stairways on Fourth Strect from Harris to Star Hill D ALBERT GLOVER BUYS "THE SPRUCE"” FROM JULIA WELLSANDT Albert, Glover has purchased “The Spruce” at 916 E. Street from Julia Well 1wt and will remodel the property. He will carry a first clas the to Claiborne Wi, 5tock of groceries and will also op- kner- of A facl N A Rafacl, C eshman ha plagie ip™ with t in the séhool CGen. and Mrs. chorage, at the cises San ademy, at t the Acad received xeellence in schol- 1ting of 97.56, high- He also received distinetive honor medal” for ving r ived the first monthly rating the greatest number of times, and permanent citation cord. Brig. Gen. By r is in command € of all Army | delicatessen. The opening announced later. Wellstandt is sailing south lerate a will be in San|and will enter the same business neer West competes in steady lure| lifornia. Young Buckner, D @ suburb of Seattle. eee LA PEROUSE STUDY IS PUBLISHED BY EDWARD W. ALLEN Edward W. Allen, widely known throughout Alaska for his interest in fisheries problems, has just publish- “bottom of{#d a bibliography on La Perouse, streems often shif ulders from their posi 'rench explorer who sailed the Alas- a coast and was the first white man to enter Lituya Bay. The Allen monograph is published Warper : In Hollywood TONIGHT and TUESDAY | | | By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, June 21 — Nice | contradiction department: On the | Fred Astaire-Rita Hayworth movie, lentitied” “You'll Never Get Ric [the camera crane is equipped i\vili\ while sidewall tires. This is another training camp, | picture, following “Buck Privates,”| | “Rookies on Parade,” “Caught in| !the Draft” et al. But it has a new| |angle: Astaire plays a Broad\vnyl dance maestro who is called to| | Uncle Sam. His theater companions | !can’t whip up a show without his| {puidance, so they take it to camp.| Watching Astaire and Hay-| worth rehearse, with a troupe of | comedy chorines prompted this bright thought, offered gratis to the national defense authorit get a Rita to sponsor every camp, and they can forget the draft. The girl has more of the old glam in a | rehearsal outfit than most of the stars when they face the cameras. film- He'll| DeMille's cogitations over ing of “Rurales” are over. make it after “Reap the Wild| Wind” (meaning next year prob-| ably) as one of the good-neighbor | movie gestures toward Mexico. . . .| The run on the South as al | movie locale continues, with “The| Yearling” just back from ]m'ntloni in Florida, and Irving Pichel going down to Georgia to investigate set-' tings for Vereen Bell's | “Swamp Water.” It's been a long run, from “The Birth of a Natlon” to “Gone With | the Wind,” both top money-mak-| ers. “Reap the Wild Wind” is a| Florida piece. Other recent Dixie! tales: “Virginia,” “Flame of New Orleans,” “Texas” “Kentucky,” “Maryland,” “The Lady from Lou- iciana,” “Shepherd of the Hills,” “Flight Command” and “I Want- ed Wings” (Pensacola, Randolph ‘and Kelv Fields), “Birth of the| | Blues,” “Tobacco Road,” “Kiss the Boys Goodbye.” Only the pio- story, | {to screen writers—and even some| of the westerns (“Virginia City,”| “Santa Fe Trail” “Arizona,” etc) have dwelt lengthily on the War | Between the States. . . . ! They tell it on Gregory Ratoff, | who sold many a movie story lidea to Zanuck by telling his talg personally with accent and ges- tures, Zanuck would hand the idea. over to Milt Gross, the writ-| er, for screen development. One day Gross turned in a script cap-, tioned thus: “Screenplay hy Milt Gross from a Remark by Gregory Ratoff.” Comics, real and alleged, are l L G JOHN RFIELD FRANCES FARMER 0’BRIEN x Beoch's famous story m—— Girls with the comedy flair, Lucille Ball and Ann bone star build-ups. Garbo's next is definitely a comedy in- stead of the serious ‘“Madame Curie.” Benny in “Charley’s Aunt,” Bob Hope in “Nothing But thé Truth” are—samples of how deep in the gag-bag Hollywood is reach- ing—old stuff that'’s never failed. -e First School For Cooks in JuneauReady Home Economist Here fo Start Three-Day Instruc- fion Starting, Tue;day authentic ELIZABETH LAKE Cenducted by Elizabeth Lake, na- iicnally knewn home economist, the first cooking school ever handled on a large scale in Juneau will begin at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon in the Coliveum Theatre when the ycunz homemaker will instruct Ju- neau women on vitamized electric cooking. Sponsored by the Parsons Electric Company, the three-day school is under' the auspices of the Westing- house Blectric Company and will run through™ Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Miss Lake arrived in Juneau frem Ketchikan yesterday on the north- bound steamer Barangf after spend- ing a week in Ketchikan with the school, It was announced that food cooked during the three two-hour | cake with honey frosting, 'COOKING SCHOOL 10 BE HELD FOR . FOUR DAYS HERE ?Demonsim—or— Announces Menus to Be Prepared { at Demonstrations | | | The following menus will be pre- | pared and cooked on the stage of | the Coliseum Theatre this week by Miss Betty Lake, home economist | for the Westinghouse Efectrio Com- Oven meal—Frosted fruit: cup, in- | dividual meat. loaves, buttered car- | rots, tomato surprise, steamed diced “)otflmes. apple roll, coffee. Oven baking—dJune delight cake with mile high icing. Ecohomy cooker—Pot roast with | summer vegetables. ? | Surface cooking—Rice and tuna ! luncheon dish, stuffed peppers, | chocolate, buttered peas. ' Refrigerator—Grape mousse. Wednesday, June 25 Oven meal—Chilled tomato juice, | honey ham slices, sweet potato | boats, green beans with little on- ions, pineapple nut bread, cream puffs, coffee. ! Oven baking — Foamy chocolate quick: ‘ pany. ‘ Tuesday, June 24 biscuits. ] Economy c¢oo0ker—Vegetable | luncheon with melted cheese. Broiling—Lamb chops, stuffed to- | mato halves, pineapple sticks. Surface cooking—Steamed fruit, Parisian potatoes, buttered cauli~ flower, mushroom medley. Refrigerator—Molded cheese sal- ad, cherry bisque. Thursday, June 26 Oven meal — Jellied consumme, Canadian bacon casserole, Boston brown bread, pineapplé meringues, | coffee. Economy cooker—Veal cutlets a la Swiss. Roaster dinner — Macaroni pa- poose, steamed asparagus, Dutch | cherry pudding, cherry sauce. 4 Surface cooking—Sausages with apples, ham with parsnips or sweet | potatoes, Hollendaise sauce. | Refrigerator — Banana Bavarian cream. | | | | 21 Friday, Miss Friday, On, the afternoon Lake will . demonstrat [ '.?J] BUY DEFENSE BONDS by the California Historical Society. schools will be atictioned off to the | you bought a G-E Washer. 4 ELELTRIL WASHERS 'ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER (0. PHONE 616 Juneau Dairies Pure Cream Pure Cream and Srawherries! America’s Most Delicious Dish For Delicious Nourishment JUNEAU DAIRIES MILK is tasty and nourishing in its natural state-—but sometimes there are ‘rebels’ among children and grownups who object to being served milk as a drink. To these rebels we recommend straw- berries with milk or cream as one milk toast is of the many ways to include milk in retioting 9l the diet. TRY IT TODAY. | JUNEAU DAIRIES, Inc. PHONE 638 Another Health Idea MILK TOAST Plain; simple, unpretentious — There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising filmy chiffon is pictured, center. NEW FABRICS TEMP The list of attractive and inexpensive fabrics i‘l endless in i tunity for girls to sew their own summer dresses, get smarter individuality and save considerable money. An unusual graduation dress at above right is made of eyelet embroidered cotton, with sum« mery, billowy sleeves. A one-plece town dress, that can be made in sleek, black satin, crisp pique or ts variety this season, T GIRLS TO SEW SUMMER CLOTHES | offering an oppors ‘The chic tailored frock at the left with its detachable pixie hood and fly front is perfect for swmmer sailing, country dawdling or just sitting on thg bech- having o field day in the currenti,)jjence and the proceeds will be search for "laughs. You can m‘;donated to the Bundles for Britain their names more frequently m‘(und. the new contract lists—Red Skel- ton, Rags Ragland (from bur- lesque via “Panama Hattle”), BUILDING PERMIT Betty Keane (from the stage into| A building permit has been is- the film “Yokel Boy”) and of sued to F. A. J. Gallwas for alter- | course Abbott and Costello, all!ing aid enlarging-his residence. af joining the attack on your funny|723 10th Street abt a cost of $1,000. DURRIRI S 5 1 ing. e ——— MRS, OSWALD. LEAVING. - Mrs. Peter Oswald is ledving about July 1 to spend the summer: vaea-' tion in the States. She piins'to visit her brother in Seattle and a sister in San Franeisco during -hep-visit in the South. bl | For Your lJne : bed ready at a moment's nofice. are assured of COMFORT and-SERVICE. 7 ted GUESTS With a BILTWELL SOFA BED in your home there is noneedfo worry about ,"Where will they sleep?” You have a comfortable The roomy bedding compartment easily holds all the necessary bed clothes.. The patented “SENG” construction used exclusively in all ln.rwm.m BEDS has been proven the most:satisfactory construction ever inslulledsg ou Now on Display in @ Wide Variety of Styles and Colors. Priced from $59.75

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