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gmeumm sprang up THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, NOV, 11, 1929 \WOT'5 THE LSE OF KIDDIN' YERSELF ¢ LONS AS HE TIPS CANT KICK, A 145 POUNDER || THE SCALES AT || |JIGGERED' | [ SIMPLE, LINK:! S A HEAVY- (| |85, THE BOXIN | | [WOT TH-? WEIGHT, ASH. | | coMMISSION HOW TH-2 [TwWAL, ILL BE TS PUFFICKLY SHOW THE GENTLEMAN OUR LjL SECRETL ‘COCOA’, OLE KID! THE LUXUR SHRUP S B HA * SYNOPSIS: Barbara dismisses | Henderson immediately upon | her uncle’s revelation that Hen- derson has been borrowing mon- ey, intending to repay it from Barbara’s fortune after he had married her. Obsesced by a d perate longing to see Ray a she @rifts into the habit of oc- eupying a secluded table in the Golden: Dollar. When she sees Rita Gllmore for the first time | ghe is amazed because Rita is not the sort of girl Barbara ex- pected, and Barbara reluctant- Iy admits to herself than Ray and Rita may be in love with each other. A friendly waiter | unknowingly supplies the an- swer to Barbara's question when | He tells her that Rita has been an important factor in the suc- cess of Ray’s tunes. Chapter 37 ABOUT A DIVORCE . /To Barbara came the sudden re: alization that, unlike herself, R was evidently interested in Ray a: & musician as well as a man. Prob- ably she inspired him, even assisted him at times! 4 As hér mind swept back over the past she recalled, with painful vivid- néss, many times when Ray had' pleaded with her to take some| iaterest in his work. Invariably ghe had treated it jestingly, e | slightingly. What was it Ray had #aid to Bill Foster that night at| the Savoy? “Barbara isn't interested in my | composing, Bill.” | ¥t had been true. She had not @btempted to inter herself in it In, fact, she had even resented it ous as she had been of any thing that tock Ray’'s attention from herself. | ¢/8itting there, absent mindedly) eliasing a piece of lobster around | with her fork, it occurred to her that, even while she had loved| Ray, she had failed hopelessly to! n—to make Ra understand him. Her love for him had been- fatally tainted with sel- fishness. wBhe had tried to remake him into what she had wanted him to be, in- stead of accepting him as he was, with ajl his dreams and ambitions, | and his absurd—as she saw it—rev- erence for jazz. n/Through her own egotism she hed Iost him. Had she thrown perself heart and soul into his work then, she suddenly became con- winced, this—this pending divorce need never have happened. #A prey to these thoughts, strange and disturbing, emanating from a LK uuu;g ' ,eAJQJE‘ had too much money and the young Italian who had none. Forgetting his place, one night, as he set knives and her: e ees always alone. Has she not ze lover, ze swee Parbara smiled crookedly. “She had once, Ricardo. She hasn't any more.” He has perhaps gone away—to anozer countree?” She shook her head. No, he’s right here in New York, as absurd, but she seemed to derive a queer sort of comfort from talking of her love to this sympa- thetic young waiter. “But, madame does not see him?” “She sees him, Ricardo, but she doesn't speak to him.” He sighed. “It ees sad. I, too, know ze un- happiness of being separated from , Ricardo . . . " ara_found elf looking at him with new eyes. So Ricardo, 109, had loved! She and this waiter— {poles apart socially, yet each with the same capacity for suffering when an affair of the heart had gone ay Her ey softened as she looked at him. “Tell me, Ricardo.” He fidgeted with the napkin over his arm. “It is ze girl'J '2fL behind me in Italy. She promise me to wait until I haf money to send for her. At first she write me, every few | days, but now, it ees sometime zat have not heard . . He shrugged his shoulders in 2 | half-humorous, half-desolate man- ner. In time Barbara came to know Ray’s own compositions at the end decision to divorce him. The note, brief and to the point, was the result of what she had heard that night at the club. Yet the motive that had dictated her writing was not the outcome of jealousy or pique. Perhaps it was the most unselfish thing Barbara had ever done. She had wriiten it for Ray's sake so that, should he sincerely love this girl, whose interests seemed identical with his own, he would he able to marry her. She crept out in the wee hours of the morning and posted the let- ter herself. Dawn, she was afraid, might bring once again a desire to postpone the issue. All the next day she went about with a dead feeling inside her. That night she refused to allow herself even the consolation of an hour at the Golden Dollar club. That phase of her life, she told herself, was onded forever. (Copyright, Dial Press) Rita and Ray reach an un- derstanding in tomorrow’s chap- ter, e, 600D PROGRESS ON EATON MINE, STATES STAPLER Results of Development| “Quite Satisfactory” on Eaton Property After a season's development work on the Eaton property on the| Tulsequah River, the United East- ern camp was closed down ‘last week for the winter and the crew [disbanded, it was made known to- day by J. B. Stapler, engineer in charge. The results he said, “were of the first few bars. In time, too, she came, unconsciously, to wait for them. Gradually her attitude to- y free to marry Rita Gilmore! wards his music changed. Its rhythm, its undeniable charm laid hold of her. Finally she had to admit to her- self that her former sense of dis- taste for his work had given place to one of pride in his artistic abil- quite satisfactory.” The development program will be continued next season, Mr. Stapler said. Work will start as early as possible and will be car- ried forward on about the same scale as this season. A ctew of 45 men will be employed at the camp. During the past sedson, 2,000 feet of underground development work was completed. In addition, 4,000 feet of diamond drill holes were sunk. Some additions will be made to the United Eastern’s permanent camp next year. One of the im- provements to be made will be the construction of a dry house for the miners, which was started late this Fall. Mr. Stapler expects there will be considerable activity in the Taku district next season. A six-mile road will be constructed from Eatofi to the United Eastern and Alaska Junéau camps, some 30 men being employed on this work. A consid- erable influx of prospectors is fore- cast, being done now. Winter condi- tions are not favorable for exten- sive prospecting as snow handicaps movements in the hills. Only one There is very little prospecting|fied City (Lawrence); KFI, Los An-’ TIDE LANDS nF |geles; WTMJ, Milwaukee; WJZ, New York; WKY, Okiahoma City; | KDKA, Pittsburgh; KGW, Port- TEHRIT“RY ARE |land; KHAM, . Rochester; KWK, | . iSt. Louis; KSTP, St. Paul-Min- | | neapolis; KSL, Salt Lake City; | WOAI, San Antonio; KGO, San NUT ALIENABLE Francisco-Oakland; KOMO, Seat- tle; KHQ, Spokane; WBZ, Sprinc- field; KVOO, Tulsa. Even Though in Use, Title P Remains Vested in Fed- AT THE HOTELS eral Government Gastineau Charles A. Hawthorne, Portland; | By CLIFF STERRETT = QrE SterRrETL /0-/4- {bombings as a gesture of the “re- |ministrator of the Memphis Dis- l:elzed from rum runners. | RUM RUNNERS - MAKE THREATS Two Motor Boats of En- forcement Officials Are Bombed and Sunk MEMPHIS, Tenn, Nov. 11.—Two motorboats, operated by Federal Prohibition Enforcement Agents against rum runners, were bombed and sunk in the Wolf River har- bor early today. Four privately owned boats, moored nearby, were damaged. Two charges of dynamite were tossed from a passing motorboat. This boat escaped under cover of a fog. Government agents regard the newal of warfare against Pruhlbi»\ tion and law enforcement.” Finis E. Wilson, Prohibition Ad- trict, immediately began prepara- tions for intensive enforcement ac- tivities. No one was aboard the boats when they were bombed and sunk.‘ One house boat, occupied by | Frank Duskny and wife, was slight- | ly damaged, but the occupants only | suffer from the shock and neither | were hurt. One of the boats sunk was a 30-foot cruiser and the other was | a smaller craft. Both had been| — e | LET Almquist Press your Suit.| We call and deliver. Phone 528. —adv. | —v———— Old papers f{»r saze at The Em- pire office. Tide lands in Alaska, eveni lhough.E_' i JA';‘d"S‘mv 1;05 Angeles; Ed- occupled, remain the property uf;War o Pz: Brevick, Den-| the Unitéd States and subject to|Ye'; Mrs. Jean-Larsen, Jack Ellis| Federal authority, declared Judge and family; B. G. Douglas, John | E. Coke Hill, in a decision recently | F¥ice; Edward Carlson, Emil Ny- reached here in the case of the|™a%: Mrs. J. Modes and son. United States against Jennie Lynch, e Ketchikan Indian. Mrs. Rennan, Juneau; Mr. nnd‘ The actlon was broiight Oc- Mrs. William B. Read, Philadelphia; tober, 1924, by then United JStates|Acncs Barnes, Mons Anderson, Mrs. District Attorney A. G. Shobp, to| Charles Shramm. enjoin the erection of permanent o i structures that would affect pavi-| L Ennis, Kake, gation. Judge Hill heard the case November 19, 1928, and his decis- ion, handed down on October 16JJAMESON HERE F OR last, said hé was of the' opinion BRIEF VISIT W[TH that the permanent structures which defendants admit they pan| MOTHER AND SISTER to place on the tide lands of Ton- | gass Narrows, and which they ad-! E. C. Jameson, former local news- | mit are not affirmatively author- paper man and now on the Detroit, ized by Congress, will be unlaw- Mich., News, arrived last night fora ful, and that the defendants should visit with his mother Mrs. 8. E. be enjoined from erecting them,” |Jameson and sister and brother in Judge James Wickersham, repre- |law Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Faulkner. senting the defendant,«claimed the| This is his first visit to Juneau in right, under the Indian claims law.}abuuh seven years. He expects to to the land involved and asserted ' remain a week or ten days. Mr. she could not be disturbed in her!Jameson, who was on the news use of it. While Judge Hill could |desk of The Empire at one time, not find from the evidence that'later was editor of the Anchorage she was in position to take advan-|Times. He has been chief copy tage of the ordinary provisions of |reader on the Detroit News for the Indian claims statutes, he' de- | sometime. cided as a matter of fact that) o~ Congress at no time had made it} F——"rrrr""" """""" possible for Indians or anyoné else to claim paramout title to' tide, lands, title of which in fee simple, he declared remain vested in the Federal government in trust for future State that may be created out of the Territory of Alaska. | Referring to a proviso of the Act of Congress of May: 17, 1884, which, said that “Indians or other persons <. . shall not be disturbed in the possession of any lands actually in thelr use or occupation or now claimed by them, but the terms under which such person may ac- quire title to such lands is re- served for future legislation by Congress,” Judge Hill said that this at mobst was a prohibition against “gelling to one private person the land another private person is oc- { , ctipying. . These provisions in no case grant the occupant any right as against future legislation of the United States.” | The Lynch case is the first of its kind affectipg use of tide lands by persons where such use or occupa- tion was opposed by the Govern- ment. Federal authorities here said the deeision of Judge Hill clari-, d the whole matter and was of H.S. 7 ‘material value. - —————— or two prospecting outfits' are still in the. field, it was said. Mr. Stapler will leave tonight on the steamer Princess Mary enroute t Rhis' home in Los Angeles. ity. Some people at a neighboring ‘able were applauding at the con- clusion of a number of Ray’s. Bar- bara overheard one of them remark: “He's a genius, that saxophone fellow. I hear the best tunes we have been dancing to tonight are his own work. he is?” soul rudely shocked to life, Barbara reached blindly for her cloak. With- eut glancing again in the direction of° the orchestra, she paid her check and passed out into the street. /'¥et she was back at the Golden Dollar club the following night and for many nights afterward. She wiais unable to stay. away. -So sim- ple it became to slip into the little Booth, secure from prying eyes, #ihere, by the hour, she could see Ray and watch his every move- ment. At times it was a torture, at times a delight. % i ‘Always she sat in the same place, it was a table few seemed _§5 fancy. Invariably she was wait- ed by the same smiling youth , she learnt to call him. several nights a strange sort between - upon Lowther—my husband.” The ed. wanted to acknowledge it? And Barbara at that moment was filled with a sudden desire to get up and shout back, “Yes, he's Ray D words on the tip of her tongue, she stopped herself, amaz- Could it actually be that she ARGENTINIAN BOSS KILLED Bitter Foe of President*% Do you know who| Jygooven Shot to Death at Political Meeting meeting last night. ‘Twenty-one persons were sent to She knew that such was the case. |pqanitals, wou::ed in the flurry of But, with the realization, came alpring which accompanied - the crushing sense of the futility of ac- |ghooting of Dr. Rencinas. knowledging this, now. the nearby table. “I hear the fellow is leaving the orchestra next week. Tt is believed there are many They were still talking of Ray BtImore casualties which have not been reported. ten the score for this new revie,iefhas, and the Chief of Police. ‘The Knave of Jazz.’ steppin’ in the same show.” : That same night, Barbara wrote|rested. All but 15 have been re- _two, between the girl Whol|to Ray acquainting him with her [leased. A fellow 1| 'A military guard has begn thrown know in the cast tells me that the|abolt the city and patrolling the cute dark girl who danced a few |principal streets. minutes ago is to do some high |outbreaks will occur, ra More than 200 persons MENDOZA, Argentina, Nov. 11.—{things. r. Carlos Washington Rencinas,| In tonight's story Andy Sanella political “boss” of fhis city, and 2 bitter foe of President Irogoyen, wds_ assassinated during & political /s Among the gravely wounded are He’s writ- [Paul Lenoininas, cousin of Dr. Ren- It is feared new BROADGAST ON TRY Eand W Su;per Service Collars 3 for $1.00 The Clothing Man THIS EVENING fT: PAUL, Minn, Nov. 11.—An ‘ammuhition train which develops asthma, neuralgia and paralysis just as 1t gets within range of the enemy’s guns is the beginning of considerable excitement on a cer- tai Freneh railway around which Empire Builders' Armistfce night is woven. might be expected, the Old! jTimer, —although somewhat over| age, just naturally talked his way into the service and; of course, bobs us right in the middle of d orchestra are all “over " entertaining doughboys be- ) fighting, as is also Bob Mac- Ginisey, the three-part harmony whistler. « It’s a wartime railway story, dedi- 'u}éd ‘by the Great Northern to the railways outfits which manned French lines during the war, _The program will be broadcast from 10:30 to 11 o'clock Eastern| Standard time; 9:30 to 10 o'clock, Central Standard time; 8:30 to 9 o'clock, Mountain time; and 7:30 to 8 o'clock, Pacific Coast time, over the following stations: - WBZA, Botson; KYW, Chicago; bear beautiful Sel and friends. ¢ ° These att: reasonable pri Send a card—even ing a gift. %% The senti will strike of their recipiénts. By o , Houston; WREN, Kansas\ § 2 -~ WEBC, Duluth-Superior; R b St i P Rememb;é Your i‘riends On Christriaé Day With An Atfig"’étive Card We have high de Christmas cards that itiments for your relatives cards are for sale at very ., The variety—many-of 'them altogether unusual. are infinite in if you are also send- L7, e ’f:éxpressed on these cards a Mfli“ chord in the hearts . 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