The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 2, 1929, Page 6

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“The | Secrel By NATALIE SU Pond” THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, DEC. 2, 1929. of Mohawk 'MNER LINCOLN [ PSS SR | rove justifiable | his brows, hi beneath his feces L of her ¢ e heart- yicon 'm was | helr. Pogey « law pro- tall and hiand murder Qiah Evar in and paced up bot and teli i limaxed by ie and, | ing I me part when hr‘ broke into the lodge the night. Jim shows deep in- Obadiah POLLY AND HE WEAKNESS, UNK! I ACC KICKED HIM IN THE HE SORT OF A A CHILLES, DOUGLAS NE DISCOVERED KID COCOA'S R PALS HERE ARE YOUR HON. \DENTLY RIGHTO! I DONT | B HEAVIEST ) | WANNA BUST MY MOD! BOOTS, TOE ON THAT o | | SR ‘ TARBABY/ © 1922, Newspaper Feator Grest Brialn igncs reservod. Clifford Wayha, and M AIR‘!VAYS FOLDER Zynda RECEIVED HERE; [ | Ta AT THE HOTELS Goldberg. N N NN ~ L. S e QFESERRET //-2- hos |of | an Alaska marine view with a the foreground. | totem pole in the’ foreground, tow- |of all, perhaps is the symbolic trade ering snowcapped mountains in the |[mark of the Airways—a Thunder | Most interesting terest and at Obadizh’s sugge g o Gastinean - g ? » e 5 " b gl a innocer I should have | Charles A. LaHar, Mr. and Mrs. distance and a Lockheed monoplan: \erd with outstretched wings and :::'l,:‘::t:s.l‘:i:d an attor “;\v“ nr ’l‘(‘ m“wl S Mr. and Mrs. A. Brown, A. M.|C. S. Gauffin, and F. J. Fryer. | ATTRACT[VE ONE‘SOQT\X:AG overhead. L |the letters A. W. A. in a circle. ; . B haste. “Judging from what Ed let| NEWS i gloslg JLeSt B;yd,% Id;:m’!‘. f:rr;n« e R e s | [ Ix:)slde (l];m cover 1;} a m:p dg- The folder invites the public to Pall 1a ioht | 3 » J. E. es, F. E. o An aitractive 1old hic] vas | scribi e routes flows y e | “ ska.” ' CF A\‘FCP‘“’;‘I\' (l*iln\(* I‘”"\\%;)\Gl" ‘]‘:Tvl)t]*:!;ryvml Obadiah 1mn‘1 | Wacker, Andrew Johnson, C. V. Bib Front.ed. Step-lns y |re “““3‘ ‘S*llt‘da';;r U":L‘ :;33\1‘(1: ];clzkinfl?’;g 0; the -'\~~'k3-\V!}1$h!yng:3¥1§ TS A_‘”}W Y 0! | As (hlo gx.'a\,"m sped :_1(,,:" the ing forward in his eagerness. »(m ‘Z:;‘:“u (;.Vl P. H(‘-rg;:tafl.“ Xz;m:l;;l Elimirate Brassieres wa: and which is | Airways, together With scenic vi | BISHOP NEW YORKE Milton road on iis trip to Litch- on.” Bowman C“‘ . M:;'sv;e Ll B R Spion. Al |08 (e Moy WS i S0 Word bas been received f fleld Obadiah Evans waved to Jim Ed hinted that Sundown might \FIND BDDY OF Kmus‘m' T'immL\s SCD:*: 3 L(:l:i' amethyst colored lingerie are the ! ravel agencies through-4 One photo 1 shows the sca Bl & ‘;{ PR hror‘n sitting behind the wheel. make it unpleasant for Miss Pres- [Smer o) 6 e H)a":sl» hades for dance ensembles. 1t the E‘D\l“tf)v is now on exhibi- }p;ane‘Juneup th Anscel }‘»‘klhml‘l”n‘_‘}g o Sork HE Vl:! i SUWpill her up with gas” he bel- |cott.” bcuckl L. B‘ Ct;rnolius Gé" as Step-ins with bib frogts are tion in the folder rack in the G standing oh the pontoon, drawn | l' [‘l A e > ik ga-| A loud exclamation from O'lmdmh ey - e T » George B.| .o or less replacing brassiere and Hotel and is the subject of [up on the ways at the hangar in |ShOFtly, and is expected to arrive lowed, using his hands for ega l Grigsby, F. Nelson, F. R. Haven, y hi ith mt favorable com t 1| Juneau. Anothcr view taken near in Juneau for Christmas. » o fai o 1 i l'ulm\n‘" he echoed Vhat in | = ' | client t y. , gives e pr e flg(};;'ad;:]:m“{‘i Bed o tafl “m;“ did he mean?” | ifi;h“;:rsBog:;“gg“‘;gmgw{" MI: Racine lacé in sunburn shades is | cover illustration, reproduced | tourist some idea of what the tops MOOSE ATTENTION light until it disappeared behind a| “That Sundown might \i'(‘l‘nl)\ Kask an}j Satharing MCI:augillill still the general favorite but deep|irom a posu?r design by Lloyd (1_f the Alaska Ccast Range looks Meotihé ‘tofliantlat 8 & ¢urve in the road and ther to drive Miss Prescott away % Aikkkan cream shadow lace is newer with|Hughes, is printed in three colors |like from the air; a third is a 4 $ FRRELLEE S I Ch BPRO- Slow is house s terrorizing he went on ("nso \ P voile sets. d “depicts the artist’s conception |cier scene, with s ial entertainment and lunch after lowly back to his house Pas! errorizing John Plock, Victor Ko meeung —adv. by the front d he continued somewhat startled by Obadiah's| Mrs, Katherine an In-| ————e—ar a RSENERIE C, SER A s b T e POk e e #round to the rear porch, and mad agitation. “Then the half- |dian woman of Juneau, was found 4 & 2 | Rimself comfortable in his favorilt d could continue to live onidead on the beach above Douglas | 2 e - { 8hair, propping his feet up on the Blind Man's Bluff unmolested.” about 2:30 Sunday afternoon by | i porch railing Ed feared Sundown,” Chase said |R. McHamilten, second hand dealer | | | "Obadiah’s head was nodding his chest as he dozed off every nov and then, when the knock front door came down on w én panel with a resounding k: He went to the door. “Well, well, Mr. Chase! Come in-t & » side,” and Obadiah held the door Sundown when he visited Yew open. | Lodge last nigh.?” Chase asked Obadiah busied himself in light-| “It might be. But if Stanton ing the student lamp on one of the so afraid, I'm thirling the| that his guest' drew up anoth- tables and, seeing had chosen a chair, er close at hand |go unless he' was armed. Was he?” “The months roll away,” he said,| “I can't say for sure.” with a faint sigh. “It hardly scems| Chase drew a leather holster A year since we've met.” m his pocket and handed it to “Eight months to be exact,” re- Cbadiah. turned the other. This was by his bed—empty.” “Pimes have changed; Jim's| Obadiah turned the holster over patk and Herbert Prescott's gone.” and read the two initials, printed Obadiah shifted about in his seat *¥ou'll miss Prescott.” I re: don't emphasis. “Why but I heard Yam s with his name down by ever I saw deadly terror in countenance, it stamped Ed’s face when I ran up to him.” Do you suppose Ed was was ’n-wl\l\rrl\nml of Blind Man’s Bluff in- faded ink on the reverse side: e | Mh critically examined the holster; Aguila said it was Stanton’s. “Very much,” agreed Chase, “In-) tellectually, Prescott was a delight- ful companion and his hospitality wu unbounded. Do you see much 61 his niece, Miss Prescott?” “Not so ‘much as I calculate to.” iah looked across at the bot-' ftl’:‘: inquiringly. “Why?" “"gnoring the question, P’&hed his chair closer. ‘T've just come from Litehfield, | town's agog over the killing of | r Stanton.” Chase 1 imagine so,” Obadiah com-| mented. “Poor girl, she’s in for clerk at Phelps’ Tavern said Prescott had signed a paper essing she shot Ed—" “Sure, taking him for a burglar,” in’Obadiah, unceremoniously. jow, what in heck was Stanton ig(hfi at Yew Lodge at two o'clock ' ‘the morning and where'd he ¢ome from?” “éMgtone Tower,” answered Chase| and, added: “Ed came late yester fl, afternoon and asked if I'd put filin up for a time.” “lHe stopped here first,” admitted Obadiah, as Chase paused. “But I Weuldn't take him in. Well, when you last see him?” di¥around 10 o'clock, when we| both went to bed.” i U0dEq fell asleep first, for I heard | him snoring, then I, too, dropped | s when I awoke he was gone.” the mare?” “ it Ed had left for an early | mofning ride, as his things were| about the tower, and mve the matter a second . “I took the car and -to Litchfield by way of Tyler There I heard of his death , 80, drove over to see you." balted abruptly before the o % |ing the edges of the inson, Telephone 4503, “Humph! Don't tell us ‘cept the belt buckle’s torn looze,” he ccemmented thoughtfully. A ecent rip, I'm thinking,” examin- leather. “Well, it like that which left the holster much he couldn’t w cxplains why behind.” Rising, e h Obadiah crossed to a ihigh-boy and pulled open a top drawer. From among the fishing tackle and odds and ends of hunt- ing articles there, he extracted an- ther leather holster—empty like- wise! With a movement 50 swift that ,Chase failed to see the second hol- ster, Obadiah had thrust it back and closed the drawer. “Stanton’s holster is the shape used for an automatic pistol and not a revolver,” the farmer con- itinued, balancing the piece of leath- er in his fingers. “Sundown’s blind “At night.” The words slipped from Chase involuntarily. The eyes of the two men crossed. The scraping of on the bare floor it out of the wa; in the sudden si- Obadiah’s chair as he pushed ounded loudly lence. “Let’s go"—and taking the oth- consent for granted, Obadiah ppeared through the hall door. “Where?” questioned Chase, fol- lowing rapidly after him. “To see Sundown.” (Copyright, D. Appleton and Co.) cr di: Sundown, the blind Indian whose shadow haunts Yew Lodge, receives callers in to- morrow’s installment. e e PICTURES FOR CHRISTMAS Lessons in penecil sketching and water colors. Mrs. Walter H. Rob- place he would | {of Juneau aming | way to the Dbrook gty 1,“,\“ 2 d".\'}smnmlunu which upon investigation On i proved to be the body of a woman. Lunting |1as, notifying Deputy U. S. Marsk | ! | i { | | | been {o'clock last evening. |for the past month, removed to Ju- The latter was on his Douglas in a skiff and row- along close to shore noticed He immediately continued to Doug W. E. Feero, who with City Mar- shal Bliss left to investigate and} bring the body to town. 1 g Dressed in a heavy plush coat and rubber boots, the dead woman | may have fallen into the bay uml drowned, and been washed up b\‘ ¢ the tide, it was thought. She has | missing since last Thursd; from the home of Jack Hen where she was housekeeper. . The deceased is a daughter of Mrs. James Hollywood of Sitka. She was 46 years old. An inquest is to be o'clock this afternoon, - &llw\\fl-‘l( ARRIVES With but a few tons of freight for local merchants, Queen docked here from the South at 5:30 | | held at in I)uugl;h‘. t the - e — BRIDGE PARTY Misses Lily Kromquist and | Cecile Cashen entertained Satur- | day evening with three tables of | bridge at the Kromgquist home, | Prizes for high scores were won by Mi: Lucile Pepoon and Harold | Gallwas. Consolations went Lo‘ Miss Mamie Feusi and M) ron King. - i RET[‘RNb TO JL'VEQU H. N. Fulbright, a local resident The neau last Saturday. B DOU GLA\ P.-T. A. TO MEET TUESDAY NlGHT' The regular Decembér meeting!of the Douglas Parent-Teacher Asso- ciation will be held tomorrow night in the High Sthool. An interest- ing program has been arranged and ! will be announced tomorrow. B o Hoover Leads Curious i Merry Race on Sundays | WASHINGTON, Dec, 2. — Presi- | dent Hoover is proving an elusive quarry for those who wait around the White House Sunday mornings in order to follow him to church. While usually attending the little Quaker meeting house, the Presi- dent sometimes alters his program. | Then the string of cars which often follows in the wake of the presiden- tial party dashes madly ‘along in an effort to keep up when it is found it is headed in a ‘new di- rection. Traffic officers wave the Presi- dent's party ahead, but the luckless | followers are held back until 'often they lose the trail entirely. Twice of late the President has chosen new places of worship. Once it was a Sunday sehool in Maryland where he had gone on a week-end fishing trip. * Another time it was the historic old Presbyterian church which Abraham Lincoln used to attend. - HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. C. L. Huise entered the hos- pital Sunday evening and was op- erated on for appendicitis this morning. Henry Messerschmidt entered the hospital Satur®hy to be treated for an attack of influenza. Robert Turner, who entered the hospital on November 10, was dis- charged at noon Sunday. J.'D. Manuel, of the Unalga, who entered the hospital in October, was discharged from the hospital No- vember 30. J. Doneschel, admitted November 22, left the hospital yesterday morn- adv. ‘lng Prejudice Thrives Where Ignorance Hives! | AN ANCIENT PREJUDICE | HAS BEEN REMOVED | AMERICAN INTELLIGENCE beckons all to cultivate knowledge. intolerance and poverty wither as schools grow in this great lariid of opportunity. “toasting did it”— Gone is that ancient pre]udlce agamst clgarettes—Progress has been made. We removed the prejudice against cigarettes when we removed harmful carrosive ACRIDS (pungent irri- tants) . from the tobaccos. \ ARS ago, when c:garettes were made without the aid of modern science, there ongmatad that ancient prejudice against all cigarettes. That criticism is no longer justified, LUCKY STRIKE, the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the choicest tobacco, properly aged and skillfully blended—“It's Toasted.” FT“TOASTING,” the most modern step in cigarette manufacture, removes from LUCKY STRIKE harmful irritants which are pres- ent in cigarettes manufactured in the old-fashioned way. Everyone 'knows that heat purifies, and so “TOASTING”-- LUCKY STRIKE'S extra secret procéss — removes harmful cor- rosive ACRIDS (pungent irritants) from LUCKIES which in the old-fashioned manufacture of cigarettes cause throat irritation and coughing. Thus “TOASTING” has destroyed that ancient preju- dice against cigaretté smoking by men and by women. It's No Throat lmtatlon-y_ Cough. Tyranny, “It’s Toasted”’—the phrase that describes the extra “toasting” process applied in the manu- facture of Lucky Strike Cigarettes. The finest tobaccos—the Cream of the Crop—are scien- tifically subjected to penetrating heat at mini- mum, 260°—maximum, 300°, Fahrenheit. The exact, expert regulation of such high tempera- tures removes impurities. More than a slogany “It’s Toasted” is recognized by millions as the most modern step in cigarette manufacture. TUNE IN—The Lucky Strike Duu-Ordnn.n. -uysuturd;y ni;ht. over a coast-to-coast network of the N.B.C. { i © 1929, The American Tobacco Co,, Mfre: '+~ i & e

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