The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 1, 1930, Page 6

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UESTION #HONOR by Ruth Cross SYNOPSIS: Resigned to her | | down her m:—‘r.; decrce that she shall ' a rich husband, Anne |ably across her knee. anely ramble in the mountains ne mc®ts a man whose ference humiliates her, don, Auntie—" The question B Gilics the strang caustically. Anne considered| péctor partner, Sheb, | thoughtfully for some moments, and ric character, that che will then, cove: a yawn with the 83, his admonition to leave |Dack of he “No—no, not if fhe younger man alonc, At the |You mean about Leon Morse. I « HAPPY NEW YEAR - bdve Moree i disturbed when |know exac how he must bel =S CT_!FF STerrRET) A | handled—if at al . €190, i Puas v, o, Gt e A e he learns Anne ha regardea |handled—if 1 o - warnings about walking | Her aunt grunted cryptically. - g e = Mbne and an frrigation com- | ‘“Just you leave him to me, \ ' priately celebrated here last evening| Following the cards refreshments Phuy has apparently blocked |Auntie the girl went om, clasp-| -y t raterr er of Eagles|were served and then dancing filled his attempts to obtain a right |ing her hands behind her head. Ty DO UGLA 5 a remainder of the of way for his railroad. |have been studying this man game rs—Leon Mo at he doesn't have Chapter 3 othing t A STUDENT OF MEN work, smoothed it implac- ; “Anne,” she said in a quiet, dc-‘ Imot, New York society beau- ‘C(,)n\tl mellow tone, “are you 'y be(-crnu the guest of Leon |quite mad? cad magnate, at his | The girl roused with a start 'a mountain lodge. On a |from her reverie. “I beg your par- was repeated—more | THEORY IS to conquer first—a railroad through | JRP—— THE DAILY ALASKA lVlPlRE WLDNbDAY JAN nel 92D, POI l Y AND HER P: \L\ ——e iy wWAS THAT A KNOCK AT OUR DOOR, Y/THINK ? DONT SETTHERE, LIKE A BUMP /| A LOG! their annual New Year Jollifi- | | | cation party. i | NEWS ying which was first in oceupied ard Dl rder of entertainment | | | ¢ doniia : T st part of the eve t- A door opened and Mrs. Wilmot, |‘h¢ r‘“;’f“ YT i ."1,“ N 8:30 o'clock and lasting until in the great living room ane o R FOL LB 1 110:30 o'clock There were thirteen | kllnced up. mean anything to him if he hadn't | | NEW YEAR FROLIC bios of i Hilew) ‘Anne!” Mrs. Wilmot cried, and I :"S‘ju;‘p“]‘( ‘:‘:uf’]‘i”p" “(fr,“k '\“'i]“'"l . — won by Mr n and John, » from s N eSS thless llow a- | \ ¥ g quavering nasel tone carried o7 | William Glecn, President] he passing of the old year and |Rendier, consolations by Mrs. John horror she felt at the sight her . | s r W 3 8 co- | Fe Of Amenmn Labor ‘v 1e it of the new, was appro- 'Fe nlece presented “If T submit tamely to his domi- 4nne, tired, blousy, with wind-|neering, he'll lose i plown hair, a sun-burned unpow-|Where most women fa Hered nose, was hardly recognizable [realize the necessity of appe ling she leaned against the door |0 a man’s imagination!” z:’nme. Her high boots were spat- “Anne, don't be coar eH8d with mud and her skirt and| “My dear Auntie—" the younger \chdn lifted her eyebrows An\us(‘(l her mouth sweater disheveled “'She straightened with a jerk at |1y twisted - in si and Dale Fleek. Makes Statement By WILLIAM GREEN (President American Federation of | Labor) The outstanding feature of nm r 1929 was the general acce ])l- K ance of the principles long m 2 Her aunt’s exclamation and started ‘c. it 1 didn't_put ‘(hmg? Into |tained by the American Federation Wishes You All a Happy New Year yemly towards the stairs ordinary pleblan words mow and|,f rapor — that acute unemploy- 5 “Anne, where have you been?” then, how uld we ever under-|,.nt could be eliminated and thal; 2 — - Q‘Ae older woman asked. stand one another at all? I think {ho higher the wages the greater | Anne let herself back limply |it's’ pretty fortunate that one of |the prosperity. | T()\””r @inst the balustrade. “I've merely (us knows how to call a spade a| pdded to this was the remark- et Peen taking a walk, Auntie,” she re- (spade. And so far as Leon Morse |aple increase in the number of em- pfled in her best offhand tone. |is concerned the best thing you ployers and others who believe V4% walk—!" her aunt echoed.|can do is to trust m Ithat the five-day, 40-hour week is “Por heaven's sake, take yourself| Her aunt’s throaty murmur |an absolute necessity to the future| s out' of sight!” packed with meaning. “That's of our country. in what I've been doing these ye trusting you—and this is all comes of But it was too late. ~Morse and Dcuglns came out of the study Forse already had caught sight of t _Aunt Emily” .down her knitting and spoke to her niece who reclined on the chaise longue. “Anne, are you Apne, and he came up quickly,| frowning with intense disapproval | @8 he took in her sorry plight.| Pouglas lingered a little behind bim, smiling. #q thought I—asked you not to go into the mountains alone,” Morse n, controlling his anger with Anne nodded. “I believe you * @la’. she confirmed, in her most in- | £angequential manner. “There are still a few wild ani- ,” Morse went on, qwas, just <telling your aunt, the country is overrun with the gation company's workmen and | own—" ne was watching him steadily, 'uely, Twin devils of perver- y and reckless mirth looked out ‘pf er eyes. h,” she murmured with the rest suggestion of an upward It to her head, _animals or the men either. Be- orders yet!” fth ‘a light laugh, she turned “went up the stairs, leaving a Bl of muddy footprints behind Wilmot gasped—almost au- A hushed silence ensued ‘the sidelines, watched his em- ér's angry crimson face, and ‘woman. “n e Tiienty minutes later, a vastly }-T ent Anne emerged from the "_l'.u n and ivory bathroom which inected with both her bedroom boudoir. ¢ stood. a moment while Del- e adjusted the sash to a cling- deeply befringed negligee and , ‘pat here, a finishing touch ) m w exquisite coiffure, then into the bedroom. ¢ ‘aunt sat grimly erect on the " of a fragile gold and ivory knftting. Anne passed her flung herself wearily, ful on a chaise longue—also and gold—piled high with was' a prolonged silence. ‘lw thankfully inert, with the older woman put e “and, as Il “I'm not afraid of | ¢ | *hance, we are absolutely ruined— | lngs mail from bag and tossed it near Anne. Anne picked the letters up with ia rather bored air, opened two or it!” She took the morn-| ~|affiliated organizations. three and glanced idly through| | 1 them. She crumpled the papers in her | {hand, covered another yawn, and {pushed them aside. “I've the older woman said grimly ‘While you've dawdled and flirt ed all \h(\m years, I've spent e {cent that I could possibly get hold of on you, and now— “Gambled, you mean, don’t you, Aunt Emily?” Anne interrupted her. The line about the grandmother- |'v old mouth tautened. “Well, any- vay, you've got to make it good. If vou dillydally around and let Leon Morse slip through your fingers as you've , let many another good ve can't even go back to New York.” “Bravo, little Auntie,” Anne lean- d over and patted the plump, un- esponsive arm lightly. “But,” she added more seriously, “you're omit- ing to mention that I would have married any one of a half-dozen, Phil King or Andrew Morton or— ven Jim tows, he was bad enough! But sou always thought I could do bet- er—perhaps you didn't put it quite| 80 crudely—" “1 certainly did not,” Mrs. Wil mot corroborated with asperity “and—you have done better. There's | not a girl in New York who would not envy your chance with Leon Morse—and you may as well un- derstand if you lose him through any of your rashness and—impu- dence, I'm through with you. You can try making your own living for are not good enough for you!” (Copyright, Ruth Cross) Anne bows to the seemingly inevitable and Morse decides to fight for his right of way, to- mMorrow. —_———-—— Try the Five o'Clock Dinner Bpecials at Mabry’s. —adv. el e Dell E. Shermy, suueaus plano uner. Hotel Gastineau. ~ady { seen thesed o ) funetions in labor disputes. ;bills-—sc\'m’fll times before; they don't interest me particularly.” “Well, I have an idea they will,”| +|taking Vinol, I can sleép 10 hours Dacres, though, heaven | | a change, if Leon Morse's millions | {ership of |are | mandeered to work out a plan of |reasonable In season and out of season for! nearly 50 years these principles have been preached by the Amer- an Fed tion of Labor and its “TIP TOES” with WILL ROGERS A Comedy Show Full of Laughs In the early days of the Amer- ican Federation of Labor, employ |ers believed that the way to make {good times in hfird times was to reduce and increase the in the workday. While con- 10—20—40 cents able ground was against these theories, it until the great war that general knowledge that hi and continuous the workers perity. The conferences under the lea the President are giving every thought to devising wa; and means of keeping men and women at work at adequate wages. Both the nation and the § preparing to launch activities that will give employment. All the experts and skilled men in indus try and finance have been com- gaine T e T e T O T T T R T T LA wages employment for' brought real pro: tates action nd - will All this promises establish irrevocably the that unemployment can be cured and that high wages will |permit those who work to live in comfort. Therefore, more nuous happiness than was thought possible a few years o will be the result, Another outcome of the years |work was the acceptance by lead- ing members of Congress of th principles of « bill to limit the use relief |||illllllll|llll|IlIIIlIilllIll!lIl oney is the BAS)S ofyour Wants It's the dollar, after all, that enables you to secure all your material wants. And after all, it is these things which make life But you can't get rich quick ¢ accumulate unless you help it . . Just a little . . . of five. you besides. Save and have . . . HIIHIIHIIIIIIllllillllllllll ® - Man Can’t Sleep, Gets Nervous, Hates People worth while. r-night, and money doesn’t . by regular saving. ach week means a lot at the end of a year At compound interest it is earning money for sleep and got so veryBody. Since “1 eo nervous I 1 not hated and feel full of pep all day.'—Jul- ius Bender, | TR spend and want, sound sleep, and a BIG mppetite. ' Nervous, wornout people &are sur- prised how QUICK Vinol gives new life and pep! Tastes deljcious. Butler-Mauro Drug Co ad\'.‘ For 30 years doctors have pre: seribed Vinol because it contains | &= T}le B. M. Bellren(ls important mineral elements of = jron, calcium and cod liver pep-|: B k tone. The very FIRST bottle brings | = an Oldest Bank in Alaska MRS I T ,es — — | Have you tried the Five o'Clock, Dinner Specials at Mabry's Cafe?’ { VICTOR | Radios and Combination ‘ Radio-Phonographs i | RECORDS SHEET MUSIC JUNEAU ME I 0ODY AMERICAN | LEGION ARENA { Next Smoker |, JANUARY 25 Auspices American Legion THE ORIGINAL CROQUIGNOLE WAVE “NAIVETTE” SOFT AND NATURAL | AT THE FLORENCE SHOP TR Rt B AT HU U THUT U | | evening | feature that is just full of amusing | E { DOROTHY GISH | | evening until today. VACATION V] 1 am Miss Lucille Fox left on ce ah, returning to her posi tion in Tacoma, after & ten- | visit at the home of MR e AR We can’t say how much we ¥IRE MEETING POSTPONED i There IEREER S ST appreciate your friendship | week he Douglas Volunteer Fire . . Depertment, unless something oc- dur g 19299 and hope for its {eurs to necessitate a special meet- & P, the [ continuance in 1930. Happy S eeo - . WELL-KNOWN CELEBRIT ARE AT LIBERTY T0\l(.ll'l' New Year. V D y Gish, one of the most| popular film stars appears with Will | Rogers at the Liberty theatre this in “Tip Toes,” a comedy | ADVERTISE your merchandise situations, ‘ H.S. GRAVES The Clothing Man B A | and it will sell? | i l Happy | Coughs from colds may lead to se- 1 and rious trouble. You can stop them Prosperous now with Creomulsion, an emulsified New Year to You All Creomulsion is a medical discovery with two-fold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and in- hibits germ growth, Of all known drugs creosote is rec- ognized by high medical authorities asone of the greatest healing agencies for coughs from colds and bronchial irritations, Creomulsion contains, in 'COLDS MAY DEVELOP INTO PNEUMONIA elements which soothe and heal the inflamed membranes and stop the ir- ritation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and checks the growth of the germs Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfac- tory in the treatment of coughs from ¢olds, bronchitis and minor forms of bronchial irritations, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Money refunded if nol re- lieved after taking according to direc~ addition to creosote, other healing | tions. Ask your druggist. (adv.) CREOMULSION S | FOR THE COUGH FROM COLDS THAT HANG The Nyal Service Drug Store | I creosote that is pleasant to take. 1 Phone 25 We Deliver e R - tndabebudodatoied | \Easedsonsdsss K oaanasan GREETINGS To The New Year Father Time has passed another milestone. We, too, have passed anggher milestone and are now better equipped and more eager than ever to serve you. We look forward to 1930 as a year of great progress and development. This community fared well in 1929. We have taken pride in its accomplishments, and have, we are glad to say, contributed our modest share to its growth. We hope to continue, with your valuable cooperation, to do all within our power for the benefit of this community and its citizens. GORDON’S Inc. "

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