The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 31, 1930, Page 6

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£ & ¢ g ¥ i b ! y - THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1930. JACQUELINE TON HER OWN b5_RICHARD STARR, ~ ™~ SYNOPSIS: A dream come (any man in the room up and throw toue! Juogu Grey, beauti- him out of the window if he really {4 maancguin, achieves her wanted to—Mr. Carew for instance. ©mbition t» invade the realm of Jacqueline might have smiled had |she known | pearls that he had visioned the dorned her neck as a the wealthy, when che inherits 509 poandi Forgetten s her poounicns cxiel nce as a mod- |mark of wealth. Tt a com- ¢! at Byrams 2c -he moves to |pliment in itself, for tr pearls had {he new found wealth as long as | cost her ex four eas and ft lacle. On her first day she |a half They were modest as to| triamph ils Byrams fo |size, and well matched. They were P chase new quiet enough for a rich man's fir Porte daughter to wear with propriety. ¥'a o the don hotel and But Teddy was not the only one 1y wen o v0it ‘o 4 night club [taken in. Mrs. Porter Mason and Ja-~¢. Unknown to (Mr. Carew did not dream of doub ness of the girl's adornments. They had formed a ing the genu ter hotel guest, d has interested EMOTIONS, 5AM. JOY, WIFE WILL . PENETRATE MY DISGUISE! high opinion of the girl's wealth | which had impressed them, each in | |their own individual way. | But so far as Teddy was con-‘ cerned, the romance ended With {those one or two stolen glances, Jsweeter for the theft. There was nothing else to be done about it the eyoning of the day|grom Teddy's viewpoint. This was| Which Teddy Mentrose later WAS pjg Jast of luxurious dining andj to revere for the memories it Te-|g51qen-necked bottles in ice pai called, that young gentleman “"”‘(“Tamon'm\' he must sell his dre: himself making an inventory of his ‘gi5thes to pay for bed and board.| werldly p 1o S0 he must think no more of the | {beautiful girl with the lure of mx-| venture in her brown eyes. | When she passed out of the res- | taurant h her companions, she | walked close to his table, and Ted- | hor, and schemes hur Dunn, a shady t> ma-ry her, believ- althy heiress. . TRIALS OF TEDDY | creditors everything possessions re- nife; 1 corl s lce d shorn him of near his survey of ‘o T tickets which he had |4y couid have touched her frock if | to nngoliate for ready cash,ine hag reached out his hand. | Jrue lotter, . { She was talking to her com- 1oiter was from a girl Who o nion the woman and he thought 0 theatr®in, neard her say :“Is my nose | He read | aqp» Byt he must have been mis- | heaved it int0ltaken, It was absurd | The great thing was she did not | was signifi- (g5 myuch as glance in his direction. | i ihie chorus loved i reqqy was sure of that, for his| gold and {ransfer-|ga.e "gig not leave her until she! 5 when his pockets | qicanpeared, | He gained a glimpse of the face | of Mr. Carew of Chicago and liked“ it considerably less than his back.| “Bounder,” muttered Teddy to| himself. | (Copyright, 1930, Richard Starr) \ emmty. !.n nfizh.’iun te the pocket pieces m exccllent suit of 1 his frame, and They must serve hefore he parted with 1 t ¢=gning cloil b t ‘m further Broke and disconsolate, Teddy | gives a lesson in card playing | {o three new found friends, to- | mMorrow. | »1 wilh his usual care, »a evenint clothes and ean His head was s jmmaculate silk hat. v his hanl strayed into ———.,————— nat poclke He drew out ‘ed niers of paper and 1* really was too good | a five-pound he had so care- days of afflu- ty b2 true T AS NOMINEE | FORCONGRESS 1rasly disposed of in f note, ey 11 his pocket, the bockoned and he eager- eir eall Half an hour i was dining cxpensively at {a member of the School DOUGLAS NEWS CITY ELECTION TO BE ! HELD TOMORROW' The first municipal election un- der the new ordinance providing for the separate election of a mayor and councilmen and the election of Board, starts at 9 o'clock tomorrow morn- ng in the fire hall. The candidates are as follows: for mayor, L. W. Kilburn; 101‘1 council—A. F. Granberg, Rangnar Kromquist, Robert Bonner, H. L. Cochrane, A. Shudshift and Alex Gair. Felix Gray is the only candidaie for the school board vacancy caused by the expiration of his own term, While there is no contest, was a good registration, something like 157 having qualified to vote. The results of the election will be announced at the P.-T. A. meeting tomorrow night. F. 0. E. AUXILIARY ENTERTAINS AT CARDS The bridge and whist party given | by the Ladies’ Auxiliary, F. O. E, Saturday evening, was attended by about fifty persons and a pleasant time was reported. There were five tables of the former and six of the latter. The bridge winners were, for high/ scores, Mrs. Felix Gray and Ed An-| drews; for low, Mrs. A. A. Ed-| wards and Guy Smith. | First prizes for the whist went to| |Mrs. Charles Sey and John Mills.|deep in a co consolations, to Mrs. Thomas Miet there | - ~ POLLY AND HER PALS I'M TORN BY CONFLICTNGH You AINT HEAVENS! T HOPETHE Antonin Dvoak, Olga By LEO RYAN | (A. P. Statf Writer) i ST. CLALro viuuE, 0., March 31, —By the tiny light of a miner Tamp the genius of Antonin Dvorak. composer of “Humoresque,” is being carried on. The great composer has been dead these 25 years or moré. = But 1 mine here another DEARGCHILD / WONT BE 4~ (top) may keep the family genius alive, | Antonin, the composer’s. grafidson |digs black gold, hoping to pass ti tinen and James Doogan. agnl's nt with a gold- Republicans of Ninth' Dis-| bottle before him, and the emile of a ma af peace with life Not far away sat 8 girl with rich prown hair and cyes to match, a delieate nose and distracting mouth. She was feptad at, a table with a woman ; ahbut 90 handsome and Felisdressed; and a man with black Rt i But it yeho atttactsd Taddy's interest trict of Virginia Take Action BRISON, Virginia, March 31.—C. Bascom Slemp, Republican Nation- al Committeeman and one time Secretary to President Calvin was the brown-eved girl Coolidge, has been nominated for and |Congress by the Ninth District Re- publicans for the eleventh time. W61d it throughout the evening. . for g Il’ht spell of -romance enveloped [The nomination places him in op- Teddy, He was fascinated by her position to John Flannigan, Demo- 1- |crat, nominated March 20. Incumbent Joseph C. Shaffer, Re- d the [Publican, declined to run. « ’ 1) 1 he was| Slemp has served the Ninth Dis- 1‘;:::03:31:;}71A’:n?‘?a;fi:‘;‘i‘ne Grey, | trict nine terms beginning in 1902, | rested on- Bim and Teddy experi- |after the death of his father who Ehded thines while they did so. It [served two terms in Congress. was a dcieched look but Teddy ésnsidered it remarkable that she 1S UNDECIDED hag cven noticed him. ATLANTA, Georgia, March 31.— fis found himsglf unable to do C. Bascom Slemp, enroute to the nvthing but thihk of this entranc- Pacific Coast, said here, he was ;Ar }:m undecided whether to accept the A second tfme he noted the girl's nomination. g He said he wmx]d»(lc- Brown eyes resting full on him. He cide upon his return to Washing- groaned inwardly, realizing great ton. adventure was not for his. He had no right to this dinner, or to this Whita skin 4nd éaw @ laughing chal lenge inh her brown eyes. For & fraction of a secon e e W. V. Mulvehill, who has been temporary agent for the Canadian Refreshments were served after) the cards. e, D. I. W. C. TO GIVE SOCIAL | EVENT FRIDAY NIGHT) A card party and dance is being arranged for the coming Friday evening, April 4, by the Douglas| Island Woman’s Club. Bridge nndn‘ whist are to be offered, starting at| 8 o'clock sharp. Then dancing will| begin at 10:15 o'clock. Refreshmcms\ will follow the card playing. The| event is to be held in Eagles’ ha“’i ———— | “STRANGE CARGO,” COLISEUM| . | A strange story, full of mys- tery, is the “Strange Cargo,” to be! seen at the Coliseum for the l:\s“ time tonight. A roaring, hilarious comedy, is included in the all-talk- ing shorts which are shown be- fore the feature. o ———— ODD FELLOWS AND REBEKAHS AT CHURCH At the Metropolitan Methodist Episcopal church nearly a hundred (cld?n ze:vl}z:,v bettle, or the clothes e L R P F‘gllows it Rteng;?s EX; w--}{:-x e s rieh he muttered.|sence of W. L. Coates, returned to ;E‘L‘dedfi‘:flz :7:‘2; f;s ;elive} o “An; b‘od&v ‘ean seo that. Look at|his home in Skagway on the Prin- ‘;‘csre}sim: erm Anybody (%% asd TIl bet she's|cess Norah. He is with the C. P.|ReV: v g i e R. office there. becn sheltero: guarded all her Prosious life and has never known want.” Of course Teddy had never seen Jachuellne sitting up in hef® truckle n Byram's dormitory. 'r‘:'hxe :l;jecl. of hig long distance damiration was enjoying herself. f{sr companions Were Mrs. Porter M2 on and Mr. Arthur Carew, who {iht!l only - recently, had answered g the name of LAnny Raymond. Fqtus far Jatqueline had given hi ng epnfirmation of his self fomfessed power over women. He Bad joined the party at Mrs. Mn; §on's supgention for dinner and the frin to Cireo's fight club afterward. i had dtriven to bc amusing but the bad hored Jacqueline faintly. Bae f1t that pre_seni‘ly he would it to hold her hand. m;;‘ Arthur Carcw of the Chicago Carews had been. dlsmissed [XOM NG orup coffee tastes like goequcline’s mind as a rather ‘ord&- Hills Bros, Coffee because niary parson with a precious opinion | none is roasted the saméway. Hills Bros’ vacuum packs ing process seals in all the flavor produced by roast- ing coffee al a time A]':?ew pounds Dvorak genius on generation. Olga Dvora 16, is the great- granddaughter of the composer and the daughter of this coal-mining Antonin. In the high school or-| chestra or her home town her vio-| lin may be heard, frequently in; solos, trilling an ambition that is backed by family pride. ! Antonin himself, in his younger | days in Bohemia, planned a musi- | cal career. He grew up on the soil | that nurtured the famous Antonin, | and tilled it during the years his! grandfather was in America in the '90s. But his father died and the | to ‘the four COME SEE THE )=\ PRETTY PONY ERTRUDE iTS A PRESENT FROM UNCLE £at Reiarm rights masrved Dbordk Km Digs Coal} to Keep Genius Alirvér AFRAID oF e ¥ sHES WALTZIN' RIGHT UP TO 4 (MAKE FRIENDS WITH HER PRETTY HOSSY! COFE SterrEfrn 8 may be eliminated by a “high fre- quency landing beam” being per- fected by Dr. J. H. Dellinger, bu- reau of standards. The beam will not only lead a pilot to the landing field but will enable him to “slide down” for the actual landing. The pilot will pick up the beam at an altitude of 2,000 feet when o three miles from a field and be led directly to the ground, regard- less of the density of fog. H JoB printing Quick Service AIR RATES AVERAGE 7.6 CENTS PER MILE CHICAGO, March 31.—Re- ductions in the “high cost of flylng” have brought air travel rates to an average of 7.6 cents a mile. " Figures from 22 operators e of air passenger lines were ® analyzed by the American air I- transport association to ob- \ : | ¢ tain the average fare, a ® mark 23 cents higher than o the average cost per mile by © rail and sleeper. ° Until cut rates wenf into © effect the average cost for : :irn::?cs.scngcrs was 115 cents “mm‘ it—reliabl i 2 ° always. We always place out RS oy s N e guarantee of satisfaction back of every printing job we do. We are good printers— know it— and are willing to back our judgment with our guaraniee. “LANDING BEAM” TO LEAD PILOT TO FIELD IN FOG WASHINGTON, D. C., March 31. —Hazards of landing =n cense fogs (left) grandson of the famous composcr, mines coal in the hope that his daughter Their home at St. Clairsville, 0., is shown at right. “MR. PR DENT” IS NEW TITLE FOR DUCYE ROME, March 31. — “Mr. President” (Signor Presi- dente) is now accepted the correct form of address when speaking directly to Mussolini. This aecords with the cus- tom of practically all con- tinental European countri where the Premier is ger ally known officially as “the President of the Council of Ministe: In Fascist gatherings Mus- solini is almost always ad- dressed as “Duce,” the word meaping “chief.” Diplo- mats accredited to the TItal- ian Government usually em- ploy the “Sua Eccellenza” (Your Excellency) if they speak Italian, or its French or English equivalent if they do not. * | Child’s Home Training Key to Schonl Attitude WASHINGTON, w™arch 31.-- Hemes are often responsible for the n which some children feel d school and its demands, in | the opinion Mrs. A. H. Reeve of Philadelp] vresident of the In- tional Federation of Home and School. “Children are threatened at home with visits to the doctor and den- tist if they don’t behave,” says Mrs. Reeve. “A fear of physical exami- nations in the school thus grows in them. “Many children, tbo, are forced ;mto vocational work for which they {are not fitted because the parents have a fond vision of the child as a professional type of some kind when he grows up.” Mrs. Reeve is a member of Presi- dent Hoover’s school child com- mittee working with the White | House conference on child health and protection. | i Brighten your kitchen; . ° o o . . . . . . L] . . o : 2 Lighten your household cares, . . x ° . o . . L] . L] . by using ARMSTRONG’S LINOLEUM Thomas H::dware Co. family was poor. In America, Antonin learned ic‘; was easy to make money. But New York was different from Bohemia, he discovered, and Antonin went west. He became a coal miner at St. Clairsville. Labor troubles, and |decreased production have made it | a hard grind Antonin gave up his own ambitions. What can he pinched out of his earnings now |gaes to Olga, in the hope that some lay her violin may charm thou- sands as did her great-grand-| |father’s. NOTICE OF HEARING OF FINAL ACCOUNT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that KARL THEILE, as adminis- COLISEUM (Douglas) Last Times Tonight | “STRANGE | CARGO” ‘( All Talking Feature i With Star Cast Vitaphone Acts, All Talking Comedy and Sound News (Iomink Tu 'Ja_v— “PARIS BOUND” himeelf ‘that was unwarranted. hry their p-(':;';l:'dhfimi‘g;::: D. 1. W..C. 'gltxhe aid think of the young man .Pn;m—!;ii_ll‘- Bro-o o g CARD PARTY ] the eropped head. it a time — 5 e nmme,mmzb;}teanT & Dot e and ¢ igh al ;"‘h ;";_”‘ Dy oked as it ne| Frésh from’ the original vacuum DANCE 't & in the world, which | pack. Easily opened with the key.| \FRIDAY NIGHT, APRIL “etre anees, Was tgch:dr 4-—-Eagles’ Hall for Teddy; and he Took: HILLS Cards at 8; Dance 10:15 or big boy wrt of 6% BROS pick almost wouid do f“:e the thing she was doing. 7 He was big and deep Tooked a5 i he could ©19%0 Refreshments Prices—Cards and refresh- ments, 50¢; dance, gentle- men, 50c¢ \trator of the estate of Ferdinand| Weaver Umphrey, also known as Fred Umphrey, dec '15, 1930, filed his final account as such administrator in the United States Commissioner’s and ex-of- ficio Probate Court for the Juneau,{ Alaska, Commissioner’s Precinct, in Juneau, Alaska, and that said Com- missioner on said day made his order directing the giving of this notice and appointing May 19, 1930, at 10:00 o'clock A. M, as the day on which a hearing will be had upon any objections to said final account and the settlement thereof, and all persons are required to appear and present their objections, if any, to said final account and the settlement thereof, or to amy particular item thereof, specifying the particulars of such objection, at said time before said Commis- |sloner in the United States Court House, at Juneau, Alaska. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, March 15, 1930. (Seal) A. W. FOX, United States Commissioner and ased, on March } ex-officio Probate Judge. | First publication, March 17, 1930, Last publication, April 7, 1930. L7 e Qi lh to slip into a new pair of Florsheim Shoes «..to run your hand over their fine, sleek leather . . . to sit back and admire their clean-cut lines (and see how your friends admire theim 100) . . . and then later, after long service, to realize that theyre still smart, still good, refusing to wear out o o« Yes, sir, its a downright pleasurel THE FLORSHEIM SHOE For the Man Who Cares H.S. GRAVES THE CLOTHING MAN " 4 Z CLEAR HEMLOCK FINISH KILN DRIED LIGHT AND EASY TO WORK PRODUCES A FINE FINISH HOLDS ALL FORMS OF PAINT AND STAIN BEST FOR FINE ENAMEL WORK - ODORLESS AND FREE FROM PITCH WE INVITE INSPECTION Juneau Lumber Mills, Inec. Lumber for Every Purpose PHONE 858 It's a downright PLEASURE brra, STATIONERY,- OFFICE EQUIPMENT, Typewriter Supplies and Commercial Printing Exclusive Dealers Underwood Typewriters - Geo. M. Simpkins Co. THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and Fad at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Casrying Boat 1 “YOUR ALASKA LAUNDRY SERVICE” T T T T CALIFORNIA GROCERY PHONE 478/ The Home of Better Groceries |l|"|lllllllm"llmlllfllllflflllfllfllfl"l“lll“llflfi for Dry Cleaning and Pressing ALASKA LAUNDRY In New Building on Shattuck Way “THE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST”

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