The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 23, 1930, Page 6

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O 200! HOO! WERE ABSOLUTELY AN HAVE YoU SEEN THE L — PAPER FAw 2 "CONSOLIDATED WHOCFS | MY DEAR! SHOE STRINGS' HAS DROPPED SIXTY POSITIVELY PENNILESS Ty ===ty on, LEE YA HEEE WHOOo.” SUSIE? WE CANT AFFORD T60 To THE COUNTRY ! LULLLHEHRER LU O LU LT LT T TTOT OF —then cool days again. in your bin for a quick fire. PACIFIC COAST NUT or UTAH NUT COAL FOR ALL KINDS WEATHER - Warm sunshiny days may be here for a weck Keep a supply of coal i ) = i 7 ]/” TR i 38 are just right for this purpose. : GFE SEerET 26 ‘A-NICE-GIRL: 7 COMES-TO-TOWN 4 BgcMareiesGreie P, oak door and drew the girl in- side. The bedroom was charming. Pol- ished oak beams comprised the| main part of the ceiling. Worn :md‘ worm eaten they were, and the| boards on the floor ‘sloped dizzily. | Mary Lou, who adored old Tudor! Rose Festival “Queen | DOUGLAS NEWS ' ; and talented Marguerite Church- ning to end, with occasional dra- matic high spots, in which Rogers reveals himself not cnly as a come- dian, but as an emotional actor as well. Rogers is supported by a splendid, cast which includes the charming LUTH TR FOR THE HOT WATER AUXILIARY Junior Diamond Briquets will save you money. They are long lasting and give a steady heat, re- quiring little attention. will be pleased. \ Pacific Coast Coal Co. Give them a trial. You | v H A visit to Lon- “That's absurd. Her ways are|COltages, Wwas sincere Jn e enr | v ill, the sparkling and artful Fifi 4 o ke tor Masy' | trifle eocentric, but ‘shie's w, degr |PDUSIESm: i sl | SUNDAY . BOHOQL. FIONIC {Dorsay, Owen Davis, Jr, Irenc G. H. WALMSLEY, Manager E Lou Loslie, Her romance with |at heart. I know yowll hit it off| —1P¢ ‘1’)‘““"1““1:‘? 113‘0“ m,l‘.‘?l: ity ! PROVIDES GOOD OUTING gich Rex Bell, Ivan Lebedeff and ‘PHONE 412 el Brynmor Whittamore is broken |with her.” {ox?ht‘o'(lo‘fi';L {u'\n v.l;xisclb:;:’:f:"l | A good attendance enjoyed the Theodore g o up when he falls in love with Yet Mary Lou was awed at the W i i ) a2 | S [ A .. 3 A ¥ i she waved a hand ceilingward, | Sunday school pienic which was]| ""I““""“!l__ II““"“"“"""I"" I” l " Clarice Day, who dances at the |thought of meeting onme of thel . plastered over. I dug ‘em all| held on. the Treadwell beach yes- PIANO TUNING um 4 ul“"m "H"mm“m" nml Emerald Dragon, a night club. Brynmor thought Mary Lou “too mice.” With Tony Tither- ington, however, Mary Lou has a_ better time than she ever had expected. Tony is an avia- tor with ambitions to fly round the world. His wealthy aunt | won’t finance the project un- less Topy goes with some girl | of whom she approves. Tony wealthiest women in England. She imagined Miss Titherington's home as an immense establishment, with enormous grounds and an army of servants. “Here we are,” cried ‘Tony as he turned down a lane off the main road. They were approaching a se- cluded, unpretentious structure that appeared to be .a gardener's cottage. out and polished 'em myself.” | “That makes it ever so much| more fun living with them, doesn't| it?” Mary Lou said. | “You've sense, child,” Miss Tith- erington said. “How on earth did| Tony get hold of you? You're the first girl he's brought down here who isn't a mess. But,” and her brown eyes twinkled, “maybe it was you who got hold of him!” '~" P S —Associated Press Photo |terday. Regular classes of Sunday | School were held at 11 o'clock, and followed by church services, Rev. :Bum‘r preaching an interesting ser- mon. The eats came next and the re-|’ mainder of the afternoon was spent |with field sports for the children. reported the water fine. number went in swimming and | | Dell E. Sheriff, Alaska’s Tuner,| now at Gastineau Hotel. adv. | - e Silque Hand Lotion. Juneau Drug| Col, Agents. —adv, ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter PHONES 39: Austin Fresh Tamales Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 | [ ; : ::flg::pc‘;io':k:flc}:n‘vfilll?;nfxf 1.11;:::;}:;:11;9)'];?“ ity BUCks) Mary Lou was doubly embar- Caroline Hahn, 17-year-old | HERE FOR VISIT mor becomes enxfl(ed to Clar- | He drew the car to a’sundstm Tssed 86,130t PRk BIED sohool seuliey ke KSR, | PLASTERBOARD i o, Tiive & sobbry at the |angd. cuened $ab igiote SRR L - o2 Lo she stammered.| Queen of the Portland, Ore., Miss Nona Castle, ward of Rev.| : 1 . a P 7 MAry | .poytsk, T didn't mean to em-| Rose Festival. P. E. Bauer, arrived here on the . ¥ your aunt today.” 3 ible. LAUGH SHOW, TONIGHT _ { “Jumping Jehosephat!” Tony ex-| Miss Titherington gave Mary Wilh [nvolumary Crew eri O the requirements of a beautiful leg. i claimed. “I'd forgotten completely.{Lou a brisk nod. “How do?” she The much heralded Fox Moxie- § Emerald Dragon, suspecct “Gentleman Freddy.” Clarice has a cousin named Freddy Mason, whom Bryn- mor dislikes, and he thinl Mason may have been respo ble. Clarice, however, assures him that Mason was in Paris at the time. and police ! | Chapter 13 | AUNT ETHELBERTA Mary Lou awoke with a start at geven o'clock on Sunday morning She was thankful the sun was shin- ing for a change, but she shudder- ed at the thought of what might happen that day. Tony, however, didn't until three hours later, “What the .devil are you doing letting in all that damned sun- 1ight?" he exploded as Wallis, his | wake up Lou. No stretch of the imagination could deseribe the home as. more than a cottage. Its thatched roof curled round the sides K of two tiny gabled windows and, hung al-| most to the ground. .. “Hello, jaunt,” Tony called cheer- ily. “Here's the latest, come all the way down for your inspection.” Mary Lou flushed and turned to greet Miss Titherington. ‘Then she received her second surprise. The spinster was doubled over, working in her rock garden. There was a full six lanky feet of her to straighten out. Her face was an- gular, but her expression was not unkindly. An aged straw - hat, frayed at the edges, was. perched on the back of tightly coiled grey hair. She wore a battered leather coat and soiled shees, and her fin- barrass you. I always say what 1} think. Every girl with sense picks out her man. Men are such babies | they would always choose the wrong 'un if it were left to them. .. RESORTERS SWIM AND SKI GARMISCH, Germany, June 23. —While early bathers here disport “I'd have got hold of one my-|thmselves in Reisser Lake, the snow self long ago, if I'd ever seen a|on the mountains surrounding thz man worth crossing the street for.|twin cities of Garmisch and Par- “Come along,” she added abrupt- |tenkirchen is still so abundant that ly. “Lunch must be ready.” skiing continues as popular as in (Copyright, 1930, Maysiec Greig) |winter. By using the suspension cable cars up the mountains Zugs- pitze, one may enjoy winter spo: jend a swim on the same day. FEES A L Sk TOKYO, June 23—Hampel Na- {gao, a deputy, is campaigning for | {a bill introduced by him forbidding gale of liquor to persons- under 5 years of age. The present law |Limits sales to persons of 20 years lor more. Aunt Ethelberta soon reveals her motive for quizzing Mary Lou. See tomorrow’s chapter. | Northwestern Saturday, for a couple | (of months’ visit. The young lady |has just graduated from the Roose- {velt high school in Seattle where she completed the four year course in three years. enter the University of Washington in the fall. e, HOME FOR VACATION Miss Ethel Runquist, who has | been attending business college in | Seattle during the term just ended, arrived home on the Northwestern for the summer vacation. PN v TO RESIDE IN DOUGLAS | - | Mrs. R. B. Hersley and:children, family of the new cannery foreman She expects tof The right shade Jor every frock in HOLEPROOI' HOSIERY The right shade in natural silk hosiery smartens your ensemble ahundred times. And the FOR BEAUTY, COMFORT, PERMANENCE and ECONOMY USE Schumacher Plasterboard It remains smooth and does not warp or buckle Thomas Hardware Co.‘. i gers protruded from a pair of dirty of the Douglas Island Packing g man, pulled up the blind. gardening gloves. | compa ight shadeis so easy tofind, { . pany, arrived Saturday to make rigl 0 easy , Wallis, however, was firm. Mary Lou stared at her in pro- NuT SGHEDULED‘ their home in ~Douglas for the if you just ask for Ioleproof. toneer 00 a “May I remind you, sir, that you{found amazement. Could this be | Holeproof coloursare ereated by B ummer. i asked to be called? I believe yollfone of the wealihlest women in | § B Lucile, the famous Parisian coutu- Telephone 183 Pool—Billiards are motoring down to lunch with And it's important, too. I'm playing the kingdom? It didn’t seem cred- Jerked out. Her attention immedi- Breaks Away at Hamburg| —Reaches Berlin | WILL ROGERS IN REAL | tone all-talking comedy drama, riere. She chooses them with an eye | to the season’s colour suecesses and | | EMPLOYMENT OFFICE [{oleproof [fosiery STATIONERY, OFFICE EQUIPMENT, o Chas.’ Miller, Prop. my last card to get Aunt Ethel-|ately reverted to the rock garden. | | “Fhe i § 4 ¥ H ¢ iy {5y WAy ! y Had to See Paris,” in which Kepresentative berta to back my flight. s “I'm having trouble with thes8| BERLIN, Germany, June 23.—The | Will Rogers is both heard and seén,| B BN C. 'S ELZABRLLE T Per‘ltl:l' Supplies and Commercial Printing #Your Iast card, sir?” Wallis in-|gentians,” she remarked in a gruff [Graf Zeppelin arrived here safely {opened an ; éhgageient . &t the Juneau Exclusive Dealers Underwood Typeutiters guired as he gathered up the|masculine voice. “Done evervthing|after an unscheduled flight. The Douglas Coliseum last aight and rlothes Tony had left strewn all over the floor. ‘Tony grinned.” “And she's a mighty pretty card, too.” Wallis retrieved Tony's trousers from the chandelier. “If 1 may say so, sir, all the cards in your pack are good-look- ing.” | “True,” Tony admitted, “but this{ cne's the goods.” 1 Mcanwhile, in the Jeromes' bed-| room, Mary Lou was curled up on one end of the bed, sipping tea be- tween bites of toast. Jay was doing likewise. “This is your big day, Mary Lou?” Jay asked. “The day when Miss Titherington sticks a little ticket on you—‘will do,’ ory ‘won't do’!” “pray for the former,” Mary Lou/| sighed. “Tony seems to set greatl store by my.meeting his aunt.” “Why should he worry about what his aunt thinks?” Jerry inter- posed. “Auntie is his bank account,” Jay explained. “And from all T hear she's mighty particular—" “If 1 was. this fellow Tony Id see her in—" “Hush, darling, you don't knoWjfayor with Aunt Ethelberta that he a thing about it,” Jay retorfed. aimost had given up hope of find- Then to Mary Lou: Grey is the right color to wear today, I think. Blondes always look so demure mngy Lou revealed a knowledge of grey, with just a touch of blue. That should appeal to this per- snickety aunt.” # «But I haven't anything grey, Mary Lou objected. “No matter, you can wear that siit of mine. It should fit you perfectly with a little alteration here and there.” any ‘ ideas on gardening,” Miss| aska. - riment to the color “Tony, as usual, was half an hour | mitherington remarked as she led First publication, June 23, 1930. texture of the fabric, or: WILL CARRY s late. He made up for it how-lthem into the house. “Or to have|Last publication, July 1, 1030. ’ ) BOYS’ TROUSERS and SHIRTS ; ever, by his e:cz:msmsm over Mary ‘,,;‘, i:;:e:r::ran{:ck:lxllg that counts,” e Phone 15 THE EMPIRE Kaynee Brand Lou’s appearance. she orouht up in the coun- || Dime & Dollar Building “jove, Mary Lou, but you look shupning today!” With a wink, he is0't it lat home in our rock garden,” Mary ithey were ripe, In my power for ’em but they don't seem to. thrive.” Miss Titherington's absorption in the garden made Mary Lou feal more at home. She bent down and inspected the plants in question. “Have you trled pressing the roots firmly into the soil and set- ting small bits of limestone around them?” she suggested. Miss Titherington turned and looked directly at Mary Lou for the first time since Tony had in- troduced her. “Never thought of that,” she re- marked in a more friendly voice. “We've had the same experience Lou told her. “A couple of years ago Dad tried gathering his own seeds as soon as sowing them at once in seed pans in the green house, leaving them for about 18 months, then transplanting them first into little pots, then into the rock garden. But I daresay you know all this.” “I didn't,” said Miss Tithering- {ton. “Thanks for the tip.” { Tony remained silent as he noted his aunt’s reception of Mary Lou. So many girls had failed to find |ing anyone who would satisfy her. He was too elated to speak when gardening—one of his aunt’s princi- {pal hobbies. | “I'll let things follow their own course, today,” he thought. “It looks as if Mary Lou may turn the trick. I'll keep mum and see what hap- |pens.’ * “Strange for a town girl to have Zeppelin broke loose at Hamburg, because of excessive heat and gain-| ed buoyancy Sunday morning. Capt. Flemming and three members of the landing crew were involuntary passengers. The Graf Zeppelin cruised about Hamburg for half an hour unable to get down, leaving two officers and 45 passengers who had hoped to make the trip to Berlin Capt. Ernest Lehman and Cap*.| Hans von Schiller, left the ground in a chartered plane and rejoined the airship here. e Try the Five oClock Dinner Speelals at Mabry's. —adv S teeth white . breath sweet aids digesflon;. after Every Meal NOTICE OF HEARING In the Probate Court for 'Juneau Precinct, Territory of Alaska, Di- vision Number One. | In the matter of the guardianship of Alice Ray Conrad, also known as Elsie Ray, an insane person. Notice is hereby given 'that on the 21st day of July, 1930, at the| hour of ten o'clock in the morning | of said day.a hearing will be had| before the above entitled court, at Juneau, Alaska, upon the petition| bf George F. Conrad, praying that| be appointed guardian of lhe! rson and estate of Alice Ray| \Conrad, also known as Elsie Ray, an insane person, at which time and place said Alice Ray Conrad, also known as Elsie Ray and all others interested may appear and show cause why the prayer of said | petition should not be granted. Dated the 23rd day of June, 1930. (Seal) A. W. FOX, Commissioner and ex-officio Pro-| bate Judge, Juneau Precinct, Al-‘ ANOTHER SPOT! No need to worry!— It’s not ruined if you send it to us. Through many years of experi- ence and careful study, we know just how to re- move spots without det- “T wi itry,” Mdry Lou explained. “We live Tending the rock gar- ALASKA . and Loan Association Is under the supervision of the is showing again tonight. Tt is a laugh riot from begin- | | COLISEUM BY REQUEST we are showing again tonight WILL ROGERS in “They Had To See Paris” with VITAPHONE ACTS Geo. M. Simpkins Co. by mail. i UNCLE SAM . WILL CARRY THE EMPIRE | 4 TQ YOU: .-\ If you are going to the States for a visit this summer, have The Empire sent to you, If you are goiggtany place near a post office in Alaska for the summer months have The Empire sent to] ypu, by mail. UNCLE SAM TO YOU . JARMAN’S - Second Street . The HOOVER It Beats—As It Sweeps— iy As It Cleans Alaska Electric Light & Power _ Company ' JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phone 18 added “—but not so stunning thal|i, peyon, youll knock Aunt Ethelberta INigen js my special job at home.| the eye as Gwendolyn did.” 1 love gardening.” | Mary Lou and Jay exchanged| «prought up in the country, eh?! Then how on earth can you stand THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU State of Oregon. Can only loan depositors money on improved ,real estate, first mortgages and State approved bonds. Keep in Touch with Your Home Town ghnoes_- atad s » ] 6% compounded semiannually Qur Services ngl. Ead e al ? ‘ i e ety b o e he | unenn Bt PHONES 83 OR 85 “The Store That Pleases” o & o “Why so quiet, Mary Lou?” TonYiysice, i : g Aiss unerigton save ner an- | [, J Eherhart THE SANITARY GROCERY other penetrating glance, but she “I—I'm just a bit afraid of meet- .didn'b comment. She opened an old jng your aunt.” GASTINEAU HOTEL Qld Papers for sale at Empire Office

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