The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 8, 1930, Page 6

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ot e s o e s o e e e \ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1930. ° By CLIFF STERRETT - AND THIS ARE THE HON. COTTAGE AT WHICH WE ARE TO SPEND OUR HAPPY HOURS, NO ONE KNOWS HOW/ AH! THIS ARE THE HON SUNBURN BEACH AT wWHICH WE ARE TO SPEND OUR HON. HOLIDAY ! I KNOW EXACTLY HOW IM GONNA SPEND EVERY FOR SALE ONE SUNNY SUDS : _ ELECTRIC WASHER New Octagon-Agitator Type O TiLL WE MOVE BACK To THE SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY PRICE— $115.00 on first machine sold. Regular price on this model—$125.00 FREE TRIAL Alaska Electric Light same, but you'll have to find some: one else to celebrate with you.” Tony looked both astonished and , died recently at Anchor- He was a native of Switzer- :nd son Billle, came up with Mrs Mills for a month’s visit in Doug- IN BED HELPLESS @ A-NICE-GIRL: , “"{;--. ¢ e A as. | and 36 years of age. Nothing b “You're not much of a sport.” ———————— | nown of his relativ -TO-TOWN S o s ot | e S| e COMES All Tight, Im not” Her volee |iNYDERS LEAVE FOR STATEs = P T il o o an ower Lo. was choked. P » : . e T BeMeziie Grefe b 2| orony. Tt 1o, wikiy inaett | A ana i T SHidk aott | AT THie HOTELS - ' |tneumstisar netvitis 1 had to bel 3 . - S St > ki, RN IR lifted from my bed to a chair. My I NGBSTe L b Ul | (be Sindi iy ATeCEY JlL TT oy 1 saia hat, sy Lo fresterdsy for, their home in Van- el | Juneauy—Phone 6 Douglas—Phone 18 misfortune have come hand in | it matter—since she was to lose him | | C S S T e youg Ta “ifig;fip“f” "c'i :’:e“ zhey Wil 5 p. Harvey, Seattle; Y. P. Lesal Band for Brymmor and Macy |so soon,.anyyay? -nev;'-r have been able to have s':ar'.- ‘s’ummery s e TR thiemer; F. Conrad; TOmlLeech‘ Lou. Those two once were in Intently she watched h?s Pro-| i on that trip.” He stood looking i 1% .58 £ | ; James A. Fehse, Seattle; Miké Jove, but Brynmor became |file as he talked of the flight, of‘m her as she curled upon the ROGERS IN FROM SOUTH allich; N. W. Lunn, Sitka; F. the day he had stopped in Paris on | | Fr | his return. Tony was changed, yet Mary Lou felt a possession of longing sweep over her. She wanted Tony—for herself. Her fingers itched for the feel of his hair; she wanted to kiss the cleft in his chin; she wanted to | have him close beside her. She shut her eyes in agony. Tony con- e, Couer d'Alene, Idaho; A. The Admiral Rogers was in pogy|/Ck<on, Seattle; A. R. Eisner, [vesterday with mail and freigmi“}' é)uull; C. R. Rose, Washington, for local merchants. | 5 - ee——— LEAGUE MEETING enamered of Clarice Day, only to break his engagement upon larning that she had been al- lied with a night club robber. Mary Lou likewise had failen in love—with Tony Tithering- ton, an aviater. To gain his aunt’s financial support on a flight around the world, he per- suaded Mary Lou to enter into a make-believe engagement with divan. N “I shall never forget that, Mary to be sure|; " yoy know that, don't you?” His voice was almost pleading. “Well, I'm giad I've been of some use in the world.” Tony walked aimlessly about the room for a moment, then turned ! There will be a business meeting toward the door. |of the Ladies League of the Con- L “Well, I'd better be going. Look Sregational Church at 8 o'clock here, Mary Lou, youre going to Thursday evening, in the league PEARL—GLO We have a full line of it—at Juneau Paint Store JARMAN’S - Second Street Alaskan and Mrs. Al Couture, city; Mckovich, Cordova; Andy , Seattle; Casper Nelson, R ronkee, Hoonah; R. L. Wal- Seattle; R. O. McDougall,| ty; F. Couture, Tacoma. is aunt’s she |cmotionally— v . A ————————— F. J. Smith, Seattle; W. E. Ellis, shi 15 not aware of their private | “Ibad a great time in New York, YO o000 'BETTS’ PARTY GOES Curtis Gardner, Portland; A new shipment of VOILE DRESSES to ; agreement. Tony is enroute |Mary Lou, he said. “There’s plen-| .0 "0 "0 " Why not? Think of | . 1 J. Drus, Portland; Mr. and' arirve on the steamer Yukon | . Beme now, but meanwhile Mary |ty of dash A:A‘nd daring 1io mtc;ma” the .good times W&'ve had"to- WEST ON ALEUTIAN Ray Henrickson, Tonapah,| f_ Leu and Brynmor have become | American girls. I fell in love the gether. It can't end like this.” Nevada; Mary E. Cooke, Seattle; E.| 2 ] good friends again. She dreads Tony's homecoming, for it may mean the end of her engage- ment. B. Hendrickson, S$pokane; Mr. and Mrs. J, Ryan, Ketchikan, b ¢ YOUNG ANCHORAGEITES WED - y > Miss Dorothy Miller, daughter of MRS W ABEMINT nd Mrs. Oscar Miller of An-|jcints would swell like I had arth age and graduate of the An-!ritis and the sorentss was almost age high school, and Edward!unbearable. Sargon drove every | {lot of them. | “Did you?” Mary Lou knew she | hated all American girls. | ! “you look tired,” he commented. | ou mean I'm not looking pret- | Chapter 25 he countered. “We can't all TON YRETURNS |spend our lives joyriding for our| Mary Lou saw Brynmor frequent- | complexion’s sake, you know.” Ks. Tony laughed. “I see you haven't | Why wouldn't he go? She couldn’t| With two assistants, F. G. Betts, answer him. {U.. 8. Cadastral Engineer, left on| “Well, so long, I'll call you up the steamer Aleutian this morning | some day, soon.” for Seward, enroute to Unalaska, | The pent-up tears flowed freely!Accompanying him were T. J. Me- | the moment Tony had closed the Cartney and L. Berlin. 2 door. Mary Lou's whole body stif-] The party will do some townsite | fened in sudden disgust with her- subdivision work at Unalaska, Later | ¢ THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and Ead at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carcying Boat ly duripg the next several wee bl 1) 4 {it will proceed to the Susitna River |1 ell Johnson, of the Alaskapain and all the soreness complete: e It became genuinely pleasant to|lost the old spirit, Mary Lou. 57 L ; i SO shi | b o AR i ey rhe g gt A : i preferred not to discuss with Jay |and Tony came in with her. Jay | | —————— | \ B do that. At least you could have > housework and helping my hus- . Before she realized it, Tony waw‘umi Jerry had excused themselves t Wt s | + N l B ll g almost due to return. One day he|tactfully at the field. . ,:;2558:;‘(’3 5‘2":‘:‘“ What on car! “I‘llnuly Parks w‘ r\'hwl YURK‘lJuI[y oz Augl\:s',‘l[:‘l;:tspla it the garden and buill ua lty rands l ou A IKnow d r ew York that he| « ¢, Mary Lou| v 3 < { v 5 Ieckscher, aged 81 years, mul i § R 1t shey ooty know.” At (Copyright, 1930, Maysie Greie) {In Coat, So | millionaire philanthropist, and Mrs,| “Sargon Pills cleansed my sys-| . hoped to be in London within a|thought to herself. “If they only o tem of poisons and regulated m:| | Vir inia Henry Curtis, aged 55 were married last Wednes- DIAMOND BRIQUETS week knew the news that must grect perfectly.”—Mrs. S. W. Trevitt, of |Hunter Waits i Tt was late on a May afternool|them when they get home! | And now Mary Lou regre! ity 1 1 o e B vhen o Gt ke a nuge siver| Tony himselt couldn't understand| her move, Developments In - | 1aGoMA July 8—The Chicago, |25, 19 &re now in nlthlA'mmn_‘mé?t{u}»‘«\‘flinxw: Dt‘t"\g Lol NANAIMO WELLINGTON homing pigeon, appeared through| nis feelings toward Mary Lou. Be-| morrow's chapter bring even |npyaukee, st. Paul and Pacirm;i(\‘m‘h\‘(’l"lme“:g:)»‘g;”" HEwaR —ad7s LADYSMITH WELLINGTON the elouds above Croyden field. |fore the flight he had regarded| ~more misery. | Railroad, which recently ordered a| Siaplet o o UTAH STOVE Great crowds had surged theroiher as a bright girl, perhaps the {freight ear held on the tracks here NOTICE OF CALL NOTICE , to, welcome Tony home. Praise of nicest of all the girls he knew. |until a pair of robins could hatch FOR BIDS i UTAH NUT his accomplishment was on every-| Now he felt distinctly uncomfort- 'and raise their young, has nothing} Bids will be received up to 12:00 BROETT one’s lips. Mary Lou shared his aple with her. Tony was not ac-| DOU( :LAS on Edwin Ganwich, of Puyallup. cclock nooh of July 19, 1930, a‘ A:.‘:T .ihlly :10 no t‘«;lcl.w‘ht‘r'nlc PACIFIC COAST NUT J | fhe office of the City Glérk, in the [ToBtals er the month of I WEBSTER SMITHING customed to feeling uncomfortable | | Ganwich went out to his wood- 'shed to put on his hunting coat for a hunting trip. He saw a commo- tion in a pocket of the coat and glory too, as “the girl to whom| Tony Titherington is engaged.” Shef tried to feign an appearance of) ity i i vill be accepted at a discount. All City Hall, for the plastering of the |% | exterior concrete surface of the“"m"h““s by mail must bear Gymnasium wing of the Juneau\postm“k 8/ pily [EREEL Yhun, iaey with girls. Their relationship, he| felt, must be at fault—this fool| nonsense about being engaged. ' NEWS CALL ANY TRANSFER COMPANY i happiness, but it .was not sincere. It was with a mingled feeling of fear and suspense that she went to Croyden tb greet. him—fear that the time had come when their game of “let’s pretend” would end, and suspense because—well, when would it end? Jay and Jerry stood with her in the front line of the crowd as Gay Girl swooped down and came to rest not 200 feet from them. “Run up and meet him, Mary Lou,” Jay shouted. “Don’t stand there like a stick.” There was Tony, leaning from the cockpit, grinning his lopsided grin, shaking hands with the field officials. But Mary Lou couldn’t move. Tony, at the moment, seemed like a stranger—a lean, bronzed, adorable stranger whom she hap- pened in some inexplicable way, to.love. She felt a horrible sense of em- barrassment. Could this be the same Tony who had taken her to visit his aunt and begged her to become engaged to him to make this trip possible? As she stood there, tongue-tied and glued in her footsteps, Tony suddenly saw. her. “Mary Lou!” he called, and pushed his way through the mob toward her. A moment later he was gripping her hands, grinning down at her. the same. To tell the truth, T've “Jove, Mary Lou, it is great 10 8e€lpeen hanging on your return to you!” Awkwardly he bent dOWN|gsever the link. 4 and kissed her. cameras clicked as one. Tomorrow the whole world would see their picture under the caption, "Darr»’ “That's all right,” she retorted devil Flier Greets Fiancee” Mary Lou blushed. “It's great to see you, t00.” It was a stupid, obvious thing “’,ndged into my place.” say, but her head was in such a think of whirl that she could npthing - else. “you're thinner, Tony,” she gasp- ed, as they made their way to a Tony winked. “Prickly pears, he grinned. “They're marvelous re- ducers.” /Tony was acting more like him- yet instinctively she sensed that this Tony was different from boy she had known before. qt?: he was thinner and bronzed by the wind; s than Tony the change was more intan man. It had been fun for a timz—great fun. Now, however, the joke was beginning to wear a bit thin. Oh, well, he supposed it would end soon, and personally he would be glad when it did. Still it was a most awkward situation. She might even want to carry on with the game. Mary Lou, to his surprise, soon put his doubts to rest. “Well, Tony, the time has come for me to be heartless and thrust {you out of my life, hasn't it?” She watched his eyes for some !indication, some hope. If only she could feel convinced that he didn't CHILDREN’S SPORTS SET FOR THIS EVENING i WEATHER PERMITTING An effort will be made this even- ing to run off as many of the field events as possible which were post- poned from the Fourth celebration, on account of the rain. Starting {with the children’s races at 6 o'clock, all of the events as sched- uled will be held unless rain or darkness makes a second evening necessary to complete the list. i A score Of press looked much the same, excepl he had the same blue eyes and the samec tering smile. Perhaps the differ- ence was in his mouth. It was more that. She felt that the was gone. This was o She didn’t know whether 10 |ing doing, Tony. Thanks just the e — want the engagement to end! FROM KETCHIKAN | Tony tossed down a cocktail. Mary Lou reached for another glass. “Here's to the termination of our engagement,” she said with forced gaiety. Tony smiled across at her. “There’s no hurry as far as I'm Mrs. John Mills and two sons, Jack and Gordon, returned hom: yesterday on the Northland from Ketchikan where they have been visiting, for the past three weeks. Mrs. William Robertson, sister of discovered a pair of wrens had made their nest in it. He promptly canceled the trip and pinned back the coat pocket so the wrens can more readily reach their nest. Ganwich said he will get along without his hunting coat until the wren family is through with the garment. 5 - e ARE VISITING HERE P. J. Cunningham, former movie theatre man of Wrangell, accom- panied by his wife, has arrived in Juneau for a week's visit with Mr. end Mrs. T. J. Burke. Mr. Cun- ningham recently sold his theatr: to W. D. Gross and it has been completely remodeled and rechrist- ened the-Coliseum. R e ROAD MAN DIES Al Bleler, for ten years a resident of Anchorage and for several years concerned. We had a good time before. Why not carry on for a while?” Secretly he hoped that she would not take up the suggestion. With a woman'’s intuition, however, Mary Tou knew exactly what passed through his mind. | “Always the perfect little gentle- man,” she mocked. “But I'm not having any more of it, thanks just “Oh, you have?” Tony's voice was slightly chagrined. “Sotry if I've | interrupted with your plans.” {airily. “There’s still plenty of time.” “Who's the new bloke?” Tony asked. “I'll bet some dude has “Maybe.” ! “I suppose,” ventured Tony, “that he's serious, intellectual, more de-, pendent and better looking than) 1 am?” He remembered what she, had said on the subject once be-, fore. “Maybe.” was not to be put aside so Don’t who driv. And so unnecessarily ! e 1| +Look here, Mary. Lou, I've been 148 hours without sleep. - Suppose I go home now, snatch a short rest, and then we'll go out tonight and celebrate my return—for the sake of old times. Say you're on!” | Mary Lou's heart jumped to her throat. Did she dare risk it—just, one more night? Surely there was no harm in that. Then she remem- | bered her resolution. This pretend-; ing had to end some time, 1 She pushed back her hair. “Noth- the moment our driver turns it. ed in soft water with fully, starched, ironed an ing sweet and perfectly ¢ CLEA Let the W ash-tub Boss You! The wash-tub is a tyrant, a cruel taskmaster s the best years from a woman's life. We, have come to the, housewives. Why not let us aid you also? } i, Your laundry will be handled sanitarily from It will be gently but thoroughly wash- PHONE 15 ALASKA LAUNDRY G and PRESSING JFesgue of many local picks it up until he re- pure soap, rinsed care- d returned to you smell- lean. e [Feesiessserseesameraraes ol =sTsssssisssessssesse High School Building. Specifications for this work may be examined at the office of ths| | City Clerk. The right is reserved to reject &ny and all bids. JUNEAU PUBLIC SCHOOL First publication, July 8, 1930. Last publication, July 18, 1930. L BOARD | discount day. TELEPHONE CO. BEAUTY SPECIALISTS Phone 42 for Appointment e 2 | The Florence Shop | | “Nalvette” Crogquignole Perm- | anent Wave i | Please be prompt. | JUNEAU AND DOUGLAS FORDS and CHEVROLETS MAY BE WRITTEN FOR Collision Insurance . FOR A PREMIUM AS LOW AS ONE DOLLAR We are now writing many new form this year including $15—$25—8$50—$§75—$100 —$150—and $250 deductible coverages. .. WE WRITE 50-PER CENT RETENTION FULL COL- LISION COVERAGE—An attractive form for the careful driver. _ALSO . Fire and' Transportation, Property Damage and Public Liability Coverages. t- 4 ” i Call at the'office and we will explain the forms more fully to you. g " ALLEN. SHATTUCK, Inc. INSURANCE S T8 it AR et s 7% or the j g Pacific Coast Coal Co. | PHONE 412 ‘ G. H. WALMSLEY, Manager IIIIIl|IlII|II|IIIlIIIlIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'I.III(I:IIIIIIII,IIIII llIllIIIIIlIIIlIIIIIlllIlIHIlIIIIlllllllllllfillllllllllIlllillll"llllllllll“l S R B Ry ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONES 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 PLASTERBOARD . - FOR BEAUTY, COMFORT,: PERMANENCE and ECONOMY, USE Schumacher Plasterliéard It remains sniqoth; an does not warp or buckle | Thomas Hardware Co Pioneer Pool Hall Pool—Billiards Chas. Miller, Prop. Telephoné 183 EMPLOYMENT OFFICE IR 31 v STATIONERY, OFFICE. 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