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v THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WED\IESDA\ OCT {plain common sense. I've told you, 'HE ROSE [ 'nmu how mother left things. She y ,‘ ch profound faith in So \gement, IN I HE DARK judgment about everything that she |lie—m left all her money in trust for me. |yo nd I get it retted her question. he ! “You were so late,” she.accused.|get “I waited and waited for you, Les- ter. ton minutes behin ¢! monev. And, ater [me en inutes 2! | » e to + 5 avhe BN PR A st tnee |iiics, Bwestla, . Ands whinsnipls, 0. ACHhate Ko, wo ; ‘\Mf‘"]: : Lester Broon, is late, and she |that you had seized the heaven-| ~1he¢ Broons have e tha trikes up ah acquaintance with |sent opportunity of tackling . old Sentiemen.” he expla E B the other man. He is taller and |Socks, I just lay low.” P older than Lester, and s wear- “Socks he repeated, |difficulty. Supposing we CONRAD NAGEL/y | "% 987K glasecs as he is soon | “You let him jaw to you for| had gone | e iotes eotat for oye | Heatiy thebe hitrs, X coufiedyghato Socks suilasked hix “Hbsiy trouble contracted while in Af- | Did you get a flock of jungle talk? |F'8ht Off the bat? Hed have want-| rica, He cannot sco Hallic clear- | Can't fmagine a worse life than ¢ {0 Know all about you, naturally 1 ctrange affinity ccems fooling arcund among wild men and 21d you'd have told him—" B Dot 85 4k oihe |apos and. crocodiles, but . Socks| “That I'm earning my living as tells her his name s [doesn't seem cured of it yet.” 8 nurse. That my name is Harrl Grannock, but refuces to let her » stood still and stared |cita Ellesmore—the name of tcll him her name, saying he The man T was falking to,” shc aunt who was mother { prefers to remember only her ChLlEA BARTay Gantodl to me and who told me voice if he goes blind, Gran- neck gives her a tiny ivory rosc, symbol of good luck, and says if he wins back his sight he will advertise “To the Ivery R ceme heme.” Then he , and Lester Broon arrives, but Hallie finds her usual thrill at his presence lacking. 3 — e ——— e “BRITISH LORP PASSES AWAY, LONDON HOME 1930 girl, it was | arm “A trick? My dear and upturne savagely kissing her ey COLISEUM T'ONIGHT---7:30, 9:30 when and if I marry a girl approves of. Until then—well, I an allowance.” vou_ride your and then. Yes right—" “Lester SYNOPSIS: Hallie Ellesmore, m%‘m‘r\l:‘ coming to keep a rendezvous with her fiance in a shelter atep a cliff overooking Long Island Sound, finds another | “I was only T\lKl\(‘ REPORTER NEWS “HOT BRIDGE"—A Talking Comedy Now—the picture every family has long awaited . . You can't afford tu mise this startling show — it’s real! it’s humar You always seem to have pie let me go! You're hurting am But THENEW.LILA{LEEYand: o »Secon A shotinthenight | a stream—then silence / WHO was guilty of ‘the most baffling crime ever committed ) my saying so, He | was upo; late Duk hed him w which he ness was he oppor founded |she of him But content that it |was hurt |edge o 1T THE HOTELS Gastineau - my | b ; L o as not his embrac her tonight. It w something del she had sli for safe keeping warm between ad drawn her blood | 1930, by Roy Vickers ! Fate brings Hallie back into | | Socks. My brother, My |0V father had abandoned me.” i G |color was high in her cheeks alf brother!™ offered, before she died, to ad differ fathers. But |l about him. I refused even to| died before T was born, |Dear his name. He'd abandoned me. |’ brought us both up. She|l Was glad to abandon him o Socks’ charge—look here Yes, I know—it's damn’ pathetic d you all this before, surely!" land Ellesmore’s a nice name, but | you have, But I didn't Socially <p&\kms:, it’s sort of bad. that your half-brother's | You see—" ‘ att) wouldn't be Broon and you| ‘Then suppose we solve the prob-| | Straightening part of the Thames|nartin SURPRISING NEWS never called him anything but|lem by simply breaking off our en-|river in London is proposed to Y€~ Killisnoo. It was Lester’ aordinary phy-|Socks. And you told me he wouldn't gagement?” lleve traffic congestion ——————— sical - beanfy that attracted her.|be home before next Saturday.” She had not meant to say it. She| Three out of five automobile m-us] Tennessee’s volatile substance tax | Deep-cyed, golden-skinned, sweet -| “He turned up last night unex,}caught her breath. The next insumllsold in Argentina are Amcr:can- collections for July amounted to {lipped—he was a young god roam-|p Something to do with his Broon had pulled her dack into his'made. slm 019.66. | tena ing the cliffs where his nymph had ey T A tel [ SGREE MurwER G WILLIAM POWELL son, F 1 and Mrs. Reed Seaver of San Francisco. Alaskan and E. Lloyd, and mother the life of Saxley Grannock in temerrow’s chapter. e 1()—’0—.}()—1404'% 75 l‘(’llts Watch -for COHANS AND KELLYS IN SCOTLAND Alisanaw, Se- H. R. Hil, William Ainge, | uscher id Ki Ross VITAPHONE ACTS and SOUND NEWS | rea Chapter 2 | name T R R AR e e e Venezuela will celebrate its cen- y in December. ALASKA IS AGAIN “ < Naugahyde BAGS A traveling bag i that gives unsual service $6.00, $6.50, $8.50 H. S, GRAVES The Clothing Man SEE BIG VAN GUNS—AMMUNITION Rubber Boots, Shoc Pacs and Raincoats OPPOSITE COLISEUM i | ! PUSSUSTSUPSCUUSPUTTTES “Tomorrow’s Styles Gossard ‘waistline step - ins with--back--lacing sections are so easy to adjustl As your waistline diminishes the lacing can be tightened. Sketched, is a pink brocade step-in” with elastic sided sections for hip restraint. It extends 2 inches above IN ROTOGRAVURES| Alaska is again in the rotograv-(red-brown ha ures this week. The New York “Awful waste to give such a heap Herald Tribune contains three bear of good looks to a man, wasn't it?”| studies taken on Chichagof Island He laughed, by John M. Holzworth of the; She drew away from him. At fir United States Biological Survey.|she had been amused at such Another picture is of Admiral Rob- | acce) tance of a handsome face but| ert E. Coontz swimming in Lak('}l.uoly the joke had begun | Spenard, near Anchorage. ‘She’s jealous!” he excla The legend under the bruin pic-{And then he laughed again. “Oh tures say they were taken at aiHallie, what's it matter if a lot of range from five to fifty feet. Only |dumb flappers make fools of them- one of the bears is hurrying away. selves over me? You know it's mm; Another is, judging from the angle, 'you I'm keen about. Hallie, your | wading to the wrong side of a'eyes are dark as night, and j i stream—the near side. One big|they're not really black. And on brownie in apparedt surprise <s ox your eyebrows is arched a little| looking into the camera. higher than the other—I like ‘ol Admiral Coontz bears an expres- |try to make them match.” sion that indicates that he thinks| But she evaded his touch. well of Lake Spenard. The picture |spell was upon her, but it was not was taken when he was with Sena- (so strong tonight. tors Howell, Kendrick and Thomas | “You've never told me anything| on their recent trip to Alaska. |about my voice,” she said. —e>—— “Why, it's a wonderful voice— Try the Fve o'Clock It's—" } Speeials at Mabrys She hidden. Half absently, she put up! a hand and passed it over his thick | Hl} —adv Tinner ‘ l interrupted him as though| “You didn't tell me he was in} danger of going blind!” Her voice was shaking. “Do you mean to tell me—" cried | Lester—*““do you mean to tell me hat you didn't know that for the last three hours you've been endur- | ing the well-known Socks?"” “No. I didn't know . . . So that's why you thought T'd been clever.” Broon was laughing immoderate- ly. “Oh, Lord, it’s great! Now, if on],\“l we can make Socks .believe you didn't waylay him on purpose! He's | a suspicious bird—old Socks. | “Hallie, you may not have lweni |such a clever kid as I thought but| |I bet you've been twice as effec-| tive. Three hours of Socks! The trick is ours, all right.” She turned upon him with q| fierceness as startling to her as to him “‘Yes, it was a trick as we pt ned it, even when we thought he'd be able to take a good look at me, | I'm ashamed of myself. And now he’s nearly blind—" | :P iDE the new EMPIRE L BUILDER, or the lux-| vrious ORIENTAL LIM- ITED—specially Pullman- ccuipped and the finest pair of trains to the East! Marvel at the great new elec- trified Cascade Tunnel, hewn through eight miles of mountain, making this Great Northern route the short, comfortable way from Seattle to Chicago and the East, via Spokane, Gla- cier Park and Twin Cities. Twelve hundred superlatively, beautiful miles, behind great new super-power electric and oil-burning locomotives . . . each division equipped with motive power to insure a smooth, constant flow of speed .. . effortless starts, easy stops. For information or reservations write or cable GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY] A. J. ARRIVEE, Traveling Passenget Agen: Seattle,*U. §. A- — The Luxurious me Seattle EMPlRIE BUILDER | Leaves Seattle daily :00 P, M, ORIENTAL l!M“ED daily 10:00 THERE’s always some favored one with a charm that’s all her own. ... And everywhere in the modern scene you'll see happy smokers break- . ing out fresh, fragrant packs of Camels . . . a natural choice too! For the mildness of Camels is a charm that’s all its own . . . a natural mildness that’s a quality of choicest tobaccos. Don’t confuse this fresh, fragrant mildness with the flatness or insipidness of “over-treated” tobacco. There’s a delightful natural fragrance to Camels, too, a “bouquet” as distinctive as the fragrance of oriental flowers. Here’s to the defighfi@ things of life! Have a Camell © 1930, R. J. Reyneldn Tobaceo Co., Wiastoa-Salem, N. Gy