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LY AND xem SYNOPSIS: Like a dream are of fish for her approval. . the ycars which Teny Lotour The girl's voice thrilled with ad- gave tc the stage, but vividly |miration. “Oh, did you catch all he rcmembers his childheod |those? How do you ever do it?" with Harriet Nccl in the vil- lage of Orchard Hill 70 ycars age. Even today the derisive townspecple hint shameful mystery in the abrupt end to the young actor's career and his return te his parents’ home therc. Philesophically tolerant, Teny now views life as a play, with Harriet—her exit made— watching her ton, Pierre, achizve theatrical fame. erre, «n- dowed with his mother's tal- ent, must have also from her inherited his eoul; for Tony says that Pierre’s father, Roy Denevan, had none to bequeath. Tony, happy that he has helped Picrre attain rcnown, mentally A warm glow spread all through |the boy; inside and out he tingled with rapture. Late that night when his parents were sound asleep, the boy stole out of his bedroom window and fol- lowed the path to the house where {the girl lived. For an hour he stcod under the stars, watching the square of light which was the win- dow of her room. Old Tony laughs now when he says: “I did not know until long afterward that it was the window of the old housekeep- er's room, and that Harriet's room | was on the other side of the house.” The paths which led from the two homes on the brow of the hill to their secluded nook were deeply unrolls his old associations with worn during the years which fol- Harriet, whem he had loved |lowed. devotedly. All the life of their native village the boy and girl lived with their Chapter |village mates. And always their LOVE IN THE BUD young hearts were warmed by the The Lotour house on the brow enduring glow of that first awaken- of Orchard Hill, where the higher |ing. They did not speak of it—boys land upon which the village and girls do not usually—but they stands drops steeply down to the |knew. valley and the river. A half mile| During their last year in public or so away, also overlooking tho|school they were chosen for the valley pastures and meadows, |leading parts in an amateur play gtands the old house where Harriel |and made their first appearance to- Noe! lived. ‘gethcr on the stage. They met of- " About midway between the two|ten in that little retreat between homes there is one of those pretty |their homes to rehearse, and named half-hidden retreats often seen in!the place their theater. No other @ country where hills and valleys \member of the company was ever [L HAVEN'T THE FAINTEST IDEA, ANGEL / I L ASK LNICLE SAMLUEL - THE ALASKA DAILY EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 193 By CLIFF STERRETT _ DOES POISOM VY HAVE A #=5 FLOWER, SAMLEL? DEAREST 4§ WANTS TO MAKE HER LITTLE PAL A PRESENT! f = V= ally, were not blind to their only son’s interest in this girl whose name was so frequently on the tongues of the neighborhood gos- sips. In their eyes, even though by any chance Harriet Noel escaped | the moral ruin of a stage career,| she could scarcely be looked upon| as the ideal wife for a clergyman. I suspect, too, Tony had doubts about a stage career for Harriet. But about his love for Harriet there was no doubt. Nor was there any doubt in his mind as to what her answer would be when the time| came for him to ask her to be his wife. (Copyright 1930, D. Appleton & Co.) | | A kiss! Then hesiftant Tony | grows bolder tomorrow. Is stage love real enough to open door? ., | DOUGLAS | NEWS | SUNDAY SCHOOL PICNIC | | TO BE HELD NEXT SUNDAY| | ‘The annual picnic of the Con- gregational Community Sunday School has been arranged for next | ‘Sunday, June 28, to be held on the Treadwell sand beach. The boys above. NO. Y;ARDS 10 | 394 (1| 360 2] 546 13 | 445 14 25%fl 389 48 135 480 3405 NO.| YARDS 410 | 2 3 & > o b/ 3 The Scioto Country club course at Columbus, O, (shown in detail above), June 26-27 will be the scene of renewal of hostilities of crack American amd British pros in their annual battle for the Ryder Cup. Walter Hagen, U. S. Captain, gnd Charles Whitcombe, American Beauty Parlors Permanent Waving A Specialty We are equipped to give you the kind of wave your hair should have—Combination—Croquinole or Spiral. Mrs. John McCormick, graduate cosmetologist, now with this shop offers our patrons a com- plete beauty service. MRS. JACK WILSON, Prop. PHONE 397 H £ g £ £ | cvarLes | WHITCOMBE SN = T COAL INDIAN LUMP NUT ... PACIFIC COAST NUT . DIAMOND BRIQUETS ADMIRALTY ISLAND ... UTAH STOVE . LADYSMITH SCREENED LADYSMITH MINE RUN NANAIMO : SCREENED NANAIMO MINE RUN ... LADYSMITH, NANAIMO OR UTAH SCREENINGS WEBSTER SMITHING . ANTRACITE NUT CALL US DIRECT Your Credit Is Good—If Your Credit Is Good! Pacific Coast Coal Co. PHONE ‘412 JUNEAU’S COAL DEPARTMENT STORE PHONE 412 ALL KINDS A Coal for Every Purse and Purpose IIIIIHIEE-IIIIIlllllIIIIHIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllfi . At Bunkers (L T LT R TR T LT LR T British leader, are shown fheet. In Tony's boyhood thisval- nvited to meet them there. Harriet's acting in the play was But many and girls are to meet at the church jat 10 o'clock in the morning when RIVALS FIGHT No. 6—500 yards. The tee shot\\onto the green that is well guarded | THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and End at, the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat must be well placed in order to get in front and on the right. The player 4 chance around a -dogleg at the |will be well satisfied to average fey land was a pasture—as it is to- d}y.‘ s Mlways ‘there 'is the pleasant|the talk of the village. &mell of grass and flowers and trees [of the vilagers shook their heads and cattle and warm moist earth.|in grave concern. To their sim- “ The boy was fishing that Satur-|ple country minds it might be all day afternoon in Cherry Creek. It 'right for a boy or girl to appear in He held up his string of fish for her approval. was one of those days in late|a school play or a church cantata, lsalad by Mrs. Brown's -class, and they will be taken to the picnic, grounds. | Preparations for the big feed which is to feature the picnic ure’ as follows: sandwiches are to be pro- vided by Bernice Edward’s class; fruit by Geneva Feero's class; salad | by Mrs. Frankfurter's class; cookies and cakes by Wilma Feero's class; ' IN RYDER CUP PLAY IN OHIO ice cream and lemonade by the Sunday School. —— oto Course; Links are | [ Improved EPISCOPAL LADIES TEA | A sliver tea will be given on| COLUMBUS, Ohio,;June 23— Thursday afternoon of this week When the annual Ryder Club team by the St. Luke's Guild. The event Matches are played on Scioto Coun- will be' given in St. Luke's Rec- | Y club course here June 26-27, tory, on St. Ann’s Avenue. Ev”y_jthe leading professionals of Eng- body is welcome. !land and the United States will B B B SO SRS e ) find a course which is simple, yet a true test of golf. VISITING KROMQUISTS } Scioto, with additional traps, four Miss Evelyn Wright arrived here new and improved greens, all com- Saturday on the Princess Louise for pleted since the National open was Iher second visit in Douglas during /played a test for the Ryder Cup which she is to be the house guest teams. of Mrs. A. Kromquist. It is a unique type of golf course . — e e—— lin the fact that it is not heavily | burdened with sand traps. Natural rolls of the ground and rather se- vere rough tend to keep the player STUART DAVIS RETURNS Stuart P. Davis, son of Mrs. Rose | Davis of this city, arrived here yes- on his mettle to score well. terday on the Admiral Rogers, as{ rpe greeéns, while noi over- one of a party of two which 1S pre- | 4rapned will call for reasonably ac- pared and outfitted to spend the|.yrate second shots, nor are they ynext month or more hunting, pros-1especially troublesome, except in spring when everything is young and bursting with the sap of life. When the shadows lengthened toward supper-time the boy set out across the pasture for his home— are feet and legs browned by the sun—rolled-up overalls, calico shirt but in the eyes of Orchard Hill an actor ranked but little higher than a bartender, while an actress was an unprincipled hussy. Old Tony says, “I remember how shocked I was when Harriet first confided to me her ambition to be- pecting and taking motion pictutes one or two cases, in the way of un- of wild game life of the territoty. | qylation, but they will be found ——————— fast enough to require a true touch. MYSTERY STORY AT Above all, Scioto demands long DOUGLAS THEATRE|;ng wen placed tee shots, with ac- curate seconds to the green. The For tonight at the local Coli-|shot requitements of the course: Battle to Be Staged on Scit| forn and without buttons—a string of fish in his hand—his fishing pole gver his shoulder. The boy could not have told why, never questioned Orchard Hill's Jjudgment of moral issues. My par- ents, staunch pillars in the church, come an actress. At that agexh.udl seum, “The Second Floor Mystery,” featuring Grant Withers and Lor-| etta Young, is on the boards. B FARMER PROFITS WHEN No. 1—410 yards. A stfaight drive of 250 yards leaves a com- paratively easy approach shot. A par 4 is not difficult. green with the' second. Two fine wood shots may enable the player to beat par 5. No. 7—380 yards. If the player carries a gully at the 200-yard mark with his tee shot, which probably Wwill be into the wind, he has a chance at a birdie 3. No. 8—480 yards. One of the feat- ure holes of the course, the green is tightly guarded, and the smart player will play his second shot slightly short, and then try for a birdie 4 with a chip shot. No. 9—140 yards. The green an- gles to the right and is well guard- ¢d upon all sides by sand traps. The length and angle to the hole can be varied by using different tees, of which there are three. Par is 3. No. 10—394 yards. If the prevail- ing wind is blowing, it willbe with |the player and the hole is a com- paratively easy par 4. No. 11—360 yards. A drive and pitch hole onto a green that is well guarded. Straight golf makes it essy to chalk up a par 4 With a chance at a birdie 3. No. 12—546 yards. A dogleg with | a decided swing to the left for the| second shot and a diagonal sand trap imimediately in front of the green make it next to impossible o get on in two. However, the player should not have a great deal of trouble in getting an average of par I No. 13—445 yards. The tee shot must be straight as the fairway is! guarded on both sides up to 250 yards from the tee by sand. traps. Par is 4. No. 14238 yards.”A fine one shot hole. The green angles slightly to the right and is severely guarded by traps. Par is 3. WNo. 15389 yards. Traps to the Par is 4. . No. 17—135 yards. One of the most difficult on the course, despite its shortness, the hole demands great accuracy. It isdownhillto a postage stamp green surrounded with hazards. Par is 3, No. 18—480 yards. A nice two shotter, requiring good direction. This is the easlest par five hole on the course and a great many fours will be registered here. The green is trapped on both sides. MELTING FURNACE IS EVOLVED FROM BURNING MIRROR STOCKHOLM, June 23.—In the artillery museum of Stockholm there is an ancient burning mirror of large dimensions, formerly used by FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON i Telephone 409 Valentine Building } . CLOSING OUT EVERY ITEM OF MEN’S F-UR.‘NISHINGS Slaughtered - J. M. SALO Next to Gastineau Hotel UM the Swedish army as a means of defense against hostile ships. The mirror was placed in the sun so its reflection set fire to the ves- sels approaching Sweden's shore. A scientific adaption of theburn- ing mirror has been made by two Swedish scientists, who constructed a powérful melting furnace using an elliptical mirror and a strong electric arc light. During a demonstration of the furnace before the Society of Phy- sical Research, the inventors ob- tained heat enough to melt a metdl with the melting point of about 2,100 degrees centigrade. e ———— E Kills flies, mosquitos, gnats and all insect life 75 CENTS A PINT Butler Mauro Drug~ Co. Phone 134 Express Money Orders KILL We Deliver | i i i i i i E | i 5 i A SssssessssssszeEisEEEIssE sssssssssssssvEsTaEe MUST SELL IMMEDIATELY One Special-six Studebaker Se- |dan; new rubber; ’excellent me- chanical condition; $250.00 for cash. Burroughs Adding Machiné. fit he was thinking of Harnel"desuned me for the ministry. That en he reached the little retreat |Harriet should deliberately propose the foot of the hill. Then, sud-|to walk so far from the established ly, he saw her gathering the|paths of righteousness was a se- lets that grew in the tall grass.|vere blow upon those Orchard Hill '&M’ as he watched her, so un-|Standards.” aware that any one was invading| The two young people ‘éntered - privacy in that little retreat, |Orchard Hill Academy in the same ling he had never known before |class and during the four yearsof me over him--an awakening. For |their Academy life were leaders in seemed to him a long time helall the activities of the Dramatic | there, wondering at this new [Club of the school. And while Har- . strange -emotion. |riet dreamed of a career-.on the Jwad forgotten his purpose t0|stage and read plays innumerable, upon-her with a yell, but ad- jshe grew into womanhoo@ with a ed slowly and with an elabo- | personality distinctive: and beauti- ; effort to appear casual said,|ful. . Considering her unusual freedom of speech and manned together with her gift for acting, and with Or- chard Hill's. séttled conviction that professional actors were a bad lot, it is no wonder that there were pre- dictions that she would come tono she held; the boy, for|good end. For her father's sake first time in_ his life, painfully |she was not exactly ostracized, but of dirt-stained hands and and face, and unable to speak ' mate with her was to be placed un- | word. der surveillance by the watchful At last she broke the embarass-|guardians of the community's mor- ,:'3’?! huh.? g‘wu l!u string} | ‘'Young Antonio's parents, natur- i -Ibd. b-' cheeks flushed, told him she wasglad 29 for any boy or girl to be too inti- | s No. 2—430 yards. Here the ball LEGUMES FED TO COWS |15t pe driven perfectly straight with ‘a carry of close to 200 yards, LA GRANGE, Texas, June 33.—lor it will be bumped off the hog- Paul Hensel's pasture, near here.|packed fairway into rather severc wasn't worth much to him until he rough. Tt is par 4. began using oats, hairy vetch and“ No. 3—375 yards. An elevated Austrian peas on the six acres ""puttlng green, angling to theright feed his cows. |and ‘sloping to the left, demands a Results: Milk production increas-ioe shot as far to the left as pos- H 5- | ed about $45 a month, m:m_d““m" oo, Y No. 4—180° yards. This putting ‘green angles slightly to the left and is well guarded in front and |on both sides, requiring a nice No. 12-iren shot for-a=ehance at-par 3. No. 5—445 yards. Following the tee shot the second must be played 'onto an undulating double plateau | style of green, as near as possible to the flag to avoid a difficult ap- Par is 4. SCHOMBEL'S ELECTRIC SHOP adv. ' TELEPHONE 4503 DOUGLAS COLISEUM ight Only SECOND. FLOOR ‘MYSTERY” it With H. B. Warner It COMEDY, ACTS, and NEWS THE SANITARY GROCERY right of the dogleg fairway and di- $10000. L. C. Smith typewriter, réctly in front of the green make it [$60.00. good policy to try short cuts to hole.| ALASKA PERSONAL SERVICE Par is4. AGENTS, 3 No. 16—418 yards. Requires & 206 Seward Building, Phone 3342, (adv)) good straight tee shot and approach It Won’t Be Long Now * GET QUR FINAL CLOSE-OUT PRICES The Léader Department Store ; -: PHONE 454 i “The Store That Plsaset” Old Papers for sale at Empire - CAMPING OUT? DON'T LET GNATS OR MOSQUITOES SPOIL YOUR TRIP Get Rawleigh’s Pyretho Fly Killer TELEPHONE 1953 COMPLETE OUTFIT—$1.25 Office