The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 30, 1933, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE FRIDAY JUNE 30, 1933. ; 7 PRINCE RUPERT. | “HERE ON FIRST. By BILLE DE BECK . JUS' LET ME B HEARD W i - GET MY HANDS i b BREAKIN' ABOUT MIDNIGHT- I LOOK OUT AND 1 SEE THE VIPER RUNNING WILD Washfi Up! STAY HOME. TLL MAKE A JiG~ I WON'T STAND FOR HIM STRANGE QUESTIONS cyclone th it you hadn't seen coming. Northwestern is scheduled to e 1‘ Ron’;‘iqur.i‘sl‘t I\:I;_s“_ H. .&} ‘r‘zondl;:;‘x)srr, Cold Storage Company for 6 and 3’ “ o { i ’ But even ip that destructive mo- sail from Seattle, July 5 e|D. T. Fett, illiam alker, id f cents_a pound. Daily Empire Want Ads ~., 1I!l-rls|l:s)|\oe|:|rgfi,‘?dherflnd, o ment—and it isn't easy to know sud- [® at 9 a. m. ® | ence Hawk.oswor(h. Mrs. Charles PRlN. CHARLOTTE 1 i 5o T She looked at the delicate Wisp ot | denly that ‘yotir only moments of |® Princess Charlotte scheduled olHnwkeswortn. Mrs, Osca.r Elmsan}. HERE SOU'I'HBOUND white that | drew trom my pocket. high and magic living are counted [® to sail from Vancouver July e |A. Hendrickson and wife, Alice EARLY THlS A. M Sho had beea, | think, about to ques.| 2P0 are few 1. count, and that they’ll e 8 at 9 p. m. o Clark, Elvina Berg, Cash Cole, H, L tion me further, for she looked faint. | 8¢ swiftly and f{rretrievably and |e SOUTHEUumsw SAILINGS ‘e |Berg, Jack Rosenbloom, Mrs. Fred ‘Suulhbuund Lhe_ Canadian P_lCn- 1y impatient at the interruption. The finally—even in that moment | knew |® Prince ' Rupert scheduled ® | Henning and baby, A. I Whyte,! fic steamer, Princess Charlotte, § impatient look, however, was suc- I could not tell her. 1 could not tell |e couthbound Saturday at mid- ® | Gecrge Whyte, Miss D. Jacobsen, C}lpt. W. Q. Palmer, a}ld A. \H: ceeded by .. puzzled little frown. this girl with the golden millions. ® night. ® | Lew Key and four steerage. Bird, purser, docked in Juneau this | w " g o L wished she'd gone that morning | e yukon scheduled southbound e | ———————— e{morning at 6o'clock and sailed | o ra o Jea she said, Ul belleve| potore her brother came! | wished |o - next Monday morning. o _lat 9 oclock "h! is A;‘fl“z" it "’“‘“‘t“’;‘e s0me I ghe'q given up her claim as she said | o LOCAL SAILINGS . TIDES TOMORROW | The passengers leaving June pis A 25 a scent that 1 use. | gho was about to do—1 wished all | o Etepeth leaves every Thurs- e _e|On the steamer for the south were 1 couldn’t be sure, though. It's a manner of insane things. e day night st 6 p. m, for o e Mrs, H. S. Graves, W. L. Smn.h g Jutte ordinary tandkerchief—you| .And something salu: You won't |o gitka and way-pofts. ® | (Alaska Standard Time; add one |C. LaMarehé and E. L. Davis. K ;:x;f:::eozegin;fi‘t’hem In.any store | feel this tearing at youfor long: it |4 Pacific leaves every Thursday e hour for Junecau District) o ! would be unedurable if you did but | gt 10 a m,for Petersburg, ® | Tow tids, 0:38 am. 3.1 feet. |FRANK W. NEWMAN ENTERS 4 1 did not explain. 1 said: “I found | you won't, for even the memory of e Kake and way ports. ® | High tide, 6:28 a.m. 12.0 feet. PIONEERS HOME, SITKA i ::‘:r; t:lzx:‘lg[o‘:' \l’Vikl:lyon com;w!!(l:: your love will grow dim and faint. eeeeeeo0 08 e e [,u tide 12:34 pm. ” foek Fratk W, Newrhar 18t Jinehi] 3 K ¥ OW Jour AFORH: feet. o o t evening for er's waiting and you mustn’t be long, ND - that, of course, was worse, 7 %2 gr:tk;h M;E;l: b(:nh v;‘\llsl t: . | Rut It will only take a moment.” and if Sue had turned just then, | o1q papers at Tie Emiplre. Pay in the Pignsers She looked further puzzled, but|it she'd faltered or hesitated or e 0 went with me toward the north cor-| looked to me for help, the whole — e ridor. thing would have come out. . At the end of the corridor I asked [ But she didn't turn. And by the o her to stand for a moment before | time we reacted the stairway I had my door. | marked her height| walked throug) heaven and hell and against the window. | did not need | emerged. 1 oved her, and | was go- even to go to the lobby whence J| ing to give her up. | was even with bad seen that fiying silhouette. Even | my own hands helping erect that i allowing largely for the angie of| hateful, glittering path along which my perspec:ive from the lobby, Sue| her little feet would walk away was at least a foot shorter than that | from me. brief silhouette had been. 1 ought| Well—I emerged. It s by no to have known it at once. Jmeans a unique experience. And , There was sti]l peither time nor,) after all, I'd rather have had it than _}| “need to explain then to Sue, I said: | #ot. So there was no gflOd making a “Do you see that room up there on | fuss about it. the third story—the fifth shutter It was almest a relief to wrench < from the corner of the:middle sec«| myself back to the business at hand. m OF‘ ’ U LY & T4 tlon? Abouat number thirty-four vr| The business of helping Sue acquire J‘/ “ thirty-five: Were you up there at| thdse damaable millions which not £ # “Heavens, no,” siid-Sue, ‘weefng [ ES Was great, Hisarrivalhad forced il RASPEBERRY—STRAWBERRY—PEACH — APRI e sandwiches of liverwurst or tangy what | meant and forgiving‘me si- | the fil“mfi.:: :ov. it stér, llthe vllt;: R‘ T N"' T 3 2 cheese ultaneously. “If you mean Mrs.| Would need be carried to its sw SA DI ES R l 5 g’ H § £.8 0 g’!ng may be—suspect—that's, ab- | conclusion, for once he was con- 0 aSte cans . C i 4 L2 by SAW _PUZZLE / OouT all the night of the first murder? I don’t know what she was think- Ing of me just then. She looked per- plexed, but Sue was never'dull. TA HIM!| only severed ber from me but which threatened her — threatened her — threatenéd her. ‘' And tithe was pressing. “No,” she said directly. “Another thing.” I said. “And for- glive me for all.this. pointlessness.” ¥ hesitated bere; the thing | was about to ask was not entirely pefnt. less. 1 plunged on, however: “Mrs. Byng says she saw you turn- {ng out the hotel lights the night ot the first murder. She says—" Sue’s eyes were widening. “She says,” went on miserably as | saw that my. very inquiry must Suggest to hér that I'd believed Mrs. Byng, “that she saw you at the switch box, there in the corridor near her door. Thati she saw you pull the main switch, and that the lights ‘went out at once.” “And you believed her?” said Sue ‘father sadly. “No.” | had her hands and almost had her, suddenly, in my arms. “No! 1 didn’t believe her. Not when you' told. me where youd been at that time:” She pulled back away frém me. “l don’t know what Mrs. Byng saw or thought she saw,” gaid Sue. “But 1 told you the exact truth. About everything.” “I'know. 1 kpow. Tcll me, Is Mrs. Byng friendly with you?” 3 o - e (LSRN it BN LR B O B S Sl creamy foam is the same . . . the rich, —no,” sa ue. “But not g o h 5 h 3 3 “unfriendly, elther. We've Lad| g theparlor door, the lift, the gai- CANTALOUPES. largesize.2for . . . 25¢ malty body is the very same.. And. in | very little to do with one another. | leries, After all, I'd seen little Mar- e g 9 . pver ci _— 11 Lh e’s h. every precious swallow ere’s that Scarcely talked at all.” ‘| =6l shot before my ‘very éyes,'and 1 e e e S e e e ot B - ety & : “You wouldn't say, thefi, that she'd lgng Wi pow:‘rleu blealic J A M uart ars . 929¢ full, - old-time' hops flavor that goes ;;::"h““w“j' T that with F‘.‘unc’s"‘:rrlvnlnslue':dafr- I Basiaba et e © 0 0 S8 e 3 OH’ S0 GOOD with Sfllly pretzels, or Murd: She’s exactly what she seemg" “I'm beginning to think 1 don't! mean anything. You'd best go along| to your brother. He'll grow Buspi- | elous. I'll go with you to the lofmgs.* / *“It's not going to be easy,” safd Sue. “Faclag him, knowing all along ghat if he suddenly produces his.own foken I cannot produce mifie %o ‘fnatch 1t. | was almost ready this ‘morning tc give up the whole thing. Atter all—why do I want five mfll dollars?” She said it thoughtfully, as 4t she really did wonder why. ! “Five millions,” 1 snid rather bit- terly, “Is not to be regarded with dis- Tespect. And in this case, If you ure in for a penng you're in for a pound.” We were walking back along the north corridor. In two or three days Francis was still in the parlor. As we ‘walked down the last steps into the lounge, Lorn came suddenly from the parlor. “Your brother is waiting for yon,” be- sald, and paused, his clouded dark eyes meeting Sue’s gaze. He looked pecullarly uncertain and 11l at ease; The effect he gave of not ‘having concluded his sentence, and thus of having still something he must say to Her, was so strong that both Sue and 1 paused too, motion- less, waiting for what was to come. ‘But it he'd interided to say sothe- thing further he thought better of it he made a rather strange little gesture with his hands, shrugged and walked away. She looked after him perplexedly, then turned toward me with a juestion in her face. But 1, of course, could tell ‘her nothing; I only felt that the detective’s look savored, somehow, of warning. Sue taok a long breath, gave me a Juick little nod, and walked swiftly toward the gtuffy old parfor and the waiting man. There’ was a tine tem- peritig of steel in Sue; she mever lacked courage in a erists. I sat in the lounge in full view ot the door.and waited. After a few sec- ‘onds | found 1t impossible to sit, and vinced of Sue's identity that plot lust’ automatically collapse. And blind aud groping about in the dark s we Were—not knowing from what quarter frouble might come—there wags every reason to fear that that conclusion might have an unthink- able, ghastly outcome. With“the token stolen, even the small measure of protection its pos- session had given Sue was gone:; with' that In the possession of the murderer :he next step was inevita- bly to produce the substitute for Sue —and to silence Sue. And it must be done at once, if ever.. (Copyright. 1933 lflzuon G !’Mvhafll Another terrible - com tomorrow, snarls Sue's M.n‘c more. i DOWN THE MIDDLE O' THE STREET — SOMEBODY. WAS AFTER HIM ... CHASING THE VIPER INTO ANY MORE OF MY APARTMENT HOUSES ON PARK AVE _ ers, Pickles; Olives, Cheese and Cold Meats. WA TERMELONS ihele.or half, 1b. . 7V%c UNDERSTAND ? ORANGES; juicy, 288 size, 2 doz. . GINGER ALE, 2 bottles . . . or LIME RI(‘KEY—-OLI) HEIDELBERG RIPE OLIVES, Libby’s, small cans . BUTTER, Sunset Gold, 3 1bs. . . EGGS, large, fresh, clean,-3 doz. . ! RA QPBERRY— flwRTED ORWE(:IA'\ & Piggly Wiggly Meat Department ‘1933’ BROILERS, 4 Whole AVERAGE WEIGHT OVER ONE POUND SLTCED BACON, Tean, tasty. 21bs. . . 45¢ MANY ’VAR]‘mmé "o c‘nb(m f ROM & B — Saturday and Monday For your picnics over the week-end and the 4th-—Insure its success byi buying your supplies from PIGGLY WIGGLY—Ginger Ale, melons, Cantaloupes, Bananas, Oranges, Apples, Cakes, Cookies, Crack ‘TRAWBERRY-—PEACH — Al’l(l( 'OT — CHERRY ( hwkens $1 00 ’rtenmg; 3 lbs. .. 29¢ Water- 39¢ 25¢, 10¢ 93¢ 79c TRIP OF 1933 Fifty Toitsists Make Excur-‘ | ~ston on Initial Run of Can. Natl. Steamer On the first trip to Alask geason, the Prince Rup Canadian National Li here last evening at 7 sailed for Skagway Capt. Neil MacLean is comma o'clock at midnight and 1 A Bright Qnavpy Job 1 Makes the Old Bus Look New! 5 . ) R For the convenience of our patrons we § = will, commencing tomorrow, serve all of the BLTKI'ER }(NOWN BRANDS of ¢ ) BE NOISE FOR THE FOURTH OF JULY UNRESTRICTED 'SALE SATURDAY MORNING! FIREWORKS — FIRECRAGKERS — TORPEDQES 4+ FLASHES ¢ The clear sparkle is the same . . . the MAKERS [ b ey er of the Print: Rupert, and o Like p 0 0o 0ecoonooe c SEVEN HAL]BUTERS | SCHOONER ESTEP TAK offlcers aboard the mer 1 * Steamer Movemenb SELL AT SEATTLE ON ICE THIS MORNING [Chief Officer E. Mabbs, Chie Keeps the' New that i . NORTHBO! {gineer, W. E. Maillie, Purser No Way : by Migtion G. Eberhare’ ® Northland scheduled to ar- ol SEATTLE. June 30Seven'hay. The schooner Estep, Capt. H. A.[man McLean and Chief Steward . i | | & TivB it SOEUSReR e GR 9 but schooners arrived today and F37°¢i WOK on ice at the Juneau R i i $1100 SR ® morning. Should have 3 days’ e | 2 .0 % Cola Storaze plant this morning | Mr. McLean is assisted by Joe r SYNOPSIS: Sue Taliy hud i her ) at the most she would go completely |y i ol sold their catches as follows: o radia o g 1i- | Burrowclough and Fred Coram. possession a Loken with which har mail. | |.. ¥rom th tarn banks<Nork paratory. to leaving for the hali-| ey | she wust tdentity hersell to her | UL Of my life. ® Alaska due 6 p. m. Sunday e | 6 wes ; oriy | In addition to the northbound CONNORS .fl.".fi'fl.,'»L'Z'/'fy'fli'n.ff.f'z"ifi" she s ot It was theh that | keew what'a |g Alsutian . due Monday. o with 35000 pounds, selling for 7% ek | passeng: there are fifty round herit her half'of her tathers enor- | deVastating tiiing it would be never '3 SCHEDULED SAILINGS ° | and cents a pound. ; 3 |trip tourists aboard the Prince i ;',',',",‘,' my;;;‘zl‘;:: m’l‘h,zre“‘I‘:luvnn been agnm' to see her advancing toward o Princess Louise schedulsd to From the local bsnks'O}'blb with| NEW SELLS FARE |Rupert this trip. [ Motor Co [ horel fu wohich sho foes conneet me. Never a, i to catct the gay Ht- I “ga1 from Vancouver July 1e| SEATTLE, June 30. — Steamer| 18,000 pounds, Wesley with 9,000 0 COLD STORAGE CO.[ Emma Lambert, H. Washburn,! i) ;jxlfi;‘r;;ueyv:_niy:l:,ln",M‘t"u,l u..;‘:':.x-” tle cllallen.ge of her mouth that was at 9 pm. e Aleutian sailed for Alaska ports &t pou}nds and Pearl with 2,000 pounds, t, Richard Goldth- INC. appears Jim Sundean adrises S a smile. Never again to watch the g nio . scheduled -t sail from e |9 oclock this morning with 137|selling for 8% and 4% cents a One thousand pounds of and Robert Bates wers Jun- ] to “Uinir> Wer “orather aud s de- gallant Iift of Her chin, the light in [0 g o July 3, at 9 pm. e first class passengers and 46 steer-|pound. Pierce with 12,000 pound. % b R o sm |©3u passengers on the steamer. \ FRONT STREET 1o find the token. Sundean gues. |50l BleAMS on'ber bair, the delicacy |iJ Prince George scheduled to e |age passengers aboard. Evolution with 7,000 pounds, Wood-| ¥°r¢ brousht in this On the way south, the Prince] ks B, of her hands tnd her beautiful body. . : A Ry with 9,000 pounds, all selling| the fishing banks by the boat, NeWlo "y 406 1n Junest " ahokit] | Yes, it was devastating. It was |® Sl from Vancouver July 3 | passengers booked for Juneau B0 714 aria Wik CRNEA" & pouna. . .| Annie, Jimmy Marks n(ll up % ) Chapter 40 like being caught in the vertex ot a |® 4t 8 p. m. ® (aboard the Aleutian include Lorane | A : werz purchased by the Ju AR Geitck Sunday mrxrnmg 3 ULk T . ° AN R T The tax rate in Vance county, . C., was reduced 45 cents on the y'l'ha Juneau Water Works N imove its oftice July 1 to the First| $100 valuation this year. Last National Bank from where it will| year's rate was $1.21. transact all business. e \ . NOTICE! JUNEAU ICE CREAM PARLORS NEXT TO PIGGLY WIGGLY > CHICKENS, light hens for stcwing, b, . 19¢ BUBBWS S, i MU PHONES—Grocery 24 leat Dept., 24-2 nngs Business Is Good

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