The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 26, 1933, Page 7

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- 3 ‘ “» Last publication, Oet. 17, 1933, TUESDAY, SEPT. 26 1933.. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG WARNIN' YA, BARNEY- o H itler-Wagner R LISSEN --- MY PAL 1§ IN JAIL HERE-- HE'S LONESOME - T'™M ONLY TRYIN' TO CHEER HIM UP ~--T--T-w omance Dies; He Is Buisy; She Defies Nazis| The oft-reperted love link between Adclf Hitler, German Chan- chellcr, and Frau Winifred Wagner, who has been carrying on the Bayreuth tradition, has beccme enly a memery. But they still are friends. BAYREUTH, Germany, Sep —The rumored romance between Adolf Hitler and Winifred Wag-| ner, gossipzd about for years, ap-: parently is off. Intimates of each| say that only friendship survives. Hitler is so busy with his Chan- cellorship and his Nazi party that marriag? is caid to be further from his thoughts than ever. { Also, Frau Wagner is one of the few Germans who have refused to bow to a Nazi decree. The mo-| ment she heard of a radio order! " which barred Toscanni and some! other distinguished American con-| ductors from German air waves, | " she posted to Berlin and bearded | Hitler in his den. She told him the radio ban was a big mistake. Also she in- sisted that her star Jewish sing- ers, among them Emanuel List and Alexander Kipnis, must be re-‘.’ * “8he had har ‘way about the so-| loists. But the broadcast decree, held, and Toscanni refused to come to Bayreuth. \ Outwardly relations continued to, seem cordial. Hitler came to the; festival here and Frau Wagner| But she paid such a superlative tribute to Heinz Tietjen, manager of her festival operas, that gos- sip switched from Adolf to Heinz. ‘ gave a reception in his honor. : i | NOTICE OF HEARING ON l FINAL ACCOUNT | In the Probate Court for the Precinct of Juneau, Territory of Alaska, Division Number One. | In the Matter of the Estate of ESA MAKELA, Deceased. ! NOTICE' I HEREBY given. that | ELI TANNER, the duly appointed, | qualified and acting Administrator of the above entitled, Estate, has filed his final account and peti- tion for distribution of the residue _of said Estate, and that the same will be heard in the Court room of the above entitled Court at the hour of ten o'clock in the fore- noon on the 20th day of November, 1933, at which time any person or persons having sobjections to the same will be heard. WITNESS my hand and the seal .of said Ceurt-this nineteenth day of September;;1933. J.-F.- MULLEN, United States Commissioner. First publication, Sept. 18, 1938. (all ROUS FIRE IN HOPE A disastrous fire in Ilope re- cently destroyed the entire home and postoffice accommodations of E. E. Carson. The postal equip- ment and personal belongings were saved, and all salvage work possible was done before the Hope = idents turned out en masse to fight the flames caused by a spark escaping from a stove pipe. Mr. Carson will rebuild at once, he said. e, —— ANCHORAGE ENROLLMENT FOR 'THIS YEAR IS LARGE With 97 enrolled in the High School and 251 registered in the grades, the Anchorage Schools are expected to have considerably more students than last year, according to Supt. W. K. Keller. WORDS without effort! For the easiest writing rm’ve ever done, try a Parker! The famous pressureless touch has made this pen the favorite of millions. words on a sin- gle filling of ink. Non-break- 2blé, leak-proof barrel. Many exquisite colors. At good stores PARKER PUOFOLD SR s EASY-WRITING DESTROYS CARSON HOME | THAT SOURPUSS GET OuUT reat Briiain 8 SYNOPSIS: A man, picked itp on ike shore after the wreck of the Alice Arden, has Dbeen {identificd by Nesta Riddell as her husband, Jimmy Riddell, and taken fo her rother Tom’s hote in Ledlington. | Shortly after, Caroline Leigh ar- rives at the hospital where the man had been, searching for her distant cousin, Jim Randal. She i3 about. to leave disappointed 3“ the nurse mentions o scr Tetter in the man’s pocket, signe ‘someon imed MGatslime ™ Garctine deter: * mines to continue the apparently hopeless search, Meanwhile, the man a,:rak:nahan: Neata sells him s hen hu . He dpclaves he N et e ther dan he vecall-other eventa of the past, | \ Chapter Ejght ! i / 8TILI. LOST 3 H N 2 | SDMETHING began to. roar in Jim’s ears. He felt himself slip- ping and fell back against the pil- lows. The room went round. He heard the women’s voices as you | hear voices in the roar of heavy | traffic. They came and went, and they meant nothing. Actually he had done no more than lean back and close his eyes. Min Williams sald, tainted!” Nesta took her by the shoulders with a guick, “Run along and don’t talk nonsense!” After that the door was shut. Nesta stood waiting with her back against it, and in a moment he was looking at her, His eyes were of so dark a grey as to seem black. His brows frowned above them, making the shadow deeper. He went on { speaking as if there had been no in- terruption. “When were we married?” “On the twenty-fifth of July.¥ “0f what year?” “This year?” “This is—what month “August.” | “What date?” “The thirteenth.” “We were married—here “No in London.” She crossed the | ‘oom, opened a drawer, and came | lo him with a paper in her band. “There’s the certificate.” A voice in his mind said quickly, “She had it ready.” It was like what stage directions call a voice off. It didn’t seem to have anything to do | with him, but he remembered it afterwards. At- the time, he was looking at the certificate, which set forth that James Riddell had mar- ried Nesta Willlams at a registry | office in Kensington on the 25th of i Juiy, 1931 | Nesta-put out her hand to take the | paper back. The hand shook, and all | at once it came to him that, whether he liked her or not, i*. was hard lines on her. He didn’t like her, but it ! wag damned hard lines. Her hand shook. There was enough to make it shake, - He said in ‘a constrained voice, “I don't know what to say—Ican't remember.” “Oh, he’s HERE was no more talk that day. It was Min who brought him his meals, and Min was much too scared to talk. She left the door wide open, put down tife tray, and' was-gone. He guessed she thonght of a men who had forgotten hig name and his | wife-as well over the border line of insanity. -2 e Presently she would come back with a quick glance over her shoul- der, pick up the tray, and hurry from 'the room. He eould almost hear ber breath of reliet as the door swung to. Nesta never came near bim. PaatA B ' He Iay in the darkéued room an wrestled with the thing that had happened to him. Presently the sheer blank horror passed. He wast’t mad. His head ached, but he could order and control his thoughts in a perfectly normal manner. He couldarepeat the multiplication table and the capitals of all the countries in Europe. BULLY « = =+ - PESSST. -~ YOU KNOW THE ONE --- HE'S MAKIN' ME HEY:! OON'T-LOOK AT ME LIKE THAT=-TM THINKIN' OF YA EVERY MINUTE=- eous Fortune KEEPER- and called to Nesta shut in her room, pe “Nesta! He's talkjng to himself!” There was no answer. “Nesta! He does frighten me. He just keeps right on. Can’t you come down?" Nesta’s door opened, Nesta stood there, harshly contemptuous. - “What a baby you are!” “He keeps right en talking.” & “Well, you needn’t take any mo-! tice, need you? Go into the kitcheni and shut the doorl” . . i With & frightened gasp Min took | in the fact that Nesta was dressed for the street, “You're not going out!” “Why shouldn’t I go out?” “I'can’t stay alone here.” . “Why, what d'you think he'll d to you?” ¢ “Oh, Nesta, please don’t go.” Nesta pushed past her. “Don’t “e a fool, Min!"” she said, and ran downstairs. There ‘were three rooms on the ground floor—kitchen, - parlor,’ and bedroom. The two latter were at the back. Nesta stood for a moment at the foot of the stairs. The vague mutter of a man’s voice came along, the passage. After a moment's hesi» tation. she walked to the bedroom door and stood there listening with the handle turned and the mutter louder. Every now and then there were words. “Green—beads—" said the mut tering voice. “Finest in the world— no one knows but me—no one— green—like a kid's heads—" Then, with a change of tone, ‘“They’ll never find them—nobody'll ever find them | | { \ By BILLE DE BECK ONCE MORE, BOYS --- AN’ PUT SOME PEP IN THIS WEEK IS LAST TO DISCOUNT TAXES! Ten percent is good interest on on:'s money, yet Douglas taxpay- |ers will earn just that, if they, get their tax payments in oy thel }end of the present week. Remrnsl to date have been coming in fine, ing to City Clerk Gray, wh ting receipts this year Iroml‘ office on the City Dock. e | D. I. PACKING CO. GEAR IS | DISPOSED OF, MARSHAL SALE| i Witliam Hobson of Angoon was| successful bidder for Lho! gill-nets and other similar| belonging to the Douglas Is; Packing Company, E. B manager, and w r ment for the past three years for debt to Angus Gair, account ges. The sale was held yes- by the United States Mar- office. Grover Winn th land udden, shal's the attorney in the case for sum of $100 was realize disposed of yesterday, of which had been sold pre- ously. MRS. FO Mrs. tess to the fricnds at her home Thursday ternoon for the fir sewing m D X TO ENTERTAIN 5 FOX Il be h Luke's Guild an abe C of the Fall season. All those interested are invited. B DS Daily Empire Want Ads Pay ~—unless I show them how—Emily’s dead.” NESTA had pushed the door ajar. It she: spoke to him, would he apswer, or would he wake? Old Caroline Bussell used to say that if you could put a sleeping person's right hand into a basin of cold water without waking them, they would answer you aunything in the world yon liked to ask. People said she'd done it too, and that was why she had such a hold over Mr. Entwhistle —she’'d certainly got something more than a housekeeper’s place at the hall, “Isn't it awful?” said Min's voice at her elbow. : Nesta shat the door and whirled round in:& fury, “Get inte the kitchen and stay there!” she sald, and banged out of the house. It was g little house in a street of little houses on the outskirts of Ledlington. She turned her back on the town and walked in the opposite direction until the rows of houses gave way to fields and -hedges, with here and there a cottage or a farm- stead. She was walking to walk the an- ger out of her. She didn't care where she went or-how far. She was walk- ing to get away from the look in Jim's eyes when he heard: she was his wife. If she couldn’t walk away from the anger which was tearing her, she might just as well throw in her hand, ‘What did it:matter how he looked at hér as longas she got the emer- alds? This was the cool, calculating Nesta who bossed her brother and meant to boss Jim Riddell. “I'm not poison, for him to look at me like that! What'd he do it I chucked him out. to go on the parish?”. This wasa curfous incalcu- lable Nesta who bad seen herself re- fused. Thig Nesta's hot fancy played with the thought of taking Jim Rid- dell twenty, thirty, torty miles into the country and leaving him name- less, pennjless, BShe could do: it easily enough— another sleeping draught, Tom's car, a quick rup out to the marshes or Winborough' Common. “Wouldn't mind if he died either. If there was He knew all the ordinary things } which don’t need: thinking about, but he didn’t know anything at all about himself. The minute he be gan to think about himself the fog came up and choked his mind, and, with the fog, tbe horrible panic sense of being lost in empty space. He forced thought back to the .| things he knew. He--had. had 2 knock on the head. His memory would come back all:xightifihe would let it alone. That was ft— he'd got to let it alone—keep him- _selt quiet, eat, sleep, say the multi- | "plicstion 'table, conjugate French | verbs, count sheep jn?nlu over a be“. [ = E T | ¢ The sun‘went behind a gloid, the room darkened. Presently ‘he did sleep, and, sleeping, heard again that volce which le'took to be his own. Echoing it, he muttered and eriad out. - Min ran balf way | another fog—" she pulled herself up with:a jerk. And throw away the emeralds? - Not. much! He knew where they were, and he'd got to She walked om, her mind very busy. Min had got to be kept away from ‘him. ‘Fortunately she was scared to death. “She is a fool. But then Tom would marry a fool. He ‘wanted & change after me—some: one. to make him feel the real he- man.” She gave's laugh of affection: ate contempt. “Tom! Anyhow he'll do as I tell him, or he'll know the reason why.” .. She walked for an hour, and came home with her plans made. Tom was back frem the garage, and Min was all smiles again, They left Jim Riddell to himselt and turned on the radio in the par: lor. 3 (Copyright, 1933, J. B. Lippincott Co.| Temorrow, Jim finds he can waik. / |~ Let us tell you how little a THE NEW WORD IN JROOFING? ‘MILLERIZED It means Long Life for the Roof “Millerized” roof costs— How long it lasts and show you how beautiful | it looks. G;m!n-loed Roofing and Shingles are “’Millerized’” R THOMAS Hardware Co. MINING MAN BACK | to 'Valdez- from a trip south. 5 FROM TRIP SOUTH Clarence W. Foy, well known mining engineer, who recently took an option on the Big Four gold quartz eclaims on Mineral Creek, from John Cook, returned recently He brought back with him a quantity of machinery, including a compressor, and heavy wagon for the transportgtion of supplies to the mine. A team of horses is ex- pected to arrive soon. Mr. Pol statzd that development work would be started on the prop- erty as soon as supplies could be freighted to the mine and would be continued as long as the weath- er conditions would permit, and resumed again early in the spring, according to the Miner. The Big Four group has long besn considered one of the most promising of the properties in the Mineral Creek area. Considerable development work has already been done on the claims, and the indi- ations are that with further de- | velopment work it will becomz a - very profitable producer. NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS | Taxes are now due and will be- come delinquent after Saturday, *|Sept. 30. Ten per cent diseount will be allowed if paid on or befors that date, at the Wharf Office of the City Clerk. Dog licenses are also past duc and payable to the Clerk, or they will ‘be reported to the City Marshal, for"collection. FELIX GRAY, —adv. City Clerk. - e The Brazilian Government is calling for bids on the opening of a new weekly air service between Belem, Para, and Manaos, Ama- _| zonas, a distance of 900 miles. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Public Roads, September 22, 1933. Sealed bids will be re- ceived at the office of the Bureau of Public Roads, 410 Federal & Territorial Bldg., Juneau, Alaska; until 9 o'clock A. M., on October 26, | 1933, for 5.148 miles of surfacing on the Glacier Highway, Juneau- Lemon Creek Section, in the Ton- gass National Forest, First Judicial Division, Territory of Alaska, in- volving 8,500 cubic yards crushed rock or gravel top course. The at- tention of the bidder is directed to the special provisions covering sub- letting or assigning the contract, minimum wage rates and alternate bid to be submitted in case he may desire to offer any foreign articles, materials or supplies. Where plans and specifications are requested, a deposit of $5.00 will be required to insure their return within thirty days after opening of bids. Checks shall be made payable to Bureau of Public Roads, eau, Alaska. Plans and specifications may be cxamined at the Bureau of Public Roads, Federal & Territorial Bldg., Juneau, Alaska; Forest Service, Commercial Bldg., Ketchikan, Alaska; Asso- ciated General Contractors, Mult- nomah' ‘Hotel, Portland, ' Oregon; Associated General Contractors, W. 516 First: Ave., Spokane, Washing- ton; Associated General Contract- ors, Arcade Bldg., Seattle, Wash- ington; Pacific Builder & Engineer, Secattle, Washington, ‘and Western Public ‘Works Contractors’ Ass'n:, Winthtop Hotel, Tacoma, Washing- ton. Bid blanks may be obtained at the office of the Bureau of Public Roads, Room 419 Federal & Tervjtorial Bld FAIRBANKS AUXILIARY American ' Legion * Auxiliary Unit of officers Mrs. Helen' 'J. Warren; | Amante Hanson, Mrs. Charlotte | in the neighborhood of Donnelly Juneau, Alaska. ELECTS OFFICERS FOR YEAR At - & recent meeting of the Dorman''H. Baker Post "No. of Rairbanks, the following were elected: President, first vica- president, Mrs. Ethel W. Tonseth; socond viezepresident, Mrs. BvaR Taylor; secretary, Mrs. Hertha N. Baker; treasurer, Mrs. Lucy Bail- ey; historian, Mrs. Lovina E.Lund;| chaplain, Mrs. Nugget Geraghty; sergeant-at-arms, Mrs. Eva Lara-| m executive commitiee, Mrs. 11, Sheely and Mrs.® Agnes Hering. R i ) ) SEVERE WINY BLOWS ROOF' | FROM CHAS. LINGREN HOME A severe wind from the south thought I didn’t like Beer” Compléetely aged — full 3.2 content—brewed ' from Teal hops and malt, not syrups— we could spend hours tell- ing you why Pabst is better. But Pabst “inside” convinces more than cold print out- side. All we say—TRY IT! You'll like it. SPECIAL} LUNGHEON—Plate Dome, on the Richardson High- way, tore the top of OCharles Lin- gren's house loose and carried it away, a short time ago. | DUTCH L ES ¥ SANPWICHES VISIT THE SALADS Salmon Creek | Roadhouse ANTON RIESS The MIDGET 'TOM and: MARIE STURGE Qpen from 10 am. to 1 am. The NRA And School! Under the NRA, child labor on a full time basis is prohibited. This means that more boys and girls will be attend- ing school! Keep your boy and girl in school—give them every possible advantage for mak- ing their own way in the world later on. A Savings Account at this bank, added to regularly, - will provide the needed funds for the continuance of their educa- tion. First National Bank IDEAL PAINT SHOP If It's Paint We Have It! ] -- PHONE 549 ‘Wendt & Garster O :; 5 IE P @ve 47 & Juneau Cash Grocery CASH AND CARRY - : Corner Second and Seward o Free Delivery o ice ** Phone 58 —nr - o = “ Tke Daily Alaska 3 & 4 A it prints everything from a visiting card to an advertising camp. beautifully and at low cost. Phone 374 1933 IS MOM, TR » » 2 » 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 n 12 13 14 15 18 19 20 21 22 23 2 2526 27 28 29 30 19 17 SEPTEMBER aign—accurately, I 1933 Y. SAT. . 16

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