The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 6, 1933, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, OCT. 6, 1933. -BARNEY .GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG A LAWYER ARE.YOU -+ YA . KNOW ! BE TOSSED OUT ON FER. NOT . PAYIN’ HER HOTEL FOR sAwaucKé EDUCATION -= HEY ? EVENSERVICE” BEGINS SUNDAY New Fealure to Be Inaug- & urated at Presbyter- . ian Church Inaugurating a new feature, the Northern Light Présbyterian Church will hold its (lrst “Evenservice” at 7:30 o'clock Stnday night, the plan being to conduct such a service monthly and upon special occasions as an #dded minisiry to its mem- ! bers and constituency. The serviee will be dess formal than the morn- | ing worship service, and will afford | oppertunity for pr ng musical and other features not otherwise | available. | “What One Business Man Asked | ini About Another Busi- | ness Man," will be the subject of | the minist the Rev. John A. Glasse, Sunéay night. Whistling | solos. by Mfs‘ Muriel Meadows will be “specigl feature as will also! the illumigfated cross specially con- structed gind purchased by the! church fer such services. Still an- | other feature will be the informal congregaticnal “sing” in which oldi favorites will find a place. The| support of the splendid choir will be enjoyed in these services, their number t week begin “O Jesus Thou Ar nding,” by Roberts; and promptly at 7:30 o'clock there will be offered two organ numbers, “Evening Shadows” by De Launay; and “Nocturne” by Frysinger; fol- Jowed later in the evening by * Old‘ Rugged Cross” (Bennard), and | “March Nocturne” (Bigzs.) This service is, of course, in ad- dition to the regular morning wor- ship service at 11 o'clock and the Sunday School at 10 o'clock. A most cordial invitation is extended | the public to attend and share in; such benefits as the service may afford. SAAY —WHAT KIND OF %‘ MRS, FINNEGAN |5 GONNA HER EAR . ANY. MINUTE L WHAT ABOUT '\'SAT $6,000 I WAS 'SPOSED YO GET SORRY — MR. GOOGLE - BuT SAWBUCK 1S STILL MISSING -- OME \N aND %EE ME --5- Freran VICTIM OF AlRPLANE CRASH BEING TAKEN SOUTH FOR BU‘UAL way south for bunal Jw mains of Aldwyn David Rob- Pilot Ed Young's Pacific aska Airways pilot at Livenzood, were aboard the steamer Alaska. William Schodde, a life-long friend of the dead boy, is accompanying the body. Funeral services will be held at Carbonado, Wash., the home of Mr. Roberts' parents, Mr. and Mrs. « David E. Roberts. Mr. Schodde is from Bu ‘Wash- ington and he. has been empio) in the vicinity of Fairbanks during the last summer. e ee— GERMAN COUNT. VISITS JUNEAU FRIENDS ON WAY SOUTH ‘AFTER FINE HUNT Count D. Wormbrand, of Bur- lingame, California, is on his. way south aboard the steamer Alaska, | after a successful game hunt:on Kenai Peninsula.,, Among the game bagged by the German nobleman | in the Westward district were a prize. bull moose, mountain shezp and a large bear. He spent ten days on the Peninsula in the vie- inity of Seward. While the Count was in Juneau | yesterday. he called on Dr. and Mrs. Robert Simpson by whom | he was entertained on his way to, the Westward. P J. E. KEARNEY ACCEP1S POSITION WITH PACIFIC COAST COAL COMPANY formerly J. E. Kearney, agent | hore of the Pacific Steamship Co., has accepted a position as book-, keeper for the Pacific Coasi Coal Co., in the offic> of the company here, according to G. H. Walms- ley, manager. (B - PR Daity “mpmre Want Ads Pay 2. FRESHNESS The vacuum process of packing coffee, origh- nated by Hills Bros. in 1900, is the oaly method that fally prescrves coffee freshness—the sir 1a removed from the can and kept out. There is B0 magic sbout a vacanm cam — it will not make poor coffce good, but i will keep good coffce fresh. Nocan of Hills Beos. Calfoe will ever g0 stale. The vacuum cam keeps it frosh aoeys! 1. UNIFORMITY Every pound of Hills Bros. Coffee tastes exaeily like every otherpound! Hills Bros. Coffee isn't roasted by usual methods. It is roasted a litdle ot a time 2 the blend flows evenly, continuously through the roasters. This is Controlled Roast- ing—Hills Bros." exclusive process which roasts every coffee berry to perfection. f‘pr the matchless goodness of HILLS BROS COFFEE Hills Bros. Coffee is roasted, ground and packed to per- f&iion! ll’hns everything you collld want in a eoflee— tion! Just wait till you begin using Hills Bros. Coffee régularly, and you'll ‘know what ‘we mea: : rothing—not ever the delight you will find. You Coffee and taste it for yourself. w&y bynnme,mdlook(nrl.lwArabtnde-mlrk on ‘the can. nt Copyright 1938 Hills Bees. a single word that'fully deseribes mnudrinkl!m- Bros. Orderymfincpmd e A s R A W A WHEN ¥OU FING Him i erts, who was killed in the crash| Al- | adv. HEART TO SEE HER TODAY-- BE DUCK SOuUP FROM NOW ON- q T AN'T GOT THE : MEBBE \F 1 HAVE A SNIF - ~-~ CHAT WITH 1} uee Great Britain nighes reserved | poucLas NEWS FIREMEN MAKE PLANS I FOR ANNUAL SOIREE| The dinner, card parfy and’ dance, yearly event planned for! this month, was the principal top- ic of discussion at the regular mecting of the Fire Department last evening. Mike Pusich was an additional appoiniee to head .the commitiee in charge of the affair,| which is scheduled for turday, | October 21 | According to present plans, the| dinner and card party will be ini the Eagles’ Hall as heretofore, and the dance is in the Natatorium. The committee is already busy| working out the details of the| entertainment. e e — STUDENTS TO GIVE DANCE Douglas High School students! will sponsor a dance ‘onight from 8:30 o'clock until midnight in the Eagles' Hall. The Alumni is invited. A small door charge will be made to pay for the hall. | Collection at the door will be | made by Mary Pearce and Lloyd| Guerin, Treasurer and President of the Student Body. Miss Pim-|{ perton has agreed to play the piano for the dancers. Chaperones will be Miss Pepoon and Mrs. | Engstrom. —————— | BULBS BULBS We new have cn hand our main | cupply of BULBS of the very| choicest varieties and of the high- | et quality. Daffodil Bulbs are much lower in price this year. JUNEAU FLORISTS. R o B A SHOP IN JUNEAU 3. GRANULATION ke Bros. Colfee is ground right to taste right. No coffeo, however good, can be uniform in taste asless wniformly reasted and uaiformly ground. Hills Broa.’ cxclusive, continuous process—Conr trelled Roasting—snd correet granulation lasre thie mniformity. Hille Bros. granalation will give best rosalts by the drip proces or auy other method. SYNOPSIS: The man picked up, his memory gone, on the shore e wreck of the Alice Arden et Nesta Riddell and Caro- line Leigh against euch other. After hearing him_ babble in his coma of the stolen Van Borg emer- alds, Nesta has identified him as her hwsband, Jimmy Riddell. Caro- line thinks jie may Ve her cousinm, Jim Randal, but Nesta will not per- mit her to sce lnm Now, at mid- night, Nesta las crept to the man's room, having heard that a sloep- ing person will answer any question his hand has beew placed in of cold water, The man wakens and s Vesta’s throat. Chapter 16 ! A CRISIS ESTA was a brave woman, but she was taken most utterly by surprise. She tried to call eut, to push him away, but her voice choked under his grip. The bluod sang ia her ears, and the darkness was full of fiery sparks. Then quite suddenly she was free. She sat back on her heels, gasping for breath. The sparks died out, and she heard him say in a sharp, bewildered voice. “Who's there?” He repeated the question again at once, “Who's there? Speak, can’t you! What's happened ?” Nesta stumbled to her feet. “You've done your best to strangle me.” She heard him say, “I'm drench- - Next moment he had her by the wrists. ed”; and then, “What are you doing here?” And with that, he was out of bed and switching on the light. All Nesta’s nerve had not kept her from a sharp recoil which took her back to the mantelpiece. He stood against the door and tooked first at her and thén at the bed. He might well say that he was drenched. When Nesta threw up her hand to try and push him away she had still held the bowl of water. 1t struck his shoulder, overturned, and sent @ cold cascade down his back. The shock of it brought him broad awake. His bands let go their hold. He'd been strangling someone. Who? Good Lord—where was he? What a nightmare! He'd been dreaming. But this wasn’t a dream, for there was Nesta with her hand at her throat; and there, tipped up on the bed, was a yellow china bowl. The bed itself showed a large wet patch where the clothes were flung back. He swung round on Nesta. “What's the meaning of this?” She had been frightened, and now she was angry. She could not bridle her tongue. “You dangerous brute! You might have killed me!” Her voice broke on a sob of pure rage. “I'm sorry—but what were you do- ing in my room?” “I'm your wife!” “I don’t think you were here as my wite.” Nesta flung up her head. “What d’you mean by that? You half kill me one minute and insult me the mext!” “I don’t think it's as bad as all that. You can talk all right—" He stopped and ducked sharply. There ‘was a rough lump of pink and grey quartz in the middle of the mantel- plece. Nesta had swept it off and pitched it at his head. It missed, crashed against the door, and fell h!lvfly T moment he had her by the wrists. *“Look here, that’s enough of that! 2ull yourselt together. It you don't, 7 T e O By BILLE DE BECK VA DON'T KNOW' P [WHAT T BEEN THROUGH LATELY, SuLL I WISH YA COULO \ [ T'll empty the water jug over you] d you can explain to your sister- | in-law why I did it. Take a few deep breaths and count & hundred! I'm sorry it I hurt you, but I've been knocking about in some fairly rough | places, and if anyone creeps into | my room in the dark and puts a hand on me, it's their look out—I ' don't stop to think--I sbouldn't be | here now if I did,” i Nesta had ceased to struggle. Now , sh ddenly leaned towards him, “Where have you been?” i He dropped her. wrist, stepped, back, and looked at her, frowning, ' —don't—know.” “You must know. ¥You said—" Ho passed his hand across his | brow. “What did I say?" She laughed, half angrily. “You said vou’d lived in some | pretty rough parts the last few years. 1 believe you too, the way you tried to strangle me. My lord, Jimmy—you've got. a_grip!” She broke off suddenly. “D’you mean to say you don't remember what you said?” I_ E shook his head. “No—it's gone.” She looked at him curiously.™ < “You don’t know where you lived or what you did before I met you? Honest Injun?” s He shook his head agaln. “Well, I'm blessed!” She began to laugh. “It's a rum start, isn't it? The man without a past! And I can’t help you, because you were always most uncommon close and never told me a thing, and as far as I'm concerned you start in where you stepped out from behind a bush in the drive go- ing up to The Hall at Packham. “And it I've got to guess, I'm go- ing to gpess that getting away with the Van Berg emeralds wasn’t your first job by & long chalk, Rough placeg? Yes, I believe you—places wherg you shoot first and ask ques- tions afterwards. Lucky for me you hadn’t got.a gun tonight—wasn’t it? “And it'd have been lucky for you if you hadn't taken one to Packham. Couldn’t you have got. the emeralds without shooting? You know what sort of sentence you'll get if you're caught, I tell you you'd better get out l.hp country as quick as you can. you must tell me where the emeralds are before you go.” She came up close and slipped an arm sbout his shoulders. “Come, boy—it's nothing but common sense, and you gwe me something.” ‘When she stopped, he put a hand on her “You ‘baven't told me what you | were doing here.” She looked at him coolly. “You called out in your sleep—1 came in tp see what was the mat- | ter.” “What were you doing with the bowl?” , . “l had lt in my hand” She Ilaughed. “Lucky for me I had! If| it hadn’t been for the water waking | you, you'd have done me in.” She put the quartz back on the| mantelpiece, and yawned. “Well, I want some sleep. You've | had yours. Oh lord—my throat's| gore!” She came up to him, tilting| her chin. “Like to kiss the place to make it well? You can if you like.” His hand tell on her shoulder. .mmmng the matter with b4 1 want to talk busi-| ness.” u‘mn. uu. J. B. Lippincott Co.) M Jin demands an ac- ‘ ~||||II|IIIIIIII|II|IIIIIfillllllllllllIlllllIIIIlllIIIIIlmIIIlllIllIIImllIIIllilIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIlilIIIliIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII T 5% water. || of the DA MEALS FOR SUNDAY Breakfast Grapefruit Ready Cooked Wheat Cerea Cram Egg Omelet Bran Muffins Dinner Chilied Diced Fruit Coffee Potatoes Buttered Beans Bread Plum Jam Head Lettuce Thousand Island Dressing Chocolate Pie Coffee Su, Sandwiches Tea Cookies Apple Sauce Fricasseed Chicken frying pan. | By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE 1 Fricasseed Chicken with Mashed | Orange Bread and Cream Cheese pound, chicken, % cup flour, 4 tablespoons bacon fat, 4 table- spoons butter, 1 teaspoon salt, teaspoon paprika, 1 cup water. ‘Wash and clean chicken and cut into serving pieces. ‘Wash in cold | Drain and store in ice box | until cooking time. Sprinkle flour over chicken and beat bacon fat| Add ‘and quickly brown chicken. Place browned chicken in roaster. Add rest of in- gredients and cover. Bake 2 hours | in moderatcly slow oven. Inspect chicken frequently and turn to allow even browning. After thickén ‘has been removed { from pan, gravy can be made by gaddmg 2 tablespoons of flour mix- ed with 4 tablespoons of water to th: chicken drippings. When blended, add & cup of boiling water and stir and copok until gravy has thickened. Orange Bread (Using candied peel) 2 cups flour, 4 teaspoons baking powder, '2 teaspoon galt, & cup sugar, 1 egg, 1% cups milk, ' cup chopped candied orange pe:l, 2 tablespoons butter, melted. Mix ingredients .and pour into greased loaf pan and let rise 10 minutes. Bake 50 minutes in mod- erately slow oven, To prevent the tears from com- ing while peeling onions, peel them in a pan of cold water, taking care to keep the onions under water. el A, Oid papers for sale a1 Emplre. X ROOM 3 B. 0. P. ANTLFREEZE' 2 Gallon Tan for $3.50 % away. Prevents rust. connections and water pump! {ifisaitnt BUR SPECIAL COFFEE— pound Ml B[ ACKBERRIES and LOGANBERRIES—— No, 2 cansii s b e hamida i SWEET POTATOES— No. 2% size .. . PIGS FEET— S e DILL PICKLES— ' OYSTERS—Medium cans, Jtor o MATCHES— carton EGGS—Fresh Standards, 2dozen i g BUTTER— & pognds i ONIONS— Good for a whole season—will not boil With this we give complete radiator check-up—tighten all ANNOQUNCEMENT A hmlted mlmher of units in’ the NEW FHI(‘HAGOFF MINES Are being offered to the public at $10.00 per umit SYNDICATE For further ihformation see N ew Chwhagoff M ines Swulwate ) VALENTINE BLDG | A General Motors Product! Phofw 411 CONNORS MOTOR CO. ummm|mmun|nnu|||uuummmm||uumuumummmnnmulmmmnflnmmnmlmmumufln 15¢ 15¢ NGO N | b O I POTATOES— 25 pounds 3 Lo MEAT DEPARTMENT Deliver L e .’Y Closed for Over_haulmg PHOZ}’E 16 Free PHONE 1

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