The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 9, 1933, Page 7

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[ THE: DAILY. ALASKA-EMPIRE, MONDAY OCT. 9, 1933. RRINGING UP. FATRER WELL AT LAST ALL 19 QUIET-THATS BECAUSE M FAMILY 1S QUT- TH By GEORGE McMANUS AN GOODNESS : 'WE AT LAST STARTED ME LETTER TO GOOD MORNIN' NOTHIN- STOP THAT NOISE- HOW DO You EXPECT I'M SORRY-BUT MRS-J1GGS 19 COMIN"BACK WiTiH SOME FRIENDS AN SHE \WANTS THIS RoomM CLEANED uP - ME TO WRITE? KANSAS HOLDS NOTRE DAME T SCORELESS TIE First Time_STnce 1901 Irish Eleven Unable to Beat Initial Game SOUTH BEND, Ind, Oct. Before 20,000 astounded fans, 9_ fighting University of Kansas bat- | tered down tradition last Satur- day afternoon with surprising ease, holding Notre Dame to a scoreless tie. It was the first time the Irish ¥ have been tied in an opening game since 1901. — .- — TROJANS BEAT COUBARS 35-0 “Irvine Warburton Sets Pace that Carries Team- mates to Victory LOS ANGELES, Cal, With Irvine Warburton seiting a fast pace for his fellow TrulAm the University of Southern Ca fornia won the first Pacific Coast. season ' conferencz victory of the last Saturday afternoon at the expense of Washington State by a score of 33 to 0. Wearing a grotesque mask to # protect his nose from injury, war- burton gained 220 yards against| the Cougars and scored touchdowns, runs of 80 and 85 yards respec- tively. . Constipation 6 Years, Trouble Now Gone John J. Davis had chronic con- ¢ stipation for six years. By using Adlerika he soon got rid of it, and feels like a new person. Adlerika is Butler Mauro quick acting—safe. Drug Co. — in Douglas by Guy's Drug Store. —adv. ———.———— — Daily Empire Want Ads Pay Oct. 9.— three two of them after Calt/m nia Univ Narrowly Wins, Over St. Mary’s BERKELEY, Cal, Oct9. —Battling to a magnificent finish after spotting their opponents to a 13 point margin during the first eight minutes of play last Saturday afternoon, the Uni- versity of California defeat- ed St. Mary's 14 to 13. It was a thrilling exhibition of fighting football. ——a—— FOOTBAL RESULTS | ol | The foliowing scores are | sults of principal football game: played last Saturday afternoon in various parts of the States: Maine 7; Yale 14. Michigan State 6; Michigan 20. Virginia 0; Army 32. Kansas 0; Notre Dame 0. Ambherst 0; Princeton 40. Alabama 0; Mississippi 0. Texas 0; Nebraska 26. Marque ; Wiscensin 19, Pitt 21; .West Virginia. 0. | Ohio 6; Purdue 13. Cornell 0; Chicago 32. | Georgia Tech 6; Kentucky 7. Gonzaga 0; ‘Washington California 33. Whitman 0; Idaho 60. Santa Clara 0; Stanford 7. St. Mary's 13; California 14. Oregon State 0. State 0; Southern ! |GURVICH LOSES TEN ROUNDER TO BAGSHAW | In the best boxing scene re- | cently in Prince Rupert, Billy Bag- | shaw was victory over Nina Gur- vich, who has boxed in Juneau.| The fight went ten rounds and both boys mixed it freely from | start to finish. Four rounds were even, Bagshaw had the best of four rounds and Gurvich won two rounds. PUBLIC CHURCH DINNER By the Martha Society Tuesday evenlng, October 17. —ady. 'fwnfmn SERIES CHICABO WHITE | the: e ® e @ @ e ® @ 0 0 ¢ ¢ o o final world's series statistics were 12 Anyone having donations kind- | amount. re-| ISanta Clara Defeated 7 to 1 bus Make Points | Capitalizing North Carolina 13; Vanderbilt 20. ¢hance | stanford defeated Santa Clara 7 | WITNESSED BY | SOX WIN AGAIN 136,076 FANS /s b White Sox defear.ed lhe Cubs 5 to 1 before 30,000 spectators Sunday {Total Recelpts of Five Games Amounted to RUMMAGE SALE fand for the fourth consecutive !time retained the Chicago cham- Only $6791365 | Rummage Sale will be held by i 9 i the Lutheran Ladies Aid at the picnship. WASHINGTON, Oct. 9. — The Church Parlors Thursday, October released last Saturday night and!ly call Rev. E. K. Olafson or bring show the paid attendance was 164,- | them to the parsonage. —adv. 076 and the net receipts were| $697,365. | The Advisory Council's share| is $101,904 and the player’s share| $284,665. Each club's share is $73,198 and, | each 1league receives the same; ——.—e— ‘The Empire wiui snow you the best. way to save and invest what | cash you have. Read the advertise- ments of the local merchants in ‘The Empire. U. 8. Department of Agriculture, |Bureau of Public Roads, October 6, 1933. Ecaled bids will be received at the office of the Bureau of Public Rceads, 419 Federal & Territorial ’ Bldg., Juneau, Alaska, until 9 o’clock ;A, M. on November 16, Y {5,606 miles of clearing and grubbing lon the Mitkof Highway, Mountain Point-Falls Creek Section, in the ‘Tongass National Forest, First Judicial Division, Territory of Al- cska, involving 375 acres clearing and 24.0 acres grubbing. The atten- ticn of the bidder is directed to the speeial provisions covering sublet- ting or assigning the contract, min- imum wage rates and alternate bid to be submitted in case he may de- sire to offer and fereign artic materials or supplies. Where plans d specifications are requested, a deposit of $10.00 will be required to insure their return within thirty days after opening of bids. Checks chall be made payable to Bureau of Public Roads, Juneau, Alaska. |Plans and specifications may be cxamined at the Bureau of Public Roads, Federal & Territorial Bldg., Juneau, Alaska; Forest Service, Commercial Bldg.,, Ketchikan, ska; Associated General Contract- OREGON STATE FAILSIS o Aoniined Genera Con: To WIN OVER GONZAGA tractors, W. 515 First Ave., Spo- kane, Washington; Associated Gen- PLAY SCORELESS GAME |cral contractors, Arcade Bidg., Se- citle, Washington; Pacific Builder % & Engineer, Seattle, Washington | ~PORTLAND, Ore, Oct. 9.—Al-| " swesiern Public. Works Con- | though three times within striking |{ioiorc's Assm., Winthop Hotel, distance of the Gonzaga goal, Ore-| Taeoma, Washington. Bid blanks gon State battered futilely against|may be obtained at the office of the Bulldog stone wall last Satur-|the Bureau of Public Roads, Room day afternoon. The two teams|419, Federal & Territorial Bldg., played to a scoreless tie before|Juneau, Alaska, M. D. Williams, 20,000 spectators. stcrm Engineer. 0—Grayson and Cor- Oct. 9.— scoring afternoon, PALO ALTO, Cal, the only last Saturday to 0 before 35,000 spectators. [ Bobby Brayson, sopohomore full- | back, pushed over the touchdown | in the first period after Stanford | recovered a fumble on Santa Cla- ra’s 15-yard line. Bill Corbus place-kicked the ex- |tm point. Santa Clara missed two touch- downs by incompleted passes. DAILY SPOR TS CAR Toozv — JACK—~ \S THE NATIONAL- A.AU i 8O0 »HRD FREESTHE CHAMPIOV 1 1933, for! Al- | OH \WELL" V'WE FORGOTVEN WHAT L WULZ GONNA WRITE TO DINTY ABOUT! ' 50 UPSET Outrageous Pitiicia WenliorTh SYNOPSIS: Nesta Riddell says the man whom she found suffering ‘ram loss of memory is Aer hus- and, Jimmy, and tells him that he stole’ the Van Berg emeralds, and &ljot Van Berg. He does not believe her, but cannot disprove the state- ment. Finally he forces her to turn over the money he had had in his gocket. and goes fo the Ledlington ibrary to read the details of the Van Berg case in the papers. As he reads he becomes convinced that e did know Van Berg, and had seen the cmeralds in his hand. 'If he did ot shoot Van Berg and stcal the emeralds, who did? Clmpter 18 JIM IN FLIGHT N the end he knmew very little more. The police were said to have a clue, Elmer Van Berg had not recovered comsciousness. His condition was extremely grave. There was no trace of the emeralds. He sat back in the hard upright chair and stared straight in front of him. What next? He had left Happicot, and no power on earth would take him back there. He would have to make that quite clear, He had bought some sheets of paper, a pencil, and a couple of stamped envelopes as he came along. He wrote a few lines of thanks to Min. A nice little thing—kind, pretty, timid. He hoped for her sake that Nesta wasn't stopping there iong. It was quite easy to write to Min. It wasn't at all easy to write to Nesta. 'How did you write to an un- pleasant stranger who happened to be your wife, and make it perfectly clear that you never intended to see her again? He touldn’t imagine how he had ever dbmbe to be mixed up with her. Or with this Van Berg affair. Ac- cording to all the available evidence, he had shot Elmer Van Berg and taken the Inca's emeralds. Unless or until he got his memory back he could neither rebut nor explain this evideree. All hie could do was to try and get & vay from it He wight rvemember why he had gone to see Elmer Van Berg, Ie had ; gone to see him, and they fad talked and had drinks. That was a funny thing—there was nothing in ti% paper about those drinks. But he remembered drinking with Elmer. That is to say, he had remembered it. It had come and gone like a flash. Elmer standing ap, with his hand on the syphon. If he could remem ber that, he ought to be able to re- member the whole thing. He might remember it at any time. It was utterly damnable. He'd got to get away out of Ledlingten—out of the country if possible. It came to bhim that there had been no mentjon of those drinks, be- canse they were a police clue. His finger-marks would be on the glass that he had used. The incident hadn't been given to the press on purpose. He leaned forward with determi- nation'and wrote: “I am going away. When 1 am in & position to do so, I will come to| some arrangement with you.” He signed, J. R.,;and fastened the Phone 33 Delivery Service P. O. Substation No. 1 HOT WATER BOTTLES $1.00 wp fiutler Mauro envelope and addressed it to Nesta. FIVE pounds is not a very large sym. Carefully husbanded, of course, ‘it will go quite a long way. It you tramp the roads, sleep out, and live-on bread and cheese, your lodggng costs you mothing, and your food mot very much. On the other hand, a toothbrush, a cake ot soap, and & . are negessaries, and so is & ge of linen. Money melts as soon as you begin to buy clothes. HowJong, would his suit last if he slept out in {t? It was none too grand now. He pushed all these things away. He had gobto get out ot Ledlington, and 4 was lucky to have five pounds to ‘take the road with. As he passed a newspaper shop at the corner of the Station Road, a headline stared at him from a yard away: ARl T NEAR IN VAN BERG CASE | A mile out of Ledlington he left the high road for a footpath across fields. It took him into a lane which climbed to an open heath. He sat down-to.rest on the stump of a tree and looked about him. The day was fine, but not clear. The blue of the sky was misted over, and the sun came palely . through. There was '8 bloom ef heather as far @ye could see. He stared across it at the vefled horizon. A il like , ¢loud stood up against ite |0ld Papers for Sale at Empire Ofincc‘ --wl-‘-u e i porthern edge—a hill with a double tog. !]éamo;ls Sociafis; | Russia, August 1, 1869, the son - ¢ | of Benjamin and Rebecca Hill- Leader Dies in N. Y.|ouit. He was educated at the Riga Gymnasium from 1881 to 1886, in the latter year emigrating with (Convmuea his parents to the United States. Continuing his' edueation in the New York City schools, he laber studied at the law ‘school ‘of New York Univers being graduated elected - Mayor, receiying 293,- | with the d:gree of bachelor of laws with John Purroy Miteh- | in 1893. Since then he had beem ], scaking re-eleefioh on a Fu on\mm«w(-d in the practice of law ticket, second with 148,060, dnd‘m New York City. Mr. Hillquit third, with,138,793. ——————— 1 Russian .By Birth | - Advertisemens =preaq . Hillquit * was 1 ‘at Riga,’ products before you. Irons Tage One) his party's candidate for Mayor of | New York City. It was in that| | campaign that Jehn F. Hylan was | f 34 e world He sat looking at it for s long | time, and for as long as he looked| at it there were pictures in his mind —broken pictures that came and went, forming, dissolving, and re- forming. When he tried to think about them they were gone. He was left with a sense of things most deep- ly familiar. He walked on towards the hill. He had bought foed in Ledlington: At mid«day he sat on a sunny slope and ate. Afterwards he fell asleep and dreamed about the emeralds, It was the same dream every time he slept, but it was getting cclearer. In) | the dream he always knew where the emeralds were, but as soon as he woke up the knowledge faded. Sometimes he could hold it for a | moment by shutting his. eyes and keeping his mind empty; but as soon as he tried to keep it, it was gone, The dream always began the same way. He could remember the begin- | ning—Elmer’s hand with the scar, and the emeralds dangling from it under the light—eight square green stones with pearls between them. Then the dream broke up into & rush of colored fragments. There was a voice in a fog. There was the sound of a shot a lang way off. There was the voice, and there was a pic- ture in his mind of tall stone pillars with pineapple tops, and a drive that wound between them out of sight. The voice said, “Like a kid's green beads,” and, “Nobody knows where they are.” But in the dream he knew. A round room with five little windows like slits—a place where you might look for a year and never find them. He woke up, the sun hot on his face. The dream was gone, but the hill still broke the horizon. strange way he associated the hill and the dream. He made a pillow of bracken for Lis head and lay on the slope watehing the hill. Pres- ently he would get to it—present- e slept aguin. 1 bet " said Caroline I'm going to T'S eleven o'cloc Patsy Ann. She went up the stairs, which ended on a tiny landing with a door | on either side. Her room was on the left, and you went down two steps tn it. Both the steps and the floor of the room were old polished boards, very wavy and ureven. The window, which looked to the front of the house, was set in a deep embrasure. She shut the door and turned on the light in the lamp beside her bed. Hazelbury West had had electric *light for the last eight years and considered itself very up to date in consequence. ‘aroline turned down her bed, folding the quilt carefully and lay- ‘ng it on the chest in which she kept her hats. She had zald she wanted to come to bed, but she wasn’t really sleepy. She opened the bottom drawer of the chest of drawers which faced the window and took out a bundle of letters tied with a twist of pale blua knitting silk. Then she went over to the bed, Sitting down on the edge of it, she untied the bundle and turned the letters over. There were.not a great :many of them. Two the first year after Jim went out—one-for her birthday. and one for Christmas—and two again the second year, and the third. In the fourth year he omly wrote for Christmas, The pain of that missed birthday came across the three years’ interval and hurt her still, In the fifth year there was no let: ter at all. On her birthday and on Christmas day:Caroline read the old letters and tried to make believe that they had just come. It was nol a very successful make belleve. In the sixth year there were still no letters. ] And then in the seventh year— this year—théy began again, He had written at Christmas from New York. Caroline got out the letter and read it again. It was a very nice letter. She hugged herself a little over it. It began, as all his letters | had begun, “Darling Caroline”; and it was quite ‘long. He had beer building a bridge in Mexico, and he had been in Chile, and Pern, and up in wild places in the Andes. He was hers, Jim. He always signed just like that: “Yours, Jim.” (Copyright, 1038,.J, B. Ligpincott €e.) The movements of Jim Ran- dal become clearer, tomorrow. In some | HAT S ““IT'S THE DOBBS’ Dobbs CROSS COUNTRY — classically simple — ultra smart— with the lines that only quality plus tatloring can achieve. Inverted seaming gives a new rakishness to the crown. Dobbs CROSS COUNTRY HAS THE EVEN BRIMLINE AND WEAR- ABLE MOLDED CROWN WHICH BELONG TO THIS CASUAL TYPE. IN ALL FALL SPORTS SHADES, DOBBS HATS ARE ‘MADI IN THIRTEEN ACCURATE HEADSIZES “Juneauw’s Own Store” Store Open Until 9 Tomorrow Night ANNOUNCEMENT A limited number of units in the NEW CHICHAGOFF MINES SYNDICATE Are being offered to the public at $10.00 per unit For further information see New Chichagoff Mines Syndicate ROO VALENTINE BLDG. UN TEB FOOD CO. CASH. GROCERS Phone 16 - We Deliver. Meats—Phone 16 " HEADQUARTERS for B. 0. P. A General Motors Product! ANTI-FREEZE 2 Gallon Can for $3.50 \’vw Good for a whole season—will not boil P away. Prevents rust. < With this we give s complete radiator check-up—tighten all 411 connections and water pump! 'CONNORS MOTOR €0. By i 4yt i

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