The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 13, 1933, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY OCT. 13, 1933. OWAY, KENNEDY=— GET OVER THERE "QUICK AND BRING THE B CASABA LEABDE “MEETING T0 BE sSTAGED MONDAY i M cung of Team Managers of Senior Circuit Call- ed for that Date E threshed Monday evening at the gony n ; High School . when managers of % the cenior teams will meet to re- form the organization of the quin- ~tets on Gastineau Channel which| performed so satisfactorily last Winter. Managers of all teams de- siring kad to at- tend s h will open circuit was composed | af the Jm eau Fire Department,| George Brothers, Moose, B. P. R, 0 as Fire Department and -United Meat. At least many teams will enter this ye: it is as believed. Monday night plans for the or- ganization team will be discussed; the entries will be mads; a le committee appointed;and assigned to the are reported to be formed—tne local Firemen, of last year’s champion- and a squad to Dougl onter a team and it aggr fully winners ship,, the Moose, xv'pre'mt the DeMolays. is certain to is understood the B. P. R. gation is almost intact. TEAMS OF CITY LEAGUE WILL BOWL TONIGHT AT BRUNSWICK ALLEYS Tonight at 8 o'clock sharp, the Capitcl Beer Parlor team will pl: aga the A.-J. Car Shop team in a bowling match at the Bruns- wick Bowling Alleys. Due to changes made in the schedule of the City Bowling League, a new scheduie of matches will be announced tomorrow, it was made known today. THE CHANCE of a lifetime for a trip East on the Y i WEW /NORTH COAST LIMITED Stop where you like, but be surevto. visit A Century of Pro- s Expositién. Fares were never so low as this summer. ROUND-TRIP FARE—-SEATTLE To CHICAGO 8580 1 Coaches and Tourist Sleepers. (Berth Extra) (%25-day Limit) Ask for low First Class fares good in Standard Pullman Sleepers. Let us help plan your trip and make murvaflox‘:n for you. Write, cable or call on our Alaska Representative: KARL K. KATZ 200 Smith Tower, Seattle _ NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILW BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG | bas- HOw D'YE KNOw, CAP? MEBBE yT/S ANOTHER PHONY TIP? IF YA ASK ME — \T'S A TEN-TO- ONE SHOT THE VIPER'S GOT HIS HOOKS ON THE YOUNGSTER AN' PFFT L S0 FAR SAFE" AND SOUND. WES STILL CAMPING OUT AND.IN SPITE -OF THE POLICE DEPARTMENT HE - r— =3 © g5, King Features synoicate. It . Great Brdiin nihes reserved ./ _ow! ONE O DEM FLATFOOTS! \F 1 COULD ONLY REACH DAT STRING — By BlLLE DE BECK FOXX 1S BIVEN HONORS SECOND : TIME IN 2 YEARS . Slugging Klng, Ainerican | League, Declared Most ‘ Valuable Player NEW YORK, Oct. Waltflr Johfison and Rogersyrmfl TO BR[NG MRS | Hofrishy are” the “only other play-| ers of either League to win the | most valuable player honor twice | : | but Johnson and Hornsby did not win thc distinction in successive P.S. EARLY TO JUNEAU FOR MEDICAL CARE To bring Mrs. P. S. Early to Ju- in | neau where she will enter St. Ann’s Hospital, the seaplane Bar- anof left here for Hirst-Chichagof |“ Babe Ruth failed to receive a |8 Kimsham Cove this afternoon. vote among the Writers' com-| o s Tl 3 well kno.wn mittee for the first time slnwithroughout this section of Alaska, | 1927. has made her home with her son, | Rex Early at Kimsham Cove for several years. She has been in poor 4 FISHING BOATS SELL AT SEATTLE Johmon was the honor man i 1913 and 1924 and Hornsby in 1925 and 1929. health for several months and thought it best to be in Juneau 13.—Jimmie, Foxx. iufithg Kig) or Atb Amerct ;vak:.cex-e she could receive medical ican League, has been SEATTLE, Oct. 13—The Chelsea Lo S el i the most valuable play S| arrived here late yesterday frgm | the American Baseball|the western Lalibut banks with PIONEERS OF ALASKA Committee ha Regular monthly meeting of the Foxx won the same Pioneers of Alaska will be held to-} night at the Odd Fellows' Hall, at | 8 p.m. All members are jnvited. E. F. RODENBERG, Pres. 50,000 pounds of fish and sold for 9% and 8 cents a pound. Today the Wesley came in with 16,000 pounds of sable and the 3 | Dawn with 17,000 pounds of sable, ‘ Joe Cronin, Manager of | both selling for 312 cents a pound, |adv. ELMER REED, Secretary. Washington Senators is second in|and the Reliance brought In 13,- ! e her and Heinie Manush, Sena-' 000 pounds of sable selling for 1, ¢ 3 Advertisemer.es spread world |tor’s fly catcher, Is thi 3% cents a pound. products before you. fllillIIllllIIIllIIIllllIIIIlIIIIIIIMllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIII"IIIIIlflIIIIIIflIillIlllIIIiilllliilflIIIIIIIIIHlHIIIIIIIIIIII“IIII]HI“IE | ceive such distinetion in two years in succession. layer to re: = = = JUNEAU CASH GROCERY COME IN AND LOOK AROUND. You'll find our stock very complete and priced extreme- ly-low. PHONE 58 Free Delivery PHONE 58 25¢ SOAP POWDER, Swift’s Pride, large packa’ge ) 1 5C R e e e 39c 22¢ TOMATO JUICE, Preferred 9 Stock, largecan . . . C e e e S, COFFEE, Our Special, Fresh 19C Grind, p_ouml‘ A FRESH AND COMPLETE STOCK OF FRUITS AND VEGETABL,ES ‘w1ll arrlv on the Northland Phone 58 - Free ellvery lfimmlfllllmmfiflmflmmlfllflllllllllflllllfillMlllfillll lllllIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII CATSUP, Ritter’s, 2 bottles MAYONNAISE, Preferred Stock, full quarts . . . BRAN FLAKES, Post’s, - 2 packages . . . . i DILL PICKLES, Faultless Brand,quart jar. . . . |}l|lllllllll“lll!“llll||I||||IIlllIIII|l||||||lll||IIIiIIIllII |IIIHIIIHIIIIllflflllllflllIlIllllmllfllIImllllIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIHIHlIIIIIflIIIIIII|Il|||||||I|_||lllllllfllfllfllllllll AT RO RO . . ||lIIIIIIIIlIIllIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIHIIllIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIHIIIIlIIllllllll I firmin SYNOPSIZ: By the merest ehance Caroline Leigh has found Jim Randal, the cousin she had thought droioned in the wreck of the Alice Arden. His memory had een lost; suddenly he recogn dier and Hale Place, the hous which hie ind been rearcd, He to send Caroline away, fearing tell lier ho fears he Atole the Van Berg emeralds and shot Elmer Van Berg Nesta Riddell 1who told iiim that ; finally Jim confesses to Caroline that Nesta declares I 48 ler husband. Caroline {s terribly shocked. Chapter 2% TRAGIC TALE AROLINE — don’t that!” Carloine got her “reath with a gasp, look like hy did you say it? You oughtn’t ~you mustn’t! Jim darling!” He caught her wrists and held them in a hard, heavy grip. “Pull yourself together! Do you hear? Oh yes, you can’ if you like. You're just making it more difiicult for us both.” She had been straining away from him, her voice broken and her whole body shaking, but at his last wc she went quiet and limp. He let go of her, and she drooped forward. It ‘was just as if some spring had She said In a little lifeless \ul«e, “Tell me. A vapor had passed across the not eee her face. She waited. Her silence made her scem a long way off. He began to speak in a strained, level voice. “I"'m going to tell you—but it isn’t easy, because I don’t know where | am, You seg, the last thing I remem- ber is landing a* Liverpool on the first of July. I remember getting into the traln for London, and after that there’'s a gap until I woke up in Ledlington.” “What?” eaid Caroline. All the droop went out of her. She sat bolt upright and stared at him through dusk.- “1 was told I'd been rescued from the Allee Arden—found on a ledge on the gliffs after she broke up, aken ta the Elston cottage hospi as. mld that my wife had ['.uhul away. s Who told you?” “She did.” “That Riddell woman?” “Yes,* “But why?” She showed me a marriage cer- A “She said so. “And you believed her?” I did. I didn’t know who 1 wa or how I'd got there—I didn’t know ything except what she told me. sald my ngme was Jim Riddell, and that hers was Nesta Riddell. Her brother ahd sister-in-law said the same thing, She said we'd heen married &t the Grove Road registry office. She showed me the certificate. Or course I believed her.” “But it lsn't true!” said Carolinc 1 a warm, indjgnant voice. He was silent. “Jim—it sn't true!” He sald, “I gan’t remember any- thing after thd first of July.” “Not anything?” She saw him wince, He said, “Bit of things broken up. It wora%fpln not remembering at a — mu me on the seventh of wrote Ju Iy?zullu Caroline quickly. “Where trom?” “Londo_n. But you didn't give Outrageous Fortune Patiicia SUPPOSE I did—yes, of course | Wentworth address—you said to write to your bank.” “And you wrote? “I wrote', and Aunt Grace wrote. I was staying with her at Craig- ellachie. She asked you to come up, and you didn’t answer for three whole days—and then you didn't write to me, only to Aunt Grace.” “What did I say?” “You ‘said you might be able to come later on. And then you didn't write again till two weeky ago, and you said you might be able to get |off on the seventh if Aunt Grace could have you, and you would take a steamer up the coast. And then— and then—you never came.” “That was the last you heard?” ‘es. Don’t you remember any- thing about it?” aid you remembered—bits.” He shook his head impatiently. “1 don’t remember writing to you at all. The things L remember—" He brole off, Vividly before his mind red the things that he —a decanter and two a syphon with the light throuzh it; Elmer Van ; the bubbles in it—tiny bubbles racing up- rds to the brim. That was one sharply colored piece. t camo out d. hl; Aore- head. He sald, quick and uneven, “I remember drinking with Elmex Van Berg.” HE vapor passed from before the moon, and he saw Caroline like her own ghost, looking at him with have told why the words startied her so— “I remember drinking with Elmer Van Berg.” Why shouldn’t he remember it? What was there to startle her in that?, He went on speaking. . “There wasn't anything about Lhnt in the papers—I read them all this morning. But the tray and thel glasses must have been there.” A light nervous lhudder passed over Caroline. “The papers?” she said. iy He nodded. . “I read them all. The tray and tho' glasses must have been there when they found Elmer.” % “Jim! What are you sayjng?” He said, “I wonder it they've got my finger-prints,” Caroline flungh towards him and caught his d. “Jim—I'm frightened. What IM‘ you saying?” “I'm telling you what you wanted to know. That's one ot the bits I remember — drinking with Elmer | Van Berg the night he was shot. Do you want to hear any more?” Caroline’s hand clung to his. “Yes,” she said. He laughed. i “You won't like it. You'd better, 20 home.” “Tell me.” She felt his hand twitch, His voice changed. “It's not like remembering really —it’s like seeing a lot of llttle pic- | tures—broken. Theme's one of a fog. And I can hear someone talking— 1 don’t know whether it's me or meone else. It's beastly. The voice lceps saying, ‘Like a kid's green beads—no one-knows but me—no e knows where they are—a kid's beads—'" He stopped. She @ muscles rise as he clenched GENTRAL BANK. {High Admmlstratlon Of-| MAY BE NEXT GOVT. SGHEME ficials Quietly Can- vassing Sentiment (Continued from Page One) The banks are of taking even a showing no sign large proportion of a billion del- government has them at 3 pir nt ey will relend it at 5] per NRA members. The ative is for business| men e local communities to| of the RFC fund lars which red if the to lend set up “mortgage associations” to do the borrowing and relending | which the banks ng to do. e on its hands a of insolvent “mort- ations.” It also will| ms of dollars’ worth of | stock in banks. In ad- Government will havc‘ other obligatians ac- | gh the variolis farm | larger gage have m dition, the all sorts of quired thro boards. What could be more logical, say | the proponents of a central bank, | than consolidation of these inter-| ests into one government banking\ house? | The Roosevelt advisers are stu- | ‘dy‘mg what happened to the first ‘ the and second United States banks which were organized and aban- doned in the early days .of the Republic.. They insist’ the third United States bank, if one ma- | terializes, can eseape the mistakes of its predecessors. AS TO GUARANTEES Incidental in the present con- ' sideration of these matters in | Washington is a plan to amend deposit - guarantee program Which. will become éffective Jan- | nary 1 over the protest of many | bankers. The new proposal is that in- stead of making the banks pay for the insurance fund backing deposits, the depositors themselves eould decline to pay the fee and stay outside of the guarantee ar- rangement.if they wanted to. jon along one or more 2 lines indicated may be ex- pected at . the next session of Congress, s iy HALEYS OCCUPY INGRAM RESIDENCE ON SEVENTH Mr. and Mrs. ‘Donald 8. Haley have rented the Ingram . residence on Seventh Street and have mover there from Dixon Street. They have a lease on the place until after the first of the year when Mr. and Mrs. Ingram are expected to return herg from Seward. RIS, e AR BULPS | BULBS BULBS We now have on mans our main supply of BULBS of the very ¢holcest variefies and of the high- est quality, Daffodil Biulbs are much lower in price this year. | aav. JUNEAU FLORISTS. THE NAME THAT GUARANTEES FINE TEA For years Lipton's Tea has been famous for its high quality andlow price. Now with new low prices and same quality—Lipton’: s is da whr value than ever. 'I'ry it and see. LIPTON Y your problems the day a good time. MUSIC EVERY NIGHT AT CAPITAL BALL ROOM—Come and let your mind rest . . . you will spark faster on after. Mr. Knox at the Piano Lunches, Sandwiches, Ice Cream, Coffee and Beer PLEASE REMEMBER — Scandinavian-Am- erican dance every Tuesday—Come and have CAPITAL BEER PARLORS PHONE 549 IDEAL PAINT SHOP If Iv's I’mt‘ We Have It! ‘Wendt l Garster PR ]

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