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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 25, 1933. NA PE LITTLE WOMAN NEEDS SOME EXERCISE -~ (o 2 foe e . ATLHETICS MAKE 1gH SCORE IN BOWLING G AMES B and A Henbing .. Have Big Totals in | ~ " Tuesday'sMatches | ! High 'score ‘made in the bowling matches ed in the Elks' tourn- ament last evening was rolled by the Athlstics of the Amer League which had a total of 1528 and second high was made by the White Sox who had a total of 1454, Radde of the Yankees was high gingle scorer for the evening, with 576 and Art Henning, with 573 was second high man. " There will be no bowling matches | ip the Elks’ tournament tonight | ds it is regular lodge night. Individual scores in the games last night follow: YANKEES 171 203 155 185 138 94 202 576 158 498 Radde Andrews Banfield 464 482 INDIANS 168 181 164 178 130 130 482 1428 179 . 528 170 512 | 130 512¢ 462 o0 4191430 | Fhere’s action here—if you like &t Kfluttering over the ring) misse: - BUEPNE .. | llive) takes the crack at the cans A Henning .. 162 178 233 573 T e Stapleton 130 117 116 363 | Wilson 150 159 150 439 | BIVEN §100,001 * FOR WORK HERE 194 189 173 151 130 130 Public Works Relief Funds 5011528 . Allotted to Indian and Eskimo Projects T. George G. Messer'dt Lundstrom ' it a 49 165 192 130 548 516 390 Lavenik Shaw Dunham 497 470 ATHLETICS 184 136 159 198 150 140 493 474 TIGERS 146 166 160 160 114 148 420 474 4751369 ————————— 487 1454 215 171 528 175 465 Koski 535 ‘Walmer Van Atta 159 471 160 480" 156 418 | H. Messer'dt Gus George Foster (Continued from Page One) a portion of the program submitted y the Alaska Division of the Of- jce of Indian Affairs for publiz works funds, it was said today by t was wife's order, so Captain Mr. Gordon. The total applied for “Sheriff Maples of the University Was $350,000. 5f Tennessee football team has| The lateness of the season makes stopped smoking. She feared the it certain that funds allotted to ! fags would hurt his wind. seitlements in the more northerly $ |sections cannot be expended until ‘Home talent is "one thing on next Spring, Mr. Gordon said. This which the University of Maryland DProbably Will result in increased { fcatball team lays claim. Nineteen |expenditures in Southern and members of the squad are natives | Southeast Alaska. SPORT BRIEFS | | - Tuere wers several Panhandle AN' YQUSE MEANTIME PROMISE T WONT HAFTA GO TO KINDAGOTTEN, Py i SAWBUCK ! NOW DON'T TRY TO GET AWAY---- YOU'RE COMIN' HOME WITH ME-- SEE-? 1 GOT A BIG S'PRISE WAITIN' FOR WO === ¢ | aere yesterday, that gives me five | clear days. fast and furious—as Leo Narbares flying tackle and Red O'Dell (in swan | canvas that resulted in his being pinnedi San Francisco recently. i communities on the program which | did not receive funds in the cur- rent allotment. Included in these | werg Kake, $30,000; Haines, $9,000; | Angoon, $30,000; Hoonah, $20,000: | angell, $20,000; Klawock, for in- | stallation-of water system, $20,000; lakatla, $30,000. { The program was made early| Jast Spring. Since then Metlakatla has had a good fishing season and there is no great need for public | | works relief expenditures there, Mr. | Gordon said. Other communities | | omitted from the list, however, will | feel the effect keenly. i - e | MR. AND MRS. J. B. BURFORD | EETURNING ON NORTHLAND | | -— | | Mr. end Mys. J. B. Burford are | | returning to Juneau aboard the | | motorship Northland, which sailed | | from Seattle Monday night. M. | |and Mrs., Burford made the trip| |couth on the last sailing of the| Northland. | —— | MONTE A. SNOW RETURNS FROM TRIP TO KETCHIKAN | | ‘Monte A. Snow returned on, the | Northwestern last night from Ket- | chikan where he has been for the ast week. /»f Maryland. i DAILY SPORTS CARTOON ‘ —~By Pap & You pow 7 ELIEVE 17 - YUS; TIME ME ~THIS FELLOW 7 ALMOST EUERY BACIK s SUPPOSED To 8¢ A'IO-SECOND MmAN “ REALLY - | years?" ! kets. Don’t you think £0?" By BILLE DE BECK SCOTT! 1S THAT BLANKETY-- BLANK A~ ¥ 11 & PIG FOLLERIN/ us--...22 eous Fortune SYNOPSIS: Jim Randal deter- minea to remain in hiding at his boyhood home. Hale Place, in am situation i w He may. for all he can prove, be Doth the thief who took the Van EBerg emeralds and the husband o a woman he detests, Nesta Riddell. Moreover, from what Caroline Leigh tells him, clues found by the police at th m Berp house seem. to Uear out N tory. Chapter 33 THE LETTER C.’U(ULINE interrupted Jim witb a frightened, “Stay here?"” “Why not? You said Mrs, kedger only came once a week. If she was If 1 can't remember things by then, I shall send for Robert and put myself in his hands.”™ He stopped in the middle of the floor. “And now you must go.” Carotine got up. “Have you got enough blankets? Are they aired?” He laughed—a time. “Who do think's been airing my bedclothes for the last seven real laugh this “I don't know,” said Caroline. “And you needn’t laugh—-it'’s nice of me to want you to have dry blan- She came up close and stood on tiptoe, putting up her face. “Geod-night — darling ungrateful Jim!™ He said, “I'm not ungrateful.” In the middle of the snort sen- tence his voice changed. He would “Perhaps you'll be grateful when you see what a nice sup I've brought you. I hought the things in town. Good-night!” She k him if it were seven 5, and she a child and he her all but brother, But all of a sud- den her heart beat quick and hard. When she had kissed Jim last her heart had not beaten like this. She stepped back, too confused and troubled by her own feelings to be aware of his. She wanted to be out of the room and out of the house. She went to the door and opened it. The dark passage lay before her. She stepped out into it with her| thoughts still in great confusion. | Why should it make her feel like this to touch Jim's cheek with her lips? She had always kissed- him. What was there to make this kiss | any different fron. all the other kisses? His rigid silence escaped her. She was dcarcely aware that he had taken up the candle and was follow- ing. They walked along the corri- dor and down the stair without a | spoken word. Words unspoken cla- | mored in them both. | He walked with her down the | dark drive and through the sleep-| ing village. At the cottage gate he | broke the long silence. “You mustn’t come again.” “I must,” said Caroline. “No, you mustn’t.” | “I shall come tomorrow,” said | “Caroline—if it's him—what shall 1say?” Then as Caroline, laughing and shaking her head, was about to run out of the room, there was a change in voice and manner. A puzzled look came over Patsy’s face; her color receded, and her voice took on a tone of disappointment. “Oh,.,. Isay?.. her.” She turned from the instrument, which was fastened to the wall at the foot of the stair, “Caroline — someone wants you. She won't give any name.” Caroline took the receiver with some ‘impatience. It was so stupid of people not to give their names. If you were cut off, you never knew . Oh ... Very well, I'll call Yes, she's here. Who shall | | first string substitutes, strut their | stuff on the grid and then join a wWOoT'S WRONG W!I0 HIM? HE AIN'T GOT FLEAS OR NUTTON--- “MOPPING” UP \Two Nebraska Backs Play Game on Field and in Capitol LINCOLN, Neb, Oct, 25—From | mopping up the “scrubs” and fresh- {men on the gridiron to mopping {up Nebraska’s $10,000,000 capitol |1s the daily assignment of a pair jof University of Nebraska back-‘ | field men. Glen Skews and Rollin Parsons, crew which keeps the marble floors of the capitol glistening for thou- sands of visitors, e The adverusemenis oring gyou news of better things to have and | easier ways to live. | who had been calling you. She sim- [& ply hated that. & There came to her along the wire an almost inaudible voice. “Is that Caroline Leigh?” “Who is speaking?” “Is that Caroline Leigh?” “Yes. Who is speaking? “Will you come and see me? 1 | want to see you very badly.” “But who are you? I didn't hear—" “I didn’t say. 1 want to see you— about—Jim.” There was a faint des- | perate catch in the voice before the name came out. T took Caroline a moment to get her own voice steady. “Are you—no, you're not—Nesta.” “Who is Nesta? No, never mind. I'm Susie. You know now, don’t you? | Will you come and see me?” Caroline’s heart leapt. Susie Van Berg wanted to see her. Why? Of all things in the world, she wanted | to see Susie Van Berg. She d_ it so much that she was afraid to say yes. Could she go— might she go? Was there any pos: sible hurt to Jim in her going? She | couldn’t see any. Susie Van Berg spoke agaln, a little “louder, a little more insist- e . "AE; you there? Will you come?” “Yes,” said Caroline, and had the feeling, like Robert, that’ she was taking an irrevocable step. “How will you come?” said Susie Van Berg. “I would send the car— | but then the servants would talk—" | “They’ll do that anyhow,” said | Caroline with the ghost of a laugh. “But you needn’t bother—I've got my own little car. 'When shall I come?” The voice said, “At once.” Caroline’s thoughts moved rapid- | Iy. She said, “Not if you don't want to make talk. It isn’t as if I knew you very well. It would be better if I came in the afternoon—anyone can come in | the afternoon “What time?” The voice fluttered. “Between five and six,” said Caro- line. “Will that do?” The voice said, “Yes.” The click | of the receiver put a full stop to the word, Susie Van Berg turned from the telephone, clutching with both Caroline, and was gone before he could answer. HE first mail in the morning brought a proposal in due form from Robert Arbuthnot. Patsy Ann glowed and blushed over it as if it letters. She read it aloud in snatch- es, with agitated and enthusiastic comments. It concluded: 1 have, for some time, been con- sidering the question of matrimony. I _hope you: knew me well enough to beLure that I should give such a ct the most serfous consid- before taking what I re- gard as an irrevocable step, From the tenor of your conversation yes- terday I gather that you would not consider a distant of rela- tionship, such as exists between ourself and me, as an insuperable ar to marriage. May I therefore ‘ll::(‘:;!fll‘er ymulfl entertain of ace me as your husband? o 7 Patsy broke off and dabbed her eyes. e doesn’t he? I think it's a wonderful letter. Don’t you? Patsy dabbed her eyes again. “I don’t know how to answer it. I can’t write a beautiful letter like that.” “I shouldn’t try,” said Caroline. “That’s Robert’s sort of letter. Yoi ‘write your own sort, and per he'll sit down at the other end wonder how you did it.” “Do you think so? Do you t"! T could just say that he's very happy—would that “Beautitully,” said Car: As she said it, the teleph ‘began to ring. A scarlct E ‘aniht up the receiver, had been the most ardent of love- | “He makes it sound so solemn— | | hands at the pale blue satin wrap | | she was wearing. ‘She had locked | | both doors before she rang up Caro- | line Leigh—the Wedroom door, and | the door of the big dressing-room which she had turned into a sitting- | | room for herself. The communicating door stood | open between the two rooms, The | telephone was i~ the sitting-room. She had hung up the receiver be- cause she had heard someone try the handle of the bedroom door. She stood for a moment, listening the grey rainy morning falling cold upon her pallor. She had the type of looks which needs the sun. Her hair was 8o pale as to be almost sil- ver, eyes a forget-menot blue, her skin ag white as privet, with no more thén a faint rose to tinge the | cheeks, and deepen to the color of pink hawthorn in the lips. She stood there listening, and instant she had stepped out of her slippers and, picking them up, crossed the floor and gone through the communicating door, moving without a sound. The bedroom blinds were down, and-the curtains drawn. 'he only light came from the sit- g room, Sasie Van Berg slipped into the -down bed and, leaning over cdgo, set her slippers down be- 1 ii, Taen, pulling the clothes che reached out her hand J. B. Lippincott, Co.) in a strained position, the light of | heard the handle tried again. In an | SSHOW-ME “AL, 18 THIS L'ADS NAME- 15 DOUBTING WAYS HAVE WON WM FAME— o WHEN OUR- GOOD COAL { HE WISHED 10 TRY = JUST ONE, TesT, ToN WAS ALL HE'D BUY asootT & WALKER, INC. But Now HE BUYS I7 FOR 10 TRU COMFORT J L7 vs BeRD Yo A TEST oM/ 'PACIFIC COASTCOAL Co. D 41240588 ZRLASKA 9 e, g PSS RS LR SO S UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver =~ Meats—Phone 16 . . . ready for the Bone yard WHEN the water begins to squidge through paper-thin soles and a new patch on the inner'tube just covers an old one — then Mr. and Mrs. Buyer have GOT about it. to do something Hundreds of Juneau folks have been “getting along” for months with ancient belongings—sheets and shoes and roofs and radios—and now those belongings are ready for the boneyard—just plain worn out. Most of those Juneau folks are turning to the pages of the Daily Empire for longer. the goods they ¢an’t put off buying any BUY THE ARTICLES YOU NEED NOW! DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE