The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 30, 1933, Page 7

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, OCT. 30, 1933. HELLO »r=~ MR COOGLE HE'S GOT I CAN'T TELL MRS - FINNEGAN- -~ My - HUSBAND --= THE VIPER--+ - HELLO, .- THIS \S ME --NO:NO-* NOU | WHERE 1 AM-- HE BROUGHT ME HERE BLINDFOLDED- DON'T LET (SAWBUCK OUT OF YOUR SIGHT ON THE NEWS MARTIN-MILLER RUPTIALS ARE SET FOR WEDNESDAY Miss Margaret Miller and Mr. John Martin will be marricd in the Douglas Congregational Church on Wednesday cvening, November 1, 45 Alaska is réceiving active sup-| at 7:30 o'clock. The Rev. J. W. Cadwell will perform the ceremony which will be followed by a re- ception in the Parsonage. All friends are invited.. — .o JOHNSON-EDWARDS WEDDING TOLD IN MT. VERNON PAPER & A newspaper clipping received in the mail Saturday by Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Edwards aptly describes the pretty wedding ceremony which occurred early this month at Con- way, Washington, uniting daughter Bernice to Mr. Leonard P . was:Canadz and their resources and| received here some time ago. The description follows: Johnsen-Edwards Wedding In Fir-Conway Church Fir-Conway Lutheran was the scene of a beautiful wed- dimg ceremony Safurday evening oet. 7Tth, at 8:30 o'clock whe Miss Bernice Edwards of Dougla: Alaska, became the bride of Mr. Leonard Johnson, son of Alex Johnson, of Fir. The church was beautifully dec- oratzd for the event, wifh trailing greens, tall white tapers and bas- kets of beautiful fall flowers. The wedding service was pro- nounced by Rev. in'the presence of about fifty clo friends and relatives. Preceding the ceremony, Philip, “At Dawning” with Ivérson sang Mrs. Carl M. Johnson accompany- ing and playing the wedding march. The bride was attired in a for mal costume of white taffeta with boquet of rose buds and swanson‘a was fashioned in colonial manner with a frill of lace. Her aunt, Mrs. H D. Plumb of Seatfle, as matron of honor was aftired in a smart model of peac htaffeta. Miss Mildred Johnson, sister of the groom, was bridesmaid and wore a costume of pale yellow taffeta. Both carried Colonial boquets. Lit- tle Shirley Garborg, niece of the groom, in a dainty frock of blue crepe, scattered roseleaves in the bride’s pathway, and her brother, Donald Garberg, was ring bearer. The groom's brother, Arthur John- son, was best man. A reception at the Axel John- son home following the cersmony, with Mrs. Monie Shelde assisting Mrs. Johnson with refreshments. The romance developed in Al- aska during the past summer while Mr. Johnson was operating a fish cannery at Douglas, where the cou- ple will make their home. GRIM REAPER CALLS Last year the Grim Reaper laid their| Church | ©O. E. Heimdahl| ~--THE VIPER'S WARPATH -- - - HIGHWAY BACKED _IBY LEGION POST The propes:d Interuational High- way which wouid “extend from | Washington State, through Br: ish Columbia and Yukon Territo | port from Seattle University Post No. 11, of the American Leg J. T. Petrich, Dzpartm:nt jutant for Alaska, recently a copy of the following resolutio: | passed by the University Post favoring the construction of the | International Highway at this % ! “Whereas, a proposed highway from the Pacific Northwest to Fairbanks, Alaska will provide work for many unemployed and will encourage teurist through the Pacific Northwest and will aid in developing Alaska, lin time will be and maintaining, and { tarther cement the friendly rela- tions which have existed betw2:n the United States and the Domin- jon of Canada for so many years. “Therefore, Be it Resolyed: That he University Post No. fl, Amer ican Legion, Department of Wash- | ington, in regular meeting this | date, hereby goes on record in fa- {vor of the proposed highway i | Territory and Alaska to Fairbanks | with such by-passes deemed advis- | able by the Governments concern- ed. The support and action by | all American Legion posfs, pat- i riotic bodies and such newspapers, | clubs and associations as may de- {tion by Congress in planning and starting work on the highway. ! “And be it Further Resolved: ! That a copy of this resolution be sent to the First District Com- | mander and the Department of Washington, with the request that a copy be sent every Post in the State, and also ocopies be sent American Legion Department of ! Alaska, the Canadian Legion at | Vancouver, B. C.. and the Senators | and Representatives from Wash- Jington with the request that they | sponsor and endeavor to secure | prompt Government action. | “DUDLEY BROWN, Attest: “Commandsr. “John L. Granger, “Adjutant.” | !'a heavy hand on the Indian popu- | 1ation of Douglas. Five answered his call... Among them being | Mrs. Emma Phillips. Saturday 2v- ening her grandson, Joe Collier, jcalled her friends and neighbors itogether and a dinner was given {in her homor and to indicate that the period of mourning was end- ed. Eighty-seven persons were served. . Daily Empre Want Ads Pay LOTS OF QUARTETTES TO A BLUE RIBBON - NONE OF THEM ARE. ENTITLED MARVELOUDS HOW THE PUBL\C LOVE TO STUDY " Jiggs Visits Chicago Fair; He Is Shown in Action BEN BERNIES MUSIC STARTS BuT trattic| self-liquidating | | “Whereas, Such a project will} through British Columbia, Yukon; | sire to aid in securing prompt ac- | EVEN MARBGIED MEN UMPH ---WE BETTER HE'S GOT HER, NOT LEAVE THE KID SULLY ---SHE'S A PRISONER 17 SHE THINKS HE'S COMIN' OVER HERE AN' SNATCH OUGHTTA SOCK ME STEP- FODDER ON P — King Fearures Synd: }N. Y. Has Champion : i Operator on Radio} NEW YORK, Uui. 30—Back in 1920 Joseph C. Smythe was N. G. as a wireless operator. His employer | told him so and threatened to dis- miss him if his record did not im- SYNOPSIS: First Caroline Leigh HALLOWE'EN PARTY WENUS . ; Ton lcarns from Susie Van Berg that Ham Relish Sandwiches Coffee |POVe: Lo a L R ien’..aa'x and Bimer, g,mf Berg Pumpkin Ple Apples | Now Smythe may boast of had quarreled the night Van Berg | Dougnuts Gder ~ |new world's record for veeeivinz| i Sheh G ualo threat- ¢ o wireless eipher code, established the! ens to tell the police if Elmer dies. Fop oo Saks. Dy | other daypat the Century of Pro- ;”‘”"b{"”l"""”&:’”g’"’,'i"‘o‘ CI’;"" ) ine blunders nto Caroline Bus- Fruit Salad gress Exposition in Chicago. He re- sell's room and overhears o Cream Cheese Pumpkins ceived the cipher at a forty-five-\ roome ar Hale hp'lcahu, s pose Coffee word-a-minute rate. hood home, {8 described in connec- tion with the emeralds. Caroline Smythe says that the reproof of his boss is responsible for the rec-| ord. He knew he had to make good, he declared, and he did. ———.———— ' NEW FAIRBANKS CLUB loves Jim, and is sure ho had noth- ing to do with the theft—but Jim's memory has gone, and he cannot help prove his inndcence, He is hid- ing at Hale Place. Date Cookies Cheese Sandwiches Minced Ham Sandwiches Dill Pickles Olives \‘ Coffee | TIndividual Pumpkin Pies ‘Whipped Cream Salted Nuts HALLOWE'E% RECIPES Chapter 37 HALE PLACE AGAIN I'r was more than an hour past mid- night when Caroline came to Hale Place again. Out in the dark, with the damp air blowing in her face and the trees of the avenue making a soft swishing sound overhead, Caroline had her first chance to think over the events of the afternoon. The more she thought about them, the more they frightened her. If Elmer Van Berg died and Susie went to the police with her story of Jim’s finger-prints ... Caroline simply couldn’t force her thought any farther. It encoun- tered an icy wall of fear and shud- The S and M Club has opened | for business in Fairbanks. It carries | | Ham Relish Filling draft and bottled beer, cigars, cig- 1 (For 18 Sandwiches) “aretes, soft drinks, confectionery, | 1 cup choppsd cooked ham, 2 etc. The proprietors are Dan Suth-| hard cooked eggs, diced, % cup erland and Charles Matich, old- | chopped pickles, 2 tablespoons of timers, formerly in business to- | chopped celery, 1 tablespoon of gether in Chatanika for about a chopped olive, % cup salad dress- year. { ing. ! Mix ingredients with fork, and | spread on buttered slices of whi bread. Cover with other buttered slices and press together firmly. pjyision Number One, District of | Cut off crusts, wrap sandwiches| ajpgka. !in waxed paper and then in damp jUNFAU - YOUNG HARDWARE | SUMMONS In the United States Commission- er's Court for Juneau Precinet. | cloth., Store in ice box untl = COMPANY, a corporation, Plain- dered baclk. prving stime. 4 tiff, vs. E. A. DE WITT, De | Pumpkin Pie Filling | we g | (For Two Ples) | The President of the United| rified her wi th ‘voice, | | nd her hints, pool of ink. she hadn’t looked into the pool 2 cups mashed cooked pumpkin, giates of Ameriea, 2-3 cup dark brown sugar, % Cub|defendant, Greeting: ! jsugar, 2 teaspoons namon, 1' yoyu are nereoy requested to ap- | | teaspoon cloves, 1 teaspoon nut- pear jn the United States Commis- | meg, % teaspoon ginger, 2-3 tea- goner's Court for Juneau Precinct, spoon salt, 3 eggs, 2 cups milk, piyision Number One, District of | 2 tablespoons butter, melted. | Alaska, at Juneau, Alaska, within| Mix ingredients and pour Into thirty days after the 30th day of | 2 unbaked pie shells. Bake 15 october, 1933, in case this summons | minutes in moderately hot oven. js published, or within forty days Lower fire and bake 40 minubss in'geer the date of its service upon slow oven. |you, in case this summons is served | Doughnuts 'upon you personally, and answer | 2 tablespoons butter, 1 cup Wa- the complaint of the above named f T, 2 eggs, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 'nigintiff on file in the said court| teaspoon nutmeg, ': teasPoON jn the above entitled action salt, 1 cup milk, 4 cups flour, 2, The said plaintiff action | teaspoons baking powder. !demands the following relief. Judg- | Cream butter and sugar. Add ment jn the sum of $2046, the cggs and beat well Add rest of congract price of hardware goods| ingredients, place soft dough ON ¢)q and gelivered you by plaintif, | to the above| % LL at once she felt that th of her torch was a danger. pose yesterday's burglar | turned. Suppose Jim were .+ . She did not “vait to sup more, but turned off her torch 2 went through the hall and up the stair in the dark. P4 floured board. Roll out until one- \yerest thereon at 8% from Aug-| eighth inch thick and cut oul yg G 1932, costs and disbursements | doughnuts and fry until brown in of the action, and a reasonable | deep hot fat. |attorney’s fee; in which action a| |debt owning you from Mae Kilroy, | CONTROL TELLS TALE |of Juneau, Alaska, amounting mi $67.00, has keen attached. | _ | And in the event you fail to 50 | NEW YORK, Oct. 30—Max Ca- appear and answer, the plaintiff | ey, boss of the Brooklyn Dodg- will take judgment against you for | ers, declares Carl Hubbell's bril- want thereof, and will apply to liant pitching is not due to a the court for the relief demanded | uscrew ball” or any other fancy in his complaint and as hercm-i delivery, but to the fact that the above stated. Giants' star has the most per- Witness, the Honorable . J. F. fect control of any picher in the Mullen, Judge of said Court, and | the Seal of said Court hereunto| game today. ———_—— 'affixed, on this 7th day of October, | The house had an empty, friendly 1933, | feeling. It did not frighten her to CARR AT CHITINA (Seal) J. F. MULLEN, be alone in it. Generations of her own people had gone up and down these same stairs, had been born and married and had died in the dark rooms on either hand. She eame to the door of the Bluc Room and, feeling before her, found it open too. She knew that the room was empty before she crossed the | threshold. She stood in the middle | of the floor and switched on her | "torch sgain. This was what Caro- line Bussell had seen with those pale, fixed eyes. “I am in the middle of the room—I am turning—" That was what Caroline Bussell had said. ‘Caroline Leigh stood in the mid- dfe of the floor and turned slowly, counting the windows as Caroline Bussell had counted them—one, two, three, four, five narrow win- dows like slits. ‘Then the fireplace— two candlesticks on the shelf, one them broken, with the candle lying beside it. She went on turning. Caroline Bussell had said, “I am still turn- | ing” The door came next, then a | space of wall, and then the recess | that held the bed. The torch shone on the wall and flickered over the bed foot and the two carved pillars. Caroline sent the ray of her torch straight to the head of the bed, a plece of massive carving supported | by pillars. The pattern of the carv- | 'ing was an appletree with Adam | and Eve on either side of it | United States Commissioner and | O. R. Carr, tormerly of Juneau, ex-officio Justice of the Peace.| is now employed n the store of First publication, Oct. 9, 1933. | J. 8. M. Nelson, at Chitina. ,Last publication, Oct. 30, 1933. | JIGES DOESN'T MIND WAITING FOR MAGGIE WHILE SHE SHOPS AT THE FAIR- JIGES MEETS HIS OLD FRIENDS -J. M.DAVIS OF THE D-L-AND-w-R.R. AND SHELDON CLARK AND EARL SINCLAIR OF THE Ol COMPANY- ENJOY THE FAIR- Outrageous Fortune Patiicia WentwiorTh By BILLE DE BECK DE T'REE OF R 'EM SNORIN' LIKE PIPE ORGANS= Now's ME trick of it well enough. Jim had showed it to her when she was four- teen. You twisted the third apple from the bottom, and it turned the latch which held the shield in place. She kneeled on the bed and focused the torch upon the cavity. It was a little cupboard with a shelt across it. In the bottom of it was a pencil and a button. Caroline re- membered them quite well; she had put them there ages and ages ago. There was nothing else at all in the little secret cupboard. Only someone who knew the trick could open the shield. Who had opened the shield? Caroline went to the door and Caroline focussed the torch upon the cavity. looked down the passage. It was empty. Where was Jim? Caroline came slowly downstairs into the hall. The house wasn't empty now. It was full of all the people she had known when she wag a child—Mrs, Crofts, the very fat cook; Miss Milton, the jolly young governess; Aunt Margaret's maid, Halliday, frightfully grim; Nanna, who spoiled them all; and a suc- cession of matds, with one or two standing out from the rest—that very pretty Cissie Jones; Maggie, who had to be called by her sur- name, because her Christian name was the same as Aunt Margaret’s, and Emily, whom nobody liked. There had been a little mystery about Emily—she just went without any notice. That wasn't like Aunt Margaret. Looking back, Caroline wondered what Emily had done. Caroline had looked into the draw- ing room and library. It was whilst she was opening the dining-room door that she remembered Emily's surname, Rudd, It came to her in | and in the middle of the tree a | shield, with. the arms of Ralph de | | Burgh, whose helress had married | ;:uuhl and brought this bed with | _The arms should have been there, |& castle and three spear-heads, but —Caroline caught her breath, The beam wavered in her shaking hand. | | With both hands on the torch to steady it, she came up to the bed, v shield stood out at an anglel like & door and showed a dark w Caroline knew the one of those quick irrelevant flashes which sometimes show one things which have basa forgotten for years. The dining-room was quite empty. She came to the back door again. The house was empty behind her. Jim wasn’t there, She felt very tired. L 1 She switched off her light and stepped out jnto the dark ynl. clog- ing the door of the house behind hen (Copyright, 1933, J. B. Lippincott Un.! 1 it S vl i e b b e The thing to do when you have Hallowe’en guests, have Whitman’s Chocolates EVERY hostess knows that candy is an important “accessory” to graciocus, delight- ful hospitality. At the bridge table . . in the lull during eonversation .. notice how Whit- man’s Chocolates are enthusiatically wel- comed by everyone. For in candy the first choice is Whitman’s . it has been so for 91 years. There is purity . . flavor . . freshn . . to Whit- man’s Chocolates that sat s, as nothing else can, the natural hunger for good candy. And in Whitman’s there is an assortment to delight every candy lover . . every piece a candy favorite . . and every piece the most delicious of its kind. Butler Mauro Drug Co. We are one of the 22,000 Whitman's Selected Agencies. P SR RS - G S MG e s RSB RS e is S S FRYE'S BABY BEEF | “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON ; Frye-Bruhn Company f s Prompt Delivery i Telephone 38 | PACIFIC COAST Coal Ghuckles SsHOW-ME “AL, WHEN OUR- 18 THIS GOOD, COAL LADS NAME- 3 {HE WISHED 15 'DOVBTING | o TO TRY = WAYS HAVE 4 JUST. ONE WonN Wit y TEST TON WAS ALL He'D BUY / _ But Now {HE BuYS 11" - BY THE LOAD- FOR 10 TRUY PACIFIC COAST COAL Co. ‘ &3} 4'2 JUNEAU @ ALASKA Juneau Cash Grocery CASH AND CARRY Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery e Phone 58 ALASKA MEAT CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING Meadowbrook Butter Austin Fresh Tamales PHONE 39 Deliveries—10:30, 2:80, 4:30 FOR INSURANCE __ See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. HILINE SYSTEM Groceries—Produce—Fresh and Smoked Meats Front Street, opposite.Harris Hardware Co. CASH AND CARRY ] ————— 3 > Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Juneau, Alaska ° Ertablished 1898 WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485

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