The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 4, 1933, Page 7

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OH-ER- EXCUSE ME, MR. GOOGLE -- YOU SEE T'™™M MOLLY FINNEGAN'S BROTHER -- SAWBUCK'S UNCLE -- SHE SA\D YOU WERE HER FRIEND-. BARNEY GOOGLE, AND SPARK PLUG SURE THING, FINNEGAN — SURE - SURE - IT'S A LONG STORY-- BARNEY -- AND T'M WEARY AFTER MY LONG JOURNEY--- PERHAPS YOU COULO PUT ME UP POR THE NIGHT - --- AND 15 QUEER - LODOKIN' % ttax? i AIN'T HE P-- NOTHIN' SAY--- HOW'D )N HIS SUITCASE BUT; YOU GET ' IN 7 ! NEWS I COMMISSIONER KARNES Is { NEVER SAID NOTHIN'} TO ADDRESS DOUGLAS P-TA 1 ABOUT HAVIN' A ipts ST . ' ! ‘ BROTHER *--* , DOA .m-bzr.x and patrons of the v 1 Y . uglas Parent Teacher Associa- a3 tlon will have the pléasure or‘l 2 hearing Commissioner of Educa- tion Anthony E. Karnes address the next meeting to be held Tues- day evening, November 7. The entire program which will be held in the high school audi- torium is as follows: Piano Solo—Doris Cahill. Recitation—Phyllis Edwards. Vocal Selection — Trio — Miss Blanche Turner, Miss Alice Palmer BLOSS M SEELEY for on hoi Here’s a simple treatment e complexion. Immeaiately arising in the morning apply water to the face. Use a face pad Outrageous Fortune cold cream. ; Pitiicia WenliorTh FOR UNE NIGHT | to “Free” $1 ,700,00(),000 in Closed Banks|" s v's e o e e . v applications apply the Torch Soclety. i BYNOPSIS.; Hnlortndersmx,tha wasn't very long, so he had hopes. 557 5 b Do this e morning while run- Ohief Conatable, is making inguiries Another minute more and the CARB PLAY'NB . ning your bath. Then use a weakt Caroline alout Jim Randal, her 5 s TOES SMASHED ; 3 > A 5 i g{mnlnuru"ho has become ;’c;lun“lad f;; hopes were justified. For a dis- s i solution orl “MT hazel in tepil Groner. Just a8 Caroline tells the | Dossible to.see both turgings, These I E N Steverae o 2 ed vacation from the Treadwell Constable she as heard nothiny five or six yards cavem);i lhi lowe: ocal Lodge nters Na- u e 2a8.8e0000 O oo Foundry on account of a couple of| The general public is cordially rom Jim, Jim telephones. She ate and part of the shrubbery of . R:-233 £ ¥y o bl o A - invi 1 service: makes “him ‘widerstand sho will | Sa ot thoss large out.of-date houses tional Tournament Set 2 Jlo 3335550k 000f | smashed toes recelving while at invited to all services. (3 » meet him that night without “tip- | one of those large of R8s his work e — Ding of* Major Andersou. Carolito | which have been abandoned before for November 24 e St. Luke's Episcopal Church | knows Jim had nobhing to do with th ‘hing tide of bungalows P NEW YoRrK g 3t taking ‘the cmeralds, but wntil his e encroachlng t —_—— 7] D $11,168,972.000 “"7:30 pm. — Evening Prayer ani memory returns, proving it is a di/- | and villas. The drive was green with The Juneau Lodge has entered b 194,153,000 e s b J » o ermon. Acult matter, moss, the garden a mere tangle. Be- tween it and the road ran a low brick wall topped by an unclipped hedge. The whole place had a deso- the Elks National Bridge Turna- ment which is to be held simul- taneously in Elks lodges through- out the country on Friday, Novem- PHILADEL PHIA D $2,403,516,000 U-e 196,570,000 R 1 —RICHMIOND Douglas Catholic Church ouglas | Church Chapter 42 ' TRAILING NESTA No services. —— e, = 5 late, unv. look. ber 24. A TM RANDAL went into the library, | * jim pushed open the gate With | 4 is the intention of J. E, Bar- Rt BAG FIVE BEAR but he did not stay there long. vi a5 sgstipn ke b % RS » 3 5 bat g 8| some difficulty and walked in. |acer’ Chairman, and his com- M Sermce% W:ir‘h‘ hen]o‘;dewnen[;x fo|r t]hekfllte Nothing could have suited him bet- | phitrea consisting of Norman Ban- / GeSALLAS Ol A bag totaling four black bear, o come there to look at. 3539247000 one brown bear and a deer is th> ter. There were half a dozen places where laurels, laurustinus, lilac and yew crowded up to the unkempt field, Bert Caro, Mrs. H. L. Faulk- ner, Mrs. R. E. Robertson, Mrs. G. F. Freeburger, Mrs. Winn God- “DEFOSITS 1N LICENSED . OR UNRESTRICTED BANKS. NLICENSED a hunting trip under- Southeast Alaska by o result of 34, O+48.000 taken in u-é aa,825,000 P10 ’ The past and what had bappened in wWee™ x A the past was nothing like so im Notices for this churck column | b L T nust be received by The Empire portant as the present and what was | hedge, and where he could stand U OR RESTRICTED BANKS, & likely to happen In the immediate | and see without being seen. faxden e QI b L O Z B G RETRICTED BANKS, ot Tater than 10 olclock Saturday(PArlY of s persons hom e futares ey g dnl ' |1a9) ol extend *an invitation to . / moriing w guarantee change of |Erancisco. The party, comprised of 5 e X i ad not to wait aoty ml_m‘ x: every. bridge player in the com- 12”» o TOTAL — D-831,94°5,667,000 sermon topics, etc. Mr. and Mrs. C. 8. Howard, Sr, e sat down on one of the stift|about half an hour Nesia Riddell |, yiey “hoth men and women, to A s # - U% 1,716,513,000 AR Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Howard, Jr, upright chairs, shut his eyes, and | walked briskly past the Kosy Kor- i take part in this nation-wide i ", «‘( % " -R 2,515 .3 & o w|and Mr. and Mrs. X. X. Tuttl> g wc;r;l rv;r dwhat Mdm ha;i t;:llrl h(n‘l gierreg:lit:‘:)rolizeszg i‘;lll:;le‘sitg;rxl‘g‘t’zré fomHiheAt: i iy @—O T Congregational Community | |returned recently to Ketchikan on Nesta had come down in the small . Thi romises A the yacht Westward from 18 days turning behind her and follow on. A poptpaiucht pRomiRe Uncle Sam has a new lever to use in the tasi of prying cpen 2500 or more banks elther closed | ! CHIES Tt i e hours at the summons of a handful of gravel thrown be one of ‘the most novel and in- be or under restrictions in the United States. It is th: Depocit Liquidation Board, which 'plans to ' frée The map shows, as of shores of Admiralty Island and the adjacent portions of the main- up against her|In point of fact she never looked | o ogins over” held. It will REV. J. W. CADWELL, Pastor 10:30 a.m.—Sunday School. round, but walked briskly into the as much as possible of the more than $1,700,000,000 held in such institutions. window. She had been away for v highly educational for the contest . something over an hour, had come | town, Where she entered the Lon- | i "oongict of playing sixteen sec- | September 27, how such funds are distributed among the 12 Federal Rescrve districts. 11:30 am. — Preaching service. |land. ba:k. and lhfen immhedmtely gone doyi ;o‘\:t:‘yt ::::lu\‘nl;;l"';‘::;&:h:fl)":‘“ retly prepared hands which have ) o Pl o) AR = | Topic, “Three Great Bible Remind- A AR out again as far as the gate, bring: v been arranged by sixteen of the By CARL C. CRANMER | goes into effect January 1, and the | demonstrate the progress of aers” SHOP IN JUNEAU ing with her something, presumably money. the other side of the High Street, bought a paper, and unfolding it, leading bridge experts of the coun- try. While these hands are all very WASHINGTON, Nov. 4 — The recovery engine, the Deposit Li- Deposit Insurance Corporation has |indicated that banks will be judg- hundred years. So the fair man- agement said November 8 would be Min had then heard her say “It's | KeDL & watch upon the door of the | y;oresting, they are not trick or | quidition Board, is being wheeled eq on a basis of solvency rather |call “Personal Responsibility Day.” :lel ‘lflw;')e &;::;nenn]d i{)m‘:m"g nhr(:m i freak :ands. " into line withtlhe bs,txlory (;f OFh- !than liquidity as to their fitness| Mayor Kelly announced he would T Py e g y in the house; after b A z & PO A Handsom= trophies are furnish- |er gcvernment agencles PIUggINg ¢4 obtai sit guar: 285, provide 1,000 barrels of nd | PACIFIC COAST C /Cé Cfi/ Wwhich the man said a lot of things AI:;:\Z 2:::"‘sfi;° ’L‘::]“:Z: q\“‘"‘n“‘ ed. The National Winners have |away in President Roosevelt’s cam.- | Al copests SRR e Sa,,dm:hc fopt, Jem (A0 0d ucrles ::1; gi)dnt hear, and m'muthal‘ she ol 2l mu-p» A nn(l‘ fh their names inscribed on the Vie- | palgn to expand credit, free bank pyESE MEN COMPOSE —e————— AL C . She heard him say, “Don't be | Stant on the pavement, And AT | tory Cups and receive replica | deposits and strengthen the bank- jyQUIDATION BOARD FIRE DEPARTMENT CALLED \CE TO MHER You SHoOULD late.’ ot L m‘".; s models of them for permnn-?nt ing_structure. WASHINGTON, Nov. 3.—Mem-| TO ROYAL BLUE CAB OFFICE poL| VER What he made of it was this— A “:“\;m ‘r >l-"‘d Wids pnas possession. The prize winners in The uymedlat,c p‘roblem of vthe bers of the Deposit Liquidation AT 7:15 O’CLOCK LAST NIGHT L\’ SAID~ \I HAPPY Nesta had given the fellow all the m””j‘ "m"‘(‘]‘l‘(.”;”: e ok a Juneau Lodge receive local cham- | new credit weapon is to lay siege ngarq, seeking to free deposits | “l‘l’ST g L& BE money she'd got in the house, and |M2Kes & E00 ccreen. fthere Was & | pionship emblems. Other attract- | o frozen bank deposits aggrgating grom closed banks, are: K715 olclogk Tast eveking, “fhe ) 5 IME A was under an _a;recmcx:t to meet s Geriihs bluv\‘ A»|: (“rl"(' n‘r“’i‘v ijve prizes (taling one per table) | more than $1700,000,000 in some C. B. Morriam, head of the|Juneau Voluntesr Fire Department W\ him next day with more. If he was '|""hv< SO5r ln.\:l'rc al are provided for the runners--[2500 banks throughout the coun- paarq and director of the Recon- |was called to the office’ of the| right, Nesta would be drawing i inas ofiratnbE MUPEA. She SABETeRRL SooRG tpiiloi) iy struction Finance Corporation. Royal Blue Cab, where some gaso- | money out of the bank some time | o CECN LT fimsy imi. | €S On the “Firing Line” | Jesse H. Jones, RFC chairman.|line became ignited and caused a during the day. Some time after Bitlon Teather prtb R it Lot - e — In the line of battle, with Dean G. Acheson, under-secre- | small blaze, which was quickly| th:t shahwould meet the fellow. And | & 0% 0K e bake shop next ied abjectives as thelr aTBEis, 2% ary of the treasury esingulshed. Thierd -wa o s | S tb:tg','.‘;‘o&f"’m“’fi,]; Place. & | door. He was so near that e could | ;,“;e.",‘““gejxg‘"‘ ey o Mawis 7. Douglas, direotar | of | age ; | hear her rather strident voice ask- e e the budget. | vantage if he co.uld contrive to ‘e tor asllETehacaInts | Finance Corporation, Farm Credit J. F. T. O'Connor, comptroller make an unobstrusive third. £ 2 et | Administration and the new Fed- ¢ the currency. He had to keep an eye on Nesta Riddell’s movements. Meanwhile he was going to risk a telephone call to Caroline. From now on she had got to keep right out of the busi- ness. She had got to be told that, and that he had left Hale Place. He crossed over to the north side of the square, went into the post of- fice. and rang up Hazelbury West. When Caroline’s voice came tod him after that long strange pause, his heart jumped. He said what he ® had come there to say, and heard Caroline say “Wait.” She said it $wice. What was the matter? Was ft because he had said good-bye that her voice was stiff and dead? He said, “I mustn’t wait, Don’t worry.” He was a fool to have said that, because the thought of Caroline worrying filled him with an insen- sate desire to go to her. “Where are you ringing up from?” He told her. He said, “I can't stop.” His hand made a movement to re- place the receiver, when quick and warm there came to his ear a rush of quite unintelligible words. He wasn't to forget that he was comirfz to Jenny Ross’ treasure hunt, They wouldn't begin while it was light— “go we'd better meet about nine.” He heard her laugh and say, “1 can’t stop either—I've got a visitor. I'll be at the end of Nesta's road— 1 can’t remember its name—at nine o'clock. Will thlt be all right?” E left the post office, reached the High Street by way of Market Street, and walked out to Ledling- ton End. It was all very well to say that he had got to keep an eye on Nesta Rid- dell, but how was it going to be done? Sandringham Drive offered about as much cover as a parade ground. There was the Kosy Kor ner Kafe at the near end of the drive. But the bother was that the beastly road had two ends. If he waited for Nesta at one end, she'd be bound to go out by the other. 1t all depended where she was go- 1ng to meet the fellow. If it was in Ledlington, she would pass the Kosy Korner Kafe, but if it. was some- ‘where out in the country, she would come out on to the main road at the lower end of Sandringham Drive. He passed the War Memorial, and presently the Kosy Korner Kafe. If there was a point on the main road from which he could see hoth ends of Sandringham Drive, things were going to be a little easier, The drive He moved farther down the street, and presently she came out and walked back along the way by which the same brisk pace. He wa psta disappear round the dringham and went back to his shrub- bery, The day passed with intolerable slowness. It did not rain, but the clouds hung low and the zir was full of damp. In his own mind he felt quite sure that Nesta would not meet the man until it was dark. He could have wished that they were in December instead of August, for even oa a gloomy day like this it would not be dark until after nine. And oline was coming here at njne o'clock. He had tricd to stop her, and she wouldn't be stopped. He fell into thoughts of Caroline which were angry, impatient, tender, and passionately self-accusing. He had had no business to let her get mixed up in this affair at all. Even if he were not Nesta Riddell's husband, he was very definitely un- der suspicion of attempted murder, and beyond all question he had been in possession of stolen property. He didn’t believe that he was Nesta Riddell’s husband; "he be- lieved it less than ever since his talk with Min, But he could not prove that he was not Jim Riddell unless and until the gap in his memory closed up and gave him | back the lost weeks between the first of July and the fifteenth of August. He might during those weeks have masqueraded a3 Jim Riddell, and, as Jim Riddell, have married Nesta Williams, but he didn’t be lieve it. It rested on Nesta's word, and, quite frankly, he didn't think Nesta’s word was worth a tinker's damn. On the other hand, the Van Berg affair in some sort corroborated Nesta's statements. That didn’t de- pend on Nesta's word. He himself remembered drinking with Elmer on the night that he was shot. He remembered seeing the emeralds in Elmer’s hand. And, most damning of all, he had found them in his own house in a secret hiding-place known only to Caroline and himself. Men had been hanged on slighter evidence than this. Caroline mugtn't come within a thousand miles of it. He went on thinking about Caro- line. | (Copyright, 1933, J. B. Lippincott Co.) Caroline hears, lionday, tome | words of the greatest importance. | Fleld beans produced the largest cash income of any crop grown on Michigan farms in 1930, 1931 and 1933, Only 29.5 per cent of Ohio farms | are still on unsurfaced roads, com- of the. DAY By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE CREOLE CHICKEN RECIPE A Sunday Dinner Menu The Menu Creole Chicken Boiled Rice Buttered Carrots Bread Plum Jelly Pear Salad Pineapple Cakes Marshmallow Frosting Coffee Creole Chicken, Serving 4 3 tablespoons butter, 4 table- spoons flour, 2 cups tomatoes, % cup chopped celery, 2 tablespoons chopped green peppers, 2 table- spoons chopped onions, % teaspoon salt, % teaspoon paprika, 1 cup diced cooked chicken. Melt butter and add flour. When blended add tomatoes, cook until creamy sauce forms. Stir con- stantly. Add rest of ingredients, cook for 3 minutes. Serve poured over hot rice. Pear Salad 4 halves pears, ': cup salad dressing, % cup nuts, 8 marsh- mallows diced, 4 red cherries. Chill ingredients. Mix dressing, nuts, marshmallows and cherries and serva on top of pears which have been placed in cups of erisp lettuce. Pineapple Cakes 1, cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 2-3 cup pineapple juice, 2 cups pastry flour, 2 teaspoons baking powder, 1 teaspon lemon extract, % tea- spoon salt, 2 egg whites beaten, % cup crushed pineapple. Cream butter and add sugar. Add juice, flour and baking powder. Beat 2 minutes. Fold in lemon extract, salt and egg Wwhites. Half fill greased muffin pans. With spoon insert teaspoon of pineap- ple into centers of the batter. Bake 15 minutes in moderate oven. Cool and frost. Marshmallow Frosting 2 cups water, 2 teaspoons vine- gar, 1 cup water, 2 egg whites, 1 cup diced marshmallows, % teaspoon vanilla, % teaspoon lem- on extract. «Mix sugar, vinegar and water. Boil gently and without stirring until fine thread forms when por- tion is slowly poured from spoon. | Slowly poor into beaten egg whites. Beat until cold and thick. Add rest of ingredients. ———————— Anticipation of better farm prices has boosted freshman enrollment pared with a national average of 702 per cent. at the University of North Caro- lina, eral ‘Deposit Insurance Corpora- tion. In the background, in re- serve, is the President’s inflation- of the Deposit Insurance Corpora- BAL»M . ary power. tion, ! . | The newest of the government's | B E NC UE “Big Berthas” on the financial [ ' front is a division of the Recon- | struction Finance Corporation and is headed by C. B. Merriam of i | Topeka, Kansas, a director of the AT FAIR Nuv B corporation. | L] | Through it President Roosevelt Has said it is hopsd to free $1.- 000,000, or approximately half the frozen funds in closed banks On September 27, latest date at which figures for both mnational and state banks are avaflable, 2515 banks had not been licensed or were still on a restricted basis since the March bank holiday These banks had deposits on June 30, or on the latest bank call, of $1,769,909,000. Of these, 877 were national or Federal Reserve banks, with de- posits of $888,140,000. “Thawing” Has Begun The size of the task of pumping steam into banks still frozen may be judged when it is pointed out that from March to September 27 a total of 14,006 nationalfederal reserve member and non-member banks opened, with deposits total- ing nearly $32,000,000,000. Already high-geared machinery is at work thawing out national banks. J. F. T. O'Connor, comp- troller of the currency, has an- nounced that reorganization plans for 376 national banks with de- posits of $398,000,000 have been ap- proved. It is in reopening state banks that the new Deposit Liquidation Board is expected to bend greatest efforts. Through the boa. banks may obtain loans up to 50 per cent of their deposits on froz- en assets for immediate distribu- tion. Exchange Gives Liquid Assets Meanwhile the Federal Reserve is pursuing its policy of replacing government securities of member banks with cash which it is hoped will be felt in expanded credit O} industry. Open national banks and re- ceivers for national banks may gain liquid assets by exchanging Home Owners Loan Corporation bonds for real estate mortgages and extension of this privilege to conservators of national banks 1t being considered. It has been in- dicated a similar step may be ta- ken with regard to farm credit administration securities, The RFC is offering to subscribe to capital stock of banks to per- mit them to come in under pro- visions of deposit insurance which Walter J. Cummings, chairman New Size! New Price! Oc CHICAGO, I, Nov. 4.—Free| beer and sandwiches at the World | Fair November 8. " It was Mayor Edward J. Kelly's| idea, and hell pay for it. The Mayor said repeal would be . effected by six state elections 'm‘i Butler Mauro | Drug Co. November 7, and the next y hould be “Personal Liberty Day at the Century of Progress. The| W. C. T. U. protested it as ‘ml insult and an undignified finals to a great exposition purporting to e “Express Money Orders” NEW STOCK Parchment Shades All Shapes Reasonable Prices COME IN AND LOOK THEM OVER New Parchment Bed Lamps Sizes and Colors Study Lights—Table Lamps A small deposit will hold any Christmas gift in our stock—BUY AT HOME ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CO. JUNEAU—6 DOUGLAS—18 BEER BLUE RIBBON BEER BUDWEISER BLATZ 3 ACME : & California Grocery Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery HERE WHERE WE resioe /' \ PACIFIC COAST CoAL Co. JUNEAU ALASKA FRYE’S BABY BEEF 3 “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company Telephone 38 S e LASKA ME Prompt Delivery CO. QUALITY AND SERVICE TO YOUR LIKING' Meadowbrook Butter PHONE 39 Austin Fresh Tamales Deliveries—10:30, 2:30, 4:30 FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M . Behrends Bank Bldg. HI-LINE SYSTEM Groceries—Produce—¥'resh and Smoked Meats Front Street, opposile Harris Hardware Co. CASH AND CARRY LUMBER Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485

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