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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, DEC. 4 BARN BOO -HOO === YOUJ'RE SO CRUEL l ., FORBIDDEN Y (,OOGLE AND SPARK PLUG TVE HEARD ENOUGH --- PLE ASE VAL[EY By William Bynow Mowory OPSIS. At Russian Lake 1 1dinn Northwest, where e cing for Lgor Karakhan. in- I crook Curt Temnys ud saves 1rom a dn Lnssian gl Sho s deter- the lmid of sy the Ca. (<l 10 press on b ia dangerons Kluse udians against Curt's advice Curt is chagrined it that _his uew enemy. tie hull-hreed i the Khan's “contact m abtuins 1 map of the Lillur térri= tory f old trupper. hoiwever and de ines to proiect So ] Lest e ca to Chapter 17 OUT OF THE FOG WO forty roings ia L ner camp up river Souya wwoke at d parted the tent. p and looked out. Ralph and the two guides were still rolled up in their sleeping bags. giay smoke mist ris- 0 colu waters of the Lil- pairs of nesting teal and ducks | I overhead, their swift mmhsl ng loug aiter the birds were| swallowed up 1n the mist. Overhead in the tall pines little vireos and tlame-colored varblers, Hitting through the branches and darting out into the air. were already busy with the fledgling problem. Stepping down to the water edge, she propped her .iirror against a stone, -bathed her face and hands, and braided her bair. Back at the campfire, she raked some coals out ot the.ashes, gol a fire going, and cooked bacon, trout, scones and cof- fee. Ralph and the two guides still showed no signs of waking, so she took assmall bucket and started up | a mountain torrent to a thicket of red raspberries. Not long after she reached the patch, she happesed to glance back at camp and was startled to see a canoe nosing out of the river fog, a cancg with two men in it. They glided ashore, beached the craft and walked up to her fire, with their rifles in the crook And then she recognized them as Curt Ralston and his young partner! re a welcome surprise, out For several reasons she was never gladder to see people than those two. But what were they doing up the Lilluar? They hadn’t mentioned that they intended to come north from Russian Lake. Through a screen of bougbs she watched them a ruinute. They did not wake Ralph or the gnides. Curt pointed at her bieaklast keeping | warm .in the ashes, and looked around for her, evidently knowing she was up. She stepped out to the timber edge. Curt saw bher ther and came up along the torrent. “You're awake early,” he grected with his likable smile. He was casual enough, as though just meeting some chance acquaint- ance; but Sonya saw the man's tribute to her in his eyes and noticed how his glance clung to her face and hain She felt sure he had not come upon her camp by accident but with some definite purpose. “I couldn’t sleep with a morning 1ike this just outside the tent,” she answered. “Your breakfast looked so good that Paul and 1 almost grabbed it and broke for the woods.” “You will stay and have bieakfast with us, won’t you?” “1f you'll let me give you a hand with that berry-picking.” “All right.” He took up her bucket, and they went back along the torrent to the pateh. “1 didn’t know Paul and you were intending to come up this way,” she remarked, bending down a tall briar. He answered her unspoken ques- tion, “We're prospecting wp the Lilluar.” ONYA did not know whether to believe him or not. Ever since meeting him she had beeu trying to figure him out. He certaisl; didn’t appear. to be a prospector. He was miles above the type. Except for her father, she had nev er met a man whose quiet efficient power impressed her as much as his. She hated to think that I » was just} a drifter, leading a caiefree exist ence. That was all vight for the men at Russian Lake, but be had better stuff to him. “Paul and ] are going ur as far as the pas: he volunteered presently. Ard then he came out with the pur- pose of his visit. “If there’s no ob- Jection on the east side of the fence, our parties could sort of be neigh- bors. In.this country people usually throw in together that vay.” | She stumbled just a of their arms. | His offer, as fine as it was unex- pected, nearly took Sonya's breath. She wanted to snap it up instantly Lefore he could change his mind. Two days of river travel had showed | her how little she and Ralp" leu'\\ about the Strong-Woods and how | wortl) those lazy guides were. With Curt leading the party she could feel safe, and if anybody could get on good terms with the Kloso: hees, he was the man to do it “If the fdea doesn’t appeal you,” he said, “please icn’t be hesi tant about saying so. You mustn’t lec us break into any of your plaps.” h, but it does appeal to You like it, then?"” Sonya hesitated. In Curt's tones and his manner she could see that he was interested in her. On a lengthy wilderness trip lugc(her where they would : constant intimate as: might come to like her 4 v deal, It wouldn't be right lu .1 ow | that. “But you'll be traveling so much faster than we,” she objected. “Oh, no; we'll be taking it le ly. scouting for float as we go. be frank, 1 don’t believe you and Ralph are used to water-d a mountain river. Till you get on to the hang of things it mightn't be a bad idea to have a couple ol experi- enced people along. Also, if those guides don't prove dependable, you wouldn’t be left in the lurch.” “Your offer is magnanimous, Curt.” little over his first name. “I don’t know anybody else who'd have made it. But we'd be a positive nuisance.” “Your company and Ralph’s would be a real pleasure to us both. Talk it over with him, won’t you ?” Still wavering, Sonya looked down | into the torrent, where 2 number of tiny trout were darting about in a pool like little flashes of sunshine. new that the safe unselfish thing to ation, he that if she steered their association | carefully she could guide it into a comradely friendship. And she did need his help so badly. | might make all the difference be- tween success and abject fatlure. “We might—we could try it,” she | assented finally. “At least we can start out together, and if it doesn’t work we can always split up.” As they went on filling the pail | Curt congratulated himselr on hav- | ing neatly solved a tough problem. He would be goiug up the Lilluar on | his own business, and a' th2 same | tme Paul and he could look after Sonya's safety. And he would have her company for a week, a week of wilderness travel with ber. At the pass, when she and Ralph came face to face with the Klosphee danger and real- ized how serious it was, they would undoubtedly turn back to Russian lake. That would free him and Paul, to go on inside and nail Kara- kban. . HE report to which Karakhan had just listened makc bim un- easy. His cigarette, forgotten, burned to ashes at his elbow, and hi. fingers, long and sensitive as a musician’s, topped the rough table thoughtfully.. Looking past LeNoir, he stared out the cabin window at the lake, pondering the 'breed’s sto- ry. The account might be a lie. Le- Noir might just “e trumping up a non-existent danger in order to jack his pay higher. But then the story might be fact. With fifty hard canoe-miles be- hind him since dawn, LeNoir leaned back against the log wall, watching his chief sharply. This man of the steel-cold eyes and calmn voice—one coud never so much as guess at his thoughts. One only knew that he wa: great- ly wanted by the Yellows‘rires, that he had buried himself in these moun- tains to shake off the police and that he was planning flight away at the end of summer to some new land. About his getting drunk, his fight with Cart and his shooting up their tent, LeNoir had wisely sald noth- ing. He knmew his chief too well. Karakhan would not hesitate to pump a bullet into any person who endangered him by going on sprees. In his way LeNoir was aitogether loyal to Karakhan, who had been very generous to him in the matfer of money. The breed aad a code, such as it was. He.had bargained to protect the Cossack, and he was giving everything he had to that job, for he was hard-set in his loyalties ag in his feuds. (Copyright 1933 William B. Mowery) Karakhan, tomorrow, sen marinue dannar. gt | (| Old Papers for Sale at Empire Office | | dishes, | of the THAT FACE-- IT'VE SEEN T BEFORE - BUT WHERE -WHERE ? JOE GEORGE HiGH MAN IN SAT. BflWLlNG Three Malches Between Fruit League Teams on Schedule for Tonight In the vegetable league bowling { matches of ths tournament | played at the club alleys on Satur- day night, winners were the Sprouts S ., the Couliflow- ers over the Turnips and the Ra- who took three straight | games, over the Garlics. Joe George -of the Sprouts made the high single game score on Saturday with 208 in his second game and the high three game to- | tal, which was 567. Mrs. Dufresne of the Radis made the hig | single game score and th: total of the women who bowled with 168 and 478. The schedule for three matches Fruit League, as 7:30 o'clock—Lemons as. 8:30 o'clock—Prunes ps tonight calls betwezn teams follows: Banan- for vs. Orang- 1 es. | Mrs | Koski i | Mrs. | Wilson She | s to refuse. But then sie thought | With her it | | Mrs, | | | | C. Sabin | Stapleton | Gillman 9:30 o'clock—Figs vs. Raspber- ries. Individual scores day night were: Cauliflowers 98 141 146 160 165 made . Satur- Koski 142— 381 Selby 409 466 486—1361 Turnips 124 182 123 429 Garlics 126 139 138 403 405 Radishes Dufresne.. 168 158 152 160 140 140 456 Parsnips Peterman 135 130 158 147 Totals 36¢ 46/ 43 26¢ 125 138 119— 144 150— 413— Petrich Bringdale Totals 424 128 1m 106 146— 124— 104— 374—118: 400 434 34¢ 154— 47¢ 156— 46¢ Coughlin Totals 136 134— 30¢ 129— 43¢ 136— 47C Mrs, Hoffman | 1 1933 By BILLE DE BECK I WARN YOU, ! MR, SULLY --- g BEWARE LITTLE M, GO0GLY 'RESU The following are scores of prin- cu:.ll football games play2d ias‘ | Saturday afternoon: Notre Dame 13; Army Princeton 27; Yale 2. Maryland 0; Florida 19 Holy Cross 9; Boston College 13. Southern Methodist 6; Texas ian 26. Auburn 14; South Carolina 16. Louisiana State 7; Tulane 7. Rice 6; Taylor T. Georgia 0; Southern California 31. Georgie Tzch 6; 12. C Duke 0. Alaska Juncau 161 179 131 189 164 164 Ugrir Quinto Ashby 200—540 182502 164432 Totals l53-l Capitc! Beer 166 122 159 Parlor 148 209523 167 156—415 59 159—477 1445 Alaska Press 127 137 213 162 150 150 166—430 204—579 150—450 1459 Evans Brown Daner ‘Totals Moose 147 190 148 193—471 159—549 126—45! 1478 F. Schmitz 1. Nello Killoy 131 200 184 Totals Brunswick 171 150 139 155 150 139 145—4T1 150—450 139417 1338 7 1413 Moose 160 170—485 158 150—432 156 165—435 Falao Van Wold Atta Handicap Totals Legion of the Seston 156 Koskey 124 Nillson 115 Totals Miners 136 138 142 Baroumes Lindstrom Rudy 118—399 Totals Handicap Totals 161 173 454 450 Sprouts Mrs. Goddard 125 125 J. George 176 208 136 136 | G Messerschm’t Totals 399—130° 125—*37¢ 183— 567 136—*40¢ 444—135" 437 469 Tm.als 3 THREEMATGHES ‘BY CITY LEAGUE TEAMS TONIGHT {Four Bowling ing Matches in Tournament Played Over Week-end Four bowling matches were play- ed in the City League tournament at the Brunswick Bowling alleys over the week-end, one on Sat- urday night arfd three on Sunday. | The Alaska Juneau team won the numh on Saturday from the Ju- neau Cash Grocery with a score of 1534 to 1441. Sunday matches were won by the Legion of the Moose, the Moose and the Alaska Press teams. The Legion of the Mooss won over the Miners with a score of 1353 to 1335; the Moose over the Bruns- wick team, 1478 to 1413 while the Alaska Press three defeated the Capitol Beer Parlor team, 1459 to 1445. Games scheduled for tonight in the City League fournament are: 7:30 o'clock—Juneau Cash Groc- ery vs. Signal Corps. 8:30 o'clork—Alaska Juneau Vs. Alaska Press. 9:30 o'clock—Federal Building vs. Legion of the Moose. Individual scores made in the Saturday and Sunday matches were: Juneau Cash Grocery 151 116 113—380 160 164 141464 150 150 150—450 1294 147 1441 Lindstrom Bayer Handicap Total NOTRE DAME SPURTS BACK, DEFEATS ARMY Biggest Upset 4 8 Ged Sea-| son Startles Cadets, 76,000 Spectators NEW YORK, Dec, 4—Turning an apparent rout into an outstand- ing victory, Notre Dame’s hitherto battered and baffled Green Shirts pulled themselves back from the depths of a disastrous campa last Saturday afternoon to ove come the Army's two touchdown lead in a fourth period rally. and to smash the winning streak the Cadets. It was the biggest upset, of the season. The final score was: Notre Dame 13; Army 12. With less than five minutes nlay, the Fighting Irish wiped on: West Point’s lead, pulling the game out of the fire in a come- back that was as swift and start- ling to the Army as to the crowd of 76,000 spectators. Heretofore the Army had not been beaten or even tied prev- iously this season. SANTA CLARA WINS IN LAST 6 MINUTES; BEAT §. l-‘ U. BY 6-0| 4 SAN F’RANCISCO, Cal., Dec —Taking the air when line pl failed, Santa Clara defeated San Francisco University 6 to 0 in the last six minutes of play here Sun- day afternoon. 167—447 | OF A AN WiTH EYE - 80, GALIFURN!A BEATS GEORGIA - BY 31-0 SCORE {Southern Collapse in Flnalw Periods Before Power- | erful Eleven NGELES, Cal, California unlcash 1 power last Saturday for the lighter University a team and defeated Bull Dogs 31 to 0. It was a brilliant foothall hibition in the first half when gallant Southerners, fighting gamely, although outgained wide margin, held the We stalwarts to a lead of a towchdown. | The weary visitors began tof slip in the nnrd period when an- | other counter was registered and)| then f nmn_v collapsed in the! final quarter’ when the "‘xmm' pushed over three additio tou(‘l\dr)'\'\\ Sou much noon G too| of | the by a| wit- th PRINCETON IS LEADING ERID TEAMINU. S. Tigers May Play in Row Bowl for Championship | of 1933 Season NEW YORK, Dec. tain has fallen on tional foot- ball after perhaps the most citing scramble in history. While the Rose Bowl game yet to come, the scctional battles have all been decided. Ox]l_\" Princeton of the major teams re- mained undefeated and untied but | its games were all game. 4.~The cur-| in the Easi,| which somewhat dims its claim to the national title unless it re- ceives dnd accepts the Rose Bowl bid and wins its game there. | Army upset by Notre Dame and Duke's overthrow by Georzl Tech Saturday, further comp :ated matters. Championship winners in the major groups by conferences ar East, Princeton; Big Ten, Mich gan; Big Six, Nebraska; South- wstern, Alabama; Southern Duk tied with South Carolina; Pacific Coast, Stanford tied with Ordzon: Rocky Mountain Utah, Denver and ! Colorade Aggies, all equal per-| centages; Missouri Valiey, Okla-| | homa Aggies. ‘ ———.—————— | Now -~ $3000 | Life Certificate Free for Inspection No Medical Examination Ages 1 to You are invited to inspect, lutely free, the new copyr ensational 10 ANNUAL DUES) |PLAN membership certificate of- fered by the American e Assn ;\hich pays $1000 for death from Hny cause and_$2000 to $3000 for | aceidental death. Men, women and |shildren from 1 to 75 are eligible. | |No medical examination. SEND NO | | MONEY. Only your name, age and | |the name of your BENEFICIARY Write to the American Life Assn‘[ Dept. H-212, Rollywood, Calif,, :ur‘ your eertificate, fully made out in your name. It will be mailed| promply for your FREE inspection { |NO AGENT WILL CALL Member- ‘,hlp costs only about 3 cents a day land you can join $1.00 | For Only |You owe nothing if you are not |anxious to join after reading yox r | certificate. Offer limited. Wri |day, — BUY NOW—BUY AJILR.- | 1cAN. —adv. | i | | | 75 abso- | i | | hted, | | — | NOTI( MOOSE ‘ Initiation tonight. Meeting be followed by a REAL MOOS MULLIGAN. All members are re-| quested to come and help us | GRANT BALDWIN, | Recorder 1 | PIONEER CAFE | J. K. Pa Nick Novak | "THE HOME OF GOOD EATS” | | | I | SEE BIG VAN ||| For the largest assortment of Alaskan Made Christmas Gifts in Juneau! 204 Front 8t. 205 Seward St. | | {will go to Haines this year | tournament, | It is not 1| gins December —/ GREAT SCOTT-- A DAME'S IN THERE WITH SuULLY---- 1S THAT ME SHE'S TALKING | DOUGLAS HOOPSTERS ARE GOING TO HAI girls and bo of Douglas Both teams ys basketb. high sch for the it has been decided known what other team from the channel. 17 is the date set for will compete December the trip which the Fornance. e — TEN DAYS FOR NEXT CHRISTMAS VACATION Chris 23 and ens again January 3 ———.e—— school op- DEGAN OPERATED UPON Sante Degan underwent an op- sration at St. Ann's Hospital Sat- ay morning for appendicitis. He reported getting along as well as could be ex MISS FRASER HOSTI AT BRIDGE-LUNCHEON Miss Elizabeth Fraser entertain- ed with a luncheon Saturday with | covers laid for eight. The after- noon was spent in playing bridge vith prizes going Taylor and Miss Margaret Pim- ton. Mrs. Thomas Cashen was presented with a handsome bridge l.lble by the hostess. er——— NOTICE TG CAR OWNERS Anyone driving a car within the city limits of Douglas without per lights from now on accord- g to ordinance regulating same is liable to arrest and fine. CHAS. SCHRAMM, City Marshal. —adv. REVERENCE Those we have served in the past attest our per- sonal thing beyond commercial bounds. A bond of friendly and sympathetic reverence exists, always. The Charles W. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-3 “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Why will a hand-tailored suit by SAM outlast a ready-made garment two to cne? First, because we build it of choicer, stronger fabrics that stand up! Second, because hand-stitching makes a suit hold together almost indefinitely. Custom Tailored Suits as low as $50 The Tailor Lower Front Street SOVIET VESSEL \Ship will be made on| tmas vacation this year, be- | to Miss Donie | breaking up the ice and permil the \ewsel to be freed. According to the radio received here the ship is believed to be 75 from shore in a position 68 and 173 west. The Cheliuskin has aboard a 1tific expedition bound for Duv idof{ and to relieve the exped - tiorr ter there he with 68 Persons on ¢ 10 Prof. Otto Schmidt, and reported to be a close of Maxim Litvinoff, Com- mi of Soviet Foreign Affairs, is in command of the expedition. e, LOGKED IN ICE : FACING STORM Arctic author- Board Still Unable to Reach Arctic Shore AUL ISLAND, Ala According to radio advi ked Soviel ip Cheliusk human o of 63 r heavy storm prev ndonment of ship and reach shore over the ice is now rising. irifting in the | might aid in N. A, McEACHRAN LEAVES ON NORCO FOR KETCHIKAN A. McEachran, merchandise {t on tha m Saturday night to Ketchikan. B Empire Want Ads Pay. br co, p the storm Daily Wrappings 6R|bbor?s | | | Deck your packages with these gay ribbons and wrap- pings — they'll glow a wel- come under the tree. Patterned Papers THRILL! Nothing like the thrill of a ten-strike! Develop your game on the finest alleys you ever played on. Christmas Seals Ribbons Greeting Cards i i Brunswick Bowling Alleys Pool Billiards Bowling Cigars Tobaeco Soft Drinks Barber Shop in connection Lower Front Street, opposite Winter and Pond Harry Race DRUGG The Squibb Store VACUUM CLEANSED rmmwl’uneau Cash Grocery CASH AND CARRY Corner Second and Seward Free Dehvery Phone 58 o | FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON Frye-Bruhn Company Telephone 38 Prompt Delivery “IT'S THE WISEST INVESTMENT | EVER MADE" __ “1 paid only a few dollars déwn FOR MY NEW GENERAL ELECTRIC WASHERY @ Genuihe G-E guaranteed washers for less than $100.00. Think of it. Never before have such low prices beea opea to you. 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