Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
XXX., NO. 4512. EXPERTS WILL | MAKE REPORT NAVY STATUS | ,'H\'u-v Sets of Proposals to | Be Submitted by Pow- i 1 ers at Geneva. GENEVA, July 21. — The Executive Committee of the ‘fri-partite Naval Conference has decided to convoke a meeting of technical experts of Great Britain, United Sta and Japan. he experts will be in- structed to exchange views and reach an agreement on the existing status of the three navies, including build- ing programs and begin a study of three sets of pro- pesals placed before the Con- ference with a view of clari- fication of their real purport. .- RAY AND ROY '~ DEAUTREMONT Twins Brought Back to Scene of Alleged Crime After Four Years. 21 twin PORTLAND Ray and Roy De Autremont unkempt, tived and bedr slept last night in an Oregon jail, four years after world wide search had been launched f their capture and after rewards totaling thousands of dollars had bden offered for convietion charge of complicity in connection with the Seiskiyou Tunnel hold-up and murder October, 1923 The senville d there Ore., June a on a quadruple in arrived fron They were ar this month prisoners Ohio. early At Jackson JACKSON, Ore., June remont twins arrived at Jail hera this after Portland in custody of yunty from itf Jennings 1 through the bars by and. father. Roy milas but Ray, who left nd child in Ohio, was very sober - They were all wif other was Ifiore German Films On Berlin Market BERLIN, June 21. inere of German serecn plays on the domestic market was rec orded for the month of April, when 16 German and 15 foreign (mostly American) films were submitted the censc The German contingent was thereby brought up to 52 per cem. compared to but 27 per cent during March. Of other scientific and in- structive: films that passed tic in AN)I 129 were German foreign. D Cupid Depletes Ranks Of London Hello Girls LONDON, June 21. — Cupid's \ctivities on the telephone are on the increase. Out of 7,902 girl telephone operators in Lon- don, ) Offic A noticeabl< censor and 38 although against say that there is strict rule flirting on the wire, conve tions of this kind occur now anc then, and often develop into ro- mances leading to marriage. - REACH OREGON REINDEER 10 BE CANNED IN ALASKA PLANT i to Put Deli-; cacy on Tables of World | -Announces Plans. 21 Carl purchase ship and canning place the Alaska the tables 'No Perfection! » |Carl Lomen | 1 “ 1 - | SEATTLE, Lo- | f | men announces |a refrig machinery June the of erator to reindeer meat of | the world Seattle will | | | on | | ) be the industry purchased is erra, 210 feet long fitted with 85,000 cubic feer refrigeration giving her a car rying capacity of 5,000 carcasses. The Sierra will sail north July 15 and is scheduled to make two trips this season The Lomen Reindeer tion plans to double output next year and for three round trips motorship the first time meat will make its apperance | on the market this fall. Mr. Lo men purchased machinery for one cannery for handling the product He will ship it to Golovin Bay | where it will be installed and the plant will be in operation in time | to make a shipment to Seattle the last steamer out of the north Ten thousand empty cans wiil | shipped north for the pack .o distributine The vessel the motorship & and of Corpora | the season’s plans the also of For canned rein- on | be |Japan to Send Dolls to American Kiddies s — ,fl The "pcxl\-ct romance’’ o Claire Sugg, Buffalo, N. Y, 1’0‘"{{" ‘J'l“dnp‘fflsll’:s“ ((:fml;fiz TOKYO, June 21.—Fifty of the 8. Wandling, “Adonis o finest and most beautiful dolls train ! | is void. | J., fo jout by were married last year. New York City Police Departe | over manufactured in Japan are | ment,’’ is near an end. Courts |(; ne gent to America before are hearing Miss Sugg’s annul- | Christmas by the International ment suit in which she charges | Childrens Friendship Associaticn | Wandling’s first wife’s divorce Japan as an expression of ap- Meanwhile Wandling | preciation of the doll gifts re (insct) is suing George H. Me. |ceived from American school chil: | Cauley, of Ridgefield Park, N. | dren : ‘ $200,000, eharging The dolls will cost approxi- mately 30,000 yen and one doll ( ti " s ;‘""" ion_ of Miss Sugg’s af- | Jii he contributed by each pre ections. ; | of | i | | fecture of the empir | i Officials of the associations ara | ' planning to raise the necessary | NU TRAGE UF | funds by soliciting one sen (about | |naif a cent) each from children | attending public schools. The man | ufacture of the dolls will be super- | intended by the educational de-| partment | - TWO AIRMEN Searchers for Nungesser [ o of Lonilea’s Old and Coli Make Report— | Waterworks. for Sale! Fly O\A("l‘ Bnll ren Ldn(l. S LONDON, June 21.—If et g wants a relic of the old FADOFE Bridge waterworks, where four | {wheels raised water which for| generations was hawked through! the strects, they can bid for No. 7 Broken Wharf, Upper Thames Street, which was once the pump- ing station The water works were discon-| tinued more than a century ago. The old engine-house which is now empty and up for divposal has been used as a storehouse. The rental in 1604 was ten shil- lings or $2.40 a year. - eee German Railways Want Jazzy Names for Trains BERLIN, June 21 slogan, “Bight Trains in Search| of a Name,”” the German Rail- Administration has started a prize contest for the most eatching, romantic or jazzy names| for the principal express trains between Berlin and Frankfort, Hamburg, Cologne and Munich. German officials decided upon this innovation after observing how much more effective pic- anyone; The London | sent | arch | Daniel| has been pub- NEW D! YORK, simistic vet the Nungesser-Coli Expedition, financed by Guggenheim and others received by Frank Tichenor, lisher the Aero Digest The report telegraphed Cyrus Caldwell, pilot of the monoplane Jeanna d'Are, in which a search is being made, He told of flying over barren stretches of Newfoundland where not even experienced woodsmen could stay alive four days with- out food. The region mentioned is beyond Port Blanford, north- east of Trinity Bay. oo Helen Wllls Defeats Miss Slerry, 3 Sets June 21 most wa by WIMBLE l)() —Helen Wills, former American champion, weathered - the first round of the singles in the Wim- bledon lawn tennis after a hard| struggle and defeated Miss Sterry in three sets. lum, ¥ OUTDOOR CODE URGES TOURISTS TO BEHAVE 7 CHICAGO, June 21. - thing belongs to somebody” is the first commandment in an outdoor code of ethies for vacationists and city folk who flock to the country in the summer months. The code was drafted by the Izhak Walton League of America and Seth E. Gordon, extension di- rector, is sure its observance will eliminate much of the animosity engendered in farmers by careless urban vacationers. Other points in the code: “Never leave a gate open, per- mitting cattle and livestock to turesque names have been in the United States. The jury for the prize contest is made up of prominent news- paper men and railway officials. A further application of railway nomenclature is planned for ex- press trains connecting Berlin with Basle, Hamburg and Ber-{ lin with Holland, and Munich with Basle. roam from their pasture: “Don’t disfigure or displace na- tural resources. “Be a hiker, not a ‘ride cadger.” “Don't trespass on forbidden ground, or hunt or fish on posted land. “Don’t roam fields; walk around “Build a camp fire, ing inferno. “Drown the fire with water when camp is proken, and do not scat- et FORGET NAMES SHENANDOAH, lowa.—A seed company here constantly gets or- ders from customers who forget to sign their names. So it says on the back of all its order enve lopes: “Make sure you have sign- ter the embers. ed your nmame and full address. “Be courteous: Leave a mote of [ Of course you wouldn’t leave it thanks in any wilderness shelter | off—but lots of very smart people el do across planted them. not a roar- “ALL THE NEWS JUNEAU, ALASKA, TUES Cy wluunl Charle teps of the temporar of his achievement. White Lindber; ALL THE TIME” DAY, JUNE 21, 197 AIR HERO IS GU Mrs. K Circle, mother, 15 Dupont g1 Hou Washing ton, MEMBER EST OF PRESIDENT Mr. w )\4*r|~ the New and M 1 York to Paris OF ASSOCIATED PRESS vin Coolidge flier are shown on the was entertained in honor (International Nwsreel) HOME TOWN GOES WILD OVER CHAMBERLIN PRlSUNERS Denison, Towa, went wild from New York to Germany. th;_mLflect, Iebratmg Ch TRIES T0 KILL POLICE CHIEF Dismissed Officer Makes Attempt t6 Get Even with His Superior. CHICAGO, policemen of engaged in a pistol fight last night with a former policeman on the main street. After a scorc of shots, a check up showed nu one injures, Fred Poe, cently discharged by Chief of 1% lice Harris, drove up in a to the Police Station, summoned an officer and said: “I just came over to shoot the chief. Tell him to come out, please.” Just then Chief Harris appearec in the doorway, Poe started shoo Three suburb June 21, Harvey, a ;ing. Two other policemen rushed ‘to the Chief's assistance as the latter returned Poe's fire. Poc fired until hig pistol was empty and then threw it into the street climbed out of the automobile and surrendered. Officers said Poe was intoxicat ed. car | d when it heard that Clnrence Ch: For Clarence is a Denison Bo; umberlm s success, teraationsl Newsreel.) | Weather Again Delays Byrd’s Hop-()l] ROOSEVELD FIELD, N. Y, | June 21.-—Weather conditions today again delayed the hop- | off of Commander Richard E. Byrd in the plane America with three companions on the ! flight across the Atlantic to Paris. ! \French to Exhibit Driverless Autos former policeman, re | PARIS, June 21. Driverless | nutomobiles, controlled by wire- less waves, are soon to be demol- shed publicly at a summer fes- tival. Two of the cars have L2en equipped with a mechanism that is sald to work well in practice and thoy are to be operated on the Colombes stadium track where the 1924 Olympic were held. Wireless controt or an airplane nas been tested by the French |army but little has been said of 'the experiments except that they | were successtul, gamer | flpuhn 12y MYSTERYTO BE FATHOMED Fate of Russian Peasants in Wild Forests Is to Be Ascertained. BLAGOVESCHENSK, Amur Pro ince, June 21.--Mystery surround g the fate of two settlements of Russian peasants, members of a religious séct who are said ‘c have fled from the horrors of Civil War in Siberia in 1918 anl 1920 to the wild Kinzano forests of Northern Amur, has prompted the newspaper Amur Pravda to dispatch an expedition in searci jof them. The peasants are said to have had no contact whatever with the outer world since they left They have been living by fishing and hunting, and otherwise lead ing a very primitive liie. The existence of the peasants was first reported by native trap- pers several monthe ago who had occasionally caught sight of long bearded, haggard figures who dis- appeared in the brush the moment they were oBserved, IN MUTINY w328 Men in [em(enllary | Mines in Michigan Strike Underground. i LANSING, Mich., Three hundred and | prisoners in the | tiary mine mutinied | noon, overpowered | blocked the cagos. The Warden's office | the prisoners | the telephone | ho thought they | demands | The June 21, twenty-eight Peniten- this after 14 guards ardd State announced to answer mine an i formulating refused to the vere prsOLers | timbers beneath | mine cages so {move from the top ' The mutinous spirit placed and they heavy above the could mnot has been prisoners de from the out- prevalent since the manded cigarettes ride. The one mutiny s similar to staged July, 1926, when prisoners surrendered after hours in the mines the the 36 - - BUILDING HUGE AIRSHIPS LONDON, June 21.—Two British airships, which are twice as big as any that have ever flown, wiil have their trial tests early next year. They are to carry 100 pas- sengers each and are under coun- struction at Cardington Royal Air- ships works and the plant of the Airship Guarantee company, Howden, Yorkshire, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE PRICE TEN CENTS ALASKAN TO ATTEMPT OCEAN FLIGHT BEN EIELSON T0 FLY FROM COAST, JAPAN Aviator Makes Announce- ment in Seattle — Will Use Plane Alaskan. SEATTLE June 21.—Ben Eielson, Alaskan aviator, an- nounced today he will attempt the flight from Seattle to To- kyo in the Fokker plane Al- askan. He said he fly alone in the $25,000 flight. Eielson arrived here with Capt. George H. Wilkins. He was with Wilkins during the past two years in the attempt to find the “Arctic Blind Spot.” Eielson hails banks, Alaska, been successful from Fair- where he has in flying, CAPT, DRAKE SAILS OCEAN IN TINY BOAT Reaches E;gla;d on Trip Around World—Left Se- attle Two Years Ago PLYMOUTH, England, Capt. Thomas Drake, of Seatt's who is on a lesurely voyaze around the world in his 36 foos boat, the Pilgrim, has arrived safely, having navigated the At lantic Ocean alone. Capt. Drake left Charleston, C, on April 27. He intended call at the Azores but of severe weather sailed to this port. Capt. Drake said today that he slept every night of the crossing heaving to when in storms. Capt. Drake left Seattle mors than two years ago. e Reichstag Refuses To Prosecute Prince BERLIN, June 21.—Parliament. ary immunity saved Prince Otio von Bismarck, the Iron Chanc 1 lor's grandson, from being prose cuted for automobile spoeding Neither his princely title nor h recent appointment to the din'a matic service availed him befoi o the stern district attorney, wv!. carried his prosecution so far » to demand that the Reichst « walve young Bismarck’s immunity Here, however, the solidarity of the German solons asserted if- self. The district attorney’s ¢ mand was read out in open meet- ing amid hilarious uproar. Prni. dent ‘Loebe, socialist, did his v man National colleague the gnni turn of referring the whole most. ter to a committee in which 't received a first class burial. it June 1 s o PARIS, June 21, — Arch'tasty of France want to be orgnan'zed into a close corporation that can discipline its members, cancell ne their right to build, when nses essary. A high standard of ethies fa proudly claimed by the arehi. tects, but they have no recorrss against unfair competition A bill to put them on somew ™ot the same basis as lawyers i3 be- fore parliament. KIMES GANG PRESENTS NEW TYPE OF OUTLAW TO SOUTHWEST STATE OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla, 21.—Oklahoma, the one stamping ground of such sque bad men as Henry Starr, Al Spencer and the Dalton boys is seeing the rise of a new type of outlaw in Matthew Kimes, the most wanted man in Oklahoma today. Kimes, a slick-haired youth of {1, who graduated into bank rob. odery from hold-ups at country dances and small town poker games, is formally charged with three bank robberies and the slay- ing of two peace officers, and is suspected of having played a Jeading role in virtually every major robbery of a bank in Okla- June time picture homa during the last year. A reward, which members of a bankers’ association believe wi'l total $50,000, is being raised fos his capture, Officers who have studied his habits and career declare Kimes is not the usual type of west rn desperado. He is short and stock’ and affects the metropolitan ¢ . =+ of a modern “drug store cowbay * George Kimes, a brother of Matt, is serving a long sentence in the penitentiary for participa- tion in one of the crimes. The Kimes boys are allegxl to have picked their home town ¢t Beggs, Okldhoma, for their first bt s SRS ol (Continued on Page m 2