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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JULY 11, 1932. GOV, ROOSEVELT RETURNS HOME; PLAIN NEIGHBOR Discusses Campaign Plans with Farley—Off on Vacation Trip HYDE PARK, N. Y, July 11—| Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt, last | Saturday afternoon, came home for ! the fi ime sinee his nomination lent on the Democrati 3 , attempting to enjoy himself | as ‘“Neighbor Roosevelt.” | The Governor found out, that for a Presidential candidate, there no rest. He had hardly reached his farm when neighbors began to call on the telephone or in person and wish him well His dinner Saturday night was| irequently interrupted by callers. | At Surprise Party | The Governor was the guest of honor at the Roosevelt Home Club and a surprise party by constitu-| ents he represented a decade ago as State Senator. Sunday the Governor met James A. Farley, Chairman of the Demo- cratic National Committee and dis- cussed matters, especially the se- lected of a Treasurer for the Na- tional Committee and a Finance Chairman to fill the campaign chest. is | OFF ON VACATION | PORT JEFFERSON, N. Y. July 11. — Gov. Franklin D, Roosevelt placed polities behind him today as he took a week's vacation with his three sons on a sailing trip up the coast. \ Thz Governor is an experienced sailor. It is planned to sail along the coast of Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts and New Hampshire, | The crew is composed of the Governor’s sons, James, Franklin and John. o R | YOUNG FOLKS ENJOY | AUK BEACH PICNIC| Sunday’s delightful weather en- hanced the pleasure of DeMolay boys and Rainbow Girls at their picnic yesterday at Auk Beach.) ‘The affair was well attended. | In the afternon games and swimming were enjoyed on the beach and in the evening refresh- me were served at the summer home of Dr. and Mrs. Robert Simpson. - .. London business girls are learn- ing jiu-jitsu to be prepared for bandits and handbag-snatchers. |sailed for Seattle this Ho]lywood-Bound | | Though she is the most popular film star in her native land, Senor- jta Carmen Larrabeiti, of Madrid, Spain, is not content with her own country’s adulation, so she plans to invade Hollywood in search of fresh laupels. The Spanish beauty s the e of Carlos Diaz di Men- doza, well-known stage actor. She 1s also that extreme rarity, @ Spanish blonde, BEZ PROPERTY CONTINUES TO | SHOWRESULTS Shaft Now at 200-foot| Depth and Ore Values R(’.n]ain GOOd Exploratory work on the Alaska- Chichagof ground on Chichagof Is- | land is progressing steadily and the | indications continue excellent for in development of a large body of high grade gold ore, it was al nounced here yesterday by WNick Bez, president of the company and wel lknown canneryman of this dis- He arrived here late Sat-| afternoon after spending at the camp and| morning on urd sev days the steamer Alaska. A crew of 12 men is now em- ployed on the property. A shaft| is being sunk and is now 200 feet | down and is d to be in good JULY CLEARANCE SPECIAL SUIT SAL $20 (SEEING 1S BELIEVING) Leader Dept.Store GEORGE BROS. OPEN EVENINGS {evidence, | marks |the Willoughby Wildcats. NEW EVIDENCE IS DISCOVERED REYNOLDS CASE Widow of fl)acco Heir, Also His Friend, Are Held by Authorities | WINSTON - SALEM, N. C., July| 11.—The coroner's jury investigat-| ing the shooting to death of Smith Reynolds, heir to the tobacco mil- lions, last Saturd. ordered the widow, Mrs. Libby Reynolds, and Albert Walker, a fr] i of Rey- nolds, held as mate witnesses | pending resumption of the inquest today. Five-Hour Session Sheriff Scott made the announce- ment following a five-hour session of the inquest behind closed doors. | He said the widow was permitted to stay on the estate under guard| but Walker was held in the county | Jail. | New Evidence | Assistant Solicitor Earl Mc-| Michael said Saturday’s session of the inquest adjourned until toduay because of the discovery of new| He said he found blood | fingerprints in the| bathroom adjoining the sleeping | porch where Reynolds was shot.| He said the blood and fingerprints were on the door leading from the | bathroom into the bedroom. Fingerprints of every person at- tending the party at the Reynolds home last Wednesday, will be taken. and ore. Explorations will be conunuea | throughout the summer and fall Mr. Bez expects to return here in about a month or six weeks and will spend severai weeks on the| property Guring the latter part of | the summer and early fall | PR N YUKON ARRIVES WITH | NINE PASSENGERS| Having arrived at 2 o'clock this afternoon from Seward, the steam- ship Yukon, Capt. Charles A. Glass- cock, departed an hour later for Seattle. | Nine passengers disembarked at| this- port. They were: From Seward—Warren H. Wil- son, From Valdez—Lt. and Mrs. John H. Noyes and child, Eva K. Tripp, N. Lester Troast, Paul W. Gordon From Cordova—Miss M. Thomp- son, June Gilson. - DE MOLAYS DEFEA' WILLOUGHBY \VlLDCATSi By the close score of 8 to 6, the | De Molay baseball team in a game | at Recreation Park Saturday after-| noon, defeated a team known as The De Molays piled up seven runs in the first few innings while the Wild-; cats up to the sixth inning scored | only one run. The Wildcats then began a rally which seriously threatened the De Molay lead. The batteries were Lindstrom and Bloomquist for the De Molays and Converse and Karabelnikoff for the Wildeats. The two teams will play again tomorrow evening at 6 o'clock at the ball park. Both teams plan to use the same line-up tomorrow as in Saturday's game. WHO'S WHG AND WHERE Roy Thomas i: a patient at St. Ann's hospital. He entered the institution this morning. Anne Bergstrand of the Forestry Office here, left Juneau on the steamship Alaska Saturday after- noon for Haines and was back in time for work this morning, re- turning on the same vessel. Lymes Seeve is receiving eye treatment at St. Ann’s hospital. He entered the hospital yesterday. Einar Olsen of the Marlyn Fish Company at Ketchikan was an in- coming passenger on the Queen this morning. He is staying at the Gastineau Hotel. Frank Herrman, who has been operating a restaurant in Peters- burg, is in Juneau on a visit, hav- ing closed his establishment for the present time. He is registered at the Alaskan. | W. 8. Pekovich, mining man of Funter, is registered at the Alas- kan. Miss Eva Tripp returned this afternoon on the Yukon after a trip to Dawson, down the Yukon to Fairbanks and out over the Richardson Highway to Valdez. Attorney Edward F. Medley, of |Cordova, is registeréd at the Gas- tineau. Gil Rich, traveling man, accom- panied by his wife, left for Sitka aboard the Alaska. E. B. Crewson, Schilling’s Pro- ducts representative, accompanied by Mrs. Crewson, arrived on the Queen from Petersburg. 'SWALLOW CALLS ON WAY TO SEATTLE ‘Enroute to Seattle from the Na- val Radio station at Soapstone Point, ‘the U. 8. 8. Swallow, Lt. Daily Cross-word Puzzle ACROSS Solution of Saturday's Puzzle 7. One of the saily L Tree of the 5 mof Anvmdm" pine family rection 6. Uncooked A[T]A[R] s. Not nollow 9. Thus: Latin L | T|N[E] 1o Goddess of 12. Papal scart AR 13. Female shee AL [E|S] 1. Grants, as b gt SIEM[T territory ik S Commonplace 19. Rubbed out 18. Type of OID) 33 Hitte of a monk . Snugg 18. Something AITIEID] u. l{::g‘!’lfigwmn B Lol Lo 710 One who gives & 21, Banner m il: f‘ (D) Estonsion ot e 23. Knock subscription 33, Three: prefix ) ar OIC|A][L| 3¢ siignt taste 26. Decay 36. Helping 21. Light helmet VI|A|T |E| 38 Flush with 29. Deputies success 31. Prevents E|L [E]D] 50, roundea 35. Nocturnal 10, plunoias mammal of 47, Continent DOWN . Uncloses Madagascar 49, Tall slender 1. Spanish 42. Reproductive 3% Assam building cell of a silkworm 52. Number 2. Bxi flowerless 33. Biblical 63. Religious slster 3. E plant country 4. Make 4 Loud ringing 44 Carol 41. Perish speeches: metallic 46. Component ot 42. Cut with ~ humorous sound a molecule shears 65. Feminine 5. Domestic fowls 48. Bililard stick 43. Goes at an ending 6. Money paid _ 50. Summer: easy gait 56. Become for the use of French 45. Hang loosely 57. General fght roperty 61. Female ruft 2 5. ol Wl i 1 /)R ’Z £ o K A NN ANEEE @m e T N dld & i Al i dEENG dNaEE N JEEGE T 1] B | 70 ] | L L 4 | | //ammm 1 PLANES BASED HERE ARE ACTIVE OVER WEEK-END Chichagof Will Be Back! Tomorrow and Fok- ker Is in Harbor | Airplanes basing at Juneau were | active over the week-end. The Chichagof, Pilot Anscel Eck- mann and Mechanic Gordon Gra-| ham, Saturday forenoon made sight- seeing flights with tourists off the steamship Dorothy Alexander and then took two prospectors to Chi- chagof Island. Saturday evening, the plane went to Lake Hasselborg | with a fishing party consisting of W. K. Keller and son, V. Groves, Eric Paulson and John E. Pegues.| The airship returned %o Juneau| Sunday forenoon. | Sight-Seeing Flights This morning the Chichagof made‘ sight-seeing flights with tourists | off the steamships Alaska and| Queen. Then the plane left for| Ketchikan with B. F. Smith, min- | ing engineer of Premier, B. C. At Ketchikan, the Chichagof is scheduled to g0 to Waterfall and| get E. Bushman, cannery official, for a fish and cannery patrol, which will continue until early tomorrow morning. Back Here Tomorrow ‘Tomorrow forenoon the aircraft is ‘scheduled to go to Chichagof and get Arthur Rust and Mr. Cal- loway and take them to Sitka, where they will catch the steam- ship Alaska for Seattle. The Chichagof is due back in| Juneau tomorrow forenoon. | The Fokker plane, which is own- ed by Gaylord Adams and his son Keldon Adams of Seattle and which went to Chichagof Island last week, returned to Juneau Saturday night. Windows of Clam Shells Pass Ultraviolet Rays LOS ANGELES, Cal. July 11.— Panels of shells from clam fish ifrom the Philippine Islands are be- ing used here for enclosed portbale sun baths. The shells, although not trams- parent, - transmit both ultraviclet and infra-red rays. Charles’ P. Stewart found win- dows in Filipino homes made from the shell of a clam fish said to be found only on the islands, and tests made by Dr. Edwin Pettit of Mt. Wilson observatory indicate it will not become solarized or op- aque from continued exposure, as does the special glass usually used to transmit ultraviolet rays. 7/ dll | ALASKA SCENERY WORLD'S FINEST, SAYS BILL HAY | Famous Radio Announcer Impressed with Beauty of Northern Tour “For scenery Alaska has the whole | world beat, Bill Hay speaking.” Bill is announcer for Amos 'n} Andy and his voice, familiar to| radio audiences all over the coun- try as well as Canada to Mexico | sounuds just the same when he | talks to one personally as it does' ‘through the mikes. He and Mrs. Bill are passeng-| ers on the Canadian Pacific liner Princess Louie and they are “do- ing” the British Columbia-Alas-! ka tour with as much pleasure as Andrew H. Brown got out of| the taxicab business or Amos does from a telephone call from Ruby. Mr. and Mrs. Hay were met here | by H. G. Watson, Secretary to Gov. | Parks, and called on the Governor at his home. Tater they met Com- | missioner Henry OMalley who in- vited them to accompany him to Sitka. Their plans, however, wers so arrangad that they could not change them on such short no- tice and they expressed regret that they were unable to stop off here for the excursion. | ‘They are both pioneer radio entertainers. Mr., Hay is Scotch, was born and went to school in Scotland. He graduated from a piano salesman to radioland and is now manager of station WMAQ in Chicago. He is a devotee of golf, as becomes one c¢f his na-| tionality, and his strongest com-' plaint is that his work won't per-| {mit him to get out on the links as often as he would like. Has Forty-fifth Birthday STILLWATER Minn, July 11— “It is never too late to mend” is the motto of a Minnesota prison weekly newspaper which observes “The Prison Mirror” is the work of inmates of the Minnesota state| prison with editors who hold no ed- itorial guild memberships and re- porters who never go out on assign- ments. “BEvery week on time,” is the proud boast of its staff who print it in their own shop inside the prison walls. The purpose of this periodical, which refers to itself as “ a home newspaper,” is among other things ‘The lower shell of the Philippine clam is thin and flat and can be —— A spray that will destroy most plant parasites can be made by {Commd'r. J. F. Warris, command- |ing, and Lt. H. E. Morgan, Execu- tive officer, spent Saturday night at Juneau. In departing from this ldl!ed to Seattle. port, she was scheduled to go and cherry trees. not cause any scalding. cut into four or five-inch squares.[to a fallen man’s self-redemption.” dissolving 5 pounds of copper: #ul-{lefon has been made Consul Gen- phate and 5 pounds of quicklime [eral for France at San Francisco in 60 gallons of water. This spray fwith jurisdiction in consular matters also . be used on apple, pearlover Alaska, according to advices | It will contfol [received - from the Treasury De-!| most cases of apple scab, bitter {partment at Washington, D. C., by rot and cherry-leaf blight, and will |J. C. McBride, United States Cus- | “to aid in dispelling that prejudice which has ever been a bar sinister e FRENCH CONSUL NAMED Joseph Marie Ives Meric de Bel- toms Collector for Alaska, | party, Prison Weekly NewsPIPUE its forty-fifth birthday this year. ! OMALLEY GOES WEST ON BRANT ON SHORT TRIP Fisheries Commissioner Leaves for Official Fisheries Inspection After spending most of last week here at local headquarters of the United States Bureau of Fisher- ies, Commissioner Henry O'Malley sailed at 4 a. m. today on the Bu- reau’s flagship Brant for Prince William Sound and points west of there. He may return here in about 10 days and remain in Southeast Alaska until the mddle of August or later. Encouraged by reports of splen- did runs of red fish in Bristol Bay, Mr. O'Malley will not vist that region this season, due to lack of time he can remain in the Territory. An unusually heavy run of red fish is also in progress in Cook Inlet. On account of this, the | Commissioner has opened Chlg-nik: F Inlet to commercial fishing, the order being effective last Satur- day and permitting fishing until August 1. Mr. O'Malley may not go far- ther west that Seward, depending largely upon conditions on Kodiak and the south side of the Alaska Peninsula. Reports from both districts in- dicate very large runs of fish in| practically every area. With con- ditions so satisfactory, he does not consider it necessary to make the western trip and may devote his entire time west of her to Prince ‘William Sound. EDWARDS IS T0 COME NORTH ON | OFFICIAL TRIP Asst. Secretary of Interior Leaves Seattle July 23 for Territory Asst. Secretary John H. Edwards of the Interior Department, whose June trip to Alaska had to be cancelled owing to pressing offic- ial business, will sail from Seafttle on July 23 for an extended trip to the Territory, it was announced today by Gov. George A. Parks. He will go directly to the interior and {cicp off here on his return trip for a brief visit. C. C. Moore, Commissioner of the General Land Office, who had expected to make the trip with ‘Secretary Edwards, will mot be able to get away from Washing- ton. Frank Johnson, Supervisor of Public Surveys, who was to have been the third member of the| is also not expected to! come. | Mr. Edwards is making an in-| spection of national parks on this jtrip. ®He will visit those along | the southern route, California and | |Oregon enroute here, and take in| those on the northern route on his way east. He will inspect M- | Kinley Park during his stay in the Tnterior, and plans visits to Fair-| tanks and Anchorage. a seven months’ abroad, ‘Nellie Kelly, well-known dancing comedienne, is shown as she arrived back in New York on 'ollowin, stay the motorship Lafayette. The American artiste appeared with considerable success in London and i Paris and is now gloini to tour her| native lan MISS MADISON CLIPS REGORD INN.Y. SWIM NEW YORK, July 11.—Helene Madison, of Seattle, swam 75 yards free style in 54 3-5 seconds at the Aquatic Carnival here Sunday, clipping three fifths of a second off the American mark set by Ethel Lackie in 1925. st Woman State Senator in U. S., Passes Away LOS ANGELES, Cal,, July 11. —Dr. Martha Hughes Cannon, aged 75 years, the first woman State Senator in the United States when she sat in the up- per House in Utah in 1896, serving two terms, died today. She campaigned on the silver platform for Bryan. She was the widow of Angus M. Can- non, President of the Salt Lake Mormon Church. ———— Experiments by civil engineers at Jowa State College show that the way concrete ds “cured” has much effect on its water-tightness. UL N CLOSING OUT ALL Summer Millinery TRIMMED HATS Values to $8.50 SPECIAL $1.50 SPORT HATS $1.00 bt BEVERAGES SUGAR GOOD CANE SUGAR, 15% Ibs. for $1.00 1 GARNICK’S—Phone 174 Thrifty men who belie: 1 | i is the lowest we've seen Of Fine SHIRTS only good quality shirts can’t afford to miss this great sale. The styles, mater- ials and tailoring are RIGHT. The price fine shirts. Plain or printed fabries— with or without collar attached. Com- plete range of sizes. $1.00, $1.50, $2.50 B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. Juneau’s Leading Department Store ve in buying yet for such $1.95,