The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 12, 1932, Page 2

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THL DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE T’ULSDAY JULY 12, 1932 MflRE MYSTERY Dady Crossacord Puzzle OVER DEATH OF TOBAGCO HEIR * %2 1. Malt liguor 4 Head coverings 8. Mal L aesnndlm- iy o) foot 18. Profane 18, Entérs with hostile . Nof S intentions OB ITALIANS COME TO US, 'FOROLYMPICS Reach New w York Amed Great Pin and to Strains J. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather LOCAL DATA /By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vieinity, beginning at 4 p.m., July 12: Showers followed by clearing tonight, Wednesday fair and warm- moderate soutehrly to northwesterly winds. Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Veiocity 20.656 6L 61 S 11 20.55 52 83 E 12 29.70 55 69 S 17 b 6. Things that may be done . Understand Withers 9, Igg-shaped Musleal aharacrer Prophet Hundred: comb. form . One of an ancient Semitic race . River in Lgypt Solution of Yésterday's Puzzle Meixc«r’fn plant . Cry of the aotent er; Time 4 pm. yest'y 4 am. today Noon today Weather Cldy Rain Rain | {Coroner’s Jury Returns Shantung Wash Frocks Bathing Shoes and Caps Ladies’ Solid-Color House Pajamas ... Ladies’ Rayon Pajamas Summer Hats Boys’ Short Sox, 6 pairs for Children’s Play Suits, 2 for Baby Blankets, 2 for Garter Belts Ladi s’ Ladies’ Handbags Ladies’ Silk Mesh Hose Panel Curtains Turkish Towels, 6 for . Silk Shantung, 2 yards for Gloves 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 Verdict of Shooting by Unknown i"d at an informal dinner party J‘on the night of July 5 in their | palatial - home here. The guests mz about midnight with the ex- |ception of A. B. Walker of Win- ston-Salem; a close friend of Rey- nolds, and Miss -Blanche Yaeger lof New York, friend of Mrs. Rey< |nolds and- her house guest Muffled Shot Heard Walker, who- had been invited to |spend the night, said he was on the lower floor closing windows when he heard the muffled report jof a shot and then heard Mrs. Reynolds scream. He found Rey- nolds on the sleeping porch un- conscious. On the floor by the ‘body was an automatic pistol. A subsequent autopsy disclosed ‘the bullet entered near the- right temple and emerged just back of the left ear. Dr. Dalton said there were powder burns on the right side of the face. Mrs. Reynolds was prostrated and was placed under the care of a physician. To Reno by Air Young Reynolds first came into newspaper prominence three years ago when he and. Anna Cannon, heiress to the Cannon textile mil- lions, were married at 2 a. m. in |York, S. C. The young couple | were accompanied to the South Carolina Gretna Green by her fa- ther and his chauffeur. Marital troubles soon developed land shertly afterward Reynolds {isettled $1,000,000 on his wife and infant daughter. A few months 20, Fisher for certain fish 3 lleulth fesort 3 Amoflcnn . Pertainitig to: suffix . Tayerns 24. Bristle [ author L Light woo for starting d fire 26. Death notlcs 27. Large parrot of Eyes: Seqteh Peer Gynt's New Zealand 20, Chénces 33, Swies river Taks out n Enzifstr Peqf'lhn ’mlnl 37. Conjunctlon’ 38. Hamper 41 34, 35, A 36. 47. Masculine name 48, Encourage 4% Back of the foot 60, lnsect's egig §1 Foundation talian touse amnen- 58. Teamster's house plant command mother Rénder Suitable . g(rxm{ taste 1. Againsts . Struc prefix Fleti 2. Wild animak & Holsting apparatus 4. Golfer’s attendant 8. Toward thie sheltered . Point of time side f Article flylal CE T T N ,- 7/ ANn | Crustacean \ A king of 1108 ' athletes with their | coaches |lowed to the strains of the Fas-| of Fascist Anthem | NEW 'YORK, July 12—It was Italy’s day down the bay. yester-| lday. Even ths steamers tried to {whistle Faseisti as the big Utalian O‘\mplc celegation sailed proudly into the harbor on the liner Conte Biancamano. Grouped on the top deck were: cra‘mers.} and directors. They bel- |cist anthem as; the. liner steamed | m the daek i RAGE MASTER " GOING TO TRY FOR A RECORD “Twenty-two years ago at Day- | tona Beach, Fla., I broke the world’s | straightaway automobile speed rec- jord by driving a Blitzen Benz| hour,” says Barney Oldfield in an| interview with Derek White for Popular Mechanics. “This winter T am going back to the same beach and break thn present straightway record, now‘ held by 8ir Malcolm Campbenl and bring it back to America, “Harry Miller, of Los Angelesr is building my new car—a 3,000 horse-power hurricane that is' geared to do six miles a minute. | “I haven't driven a racing car, CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS -— YESTERDAY TODAY Station Barrow ... Nome Bethel Fort Yukon Tanana - Fairbanks Eagle . St. Paul ...... Dutch Harbor . Kodiak " Cordova Juneau Sitka, Ketchikan Prince Rupert .. Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco 36 50 64 % .6 6 82 48 . 56 58 . 58 61 60 . 58 . 63 62 64 2 66 Highest 4p.m. | temp. temp. 36 50 58 76 6 k(3 82 46 52 54 58 61 52 52 60 64 70 60 i \ | Lowest 4a,m. 4a.m. Precip. 4am. temp. temp. velocity 24hrs. Weather 82 390 18 0 Cldy 42 42 10 0 Clay 44 46 10 01 Cldy 52 52 0 Clear 50 50 Clear 48 48 Clear 44 44 Cleax 42 44 Rain 42 44 Clear 52 56 Cldy 44 48 50 52 50 —; 50 50 48 50 42 44 52 52 52 52 52 54 Rain Pt. Cldy Rain Rain Clear Cldy Clear 0 0 o 0 Cldy ‘The pressure is moderately low th‘r’oughout Alaska except the extreme Southwest and is lowest in the eastern portion of the Gulf of Alaska, with showers from the southeastern Interior to British Co- lumbia The pressure is high between the Aleutian Islands and Ha- wail, with clear weather in the Interior and generally cloudy weath- er on the coast. [ Temperatures ware much lower yesterday in South- ¥ Alaska and HW h!gh’r in the eastern Interfor, lat the rate of 13175 miles per i 7, [owr DIGKEY-SWINGS - ™" icnemamy 1 FIST sREYNOLDS JAW IS BROKEN |Yankee Catcher Suspended Thirty Days—Also Grand Close- Out Brunswick Rayon Prints, 2 yards for Printed Percales, 5 yards for . 1.00 1.00 voree., Figared Cretonnes, 6 yards for ... 1.00 | Reynolds' interest in aviaticn ; { s o 3 x _ He is chiefly remembered for ms not the least bit interested” prompted him to make several air- _ . statement to a Times girl reporter |tebacco factory his father founded. T ac H S var | Unbleached Muslin, 15 yards for d plane . jaunts, inciuding one ahout s ; 9 the Far Mast with Jean Assolant, 10 Waomy pe ssld he would . “like| “As long as they keep on making EF‘rench fiyer. /He was» returning to ffll in dove with some amusing|cigarettes for me to smoke that's girl. {falll T care,” he laughed. “Some |from this trip when Miss Holman & lwent to Hawaii’ o mest him and He complained of his lifelong un- {day I think Tl build airplanes.” | | popularity with girls, saying that (they were mayried there. An- | nouncement, of the mariage was! Ton his money, hadn't,, inspired |not ‘magde, however, until’ their rc-‘:lg:;‘ ‘:,:’) m’;sh him’ @s he, wished |turn' to New York 'severgl woeks | At Boeing Field later. | Bride Broadway Hit At it later developed, he was: a Anna Cannon Reynolds, shortly Dridegroom —at the time, having “.m., her divoree, announced her Met, married and left his wife in| |engagement to B, Frank Smith, Honolulu. In addition to enter- |9r, Charlotte hardware man: They '3ining newly made Seattle friends | were married at about the sameat lavish hotel parties, young Rey- |time Miss Holman and Reynelds| (nolds spent. much of the time at | announced their seeret marriage. Boemg Field where the amphibian | — - Miss Holman, six years older 'plane in which he had toured Fur- Agent for the Interior Department | /a0 Reynolds, is the daughter of; ope and Asia was being repaired. in the Territory, will add to his|® Cineinnati attorney. She was. He finally grew tired of wait- duties that of disbursing funds for | SradUated from the University. -of ing for the work to be completed S s for | i and said he didn't need a water road work, it was alse announced | Cincinnati. where she studied law, by Gov. Parks. The sub-offices for |#P@ ‘later rose to prominence. on Planc any longer anyway. He left disbursements, Valdez, Chitina, Fair- | !he New York stage. Her contralto for New York by passenger plane, banks, Nome and Anchorage, will |S8ing inuthe “First Little Shoes” saying he intended to spend m‘f‘ be maintained as in the pasL' and her dancing with Cannon winter in the Columbia University Webb. caught the fancy of thegtre~ School of Engineering. Fined $1,000 CLEVELAND, July 12. — BIil| Dickey, New York Yankee catcher who swings as a mean a fist as he does a bat, will have to deo his| 30 days off the ball field and also | dig up his $1,000 fine for breaking the jaw of Carl Reynolds, star| cutfielder of the Washington Sen- | ators over the vigorous protest of C5l. Rupert, owner of the Yan- kees. The Directors of the Amer- ican League however, decided the suspension and fine was a just punishment. DEAF =~ Read This Don’t be handicapped by deafness. VIBRA- PHONES, emall silver devices that fit snugly in the cars, are helping thousands. VIBRA- PHONES have no wires, head bands, or bat- teries to annoy you. They are sqinconspicuous that even your friends will seldom know you are wearing them. Nothing to get out of order and " 5 ne itional expense. is what the hard of we will tour at 100 miles an hOUr hearing have long been looking for. Writo for |f erhaps S grestie soaeak-so e S, B L ot B speed record with special cars £0 that tomorrow .all the world may attain tremendous speed with safety. “My new cat somewhat simi- lar to Campbell’s ‘Bluebird,’ ex- (51 . since 1920, but that doesn’t mean ! llll%llll/fll T / years old and have been racing! for forty-eight years. Is that. too old? Sir Malcolm Campbell is over forty-eight. My health and my eyes and my nerves are as tgood as ever. Judgment, more 'than anything else, will break the |rc~ d. Given a car, properly powered and englneered, it is en- tirely a matter of picking exactly the right time and the right con- ditions for the attempt. Tm bet- ting on my judgment in this case. T have a car every bit as good as Sir Malcolm’s, if not better. The Object “What isc the object of trying shatter every record as fast as is established? Progress, that is, the development of faster means of transportation for everybody. “When we have the super-high- ways built that are now planned, later Reynolds flew his wife to Reno where she obtained a di- in the ‘This is the second tragedy in the ]mlllumalre family as Smith'’s clder |brother, Riphard Joshua, served n | five-month “sentence in wormwaod |Scrubs Prison. England, in 1920, { He was conyicted of manslaughter in connection with the death of Arthur Graham, 21-year-old motor- cycle rider, who was struck by |“Dick” Reynold’s automobile in | London. Brunswick — oune of the great names in music reproducing instru- | ments, became involved in financial difficulties this year, and their creditors have forced them to throw their immense stock on the market for just what it will bring, and this is your opportunity. These Radios are the last word {in modern mechanical excellence, |either in machine or cabinet. Won- derful tone and pick-up of distant istations. We challenge comparison |with any make that costs any price. /Nearly all Radios are made under to it B T THE HOTELS IKE P. TAYLOR Gastineau " " Mrs. Fred Patter, Mrs. E. Naze, ) + | Ketehikan; J. L. Nevill, Wrangell. Alaskan C. E. Ensley, Chichagof; James Gibson, Cordova; James MeGavin, ROABS AGENCY Transfer O\'der on ARC. Received—To Be Con- summated on July 20 (Continwea from: Page One) Alaska for the past 11 years, all' 'with the Commission. Most of that time he has been Senior Engineer, assistant to the Engineer Officer of the Commission, and with him in' charge of the building and maintenance program. “He is a competent engineer and trained executive. Prior to his con- ection with the Alaska Road Com- mission he was a member of the! engineering staff of the Alaskan Engineering Commission which con- ucted the Alaska Raiflroad, and lwas for a time assistant to Chief Ingineer Brown in the interior idivision. His long service in the Terrftory with these organizations, his intimate knowledge of the Road [Commission’s policies and methods pf procedure and his technical lqualifications make him an ideal iman to carry forward the work,” the Governor said. i Naghel' Disbursing - Officer Charles E. Naghel, Disbursing | conclude their duties on the Com- | mission on July 20, is expected to | Bavard said. No other present additions to | the force are contemplated, and no reduction in the personnel, other than the Army officers who will be made. LOCAL STRAWBERRIES, FIRST OF SEASON, ARE BROUGHT INTO JUNEAU| The first local strawberries of the season were' brought into Juneau today by Nick Bavard. The berries are fully ripe, lucious and were raised on Bavard’s ranch on Auk Bay. Other berries are ripening and should be ready for distribu- tion within the next few days, M e CALL FOR BIDS Bids for the construetion of two concrete walls—one back of the Grade School, the other near the Bergmann Hotel, will be received by the City Clerk until July 15 at 8 pm. Plans may be seen at the office of the City Clerk. THOMAS JUDSON; goers; peculiar timbre, haired. rendition of. “Oh, Give Me Some- thing to Remember You By.” REYNOLDS' “LON£SOME” nolds, | visited in Sehttle five days in May, very much with his life” and “was | Wednesday night. At the timie of his Seattle stav young Reynolds was making every effort to conceal his marriage as| the name of Libby Holman actual- | \ly came up during the interveiw | h.wlth the avowed lonesome bachelor. | {Her new husband gave no indi- | !cation of ever having met the toreh | singer. l Not Interested im Tobacco | He said he had “never dome | She has a decp voioe of' is tall and raven- She made a hit by her DURING SEATTLE STAY SEATTLE, July 12—Smith Rey- | son of the tobacco king,' Tulsequah; Louis Aghdal, Juneau. Zyrda E. Owens, Paul W. Gordon, Sum- dum; O. Krenov, Tyonik; J¢hn Eu- sich, Seattle; Lt and Mrs. J. R. Noyes and son, Marie Tollefsen, Juneau. ————— B. P. 0. ELKS Regular semi-monthly meeting —adv. S i g T Byrd Plamzing: New Expedition to Antarctic P * % ‘ To Lenve in.September with Airplanes and Tractors for Two-year Stay in'Southland. & Exerormvg S dnce ::: :z:}:‘:;: 3: both Q‘t Scpumb:'ll: nu:fim: venture, lllnd!tln Ao Fronesy ond of thé St closer arctic and named for his wife. But an -mm;! wlll Paur, Semre, MAJ‘EQ!‘I!:!:M . Byrd, c Conditions Main Object Study of New Land Named for Wife. who Has alveady uocuml m 4 Rown over the topof the world and under’ permitting, Byrd plans to leave Boston alfout’ -nv-l:kr-n- at du bom;n of the earth.. In-this latest provide tr Byrdland; ture in the Amt- mdo to el-bonu on -dn“l hh gained .l & cept the engine-design and power output. The British car weighs 8,000 pounds, while mine will weigh but 6,500 pounds. My car is fif- teen and one-half feet long and | will be minus the huge fin with which Sir Malcolm stabilized his craft. “The fin will be unnecessary, be- cause the Miller special has four- wheel drive, whereas the ‘Bluebird’ drives from the rear wheels alone. Wind-tunnel fests have determined the efficiency of my design, which is, in general, cigar-shaped. “The engine will have three | banks of eight cylinders, each cperating on a single crankshaft and driving through two trans- | missions to the front and rear | wheels. The maximum of 3,000 horsepower Wwill be delivered at 4,000 revolutions per minute, and with this engine speed, the car will do 360 miles at hour.” Severar:ce Farmer Pities Dyspeptics Severance, Kans.—“I certainly do pity anyone who can't eat and en- joy his food without indigestion afterwards, for I was that way for weeks and weeks myself before I began the Sargon treatment. Now I can eat anything I want. My food digests better than it ever did and I am hungry all the time.”—Earl Miller, Severance, Kansas. Butler Mauro Drug Co. —adv. Beach Pajamas [R.C.A. patents and except that a larger loud speaker gives a slight [improvement. in tone, there is little difference in reception. | A seven-tube circuit that em- |ploys three type 24 scresn grid ‘tubes, two type 51 variable-mu tubes, one type 47 Pentode tube and one type 80 full wave reetifier. The variable-mu tubes serve to control the volume and insure per- fect quality reproduction. Dynamic |speakers built for Brunswick Re- ceivers are equipped with non- {warping: voice coil and rattle proof cone and reproduce all sound bril- liantly and naturally, The above Receiver is in a miniature high- boy . cabinet of matched walnut, 43 inches high, 17% inches wide and 10% inches deep. All lates® radio- developments included. Just a few on hand and special this week fo- only $30.00. Former- ly $84.00. THE NUGGET SHOP adv. |~ JUNEAU-YOUNG | { Funeral Parlors | Licensed Funeral Directors and Embalmers B et Old papers ror sale at Empiry Office. S TO MATCH Special $2.50 Sizes up to 20 JUNEAU Sample Shop “The Little Store With the Big: Values” Night Phone 1851° Day Phone 12 THE Royal Range ok & Quick and Even Heating Oven + Eliminates Guess Work and Baking Failures ‘Large Cooking Top Surface Long Lastirig Body Construction NQW QN DISPLAY BUSY 4 “Because we do it better” RICE & AHLERS CO. Plumbing .Heating Sheet Metal “We tell you in advance what job will cost”

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