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HORS! \T'S MINU " BYNG OF iy DIES SUDDENL { THIS MORNING Britis ;‘Wpl'f(‘]—\X/ar Leader,| Pcacté Time Reorganizer, Pasges Away at Home ‘Jontinued | tlers cho BYNG | orials to fallen soldiers and meet- ing the, meh who had served under him, The Crec Indians made him a chief ¢f the tulbe, calling him “Buffalo Head.” McGill University | bestowed - the honovar LLD. Farcwell {5 Canada When he /eft, in: Oztober, 1926, there 7a3 something extra added to the jusual ccurtesies of farewell. Lord Byng sald he returned to| England “imbued with the ideals| of Canadianism” and called his| term of office “five happy years. He was raised to the rank of Vi count. 4 He felt he was re everything: "“All'T want,” he said, | “is just to sit down.' I have not| sat down for 64 years and I shall enjoy rest.” Another Duty Call retirement was not to be. In er, 1028, he becamc Com-| ner of Metropolitan Pol by an appointment which was de- | seribed by Sir William Joynson- Hicks, the then Home Secretary, as| “a stern call to. duty.” | Lord Byng immediately launched a complele reorganization. Every | department of Scotland Yard’s ac- tivities. was touched; the whole ad- ministration was tightened up. ‘When failing health compelled him to go to South’ Africa and later| to France to rzcuperate, he con- tinued to direet the roforms. Retirc: Soon' after his sixty-ninth birth- | vay, he relinquished- the office, giving £ge and health #s the sole reasons. He looked back on his three years at the post and was| satisfied to call London’s police| “the finest fofce in the world.” Rest and travel followed, one trip in 1932 taking him to the West Indies, thence through the Pannma[ Canal to ‘Southern California| whence he journeyed home via Vancouveér and across Canada. In October of. that’ year he was cre- ated Field. Marshal. Juliah Hed th' George ' Byng was born/ Seplember 11, 1862, sev- enth son . of the second Earl of Stratford. ‘He Was married, April 30, 1902, t0. Marie Evelyn, only child of ; BIf 'Richard ‘Moreton: He left no heir. - NEIDERHAUBER lLL i William Neiderhauser, of the Con- nors Motor Company, is ill at his| quarters in the Fire Hall Amrbfl ments. > Henry Clay Reynoldx of Hagers-, town, Md., recéntly took his first air | plane ride at the age of 97 at Mi- ami, Fla. H S TR AL | Richmond, Va., claims the oldest Masonic hall in the United States is is located there and still in use 145 years after it was built. TOO LATi TO CLASSIFY FOR SALE—Rooming and b;mdmv house completely equipped . and! “fi'ENgsT Tk | ported by {ing the necessity of such absence, | the roguirements of the homestead | improvements, éxpenditures, or pay- | group composed of members of the _|gram_and dance tonight, WON'T TODAY.--HE JUST AN' SAID HIS E WAS SICK--- Y-TWO THEIR WAAL BUS' MAH BRITCHES / 5 ‘\i Faskion Experts Think Bare Leg Vogue’s Gone CNLCN, June 6.—According tn fashion experts, there is little m‘ob-‘ ability of the bare-leg craze being evived this summer. Delicate transparent stockings will be worh with sandals, and gaily ..ored ‘woolen ones for sportswear. Dayllme stockings arc lighter in tone. For girls whese legs ar> not as gliim as they might be, there is a new shaded color scheme. It makes the legs look thinner. The shade N I.AST FIGHT Gen. von Llnsmgen. World War Veteran, Dles in Hahover (dontmuea trom Page ) o v.mw from. a dark inky blue to a D:\.c ie-gray, and in’ the tones L.cm nigzer to a flesa gnt. e HOMESTEADERS GIVEN LEAVES Pleaxdent Slgns Measure Applicable to Settlers in Alaska brown ort of topaz JINGTCI, May 25— (Spec- pondence) —The bill grant- Z a leave of adsance to the set- of homestead lands during 1835 has been enacted into Public Law Number 64, having been sign- cialists, the old soldier again. show- ed by the President May 22. ed himself, clad in his imperial Since the Jaw will be of value to| general's uniform at several rallies many . settlers in Alaska, the pro-|of war veterans. visions are quoted below: | Alexander von Linsingen was born Any homestead settler who rmds‘ February 10, 1850, at Hildeshein in it necessary, because of economic|Hanover. On graduating from the Lcndmum to leaye his homestead | military academy at Lichterfelde he ' lto seck employment in order 10|received his commission as Licu- obtain the necessaries of -life for| tenant in 1869.. He took part in himself and. family or to provide|ghe Franco-Russian war of 1870- for the edugation of his children |7} and was decorated with the Iron | may, upon flling with the register | Cross, of the district, his affidavit, sup- corroborating affidavits of two disinterested persons show- ALEXANDER VON LINSINGEN be excused from compliance with laws as to residence, cultivation, | ment of purchase money, as the case may be, during all or any part cf the calendar year 1935, and said entries shall not be open to con- test or protest because of failure to comply with such requirements | during such absence; except that the time of suth absence shall not be deducted from the agtual resi dence required by law, but a per- iod equal to suc habsence. shall be | added to the statutory life of the entry.” Weeds probahly present the greatect pr&hlim ih. maintenance | of a lawn. \’nzmunmmy‘ there | is only ome pnotlw method of eliminating the most trotblesome: | crabgrass, dandelions' anfi plan- tain—that is by Hand weedmng. A good ‘rule for all handing weeding, and bne espedlally ‘ffective in the| case ‘of dandelions, 15 to cut the roots as far. as poSsible below the surface with a spud, or aspara- gus knife or some similar tool. Am- monia or aulphace will Xkill chick- weed but ordinarily it is bewer to cut cut the patches. NEW SOCIAL GROUP TO DANCE TONIGHT| Social The Club, a new social Moose Lodge, Moose Legion, and Wcmen of the Mooseheart Legion, will hold its initial meeting at the Moose Hall with an informal pro- ‘The committee, consisting of one member of each Moose unit, cor- ,| Raised THE & 1933, King | .Gen, von Linsingen beca mous_in he great war 8s sauiher in Jan: uary, 1915, Previously he had gom manded the, seecnd ,ArmYy COLpS i the engagements ab, Mong,, the Oureq, in, the, bsme of the Marne and in the early, ¥Ypres EWWD | _ As leader of the Gepman South- | ern_army, he rushed # assist- | ance of the harrissed Msmans in [the Carpathian mountains .and suc- | |coeded in fortifying , the. mm— ngnum {ront Agamstr the | Ampet- \uous advance of iih& Ru(unma i 2| U‘lumauly. at the hud._u:‘,&e ‘auny of the Bug, he re | Galicia. and took the, fom o! | Bre:t Litovsk. In the subsequen: fdeploymen! of the Austro-German forces into the long eastern front, | Linsingen's army became the cen~ ter of the Austrian contingent. In March, 1918, Linsingen led an ad- | vance, ingd the Ukraine and .a month later was raised to the rahk of “generaloberst” (Colonel Gener- al). B With the conclusion of the peace with the Russians in 1918, von Lin- singen was transferred to Berlin where Kaiser Wilhelm appointed him in Junc cf the samo year as commander of the troops in the Mark Brandenburg. Aster his resignation von Linsin- gen lived several years in Stettin where one of thc main thorough- fares and the military barracks were named for him. Later he meved to Hanover. A 32 worth heiress. The count year. Now he’s paid off. GORST BOEIN L s S ERIRR MAKES CHARTER Afiup i g SRR D TO KETCHIKAN TODAY ;,m' i[u. Craig ar m Vx stor Anderson for Wrangell. o'cldek the | From Wrangoll, the plang Boeing boat U0 ontinte to Ketchikan to return » bere wilh Carl Wirth and others Fefdbiberg) WHER L even- head 9 was This morning Gorst . Alr Transport left its. Jungay hase Bhound : fo Cralg, ‘Wrangell ands-.Ketchikanys: 420214 tnb R with Frank Knight, pilot and Erip i¢ burncd near that city las Schutte, meghanic. ~Norman B, Ing ac ing to Verue Gor at i. 8 —You expect your dalli paper to give you all news— 2 " "of the company. Syndicate. Teg,, Great Britain rights reserved WINS $25 BET WITH COUNF Alexander A. Brown, society -dllor for a motion plctur‘ newsreel in New York, reading a telegraphic money order for $26 from Gount Sourt Haugwitz-Reventlow, new husband of Barbara Hutton, Wool- Brown he would not marry within a (Associated Pre: Phote® ‘The plane is to return by way of Craig to bring Mr. Cook back on the return trip. It is due here this afternoon, Mr. Gorst said. Yesterday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Harold Stabler and their son A i Kedtiie | YHEHY OVer” Meéniden= hall Glacier in the Gorst Boe[n; boat piloted by Knight. : flIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|I!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllHIIIlIIllIIIl"III|IIIIIIIIIIHII!lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIll|IIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIlIIIIIII"IIINIIIII!III|IIIfl[IIIII|IIII “ t|.||~ —You expect your dall paper fo take the le: ul in Bottorment — 6 ddvoc.llmg, communit: ‘Xv"ly" nin —You expect your da\il' roads, schools, and' 19, brations— paper to boost for good su /Ort (:ummunilv (;l,‘ll‘- —You expeet your dafly paper to support Red Cross drives, Chnsb’ms Seal ,,dr_ue»,, Poppy sales— A7 iitedea hiew in iy —You expect your dddy paper to help bring good people .to. Juneau — toijnterest, them, in this town— T v)u { —Your. daily paper does thbqn- tlunw .\ml you. The next time ‘a prmtm" I on you, tell him you’re going to give the sa printer a chance. It \ Joume helps mnan l'fl"‘i home KA EVIPIRE DAILY ALASKcA-BMPIRE | cléBn—free from Munitions Output Is Con- trolled by Army Ex- perts in France PARIS, June 6-France has cre- ated a new:. corps in her army+-a ' group of .experts to. supervise the manufacture. of armaments. In its recent session, the cham- ber of deputies: voted to give 30 trained army chemists and indus- KEEPS GARBAG SWEET — INOF Even in the nottest weati can keep that smelly and cflen disgusting garbage can sweet and maggots and of- fensiveness. Simply sprinkle ‘Bu-hach aoyer the contents occasionally = ‘that's all. This great 60 year will sutprise and please you-it n':ts like magic. | Bu-hach is safe — inexpensive— | odorless, In handy sifter cans “at dm', grocery, ceed stores, pet £haps e%rywhm trial experts supervision of the na- ; ticn’s munitions. They are stationed in 18 factor- ies where shells, cannons, fuses, rifles; tanks, gasses and all the in- strument$. of modern warfare are being manufactured by 15,000 work- e, In timeé of war* the experis are to be the gkeleton of a staff con- trelling ~ che fayorite factories. About 180,000 workers would be em- ployed in arms factories then. Marc Rucart, a member of the, chamber of deputies’ commission ne manufacture of armaments, predicted that the next step would be. the creation of a new cabinet Jjob—the post of minister ¢f arma- ment £ B e BACRAM Bm--DMousv 11'1.- f by | istature has been voted down Californta ' Sdnate, v+ SHOP flave 1t! | IDEAT, PAINT WENDT & anta-rn Dr. Geo. L. Barton CHIROPRACTOR | 201 Goldsteln Bidg. Phone 214 Office Hours: 9 to:12, 1 to 6 = + { 1 Evcnmgs by appointment ( SABIN’S Everything in gqrnhuu- for NEW 1935 6-E REFRIGERATIIRS cmv YEARS PERFORMANCE PROTECTION' o €08t ds ! other: igerators atop, Liftop. lkc!t’d odgl ic m ur require- G S f-ns & week or $25,000 a year. size_and lour income &an e - 1 ;-;r.nq:mz_; ’:30- o‘pdc’flu sealed-ingteel r.lnbrolb.llh.'.. b » Aldska Electric. nght ~aiid Power Co. . 4 l)(?lh I.‘A}Tl_’l}qne 18 “"‘-‘T Ve Che’vrolet and Pontiac (On ) Dealers (O X0} OPEN ALL NlGHT l old insecticide | ‘ 'i .a 1@ 0 o s o Lommercial Dejfm-t“ment filfillmmfiflinumllm illmmmmlmlmmnnmfiflmu;mmmmnnmmuuulmmnuummm|||||mmumumummu|||||||mumum|mnmuu furnished, to care for 6 rcomersdially invites all organization mem- and board for 16 to 20. Well es-|bers and families to attend the tablished and popular. Will sell meeting in order to enjoy the pro-| reasonable. Must leave account of gram and to hear the speakers ex- ill health. Phong 433 for appoint- plain the purpose and future plans | ment. af tha mew club, Atasian Hotel Liquor Store Phone Single Q-2 rings IIII|IIIHIIIIIIII|IIIIIIH"IHIIIIIIIIIHllImlIIIflllIIIIIIIIIlIIIiIIWIMIMIIMHIIIIIIIflflIIIHMHMIIMIIWHIMIMHHIIIMIIHIMMHIHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Dave Housel, Prop. L T