Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
8 e ———————— U, S, [}RUISER " Radio Messa zes Spur Slups on Rescue Search STEEI_ WALKGUT NORTHAMPTON ANCHORS HERE Division 4 Fl;xéshi;) Arrives Saturday Night—To Re- main Until Wednesday return to the nto a curved a surf-board, hook in an For the planes dive esembling a small nner approximately water. In addition to Admiral's and the Captain’s ters, there are quarters for the ers and compartments for the men. There are tihree 1 mess-halls for the men, one officers and one for officers, The mess-hal utilized, after meals, for gymns jum, library and other social uses for the men. Aboard the Northampton are the 's barge, the Captain’s jig, ' motorboat and the en- motor launch. Visitors Aboard Approximately 100 Juneauites took advantage of inspecting the cruiser Sunday afternoon. They were taken through the vessel by courteous seamen. Visiting hours are from 1 until 4 pm, and those who did avail themselves of the oppor- to se the cruiser can do so or Wenesday. In Wrangell, draws are the listed men not tunit ‘I uesda the Northampton attracted a small N crowd of sight-seers the first day, was seen hy 400 persons lhe day, according to officers Admiral Anderson is in charge of the four cruisers. Commanding officer of the Northampton is Capt T. A. Symington, and Executive Officer is Commander L. N. Lins- ley but second Admi s Staff Admiral's staff is composed Rear Admiral W. S. Anderson, Commanding Officer of Cruiser Division 4; Lt. Comdr. J. C. Cronin, Commander of VCS Lieut. R. E. Rose, Aide and Flag Secretary; Lieut. M. S. Adams, Division Radio Officer; L%uat. L. H. Frost, Aide and Flag Lieuten- ant, Ship's officers follow: Capt. T. A, Symington, Commanding Officer; Commander L. N. Linsley, Execu- tive Officer; Lt. Comdr. H. W. Von Hasselin, First Lieutenant and Damage Control Officer; Lt. Comdr. W. Wakefield, Navigator; Lt. Comdr. L. Corman, Engineer Of- The as follows: WANIL ARG &, 7 Wtueene s S0 oy SEAR(MING PLANE FORCED BACK BY SNOW AND SLEST PAC THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JULY 12, 1937. AMATEURS AGAIN I UNIT] HAVM TAN IS ADO MS&COI ON WAY TO M F Te 57 planes, F the U gator, ed Noenan. shows the various shins and the area in which the Lt Gunnery Pollard Comdr. P. W. Slrm)ngen. Officer; Lieut. Lieut. H. A. Dunn Lieut. R. Goldthwaite, Lieut. M. Van Metre, Lieut. J. E. Cohn, Lieut. . Donahue, Lieut. J. W. Cooper, R. A. Mitchell, Lieut. (jg) r, Jr, Lieut. (jg) J. R. Ogden Aboard the cruiser are R. H. Baynard, I. S. Presler, 8. E. Ball, W. J. Beitens, J. Probasco, W. C. P. Bellinger, Jr., J. C. Shaw, F. M. Robinson, R. R. Humes, R. A. Smith, L. O. Davis, W. J. Sten- cil, J. A. Pridmore. Aviation Cadets are W. F. Eadie, A. Durham and R. J. Richey. Lt. Comdr. (MC) E. G. Brian for medical, Lieut. (DC) E. B. Hoag dental, and Lt. Comdr. J. E Hunt for supply are other officers. - o - Ensigns Ensigns abeard North Dekita had the lowest death rate—8 per 1,000 of population—in the United States during the last year. Ari s Cpath rate of 155 was the hig The government of Ecuador has placed a tax of $100 on persons de- siring to explore the public lands of that country. The fee is good for six months Liked by everyone —because it t so good ! People buy Spring-Air for many reasons — it's so good looking: it has the endorsement of 3o many world - renowned institutions — in short, it is America’s finest mattress. But after they buy Spring-Air, then everyone praises it to the skies be- cause it f so goodl That's because it's the enly nationally known mattress containing the famous Karr Sleep Unit — the spring construction that carries the strongest of all guarantees. You pay no premium for Spring-Air — in fact, it's the most economical mat- tress you can buy. $24.50 to $45.00 JUNEAU - YOUNG HARDWARE CO. FOR HOME OR BUSINESS REFRIGERATION SERVICE and REPAIRS Phone 34 Our Refrigeration Expert, equipped to give you at reasonable cost. JOHN HOUK, is Quick, Efficient Service Rice & Ahlers Company * ampton now in the channel, UTTER fTASCA CONTINUES WUNT ard Howland Island, tiny sand spit in the Pacific, sped the U. S. aircraft carrier Lexington bearing Colorado and four destroyers to aid in the search for Amelia Earhart and her navi- Amateurs reperted hearing signals believed to be from Miss Earhart. The map u are believed down. + Admiral Anderson SEATTLE STAR Pays Respects fo IS PUBLISHING Daily Star is publishing editions | regularly today with only one Guild Capt. S)mlnglon of North-/are guarding the entrances. amplon AlbO Mdk&s OMIC Negotiations between the man- Guvl Jflh“ wl Trfly SEATTLE, July 12—The Seattle striker picket in sight. Five police agement and the Guildsmen, news, cial Visit, Chief Executive | nts remained deadlocked this . afLernoon The affected depart-/ Rear Admiral Walter Stratton p,onis gre manned with skeleton Anderson, Commander of Criuser .. cco Divisien Four, his aide, Lieut. Lau- Major John F. Dore said the po- rence Hugh Frost, and Capt. T. A.|, ” 11 Symington, commanding the North- Hee. wiit beodie up Sy, BICKELiigs this merning paid their official visit lo Gov. John W. Troy and a short time later the Governor, with his aide, Simpson MacKinnon, returned the call, a 17-gun salute being fired as the Chief Executive was wel- comed aboard. This afternoon Admiral Anderson and other officers were the guests of W. 8. Pullen at the Thane golf course The Governor was in receipt’ of word from Rear Admiral E. J. King, who is in command of three air squadrol now in Alaskan waters, teday that he expected to arrive in Citka Wednesday and, if convenient to the Chief Executive, would fly over Saturday morning to pay his respects. only “peaceful picketing,” 100 feet from the Star Building. bR 7 Band from U. S. S. Northampton Will Give Dance The eleven-piece band off the U.S.S. cruiser Northampton, now in Gastineau Channel will give a aance in the Southeast Alaska Fair Building tomorrow night, according to announcement made this after- noon. of the finest connected with the cruisers and a peppy program is promised Dancing will begin at 9:30 o'clock. S .. Winston, (Ala.) County’s only ne- o farmer is named White. D Romance Blossoms Under Carnival Tents in Juneau Romance blossoms under the car-| nival tents as elsewhere. This morning Miss Elsie Camp- bell and George Emmett Osbel, both connected with the Crescent Shows now playing here, were married by U. 'S. Commissioner Felix Gray. Miss Campbell gave her home ad- dress at Vancouver, B. C., and the bridegroom hails from Pratt, Kan- SAs, —— e - | AT THE HOTELS [AF Gastineaun L. Williamson, « Leadville, Colo.; Captain Quinn, George Moser, Joe Dunlap, Seattle; L. 8. Ferris, Ket- chikan; A. C. Black, Portland; J. P. Curckom, New York City; M. M. Breard, Los Angeles; Beatrice Fisher, Stella Smilde, Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Pollock, Mr. and Mrs. John Walley, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Mecklem, Woodstock, N.Y.; F. Hatton, San Francisco; Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Sawyer, Windham; M. Bing- ham, Chillwock, B.C.; Joe Morri- son, Whitehorse; Frank F. Benson, Boston, Mass.; Mrs. Walter H. Mar- tin, Columbus, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Crosson, Murray Stuart, Fair- banks; Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Wilde, Entrance Island; Mary Joyce, Taku. Juneau Walter O. Wright, Jr., Honolulu; L. S. Rice, Santa Rosa; Bruce D. Shepard, Max Westerberg, Pontiac H. Moses, Hoonah; Alan Richards, Washington, D. C.; A. Amundson, Bellingham; Henry Jenkins, Ju- neau; Fred J. Hotes, Portland; Mr. and Mrs. John Flintoff and son, Tacoma; Alberta Burke, Katheryne' McNulty, Sitka; Henry Meyerhoff, Pendicton; Ray Lobe. Alaskan Ray Thomas, H. C. Shafer, James Green, Juneau; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Blackinten, Gambier; Baine Sirean; Excursion Inlet; John Browash, Mile 70. ——————— Not at All Gun Shy GARY, Ind—Nobody could ac- cuse two bandits here of being afraid of guns. The two got $10 in a holdup of a shooting gallery equipped with many rifles and a counter full of ammunition, ——————— Fossil remains indicate that there has been little or no improvement | in the mental equipment of fish furl the last 100,000,000 years. tasting i x\dvemsing and circulation depart-/ The Guild announced it planned | The band is said to be one| FLARES ANEW AS TWO ARE KILLED | Death Toll Mounls to 15 with Violence—Police Arrest 141 Strikers MASSILON, Ohio, July 12.—Two | men died of bullet wounds which| were received in a clash between | police and strikers today near the Steel Works Organizing Committee headquarters here, bringing the death toll to fifteen in the seven weeks of the steel strike. Six oth- ers were wounded today. Police arrested 141 men, charg- ing them with disorderly conduct. | Fulgmencio Calzana, Mexican, and‘ Nick Valdez, 45, died of gunshot.[ wounds as guns glazed intermit- tently for an hour. Uniformed special police besieged a two-story | frame building, near which 5tliker5£ ind their sympathizers assembled.| Major E. O. Curley, former army officer, was named by the Chief of | Police as his aide during the strike., Major Curley said the steel workers started the violence by stoning him and firing at police. | Harry Ruttenberg, represennng; the workers, charged that officers; fired revolvers and team gas shells “‘without povucuunn : Youth Saved hy Quick Action of Daring Climber INDEX, Wash., July 12.—Seven- teen daring mountain climbers low- |ered Joseph Halwax, 22, Seattle electrician, down a precipitous 1600- foot narrow ledge, north of the face of Mount Index, where he was crit- ically injured in a plunge yester- day. Then they trudged four miles to, |the Stevens Pass road to get an| ambulance. Halwax, Scott Osborne and Stanley King were all tied to-| |gether on a rope. Within 500 feet | lof the goal, Halwax slipped and\ Ifell over the edge. The instant he! fell, Osborne flipped the rope over la rock, having all lives, Osborne and King then were forc- ed to lower Halwax the few re- maming feet in order to save him. 'FAIL TO GET CLUE : TO WHEREABOUTS | [ OF MRS. NORMAN Awaiting Word from Fliers Mrs. Frederick J. Noonan, wife of Amelia Earhart’s navigator, and George Putnam, husband of the lost woman flier, look over : ;lobe of the world, wendering just where the two daring fliers are. Putnam called on Mrs. Noonan at her Oakland, Cal, home to cheer her up as they waited for word from the mis:mg fliers. sm-n going aboard a boat here after being pulled from the water near the upper City Float was run down yesterday ‘when the boat she was Funter Bay. Mr. Norman went by plane to contact the vessel, oper- ated by Roy Wright, but Mrs. Nor- man was not aboard, officers were intmmed DYER SAYS HE IS INNOCENT LOS ANGELES, Cal, July 12. — |velieved to have gone aboard was in | ~ VETOED BY FOR | Bank loans, l.u'm mortgage | the increase in t'ge ability of farmers to pay the interest. Manacled heavily and guarded, Al- | he said the Administration is trying| : LOW INTEREST RATE BILL 1§ WASHINGTON, July 12—Presi- | dent. Roosevelt has vetoed the bill ‘lo extend for fwo years the |interest rates for Federal bert Dyer, 32, pleaded innocent of | to balance the budget in 1938. 'the charges of murdering three lit- | itle girls whose bodies were found |last week in a gulch near Ingle-| ‘wood. Trial was set for August 6. }Dyer showed no emotion. | —eo Dog-Gone Stubborn RICHMOND, Ind—Alex Shumin- | | off's 7T-year-old German shepard | I No trace ahs bees found of Mrs. |disappeared the night of July 5, it was reported today by authorities.| A clue that Mrs. Norman was last Jrom all the re. _]ust as the savory aroma of appetizing food is half the pleasure of eating, so the fra- grance of fine tobaccos is half the pleasure of smoking. That’s the reason we go half way around the world for the costly aromatic Turkish tobaccos that help give Chesterfields their more pleasing aroma. Blended with mild sun-ripened home-grown tobaccos they make Chesterfields milder and better- ...different from all the rest dog, when her own pups were ta-| e Lode and placer iocation notices for »-ale at The Empire Office. [ - He Likes Classwork low‘ Land | He said the veto was based on the general lowering of! interest rates .md‘ the |82me tomorrow afternoon, the team Also from the U.S.8. Northamplon is to CRUISER TEAM AND ISLANDERS MIX TONIGHT Douglas g;—uad to Be Strengthened by Addition of Catcher Hawkins Braced by the recollection that they were the only Gastineau Chan- Inel ball squad to score a win over !Lhe Navy team off the Cruiser | Detroit last year, the Douglas Fire- !men mateh themselves against a reputedly very strong sailor nine off !the cruiser Northampton, this eve- ning in Douglas, at 6 o'clock. | Hurler Claude Erskine, who turn- ed back the-Detroiters last summer, figures on adding another Navy scalp tonight. (He still can faintly recall a nightmare lineup of blue- clad clouters off the USS Wright, and regenge is still sweet.) Tex Hawkins, the League's No. One receiver has been borrowed by the Islanders for tonight’s fray, and should -he maintain the hitting pace he set yesterday against the Elks, should add considerable poke, as well as defensive strength, to the i Douglas line-up. ATTA BOYS HOLLYWOOD, Cal, July 12. — (No less an author:ey on men's at- tire than Adolphe Menjou says America's college boy is the “world's best dressed man.” Menjou, long considered an au- }thority on dress, says sloppy socks, | sweaters, open collars and sport: shirts to the contrary, the colleg- iian is still the world’s best dressed man. “His clothes may be convention- defying,” says the dapper film star, “But comfort is now the last word in style, and the college man in America dresses for comfort.” NORTHAMPTON TEAM CHALLENGES JUNEAU; GAME IS TOMORROW Callenging Juneau to a baseball play here tomorrow at 3 p.m. in the \ball park. | Bud Foster and Erv Hagerup are lin charge of arranging the Juneau | team. The Northampton team has BRUNSWICK, Ga., — Steuart‘played 91 games this season, win- s e MOSES IN TOWN Henry Moses, fur dealer, e “Alaska” by Lester D Henderson. arrived | Albert Norman, Juneau woman who ken away. began nursing seven pigs. | from Hoonah on the Estebeth and | is a guest at the Juneau Hotel. Hopkins graduated from high school |ning 87. | with a record of never having been; | absent or tardy during 12 school; ye.xrs R osammam. o o oo FERRIS IN TOWN | L. 8. Perris, hotel man of Ketchi- |kan, is in Juneau and a guest at the Gastineau. ——————— Installment sales in the United ]Stutes increased to $4,500,000,000 last year as mofpared with 3,600,000,- 000 in 1935. .o for pleasing aroma and all tbe good things smoking can give you.. . . enjoy Chesterfields