The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 3, 1927, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALA SKA EMPIRE VOL. XXIX., NO. 4367. ) JUNEAU, /\LASKA, MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 1927. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS ~ PRICE TEN CENTS ———— DECLARE MARTIAL LAW, QUAKE ZONE ANOTHER B. B. SCANDAL REVEALED LARGE EASTERN 'ORMISTON DETAILS HIS 1BRIBE MONEY | o WANDERIN(}S; SA YS MISS i t IN'B. B. GAME Cal, Jan. 3. -—yback Oakland. There she boavded al Kenneth G \nun ton, in a statement) train for the north.” ARMED FORCE ON PATROL IN QUAKE REGION fais o Carmopa. | Published in the Los Angeles Exam- 5 e TR lnlcm.allonal PdpmflConpma sl 2w e " !Four Game Seri Bolworzl Governor of Lower California 4 tion Plans [.0 Enter | I made the acquaintance of Miss l()\ AN o EslT(In A:Twi'\w .l Detroit and White Sox | Takes Action—Looters Local Field. X i e is a nurse.” Ange Imu said Distriet Attorney | /\ll(:g(‘d Crooked. to Be Shot. - — iston dec led his wanderings Keyes has started a new inves-! bl time he left Miss X until|tigation to determine Mrs. Aimee BULLETIN — CALEXICO, Jan. 3. — Two jolts shook the town at 5 o'clock this momn- ing. Tremblors are reported as occurring at intervals of an hour in other nearby sections. SALOONS CLOSED- CALEXICO, Jan. 2.—Gov. Ab»l- irdo Rodrigues, of Lower California, has declared martial law and closed all saloons in Mexicali following the earthquake of last Saturday Police Chief Harwick, of Calex- ico, created a special patrol to pro- tect the busginess house from plund- Orders have heen issued to kill any one caught looting The Chamber of Commer wional Pa a, in the was I left Carmel on May and ar forccast today in an announcement rived al San Luis Obispo on May made by District Forester C. H. Fio-| We rested at a hotel continui ry, which disclosed that the com pany had filed applications for both waterpower and timber in the Ke chikan district. Officials of the com-!1old Miss X and ny pany are due in Washington this' ing for Mrs. McPherson. After view week to confer with Forester Col.|ing the man in the car with me W. B. Greeley regarding terms of he was satisfied that she was not the timber contract ! Mrs. McPherson The filings are known to have : 3 ’ 2 4 T “We drove on. we quarreled ove been made on the strength of a sur-! - P M ) ! vey made last summer by enginners|h¢ matter and Miss X asked 10 befmovements L £ g 5 taken 1o a hotel. She was met in a| from the J. T. White Company, of | % - cl New York, for the International in.|D0tel by a newspaper reporter and, Mrs, McPherson's Statement terests. They spent almost all others. 1 .\u-m to Oakland May 31.| Mrs .\lnl'fvn-l\nn said { do not SO i the tiald. ddn confining | A long distant telephone call from |care what they ime to have un themselves -to Snettisham Inlot ana M58 X from San Mateo, asked me|covered in the the Ketchikan district [to come immediately. She wanted to|ental jaunts. I have :.n»wm,\ ~.v:.|m|: Plan Big Plant i{be taken to her home in Seattle 'lhul I was not Miss X. Mr. Ormis- The company plans to crect a ‘|‘:\<‘\Iuni\ was following my blue|ton Il:n gaid his companion fx.h per mill of 250 tous ly capacity|¢oupe and I had no priv what-|Miss X and that I was not at Car- T e ever, so vented a Ford coupe and,mel, the same as I have stated, and cording to a telegram receited by drove to Sun Mateo and brought her that settles it The entry of the Inter per Corporation into manufacture of puip found in Harrisburg, Penn. ’\(-mmn McPherson's whereabouts! CHICAGO, Jan. 3. Charles A when she was supposed to have heen | wed Riseberg, former Chi kidnaped. This centers on an al-g White Sox pitcher, has told Base- 11...‘”1 hotel registration at El Paso|ball Commissioner Landis the White two days prior to Mrs. Mc¢Pherson's|Sox purchased the four g reappearance of a woman who -re- from the Detroit Amer a mained there a day and a ni helped the Sox win the 1918 pen- fter June 21 and then went west nant ! on a train to the boundary which The White Sox | arrived at Douglas, Ariz., about 10'§45 ni hours before Mrs. McPl found at 1 Prieta, |boundary. Keyes annot nd i evening and arrived at .\m!.l bara. 1 was stopped by Wallace W newspaper reporter and he ame series If he was look Nayers contributed e and raised a pool of iven pripeipally to the De- across theitroit pitehers wes he has Clarence Rolanl, then manager of arted to check Mrs. McPherson's the Whiite Sox, now Ame ue umpi yroached the pur- ¢ to Riseberg, Among the play rson was §1,100, rican rs urh'nlwr!ilv.',‘ to the pool, were Eddie Collins and Ray Schalk, Sox's 1917 manager The money was iven to Chick Gandiil, the Sox's first baseman who paid Bill James, Detroit pitcher, near the close of the 1918 season The White Sox figured they owed Detroit a favor and siouched two » has taken steps for immediate rehabili- tation y of transcontin- SHOCKS CONTINUE | CALEXICO, Jan..3. — Recurrent | tremblors aga shook Calexico and 1, ac lgames then to enable Detroit to Mexicali. Fire razed two bulldin Mr. Flory trom Asst. Forester B. F : - -lwin third place, The White Sox veral severe jolts sent brick Helntzelman who is now in Wash-l, W R jwon the ponnangythat year | | walls falling into the streets and tmgton; - this message it wa said: TiWAR VETERANS { | widened cracks in walls of bulld- “Timber and power applications o " ! GANDILL ADMITS SCANDAL ings. The shocks, however, did not the International Paper Company ar Many Villages | ! | . PASO, Texas, Jun. $.-—Chick| add materially to the damage which ,.,]wx.: n[.q;,_\, (—r|,;»_\'vr;.4.\ r 0o et Swept Away I i ARE GUING Tu [Gandill said here in a copyrighted is estimated at $1,000,000. al plant located Thorne Arm an f S ! “t the EI Paso Times that v 0 ; Black Butte volcano, 40 mile: : shy i o . A i \ in the E Mary Cross will He queen of the Banff, Canada. Winter G DRCE, ORI i power on Revilla Island plus Pusicl During Flood | 4ty Whila Soxrlaysr was 16voly G i S e Will - takegsouth of the border, is spouting h!»\\J !I(x added I|l.|l.|nll\xl.lln' offi »\ o ;,| in buying the series from tic place in Febsuary, smoke and vapor It was unusually cials will be in Washington to take SINGAPORE, Jan 2 Dig- | | rers : : active in 1915 when earthquakes up the matter of timber leasing and — batches from the Malaya ! T[ got the money said Grandill, devastated the Imperial Valley contract terms with Forester Gree State of Peran said village (P the Ol as0 BoyE il Dkl it| > dities: | p 00 € 3 a P § « ‘ feage 0yS al yaid The streams and lakes covered in| great loss of lite is feared. First Benefits irom lwcnly-,'.mm\ e e e parently, the same as were applisd | rose 40 feet ow to rafos. || - YEal lnsurance HOMNCISs [ i e e e onv K [ 1 4 The International Paper Corpora. meant more than a mere New | [ ¥ : : tion is probably one of the largest, SR inot oven kmow we collected the|nany foracasts an Inter RuBBERY CASE and paper mills, six hydro-electric i g g6 oh rve i A | A rd Swe ,_IH,”J. B iiaslece during_whi n”m:. i“]\\nw.”.“ x:)::t”“.::f DETROIT, Mich,, Jan 4. Presi- London line. The chief obstacle s | | A hard Swat mine. Its property and manufactur MADE SEATTLE :}:“1:".::‘." ,;“‘,l\ I,’,,,.":;u sl in ad.|dent Navin of the Detroit Club de-jjumping the Atlantic Ocean. S e SR W""(.ss(\s Gomg to Fairbanks ing interest are scattered through i cluredl that he helieved thot Wit : in Dog Team Mail Rob- vinces. It has plants in New York 20-vear insurance policies n.]'“ throw the American fox trot, sh and | | New Hamosllive, NMadsashusors: ver i Ninety-one Pensons Jailed forthelr wal:year nsupante, Bocx ton from the rave e said| London will be in experimental com AR 08 e AR for several weeks by the Zellerbach | Bridges are reported blocked by | Are Effective. jonal R i nds of ‘ Ouch! American ed service o ay, if they | ot Supreme Council for Physi- g | RiBlsidnnvice auedlh TRV IOV oo players paid the Detroit pitchers! LONDON, Jan. & - Evening Stun ‘\"‘ !‘."'I’I;"“"”v" - ;:"' ”h":'“fli”“w | § ce ates b lepositing them | " s BONAELGRILINCE e LI Rey R ng: 18 . common practice for Boston| munication with Australia and South S ERR Ui interes pEE £ A o e o ¢ it was just a little present to the = . ""‘“-"“‘"Bi"""ifla‘"‘l“"‘a"c‘t:r‘e’r bodies swept down by the flood T Tl | Detroit player Ty Cobh did wot| NEW YORK, Jan The Amer |, ) GUMING MA L ; [} » .\ WASHINGTON, Jan. 3. Last Salo o ooy of our money. Me did|ican Telephone and ‘T aph com o p lio 1 | if not the biggest, paper manuf Aie World War veterans |Buise=(op ot slcl AR dvied ‘;.Im n: ::12:.‘“”“7’\“ t,l:”mu ’!],f“.].q m‘ Dances Give turer in the world. It has 27 pulp e s i o j b ! as sequ [ ances Given | | TO THROW SERIES [the opening of the New York and) six States and two Canadian pro- ! S P rst he ts from | * dmu obtain the first henefits from ries eliminating Ros-| dard says that within a few months bmy Case. mont, Maine and Louisiana, and Ce]ebm[m&,-,lg Under as security for ioans it wi Charleston X A e ATTLE, Jan. 3.--Government SE sian youth Quebee and Ontario. Its paper mill| It is estimated that there are ap-|in the 1917 season to pay the! Africa by the Marconi short wave i i Befasiits Ionbun sads Hhe witnesses including J. E. Beattie, at Three Rivers, Quebec, has a daily Care of Doctors. | proximately 5,018 such certifi. [ pitshers to “bear down™ on Detroit. beam system and may communicate| —o8tE SRR CEROHEE] EEotel proprietor of Long View, Wash,, Gaiialis: af d00Gtons. the. darmest ot prRes R B e ciEd with India within two months sl e b land Post Office Inspectors Star Pink- TTLE, Jan. Seattle's New celebration ended Saturday g with 91 jailed and 19 any in the world. It is now con| structing another gigantic plant at Year's Gatineau, Quehm' morn dependents of deceased service men, | PLAYERS SUMMONED 1, T e e . A 5 s/ ham and J. K. Fitzgerald, sailed Sat with a face value of 57.658,0 CHICAGO, Jan. 3.—Baseball Qord-jft————""—""— = - urday on the steamer Victoria for and that loans up to $26: 2,540,000 may | missioner Landis has telegrapied 3815, D . | IFairhanks, Alaska, to attend the trial v 1927 on that | players urging them to appear Wed-| | Travel in Air | ABMY FLIERS sl i for an inquiry into the De-| | s',,"(,r Than | |robbing dog team mails of $33,000 — |under eare of physicians ; Yo Wads durloe Be f\ score of men, welcoming the ,pepegate. Applications for certifi-| nesday g ) y | A ) | [New Year with a street fight, were! catas may be made up until January]troit and Chicazo affair. [ (1 three years ago. interrupted by a riot call. Six men,' ] 1gg. \ St G i B0 With Mules | Schermeyer, who formerly operated pear g knive daggers, scissors, .\'hll! it is inevitable that many | 'a roadhouse between Iditarod and iuml s kuckles, were jailed. Sev-| gorvice men or families of those who | NEW YORK, Jan. 3.—Capt Ophir was apprehended after being en were taken to the hospitals. ‘r iled to return from overseas who | ‘! H. G. Stevens reported to the | trailed from Alaska to Mexico and — lare holders of certificates will ex { | American Society for the Pro- GUATEMALA CITY, Jan. 3. The! California Faantas L Wi iy g | | motion of Aviation, that air- Pan-American fliers of the U .. Beattie was in charge of the dog RECORD CROWDS ercise the loaning privilege, Frank T.| SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 3.—Ho-! Hines, Director of the Veteran Bu-! H planes were much safer to ride | | Army arrived here on Sunday from team. [tels and cafes entertained record’ reau, hopes that beneficiaries will ’ i in than was mule power. He | [Salina Cruz, Mexico. | - - (mv\(h New Year's Eve. One cafe! foregoing such a step to any appreci-| | | said eight pilots lost their lives iFedenl Reserve Boud NASHVILLE, ’r‘enu. Jan. 3.—Dr.! 1,400 guests. There was lots able extent on the ground that it! u | in commercial aviation last year Two Escaped women ‘ Aids Vets’ Bolllll Act Gus Dyer, head of the Vanderbilt|of likuor but it was not publicly, would be more advantageous to the I and mules kicked 80 persons to C Are.C I’ll University Sociology Department, de- displayed. holder to keep his certificate un-{ [ death in Missouri alone, onvu:ts re Laug Wy Lo 4 : clared false economic conditions are| ! encumbered to the date of its matu- CRW : 1 3.—The New| | | | WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 i Th» i tefitzatibn. | e NEW NCRE, dan. 0 il | PRI S s3] WALLA WALLA, Wash., Jan. 3.— | Federal Rese Board has joined destroying the present civilization WET WELCOME IN N. Y. rity. York World today noted the m-; b s i) ) T R | e A R He said: “The home is becoming| NEW YORK, Jan. 3.—Broadway| Eligible for Loans cresss 1o the supply of suckers in M A F | l Cecilia Rosenfelt and wde Bode, | th eterans’ Bureau in assuring pra ally impossible. Children nn-‘;za\o the New Year a wet welcome; The earliest date of any of thely B o0 The World s ' yron osom £ two women serving sentences in the | banks full protection on loans legal- almost out of the question to rear.| caused by a heavy and steady rain.|bonus-policies in ‘.lanunr_v 1, 1925, and the clubs at their best are no more| Dead m San FI’&IICISCO i?’:lvh'l'll'I”;’.'!“I“:\I |(un'l“ nht: .(.'stluw:'h:y n.m’h-' \\‘I\l[v \iu;mn‘: \nr;lor du:e Christian motherhood is almost a Prohthition agents wer8 ordered not|as the law prn\:ulr-s that loans may than poors substitutes for the nhl—% by <u ) ym.l i« |\'“11|L it, were recapture 1“.’””“‘ a Y “"?, hanks refused to thing of the past. Marriage to most | to disturb night clubs and hotels.|be made any time after two vearsi . oo saloon backrooms. The cover| SAN Flh\).:‘ls( 0] Jan. 8-=Myson ew Year's Eve, |handle tes certificates. young men is an insurmountable The liquor deaths since Christmas|from date of issuance, New Year's| (o "hiop™ o 40, provide an A. Folsom, associated with the late Uability.” ]“"me" to have been forgotten. found hundreds of the early appli-} o0 ™0 " gynthetic liquor is|Senator William A. Clark, of Mon- S NA TE SER V’CE MEN ; i fi'"f" "]”ll"',[.‘;lf,"rl m""'s‘”l:f"”,” “”;5524) a aquart and not it to drink. u.m.. in mining, died at his home POSTAL RECEIPTS SHOW |ttt at il Bt st o8, i o b At : R o e ol in the morning, when gaiety is sup- |§ickane, Wakiis and_orgunizer of LED BY GEN. WARREN M|1u>wrl to be at its height, most of the Bunker Hill Smelting Company The average amount that may . o % “BIGGEST” CHR’STMAS“’"““"N by loans during the yeap! the clubs are dark. The only suck- ot Kellogg, Idaho the elderly playboy, with money | ——— 1927 is approximately eight and onc-|€% A | ial ‘ s . I’l WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 The |19 out of ninety-six. And the first half cents on the dollar of the face|to squander, remains. Credentials of Smit schoolboy impression that the new | Senate had a3 presiding officer WASHINGTON, Jan. 3. — Santa|about $51,000,000. The increase in|vlue of the certificate. Loans may Must Go to Committee| American government which emerged | John Adams, whose military exper aiia’ b 1l > 5 i X .!be made at any national or state . . | _— from the Revolutionary War was|ience was so scanty as to be almost Oisligiytuienear, Unclo Baw Akl |fevenies . for ‘Decemier IGDLONOREL o b0 ' ningty per gent of lhv.-.Thomnd Chinese Coolies | WASHINGTON, Jams 8 Dents- | composed almost entirely of ex-min-| indiscernible, while the Ninety Sixth in a neat bit of money for his serv-|roughly the cost of carrying Christ. Af NGTON, Jan. 3 — 1% is presided over By 164 {EIEHE faas thix Chrisimas, Ths o%act toent | mas glfts and grestiags. | current value l)(ll"-le certificate. Thus, Attack B“tnh Concession | crats have agreed that the creden- un; -m“":-f.‘“;‘, vhu‘! ml .lx.xu-x' years rided. oteritg) 3 He has B0t Had thins tb calewlate; but Never before had such & huge sum jon a $1,000 policy, at the end of s tials of Senator-elect Frank L.|PY slic officialdom has been nnuu_n;irull fledged Major General Hie Srastum. aatiinats the Dmssislinas patd to the pastst servide mrltwo vears, a loan of $87.93 could bel 1avkow. J One thousand|Smith should be referred to the in-|4lmost entirely to non-military fiz- Schuyler in First Congress ublie. mald approximately $18,000- | handiing Christraas. mails mor hag|TAde. interest excluded. On the same|yinese cooltes, incited by antl-|vestigating committes before he is| Ures: seems to be all wrong General Philip Sehuyler of New 51)0 to the pual"\‘lpnervlce Vh.)r hfln;llln‘z such agquantlt\' of gifts ever been BOUDY, -ac the ohd of nineteen year‘lfirilmh.flpce<-he~ attacked l!‘u- Brit- | geated Take for instance the United Stat »Y""k by the ouistanding seldiee- B ¢ 4 831.23 woul 53 ; ¥ diet ! | g 2 Ahaion HSLEReELhe * SIS gonator of the First Congress, gifts and greetings. handled during the holiday season.|® ;,Z':;‘mgf‘z a vflemn'd‘""fm‘;“:‘"(’)f‘:i ish concession in the district and| The credentials of Senator Nve.|senate. When that branch of Con-| gt/ C 00 em:::mx al B Sn::: Postmaster General New, proud of 800} toned the police, marine and sailor | Republican of North Dakota, have gress first set up in business in % Total postal receipts for December % | the loan at maturity date will re- o o % orial colleagues whose military i ~ '~ his postal workers in distributing{ v iy (e bank or trust company defenders. The defenders held theibeen referred to the Senate Elec-f 17§y, with Rhode Island unrvepre-| . jiocenonts have lived in history are estimated at about $69,000,000 | the vast quantity, at the same time turning over his certificate to lh; mob four hours without shooting.|tions Committee, sented, only seven of its 24 mem- ow the “grand old soldier” 'ol while the average monthly receipts | gives ‘credit to the public for its co- Chinese soldiers then dispersed the| This may set a precedent in the|pers had seen military or naval sery- ” — e e, ol e B e T for the year prior to December were | operation in mailing early. 1 (Continued on Page Beven.) mobh, g Smith case. jce. In the present Senate there are{ , (Continued on Page Two.)

Other pages from this issue: