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

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE ‘:AI,L THE N!’fWS ALL THE TIME” UNEAU, ALASKAYFRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1927. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS ~ PRICE TEN CENTS VOL. XXX., NO. 4497, ' CLEVELAN 3.- 5 ording to the regulated moy £ : ; i o | \ Makes Flight from Engi " ¥ 2 S om 4 al in Darkness—Rescue | 2 s G G T N - { SR Y ll Pari g T “H ngland . rere are exceptions. Wilness s Wi I i e ] \ o Paris mn Two Hops — { After 18 Hours. - i b tree for over 18 hours before res-|tain. They were close friends, and | | ori¢ f the h ming recep- o'clock last night, only slightly [to the boat landing, explaining that his promised farewell visit before B will hoatrd the cru.ser Memphis for and R. S. Reierson, who were re- someone discovered that Mrs. N of Pittsbu Washington, . €., where he will ] . [ i 2 b 3 ro | —_— N NORFOLK “TRIANGLE” '‘Balkan Meéting Dc " Zita to Exil | y LA 'Bailran Meeting Dooms Zita to Lxile GAPT LINDBERGH I ~ ol g i SN T | L] | BREAKS MOVIE RULE: | With Three Other Thronel. ens | » [} ree er roneless Jueens AGAIN IN PARIS ; TR ND, Ohio, June The iy | “eternal t well known home- | wrecker, s leads to . divorce, - L the case of Mrs. S. B. Marshall and | 1 | 1 T Harry Staples, both of Norfolk, Va., " ; i J | eaves lomorrow. Stumbling over a cliff in the| Staples, a contractor, lived just| & ; ’ ) | AL darkness, landing on a narrow ledge across the street, in Norfolk, from i ! . ; [ : 4 | PARIS, yune a.—Laden with' new. cued after having been lost on theleach had a wite and two children.{ Three Fourths of Repuhlicans \ ; ! i > i I'tion hy King George and the Eng- Mt. Juneau trail, Mrs. John Hallum| Several weeks ago, Mrs. Marshail | lish people, Capt. Charles A. Lind- bruised from her accident. Cries|she was making a short trip to Smith Sh‘ongest Democrat 3 ‘ _ - | leaving for home tomorrow. for help were heard late yesterday )Hartford, Conn. Mys. Staples did L " | _ At Cherhourg, Capt. Lindbergh | turning to town after a hunting!shall was not on board and, in fact, | mer Congressman and former Secre 3 | be greeted by President Coolidge. trip on the mountain. Upon hear-ihad not hcen seen during the trip. [tary of the Republican National | 3 g ¢ 5 g ’ Capt. Lindbergh flew from Eng- | | | | ERRING WIFE HOME ' | ) \ ‘ i Mrs. Hallum Falls Over Cl;fl'lqu cide, murder or maybe a lynching, rnd hanging on to a small alder|S. B. Marshall, a former sea cajp-| 0 % ) ? y ors and beari vith him mem- was bronght . to town about 10 |asked Mrs. Staples o arive her down| Want to Name Coolidge— ! : ML I [herah returned to France today for afternoon by Rev. Harry R. Allen!| When the boat landed in Hartford, VAS TON, = June ing the first cries they could not Her suitcase and purse, containing | Committee, told President Coolidge| and in a British plane after a 1 locate the source but with the aid|about $20, were found in her state. |that a Nautional survey of the “hest forced delay because of fog. He left of field glasses saw a small clump, room. minds" of the Republican Party had Henley Field at 6:20 o'clock this of alders moving about half way up Complete Mystery shown the President to be thel ) the mountain. Reierson started up| Complete mystery surrounded the lchoice of 76 per cent. of them as| b that he descended at Lympne after the mountain and Allen returned tofdisappearance and authorities fin 1 “the most available = Presidential 2 X9 ¥ % covering 50 miles in an houtr. Later town for help, securing a rope and!ally decided that *“poor Mrs. Mac | ¢andidate.” rmer “rank O, | 9 —— ) 3 i Capt. Lindbergh again took the air automobile and with the assistance|ghall” must have accidentally fallen | owden of Tllinois was e sed by } . 3 3 {and landed gracefully at Lebourgat of E. C. (“Doc") Sweeney, started! gverboard or perhaps committed :u per cent., while remaining | & ’ 3 i £ | Field at 10:02 o'clock. for Silver Bow Basin about 6:30]suicide. 4 per cent. chose oth ates | — o'clock last night. A few days later, Harry Staples Fifty per cent of the Repoblicans ! PLANE ON CRUISER Upon reaching the ledge they|informed his wife that business call [ named Gov. Al Smith as the “Demo " ¢ 4 Y | SOUTHAMPTON, Eng., June 3 — found Relerson who stated that &|ed him to the north and that he Jorat who would be hardest to de ] | e l@apt. Lindbergh’s’ plane Spirit of woman was hanging below on a|might be gone for some time. Mrs feat Senator Jame Itred was ; § u % AP " | St l:mn\ p:nkl'(!’ill t‘wu In.mz WLA od- small ledge but it was impossible| Staples began thinking over the named as the stron Democrat [ ; 5 P s 3 len” crates weighing three tons has to reach her. With the aid of the|whole matter. She remembered that jP¥ 10 per cent. and Willlam G G " % g i ko | been safetly placed aboard the rope Reierson made his way to the'per hushand and her “deceased” | MeAdoo by 9 per cent L ruiser Memphis whicl IR BRI e S war b S L | N . 4 o [cruiser Memphis which left soon ] { ! 4 3 . after for Cherbourg. Mrs. Hallulm's walst and she was| (Continued on Page Seven.) SMUGGI—INB UF 5 b : i hauled to the top of the cliff. Mrs — ¥ % < | Hallum was slightly bruised trom| y ; 3 i TO BE MADE COLONEL her fall and was able to make h('r‘AuTu |NnusTRY | . b , b 4 ')*‘I"I'IM\'(.L\' CITY, Mo, Jul}e_3. way down the trail practically un- RusslA Ns Is | W 3 S ! 1 (‘1:11:; IA llx;m‘ll\‘l‘:m\'vnv!‘\l-l)n';\gl | 4 morning. Conditions were so bad assisted. assisted Loses Way on Trail ‘ Guard of Missouri when he returns Mrs. Hallum said this morning | NOW REVEALED |to St. Louis according to Gov. Sam |A. Baker she Juneau Wednesday afternoon at 5 o'clock for a short walk up the mountain and while re-| turning home at dusk lost her way ' ' Four Queens without a throne! Turbulent affairs in Europe leave Sophie of Greece (np- g (A R N | per left), Amelia of Portugal (lower left), Zita of Hungary (centre), and Marie Feodorovia - | o’ Russia (right), in exile. Zita’s hopes to return and see her son, Otto (below, centre) on the PHILADELPHIA, Penn., June 3.— | ne now seems to be blasted. | A gigantic conspiracy to smuggle | housands of Russian aliens from By NICHOLAS GOLPIN, his brother. Though it Is suspected Jubk into the United States throngh | 7y Tt Dlustrated N aff Correspondent. she did not live him, they were wed, : \).—The last hope for one of Burope’s frur She shared his dangers dovotedly—« | f v 3 perhaps thinking of another to whom Florida is revealed through Assistant | )\ Jalt T0e" tlaciomnre, was ot 1 exiled queens to return to power seems to be flickering 4, pa gedicated her life—until the y s ! Vow- | out. OF the four queens without thrones, the hopes of ex- end. In the Russizn revolution she on the trail in the thick brush, stumbled and fell, landing on a small ledge. . NEW YORK, June 3.—The auto- ‘I was not excited and knew tnat|mobile industry is now the greatest I would be rescued, having told jndustry in the United States, accord- Mr# H. R. Shepard that I was gong|ing" to statistics for the past year ;"k'::'v‘ve t;.:llrlfllll d“‘s 3‘: r';'{:’“r':llfltl}:l'; issued by the National Automobil 0 Cha of Commerce. next day she would miss me “"‘H(hllx’lmlbfl?;! ufw Wholesate. valtie -0 th send help. I am certainly thankfuliproduct of the automobile industr: :f";"d l:::] &;:';'Blewn lW"g fvg':f‘lw;';fi was $3,371.855,805, whereas in 1920 e Lor ; lit was $4,696,945,620. bl e v R BORG TGS ORI fear of bear, nor of the dark, butliopiles manufactured in the United m?rl'ym;:l::& en';“;;‘)'de]:f"' ".’.‘"l"f‘“:l': States and Canada :uu]l 72 per cen she had the teoling that she woula|Oh oS, oare wars closed car be rescued. g According to the National Auto ol ia not sleep a wink during|moiile Chamber of Commerce the thitg §mce i anenaNy- unon hmyl automobile industry ranks above was nellh‘ar sleepy nor hungry 1 meat _pmklnn and steel and petro was frightfully cold several M‘mes, leum. in the value of the production having left my coat at the foot of "'P"w” '"d""m,es' t 3 3 the mountain, and was dressed in a ourteen per csnt of the annual light house d‘ress " iron and steel production in the Mrs. Hillum is ! el kpown in.UnIted $la|e.fl is used in the auto Juneau having lived here years ago,| Moblle industry, fitty per cent oi and up to the last couple of years all the plate glass is used in auto- has made her home in Seattle wnhl"“’b‘le“- 84.2 per cent of all rubber her son and daughter. John Hallum|&0€s to the manufacture of auto- is one of the best known pioneers mobile accossories, and 80 per cent in Alaska and located the Hallum of h‘_i"" gasoline is used by auto- mobiles. Sropsc TR var Bow: Basin; The total capital invested in the automobile industry is $2,089,498,325 —_——eto——— New York city leads the world in ownership of automobiles haviny 421,212, Detroit with 308.501 while automobiles has one for every four persons. Ten Per Cent Own Cars Ten per cent of all the families in the United States own more than CHICAGO, June 3.—F. Scott Mc-|one automobile. Bride, General Superintendent of tha | The average maintenance of the Anti-Saloon League, before the North- | American farmer's automobile is $s0 ern Baptist Convention, urged the}a year. ultimatum to those who dislike the | France, England and Germany are dry laws to “go out in the Atlantic !the noarest foreign competitors the Ocean, build an island of your beer | United States has in automobile pr Federal® Judge Kirpatrick when New 3 : il d i . i willing Was the only member of the imme- ‘on ,]umq\n‘h‘ stewart of the British | Empress Zita, of Austria, seemed bright Hungary is willing F7% royal family to escape execus “:“’:;L‘":‘('l‘ i g rl whkin oy to restore her oldest son, Prince Otto, to the throne. % tion in the hands of the Bolsheviki. . % OB CUATES ff "SHIMEEURE: 3 cary’s neighbors are uniting to prevent the resto- she escaped on a British battleship Bustisme ; s i But Hungary’s neighbors i ) SN i NOLULU, PR i5i g Sung -siren. B ration. Foreign ministers of Czecho-Slovakia, Jugo-Slavia and from Crimea, where she had been HONOUULY e B L stan stowaways from Cuba on the |, 1 ‘ 3 s A iiving, to return to Denmagk and tended entry of a steam driven steamer. Rumania are meeting at Joachimsthal, Czecho-Slovakia. The [“HE @ FFES Cith her i plane in competition for the Dole meeting is a warning to Hungary that an attempt to restere a Queen Sophle of Greece alspwent _|}.I|'|",““I‘1ll;:l |fll1.:‘mrlr:*l".,ul,:ll:l(‘(;‘;; ':'l::;lc z‘?‘ Hapsburg to the throne is a cause for war. into exile amid blood scenes. Twice | -S4 ’ Mungary is fllprepared for war, lace failed to rise arid support them, her husband, King Constantine, was and it seems certain that Empress and they returned to exile. Then banished; then he died in exile, Her sages e ved here declare the Zita would return to Hungary with came the death of her husband, leav- husband’s father, King George, way steam engine designed for ‘the afpe i | revealed in a message received from | Ter son it war would follow. In her ing her in abject poverty with her murdered, and her son, King Alexan. A ol 4 plane has already been subjected to Is c H A L LENGE ‘ yofuge in the old palace of Uribarren many children, Bhe exists now al- der, died. Her own family—she is & [osts which were met perfectly. H. Crossland Pfaff, of Chicago. Mes- at Lequeitio in Spain, hers, as is most solely on charity. sister of the ex-Kalser—fell from k. that of the three other queenly ex- Two of the other queens were ex- power. Today she remains at a - o e flos, I8 @ tragic one, As the wife of fled by the war. Marle Feodorovna, small villa near Florence. - M y | ¥mperor Karl, heir to Franz Josef, wife of Alexander 111, is now eighty, Queen Ameria of Portugal was the | l()[)(l(,'('ll men I‘(’(lr Ymperor of Austria-Hungary, she awaiting the end in Copenhagen, the first to go. She saw her husband, | et B - H had expectations of a long and bril- land of her birth, At an early age King Carlos, assassinated in 1908. A Over Production; | | liant reign. The war ended the rule she was betrothed to Czarevitch few years later she and her son, Meet in Convention of tha Hapsburgs, and she and Karl Nicholas, whom she loved dearly. King Manoel, wers forced to flee be fled y made one daring attempt He died, and in his dying breath he fore revolutionists, She Is living in to urn by airplane. but the voou- asked the Danish orincess to marry Versailles, Mississippi River Tssues Threat to Nation Declares Peril of overproduction will be U_ S‘ Army Enginez stressed here this month by leaders DAVIDSON COLLEGE'S FAMOUS SUICIDE CLUB s |in the tobacco imdusiry, when the CHIOAQES. Tuep & i DISBANDED ON ORDER OF SCHOOL FACULTY COINS SAVE Siatcs ot s sl Convention ing the Mississippl River floods as| : I a challenge to the Nation and a here June 22-24 threat less serious only of war it- R s - g SR 4 v | { Since the enormous size ot last self, Major Genmeral Edgar Jadwin,| DAVIDSON. N. C. June s.—David | Soldiers May . Wear | |¥ cotton crop became apparent, Chief of the United ates ArmyjSon Colleg unous “Suicide Clul “H M s | {and its selling price was established Engineers, impressed upon the Flood has disbanded as suddenly as it firs Hand - Me - Downs ; ; . .lat a figure below the cost of pro- Control Congress the necessity of)leaped into prominence while the OFf Ten Yoars Ago Head of Union Tneologlcal;(lurlinu. advice has been pouring into adequate methods of flood control, | ‘student suicile wave” was sweep s Ago Gagiidl & PLe U; the ears of Southwestern tobacco “With many lives known to have|ing the count I eminary in Ina, iias | planters, it was said been lost and millions of acres of| The little hand of eight students WASHINGTON, g v B As a result of this, according to agricultural lands . flooded with has been dispersed by order of the |downs of ten years ago may Narrow Escape. tobacco association officials here, tha damages totalling hundreds of mil-|college faculty. The students, accord-|worn by the Army this summer [ inclination of farmers is to increase lions of dollars done in this greatest 4 MOREHEAD CITY, N. C, June 3. ling to reliable reports, were given jihe Quartermaster Corps succeeds in | SAN FRANCISCO, June 3 Dr.| the tobacco yleld. The danger of of a long series of floods, it is ap-/the choice of expulsion or signing |decolorizing and satisfactorily recol | Donald Richardson, head of the Un-|this, it was stated, would be effec- parently a flood’s threat and chal-'a pledge not to discuss the subject |oring the many-hued cotton uniforms | o0 ’”'“”1*"-‘“‘“') minary at Nan-|tively stressed at the convention, . entire N " |of suicide with fellow students, 2d as “khaki” s stre ¢ | king, declared he threw a handful| Market t the 1927 crop and KegE. akq pelbit Nicholds: Mupreyifyotion, ‘sod. tisse: nations are fas e PR 1'”1\;«\-2‘.’11‘;"‘f,-q "ol (e abanke LMY e ;.:-r);::ftlinum RS ot | o s (. the hth ot pursuing|a v S | praskeits Wil Butler or Al Smith as your leader.” Ibehind in numbers produced. # | ! hatically denied that their aim! The War Department has tho ugands | Chinese soldiers which saved hisibe the principal items before the Congressman Grant M. Hudson, of ! It is estimated that 80 per cent of [ous . jcid i 1114 i Y all the automobiles in the world are ; jwas to en age suicides nong | of - cotton uniforms left o from Richiaidonn: sallt: ot rl'('ullelll”m"“} s tobacco growers when they e e ———————— e ——— e Michigan, declared that women, can { : D - 2N " | students, and maintained -their sols | the war, but becauge of the df ¥ H gather here. take care” of the wet newspapers, lowned in the United States, the Ar- {Durpose in oreinization was o con- | ference in shading they would give(® Story of a man fleeing from his| Representatives from all the to- ::o!nsl‘;:"l't:retshI::la:h:gve:;:;ein!Bdrx;:-. g‘er:::ee‘ Gé‘:’:fitr;lr‘;klnN:rKi Dz:nflrl::;{f PRIGES Tnu Low-dm-( discussi into the theory of | a company front a kaleidoscopic ef- ""I"]':"I“‘-“»*I“ I ”“‘(’\\“':’": at '1[\"“ | bacco growing sections are “Méfd At \ v ey foct 3t Jesucd without alteration. | soldiers who were firing at me. They | here. However, the Carolinas, Vir- ping newspapers. are other large users of automobiies ot 41 insued pelthont steresion ho |Stopped to pick them up and T - ginia and Kentucky are expacted to The Suicide Club has been in ex- New cotton uniforms said te Congressman Hudson said the only [but they are far behind the United oyl Yy e R 4 g s : | caped to a Chinese shack. The fol-|g e 2 ey opposition to Prohibition comes from |States. ‘Ia(xenn e for only a few weeks, and | of t color are being given a trial {send the lar delegations. | lowing morning [ escape ! i : arstoe ore Wi aisy. Santile aaIBAB SR ELt L ! g escaped’ to the! A progre sind vhes. Anil a e YHIKAN, 1 Express-| it was under d there was no op- | by an infantry company at Fort |, : izl 0 gl » oyl A program, including speeches tho ‘“wet fringe along the Atlantic | There are 420503 motor truck | KETCHIKAN, June 3—Express-| o SG00 SO 0y uitimatum. | Benning, G, to determine how long | SAnboat, disguised as a Chinaman |giscussions by leaders in the tobacco and large cities which are largely [fleets in operation in the United |ing dissatisfaction at the prices of-} y - My wife and three children had; " etehika Nrh. 8 - D the mat 1 will stand up under i Tk e I ’ ‘lindustry, is to be announced shortly. unAmerican. ! States. fered by Ketchikan buyers, salmonj| service conditions. A similar tes: | Préviously been taken aboard thei " Goyernor Angus W. McLean and trollers of the Baranof Isiand dis-| - 1 7 B i % SHEE Tave: consan” Nahing % Reindeer Importation to will be made by infantry at Papama, | 5'PPO8t Senator F. M. Simons, of North Care- PEACE BRIDGE JOINS o et ke G 1 et Bafin Land Is Failure) e T Alenist Visis Leopold, ™ " T T T 8 cents for Reds between 4 -and 16 Slnyer, in Penitentiary ———————— ! g “ s} § 46 o s SN glh A | . ; — CHICAGO. June 3.—A noted alien- | LINDBERGH DOESN'T increase on th rounds that lower| Baffin Land proved a failure and g & % % o e st Soumd wads compelas @ result (he Canadian Government | LONDON, June 8.—Claiming that ist has visited Nathan Leopold in ! SMOKE, DRINK, CHEW tition difficul | has cancelled ihe grazing permit is. | theyhave fewer chances of promo-| joliet Penitentiary and convefbed OR STAY OUT NIGHTS R e o oy 00 waleh (e il —— e sued 't Villjulmur Stefansson for |tion than any other body of public | with him for hall an hour at the 2 T i Fey : ae aiher nerbivorous an'- | Servants in the world, the 50,000 | invitation of the Leopold family in NEW YORK, June 3—"Slim" m.::':mflh:h:flm“;::‘?“tm?n RUE aate: E'A'fmfi'{{."’?h'"'firfii'; Niagara British Rail Travel BB Ao ot postmen (maimen) in Great Brital | whal s coustrued as an effort to || Lindbersh is degeribid by his 9 e ol e 2 i are seeking an advance of wages. To | have 3 » slayers ittlo riends 3 ¢t pict t s affin Land. have one of the slayers of littlo | | friends as the perfect picture of ;’n’;},‘:oom..:,';:flc ,;f,':‘:.'.‘":fio;’: HHE LTy e Tl Setos: The. nive Shows Big Decrease| hait of b . that end a committee drawn from | Hobby Frank moved from the Pen. || clean-cut youth, Sipeimb g U p . T Y " he postmen and employers s at| jtentiary to an asylum. Leopold's fa The youthful captain doesn’t Niagara River between thia city and | tario, it differs from the others in| LONDON. June a—here is 2| GREAT NORTHERN RY. present investigating the situation. | ther denied however (hat such was | smoke, drink or chew. He doesn't | Port Erie, Ont. being vlrtm‘lly owned by the public. |strange and inexplicable decrease in REPRESENTATIVE HERE-. Evidence submitted to the commit- | (he motive. like to stay up. late at night and | mals on a portion of the southern Tolls will "be. collected until the | British railroad travel. tee shows that British postmen start e p ’ o The bridge connects not oniy tte | ogt of building has been met, when | During February last, the total ) at $5 per week at the age of eigh- | § 2 (l;;,,?,?gm o ing for BEWIOR two great American commonwealths, | ine hridge becomes the property of |number of passenger journeys was| A, J. Arrivee, Traveling Passengcr |teen, rising to $10, exclusive of war 9 Killed in Frenc Although he never went out but rests on land in each which was | the two governments. 81,298,564, a decrease of 7,614,190 or | Agent of the Great Northern Railway, | bonus, which is still in operation. o % | for athietics in_ sehool, he. kep the scene of hot fighting during the | The enhancement in property val-|8.6 per cent on February 1926. Re-[the route of the “Oriental Limited,” PRy St Tt e Railroad Accident BUEsGI In Darfect Dhumlost tim: War of 1812 The American end of | o4 which the bridge has occasioned |ceipts from passengers showed a de-| with headquarters in Seattle, is now | * SEATTLE HALIBUT PRICES PARIS, June 5. Nine persons| His life of flying, stunting, barn- the *bridge is within the grounds of | recalls the dream 30 years ago of |crease of $1,658,340 or 9.1 per cent |in Juneau having recently arrived SoED RINEd nad ade il TAETRed whier, | | dtureiing. vt bl R ialiny R Port Porter, now abandoned. The|alonzo C. Mather, now a Chicage| On all traffic the decrease in Feo- |from a trip to the interior of Al-| SEATTLE. June 3--Six vessls | the Paris-Times Express this fore- | | made him near immune to or- Canadian end is only a short dis-|puginess man, 83 years old. Mather, |ruary, as compared with the year |aska. Mr. Arrivee will remain in Ju-{brought in 100,000 pounds of halibut | noon ran into overturned cars of a | dinary physical fatigue. tanes=Spm. the: rulns of Fort Hrle, previous, was $2,065,555 or 7.5 per | neau until next week looking “up” |yesterday. The prices averaged 10 |wrecked freight train near Moulins " # military post of a ceptury ago. (Continued oy Page Seven.) cent, | pusiness, and 13% cents, e 30¢ Biitor novth of Rore:

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