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THI VOL. XXX., NO. 4526. NAVAL DISPUTE IS BECOMIN Ford to Quit Attacking Jewish People; Is Made; Expr NEW YORK, July 8.—The Nuv‘{ rk American, in a copyrighted | says Henry Ford has o the Dearborn Independent ¢ to “discoutinue permanently all} articles hostile to the Jewish peo- | plo.” | The American says Ford withdrawn from publication pamphlet in which such were being distributed and Willi Ford | Independent replying I has u signod #n statement expressing r gret for any injury or hurt caus: by the series The American Randolph Hearst $1,000,000 for the Ford is quoted as L ‘won't sell it, but to make it a hou ar going to deep also say offered am g . and top absolutely every thing that could possible complaint hurt the feelings of | anybody | Tiie American Ford 1 saying that “this statement on my own initiativ wholly in the intorest of right in accordance. with what I gard solemn duty man and a citizen, I am deeply morti fied that the journal has b made a medium resurrecting ple fictions and for giving currency to the so-called protocol of the Wise Men of Zion which | 1 learn to be gross for 1 | also for contending that the Jew have been engaged in a conspiracy to control the industries and capi- tal of the World.” ON FOR SOME TIME DETROIT, Mich., July § tiations looking forward to lication” of Ford’s statement all ‘articles in the Dearborn dependent hostile to the Jewish | people had boen ordered discon- | tinuod, has been going on for some | time, William Henry Gallagher, | Chief Counsel for Aaron Sapiro| sald. He added: “I confidently | expect the libel suit of will be settled out of court.” 5 PAILROADS MAY 60 INTO " AR TRAFFIC | Assistant Secretary of| C( mmerce Announces Plans of Rail Lines CEDAR POINT, Ohio, July 8 William P. McCracken, Jr., A sistant Secretary of Commerce foy Aviation, declares that five large railroads are considering - supple mentin;g their rail service with air passerger service. Officials hayo been in_ conference with him but nothirg definite has been decided MgCracken said the railroads, “sooner or later, will be forcel into supplementing rail servie: with air service.” He said the railroad companie: will work in conjunction with aviation companies and the rail-| roads’ chief function being in ad ministration and ticket selling. made n ed Nege pul: thut | In Sapiro |2 | ward ] Da QUEEN 58 Beauty, scholarship an OF T d personall ] tion when students at the Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechani- | > 2 @ HE AGGIES' P TR -} taken into considera- ity were S vt gal College elected Ona Mac MoAllister, *“Queen of the Aggias. g Rockefeller Celebrating 88th Birthday 00 NEW YORK, D. Rockefeller, reputedly to be still of the of the Standard Oil Companies, today celebrated his 8Sth birth day. Jorn in the oil was the world Rockefeller has lived bathtubs, tel ph, telephon electrie lights, motor cars, radio and airplanes become in- ral parts of the American July Johr » when wha illuminant to sec - o Prosperous Man Siain _ Str " S angler? For Alleged intimacy: ROCKVILLE, md., Mills, prosperous was murdered by pinned note on before esc The pape form of & tended for intimated he had been too timate with married women!/ names were mentioned July dairy far tranger the mer, who a ping was written in » confession signature in and in No CUPID KEEPS SHACKS [ ON U. S. RES FT. LEAVENWORTH, Kansas,| July 8.—The little god known as Cnpid s standing in the way of eradication of Fort Leavenworth's war time cantonments. During the World War nearly two score of these long, rambling shantios were thrown together in| a few weeks alongside the beau- | tiful fort and city highway on the military reservation, to house the hundreds of raw recruits sent there. ‘When Leavenworth returned to| its normal population of about 300 officers and a few companies of| enlisted men, a generons com-| mandant turned the cantonments over to married enlisted men with rank of sergeant or under, rent free. 'The army makes no allow- ance for the housing of a soldier's family unless he achieves the ter sergeant, or warrant officer. Those of lower rank are not sup posed to get married, and to do %0 must obtain consent of their company commander; The cantonments, ramshackle a# they were, proved a financial boon | and | to many privates, corporals, even sergeahts with families. They soon were filied and still are But now the roofs have fallen | in, all are in need of paint, and the hillside makes a gcar on an otherwise beautiful military reser- vation, officers believe. No on2 wants to move the men out, hgw- evar, and the officers have adopted a polity of watchful waiting until the cantonments get in such con- dition, one. by one, as fo be ah- solutely uninhabitable. Then they are torn down. Two or thrae years probably will elapse before they are all gone, 'RVATIONS) | Rite In Tucson, - | body the This man is held by police of Winnipeg, Canada, who de- I elare him to be the man who ' has wandered about the United States and Canada, strangling |nearly a score of women in the |past few years, He was | booked as Tarle Nelson, 4tnternational Newsreel.) e [ Three Earth Shock: Felt at Bakersfield BAKKKSKIKLD, Cal, July 8. — Three distinet earth shocks were felt in rapid succession here and lin other points of Kern County at 4:47 o'clock yesterday after- noon. Dishes rattled, chandeliers swung back and forth and buildings shook. eee MASONS DONATE FLAG TO PUBLIC SCHOOL BENSON, Ariz, July 8.—A com- mittee from Club of this city recently present- {ed to the local board of trustees a large United States flag, which had been donated to the gram- mar school by the four bodies of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish by the Magonic Studyf “ALL THE NEWS JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, JLY ALASKA ALL THE TIME” JULY 8, 1927, New York Is to Welcome Five Imerican Fliers NEW YORK, July 8 ception rivalling that ed (o Col. Charles A. Lind bergh, awaits five American | trans-Atlantic fliers to France, Grover Whalen, of the Mayor's Reception Com mitt anncunced today Whalen said definite nouncement of the the fliers is only et action for the A re- extend Chairman an- sailing of needed to welcome., DROUKIN To LY GOLUMBIA —& Levine Announces Name of French Flier to Make Ocean -[l‘I[). P ] PARIS, July 8.—Charles A. Le vine announces that Maurice Drou. ! | hin, noted long dis [ RITCHIE HITS BACK TO U. 8., CENTRALIZATION OF GOVERNMENT Maryland L U. S. Government Be- coming Most Regulatory SELF-GOVERNMENT IS NATURAL REMEDY L’?(Till G()VCI’HII]CHL‘? Furn- ISI\(‘Q Ollly }‘lfl‘(‘('tl\”‘ illl(] WUTI(:’]')!(’ BE\.:'. o FRENCH LICK, Ind., July 8§ The United States is passing from the government of law to a of men and that often approaches tyranny | has ‘been vested in the Federal Government, Gow = Albert C.| Ritchie, of Maryland, declared in an addp before the Indiana | State Bar Association today “The Government Is no longer| tur2 and protector of 1 rights but is rapldly government power | in be: flier, has been selected to fly the {‘monoplane Columbia back to Am- ica. Levine will go as a . passeud Levine, Drouhin and | 1in will fly to Oroyden, England, sometime today where Chamber- | lin will instruct Drouhin conceri ing the plane Drouhin cannot and Levine cannot but he will carry a pocket die- tionary with which he hopes to carry on conversation. Drouhin has been planning a Paris to New York flight for a Mong x.ome. - For thres. timos “‘T has held the duration flight rec ord. He is 36 years old. Chamber+ speak English speak French REACH ENGLAND LONDON, July 8—The tran Atlantic monoplane Columbia be ing Chamberlin, Levine and Drou hin arrived hore this afternoon from Paris Levine said he will be hop-off from Lebourget ris, within a fortnight | trans-Atlantic ~flight with Drou Hin as pilot. He expects the Co lumbia to be in perfect mechanica' order by that time. Levine denied there has been any serious dispute betwecn him- self and Chamberlin but admitt-d they were practically on a busi ness basis. Levine ,will return to Par's late this afternoon in the Colum bia, and fly back to London with his wife tomorrow. ————————— Glacier Travel Hit By Order of Canadian National Pa the. ready Field, on Local taxicab men last night felt materially the effects of order. issued by the Canadian tional Steamship Lines which di rected its pursers to discontinue, at least for the present, the of taxicab tickets from Juneau | to Mendenhall Glacier. “Legal red tape” was given as the reason for the order, All last season and at the ou' wet of the present year, purs on the Canadian National steam ers sold large numbers of these tickets for the local taxicab us- sociation. Every trip anywh<re from 76 to as many as 91 pas- sengers made the Mendenhall trip. fn compliance with the new order Purser Norman McLean declined to sell any tickets on the present voyage of the Prince George and as a result there were but few who made the glacier tour from here. sale .- STENOGRAPHERS GONE FROM PARISIAN CAFES PARIS, July B8.—Stenographe:! have disappeared from Paris caf« The first few customers who dictated their correspondence while they drank their heer had their pictures published in the newspapers, Cafe proprietors have learned, however, that the busy business man of France isn't busy enough to work' while he's play- ing. The stenographers failed to earn their salt after the first few day: and the click of a typewrits no longer bothers the old school gentlemen who regard their ape- ritif hour on the sidewaik, just before dinner, as a solemn, tradi tional rite, | with this, the Government advis coming a dictdtor of them,” Gov. Ritehie, said “Today sell-government furnishes the only efficient and| effective workable basis on which| the diversificd and changing| problems in our land can ever be practically settled,” declared the spealker. Gov. Ritchie s Government has become most regulatory in the western world outside of Russia and Ttaly. He| declared inspectors and spies, of- ficial regulators, foliow the Am-| erican from the day he takes fouriehment. “Here he is told w what he may spoke, w he may | drink, what he can read or write or see on the stage. Not content| id the America t to eat,| him how the home, to hang a curtain in what meat to cook for the Christmas dinner, and two| months ago the Department of Agriculture distributed through- out the country a treatise en-! titled a ‘Pocket Bssay on ing,'” said Gov. Ritchie. The Maryland Executive K as- serted the “growing contempt for, & the law is attributable in a large! measure to this unholy zeal for more law. Those at least who knew what their rights were under the government of law/ often do not know under this| government of men, whether they have any rights or not e SHEFFIELD TALKS WITH PRESIDENT ; cutive Saysl Wants American | | Kinbassacor ‘Has : Confér 4 - ence, Discussing Situa- tion in Mexico. BULLETIN—RAPID CITY, 8. D, July 8—~James R. Shef. field today presented his re- signation as Ambassador to Mexico, to President Coolidge, RAPID CITY, S. D, July 8. Ambassador James Sheffiold made a personal report to President Coolidge yesterday on Mexican affairs. It was the first foreign situations discussion the Pres!- dent has heard at the Summer White House. Details of the report are with- held by the Executive offices. It is announced that before the conterences are completed, Shef- field will announce his futuie plans and his impression of Mexi- can problems. Sheffield has refused to dis- cuss rumors he intends to resign CnuxhtASeding l:it;l:or; 2 Shot in Cold Blood SAN FRANUISCO, July 8. While their 18-year old accomplice L el _ Ventikiault, hotographed on lier arrival in ew York from France, raced Asite Camally List Heavirestr at 6 P. M. PARIS, Jusy 8 Automobiles | take their greatest toll at six| o'clock in he evening. Most of the deaths of pedestrians in Paris streets—which average one elghteen hours—occur at that hour, | Chiappe. | It isn't wecause hundreds thousands of workers a; crowil ing the streets homeward bound, although that factor. He thinks there are some | psychological elements, and he has begun a series of tests and obser- | vations to learn the cause so that, he can look for a remedy. hid in a gloset trembling with fear, two hijackers were shot and killed in cold blood last night while they stood with their hands in fhe air in the Latin quarter in a bootlegging plant.. Joe Bra- giani told the police he and th~ Carolomagni brothers were caugh® while stealing liquor, Other observers suggest people are tired amd mnervous at the end of the day, the light is poorer and the day's accumulation | of stupefying exhaust gas deadens the sensitiveness of all, making mental reactions in emergencies much_slower, tha'l A WELL-WATCHED ROMANCE |Trip from Denmark to | aifplane flight | and | Atlantic { tonsideration | and every | hear Newspaper reporters are closely watching for signs of ro mance between John Coolidge, son of the President, and Flor ence Trumbnll, daughter of the Governor of Connecticut, now that vacation days have arrived. of the Trumbnlls at Plainville, Conn, following Florence’s grad nation from*Mount Holyoke Collece. it o) Sk John has been a house gues( NEW FLIGHT IS PROPOSED United States and Re- turn Indicated. , July 8 An Denmark to United States with one stop return is the latest trans aerial venture under COPENHAC( from the Christian Johansen, Danish air- nan, has received cable from the Danish inventor Theoger Jun Jer in New York, asking if he ready to fly to America return with one what the cost of be. i and the will e o WOMEN HELr HRESTORE 200 YEAR OLD FORT YOUNGSTOW The Abig N. Y., July S Filmore chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution will furnish the new entrance hall of the 200 years old Fort Niagara, belng The furniture will Lbe of the Colo. nial period Other patriotic organizations are expected to restore the other rooms. Congress has appropriated $15,000 for exterior re made by the War De tment co- operating with the present author ities of Fort Niagara now restored v AGREEMENT N passenger | trip pairs to he MPIRE MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS UTE NAVAL ISSUES - NOT REACHED {Crisis at Conference in ‘\ GC[I(‘V{\ S(‘F“\S Far fl'(’f'\ Being Settled. GENEVA, July 8—The ecrigls i1 the Naval Conference is far from being healed and not only tinues but becomes more acuts This is indicated by a stata ment issued to the press by J Bridgeman, First Lord of the Brit- ish Admiralty | Without naming | States, Bridgeman cos- the Uni hinted broadiy maintenance of large sized ships might be construed 7 aggressive rather than defensive. - JAPAN FIGHTS FOR INCREASE INSUBMARINES Wants Tonnage Increa-el to 70,000—Admiral Saito Explains. wa | GENEVA, July 8-—Having lost the battle for the right to bwitl an unlimited number of small s marines, Japan is again pres- her demand for a considerad’ increase in submarine tonnag:s al private conferences. The American delegation pro. posed a submarine tonnage fo: the United States and Great RBri: ain to be from 60,000 to 90,000 and Japan from 96,000 to 54,000. ° Admiral Saito wants 70,000 to- of submarines because of Ilon stretches of Japan's Island Em- pire and the necessity of def " ing the coast from invading war ships 0OV, HARTLEY'S WIFE IS HURT AUTO ACCIDENT SEATTLE, July 8.—Mrs. Ra- land H. Hartley, wife of the Gor- ernor of Washington State, w<s injured in an automobile arc- - dent, 11 miles south of S att's last night. She was brought to a hospital here A. W. Groteseld, said to be a prominent produce man from C | , has been jailed on an op: charge. In the Governor's car was h'y wife, daughter, himself and friends. The others were shak m up. Mrs, Hartley is suffering from the shock and a gash over tha right eye. g ov. Hartley sald he will bring charges against Groteseld. | | | | - eee MENDS OLD TAPESTRIES PARIS, July 8.—Since the tap® try repair shop of the Gobelin fa P tory was inaugurated in 1895 it i3 estimated that 500 tapestries of value as museum pieces hava | been saved by the expert nesdl:. workers of the shop. DAKOTA WOMAN SAVED SWANS FROM WOLVES | SYLV It President a tale hobceats N LAKE; 8. D, July 8, Coolidge cares to of western wolves and during his keeper of Sylvan Lake inn, in the Black Hills, can tell him one. Mrs president’s vacation home. Ona winter evening, when the lake was frozen over but the ice off- shore was fragile, the swans es- caped from their pen and waddled far out onto the thin fce. Mrs. Peters, alone at the hosterly, couid not coax them in. She dared not go after them lest she break through the fce, In the rocky hills encircling the lake, wolves and bobcats caught the scent of the birds. Ravenous summer says the Prefect of Police, Jt‘“ll‘v;wu(inlu Mrs. Myra K. Peters, Peters has two pet swans is a contributing|at the inn, a few miles from the 4 (from lack of food, they mav-d | in the dark toward the lake shora, | Anticipating the invation, Mra. | Peters had built a big bonfire on the bank. f “Throughout the night,” she lates, “I could hear the prolonge howl of the wolves and the f some screeching of the bobcats. | Whenever they screeched 1 yoll and beat a stick on the haat house. They came almost to th lake edge but never venturcds onto the ice. At dawn they slun& | away.” N But even daybreak did not bri the swans to shore, and for other night she kept her without sleep, guarding her | against the preying beasts’ the second day the swans bungry and shuffled ashore | their pens, jh.