The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 4, 1927, Page 1

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THE VOL. XXX., NO. 4549. LASKA EM “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU; ALASKA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1927. PRICE TEN CENTS MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRE — AGCO - VANZETTI DECISION IS MADE CGONFER NAVALSESSION | COMES TO END; UNSUGCESSFUL Tripartite Conference Ends at Geneva After Seven Weeks GENEVA, Aug. 4. — The Geneva Tripartite Nava) Conference has come to an unsuccessful end after near- ly seven weeks’ discussion. The delegates from the United States, Great Britain and Japan found themselves mable to ag on limitation of cruisers, destroyers and cubmarines, which was the object of the Conference. FRIENDLY CLOSING LONDON, ~Au {.—A Geneva dispateh to Reuter's British New A the Tripartite Con plenary session closed in t mgnner after a complimentary by of the British and delegations in favor of Gibson, American chief, turned thanks ference the friendlie few head words Japan Hugh who re RECONCILING VIEWS WASHINGTON, Aug. 4 Hope of the Washington Government that effiorts of further naval limi- tation, which failed at Geneva, be resumed an carly date, icated in a formal s ecrefary of State Kellos he convinced that between the United land had not been im ard the work done at Gen will make it possible to find of reconeiling views the early conclusion of a nt on limitation retary of State the British proposals an enhanced cfuiser rogram which the American Government regarded as “‘neither necessary nor wise.” B Is Kulled in Dlspute can i s id s rela ) and 1t reeme The it that nstituted pointed Over Operatlon of Mine tXPEfl COLUMBIA, onlo, ferences of opinion operation of the near Nelsonville, Aug. 4—Dif regarding the Lick Run min resulted today in the killing of J. C. Merz, Presi dent the Lick Run Company Jim MeMananway, Merz's In-law, surrendered to the count authorities declariug he killed self-defense of Mananway approved of position of the union minefs. has been operating the a non-union basis. The killing personal affair between the adherents. the Me: mine 01 is regarded as and not a flare-up workers and union > Seven Known Dead In Mme Explosion| i CLAY, identified rescue the Ky., AHL, 4.—Three bodies were found workers in No. 7 mine of West Kentucky Coal Company bringing the total dead to seven wi h nine missing as the resul of an explosion yesterday - DEPORTMENT CODE OF CZAR IS FOUND. LENINGRAD, Aug. Surveys of the official archives of the fa mous Winter Palace here resulted in the discovery of a novel “Code of Department” by Peter the Great, Intended for young men “who wished to succeed at and in everyday life,” Peter's Codc | embraces ten quaint command- ments, the violation of which ren to banishment' frem polite society This is the Decalogue: Never emulate the rustic boor by getting drunk in the daytime. In conversation with a group of others, refrain from spitting in the middle of the group; spit to one side of it. In the church, theatre or other court | States | | taretic | | | ! ceptions in | expedition, ing dered the social delinquent Hablo | | with the mouth full, STILLMAN'S BACKWOODS RBIDE i | # v Jame officiat at girl h Stillman nd Father L' before the 1 backwood on of Ami wedding Wi 3he kno Ilman had signed that their children THINKS greed he GOST BIG SUM . Byrd's Antarctic Trip E timated to Cost Quar- ter (‘f Mi ]llon. YORK Aug. 4 ening 8 Post expedition The N the of th undertakings $250,000 ic into promises to be one most stupendous history and will Commander 1 extraordinary was really a measured admitted but dec conservative against the size distance, supplies required for completion Commander Byrd {Ford will not the of the expedition i W. Va, Aug thi one, th to Edscl he sole WHEELING Col. Charles Lindbergh today at Langin Field burgh for another round West Virginia, 1 landed Pitt of re from public place avoid nose loudly, or with the finger, or drawing hand acr the mouth, or the elbows upon a tabl ing the hands the feet, or gnawing a bone, or the teeth with a knife, or scrateh the head, or crunching your victuals like pig, or speaking blowing picking the the noss or the finger Don’t walk aleng the head poked for down, or features attuned to supr ciliousness. Rather preserve as you advance an air at on cheerful, polite, urbane and firm. On being introduced to a youn;. street wi “(Continued on Page Seyen.) the | leaning | or allow- | or shuffling | § | picking | | t | Grand reared in the VOTE | TO WORKING (,IRI | i | Woman age, 5 ) ‘uN Tn | T, Smith, labor leader, has been | of no assistance in getting wom | than bor n|leave ared it \um\ backer | | She | the | conimittee | | ; | Says Lnta Chaplin | union INATIONAL AFFAIRS BEF()RE II\S'III UTE _s| CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va { 4.—Aviation, farm relief and hibition will be discussed in | light their importance na | tional issues at the Institute of { Public Affairs, to which the Uni | versity of Virginia will be host | August 8 to 20. Edward Dunford of the loon League and Senitor § Cabell Bruce of Maryland {bate prohibition, Gov. Harry {Byrd of Virginia, will | “Reorganization of State and Coun {ty Governments,” and General H {M. Lord, federal budget director, {will talk on “The Nation's Busi Iness” Treasury financing will be ussed by Ogden L. Mills, a distant secretary of thé treasury .- | ,€ommander Richard E. B r',; A. Lindbergh wm policy 'DECLARES FOR . HERBERT HUUVER { Today, ‘1 nd of Mgryiand State Right |Automobile Manufacturert | Says Coolidge Is Out and Hoover Loplm| Successor Ay pro the ® 15 Planes Are | Entered in Dole Air Derby SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 4. Fifteen planes are entered in the $35,000 James D. Dole Air Derby from the Pacific Coast to Hawail. Planas will start- at noon on August 12 Among the entries are mail monoplanes, biplanes and one triplane. Two women, of whom is an experienced pilot and navigator, are entered ot as Anti-Su Williawm will Pl speak on one rd ana ha Charle nvited peak ov of John 1 Unit aviation justice of {he court Nation Albert The Rel the Industrializ South.” ->oo WUUNDED DRY " MAN DIES IN TAGOMA HOSP, 2 of Gov as it Ritch on ation of to 9 tion of the i | i STROIT, Aug. 4.—Henry Fordg 1 in a gtatement issued (oday, en- dorsed Secretary of Commerc »w | Herbert Tioover as the lodical rn» didate for the Republican Pr dential nomination to ~,um-(-u| President Coolidge The automobile declared that President Coolidge sincere in his decision not to become a candidate for re-electio and said the people should decjdis upon an appropriate man for | successor. He is emphatically Secretary Hoover, h marri Len nge shown their manufacturer ! Away Shot While Resisting Arrest had Indian blood 1 million dollar Catholic became that had Quebe it ’3 TACOMA, Wash., Aug. 4.—Wii liam Harvey “Kinky” Thompson militant Federal Prohibition agen: died in the Tacoma Hospital last | night from a bullet shot of Wil Nerbonne, motor patrolman ago erbonne has been exoneratel Beats Time Bhiord (onie e ows s tired when Thompson pulled his gun defying arrest Thompson lived in Seattle his mother and 12-year-old both of whom were at his bed Thompson - was shot by bonne who answered a call, when the dry agent sted arrest for drunkenness and ra a distui* ance with an intoxicated womesn companion. The bullet entered his mouth and lodged at the base of the brain. and religion it for O AID D Anclenl Airplane coma a week JERSEY suffr QITY, N. J., Aug iAo SYDNEY, Aug ten years old, containing gine 15 years old, was | Captain Kingsford Smith | Ulm in making 9 mile tou of Australia ten days, five hours, This time cuts the previous record in half, Premier Lang them, said they . [equal to those of Col. Charles A o the SAREee OF 405 Bmvine SR tb ;‘lbl,!r:;lhn-'rkh in the transatlanti our ballots that count. La-| ]"j“ PTANES 1oL 1 M dn wiis” hecause its objectives| [\\T‘:wrlw‘ n\r::l. u.nlnn]\ahulf-u countr SINER, Jpd -t Imaces Invoived kevaattsling o women in industry lack | ’ pEY Satalling o and girls continually [ 1anding &t their jobs for marriage, Mrs Smith points out, it is impossible | for them to organize success: s men Smith found herself widow with a small son to sup port than a decade ago. Sh+| became a teacher, Since then she has been graduated from Fordham University. Recently she was ai- mitted to the. New Jersey bar. was appointed member * of state federation's executive after her organization Jersey school teachers' 4—An airplar. an o used b and C \< lie with sister, quare deal” in Smith the one few w industry \1_ distinction | K% of the it to serve o of a s m hum man i | wm execu- ite 2 country re: tive committee federa tion of labor. Labor got just as much before it does now,” she ave who had welcomel taken risi< shot after he liad drawn his revolver and ways pointing it in the general direc tion of the patrolman, it is stated | The officer, according to an Assc- | ciated Presg dispatel beat Thomp | son to the draw.” Self Defense Pleaded | Patrolman Nerbonne, wio TOKYO, Aug. 4.—The Womens he shot in self defense when he Suffrage League of Japan, whi'e|saw Thompson flourishing a ro not expecting that the ballot wi.l| volver, was exoneratad from blami be granted to women in the ne. A woman who identified herself future, is waging a campaign fo|as Mis their equal recognition under the|old, and said she lived at laws of the Empire. | Rifth Ave. S, Seattle, was Heretofore the eldest son ha:| Thompson. She was taken to Ta been the legal successor to e« |coma Police Headquarters and tates and women do not succee!|charged with being drunk. A chack to property. |of the address she gave here The government has under con- showed it to be fictitious. sideration a law which will perm-| Was Fighting with Woman it all the sons of a man to succeed | According to M. S. Aleshire, {to estates in fixed ratio. Tue|janitor of the Parkland School, h~ suffrage league has petitioned for | saw Thompeon and the woman an amendment of the law which|fighting in the school yard. He will permit daughters to succeed|ordered them off the grounds and to estates the same as sons. when they climbed into an auto mobile and continued their quar- rel he telephoned police. Responding to the call, Patroi |man Nerbonne drove up in his machine and started toward the Thompson car, removing his gloves as he approached. “I saw Thompson suddenly reach for a holster under his arm.” the police officer said. “T did nct know who he was, but I know he might have shot me, o I drew my revolver and fired a shot at him. The bullet strock him in the jaw. I' could see that ihe and the woman had bee) arinking.” “Poison Booze,” Says Lyle “‘Kinky' probably was overcone by the poison hooze they have at some of the roadhouses,” Lyle Thompson are un Because permanency e Japanese Daughters Ask Property Rights as S said and more Jeanette Snow, 25 wl!h a of the New -re Refuud Settlement, LOS ANGELES, Cal, Aug. 4.- Lyndol Young, former attorney for Lita Chaplin, testified she refused to sign a generous settlement re- puted to be near $1,000,000, in he divorce snit against Charlie Chap. lin and insisted on filing an amended complaint charging her en comedian husband with in proper association with prominen picture aciresses. Young is seeking to collect fees as counsel, follow: ing withdrawal of his firm from the « | Four Stitches Are Taken In Man’s Heart EVERETT, Wash., Aug. 4 Four Stitches have been taken in the heart of J. W. Wing, | aged 33 years, of San Fran- cisco, after he was taken to the hospital suffering from a supposedly self-inflicted knife wound. The stitches stopped the flow of blood and closing a gapink aperture which had | been made in his heart. His condition 1is serious. - e 0. K. EXPENSE ACCOUNTS The expense account of wit- nesses in the re¢ent jury term of the United States District Court was approved this morning by Judge T. M. Reed and other rou- tine business disposed of, which | took but a few minutes. Coust| | “Kinky" Th(;mpson Passes| adjourned shortly after convening, )& e (Continued on P:xe Eight.) ENCE AT GENEVA, | | . aska. {her 15-year-old daughter weighed FAILURE SACCO-VANZETTI FINAL JUDGES 0oV, EULLER HAS DECIDED MURDER CASE No Executive Clemency ta | Be Extended to Sacco and Vanzetti PLAIN STATEMENT MADE BY GOVERNOR Reprieve lfxpin%s on Aui- ust 10 — Men Must Die i in Chalr BOSTON, Msus, Aug. 4 Gov. Alvan T. Fuller has re- fused executive clemency 1) Nicola Sacco and Bartolom~» Vanzetti, sentented to dr th for murdering a shoe factory paymaster and guard at South Baintree in 1920. The reprieve expires Aug- ust 10. The Governor’s decisi-n concluded as follows: “As » result of my investigation I find no sufficient justificat on for executive intervention 1 believe with the jury tast these men are guilty and ho | a fair trial. I believe the + is no Jushfiahln rcason for a new trial.” The decision was an- nounced last night and fol- lowing the ~afinouncement, Gov. Fuller retired, It is understood that a guard of State officers will be placed at his summer home and also at at tis Massachusetts General Ho - nital where his son is con. valescing from an appen- dicitis operation DECISION “BRUTAL" BOSTON, Aug. 4.—The Bae Vanzetti Defense Committee char- acterized Gov. Fuller's d " unbelievable and brutal ™ A ement said the Governor and Advisory Committee must jirs themge hy reason and not san COOLIDGE NOT INTEBVE‘"-‘ RAPID CITY, S. D., Ang. 4 President Coolidge is not exper to intervene in the Sacco-Vanzet- |t decision. “New- photos of Governor Alvan Fuller (upper left), of chusetts, and the men he appointed to investigate and advise him on the Sacco-Vanzetti case. Upper right, Judge Robert Grant; lower left, Dr. Samuel W, Stratton, president off Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and (lower right), Dr. A. Lawrence Lowell, president of Hary rd. TWO MEN WHO MUST DIE Iy Ve # END NOW IN SIGHT BOSTON, Mass., Aug. 4 -—The nd of the seven years of walt ny {in the shad of the electris | chair Sacco and Vanzottl, is ow :n sight. The long struggle in the EARTH SHOCKS { tenced the men to die during tha | week of July 10. They had } | convicted of murdering a pay- master and his guard dvring a | robbery in 1920 Then the eyes of the world turned to Governor Alvan T. Fal- ler of Massachusetts when Van- ' zetti, In a long written pler, ajk ed him, not for a “pardon” bt for “justice.” Accompanying the plea were five affidavits by pere sons who affirmed that J dza ! Thayer, during the trall, had spoken outside the court room in language that showed he was pra- (judiced against the defendanty. Evidenced Reviewed The Governor assumed the ta‘k of reviewing the evidence, and also questioned the jurors whe | brought in the verdict of guilty He worked with an advisoty ow for M. LOS ANGRLWS, Cal, Aug. 4 earthquake shook Lus 1:22 o'clock this morn- | A heavy Angele ing Pasadena and Hollywood report- feeling the quake San Bernardino, 60 miles | reported a double shuke | No damage has been reported - HONORFD AFTER 700 YEARS TOKYO, Aug. 4 Although | Lord Tadah Shimazu has been @ hunting expédition to Al-{dead 700 y . the Emperor has They expect to hit the trail | promoted him to the second court for 500 miles into the Mentasta|rank of the Junior Grade in ap- Pass country. They will go to|preeiation of his devoted services Cordova where they will begin|to the country the long trip. They intend The bestowal of main in the Mentasta Pass coun-|honors is custoamry try for the winter for the m it 1s believed tion of ecaribou. They wili & of the dead hunt for brown bear. at TWO HUNTERS ARE GflMING FRANCISCO, Aug Williams and Ered Franelseo sportsmen, will | oon for Seattle on the firat V od eant SAN Fred San leave lap of Hr~|'lv r, posthumous in Japan that the are always| | J to re-| 2| where | spirits | preas nt Al (Continued on Puse Two.) FORESEES \ MEN COOKS; Wi VES WA(,E EARNERS days, while the husband weais the apron and does the domastiy tasks such as cooking, wishing the dishes, and putting out o cat the last thing at night. “Qur mannikin," says Miss Kise nedy, “proposes to a girl " has twice his vitality. He earn the equivalent of $20 a w but as she can do the same, supposes that they can ‘rub a’ somehow, and lets it go at Eye Dfoppe.r'lz:ed; : l.lghtwelghl Babies | LONDON, Aug. 4 nglish par ents are vying with each othur for the honor of having the light est weight baby One entry from Paddington was a little girl who for three weeks was fed with milk from an dropper. She has now graduated fc spoon feeding. The child is the tenth in her family From Christchurch, W land, came a mother's claim $.—The modern while rather Joan “The LONDON, “Bve is “Adam" is than man, Kennedy, the Soroptimist.”* Aug torging a hoad, annikin Miss in eve a “It. will soon be a compliment to label a man ‘effeminate,” she gays. She predicts the wife as the wage earner of the future, loafing about the house evenipgs and Sun- Zea that 14% ounces at birth and was also fed with an eye dropper, S .

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