The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 30, 1927, Page 1

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Collated: \ Comp le‘ar THE DAILY ALASKA EM VOL. XXXI NO. 4648 “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU ALASKA WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 30 1927. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. ' STRINGENT REGULATIONS ON HALIBUT INDUSTRY PROPOSED “PEACE BOMB” | IS HURLED IN GENEVA MEET Uloplan Scheme Is Present-’ ed at’Disarmament Conference ‘ RUSSIAN DELEGATE ' MAKES PROPOSALS| ‘Would Abolish All Land, Sea and Air Forces, to Prevent War 30. — Soviet ‘“peace bomb™ upenln}: session of the atory Disarmament Com- by formally proposing complete abolition of all land, marine and air forces. Admitting the Soviet project to o e a radiedl suggestign, Maxim Litvinoff, chief of the Soviet dele- Ration, called for a dissolution of all land, sea and air forces nml nonadmittance of their exlstnm-e in any concealed form. ! Profound Sensation Il The proposal eaused a profound | sensation at the conferemce m— day. Many delegates smiled as' if they ‘considered the scheme! more than Utopjan. | The Russian delegate submitted | other cardinal points of the pro-! Ject that all weapons, military swpplies, means for chemical War-, fare, and all other mati VM armatent e warghips and milftary llfl'.rufl to be scrapped. The system cdlling upon citizens for military train-} |« ALMOST LOSES HER DIVORCE sum ]BULGAR (}ZAR o~ & plcture player, when her sult agal) ath sl.mg!hund hy her husband, Kenneth Harlan, also nst him for divorce was nearly thrown PRINCESS OF to Be Settled Perfect Union to | | | | SOFIA, Bulgaria, Nov. | prominent Wiplomat i from Rome is authority for statement that the engagement of | Princess Giovanna, {ter of King Victor Emmanual of ifore June next. Only one point settled. man Catholic, remains Bulgaria, which sent, Two interesting points with respect to such a union. mier Mussolini of Italy is desirou requires aris’ of establishing a firm link m.h Bulgaria by a royal marriage, order to offset Jugo-Slavia's avow: ed hostility towards ltaly. Settlement Hinted The Holy Sge, on iis part, i eager to retrieve its lost tempor-' least over an are the vatican, a great al power, at continguous to Mussolini has an long “Roman question.” [ (% {sible that some arrangement ca be entered into looking to these important points. The Italian government alway |has been nervous when Kin ITALY TO WED Only One Point Remains 30—A returning the third daugh- Italy, and King Boris of Bulgaria, is expected to be announced be- to he Giovanna, who is a Ro- must be converted to the Orthodox Greek religion of | the as-4 tacit at least, of the vatican. Pre- | ambition | crities of its tax to achieve settlement of the age- therefore, is considered pos-yo president Coolidge, ciliation and _the settlement of Watched Death Slowly Creep Upon Them ILWACO, Wash., Nov. 30- ! How for four hours, three men suffered a living death | ahd then death came to them | | uitimately as the rising tide ‘ | cpept inch by inch upon them, | 18 told by three Japanese e¢n- | | | gaged in taking oysters from | the sea. The men wero work- | iI8g an oyster bed a quarter of a mile from land, at low | { tile. Their hoat got away | and the men were marooned | by the rising tide on'a stormy | | night. 3 TR 'STRIKES BACK AT STATEMENT OF PRESIDENT in|Chamber of Commerce of U. S .Defends Posi- tion on Tax Issue WASHINGTON, Nov. 30-The Chamber of Commerce of the A United States has struck back at | reduction pro-| f f s ! 8 | gram. It avoided any direct reference whosa di ;. favored by a’ majority of last flime sufe at the organization's ef fon- *rori Jdo bring aboat revenue lnw its members, as disclosed week, Breaking the silence which the 8 z 5 meiled of Crullers,” So Follies Bride Quit PRICE TEN CENTS CONDITIONS ON HALIBUT BANKS MOST SERIOUS i Protective Measures Are to Be Taken by Commission ‘WARNING NOTE IS SOUNDED, DIRECTOR ‘Regulations to Be Adopted for Various Fish- ing Regions VANCOUVER, B. C.,, Nov. 30— Although there is opportunity to revive the halibut industry, fish- ermen are advised by Dr. W. F. Thompson to be prepared to oper- ate under stringent regulations which will be made by the Inter- | national Halibut Commission. Dr. "Thompson, Director of Sci- entific Research, under authority of the International Halibut Com- mission, spoke yesterday at & conference here. He declared that statistics show conditions on the halibut banks as being serious. The total catch declined although an enormous amount nl gear was used. Extend Closed Season 2 Vancouver representatives aof the halibut industry approved a closed season. Two suggested that closure might be extended | two weeks each at the beginning: (@eason, or ftrom November and end of the March 1. Dr. Thompson declared that [ with the decline of the fish taken' 4nd increase of gear, the conclu- sion will necessarily follow that out of Los Angeles court bec.u-o she was evldenuy trying to shield him. ‘g, . approaches Belgrade on his! way westward, and it is recalled that when Boris visited Belgrade officers maintained since the ing is to be discon o g i views of Coolidge became known, Scarn ping, Etc The Russian resolution provid- | ed for the comvocation of a Dis- armament Conference not later| than March, 1928, and if the proposals are accepted, m‘rnpplng‘ is to be carried out within four| years. - i The Russian resolution read: ‘‘“Armed force is a weapon in lhe hand of great powers for op-! pressing the peoples In small col-! onial countries abolition of armaments is only real means guaranteeing se- curity and affording a guarantee against the uutbrfiak of war." Wlnte Suri Guulen Night Mail Fliers BRIDGEPORT, Conn., Nov. 30— The white gleam of phosphores. cent surf at might, extolled by many a poet, has been put to practical, use ‘as a flying guide by airmail pilots on the Boston- * New York route. One avhator, with a record of 700 trips between these terminals, says ‘that he never picked up a Deacon placed high on a hill ia Easton, but that he found a bet.! ter trail blazed by surf breaking | along the coast -line -of l.ans Island Sound. Beacons placed on hflla at some |- | points in Conmecticut now are to he moved' closer. tg thé shore 8o that their beams.mgy flash upon the surf. The lght ‘rays sinting on the surface of ‘the hreaking waves arc expected to imtensity the whiteness of the foam. Polar Ex \' BERLIN, Nov. 30—General No. bile, the Italian. airship construc- tor and aretic aviator, in a lec ‘ture on “The airship in the sery- | Ice of aretic exploration,” at the pnglottenbnr: Pntnmmc, bed how aviation had com- revolutionizéd polar _ex-| the jon, pointing out that today wp possible to fly from ploration Is : Changed By Aviation MOTHER IS UPHELD FOR SLAYING MAN Daughter—Jury Says * Justifiable™ LOS ANGELES, Nov. 30, — A | coronei’s jury returned a verdict 30.-——Roy Olmsted, describing as a ! justifiable act, Mrs. Hazel Hull's slaying, of Gor- don Waters, 29-year-old attacker ot her daughter. The verdict, returned by a jury! of eight men, found that Waters shot wound inflicted by Mrs. Hull_in defense of the honor of her young daughter and we feel her act was justifiabl The inquest was robbed of the significance of the verdict a few minutes) later “when detectives from the District Attorney’s office entered upon Mrs. Hull ordering her ap- pearance before the Grand Jury. LONDON, Nov. 30—A self-un- loading steamship has been built here. Rubber conveyor belts, four feet wide, carry over the bow portions ‘of ‘the cargo brought from the hold by scrapers work- ing through tannelways. From the. experiences of his polar flight, May 11th to. 14th, 1926, the speaker deduced that to prevent the formation of ice on the' airship it was mecessary to de- |.cover all metal parts with a thick layer of grease and, above all, -should be' rendered immune " ‘againgt ice formation. Spits | The tatal Influence of low tempet- an.m be | ¢ompigte a and served n subpoena| . ROY OLMSTED NOW CONVIGT FED. PRISON Jad. oo Kills Attacker of Her Enters McNell ]sland Peni-| tentiary—Says Crime Does Not Pay McNEIL ISLAND, Wash., Nov. acknowledged head of the #acific Northwest’s largest rum ring, has entered the Fedéral Prison here to become a leonvict in expiation if his debt ito society, having been convicted of conspiracy to violate the Na- j'‘came to his death from a gun-|tional Prohibition law. “Rum runnlnx does not pay and cannot pay,” Olmsted declar- ed as he stepped within the walls of the prison to serve a four year sentence, *“That goes for any other erim- inal enterprise,” continued Olm- sted. ‘‘You can't tread on live coals without getting your feet seorch- ed. I know that I am not com- plaining now. I violated the law. I am going to pay the penalty. It is my own fault. « ‘“Every bootlagger goes into the game for one thing—the dol- lar. A man mij law for quite a £ out of it, he will caught and punished.” FERRREEE . e SR Wartime Draft Head hwyar in Chi surely be Crowder, author and administra- tor of the wartime selective draft law and retired from the army ‘with the ramk of major gen has taken res! e in Chi and is caring for the legal puc- tice 6f a'few friends. \For many weeks he lived hu unrecognized except by a lv in- timates, residing in a downtown hotel. A .small and slender maa, his firm tread and erect w belie his almost 70 years. General Crowder found - tin { lw course while assi to ly in od > s two or three years ago fears of a Serbo-Bulgarian proachment were nearly realize Hint to Boris To prevent any such eventual ty the last time Boris returne { that it would please Italians muc better if he avoided Jugo-Slavia territory. Accordingly Boris mad: a long detour by traveling throug Austria, Hungary and Rumania. { _The recent conclusion of French-Jugo-Slav treaty of amit desire for closer relations wit | Bulgaria. Borfs is keeping his own coun sel, ing his ensnnment WILL MARRY ANYONE FOR Miner Presents Writ- ten Proposal NEW YORK, Noy. 30—A min- t violate thejer's daughter, of Frdckville, Penn- by foreign credits during the laet hile and make|sylvania, offers to marry anyone|two years, the economic condi- huge profits ‘but winless he pulls|for $9,000 in an effort to aid her tions of this country has improv debt ridden parents. In a letter to the New York|governmental banks have been American, the girl says: “I'am a girl 19 years of age; work in a factory to help my par- ents who are in debt up to thei necks. to. cloth the family. oldest of eight children, willingly marry any man for $9- .1l am th 1,| 000 to save my paremts from ruin. jo| My right name is Mary Luzuske, of Frackville, P.nnw » Murderer Taken l’n- Jd,SI__-_t_-dlned JENKIN ard Woods, who'was asrested fo: the slaying of mine foreman, W the jail by'l ed. Mrs. was powerk ...' which sawed the Tw ted. thy Ttaly" rap: | ifrom Rome to Bulgaria he was given a discreet hint by Mussolini still further has deepened Italy's In the meantime King either denying nor affirm- SUM $8,000 Daughter of Pennsylvania Father is a miner and CHIGAGO, Nov, 30—Fnoch H.|works hard but gets insufficicnt during. 1924-1926, the first years I will - Ky., Nov, 80—Leon- I Deaton, from i burn- Y Jaller, throng i President Plerson, in a formal | statement sald: “When the na- tienal revenue measure is being | considered, the Chamber of Com-! {merce of the United States main- itains that business organizations, jafter a careful study by com- petent experts and after full con- gideration and widespread refer-) endum vote, not only have the right but the responsibility to ex press their mature judgment on what appears to be a safe tax | reduction.” Detective Stories Fascinate Premier 3 1. i d h | n ) h a y s hi | { - | i | I LONDON, Nov. 30—Detective | stories did not interest Stanley | | Baldwin, England’s prime minis ter, as a boy, but he likes them 1 now. In his childhood ke read Scott, and before he was nine he had gone through the whole of “Guy Mannering,” “Ivanhoe,” “Red Gauntlet,” and “Rob Roy,” he told the English Association, of which he is president. Although he enjoyed “Pilgrim’s queen of the and millionaire. her I've Broadway. Progress” when a boy, hs always skipped ' the ' theological discus- sions. Polish Money Eases Without Foreign Aid ‘WARSAW, Poland, Nov. 30—A though Poland has not profited ed to such an extent that the able greatly to increase credit activities. The Bank of National Economy. T| established for fostering Polish business and constructions, gave their elof its existence, 20,000,000 zlotys in credits. Daring the present year the average monthly credits given by this bank are 24,000,000 zlotys. . ——— — sKVlOflA_’II ,FOR SYDNEY YDNRY,” Nov. 30—A new sky- scraper oftice bulkling, 300 feot high, and similas in plan to mod- ern American buildings, is to be erected in King street here at a cost Of more than $3,000,000. Thirteen floors will be used for offices. = A radio station will be housed ‘in 150-fo0t tower. CLEVELAND, 0., Nov. 30—The body 'of Edward Exberg, missing e | air pliot, has | found beside T 0 termination of amother December-May alliance, Helen explllne«l ‘“He always smelled of fried crullers.” - HELEN HENDERSON (International Newaree}) | 'Twas only a few “Follies,"” the wife weeks ago left the became of Aaron The beauteous Helen didn’t ¢ age. She said at the time th ever met."” But it's all over now! Helen “walked out” When pressed her for on | are if Aaron was more than twice the { i . 1 | ) ) AND AARON iNllC"! that Helen Henderson, youthful; show flat, ceased being glorified Benesch, 60-year-old Baltimore “‘the first sensible man at he was She's of back on the sudden hushand, back aged reason JUNEAU MAN CINCINNATE 0., IS WITNESS REMUS CAS Nov. 30.— | a dance group which they call “The Wrong Number Club,” +In_a general invitation to tele- nhune subscribers to attend the! club’s functions, the girls used lhe‘ slogan: “Dance with the ¢lrln' who cut you off.” On the opening night the lnnu-l bers sent a special invitation to; a4 man known as the most vigor-! ous critic of the service. The star kicker attended, wore a grin John B. Matshall, of Juneau, Al-| the whole evening, and left the aska, formerly United States Com- impression that any old number migsioner at Juneau, and also Al- would please him thereafter, aska Prohibition Director, was called today as & witness in the murder trial'ef Georse Remus. Jack terrogations had oninicr 15 to | Assistant case, sked about con- as Special Unit- y General In the Danfel ease of St. Louis. objected to m- i *the ground they; Mg on Marshall's Mus’ sanity. e itor Basier “Since’ all used Re- as a wl # in the Danfel’s Remus “must have been no b Phone Gir i -, toDmo “ iNov. 30—Tele- e organized! stringent regulations must be adopted in the immediate future. Migration of, halibut has been found to be comparatively small. Different regulations in each area will be enforced owing to the distinctly different rates of growth and habits of the halibut. Spawning Reserves It will ‘probably be necessary | that great spawning reserves be created to protect the smaller fish. Dr. Thompson said all regula- tions must be regarded as ex- (Continued on Page Seven.) . et cdsedulin, SEEKINGAID FOR FARMERS Senator Capper Sounds Warning Against **Sec- tional Disparity™ PHILADELPHIA, Penn., Nov. 30.—Sounding a warning against continuance of ‘“‘sectional dispar- ity" of the Kast and West, lest ithe whole United States become economically fmperilled, Senator Arthur Capper, of Kansas, made a plea today for Congressional alleviation of the ills of agriculs ture of the Western region. ’ The Kansas Senator said there Iwere two possible methods of re- Hef for the present condition im the West, either a lower tariff, on what the farmer buys, so he can get the venefit of lower prices on goods made in Europe, or exten- slon of Government aid, disposing of the surplus farm products abroad. Talk Aids Barbers To Study Customen ’ PARIS, Nov. 30-~Why barbers talk so much—if indeed they do-— has a new explanation. 1t ‘s all a matter of high art and analytical psychology. - 8o, at least, say defenders of the bar ! hering craft. “How, Monsieur,” remarks oume, “can I dress your hair so as to express your personality and your charaéter, it youw do mot talk? How, indeed, can 1 read yonr soul it you say nothing? your though make you talk.” Thus, in @ high-flown mixture of mental -sclence and tonsorial art, 1s the traditional talkativeness of the barber placed well up in scale of professional ac ments. s, Handiing the marcelle trimming an artistic bob, and giving an ordinary man & close shave, say the

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