The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 7, 1928, Page 1

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3T ® THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. XXXIL, NO. 48¢7. JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1928. PRICE TEN CENTS MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS [IGME OF POLICE CAPTAIN IS BOMBED FAST CAMPAIC IS OUTLINED BY BY GOV. SMITH Will Make Whirlwind Fin- ish During Last Seven Weeks Before Nov. 6 ALBANY Y., Sept. 7 A firm believer in a strong finish, Gov. Alfred E. Smith will de- vote seven wecks preceding elec- tion day to an extensive cam- paign for the Presidency. Although Gov. Smith will not leave Albany until a week from Sunday to open his drive in the center Corn Belt, at Omaha, on September 16, he is expected to make up for a relatively late start by a series of speeches that will keep him on the jump up to the last week before elec- | wion Twenty, 1 sly thirty or more addresses are estimated to be made by Gov. Smith before Nc- vember 6 The belief of party chieftains that Gov. Smith has a good chanc to n Nebraska's eight, Okla-| homa's ten and Colorado’s ix votes in the electoral college being made in the face of conven tion delegate line-ups which show | only one, Crlorado, as solidly being for Smith This state gave him all her 12 convention =i, but| Nebraska's 16 stood up until Nu* last for the favorite son candidate, | Gilbert Hitcheock, while Okl homa’s was carried through the balloting. Democratic leaders are of opinion all three states which are to be visited, can be placed in the Smith column, despite the that Coolidge won outyin Nebraska T i'umr.u(n four years ago. MORE WORK FOR SMITH NEW YORK, Sept. 7.—Besidc Omaha, Oklahoma City and Den ver, speeches of Gov. Smith's itin- inclnde Helena on Septem- Minneapolis on Sept. and Milwaukee on September 29 Gov. Smith will return to Ro-| chester on October 1 for the Democratic State Convention. Agriculture, water power and prohibition are expected to be Smith’s subjects to A. J. STOCK GOES OVER 5 be discussed. ! 0 developed a split which | | the | | CURTIS’ GRANDNIECE WILL WED | Florence Layton of Topeka, Kan, grandniece of Sen. Charies Her engagement to Danlel Henry @urtis, will be a September bride. Myers of Wakefield, Kan., was announced the day her distinguished Maine’s Early State Election Is Seen as BANGOR, iuaine, Sept. 7. —A host of orators. from both parties, with Senator Curtis heading the Republi- can_ spell- hinders are part.lcfl; pating in for the l(alne Novz:b‘er vote along with the rest of the Nation but party workers are | secking to make next Mon- day's contest the sign for the future. Chairman Deffield, «f the State Republican Com- mittee, informed Curti have a mn]autv as barometer State.” By NELSUN G. MORTON (A. P. staff Writer) PORTLAND, Me., Sept 7. Maine, still clinging to its cusiom of electing its state officers and members of congress nearly two months ahead of the other states is prep: 1 to give the peliticians their quadrennial opportunity to expatiate on the significa of the outcome cn the n ,klnunn accepted the republlcan vice preudenual nomination. , Political Buromot:'r] for e i ROWLAND IS LEADING IN AIR DERBY ls First on Second Day Leg cheered tor smitn, —Two Classes Held Up at New York KANSAS CITY, Sept. 7.—Fly- ing under ideal weather condi- tions, Earl Rowland, of Omaha, led into Kansas Citr the class 3 transcontinental air de Again the four first planes rived in the st order as they | did Wednesday at Columbus, Ohio Cloudy weather last night caused postponement of the start | HOOVER PLANS HIS CAMPAIGN IN EAST, SOUTH Outlines Central Themes to Be Discussed in His | Addresses | WASHINGTON, Sept. 7.— Busi- ness nomic cenditions, tariff, | water power and industrial prob- lem labor will be the cen- tral then of the four speeches Herbert €. Hoover Is to deliver in his campaigning in the East and h. Prohibition, gener- ally rded as an outstand ng isst the contest, may be treat- WASHIN ljon in November. The electicn until 9 o’clock this merning. |charge that the N |n b e | Heptembar. 10 [League is opposing Gov J ] NEW YORK, Sept. T.—Alaska| Sen. Frederick Hale, Repubii-, ARE OFF TODAY \’:_'“'""Y“‘ Bk squoRnt ot Bis j' Juneau gold mine stock is quoted |¢an, who is chairman of the Sen. KANSAS CITY, Sept. 7 !’f“l‘_';“:jd:""':"a“f}}r’"':'l:“'"“'1-‘ false today at 5%. |ate Committee on Naval Affairs, Twenty-six survivors in the class | P e iy — {1s a candidate for re-election for “A” air der left here this TR o According to the above Asso-|a third term. Three of the four morning for Fort Worth, Tex e e L SRS TN G TON, Septi clated Press dispatch to the Em-|Congressmen from this state, all the third night control point e A 3 |Greece and Bulgaria have been pire . the Alaska Juneau mine|of whom are Republicans, also route to Los A s | | Father Saves jadded to the list of nations stock tock a jump of over a point seek re-clection. Herbert I Rowland chutinues to lead the| | Son But Loses | [which intend to adhere to th since yesterday. The stock was|Holmes, a Lewiston attorney, procession |1 7 Kellogg treaty outlawing war quoted at 4% yesterday. .|Senator Hale's Democratic oppou- Own Life I while China and Albania are re ent DELAYED IN NEW_ YORK — iported unofficially to have sign ..| ‘The contest for Governor liesi NEW YORK, Sept. 7. — Low LACHUTE, Quebec, Sept. ' |fied similar intention g % hetween Willlam Tudor Gardiner|visibility and hazardous flying|| 7.—The presence of mind of | ot sixty-tour nations, thirteen . |ot Gardiner, Republican, and Ed.|conditions causcd a \l«“l\'l post- a father throwing his seven | [have not signified their inten | Another Ticket ward C. Moran, jr. of Rockland,{ponement of and || year old son from an auto. | |tions low i Democrat. Gardiner, a lawyer, i5|"'C" races in New York to mobile when he saw a collis- s > o ‘ Is Now in |a former speaker of the Maine Hm Angel r derhy. 1| Jon with a train was inevi- HAVANA, Cuba, Sept. 7.—O0ffi [ Nfltmrml Field ihouse of representatives and al i | table, saved the boy's life. | ¢ial Teports of the Cuban Govern | S | {World War veteran. Moran is | The lad was not injured ment show S} roreasy of § { KANSAS CITY, Sept. 7— | |a businessman, | N PLUT The boy's futher Homer |000,000 in Cuba's cxports lust | Frank Webb, of San Fran- || As usual in a Presidential elec- | Rugere and the driver, Col year as compared with 1926 and | cisco, Calit, and Senator ||{tion year, national party leaders G. Blais, were killed. an increase ";-‘ S quia | James A. Reed, of Missouri, | [have given considerable attention | toms collect all preced | have been sclected by the |!to the Maine campaign and speak- 1ngyyears | Executive Committee of the | |ers from other states have been 4 | didates for President dnd ||to consider the “moral effect,” of| OAKLAND. Cal, Sept. 7.—A e et | Vice-President on the Farm | |iheir balloting upon the country as efforts to poison sev- 07V I;RA ()l- ,RhAll‘,,\l PROSPERITY { Labor National Ticket. la whole. The popular designa-| ¢ officials has landegd oS | Webb announced he would |tion of Maine as a hkn'flnwu-r\‘hll:l in n'\.w :‘n;h »T': !“)‘x”e ;'T’I)JIXI]'I",UH' By GEORGE LANGELAAN [Americe e | accept. | state” persists in the face of cold | ;Illmllnj‘« i ‘Ill Lo the (A. P. Staff Writer) lg,,, i hotse and i sl (Continued on Page Seven.) |by the Japanese Vice-Consul at| PARIS, ~Sept. 7.—The Unitcljterwards ! W . oo —|8an Francisco t Higashimi | States today, compared with 35 nll'lr- far r . @ sent boxes of poisoned candy to y‘(zurs ago, is a nmew country, l"u.“ Speaking of his fv ; Kln Borls Is Usually everal louders in Tokyo, inelud-| €laudel, French ambassador io|southern Statec : ing Prince Konoye of the House|the United States told an int French origin, the ¥ L a 3 . . lof Peers and Prince Tohugawa of |Viewer of a French newspaper. sador said Agalnst Death Verdict!: . . i bmne T witn| “The Unied Saies possssas| 7T v an exivencly ni the candy have been traced to|the finest architecture in the|ing journey It 18 a ' | Higashimi world. Their skyscrgpers, which|many to see the ptatiy SOFIA, Sept. 7.—In the central|agrarian government of Stambou- P — in days gone by mdy have ap-[of France, the coun I the srison of Sofia, forty-three prison-|liiski, who was slated for execu-| peared ugly, have been perfected |have never ed to love e ilatond. & Aotk dro bin.|1iin ‘beveshl Yoacs aga .t having|TWo Ton Bell _l’ Cu(' in line and structure. The build-|whose lane pecially ning their faith to the repugnance {organized an attempt on the lives| For Provlnce clnmeg ing in tiers, gives an aspect of|Lonmisiana, they speak well I of King Boris toward capital pun-|of members of the opposition! - magnificen: is to the French cl tha ishment, for commutation of thei»| while they were holding a meet-| CROYDON, England, Sept. 7.—| ‘“America is entering on a per-fowe this fide to ¢ sentences ing in a cinema house, which phe Bourdon bell, weighing more|iod of great prosperity. Ther Further, a 1t part o ; ~ |claimed many victims. ithan two tons, for the carillon|is in that country more comfort,|country, especially that recent In all probability, King Boris| King Boris shows a great re-lof 51 bells presnted by Mr. Luc-{more dignity than elsewhere. The|tried by will before long exercise the right|juctance to sign death warrants,'ian Sharpe, of Providence, R. L, 'standard of living is superior to|tinctly cha given him under the constitution |and since no executions can take to Brown University, has been|what it is in Furope. Workers|never forget ti of Bulgaria to commute their sen-|place without his approval, helcast here. During the casting,|earn a great deal of money and|Angelus by the enormous tences to life imprisonment. thereby exercises an indirect ve'o|Miss Douty. of Philadelphia, |live well. In France we work|Louisiana At Charlest Among them is Proudkhine, for-|{on capital punishment in this/threw a coin into the molten |all our lives and.at last are able|we found a colony of mer prefect of police under tha|country. metal, * |to possess our own houses. In | cendants. SMITH WAVES GREETING TO JERSEY CROWDS CHICAGO SCENE OF ATTEMPT T0 KILL OFFICIAL ‘Woman Is Blown from Her ! Sick Bed—Baby Bur- ied Under Plaster DAMAGE IS ESTIMATED TO BE OVER $10,000 Bombing Followed Raid on Club Where Gambling Was Conducted ed in oge of his addresses. | Hoover's sion to limit to four the number of specches on the CHICAGO, 11, Sept. 7.—The | Attantic wd puzzled his par- home of Police Captain Luke Gar= |ty leaders and public alike, but ! rick was bombed this morning thos« 10 k P oman an ! a iarric ho st HI,“ Y.\,\,,"h" ),x]",m :",l,‘“h.:\ Governor Moore of New Jersey, Mrs. Alfred E. Smith, Governor Smith and Mrs. Moore as they i A "\I‘“]“ 18 111, vl comparatively w,,,,m:\ e | acknowledged greetings of crowds that gathered at Seagirt, N. J, where the democratic presidential x\ i yr‘:‘-:-vm o e, It 10t that he is adverse to eandidata reviewed national guard troops. daughter was buried under eight public speaking and facing crowds nehes of plaster as it lay in her but the answer is found In the crib ltime he devotos to preparation of N N HOOVER GREETS HIS SUCCESSOR The damage is estimated at ap- |each address and his abiding on- proximately $10,000 viction that it is better to speak f The bomb exploded in the ves- |infroquently and well than fro. tibule of a flat building Shantly. alAh Hakywall [ Neither Mrs. Garrick nor the Bt o { child were seriously injured but both were sent to the hospital | Anti-Smith | IN GA P Capt. Garrick, a few hours be- | : | fore the bomb explosion, had led Meeting Broken | a raid on the Miners' Athletie | i Club where 64 men were arrested Up by Eggs IDul(mw Decision of U)dl- for gambling. Garrick said he s 3 er Lacking 3 believed the bomb was in re- 0 R ,; ad}(j l"“k""fi md‘COUl taliation for the raid __|The second North Alabama antl e il smith meeting within three days 1gge anc-riatey was interrupted at a gathering last P (S {night and adjourned amid a bar.' 1“|1|‘" ! 'H / l"“\I<”:' i Rus |rage of eggs, oranges and other|, ant ity are xasd Shy: | missiles. A fist fight also enlivenajg o ior joueph. T. RoMipgon with ed the proceedings but four Depu- . " aping failed to a daetsic )ty Sheritts managed to restore or. (FA2 s falled lo deply e !der after escorting Henry Pri 5, |t ford 'l.‘ s and meonibetin h;zrxull‘lpmln.- for alderman, to Bis! e Gheir advicors. He pref SMOTBOM Bmt. 1 sulio meh Price so bt aiiies | % PSRRRC WK & CHSIEIRGS [has heen received from the Rus- | Price is accused of having struck |y made no personal attack on sian plane Soviet ‘o the North {Raleigh Monroe when Monroc'eiher but the point sl R lon Talt . Viedivaklah rsrokial ‘ to drive home was their Herbert Hoover deserted his presidential campaign long enough lon a flight across the edge of the | R. H. Fegues was speaking jeadership was not notable to a| fo turn over his commerce post and introduce his newly appointed | Arctic Circle to Liningrad. It is | when the first eggs were thrown|degree; that the memory of Hard- successor, William F. Whiting, to officials of the department of com- |feared lost on the wastes of and struck the wall over i could not be glorified or that| . merce. | Northern” Sileste: shoulder. He then retired |Coolidze could nct be eredited i L 1 S | Dr. John Turner, the next speak-|with great political triumph \ {er, brought forth the main at-| The Democra 1 iden Connecticut G. O. P. [tack by the Smith supporters when tial nomince said that it H ml # ” |ne asserted “Prohibitionists shoull|ing had halt the knowledge o | Nominates Walcott; vote for Hoover.” |men that Gov. Alfred B Sttt N . | i nas, he would mever have picked ¥ 1 Gov. Rnnommated' | a | Daugherty, Denby and Forbe 14 PEM . x 3 7 Anh'saloon Leag‘le and Coolidge showed lack of NEW HAVEN, Conn, Sept. 7.— | Denies Opposing Smith | sponsibility when - he retained | ; o ATLANTA, Gu, Sepl, T—Rivers| State Senator Frederic Walcott | pposing them it b e e e has been nominated for United | comeer r( told ub it Hiel : " m‘ I A Giates Senator by the Republican ¢ 1 ‘ort State Convention He is to sue- 3” * uavel b e 88 y rains i North Caro- o oq George P. McLesn e B e o . Mflowed fapm| Gov. John L Trumbull ‘was e o 1s il oA oned T ominated to succeed himaelt, by lity of amend Con ted cot | been dam. dcclamation e n. He reiter t the aged b, 1 1 wate g oo *"’f * E are t0. £oal iy e .. —- stk - Pchhcal Resolution || Pre -“"l""'" s Russian Girls Gain Adopted by Lutherans | Son to Be COLUMBUS, Ohio, Sept. 7 Right of Free Choice| | | | Railroader l [} | | | | | A regolution, referring to the SUPERIOR, Wis., Sept. 7. MOSCOW, Bept, 7 t has been | Presidential ele n declaring | John Coclidge expects to declarefl BaQEENS o for|that the “peculiar allegiance that{ | gy jnto the raflroad busi- parents to prevent rriage | the faithful Catholic owes toward| | pees making his start in the « daughter for the reason that|a foreign ereign, who al$o| | freight department of the BOUEEE of peri iin, | claims, suprer alar at New York, New Haven and In other word L who | fairs, may clash with the best in-| | praptford Railroad. He has PP the marriage of terests of the country,” has been| | yrrived here from the sum- danghter because \ ed by the | Lutheran| | mer White House. b 1ing a salar nl 1 litor Association, representing AT FOUNTAIN REPAIRED el FOR COOLIDGE RETURN Convicted Man Is S Granted New Trial ) 350 0 Whi | when Roosevelt was president. The 1d seemed to be an inspir. ation to him OLYMPIA, Wash Fd-|the 1 nta he murmur of the water soothe ward Fasick, convict n- dwelling has sprung a leak in its ed the taunt ves of President ish county, of i f ndation and now is )| Wilson during the trying war Charles Harrils, a form repair When 3 [t was led that the member of & hootl re xecutive liked to gaze out upom ranted a new N i be tinklin ¢ the fountain and the waving Supreme Court w 1 adm ly as ev f the shrubbery that sion of certain s In | error The sbothing splash of the foun-| « House collies of the e iin has helped 1 » gime frisked ! fo and n Jasin’s rim seeming to Pilot of Plane Kllled Three Injured in Crash " getting sprinkl- » Roy lest his purchased by Mrs. f, in the pool. > White House and ed, and onee r ball, ROCKFORD, 111, & 7 Repairs to E. Headley, pilot N ns of |t grounds have been less this of the Packard I o ( Harding | year during president's vacas was killed aud »n. than in previous years. This when it crashed n ed because the place had & thors near here late yesterday after-|to take on t 1 nilough renovation last summer. This noon |feet to th d ar about the ouly repairs neces. tichard Tes, of Ro yed, may | his dafly str yund been on the fountain His skull was fracture west tarrace,

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