Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” PRICE TEN CENTS ALEXANDER KNOCKED FROM BOX BY YANKS WHO WIN SECOND GAME, 9-3 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1928. VOL. XXXIL, NO. 4911. STATES SHOULD BE DRY IF THEY DESIRE TOBE S0, Smith Reiterates that States! ! Should Have Prohibition i& If They Want It ‘ ALBANY, N. Y, Oct. & Alfred E. Smith holds that States wanting Prohibition ought | to be permitted to remain dry| under t Bighteenth Amendment | % if they want to do so. The nom.| ince re-emphasized this conten tion in replying to criticism that | if he were really consistent he | his audience for two hours and would advocate the outright re- ,was warmly applauded. peal of the Prohibition law, 4 4 8 | He sharply criticized Delegaie The Governor directed his re-|f Sutherland for his faliure to dis- marks, which were made at a 'cuss any of the issues and for con- press conference in the capitol fining the campaign to the “Con. offices, at a speech before a group trofler Bill.” He also denounced of Republican women in New ihis' opponent’s attempt to dictate York made by former Senato § elaction of members of the James W. Wadsworth. 3 5 1 legislature. In referring to Senator Wads- . Grigsby contrasted the na- worth, with whom, he d, he| jticnal Democratic and Republican had been a friend for years, Gov. | platforms as they deal with the Smith stressed to the newspape.- | erritory He showed that the men that he, himself, was a Jef-| election of the Democratic ticket fersonian Democrat, and added Paul of Russia, will take three |hdre would be an endorsement of believe in-State rights. If a { days off from her job in 2 Chi- |{ne Democratic national platform wants to be dry, let it be dry.| cago store t@ marry Prince |favoring Home Rule and an an That’s the a g | Rositslav, a nephew of the bureancratic'policy, while the clec- ) martyred Czar Nicholas. Then |tion of Sutherland would consti- | both she and her husband will {tute an cndérsement of the pres- GRIGSBY HITS *° AT OPPONENT =T IN ANCHORAGE ANDTHEIRWORK Democratic Nominee Is| g | Nominee for N. Y. Gover- Warmly Received by > U X i il 1 nor -Attacks Those Who | Large Audience e 48 i || Would Inject Religion ® .0, ROOSEVELT | ASSAILSBIGOTS | 1S TAKEN OUT TOAY'S GAME | Unable to Withstand Ter- nfic Attack: Pipgras Holds Cards TODAY'S SHORT SCORE s E, 4 8 Princess Will Wed — BOX SCe AB ~|RELIEF SUPPLIES FOR PORTO RICO CARDS Douthit, High, Frisch, 2b Bottm'y, Haffey, Harper, Wilson, ¢ Maranv'l Alexander, 0 tti Mitchell, p 1b 1f rf 0 0 P Totals 31 * Batted for Mit Gov | | YANKBEES those | . § Durst, ef Koenig, Ruth, Gehrig, Meusel, & ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Oct. 5. A large and enthusiastic audience listened Wednesday night t jeorge B. Grigsby, Democra nominee for Congress, outline and review the issues of the campaign Mr. Grigsby held the attention of COLUMBUS, Ga., Oct. 5.—Brist. ling with denunciation of those he sald sought to inject fous pre- |judice in the campaign, Franklin | D. Roosevelt declared “the nation of a Catholic by parties has made the pr idential campaign one of il important in our National life.” Addressing a large rally Demoerats from Eastern Alaba |ana Western Georgia at this place, on the border between two Totals 28 $27 5 1 : — states, in behalf of the Democratic Next game National ticket, the Democrati Louis on nominee for Governor of New York inveighed against “indescribably vile stovies and threats being cir culated by unthinking people op posed to the Democratic nominecs’ For generations,” he said Americans have lived side by side in harmony—Protestants, Calholic and Jews. The measure up e now has been a ma worth, not his church membership.” Mr. Roosevelt added 0 sano peison would think for moment r:r:.~ 5 (Cardinals ' o Yanlkees X COMPCSITE SCOR: nomi 2 Game one of th ough, ¢ Cardinals BinErhs, D Yankees 12,1 Paschal, ef SCORE ;?Y ‘.m‘"!“isq 39 ]l:“::"'"::;ll‘_']':h : Cardivals 020000000 g Yankees 21400010x the vill Sun be played at Summary-~Earned run St 9, Carda sacrifice Robertson, Pipgr Wilson, Meusel, run-—Gehrig; first base on off Pipgras 4, off Alexan- off Mitehel J:2: nit by pitehed ball-—Pipgrac Miteh- ell; struck out—by Pipgras 7, by Alexander 1, by Mitehell 2; stolen bases—Frisch 2, Meusel 1; louble plays—Koenig to Lazefrl to Gehrig, Frisch to Maranville to Bottomley; hits Yan hits two | Ruth koes = By ALAN J. GOULD (A. P. Sperts Editor) NEW YORK, Oct. .- -The Yan- kees, after a wolly start, knock- ed their old Nemesis Alexander out of the box ‘oduy and thresh- €l (he Cardinals for the secend straight game in the World Series by a scure of 9 to 3. Pipgras settiod down after the wildest kind of a getaway and held the National League cham- base hits home Princess Galitzine, of Chicago, | “we daughter of the late Prince | PLANS FOR TOUR NEARLY oft Plpgrass READY ALBANY, N. ¥, Oct. 5—Ten- return to their work. {ent bureaucratic policy of Alaskan {administration. He showed that | Sutherland is not a logleal candi- Food, elothing and medical supplies are being rushed to hurrl. cane stricken Porto Rico aboard the U. S. S. Bridge. Upper picture Lower that the Republican candidates or their managers have the slightest connection with this foulness, 4, off Alexander 6, off Mitchell 2; innings pitched-—by Pipgras 9, Alexander 2%, Mitehell 5 2-3; plong. scoreless after the second inning. The young Yankee right- hander «!'lowed only four hits al- tative plans for Gov. Smith's seg-|"| ond stumping tour as prepared by the Democratic National Commit- tee are now under consideration| by the Governcr who hopes to announce his itinerary by tomor. row. HOOVER READY | FOR HIS SECOND SPEAKING TOUR fWE[\mK - found Myles der of Gill Jamieson, aged 10 |years, after an hour and three- lquarters deliberation, Fukunaga kidnapped and slew the son of Frederick W. Jamie- {son, Honolulu banker on Septem= {ber 18, The conviction death penalty Fukunaga heard without emotion. Sentence will next Monday The youth lured the hoy from school under pretext his father shows supplies being loaded b the army base in Brooklyn. picture shews .G. Wolfe, States.navy food, Inspector, putting seals on'barrels of pork that are-being rushed to the storm’ area. POLITICAL WOMEN losing pitcher—-Alexander. togetier and struck out elght ‘M‘Qp account of his strained relatfons with Herber Hoover. - Graf Zeppelin's Flight Date Is Set Back F[HE])“I(',HSI;VE.\‘, Oct. 5.~—The flight of the Ger- man dirigible Graf Zeppelin to the United States has FHUND GUILTY been reset for anytime after Sl | October 9, instead of next || Sunday. i an nts of O et o Gwenn i/ ginte, Ffi}m y i ing {ler at tirst bas fowan at sec- rndvada. of thousands of ot |ond base and Phirman at third, | '.erawd roabed. ’ dreds of thousands of dol. as i . it hundreds of the ) ' ind- Rone Bos il lars for printing and: distriputing i Gehrig’s errific home run Do, o this literature, and seconfl, we smash to the right field bleachers in the first inning, with Durst and Ruth on bases, started Alex- ander’s downfall It was com- pleted in the third inuing when the Yankece: clinched the game by scor‘ng four ruus and gaining a commanding lead before Clar- ence Mitchell, southpaw, success- sor to Alexunder, stopped the at- tack. cannot escape the fact that the Republican candidates stand to Murderer of Honollulu Lad Hears Verdict With- out Emotion b CHICKASHA, Okla, Oct. Senator Joseph T. Robinson, Dem.- ocratic Viee-PPresidential nomi- 4 speaking here last night, said i | “Hoover has established a reputa- tion as a humorist” by declaring that seven and a half years of Republican control of the Govern. ment “constitutes a period of rare courage in leadership and con- structive government.” He said he could not under- stand how such a statement could made in good faith by the Allows Seven Hits In two and one-third inning he pitched, Alexander was bombed for seven hits and Durst, Ruth, ehrig, Meuscl and Bengough jumped into rhe attack. The bases were full whon taps were sounded for the viteran who beat the Yanks twice in 1926 and stopped them the third time. The official attendance today is glven out ns being 60,714, slightly 1 than the opening Pt . {ame as were receipts amoynt- wirler, pre-[EA e 588 " nee, G. O. P. Candidate Leaves Washington Tonight for Tennessee Mountains Oct ~A jury Yutaka Fukunaga, . guilty of the mur- WASHINGTON, D. C, Oct. 5.— — Herbert Hoover has everything ready for the second of his flying campaign trips. ‘This one will be| to Elizabethtown, Tenn., where he will present his cause tomorrow to the voters of the Democratic South, although he will speak in a Republican stronghold. Accompanied by Mrs. Hoover, his son Herbert and a number of newspaper correspondents, the can- didate will leave Washington late tonight for the mountains of East- ern Tennessee. Before he returns Sunday he will have made at least three speeches in as many towns. At Rganoke, Virginia, he will be Joined by a number of Republican leaders. His first talk will be in that State at Bristol. Tpe third speech will be at Soldiers’ Home at Johnson City, Tennessee. e e——— ALASKA STEAMSHIP STEAMERS ARE TO CALL AT PETERSBURG According to the fiéw schedule of the Alaska Steamship Com- pany, all steamers are hereafter to call at Petersburg both north and south bound. FRANKFORT, Ky., Oct. Twelve prisoners, three of whom are held on Federal charges, es- aped from the Franklin County Jjail early this morning by forcing open an iron barrel door, biusrow- ing through a brick wall and then sliding down a line of blankets which had been tied together. The jail delivery was carefully timed and executed. The break occurred during a brief interval in which Warden Poppas left his office to go home, less than 50 yards away, to awaken his son. Communists Are Ousted From Carpenters Union LAKELAND, Fla, Oct. 5.— Branded as Communists, five members of the United Brether- hood of Carpenters of America, have been ousted from the or- ganization by delegates at the Twenty-Second annual conven- tion. The deposed men are members of the New York local, the charter of which has been revoked. GUARDED MACHINERY MAKES MILLS SAFER NEW YORK, Oct. 5.—Improv- ed machinery and cooperation of employees have enabled the tex- tile industry to win a reputation as the safest of major indus- tries, Jhn A. Perkins, a director of the National Association of Cotton Manufacturers, asserted in an address prepared for delivery today at the National Safety Council Congress. 5. | be ALEXANDER Veteran baseball vious hero of World Sories games, | who was taken from the mound | today in the third inning bec unable to withstand Yank’ tack. carries the the verdict GAME BY INNINGS | | FIRST INNING | CARDINALS—Douihit Ruth 1o walkcd. Friseh also tomley fouled out to HBengough |Who took the hall Dbehind the |plate. Hafey fanned. No runs, no hits, no errors. | YANKS—Durst jover Frisch who l'J” by leaping to Hafey. Ruth etraight balls. be pronounced went out, High up and ralked. Bot. Cehrig, Senator Robinson’s address here last night closed a three days’ campaign in Oklahoma. Tomor- row he enters New Mexico and pove Jmo a single got the Koenig tlied out walked on four Durst, Ruth and jGehrig scored ow Gohrig's terrifie honi run drive into the right field stands. Mensel struck out on three pitched hahs. Lazzeri was thrown ont at first by Alex- ander. Three runs, two hits no errors. Mellon Will Make Two Speeches in Incriminating Evidence Hoover’s Behalf | poyng Against Northcott WASHINGTON, D. €, Oct. 5.— . Secretary Mellon announced to- LOS ANGELES, Cal., Oct 5 walked. louble, scoring Har- By LORENA A. HICKOX" ¥ G 0 P NAMES (A, P. Staff Writer) ROBINSON CLOSES (] L] [ NEW = YORK, Oct. 6~They OKLAHOMA CAMPAIGN used to serve tea in the women's 0TTINGER FUR [section of Democratic National headquarters. But they don't any | Y v UR If they call it “high tea” in Eng- L land, this was certainly *low it te And it was by no means 5 |a daily occurrence. New York's A.!lorneyG(‘n— Usually it was sent up from eral Heads Ticket—Am- |the drugstore in the lobby of the Sometimes, when there were SYRACUSE, N. Y. Oct. 5.—At-|yisitors—for instance, the da Albert Ottinger{when John J. Raskob, the Nfl-ll'rwhluullfll candidate nor could was yesterday nominated for Gov-|tional chairman, came down from |he see how the Republican spokes- ernor by the New York Republican|the floor above and had his pie-{man expected to “hoodwink” the State Convention and Alanson B.[ture taken drinking tea with{Nation's voters, Houghton, United States Amba man of the National Committee, [ast by inserting in their platform Ottinger was the only candidaic|and Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, declaration to keep elections was injured, then strangled him [on the Republican State ticket last|chairman of the National Wo-!ijean and honest and free from to death. year that survived the Democratic|men’'s advisory committee—it The father paid $4,000 on a|victory. He was elected by a|came over from a hotel, in tall 1$10,000 ransom demand, The |plurality of 14,000 votes. He is a|glasses and accompanied by little slayer was captured by tracing a|New York lawyer and personally summer. The only food that| ", % LooS o BN T speak nominee for Lieutenant-Governor.|comes into the women's section i, =, . .ing mexae these days is Mrs. Roosevelt's it s lunch—sandwiches from the drug 5 w: i store. Women at Democratic xmuunuIIBuI‘L LEADER more. They don't even think! Dnups/ BBMB o would make speeches' The blood flecked cap which was|about tea, Somehow, the chat- mittee on October 11 and October |abandoned suitcase in a cemetery |would sound out of place in Mrs. b vl B. C. has heen | Roosevelt’s office these busy Oc- SECOND INNING 29. Under tentative arrangements aguyer, . 8 | sobart the speeches would be made over|ldentified by Mrs. W. Winslow, tober days. pe Maranville got a single into | center, Wilson going to third. | Wilson scored when Lazzeri took | Alixander’s grounder and tried to Yankee hurler who held the throw him out. Maranville went to Cardinals scoreless in today's!third. Maranville scored when ignorant and bigoted vote.” more It was not very elaborate tea. b. T |building where the “lady Demo- assador for Senator |cruts occupy the seventh tioor. -|former Governor Nellie Tayloe| He added that the Republicans dor to Great Britain was nominat-|Ross of Wyoming, first v chair-|pad reached a “climax in bom- ed for United States Senator sandwiches and cookies. few $5 Dbills of the ransom money. |popular. He is a Jew, as is He Rut that was all back in the bert H. Lehman, the Democrat headquarters don’t have time to bother with afternoon tea any % i UPUN MAHKET . ! | CARDINALS—iiarper » that| The elimination of the person- —— 2 44 | Wilson hit o radio from Washington, although |°f Pomona, as looking lke that| A ToC JCEHREIAR B8 0 Or e . the secretary said he had consid-| O™ by her missing son Nelson, |[game after the second inning. |Douthit hit into a double play, s - | Koenig to Lazzeri to Gehrig. High Raskob Declares Prices Have Run.to Limit— Selling Orders NEW YORK, Oct. 5. Wall ered delivering one or both of|28ed 12 years, for whose murder|most striking changes that has . PIPerRAS at the Riverside farm, Northcott|come about in the development of them: befare public gathiertegs, ' |0ty liote |suftragists into politicians. Wo- A store clerk, where the cap |men leaders seldom are heard was sold, is being sought by tI ’Lnlkinz about their children, their authorities. hushands, their home problems, Northeott and his mother are|or their social ‘lives around the being held in Canada pending cx- |Democratic readquarters. They (street lost ome of its best bull tradition to California. are all for business. The men jeagers when John J. Raskob, for- upstairs are regular old gossips imer Chairman of the Finance |compared with those women down|committee of the Genmeral Motors on the seventh floor. declared that stock prices had T run their demonstrated values in b ossip”’ uses Gi the present byll movement and a G ca 'Gll’l,' . readjustment of the market was 13, to Commit Suicide necessary. KANSAS CITY, Oct. 5—Dis- The statement fell like a bomb- shell midst a runaway market, |traction by what she termed in a |death note as “gossip and lies,” causing a flood of selling by the Mayer is suspected of having one hit, no errors. caused Marje Gillum, 13, to’ shoot frightened speculators. murdered. THIRD INNING The market closed yesterday A search for the body of Bas-|{ aRDINALS—Frisch up and son Terrence to jail to cure him|and kill herself. She left a nole of the “drinking habit.” The plea|saying she was discouraged and generally higher but there were sett is being eonducted at Rich- singled off Lazzeri's hand. Bot. I‘}-——-—-——-——__._g was granted. Jdid not wish to live. Waterspout Is Sighted Off Oregon Coast |popped to Robertsou. Three runs, twoe hits ,no errors. VANKS--Rober'son hit a high A G hopper to Bo'tomley, who raced Identification Mad e, tne bag aneat of the runner. e | Benzongh walked on four straight SEATTLE, Oct. -A mllfflhliba‘ls. Pipgras sacrificed, Wilson found on D. E. Mayer when ar-'to poitomley. Bengough scored rested in Oakland, has been iden-|on Durst's slashing single to cen. tified by eastern relatives as that tor Koenig sent up a high fly belonging to James Bassett Who!wpich Trisch smothered. One rum, measures were enumerated by Mr. Perkins as important factors in the textile mills’ record in elim- inating accidents. “Accidents from mechanical causes,” he said, “have reduced to dbout a third of the total mishaps in cotton mills. Men are employed daily in repairing guards, putting on new guards and inspecting machinery to see if there are any places which should be guarded. When new| | operatives are employed, they are instructed fully, in their own (Continued on Page Three.) Billfold of Murdered Man Found on Suspect; ASTORIA, Ore, Oct. 5— The first waterspout ever sighted off the Oregon coast is reported by Capt. Charles Alberts of the steamer Flo- rence Luckenbach. He | sighted the waterspout a short distance off Astoria and watched it untill it whirled beyond ' his vision into the open sea. Father Asks Jail Term To Cure “Drinking” Son SOUTH BEND, Ind., Oct. 5 Tom Deshone, Elkhart, who |cently served a term in Leave: worth prigson for a dry law viola- tion, yesterday asked Judge T. W. Slick here to send his 21.year-old 5. Guards on machinery, elimina- tion of many belts and shafts by means of individual drive motors, better lighting and greater co- operation of workers in safety a number of losses running mond Beach, where the sand is . (from $2 to $6 a share. ]beinz dragged. (Continued on rage Seven.)