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THE DAILY AL VOL. XXXIIL, NO. 4964. “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1928. SKA EMPIRE MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS N PRICE TEN CENTS U.S. CHAMBER WOULD ADMIT CANADIAN SHIPS T() NORTH Where George V. Caught Cold SENATE HAS DEBATE UPON IMMIGRATION Stands Taken by Hoover3 and Smith During Cam- | paign Are Brought Up | PROHIBITION DEBATE | IS HELD IN HOUSE Estimates for Enforcement Starts Fight—La Guardia Attacks Methods Used WASHINC gress had political volving tions of PON, Dec post-campaign skirmish yesterday, re- around the relative posi- Hoover and Smith on im- migration The Senate cl which W mi already 7.—~Con- its first debate over in took the the ild fix the number of on a basis of immigr admitted from in the rants ants various countrie Reed’s Position Barkley, Democrat of y, asked Senator Reed of Pennsylvania, it he would oppo Hoover's recommendation for repeal of the national origins pr vision Senator for We ., and Duke of York, are shown bare- h during Armistice Day ceremonies ices is bclxevcd His Majesty, George V Reed replied: “Hoover he.nl(d before the cenotapt himself. 1 speak for m W hitehall. Standing uncovered in rz ain for sery. have the votes mnow 'to have caused monarch's present illness. not, and I will vote attempt kill the speaks myself and he has against any provision.” Reed Is Challenged Senator King, of Utah, then challenged Reed and Senator Har. rison, of Missisgippi | joined oh- jection to King's Staférhent s that Smith opposed restrictive immigra- tion. Senator Heflin, of Alabar clared Smith favored unrestri immigration and the “whole Tam many crowd voted against the pro- 1 to Curdled Romance King Has Restful S'lm’p; Strength | Is Mrunl(uned l?m'. of resistance him well in the severe persistent LONDO George's pow are serving battle with a illness which still anxiety to his sub. countless well-wishe out the world. The issued this forenoon King had a restful his general strengti tained. King de. ted a1 is causing and through bulletin aid th sleep and main- Provision Unworkable Senator Shipstead, of Minnesota then el the provision as un- workable. H Senator Harris, Democrat of Georgi and Senator Blaine, Re- publican of Wisconsin, protest to the inflow of immigration from Mexico. Finally when the up. e ———— MUSTOEFOR | SLAYING WIFE the disciission endea! Boulder Dam Dbill came Traditional Fight i The House went through the fight which has become traditional | during consideration of the Treas- ury and Post Office Department appropriation bills. Some of the| Wets began taking potshots at Chief Justice Tafe Denies! the $13,500,000 appropriation as- PIC fCalifornia a O serting the sum ‘was not sufficient Mrs. William A. Dunlap, the Murderer former Countess Campusano, who has instituted suit against heir to hat millions and asks alimony sufficient for her to live on. Since her marriage, she informed court, | hasn't contributed enough to keep her in food and clothes, Am-muu-.nu Nowsreel) BOY SLAYER - QUESTIONED for enforcement in Detroit alone, Nominations Received Although the day was generally quiet, T ident Coolidge furnish- ed an issue by sending the names of Roy O. West of Ilin William F. Whiting of Massac! etts to be Secretaries in the | | | WASHINGTON, Dec. 7.—Chief| Just William Howard Taft, of! the United States Supreme Cour refused to stay the hanging tod at San Quentin Prison, Californi partment of Interior and Depart-|of John Joseph Malone, convicted | ment of Commerce respectively, [cf murdering his wife in Los| Chairman Nye of the Public|Angeles a year ago. Chief Ju Lands Committee, said he would tice Taft told Ernest Spagnole, ask West to appear before the Malone's counsel, that the attack committee for questioning as to|which he sought to make upon) whether he had been connected|the validity of the California law | with the Insull utility interests ef regulating trial on insanity vle:m o in murder cases had been brought| Boulder Dam Debate to the attention of the Court in! During the Boulder Dam debate |th® Hickman case and he could | ini ‘the Senate, an effort was made |80 1o .réason ;why the Court Confesse to meconcile Californig amd . Ari.|sbould ""“"‘ g0 ‘"“’__'»“" mELLer. Grilled on Several zona but without success. Senator 75 i Bratton of New Mexico declared [ CAMBRIDGE, Mass,, Mysteries ha/whe redly ta’ sppsove the BIALMISS . ANSe “Many:. Langfellde; gl Mich., it Calitornia. would . accept the|daughter to the poet, Henry Wads-| pgrROIT, {worth Longfellow, died at her hummlmhu ot ‘Detsnle here today at the age of 78 years., FRENCH COURTS SEEK TRUTH ABOUT WOMEN PARIS, Dec. 7.—The French went back to the traditions of his|cut, at Secaucus, N. J., he is said courts have been called upon to|youth and painted things -as he,to have admitted he attempted tell the world what a woman really | thinks most people see them, to abduct a boy and girl in looks like. Painters, both of the| Modernists, however, appear to!New York several months, ago. classic and modern schools, will|be the best patrons of cafes, so|Despite long questioning he re- re-cnact in public the quarrel they|when they saw the three paintingsfiterated, time after time, “Joe is have had in private and which|with the female figures, draped|the only boy I killed.” caused three large paintings to|and undraped, in the place where —————————— be taken down from the walls ol|they spent their money they told STOCK QUOTATIONS a Montparnasse cafe. | the proprictor he would have fo NEW YOR:, Dee, 7.—Alaska Umberto Bruneleschi is the art.!choose between them and the pic- ist in the case. Being a person! tures. The proprietor took them | of considerable renown, he was|down. commissioned to paint three pan-| Brunelleschi, although paid, els for the cafe which for genera-|indignant at the humiliation and tions has been the favored spot of | sued the proprietor for $8,000 on artists in the Latin quarter. the theory his reputation has been Once he was a cubist, but he 3 Dee. 7.~ Dec. and .~—The several atinued on ine Three) lan effort to learn ! Kudzinowski, confessed slayer, is | responsible for the disappearance lof several children whose fate is | puzzling to the authorities. After eph Storela, New York lad, whose body found yesterday, throat at 8%, Chrysler 129%, Cudahy 63%, REitigon-Schilds 37, Kenne-| was | cott Copper 133%, Missouri 61, | Nevada Consolidated 32%, Packard Motors 139%, Sears, Roebuck 169, Stewart. erner 109%, U. 8. Steel 15214, Dunlap | d Mu_rderer Being I Static | parai | tor Juneau mine stock is quoted today: HOOVER PARTY | 11 then met driving lessons. Shippey told him of ‘he had warned Davis to leave Selling Movement Yester- 'nmu- for speculative favorites a share were cut down or to $5 a share, Eastern cities are cooperating in | whether Peter | admittting he killed Jos- IS OFF CHILE DURING DAY Cuts Off Detailed Advices—Bolivians Are Received WASHINGTON, Dec, Static holding up detailed advices the battleship Maryland, en- route with \-Elect Hoover Antofag Chile. Officials Bolivia were to be received the Maryland at that porti before the battleship: eon-! vood will tour to Val-} to Santiago. » the Hoover par ney across the Andes to Alres, When Hooyer reach. Atlantic he will take new on the battleship - Utah return trip to the United via Rio de Janerio, .ro ALLEGED HOME WRECKER SHOT Auto Agent, Iniimaie with Customer's Wife, Kill- ed by Husband from Presi to 1ita, aboard today tinued the thence Fr om Santia jou | Bueno, t the rs the | ATLANTA, Ga., De 7 moned to.a spot near his place of business by a former customer, G. Hall head of an antomobila agene; shot to death as he sat in his automobile in the pres- ence of a number of persons W. L. Shippey, chain stor cery clerk, shot Péyis close range and then rendered to the Police after remarking “There is man who never wreck another home.” Shippey charged Davis had been | intimate with his wife. hippey is said to have bought a machine from the Davis Agency gseveral months ago and Davi Mrs. Shipper, giving her | Sum Fiavs sur one will| the Police Mr her relation Shippey The slayer told ship with Davis said | hi wife alone. e, — STOCK MARKET SHAKEN;RALLY STARTS TODAY day Carries Oyer 100 Issues Down NEW YORK, Dec. market wkieh was foundations yesterday heavy selling movement than 100 issues down from $5 to $2250 a s broke sharp- ly at the opening today and then | rallied in brisk fashion as the bull forces hastily erected supports 7~Th shaken ifs when af carried Early declines of from §3 to $15 wiped out and by midday today more than a score were lifted from § o’ Y OUR) ristmas &opm;m,w / .onw" "'Railroad President, | pital |ing of aireraft Pretty Invaders Reach Our Shore e London”; Nathalie [ Cobra, “M Austria” Marguerite Here's a bouquet of beauties chosen in Eng- land and France, Spain and Germany and Ru slu and Austria, as they arrived aboard the S. President Harding for a theatrical tour of the Lwnlt'd States. L to r., in front, Kate Reiter, “Miss Germany”; Joy Ashley, “Miss PASSES AWAY Retir-| ed, Dies in Hospital in Baltimore BALTIMOK Ma., De ward J. Pearson, recently President the New York Haven and Hartford Railroad, in -a hospital here today Mr. Pearson resigned because illhealth and had been in tha since October 23 Death due to cerebral hemorrhage When John Coolidge, son President Coolidge, entered the employ of the N. Y. N. H. & H. R.| R., Mr. Pearson became his boss.| arson’s career prior to his| dency of the New York, New n & Hartford railroad in 1917 had to do -with construction of| terminals and freight yards A familiar office picture of him was! that of a man at a window watch-| ing the yards opposite and remark- ing: “I'd hate to w tonight.” As an en walked the New H |from New York to ! | | retired New died | | of of| hos wi ven roadbed Springtield on the Atlantic seaboard, sinette T, s Spain.” Nita du Angela Joyce, “Miss E: nl,l.'md o WHERE HOOVER CROSSES ANDES View of the snow covered Andes and the trans-Andean railway over which Herbert Hoover will | tains to Argentina to begin his tou BU“NESS 'MEN ANGE JUNED oiii? ACT |Ask to Have Exception | Against Alaska in Rail and | Watet Haul Eliminated IALASKANS WANT USE OF CANADIAN SHIPS LY Change Asked to Meet Need of Better Transpor- tation Winter Season i { | i \ \ PASADENA, The Western Cal, Dec. T.~= convention of the United States Chamber of Com- merce, which adjourned late yes- terday afterncon, adopted resolu- | tions urging the National DIi- | rectors to give attention to fos- |tering the salmon industry of the Pacific Coast and Alaska particu- larly favoring an amendment of the Jones-White shipping law, M . . |Which makes it necessary that Miss Paris”; | o water haul on combined rail and J“'l‘fi“'”‘fl;.ml water shipments from the Isie Korin, “M Stales to Alaska shall be in Am- “Miss Poland”; |erican bottems, so as to give Al- “Miss France” and |aska the privilege of using for- cign shipping the same as other sections use it, and asking that’ the provisions that foreign ships cannot engage in shipping be- tween American ports be elim- inated as far as Alaska is con- cerned Alaskan representatives have contended that the usg of Canadlan vessels should be per- mitted to Alaskans in the winter season when few ships reach that Territory. Gaubert, “Miss Russia,” Rear, Smolenski, Frence, p AVl Tpomi al tions havé favored Thé 11 s amendment to the Jones-White shipping bill, and the Juneau |Chamber of Commerce contested its constitutionality in a case that was taken the United States Supreme Court This law stopped the custom of shipping goods from the Bast to Alaska via Canadian raill ys for the fr on that it made it unlawful for the haul betw the Canad- ian ports of and Prince Rupert in any except i to ' Vancouver to be carried American bottoms. > |Alaskan Sleeps with Door Unlocked ;Robbed In Hotel in Seattle SEATTLE, Dec derson, of Petérsburg, Chris San- Alaska, was to Peters y fr t the o L across the moun- American republics | valuable Yom his and He £t Mass., and the wharves and docks of the company from New York to Boston, surveying tracklaying switching facilities and mainten.! ance, When he was less than ten yea old he used to ride the wood burning engines and stand in the gangway when wood bein thrown on, racking it Pearson was a mid-we by birth, but New En heritage. His mother tive of Corinth, Maine. His father was born in Byfield, Mass. He was born in Rockville, 11, October 4 1863. He married Gerturde S Simmons at Evanston, 11, June 1899, ; * Blue Uniform May Come Back In U. S. Army WASHINGTON, Dec After more than 10 year olive drab uniforms, and enlisted men of United States Army have authorized by Secretary wear the blue uniform in vogne before the World War The use of the blue uniform is entirely cptional with the offi cers and men except be with format troops, the expen t the individuals, we offi- the was in tiers terner ider by was a na aar ing been Davis to may ——4‘ - > n ot Air Device Is Pronounced Success CAMDEN, N. J second series of test designed to make in be born I by Circus Midget Lonely; Dec. 7.-—The an a device afer the la=d fog W pro- nounced a su by officials of the Vietor Talking Machine Com-| pany at whose plant the test wi ag | midget, was found drowned carrled out with the aid of the|bathtub yetserday. Acquaintan Navy dirigible Los Angeles. helieve it is a case of suiclde duc The new device is called alto loneliness. Winner was “guper-directional horn” develop-|inches tall. ed by Lieut. R. (. Mayer, mem- ber of the Los Angeles crew, and| 8. 'T. Williams, of the Victor company. { It consists of a of units operated by vacuum tubes which permit reception by aircraft o directional gignals from the land- ing fleld, Wheh perfected the apparatus ll _expected to enable the navi- \m‘ to_discover through differ- “1 pitched signals compass I’M’ltl of the fog-enveloped field ll‘ direction. The finder is supplement to the radio beam. 1 AN FRANCISCO, Dec Washington Winner, circus - Robert S. Feagles Passes Away, Seattle series SEATTLE, Dec 7 Feagles, son of the late ert 8. Feagles, died here yestorday. He participated in the Klondike rush in gince then has been connected in mining activities in the Pacific Northwest and Alaska. He algurvived by two brothers sisters. Robert S Rev. Rob- at his home || | { Alexandria mine. | | Believed to Be Suicide His age is n0t known jg |cult for France to meet payment and six [coming | door . unk Twenty-Seven Miners — — Dead, Flooded Gall | Jugoslav School Girls o [ ery\ Must Mend Their Ways LIMA, Peru, Dec. The dn-nlll| BELGRADE, Dec The minis- toll resulting from the flooding of galle i the Cs ana 3 galley in the Campana mine|, ."or".qycation isgued a general |order forbidding Belgrade bigh near the Andean mining city Moro- i the Mir ry of Publi > oif school girls to wear elaborata AR Sap n (he|dresses and warning them not to : roscued, The | 15e cosmetics. disaster occurred when water leak.| e lll‘:ls'llll‘.ll:;dl ‘;. 3 idoge sisting of an ordinary ed through from the San Fran g with a small beret cap. School of- ticials e required to examing clothing, lips and cheeks carefully. 'RANCE WONDERS WHAT HOOVER MAY DO ABOUT TARIFF ocha timated by Works, men entombed were ? uniform con. black dress By S. F. WADER (A. P. Correspondent) (reached a deadlock on the qgestion | of appraisals of French gooffs. The action of treasury agents im France, investigating the cost of are | prepch exports by consultivg the the |hooks of the manufacturers, was, 9| it is now said by exporters, SCarcs.. the | |¢ Jess objectionable than the arbl trary values put on French ;oodn They expect no particular relief|at the custom house. - PARIS, men and awaiting Dec. 7-French business political leaders with much interest disclosure of the tariff policy the new administration in United States, in the way of reductions of duties, They are such, exporters on French products, but they hope as practically to throttle some 1 Jftening of the regula-|of the export trade. whereby values are put on| ‘The French proposed os a uol mports from France prom that the American guve The remark is often made in|ment pick out French exporters i political as well as business circles|appraise costs. The United 1 mu if present methods of apprais-| government rejected this proj French goods, and hygenic|and the matter now stands wi that hinder the export of|it did when the treasury French agricultural producis to|were withdrawn. —Meanwhile, | America continue, it will be A!fi-| proposed negotiations for a plete commercial agreement tween the two countries abeyance. some 1 due on war debts, The two countries seem to ave