The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 13, 1929, Page 1

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THE DAILY JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY, APRIL 13, i929. ASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” PRICE TEN 'CEN- IS VOL. XXXIIL, NO. 5073. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS ALLIED REPARATIONS BILL IS HANDED TO GERMANY BOY SCOUT ONE SCOUTIS DEAD: OTHERS ARE RESCUED CLIMB PROVES FATAL CALIFORNIA | EXPERTS GIVE WINS ANNUAL CERMANY SUM BOAY CLASSIC FOR WAR DEBT TR % . | q B S {Washington University De- Bill Covers Reparations for | feated by Seven Lengths L by Seven Damages During Re- in Today’s Big Race cent World War CROWDS AT WHITE HOUSE EGG ROLLING PARTY S CHARG Party Descending from Mountain Plunged Down by Rotten Rock OAKLAND, Cal, April 13—Jump- i|ing into the lead at the start and continuing to increase advantage at each beat of the oars, the Unive ty of California varsity crew, cham of the world, over- whehmingly defeated the University ] inglon varisity crew W.lay {by a margin of soven lengths in the anrual regatta. The unofficial time for the three miles was 15 minutes and 15 scconds. he TOTAL PAYMENTS ONE MEMBER IS RUNS TO BILLIONS HURLED OVER CLIFF‘ Another Hangs by Jagged| Rock for Eight Hours | Before Found LAH, Wash., April 13.— dead, another with and the Scoutmaster i ondition from cold a ter hanging over the iff eight hours, a group out mountain climbers re early today. outs with Don Hutchinson, Considerable Sacrifice Re- ported Made by Al- lied Creditors PARIS, April 13. — Reparations experts of the Allied Powers who have been studying revision of the Dawes plan have handed the Ger- man delegation the Allied bill for reparations for damages incurred in the World War which the Allied Powers expected Germany to pay. The experts, this morning, pre- sented the formal document set- ting forth the plan for annuities which it is said in French circles, (represents considerable sacrifices by the creditors. 3 e The experts kept the actual fig- Mme. Lydia Lindgren, right, Swedish singer, is filing suit jures secret and also the discussion for $250,000 in New York against Julia Claussen, left, Metro- |Tegarding them. politan prima donna, who Mme. Lindgren charges slandered | There 15 = large mpasure Of and defamed her character. She charges that reports were ,SD?.CUquon bus ihave 1s Igasisi spread that her operatic career was furthered through the un- ihr?{:e:v|mehmm] payn?gnts it duly friendly interest of a New York financier. Mme, Claussen |one hur byl gl B % 2 o < yone hundred billion gold marks or denies all the allegations saying that she has known Mme. | approximately 824.000‘?000,000. dgren Jor ten years, but has only met her three tinies and { - the orlyl cakrially: ISTUD EAD; FOUR THOUSAND plaque on the | Point, | Washington junior vars\) crew defeated California ji three lengths. n le ornia fres) {over 18 feet. THO SOVIET OWNED BOATS LOAB SEATTLE nouncement s Made by Traffic Martager of Seattle Port y of Idaho football scaled Quartzite Peak ye: £ 2,000 feet above the which rises town . Just before starting the descent last night, rotten rock gave way ing tie group down the steep de to a narrow ledge. rold Stiffenron, Patrol Leader, 5 ba e and plunged se hundred feet over the brink to his death. { wote Hutehinson grasped =0 save him and was carried over the ledge but clung to jutting.rocks where he was rescued eight hours later. Pat Hayes’s leg was broken the fall. A rescue party of 100 men was kly organized after cries of the E ors attracted attention to; their plight. Shortly after mid-| night, the rescue party reached the | top and lowered ropes and rescued cix of the Scouts. Hutchinson w: rescued after 2 o'clock this morning as his exact position could not be determined until that time on ac- count of darkness. — ., INMAN WINS Crowds thronged the lawn of the white house Easter Monday for the annual egg rolling party. Pr tests Flood House o Compuisory Physical and Medical Examination Bill S GREATEST OF EXPLORERS tendanc in the Members of Antarctic Ex-|, pedition Return to U. *!! S.—Brief Respite SAN FRANCISCO, April |Returning from the great ad: {ture with Commander Richard |Byrd, in the Antarctic, | members of the party have here aboard the liner Taki {New Zealand. The men were | former members of the crews of the Iships New York and Elea Bol- Wealthy Man Freed from ing. Wife, Minister's Daugh- | The ter, Who Drank RENO, Nevada, April 15.—Walker | Inman, wealthy New York and At- An advancs 3 ed flood of ed the his morn- MARTYR HERO OF GOLD RUSH WILL BE HONORED COLLAPSE OF Pa; NOW NEARING -. R | one Mmove to honor e nore| omIOAGO, T, Apri:13—Badh Sl - e "I (of 4,000 students of the John Mar- iber, declared Mrs. Florence M. f i ¥ ti o gents Losing Morale! Hawthorn, wio went over Lhe:’:al;spc(:?x "gf;:et“n‘:“n:;':a“';:c Owing to l)ef("rllf, t,r'ml l.n ‘sx with her husbami “'"d_who is responsible for the death Z (has since written a number of of joseph Stein, a nine-year-old and Surrenders Alaskan stories. e § | boy who returned from school com- S _The Ladies of the Golden North plaining he had been beaten by sponsored the undertaking. clder boys. Half an hour later, T |the Stein boy died. An Injury on ,the temple was found by the cor- loner’s staff as cause of death, a " {blow having been landed there. | Principal Deers said all students BEAD |N AuTu placed on their honor to tell what they know of the fight which end- 17 led fatally. i e — 3.—Two Soviet owned vessels will berth in Seattle to load for Siberian ports instead of one as previously, reported W. S. | Cahill, Traffic Manager of the ;Pnr? of Seattle. He announced he bhas completed arrangement; with the Amtorg Trading Corpor tion of New York, to handle t carrier Lake Elmford, to a e late this month to load for Kam- chatka, and the car Lake El Pueble, about the same time, to load for Vladivostok The Amtorg Trading Corpor tion is a Soviet concern which has all of the business of the Rus-| slan Government nd transacted | last year, over $1,000000 worth of Jpeur business in Seattle, supplies pur- chased by the Soviets. e > in { . April 13 = letion bronze at Inspiration t straight up from h on the White ed: Hero of the Alas- the Pack Horse.”| Anche ions and cit- sts. Chris and e )2 11 t 2,000 f Horse G Trail to r "he Martyr old Rush, Chicago Lad Dies Suddenly After Being Beaten by Older Boys | s i indi-| | viduals them were opposition. Provisions Are Stroag are provides for ination of all stu-{ c schools, compulsory exclusion of children | from certain ailment: 'y medical treatment fo | and makes it a| i or guard- | to obtain! E | twelve | The e e 0000000000 TODAY'S STOCK QUOTATIC ® 00000000000 certain diseases raisdemea fans to NOGALES, Ariz sion b April 13—A de- | d on the rebel eadquarters across the border. Rumors are being heard on all 2 Isides of the protending collapse of today | the rebel mo | the tell the are full of praise for |leader of the expedition and {'ulf’% of thrilling battles with icy elements “down ¥ The 12 men are bac for a brief res . o ° ®h NEW YORK, April | Juneau mine stock is qu {at 6%, American Smelting at 103%,| Reports of {Chesapeake Corporation 85, Cud- |btories on all batile |ahy, no sale, General Motors g5, %0 have an effec !Gold Dust 65%, National Poiver Of the rebel le :and Light 49'%, Packard Motors pessimism is manifest the rebel 1127%, Postum 68'%, U. S. Steel 189, headquarters at \. ales, Sonora. | Bethlehem Steel 100'%, American | The rebel morale suffered a tre- | that the! | t sonal Tib- | aring that “it is as medical attendance | s to prohibit it will be called in one by one and unjust to mal compulsory tice. Other ments are in divorce from Mrs. Helene Inman, soon as the ice daughter of a Komomo, Indiana,| The party is clergyman. « Harry Williams. He said The jury returned a verdict in|two ships were-tied up at Dunde- favor of Inman who charged hisidin. All united saying “Byrd is wife abandoned herself to liquor|the greatest and most beloved of Lieut. the CHICAGO, I, April 13.—Two men were found shot to death, slumped face downward in the re: Registration e night drinking with other men. Mrs. Inman contested the divorce and asked to be given the decree., She demanded $250,000 alimony. | Under the verdict she will re- ceive an annual allowance of $15,-| 000 for five years. {all explorer the World has ever known.” i P S L R e Fishermen mnear Koenigsberg, Germany, recently pulled up an ancient craft — a monoxylon, or boat hewn out of a tree trunk, Wired Radio to Make Its Bow to May, WASHINGTON, April 13.—Wired radio is to be installed in listener’s | hemes in Cleveland, in May, C. W. Hough, president of Wired Radio, Inc, of New York, has informed the federal radio commission. Mr. Hough said arrangements are being made with the telephone company in Cleveland for use of its wires. He outlined to the commission the plans of his com- pany for establishment of the new system by which specially designed receiving sets will be rented to lis- teners and the programs sent over the telephone wires by stations serving various cities. ‘The -sets also will be fitted for reception of the regular “space” radio pro- grams. ” The company has applied for three short wave channels for broadcasting the programs to the | | i | Public in \ Board Is Told); city station them on the wires that ca into the listeners’ hom planned to link thes permanent intercity t: 1es | and to utilize the short waves for| transoceanic relay of the program to foreign wired radio fans. He' says the programs can bcj transmitted over the telephone ! lines on a frequeney that will not interfere with the regular conver- | sation service. Three different types of programs can be tuned in, | he said. In addition to the audi-! ble programs, the company plans| eventually to transmit motion pic-! tures synchronized with the voice | signals. ‘ Talent has been engaged tenta-| tive program material arranged and many musical copyrights ob-{ tained, he said, which in turn will put| them | i Itied ams Ketchikan, th from T one from Skagway and two f Anchorage. ‘They were referred to the Committee on Education and Public Health, which is now studying the bill. T Pass One Bill The House pass ne measure the Terri- ission to co-op- s of 1,000 or more | in the construction of | nd hydroplane landing | n five miles of the municipal limits, Two new measures were intro- duced: one by Mr. Lomen adding the st nimal” to the list of crimes classi- | as larceny; and one by Mr.| Shattuck for an appropriation of | $155.43 to reimburse Norman L. Wimler for travelling expenses in- curred in mining investigations in the Territory in 1926. This was disallowed by the Geological Sur- which employed Mr. Wimler | udy placer mining methods in a. o A ARRESTED AT KETCHIKAN | O. Strand and 8. Peterson were arrested yesterday by Deputy U. S.| aling of a “dog or other;’ {Cupid has received g | A N Mrs. F. Louis Slade of New York is expected to be :1])-] pointed U. S. Commissioner tef the International Prison (_un-“ gress at Prague, Czecho-Slo-| vakia, by President Hoover, ta' succeed B. Ogden Chisholm. { (laterpational Newsreel) | D NEW YORK,—In against theatre that to nearly all box office prices. Dan Cu pid Ob j;zéts To Phone Service, 13— sering for | April HARTFORD, Conn., a set-back in his campaign here more marriages. The latest teleph came out with 20,000 e di changes in| » of 73 years. mendous blow last with the T any 219%, Conti- | and T company surrender of Gen. Manzo, Comman- nental motors 20%: hieson Al- kali, no sale, Goodyear 1344, In- ternational Paper A 344, Inter- national Paper B 19%, Standard Oil Company of California 80. - ee e |Coast with Gen. Bernal, his Chief of Staff, and 13 other staff offi- cers. United States 33 immigration of- [f:cials have sial reports that |Gen. Manzo ! been coprt-mar- (tlaled and removed from command Escol rebel Comman- Chief. scoba y * affirm the r Aged Statesman of Japan Passes Away; Was Active to End| |by Gen der di = | - o KYOTO, Japan, April 13.— count Shimpei Geto, former Fore- NEW ALASKA FOLDER ign Minister, died today at the age| The statesman /",1‘-“ tinued his active career to the end. | He was stricker ‘ A new folder for the 1929 season, describing and telling the wonders jof that part of Alaska and north- (ern Canada served by the Canadian | Pacific steamship lines, i5 now to {be had at the office of W Coates, local representative of th cerebral hemorrhageé April 4 on a train en- route to Tokyo. is devoted more to |A aska than to Canads The firs! Ipages give the history of the north |from before “The Trail of '98” to |the present time when thriving, girls’ actual identity being a tele- phone number. The new directory young men considerably the annoyed. |arc scattered over Interior. :ctory | They have complained to the tele- Points of interest that are to be | legislation making phone company. A man, they|seen by the traveler over the C. P. |der of the rebel troops on the West | ceat of a sedan. Oflicer Pr lice Department, saw an automo- |bile parked near the entrance of ® ia hotel. Two men stepped out. i’They saw the officer and through a vacant lot, followed by | Price, '‘who fired two shots. Then fthe men disappeared. Price re- turned to the car and found the two bodies. - GRAND JURY McGebney ¢ Marsh and ¢ She is action of was stated at 5 office. HELD FOR Birdie Deput Mrs. d by was .8 H. C jwith al ling held Grand Jury, U. 8. Mar: be~ the the | | BOSTON, April 13.—The Massa- is pushing militant |for jury service After eight years of peaceful pe- fled ® has left these |prosperous towns dot the coast and |chuseits League of Women Voters | paign. campaign for |ary president of the league. An= women liable | other leader is Mrs. George A. Slo- Of Autos Show ! the Cicero Po- Great Increase . WASHINGTON, April 13. —The number of motor ve- hicles registered in the Unit- ed States last year reached a total of 24,493124. This is according to the Bureau of Public Roads announce- ment. This is an increase of approximately 1,360,000 over the previous year. sceces 0000 - e HAS OPERATION Neil Brodie underwent an appen- dictomy at St. Ann’s Hospital this morning. He is employed by the Alaska Juneau. ‘e Massachusetts Women | Fight for Jury Duty the vote, in charge of the cam- Mrs. Blackwell is henor- comb of Worcester. The women contend that the Marshal W. H. Caswell at Ket-inumbers. Now it I cloped | contended, should chikan and charged with alleged‘that many young men had an ex-icall Helen and get May violation of the Alaska Bone Dry tensive acquaintanc 2 Law. The case has been set for!“Mays” and “Helens on April 16, 'have you, their only clue to the have been blighted. not set out to R. route are pictured and detailed | Or even the | worse, call May ana get a butcher fine photographs of scen and what {shop. Many romances, they claim, | Vancouver to the far Inte in the folder accompanied by many |titioning the league has ndopted\quuu(,y of Massachusetts juries | from | methods of old suffrage days with needs to be raised and that men |Alice Stone Blackwell, who saw |of experience and training are sels or along the Yukon River, \yceman service in getting women |dom found in the jury bex, R

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