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;L".- = L\ 4 1 ¢ ¥ Pges - “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. XXXIV., NO. 5240. JUNEAU, ALASKA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1929. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRLSS PRICE TEN CENTS_ M “SEES” MILES TO SET NE REC(H D STOCK MARKET CA ERA 227 14 R THEATRICAL e o Sl ! ? g 7 § o AGAIN BRE AKS ARMY FLIER'S LENS PIERCES HAZE AND SMOKE TO e o tane hows B egin, ¢ 2w s prsfo g g 0w sanvocesl A AGN ATE ls : E . P SNAP MID-W ASHINGTON SCENE FROM MID- OREGON!‘“‘" simply a gray triangle, de-| At 24,000 feet he began to wonder g CAMERA'S LATEST FEAT e = d from earth. The flier believes | what a parachute jump feels like. ° . !lm can take pictures still farthe: So of‘cr the um;‘ he went 41:;;.;@ ° World's long distance pho- ® c 0 Nv | with the present camera. d§ngcl ”.mt Pnflxn\{uum« static| o . ord—227 miles. ° S : MT.RAINIER | He came here a fow days ago to |Might prevent the chute from open- | o aken for U. S. Army ex- @ Scores of Many Leading Is- 14 ,400FT. conter with scientitic men who arc |10 0 le periment by Capt A W. - 1 h D fr . cocperating in the ‘work, which is| Half an hour later he landed, 25| ¢ gtovens. ¢|Seven Women and Five sues Crasl own Irom authc:ized by the war departmeni |miles away, in a cornficld, breaking | ¢ pn a plane above mid-Ore- Men R Verdi 10 to 50 Points pecause of valuable contributions to | three toes. Ie lost his oxysen tank | g gon he shot mid-Washing- e en Return Verdict 0 | mil nhotograpt ceto on the way down. No onc since ! 2 n v photography expected to D e ton. . A t P, t [ ) 1 has jumped from so high | £ gainst I'antages NEW YORK, Oect. 28 result Stevens talked with cx- T o Target Mt. Rainier, 11,400 o 4 el o o ) t_ perts of the Bastman Kodak com- Jo;‘: g(‘;i‘,’smzhem‘f““"ldn ¥itn Lioutiie,; ret high. . e e stock market went into| any, Folmer Graflex corporatior e g e e Planc 000 fect. ° . — ,‘0 l.]‘m, oo (’mpon'x 0 est aerial photograph, from 37851 P n.],_ s }7.9 o e & SENTENCE WILL BE ancother terrific nosedive t()-{ and Bausch & Lomb Optical com- feet B v invisib) Stevens could not sec his e PRONOUNCED Nov l : TEl A e d was invisible, | o garcet. P4 | day breaking through the low | B ;;‘ gt i 12.nep | DU Infra-red rays pierced the haze | o t"‘f:m”_ e bl a8 4 levels established at last! His special camera has a 12-106R | ¢pen gg with the Mt. Rainier pic- |'s' and smoke to reach it. & ¢ 8 focal length lens, the only one of 168 40 Ljeutenant Corkille was his ~ 2 o A Thursday’s record breaking | fihd in exisionod, sheed T TS| L Biile west coast expodltion | 5 o' s te e 5 6 e 65 0 blea Jury Recommends Clemen- session, as prices of scores’ len; pierced haze and smoke that |y, cimmen | ® e cv—Motion f; N of leallihl et crushed from sven a tolescope would not have | A DA or INew s 8 ; il opencd to eyesight. It uses, in ad- i = ———el ¢ Tonl 10 Be Made 10 to 50 poeints a share. dition to light vigrations which are Sy The net declines of active Ralf heat and haif light, but wholly ! : 4 L issues were the largest since invisible to the eye. LOS ANGELES, Cal, Oct. . They are infra-red rays, V' - | o — the selling movement started Day are Jgirled Teys, of e |28 Alexander Pantages, n | lengths so long that they ge! aged 51 years, was convicted about a week ago. Sales were' through fog better than light does o over 9,000,000 today. That is, they hit the camera platc jonacharge of assault much in the pattern in which they brought by Eunice Pantages, STOCK QUOTATIONS éfi‘c ‘“‘° fi"‘lcocf‘ fi;‘z(f"“ other side of | 17-year-old dancer, by a jury NEW YORK, Oct. 28.—Alaska | ] R . | . ool Development of photographic of seven women and five men 4 Juneau mine stock is quoted to-| & z day at 6%, Alleghany Corporation | plates even more sensitive to thesc at 9:30 o’clock last night. 30%, American Ice 37%, American sJong rays is under way, opening pos- The jury tobk the case at 4:15 * Alcohol 36, Bethlehem Steel 941, | sibilities of bringing still more dis PORTLAND o'clock last Friday afternoon. Corn Products 106%, Fox Films| tant objects into view. Krypto- m i Frank E. Franz foreman of the 1'%, General Motors 47%, Imer-{ 3 ceanine has been much used as an ¥l panel, delivered the written ver- national Harvester 90, Kennecott | aiie pnotograpner was <z mues away, and 17,000 feet up in a plane, when he took this p!cturd infra-red sensitizer. Now this T dict to Bailiff Weed ‘who presented 70%, National Acme 25, Pan-Am-|He aimed where he calcuated Mount Rainier was. Throngh mist and fog the image was obtained on the!Preparation has a little brother, & {1t to Superior Judge Charles Fricke erican B 60%, Standard Oil of |plate of a special camera. ]Neo”yunim, a youngster whose spe- N i for inspection before it was read California 68%, Standard Oil 01‘ 23 5 I} PLs cial merit is to take in a wider i before a crowd of tense spectators. New Jersey 67%, Air Reduction 152, | ( s ey band of invisible rays than the Recommends Sentence Ast.mencan90 TMand ;rpliizf E;ofcmc ROCHESTER, Y., Oct. 28.—Flying 17,000 feet Hh()\'c‘i’f:::,‘flc}";1‘;2]:;]';;“[“']‘;::‘I:‘f"" Il:,n:"z. Dh'irclr s;l));tax;(l:c. o e m:‘he jury recommended that ann- torage issouri Pacific | . 3, T K . 5 P it % 1e 227-mile photograph Captain es be sentenced to the State a | the middle of Oregon, Capt. A. W. Stevens of the Army Air sembles a small clay model made Y | stevens thinks may yield important Penitentiary for a term d (orps recently pointed a special camera toward the Sldte a child’s fineers. measurements concerning the pos- by law which is from one tb 50 | SEN BINGHAM ‘ Washington. The result was a picture taken ‘“ a range| Up to 100 miles and more this :;ble c:lr;ature{of light rays around o n years, but urged clemency be ex-' | 929 fre 2 o o | model shows many sharp details{the carth's surface. o tended. ff 227 miles, the farthest a l(‘f‘ h‘“ e e fi‘un UI contour, humps, peaks and fis-| These measurements would bear 5&5 @0 Judge TFricke™ oot November 3 Ji i B e it sure-like ridges. Beyond that dis-|{on the possibility of pointing & Q ] nex #5 the day for Capt: vens 3 g s P STR_IKES BAGK 1“';:1:;?0“&:‘\;!:; i?;dm:‘:; ;s: shoulder of the earth’s curvature. -|tance the outstanding mountains|camera at some object actually be- <R o | nonneing sten, sihoke i3 oyt 1fs, montan DEAKS The low appearance is ascribed*$o+ are*visfie Principally througli Hueir {low the horizon, and yet obtain a wd 4 géig | ¥.o New: Evial ’PJt B 455t 88 8 hi i e the great cirvature in the 227 miles, | bulk, ‘with occasional traces of vast|likeness or an inkling of it by rays S l AT e couh: | - S @ big gun 1s almed, | which, as a new record, breaks by |shadows on their slopes. which had curved. B th by calculation, for a point where | thiett slony ) ) Wb thoaght Mt Hainler, fh Washa 50 miles Stevens' own previous long ~ Far-away Rainier seems to float| Differences in density of the at- e, " hie %0, |distance picture. on a medium which is probably the |mesphere might affect the direction would preserit & miotion for a new Pl ington’s mid-section. Thi N N Y 400 foot bulk. That‘\' S e debvats This photograph shows, in the haze of intervening valleys and pla- {of light appreciably over long dis- trial. Declares Lobby Inveshga- The phnw".raph nn‘;‘le fie Il"m"’\o near fcrevroud a scene of the type teaus. Its shape is triangular, its|tances. Computations on light cur- In Custody of Sheriff tors Unfair, Used Po- |Eugene Cle au bt sway Janded | o SRR Y, aerial photogra- mass an even gray, its upthrust im- | vature possibilities will require a Pantages was remanded to the ‘ ’ ‘and dc‘velopéd SR Slates ‘l)'h'i great wooded expanses of the pressive. But so low: does it sit!good deal of time. Wia shhp e Cant. A, WiiBlevens, who toak [hé 897 mils ‘sheto custody of the Sheriff and taken lice Court Methods Hohe Siokits rcvcgle:K " line of | CAadé mountains, peaks streaked | that the closer positions of some in-| Stevens was a war photographer 5 p i B "'I : : © 2si-mile PAOLO-| i, the prisoner's room for pre- el et d o b;eu s with snow, lakes snd other topog- | tervening mountains show ouly in|His “big cxperience” had nothing EEVEe . 2D SU0 FRREY ZASD, . AP Sroe f"“""’ his plane’s position 17,000| . ation of formal booking and cell WASHINGTON, Oct.’ 38 —8triE- iulo o his eves. At ¥heir far end, | ‘oPnical features all distinct their sharper lights and shadows. |to do with photography, but is typi- | feet above Oregon's middle section. The mountains form a rougy line|5ssignment in the County Jail ing back at his accusers, United|on m; h;)n;m.wfls i ety »| Beyond this foregro 50 miles | Stevens took pictures successfully {cal of his unbounded curiosity. He |along which he “aimed.” The map below illustrates his “shol” inlwhere he will be required to re- States Senator Hiram Bingham,!qiy sman, sitting 10“ bbhm(‘l t.hc |and upward to the northward, be- also from 214 miles, One of thelwas flylng over Dayton, his home | cross section. main. o contended that the Senate Lobby| k e e ,'7,‘ RS A AR IRk AR, T R The multimillionaire vaudeville Investigating Committee is “un- f % g magnate sat with his head resting ‘ d t { P his h hi; I's tabl fair” and used “police court meth- rospector from i Traffic m on his hand at this counsel's le ods” in examining him regarding pd f | '”( Ja b) 2 while the verdict was being read. 4 his employment of an officer of | | | | Alaska, Takes i Results in Prince He grew 'noticeable pallid but the Connecticut Manufacturers As- | I8 & 2o Q. o walked to the prisoner’s room with sociation to assist him in Lariif‘UF GERM A N Y Is \ BULLETS WHIZZ'L'/e in Seattle | FIRING SUUA |Beating Up Man a little assistance from Jerry Gels- = matters. « | | | ler, one of his attorneys. b Senator Bingham asserted the ‘\ Pr‘?x::d‘:rT T:lsti:ll]usoxs:{edza. ;1‘,‘(;:“)‘«\[\1 IE,ONDON Orl Z&‘T‘Evc" L To Carry Case Up = committee was “framed against ain E A D I N ITA LY | fr&m Fran e Forind (:'.,‘('Jlbf,,”_ ;P E d‘ ;er ';:“cfr;;;z c:rsx;esu‘:)r:cm,; : Geisler said, as he and Pantages | frier the Administration” and | 1] 5 | A ¢ 5 | 5 3 3 59 S R ks Students and Girl Compan- aay in his room in & hotel witn || rominent Jews Xecuted |, Vienna dispateh to theDaily o |P2%d 8 Group of mewspaper men, 8 2 | . . | . wroate HOvs p = * the case would be appealed if a used a member of the Capitol po- e | ions Are Fired Upon |the gas jets open. A note he wrote | in Soviet Russia—To- | Mail since Prince Nicholas, e |1i% GH& VORI o0 AEOEM e e lice force as a chauffeur to drive | = i cxplained that lack of luck in pros-| t l Kll N 63 uncle of young King Michael, e Pantémes “said: 7% amt g0l t NG k him while the policeman was still Pnnce von Buelow ‘Second | —Arrest Is Made pecting coupled with illhealth and al Nillings (Now o and one of the Regency e fight 1txout e going 4 draw v ent 2 4 4 | approaching old age, caused him to |® Council, became violently e Y P PRRng EOTCERE N Bismarck’ Dies Sudden- | byt i MOSCOW, Oct, 28Two promi-|s snery T o tatfis oams wia, o] Whilsidowncast. ‘Pantages Wy il former member” Gtdhe commtttee, | 1y Grief and Cold ¢ LYNCHBURG, Va., Oct. 28—’ FEb A . nent Jewish diamond merchants, e his automobile was held up e |toical and apparently had faith leaped to his feet. amd’ insisted y | Three Washington and Lee Uni- | Kleiner and Teitz, were executed e by another in a Bucharest e 1“‘;"3’0“ would r"l‘“ a "'l" trial s A ts and college girl | today by & firing squad for smug- e street. The Prince got out e OF Make a successful appeal Bingh: ~ Senator. : A versity studen | y got ou ‘I“Tgh: ms;mu:m Wfi;onsin "v‘-(,ifogf,iiUa“&_ghf,fc’?fifirne;"g”,‘f‘ compahions narrowly escaped death | gling diamonds out of Soviet Rus- | of his car and pummelled | Pantages was started on the road Bingham replied. Sy o S RdTCE ‘rm*mo"v sgv- jpnder &, RIS GREL & Shob- ‘ { sia. the offending driver so se- e |t0 Wealth as a Greek immigrant ad- W1 il B oty e, Blaine‘onnd}'p‘ b S u’lLt L‘y-""i iz’ (zun and two revolvers when they ' t Their deaths brought to a total e verely that he was taken e |venturer in the Kiondike and = e it i Imm‘ . Sl VYO. By u' : |stopped at - a filling station las »L' RDER F Tw 63 known executions in Soviet Rus- |® unconscious to a hospital. o |amassed a fortune of $15,000,000 in 1 speech. 5 ;::fl:\ If:;.,mmp Ryt ;,m',f"x;r r’;' ‘!x‘ ght on the outskirts of the city. isia during the past four days for|e® o |the theatrical business. i o) d‘.l;x o "'l;‘olo‘:::f \\'i‘l;ar:'jlfln;kcl); i Gus Wiltshire, a student \hn {alleged offenses, most of them po-|® ® © 6 © ® ® 6 0000 00 Assault Charge o TREFGAR RETURNS NORTH c;q P 1032; e ‘v_“ 50 Soas lled by Garland Falwell, accom-| litical 2 Eunice Pringle charged Pantages FROM TRIP TO SEATTLE ];Ipe & hoa Lot O aaeial da o )L nied by Lloyd Goff, the police| ARKANSAS CITY, Kans, Oct.| The two Jews executed today were jwith a statutory offense alleged At 1t eae Ak RN vie e M |:aid, charging Falwell with felon- |23 —Three men are held and a|charged with getting diamonds out committed in the “cubby hole” of- Hardy Trefgar, Yakutat fox!eontracted a h;m’y‘y" Moy m‘ ‘L‘M TAssociATED Paedh @unctewoon , |10usly shooting & student. fourth is sought for the slaying|through the officials of the Latvian| fice of Pantages in his theatre rancher and associate of Judge W.|that hi dit 4 7 '1 d‘ GENERAL VON BUELOW, ‘ Wiltshire was pickea up by his of Carl Jones, farmer, and hls'Le;;uunn and importing illicit rubies building on August 9, when she a is condition was regard st hter Elizabeth Walworth, chased abroad. sought to have him book her danc- H. Dugdell in that business, visited |gerions. He had been weakened by girl companions who started the s epdaughter zal al » | purchased abroad. | Juneau friends today while the prief over his wife's death last Jan-| T car and raced toward town with on their farm. The Presidium of the Central Ex- \ing act. On August 16, Pantages steamer Admiral Rogers was inyary s jcus peace -overtures by the Cen- the victim while the other boys; John Phelan Jones, father of, ecutive Committee, the highest| ‘Was held for trial on the charge by port. He is returning to his home tral Powers. Just before the col-|fled across a field. icarl Jomes; Clarance Walworth, |Executive body of the Soviet Union, Jfigelxgon:trdn\;vuso:‘hmm Mu- after a business trip to Seattle and| BROKE PRIDE OF EMPEROR lapse of Germany von Buelow was| The shooter, after raining a vol- brother of the dead girl, and Neil rejected the prisoner's plea for{ PpISA, Oct. 23 — Crown Prmce-]nc‘pa 0: flm T 8 2 T ay pre- 4 other northwest cities. Prince Bernhard von Buelow, for- ,dvocated for a return to the ‘f'v upon the fleeing boys, followed Jones, brother of the slain man|clemency. Humbert, yielding to popular: ™ "3"3" e"sallz T:dfl mw“m' ] Ler Chantellor of té Germar, Eva. |ChauCRNORRIDI sy, the Conserva- |the roadster iwim. by the elrls s Rpii g offlosss who seek | . ol clamor to see and acclaim him 3¢ that time, sald: “There is suffi- ‘ rscoed G . pire, once called “a second Bis-|UiVeS and Centrists but was strong- |@ nd fired upon them. |Harry Jones, another brother. No Rapidly Dri C after his escape from an assassin|clent cause to believe the de!end- it Escaped Conuvict Inarekr the man oho. Droke ' the |13 OPPosed by the Socialists, In No- | Falwell, according to the police, icharges ‘hiave been flled against apl {) “Vr:fl ;l' i F in Brussels, reviewed the Fascisti|8nt uilty. el i v o v i ¥ e ve: 2 or (said “the girl driving that auto- the three men arrested. All de- anniversar: arade today from a 3 a Own Life vember, 1918, the former Emp ag { oes Not Nee an y pe y | Tak v z 4 ?:;f ;ii:,:ge?; thlln;)m :Ad:ns having fled to Holland, von Bue- |mobile is the best I have ever seen nied connection with the sleying {balcony of the Royal Palace. Hc[ The trial started on October 3 Fearing Discovery |Prince by his nly o be made @), iioued an appeal to the people O ‘¢ might have been different|A dispute over land willed Carl | was cheered for more than an hour |and has been hard fought. L et e amf_ ih e C;' " to recall the fugitive. The rev He gave no motive for the shoot-'Jones by his mother is seen as 4 NEW YORK, Oct. 28—An auto- by 60,000 gathered below. ! Miss Pringle testified as to the EUREKA, Cal, Oct. 28.—Gustave | 1=V I olttien] seoidlon i Lur|tion which followed made of the ('™ |possible motave for the saying. |mobile driven at 35 or more miles| The Prince congratulated the!alleged assault. ~ Pantages also Kahl, escaped conviet, who has '"ed 13 Poteal seclusion in Ll oo tomoys” premier o refugce| T ———— lan hour needs no fan to cool it,|Fascist authorities on the impos- 00k the witness stand and denied * lived near here as a respected When the ewa;:"nstartedi 1914 'on’ mself. ol i |according to Prof. Vincent C.|ing review and forces of the preb.!everytmng she had given in evi- o1 voo Communists Make Daughter of Auto {George of the University of Cali-fent regime. Idence and also hinted strongly of & citizen for more than 10 years, is| dead, a victim of his own hand.| He shot himself through fear of; being detected and returned to San Quetin Prison to finish serv- ing a term for second degree mur- Buelow issued an appeal to all] Germans to ‘“defend” the Father-! land. A few days later his brother |was killed in the fighting before| Licgc, Belgium, In. December of Residence Beclouded Von Buelow’s residence in Swit erland was beclouded in 1919 at the | trial in Zurich of 28 alleged ' German royalist revolutionists and | Attempt Reach U. S. | | i ]. Embassy in London| Star Footballer NEW YORK, Oct. Magnate Is to Wed | 28 —Bernice | fornia. -, —— At high speeds, - he says, it is doubtful if any power is absorbed|Au(’n;pt Believed by the fan because the headwind rushing through the radiators is Made on Life of |“frame-up.” Several witnesses were :held in contempt and perjury | charges perhaps developed in the |case against one or two witnesses, | ! - e ithat year von Buelow went to| n v . S CT JVU RDING der. dynamite plotters when he was ac- LONDON, Oct. 28—Communists Chrysler, daughter of Walter B. sufficient to drive it. Racing cars apanese pr,,"”er DISTRI JUDGE HAI ¢ Kalil's body was found fn a de-| Rome 45 hcj"’;;;‘ JAmbassador. & \cused in court of, being the “brains” (and London police fought for more Chrysler, automobile magnate, 15 have no fan, he points out. Japa o AND ATl(Y. FOLTA RETURN serted cabin by a possee after a|post he ha P AT ORTE. NOAOPS, restore the |than half an hour today outside w marry Edgar W. Garbisch, for-| Interested in the large variety of the conspiracy to After a hunting trip to Snet- two-day search. A]\_:szhm » TO::J(’) ;‘oeo v;” lepcrtegn'a Hohenzollern monarchy. One oryflfl’ American Embassy when sev- 'mer foothall star of Washington of fans used on automobiles, Pro-| TOKYO, Oct. 28.—An apparént- L oale Kahl, or August Baum, as he|have spen n a pro-Ger-iiho gneged arch-plotters was von |eral hundred paraders attempted and Jefferson and West Point. |fessor George made wind tunnel|ly weak-minded Japanese has been tisham Inlet and vicinity, Distriet was known here, was arrested 10 man publicity \campaign to keeDigueiouie private secretary, When|!0 Dresent a Tesolution of pro-| Miss Chrysler is 21 years Of tests of a number of types, dis- | arrested after an attempt, which!Judge Justin W. Harding and Asst. days ago after he ordered two| Italy out of the war and was covering that the fewest number the police believe, was directed Federal District Attorney George W. rabbit hunters off the ranch where charged with attempting to over- he was working, at the point of a throw the Salandra ministry. gun. l . Leaves Rome Officers investigated and found; Upon Italy’s declaring war on a cache of liquor. They arrested Austria in May 1915, von Buelow Kahl on a liquor charge and he left Rome with his staff and re- was released on bond after finger- turned to Berlin. For the next printed. He apparently feared de- two years or more his name was ‘tection through the finger prints. mentioned in connection with vari- the former Chancellor was ac |by Dr. Enderli, a Swiss Soci |deputy, of complicity in the cons| {acy, the Prince sued him for libel |and the Swiss German Council re- turned a finding in favor of the man who made the charges. Shor ly afterward it was announced von | " (Continued on Page Six) | !Square and moved towards ers' trial. The parade formed in Trafalgar | the | {was barred by a cordon of police who informed the leaders they, would not be received at the Em- bossy. od |test at the Gastonia Textile \’»’ork-lm Garbisch was selected in 1924 | ,on many all-American teams. ————— J. B. Williams, of Seattle, arrived |American Embassy when the way 'in Juneau on the steamer Admiral Rogers and is a guest at the Gas- tineau Hotel. Mr. Williams will ,800n join the corps of workers on the Alaska-Juneau property in the A free for all fight then ensued. ,[ruku district, of blades and the smallest blade angles developed the greatest effi-| ciency. A two-bladed fan developed half | as much power as one with eight blades. Blades with small angles ran more quiely than those wnh‘ large angles and flat blades were more quiet than the curved types' ‘ against the life of Premier Ham- | Folta, returned home Sunday morn- guchi. The Japanese sprang to the run- ning board of an automobile leav- ing the Premier’s residence, with a drawn dagger. The car swerved and the Japanese was thrown to ‘the ground where officers picked him up and arrested him, ing on the Helmar, U. S. Marshal's boat. They bagged a fine of ducks and geese but were disap pointed in their big tions. The water in the Whitin River was too low for theymwmmuwhn 3 try. | i