The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 21, 1929, Page 1

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e e N 1 ) L B A O ) B A it THE DAILY S BAN NSNS CH NS \’OL XXXV NO 5261. “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRE Sb MANY DROWN IN TIDAL WAVE 0 ALASKA EMPIRE PRICE TEN CENTS ATLANTIC COAST HOPE REVIVED OF LOCATING EIELSON | | D0G TEAM 1S EXPECTED AT SCENE SOON Relief from Nanuk Believ- ed Nearing Location Where Eielson Is Down LAST SEEN 60 MILES FROM N. CAPE, SIBERIA Dorbrandt Reaches Nome! from Tellet—Take Air After Plane Repaired NOME, Alaska, Nov. 21.—! Modecration of the weather,| combined with the direct| statement from Olaf Swen- son, abeard the Nanuk, that the dog team sent out from the frozen-in ship should reach the vicinity of where Carl Ben Eielson was seen flying recently by natives, has revived hope that the missing pilot and his me- chanizian will be located soon. Eielson was about 60 miles from. North Cape, Siberia, when Jast seaft Pilot Frank Dorbandt ar- rived here yesterday from Teller. He said he will take off for the Nanuk as scon as, the axle on his plane has! been repaired. He will also kecp a lockout for Eielson. Swenson’s message to the Nome Nugget said the tem- perature at North Cape had, risen and if was 26 degrees| above zero and the atmos- phere was clear and it was calm. A regular blizzard has been raging in this section for over a week, especially at North Cape and Teller. —————— BODY OF 600D LIES IN STATE Last Batlasals Paid by Chic cago as Funeral Train Stops There CHICAGO, Nov. 21.—The body of Secretary of War James W. Good is this afternoon on the way home to the sceme of his political tri- umphs. For an hour this forenoon the body lay in state in a downtown railway station while former asso- ciates, goygrnment officials, mem- bers of the bar and hundreds of the public who knew him less inti- mately, gathered about his -special funeral train to do him last hon- ors. The special train is due at Cedar Rapids late afternoon where | Good will be laid to final rest. “admits only one illness. HOOVER HONORS SOLDIER 3 President Hoover laying a wreath on the tomo of the unknown commemoration of the eleventh a Prince of Wales Narrowly Escapes Collision in Air LONDON, Nov. Pringe of . Wales narrowly escaped-a cph ip. the,air while making a \practice flight in a’ moth airplane to- day. There was ‘a slight mist over the ground as the Prince circled over the air- field before landing. This ob- scured the view of another plane which was also pre- paring to come down. The Prince and the other pilot saw the danger in the nick of time and avoided ecach other by a slight’ margin. 21.—Thea . @eec0co0eeocs 000 e — e RECORDS JUMP FROM AIRPLANE; RADIO, TALKIES AN ROOSEVELT FIELD, N. Y, Nov. 21.—Henry Bussmeyer, par- achute jumper, yesterday af- ternoon broadcast for the radio and talking motion pictures during a 7,000 foot leap from a plane. Bussmeyer was equipped with Prince Serge Mdvani, husband of granted his divorce decree. Miss McCormic is reporte: Prince abrogate his title before the | | i | | [ DEAD ON ARMISTICE DAY ’Hmhhghzs Boom nnlverury of the slgnmg of the armistice. Noted ()pcra btar to Wed Prmce ! Mary Metormic, noted Upera star, United States {s said to have confirme Although admitting the coming marnlge, d to have denied that she had insisted the International Newsreel | As Sinclair Is Reloased from Jail a..er midnight this morning. He has been in jail since May 6 after conviction on charges of re- fusing to answer Senate questions and of shadowing Jurors. .o.-oouoac.o NAVAL PRBLEY | MEMBERS FROM US. ARE NAMED 1 .\President Hoover Desig- i nates Representatives at I London Conference WASHINGTON, Nov. 21.—Presi- dent Hoover has completed the American delegation to the London Naval Conference, appointing Navy Secretary Charles Francis Adams, Ambassaders Charles G. Dawes, Dwight W. Morrow and Hugh 8. Gibson, and Senators Reed, of Pennsylvania, and Robinson, of Ar- kansas. Secretary of State Stimson has already becn deslf,xmtcd as chair- man. In nu\inp severl mémbers, the |President is assured that the Amer- ican representation is equal to the British Empire, which will be rep- resented by Canadian, Australian, New Zealand, Irish and South American Union delegates in ad- dition to Great Britain's. ———— MAKE REPLY T0 ATTACKS UPON SENATE Republlcans and Demo- crats Hit Critics of Legislative Body WASHINGTON, Nov. 21.—Repub- licans and Democrats of the Sen- al in tha ate struck out at critics of the 1d marry | {Senate and more particularly those lviho blame Congress for the recent Istock collapse. Senator Harrison, of Mississippi, was one Democrat who attacked the “propaganda” disseminators for Hoover and :Senator Sackett, of Associated Press Photo soldier In Arlington cemetery In who upon her recent arriv: d the report that she wou! Poli Negri, as soon as he has been marriage takes place. two parachutes, microphone and radio aerial when he leaped. A light wire attached to the microphone, connecting it with a motion picture camera in the plane, fell more than 1,000 feet. The first chute, reaching the end of the microphone wire, opened and let the second open, then drifted safe to the landing field. The radio set picked up a de- scription of the fall from the aerial. HOWARD TO By FRANK I. WELLER Farm Editor (Associated Press Feature Service) WASHINGTON, Nov. .. |from his 600-acre farm at Clemons, Frank Rodrick, farmer living near | Yown: Sasmli Moward, first D New Albany, Ind., is 102 years old| and has never called a doctor. He jld?nt of theé American Farm Bure federation, is going into the field! for the federal farm board as an IF WOMAN REBELS of ganizauon specialist. All who know this kindly, grey- haired leader of early American| FARM BOARD KEEP CO-OPS IN LINE! Kentucky, one of the Republican regulars, defended the Senate. The |latter asserted that “today this Senate is more résponsive to the |will of the American people that ever before.” The Senator from Missippl re-" ferred to some newspaper friends of Hoover, whom he did not name,} “who dine at the White House and are taken down to the President’s| HELP |stance, which markets three times, as many hogs as any other three! eo0oceco0008 990 iThe bronze bust of Hoover - |Eon. Myron G. Herrick. Feliow Ambassadors to Europe? |General Charles G. Dawes, American Ambassador to the Court of | 1St. Jamel (right) and Semator Walter Edge, of New Jersey, who is ' America’s new ambassador to France, succeeding the late hvhrutlmul Newsreal 9000000000080 TODAY’S STOCK . QUOTATIONS e e ces s 000 NEW YORK, Nov. day at 6%, Alleghany Corporation 25, American Alcohol 27%, Bethle- hem Steel 93, Corn Products 92, General Motors 42%, Combustion 13%, International Harvester 841, Infernational Paper A 30%, Inter- national Paper B 17%, Iniernation- al Paper C 15, Kennecott 66%, Na- tional Acme 19%, Pan-American B 62, Standard Oil of California 68 Standard Oil of New Jersey 65%, Texas Corporation 56%, Bronze Bust of {Hoover Stolen, But Recovered BRUSSELS, Begium, 21, was stolen from the Louvain Library and placed undamaged at the foot Nov. nearby. The Police attributed the; incident to a bad taste joke on; the part of students and are search- ing for the perpetrators. The Lou-! {vain and Brussels officials expressed ! annoyance and will tender offiefal cf the Vanderweyer monument| 21.—Called | SHE IS INTROVERT agricultural cooperation —and has personal contacts in 47 state: {believe he will ‘help the board to | states, sells 50 per cent of them di- | rect to inland packing plants. These | plants have doubled their business in less than ten years. “On the other hand, cattle must go primarily to terminal markets. lThey cannot be trucked as easily| |as hogs, there is more shrinkage| ‘m handlinpg and more expense in| feeding, loading and unloading. i | “Consequently any system of na-, {tional cooperation must treat the |big packers at the terminals and camp to write comment unfavorable to the Senate and favorable to sume one el SENATE TAKES WASHINGTON, Nov. Oxcr riding opposition of fhe ‘“young !guard” Republicans, the tariff-tired | Senate had voted to adjourn the |special session Friday night for a week’s respite before the regular session, convinced that the tariff measure had to go to the regular; session. HAMILTON, N. Y, Nov. 21.—If a woman works intermittently at tasks during the day, rebels at dis- cipline and commands, dislikes to sell things and meets the obliga- tions of conscience promptly, she | has a tendency toward introversion. This condition and its opposite, extroversion, are recent subjects of study by psychelogists. All per-| sons are both introvert and extro- vert in some , but tend to di- vide into two ’n roversion ns interest uflm self and introver- t into self, but traits are not ne- outside sion means the two heal old wounds and avoid fresh ones among individual cooperatives | whose support is important to any scheme of national organization. made by Dr. Roswell H. Whitman,) now of the University of Chicago,| in describing some of his research at the Colgate psychological labora- tory. As president of the farm federa- Similar traits in a man, he says,| tion he appointed the committees do not diagnose introversion. But|and supervised the work of estab- if a man keeps a diary and Pl‘efflslushmg the National Livestock Pro- things intellectual to athletics, he|ducers association, which has co- probably is introvert. A woman, gperative selling agencies on 12 ter- {however would not show Introver-'minal markets. sion by either of these traits. | His first work likely will be in Dr. Whitman finds that adults cohnecuon with the board’s new tend to become more introvert than | | National Livestock Marketing asso- youth, three special introvert adult | ciation. traits being, hesitancy to make| «Direct and the way it Joans, inclination to work thlngluwmfimm program at out alone, and greater tendeacy 10| terminal i a difficult ques- . , W,.m “Jowa, for m-,m 17,500 miles last year, |the inland packers alike and give the producer equal advantages of | | price and service on both types of { market.” Two French Fliers iD. A. R. Membership At Highest Point | NEW YORK, Nov. 19—More wo- men—171,840—are now enrolled in Establish Record {the D, A, R. than at any time in 'history of the society. For Long Fll!.{hl Since the soeciety was organized, LEBORGET, France, Nov. 21— more than 350,000 women who are Capt. Dieudonne Coste and his lineal descendants of soldiers of the |companion, Maurice Jacques Bel- Amerfean revolution, have joined, lonte, landed here today, seiting a but death has reduced that num- |new record of four days and 50 ber about Malf. | minutes from Hanoi, French Intlo| At its last ing the China to Paris. This is six hours 2700 new members, the, and 20 minutes faster than Coste number r reported ab and Joseph Lebrix travelled mu&us They. were all enrolled board apologies. - J\(m]n 15 Day Lone Vigil at Body ‘()f Her Husband | ST |—Mrs. Erna Hohlbeck, aged 33, kept a lone vigil in her home for 15 days while the body of her hushand, ‘Fx ank, aged 53 years lay untouched ‘on the kitchen floor where he had len after she said hekilled him- f by shooting. 8he explained tlu vigil by saying: God told me not to pay any at- |tention to him.” The finding of the ailtopsy to be held on the body will depend ac-| 8he is held in’ tion against her. il The Hohlbecks are termed religi-| ous fanatics and keep strictly to themselves. she wrote to her sister in Chi 0 for help to bury her hus- “quietly.” e band The sister wrote to the Polh:el here about it. woman who ate and slept in the {ba sement. JOSEPH, Michigan, Nov. 21. ! / + Rate on Incomes o|To Be Lowered * |One Per Cent 21.—Alaska | Juneau mine stock is quoted to- » WASHINC TON, Nov. 21.— A total reducilon of nearly two billion dollars in taxes of the nation since 1921 will be accomplished if Con- gress adopts Secretary of Treasury Mellon’s recommen- dations. Rates on incomes in 1921 will be lowered one per cent, ® 000 00 00000 00 SENATOR EDCE IS NOMINATED | | | sador to France—Quick \ Work by the Senate WASHINGTON, Nov. |nomination of Ser Edge, of New Jer: lbnsrfldor to France, r Walter E. to be Am-! was confirmed | iby the Senate as soon as the nomi- | nation was receiv Chairman Bor: d ah, of the Foreign | Relations Committee, asked for im- mediate confirmation and the vote {was taken without discussion. Senator Edge is in Santa Fe| visiting his son in school. A telegram was immediately sent him a | i AND CONFIRMED New Jerse_v Man Is Ambas-| 21 —The 21.—The o4 william Whittle for qi ISOUTH COAST, NEWFOUNDLANB | HIT BY WAVE Fifteen Foot Tidal Rise Fal- lows Earthquake of Last Monday TWO SECTIONS KNOWN TO HAVE 27 VICTIMS ‘Coastal Shoarciivs Giving ; Aid—Communication, i Except Radio, Cut ST. JOHNS, Newfoundland, Nov. 21.—Twenty-seven per- sons weré drowned on the south coast of Newfoundland by a 15-feot tidal wave which swept up from the .earth- quake there H.st Monday. This information has been received in a wireless report reaching the Justice™ ment from the steamer Por- i The report from the steam ler said nine persons, -mtb fiwomen nd childven, lost | !their lives when everything ’aloq thc waterfront at Four bedies have been Dy |reccvered. Eighteen persons were | 'drowned ot Lord’s Cove in ,the Lamaline Burin district. {The steamer Daisy is giving ‘assistance to the stricken communities. All means of communica- ition other than by radio h been cut off from the souf 'coast. - THEN SUICIDE Girl Commlts Deed in Francisco — No Cause Known—2 Men Held SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Nov. 21, l—A girl identified by the Police as |being Grertrude Hawkins, bel to be the secretary of the head an automobile firm here, died in the Emergency Hospital early this |morning from a bullet wound In= flicted while she was attending & party in the apartment of her |neighbor, Lawrence Tulloch, pro=: gram manager of the National | Broadcasting Company. The Police said it appeared to b fa case of suicide but held Tul | | | | § | | | Whittle shared the apai {with. Tulloch. Tulloch said that while a b !game was in progress, the girl |the room for a minute and |afterward a shot was heard. iwas found in an adjoining ‘wnh a bullet in the right expected he will wlrcl They found' the, Mississippi for the commercial ut his resignation as United States Senator Gov. Morgan F. Larson, it is un-| derstood, will appoint David Baird, | Jr., of Camden, New Jersey, to| succeed Edge. ) —————— | {Five Women Killed | When Automobile Is Hit by R.R. Motorcar DALLGS, Texas, Nov. 21.—Five women were killed near here to when their automobile crashed into | a motor car on the Sante Fe Rail- | road at a grade crossing. —— In 1909 there was not a plant | dzation of milk or cream. Now Lhcr-fi ‘are 306.

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