The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 5, 1930, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE VOL. XXXV., NO. 5376. LABOR GOVERNMENT SURPLUS T0 BE SLENDER womy Be Strict Economy Must Practiced by U. S. Gov- ernment — Views WASHINGTON, "April dent Hoov king for a slender s year and the { even if the most is exercised by both nd executive branches | » Government, t is based upon in- WIHITE Wil e H'OUSE a4 lections for March which President 1 “Indicates un- developments last fall but affec dividual incomes | tent many feared.” > MUSCLE SHOALS ESOLUTION IS PASSED, SENATE Measure Goes to Hou°e Where Disposition Said to BP Unceltam the fav did rable nc to the ex to the s of credence to President Allen Bu- Vihite he presented his | Houce. Shcwn wit (&) Amn 5. — The fuscle Shoals Government with uncer-| QUEENIE DIES BECAUSE WHERE HER PAL DIED . ELEPHANT. ~ SWEDISH QUEEN (DIES IN ITALY; T ILL FOR YEARS cloaked ate passed the > House yes measure | \pw vor 1ay. The | fipe mild-m of Victo her mahc chos more! Queenie Republican the measur SOUEALERIS SHOT, KILLED - crumpled to the floor heart had fe ng the old pal and oved by Adan rnum an da wi no complaint “Molhcr of the Land” Passes Away at Rome —XKing at Bedside oment lifeless. iled the thou bu fe! YORK CITY, X 5.—A bullet which centered his while he was in front of caused the death of James Collins, a reputed rack- Escape the ecades Queen and he country in Alway when alias si¢ minutes ente: before the shoot- d the drug stor de a purchase. As he strol a man walked up, pre against Cle head and e shot trouping gunman escaped. Wher ieve Clark was kill- and squealed. He had inconsolable witness in a gang slaying. chained Y g iy clephant, besic YUKON SAILS FROM SEATTLE TTLE, the sing T hv led to gi Bu ated from hin will now be bur mahouts nise, - Woman Who Wed In Coma Is “Freed” SAN FRANCISCO, April 4. Ellen. Rundle, who r suit for annulment of h \to Vernon Horner Rundle on ounds that she was in a coma tose condition at the time of he was her fr iperior Judge John J. Van April 5. Steamer sailed for Alaska ports at, < this morning with 290 engers and 237 steer’- board The following pas. are booked for Juneau: Garrity; J. F. Glenn, Mrs . Thompson, E. J. Eberhardt Kallio, Agnes Devick, Mrs. A. beck, Joe Salin, and nine ¥ N VICTORIA th ROME, March 5 zed 68 ead here. from Queen Vic years, long Sinking complications ses,’ she took worse. Ki oria an for of a ng e The Hohenzoller: sic has been demon- Rundle testified court, Prince Joa- (ml(‘ of marri His own compc . = the that the at to here ay fore- | e day a spe-| ve here with the fur 1 party nce was signed| o (}zl F low from W II(I dhg’,“};‘ ; Gusher Stopped; then Qeriizn port from w Stockholm. Breaks Out Once More.™ warship will take | OKLAHOMA CITY, April 5 OXLAHOMA CITY, April 5—The | Hu 1g aside man’s puny 1 | flow in the Mary Sudik No, 1,|cal contrivances which for o s B x-unni'xg‘h”m held the recalcitrant gushe ¢ “® Mary Sudik, No. 1, under ccnt wild the past nine days, has b hut off by use of the over- t cap. The wild flow is mated at 2,000 barrels of oil hour- nce last Wednesday, hich a Swedish the body to BRIDE AT 19 en Queen Victoria n as the 18-y n Crown Prince and Sweden, Oscar , it was a trium . dopted cour ing smashed again out of control Um hearts of its people. and resumed its wild rampage after myo pola which she g a specially constri e |began to leak first went old bride of Nor- Gustav 1 entry nd into which o for 1 upon | (Continued on Page ‘Eight) JUN!:AU ALASKA SATURDAY APRILS 1930 ARE LIKE I'H.'H\ * France Plagued in- ‘William | bound to some | “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” MEMBLR FlGHT ON CONFIRMATION OF PARKER OF ASSOCIA'I hD PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS FILM DIRECTOR, PRODUCER SUED | FOR LARGE SUM t,f Madame Schumann - Heink | i Asks for Damages to Amount of $75,000 LOS ANGELES, Cal., iMadame Schumann-Heink, noted| |singer, has filed a suit asking for! | April 5.— | Huge Brmsh R- I(N) V('m.s Atlantic Hop OPPOSITION TO CIRCUIT JUDGE FOR HIGH COURT Organized Labor Against Parker for Place on U. S. Sup. Court DECISION MADE IS $75.000 from ewe, film di- | {rector and for alleged | | failure to com ntract which | {was to have d her in four | {sin picture | | The contra i | mann-Heink was to receive ging | adame Schu-| provided she| $75000 from the| first picture, $90,000 from the sec- ond, $100,000 from the third and| $125,000 from the fourth. | The singer Carewe dis- signature i"i sk said claimed liability His (m the con t e — | THREE LOSE - LIVES WHEN Ocean [Souti Afric CAPE w\\ N BUENOS, AIRES Lt CAUSE FOR ASSAULT President of American Fed- eration Gives Reasons for Present Fight WASHINGTON, April 5.— | William Green, President of the American Federation of {Labor, today told the Senate Judiciary Sub-Committee that all organized labor is in op- position to the cenfirmation of Judge John J. Parker as Associate Justice of the Su- preme Court of the United 0 tnaian x == Zeppelin Flight HOME BURNS fly to Canada this spring, and Graf (upper right) o S to South America. | S | | I3 2 LONDON, April 5—The British |for a fleet of dirigibles linking the Three Others of Same!uime oo wil attempt 0| {ar-flung units of the empire by < ena | t tlantic A - |alr. Family Escaped but \P“. *,‘“w‘fi‘i‘,‘ff‘Iiw“;ffxfiil'fi"i;.p‘f;;r Controversy has dogged the R-100 Badly Burned P 56 BN, ‘T i) |ever since it was built, In par- iz liament recently, F. Montagu, un- der-secretary of state for air, re- trans- A!Innnc‘fused to reply to the question ‘whelhcr it would not be best to |admit frankly “that neither the 1R-100 or R-101 would be of any value for commercial purposes.” The R-100 will bggin its flight at Cardington where it is housed with its sister ship, the R-101, and destination will be St, Hubert air- port, near Montreal, where a 200~ foot mooring mast higher than any | in the United States, has been erected. Later the R-101 will head for a mooring mast that awalts it in| South Africa, while other masts have been erected in Egypt and India. Either Rt | NEW YORK CITY, N. Y., April{ Mcanwhile the Graf Zeppelin wlll‘ —Three persons lost their lives|start on its sixth wl three other members of the |trip. same family were injured in a fire| which swept the family home ik X c T : Mrs, Tessle AB- ‘fmn\ air liner crossings, will be p years, and her Reglected, for the R-100 will point ; aged 17 for Canada and the Graf for South | America. ¢ United States, focal point of Florence, Marie, aged 15. father and two other daugh-| succeeded in reaching a fire! > but were badly burned be- lmo firemen carried them down | lud lers to safety. years, its Weather conditions” will govern |the time of departure, probably late in April or in May. For the R-100, gigantic dirigible AT o N et completed last November, this will l‘v the acid test. It was built ai of $950,000, the total cost be- $2,500,000. The performance : ,l’ the R-100 may determine wheth- | AT VANGGUVER r Britain will carry out its plans | | E AR o it | GRAF TO FLY TO SOUTH AMERICA Famous Olchestra Leader Cancels Two Engage- | ments, Dance, Show VANCOUVER, B, C., April |Refused permission by the Canad-' ian immigration authorities to keep| two dance engagements here on the | ground that his orchestrs admitted to this countr; “entertainers” "and as such pk from theatre stages only, Paul | Whiteman, famous orc leader, |also cancelled his theatre engage | ment | “I have traveled all over the| world and this is the first time/ I have had any trouble,” said | Whiteman. Leudcr Squadron R. 8. 5. could | - 1 By Potato Bugs; | Yankees Blamed | BORDEAUX, France, April 5. '\" ouple of potato bugs, which the | |French assert must have stowed | |away in some American doughboy's | baggage, have reproduced their| |kind so successfully that the na- | tion today is threatened with | scourge. | The French Chamber will con- Isider financing a war on the pest, | |and the Agricultural Department | |1s preparing a nationwide campaign | to exterminate them. | The government gets its do It y from the fact that t [tato bugs can't swim, fly |carried on potatoes, but they ‘hrr-n here since about 1917 Atiantic Ocean AFR[CA b a | s ; y ; | | 7 | The German dirigible, Grat Zeppelin, will take off at Friedrichs. | hafen in May on its first South American flight with a return by the way of Lakehurst, N. J. have S ‘ s SR neis e s e o 2lHe Fills Their 1o —s i D o TODAY'S STOCK Pipes; Workmen Hoover and Part e '8 b . y S 1lons Waste No Time On Fishing Trip * hd | GLASGOW, Scortand, April 5.— ORANGE, Virginia, April 5—) |A professional pipe lighter has sident Hoover and his party ar-| NEW YORK, April 5. — Alg been employed here to keep street | ived at the headwaters of the!Juneau mine stock is quoted today |Trailway laborers from wasting the lri |Rapidan River yesterday anm-noomat 7%, Allegehany Corporation 33%, | time. His sole duty is to refill and] fon the first fishing trip of t a- | Anaconda 78%, Bethlehem Steel light the men's pipes as they 80/ son. - The members brought several|107%, Central Alloys, no sale; Gen- [out. His job was established bvl | trout out of the water before dinner leral Motors 50%, Gold Dust 42'4,|an efficiency expert. The men last night. Granby 58, Grigsby Grunow ,|have to furnish their own tobacco| e [1nternational Harvester 104, Ken- |and matches. MONTE CARLO-—Somebody has necott 58, Missouri Pacific 94%, {been counterfeiting the chips used Montgomery-Ward 39% National| COPENHAGEN —Wilhelm Poul for roulette and other games with|Acme 23%, Packard 21%, Standard |sen, conductor, is dead, having| ‘ud\ luck. The Casino estimates Brands 25%, Standard Oil of Cali-|been stricken with heart disease |its losses at $2,000 a day. The zhlm’lorma 72, United Corporation 46%,|while leading a concert befors tare changed frequently but the S. Steel 196, Simmons Beds|members of the royal family in counterfeiting continues, 'the Odd Fellows Palace. | Folst e PR TS How Britain plans to link up its empire by dirigible routes is shown in map. | England-S. Africa— {son and Ed Young took off from jand 45 minutes {a stop about 50 miles from here to ‘pm gas in his tanks. | | | Northland. tates. President Green was the first witness of those opposed to confirmation of Judge Par- R-100 (upper left) will Booth or Maj. G. H. Scott, who commanded the R-34 in 1919 on the ker. first trans-Atlantic crossing by a Green said that organized dirigible, will be the skipper of the| 8 R-100. Dr. Hugo Eckencr ag n\mxl“b"r is opposed to Judge Par- will command the Graf. ker because of his decision The R-100 holds 5,000,000 cubic upholding the injunction re- feet of gas, is 709 feet long and o 133° feet wide. The Grafs gas Straining the United Ming capacity is 3,708,000 cubic feet, and | Workers soliciting member- it is 776 feet long and 100 fest|ship in the Red Jacket Coal wide. 12 i Time savings experienced by diri- 1“Td .C?ke Company of West gible on British empire routes in- Virginia. clude: | Judge Parker is Federal e s |Circuit“Judge of the Polfrth |District and resides at Char- isilotte, North Carolina. England-Egypt On to Bombay On to Perth PRISONER SHOT _“"AND KILLED IN Questions; Suicide ESBAPEATTEMPT ] Be Counted as Alive \ Becond. Tiie 1 History of Sing Sing Convict Gets Over Walls OSSINING, N. Y., April 5—A Sing Sing prisoner, Alphonse Tar= | rello, aged 24, made a break for ° liberty yesterday afternoon from the midst of a large group of pris- oners at recreation and was shot by a guard with a machine gun P PUR as he jumped into the Hudson River, after scaling two walls. The body was taken from the | water 15 minutes later. | CRDSSUN AND ! Tarrello was sentenced from the |Bronx for robbery. YUUNG REAGH | Prison officials said it was only |the second time in Sing Sing's | NANUK AGAIN history that a prisoner attempting ¥ to escape got outside the walls. SCHOOUNEr NANUK, East Cape, Siberia, April 5.—Pilots Joe Cros- Via West Africa Via East Africa Australia-N. Zealand England-Canada | India-Australia |India, Can -Eng. Answers Census LOWVILL N Y., April 5. — Albert Davis, aged 41 years, restaurant owner, took nearly half an hour to an- swer questions of the Fed- eral census enumerator, then walked into a bedroom and committed suicide by slash- ing his throat He will be listed in census as alive, however e 000000000 the ®secsescceces ‘Favors Inquiry Into Railroad Holding, Trust And Other (fl)mpam'es_ Teller at rived at noon yesterday and ar- the Nanuk in six hours: Both fliers were Young made WASHINGTON, April 5.—Joseph Eastman, member of the Interstate | Commerce Commission, testified to= i} day before the House committed’ that investigating of railroad hold=% ing, investment and trust compans ies by the Commission was favored' for inquiry because it feared thatd n of certain holding# losing control of Iway unification, | Eastman said this view was abso- will lutely personal and he was noH the speaking for the Interstate Coms! merce Commission membership. in Fairchild planes. two planes encountered headwinds and only fair all the way, is the first time planes have been here since the bodies of Eiel son and Borland were ou D William Morris and his wife e in Juneau tonight aboard strong Fuel Famine Acute at " Point Barrow; Ice Is Crushed Along Shor Alaska, April| The hulk of a wrecked ship 1.‘ unchanged |the Arctic has been reduced to g % . | piece of tangled iron. famipe Js. m“! Hundreds of anxious eyes dally | tinually scan the ice for in await the emptying of the white [tions of a movement. West people’s ashes to sift for burnable(winds continue to crush the residue. Jon the shore, BARROW, conditions are ere and t fuel acute Shivering natives

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