The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 6, 1934, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA 'E “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL XLIV., NO 6747. EXTILE STRIKE ALASKAS SALMON PACH i s FOR"34 BREAKS RECORD 'BY DISTURBANCE i SHOTS ARE FIRED IN | TEN WORKMEN | TWO NATIONS ' - AREKILLEDIN MAKE PACTTO * COTTON STRIFE FIGHT GERMANY ! Scores Are Reporled to! {France and Italy in Accord, i Have Been Injured in to Prevent Planned / One Gun Battle Rearmament [ INDEPENDENCE OF | AUSTRIA ASSURED {Important Session Is Held | at Which Several Is- | ‘ sues Are Settled In Fatal Triangle Elopes_'Retums One Hundred Thousand | Dollar Pier Demolished | —Another Collapses ! i ‘ SEASIDE HOMES ARE i With a total of 7,234,227 cases of canned salmon packed, on the basis of an incomplete count, the IDAMAIGED. UNDERMINED { 1934 Alaska pack set an all-time record for volume, it was disclosed in figures made public today from | local headquarters of the United States Bureau of Fisheries. | Record up to this year was set in the war-time year of 1918 when 6,677,569 cases were produced. In that year, however, there was no restriction on operations and fishing and packing lasted all summer. “FLYING SQUADRCNS” | REPORTED IN ACTIONL ThousandsR—ep—orledHome- o less in Destructive Ty- phoon, Luzon Island President Roosevelt Names‘ Mediation Board of | 4 Three Members BIG PINK PACK This year's pink pack, totaling to date 3,766,129 cases, set a new record. 3,333,349 cases which was established in 1926. which was an off-year for that species. The output of red salmon this season 2,676,595 cases, was 41,955 cases short of thz 1918 mark of | 2618550 and which still is the record for reds. Kings also showed 17,611 cases below the 1918 figure. Chums dropped 738,261 cases from 1918, and cohoes 25,643, | It was the abnormally heavy pink production this year, ¢oupled with the great red pack that sent the figures to a new all-time high. | LONG BEACH, Cal, Sept. 6. ] —Whipped into a frenzy by a mysterious disturbance, the Pa- cific Ocean hurled huge swells against the Califernia coast line. ) The $100,000 Long Beach pier was battered too pieces. Scaside hemes were damaged and undermined. Three children were maroon- ed for hours in a beach home. Scientists are baffled by the It passed the old mark of It was about 1,350,000 cases larger than the 1918 pack | SARI Italy, Sept. 6.—France | and Italy have rcached an ac- | ecrd cn a eommon action to | prevent rearmament of Ger- WASHINGTON, Sept. 6.—Ten | o men are dead and scores have ' been injured as striking textile | | many. | | France's delegates to the Le- | | vantine affair caid the nations | i Betty Greenwood | Pretty Betty Greenwood, above, | 17-year-old screen actress, solved | the mystery of her disappearance werkers scught by picketing and “Flying Squadrons” to close had also ceme to an agreement cn the question cf Austrian inGependence and pledged them- .lves to take a common action against the Nazis. Ancther phate cf the agree- ment is that Italy renounces | her rearmament policy. mills, still operating and to pre- vent mill employees reporting | for work. ; | | SOUTHEAST ALASKA PRODUCTION 1 The production in Southeast Alaska, despite spotted results in the northern sections, was well | above the average with a total of 3,099,473 cases. This has been exceeded but three times in the history of the industry. The record was set in 1918 when a production of 3385540 cases was reported. In 1917 the pack was 3,284,408 cases, and in 1919, 3,108,000. waves which sometimes towered This year's final figure probably will top the 1919 total. Production statistics from the Wrangel | 40 feet above the tide, breaking i y ; area for the last ten days of operations are not included in the figures released today. In addition to | MO than 1,000 feet offshore. from Detroit, when she reap- | peared to inform her mother and | | police that she ran away with AL j Richardson, a horse trainer, in= | tending to marry him, but re- Shctguns, dynamite, sand bage, barricades, clubs and tear gos were used by one side or the other. ! I i itot arultehta, doly “ater all LR :Eifv:i;"‘“" e~ | were looking for her. Miss | Pine Avenue Pier until most of it . mills in all divisions of the in-| Judson C. Doke, above, city ot- | Tm‘y o Vitesilles, | Greenwood and Richardson now PACK BY DISTRICTS collapsed and tossed the ngmded dustry are closed. ficial of San Leandro, Cal., is be- | bt Yty | are trying to overcome parental The pack by districts is as follows: vigibers. ot ihe beach. o Six picketing strikers were slain| ing held by police at Woodland, 1 01,Jed.on; to marriage. District Reds Kings Red Tails Pinks Cboine Odlised Total | Debris covers the beach.: ingail thirty wounded at Honepath,' Cal, in connection with the fatal | N k i TR Bristol Bay— directions and the scene rmm!jes | 2.8 3 | » one in the wake of a Midwest th. Carolina, .as._guns blazed‘ shooting of Lamar Hollingshead, Qul(/ Ke plY Kvichak-Naknek ..41,118,739 1,102 16,199 M09 o 1,160,076 }mrmdo when a “Flying Squadron” went| 23.year-old Berkeley university i TI Nushagak . 361,287 7,010 2,052 1926 *1¥668 1125 388429 | Oldtime . sbhimeti “said ey WS ’ there. No one knows who fired student and poet, over the affec- I S M a de to | { Egegik .., 140,750 41 929 3,752 142476 | never seen anything like it. | the first shot. tions of Doke'stxkeuy zi!e,an. | { Ugashik 56,166 83 1,249 1,498 58,997 All bathers have been barred > Helen Louise Doke, also above. | H b H | SUV|ET D - - - |from the water at Santa Monica. -, g"‘,‘g’;igfi”fifgo;pf%‘_“zb; = o - er oover TOTALS 1,676,942 8,302 20,429 1,926 30,954 1125 1,739,678 The seas charged up over the z ing on the request of the National | l | B S | Alaska Peninsula— :ogza:n:c;:flfiozzsmkflf";.md 4 Labor Board, President R&oseveltz‘ 11Donald Richberg Tells Just! | ¥ Soutn e man Ask nemo weds man fade P g has hame ov. Jo! 2 nt, . U ort e » O g doN i ¢ of e Hampariien Muglon Sinith | What Constitues Hu- | Chignik 16571 142 01 1358 3078 19993 | o ath e b Tiie ; ;\‘Janm attorney, and Raymond V.| ATTENDANGE |s | man leer[y ‘C Il R 4 Diss Kodiak . 154,476 332 412,357 71,328 8,147 646640 |ands homeless, grops damaged and ngersoll, President of the 13_01‘oughl | k0 |Collapse epor!e mn 1871 Cook Inet . 144,082 19,423 48,823 8434 23,627 244389 |roadways practically wiped out, a 22 ?rfzle:rl)m;:: “;c!f;::s‘?::;:ra;;:i; WASHINGTON, Sept. 6~Donald| cussion on ore Than Central Alaska— typhoon swept the northwest rav- a>t bt to arhitrale th; St Fu U S | Richberg, apparently answering the Half Bl“lon me U s | Copper River 92,261 3,520 . 95,790 [aging the northern part of Luzon strike. | };*S‘: :f I_?I‘“m&n liberty,” raised by gu.0. Prince William Sound 13,398 1,121 385207 33,752 11,796 445274 |Island for two das. 4 . } ,Lef ; vat;fu l:d an address in o AsmNC"ro——“N o e Resurrection Bay [ I i 3 1,098 2,074 Four Red Cross men have left NONUNIONISTS GUARDED Th n: ‘}m(;mn;ngcslhe ;er:i:en(i.‘«gl?xzq mia: Su\'mMAmcI‘xcan. no:oual.ious in| Maiia lg a0 Army Dl S PORTLAND, Oregon, Sept. 6— | Lhirty-one Million St.l‘ldenh"mght in a radio address\sald: |settlement of debts with claims TOTALS — Western and e e s :;‘gr::","t;it Under protection of a police guard, Expecled to Reglsl- “The new liberty of the New totaling more than one half billion Central Alaska 2475661 37710 20420 1190022 33664 72208 4134754 | B DR T e damage has . non-union workers in the Oregon | . F ll Deal is an increased freedom for dollars, have virtually collapsed as| Southeast Alaska— been caused by floods and torren- Worsted Company’s mill, marched ! €er 1n rai men and women who do the hard the result of another unsatisfactory | Yakutat 19,406 4,367 it 5,027 268 5,286 34354 | 101 rains accompanying the per- . to the ;_)lam in a body this morn-; by g | work in the new world.” |discussion of settlement terms be- Icy Strait 16,842 18 226,959 37,041 8912 289,772 |odic typhoon rather than by the ing, while men and women in the | By ALEXANDER R. GEORGE Richberg did not mention Hoover |tween Assistont Secretary of State | Western 13,312 120 312,563 94,386 9,846 430,229 |wind, 1 Pfifrk:f 11:;%5 hoole;i. gaitl | WASHINGTON, Sept. 6. — The | directly. Moore and Soviet Ambassador abtieh 7,927 3,800 217,008 62955 17,470 209,169 e R T ewmxg;”e;r&e‘ eT';‘;‘y’ nation's educational system, still | TR 'T‘;’,‘YO*:‘:V‘S‘;{ e SEREER Wrangell 11,566 116 286,046 33236 19883 350847 number about 150. Normaily there Z?igees:ng fmmufie blo;'s pLi 8 limit x‘n making coencesslongs Iam| Ketchikan b e il bl L ‘ are about 250 employed. il v el e Gl K"_AUEA AGA'N convinced that to go further will West, Coast ... 1752 | 5938 o BET AT 560971 e Portland Woolen MIlls, |y population this fall. ke ynaugkarle. Audis saaritios e 5 FuH DEMBBRATS employing 250, all are at work as' ‘wiin gitendances augmented by | |the public interest.” TOTALS—S. E. Alaska ... 100934 12,046 2,576,107 288934 118,651 3,099473 - theze s .ng. unipa’ there. thousands who in normal times| E UPTING'LAVA e < myfi - | would find ~ compensatory occupa- L) GRAND TOTAL 2576595 89,756 20,420 3,766,129 627,508 190919 7234227 s A¥s s“ A ucK . | tions, it is estimated. that the en- INSIDE flF suB K v SR ey L T e I l PuLlcE GIvEN ‘rolmem :m reach a record-break- M LARGE é6 . . rt ague 2 |ing grand total of more than 31,- A L b y Le g Is HEI_D F . 4 /000,000 students, some 28,00,000 in il ; B U I Lnl N G I.Aln merican Libe 9 Senator, Seeking Re-elec- wthe pubiic schools and 3,000,000 in . . 1 1 itx GLUE STULEN | private institutions. The increase D|sturbancc FO“OWS nghti i Organlzers, Purposes, Cll’(“n “EsTIuNING hon, Fmds COndltlons . |over last year's attendance is fi-| Earlhquake — Vast BEFURE PRBBERS' y Favorable in South gured to be between 300,000 and . ;e : . | A l b B P : PownER FuuNn‘moooo Fire Pll in Action [ na ys"s y yron rl(‘(’ 3 Encouraged over the outlook for Government education officials | continued Democratic success at say the brunt of the burden impos-| HONOLULU, H. I, Sept. 6.— y ( By BYBON PRICE the polls in the coming election, ed by increased enrolment will be !Kilauea began erupting at 11:15 R LY o | | September 11, Senator Allen Shat- * Tip from Underworld Cir-|Pome by tne high schoofs, which |o'clock this morning, Pacific Coast America's Foremost Con PnLAND s STAND (Chie of Bureau, the Assoclated : tuck, candidate for re-eletion, Te= e Roviate hisgs aready are overcronded and han- Sandard time, after 8 light earth-| cern Had “Agreement Press, Washington.) {Former Convict May Be turned ome sarly this wesk apped by drastic curtailment o . . . . | | i : e wind up his campaign in Gastineau v, Cache of Dynamite e T e ] Lavi fimotith & adbato 10 10| WithForeignCountries KEY Tu SUVI ET There are reasons why oraniza-| Connected with Fiend- |00 Drecincts, He visited Ket- jand continued pressure of adverse|wide from a height of 600 feet e gg“ of “’It'h? Am"‘“l““ Liverty sh Murder, San Dlego chikan and neighboring communi- kg | economic conditicns are expected to|above the crater's floor. | gl 1 ague,” got for more than pass- b ties, Wrangell and Petersburg on . LOS ANGELES, Cal, Sept. 8—|make 1934-1935 the worst year for| The eruption is within the VEIS-L!d WAS:;IIH:T:O% S:‘;CL Beom Cfi:_ E ENTRY ing attention in Washington. R . |nis tour. Acting on a tip from the under-ihe gonoqls in' some sections of the|fire pit known as Halemaumau, | enceA i 1 icnrmst fmring . Ordinarily, the establishment of | LAS VEGAS, Hc.ada, Septl. 6| “uppe "prospects are bright for world, the police recovered elzhl:{wum,y_ |with a circumference of more than l)anfl‘vml’rlcat Oed A i‘“ phpe ane more association at the capi-|A man identified as Lester Beard,| . i .. syeeping Democratie vic- tons of stolen dynamite. The find S irav it A ok two miles and 8 depth of 1,400 feet, | hitijders, Insfneing i O; # g - tal would go unnoticed. There|alias Cecil Bower, aged 31 years,|, . . genator Shattuck said to- ’ was adjacent to an exclusive Tesi-| Tyey pelieve, however, that on| Kilauea is the world's tgest| |ments™ not only with Vickers of By JOSEPT E. SHARKEY lare 5o many already that their|d former convict, is held for ques-| . "1/ o0 o the cities visited, T dential district near the intersec-|in.:whole the depression in educa- |active voleano, . Fn.gl;fnd but also leading ship- GENEVA, Sept. 6.—The stage is|names crowd several pages of the |tioning as to the fiendish murder found the political situation in our . tion of Vermont Avenue and West | tion has about reached bottom, that | : |building concerns of Holland, Bel-|being set for Russia's entry into|telephone directory. Most of them|0f Cella Cota, aged 16, in San|g . o and T am confident our tle- A0S, ; greater stability will be attained in |gium, Norway, ~Russia, France.|the League of Nations, but Poland,|}ist nationally known figures among |Dieg0. on August 17. Beard denied | yoy wi) get a large majority.” The explosive Was found in &|genool financing in many states y |Spain, Italy and Japan, was laid|one of the principal actors in the! thejr membership, Several have |knowledge of the crime. Mr. Shattuck spent five days in warehouse and & foW cases Wer®|ini; year and fthat gemeral im-| RUSS M LAHNIN {before the Special Senate Muni-|drama, may smash the whole show.|nimes closely resembling that of| Sheriff Keate said Beard ad-|weicpikan 'That city, he sald, is found in other places but one ton|provement will be noticed a year | nom Commmen today. The League assembly meets Sep-|the neweomer. mitted leaving San Diego about the enjoying a revival of business is still unrecovered. { nence. Y. Spear, Vice-President of {tember 10. Entry of Russia a8 a| yet Washington seemed to sense | time the girl was killed, wandering | . serity after having experienced The dynamite was stolen from a Emery M. Foster, chief Sl&lhu-‘ F GHT T NI HT\the Electric Boat Company, said|member, it is generally assumed,|that the new league hardly was then to Nevada. one of the finest fishing seasons in powder magazine in Newhall cian of the United States office uf\ |cooperation with the governmentsiwill hinge on her gaining a per- just one of the crowd; thatit would| After Beard reportedly talked | o history. ot The owner of the warehouse iS{ejucation, says the outlook has| |of England, France, Italy, Russia, \manent seat in the League Council.|be heard from often in the future; | suardedly about young girls in| ‘Tnere is perhaps more political held for investigation. He said hepoon’ prightened by the movemem; . |Japan, Germany, Spain, Canada,|In that case, Polish spokesmen|that in one way or another it Tonopah, Sheriff Keate assigned|.ciivity there than anywhere else s did not know the powder Wag 81018 oward restoration and enlarge- |, o . L ORK, Sept. 6. — Barney Holland, Denmark, Sweden and|say, Poland also will demand &imight be destined to have a part|several deputies of his office 0|po visited, he said. He said there | and said he had been informed tnement of state aid for schools, by | o Vil enter the ring tonight |Norway was necessary for an of-|perfanent chair, as well as that|in the writing of history. | trail the former convict. was an apparent disposition there > explosive was to be shipped to a |against Jimmie MecLarnin in de- |fective world-wide control of sub-{Russia subscribe to obligations for Beard explained scratches on him |5 yrge voters to vote for Ketchi- mine. «wonrinued on Page Two) | fense of the welterweight title. The ' marine production. He said all pri-|proper treatment of minority peo- START OF NEW PARTY? by saying they were inflicted by a%xan candidates, regardless of party 7o |bout is a scheduled 15-rounder. |vate submarine building in thelples. For one thing, the conviction is|kitten he had picked up. and every effort is being made to * z This forenoon Ross weighed in at (world outside of the United States| The expected difficulty of grant-|inescapable that the organization - > ;p“e up a heavy vote. “It is the ‘A_lumlnum Str[ke Is Ended a in these coun-|ing permanent seats in the Council|will figure in practical politics. VISITS WORLD'S FAIR duty of the party here to work for | | potinds. | tries. both to the U. 8. S. R. and Poland | When industrial men start a cam- |a big,vate in Junesit.and all ow s | ————— Evidence that the British Gov-|conceivably may serve to block the!paign to “protect liberty,” they Conrad Ness, Principal of the|the district,” Mr. Shattuck said. PITTSBURG, Pa., Sept. 6—The |will return to their jobs in six GOING TO FAIRBANKS ernment gave Japan a design for |admission of Russia to the League.|speedily are drawn into political| Cordova High School, visited the|“From now until the polls are month-long aluminum strike was |Plants of the Aluminum Company 5 ‘the “K” type of submarine was Unanimity Necessary arguments, willy-nilly. Century of Progress Fair at Chi-|closed next Tuesday we should de- N, declared ended early today. tomorrow. Mrs. J. H. Romlg._ wife of Dr. _a!so presemzd_ in letters from Hen- An accepted interpretation of the And when such Democrats as|cago this summer after completing |vote our energy and time to inter= - K Details of the agreement were |Romig of Fairbanks, is a passenger ry Carse, President of the company,!League covenant is that unanimity|Al Smith and Jobn W. Davis, and |a course at the University of Wash- lesttng people in going to the poll~ Eighty-sevey hundred workers lfor the Westward on the “Aleutian. to Spear. 7 \ Chairman Gorman, of the Strike said the unions will| not disclosed early today, | Italy will join France in her turned when she learned police i this some fall fishing will be done which will carry the Panhandle pack still higher. (Continued on Page Seven, l (Continued on Page Three) jington Summer School, One gigantic swell buffeted .the ing places and voting.”

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