The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 10, 1934, Page 9

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1934. SECOND SECTION—PAGES 1 TO 8 _ ATLANTIC STORM PRESIDENT’S SON LOST 24 HOURS COAST GUARD 'SEVEN STATES ~ PRICE OF BEER the price of his beer will be reduced ] | was lowered into a grave in Mt. $2 a barrel to $16, ‘Tamalpias cemetery last Saturday. Seattle newspapers forsee a price | | The burial followed public services SIGN U. S.-CUBA INHUNT FOR J, ROOSEVELT Search Made for Racing _Schooner Off Coast of New England PORTLAND, Maine, Sept. 10.— James Roosevelt, son of the Presi-| dent, smiled lightly today at the owing experience of being buf- about on the storm tossed ic for more than 24 hours rd the 50-foot racing schooner Black Arrow, and reported lost. The crew was composed of ama- teur s Roosev put in here last night while eleven .coast guard vessels searched the waters off the New England coast for the craft. Admitting that he had an “un- comfcrtable” night, the President ot Hyde Park scoffed at the re- port of deep concern over his son’s danger. The President was noti-| fied by telephone when the yacht put in here. The Black Arrow was racing off the coast with 29 other ships and became separated in the storm and T TROUBLE N ARIZONA IS BELIEVED OVER One Company of National| Guard Demobilized— Cases Against Agitators PHOENIX, Arizona, Sept. 10.—It now appears as if Arizona’s riot trouble, growing out of the efforts of agitators to force a strike of Federal Relief Workers, is at an end. Company K, of the Arizona Na- tional Guard has been demobilized and Attorney General LaPrade is preparing cases for preliminary hearings sometime today of the 29 agitators charged with rioting and resisting officers. — e - ARMISTICE IS DECLARED IN ciated Press Photo) Expelled By Nazis | Mrs. Sinclair Lewis (above), who writes under the name of Dorothy Thompson, was told by secret police of Berlin that she must leave Germany because of articles about the Hitler regime written and pub | tished under her name in the Unit | ed States. (Associated Press Photo) N, 0. ELECTION EMPLOYEES OF Armed Forces Will Not Go Near Polls in Tues- day’s Primary NEW ORLEANS, La. Sept. 10.— Under threats of bloodshed and complete martial law for New Or- leans’ Democratic primary tomor- row, an armistice to keep all armed forces away from the polls was agreed upon last Saturday night by | Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley and United States Senator Huey Long, political adversaries. STUDENT DID NOT MURDER SWEETHEART Jury Acquits Oklahoma| Young Man — Averting | Motherhood Was Cause NORMAN, Okla., Sept. 10.—Neal! Myers, aged 21 years, pharmacy| student, was acquitted Saturday| night by a jury which tried him, on the charge of murder in con- nection with the death of his col-| lege sweetheart, Mariam Mills. The state attributed the 19-year- | old girl's death to gn effort to avert motherhood. —.--— Saiv_age for fl::dy SANTA BARBARA — Neighbor- | hood House, operated by a hbenev- clent organization, maintains a sal- vage shop to reclaim discarded ar- ticles to supply the needs of un- employed. Sultcases are the articles in greatest demand but requests range from wood stoves to glass eyes, one of which was listed as wanted recently. | registered here. HOSIERY PLANTS ARE CALLED 0UT ;Strike Is to Start Next | Wednesday with 85,000 | Workers Affected WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—Hos- |iery workers were called on to strike last Saturday night by the | Union officers. The strike is called to start next ‘Wednesday but it was pradicted that the walkout would begin to- day. Eighty-five women are affected by order. EVELYN BERG BOUND NORTH SEATTLE, Sept. 10.—The North- west Steamship Company's Evelyn Berg sailed at 5 o'clock last Sat- urday afternoon for Southeast Al- aska points with a fair sized cor- go including fresh meats, butter, eggs and cheese. An 80-ton refrig- erator has just been installed on the Evelyn Berg. i To “Prol;e” Death LONDON — “To investigate the question of survival after death and allied problems,” is given as the iniention of Survival League, Ltd, a company which has been Among the seven members of the league’s council are Shaw Desmond, the novelist, and Mrs. C. A, Dawson-Scott, founder of the league and writer. - eee SHOP IN JUNEAU! thousand men and the strike TRADE TREATY Diplomats of both the United States and Cuba are shown gathered in Washington to sign a treaty for the purpose of stimulating trade tomorrow, electing a Delegate, Ter- between the two nations. Seated is Dr. Cosme De La Torriente, Cuban secretary of state, affixing his signature, and Cordell Hull, U. S. secre- tary of state. Standing, left to right: Manuel Sterling, Cuban ambas- sador to the United States; Sumner Welles, assistant secretary of . state, and Jefferson Caffery, American ambassador to Cuba. (Assos ARE TOVOTE ON TOMORROW Maryland and Georgia Stage Primaries Wednes- day, N. Y. Thursday ‘WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—Seven states will hold primary elections tomorrow. They are Arizona, Colo- rado, Louisiana, Michigan, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Wash- ington. All states, with the exception of # Louisiana and Washington will 5 nominate Governors while all will| name nominees for Congressional . seats. ] The primary campaigns in all i states have been featured by Dem- § ocratic support to the New Deal with Republicans in opposition to it. Alaska will also go to the polls ritorial Treasurer, House Legislators. Brazilians Claim Lead | in Melting Pot Capacity ! e il Senators and Nerve-Worn French King RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept. 10. — Wrote lmpreuwe Prose The federal statistics bureau esti- mates that Brazil tops all other PARIS, Sept. 10—Evidence that ;’:;:’;fy fn " potentidl populatn Louis XIII suffered from a grave ‘. 7 4 i form of neurasthenia is contained rETh;l_statisncmns Ligire. Uit flis In letters from him fo Cardinal TPUVHCAR can support 900,000,000 Richelieu, recently discovered in mpz :o% 499, 0N IesOUICRS: e the musty archives of the French "7, 44000000 ‘“gl::e'z b o foreign office. | States a capacity of 500,000,000; The correspondence was Pro-' cping quoogooo-y lndl: 4%?0%0- duced at a meeting of the French o). Rucsie 220,000,000 and Canada Academy of Moral and Political o1 Argentina 150,000,000 each. Sciences. It made melantholy ¢ i 5 Sciences. It made melancholy were ‘deeply impressed bysthe pur- U s- Blld“ ity of the king's prose. - - | ’ BUENOS AIRES American The National League is taking safety razor blades are gaining in a look at a new umpire, John Will- | favor in Argentina, according to iam Sears, who is just up from the reports from the United States Texas League. Trade Commissioner here. Favored Start him off on Wings of the Morning and he’ll come home the way he started. Fill his cup with fragrant Schilling Coffeel There are two Schilling Coffees. One for percolator. One for drip. A coffee that fits the method you use makes a lot of difference in the flavor you get. wa Seattle Newspapers Fore- see War with Possibly SEATTLE, Sept. 10.—Peter Mar- inoff, President of the Northwest Breweries, Inc., announced last Sat-|sands of rare books, manuscripts, | living urday night that beginning today ' and relics were burned. — war and perhaps a 5-cent glass of keer, Mcrinoff severed connections with the Northwest Brewers Asso- BY BARREL CUT " Greek Monastery Destroyed by Fire | ATHENS—Megaspelaeon, a fa- 5-Cent Glass Beverage |5 old Greek monastary, has | been destroyed by fire. Situated in an immense cave, the Byzantine | structure dated from 1640. Thou- MOTHER BURIED, * MT. TAMALPIAS Son Not Permitted to View Funeral Cortege, Kept at Prison Duties TAMALPIAS, Cal, Sept. 10.—Not far from San Quentin prison to | which she often referred to as the tomb of her son, Tom Moon- ey, the body of Mrs. Mary Mooney |in the San Francisco Civic Audi- | torium. | Prison officials refused to allow | Mooney to view the funeral cortege and he was also denied a day off from prison duties. He is serving ia life sentence for the 1916 Pre- | paredness Day Parade bomb ex- plosion in San Francisco. | No demonstration attended the funeral ceremonies. — g f Tvey Shiver, former All-America end at Georgia, latterly an out- fielder with the Detroit Tigers and | Cincinnati Reds and now with St. |Paul will give up baseball and | devote his time to his coaching job at Georgia after this season. pops into my mmd ‘ ou know Wh'at; when I l‘lC the cigarette ar. . thats MILDER the cigarelle tha SATISFIES .

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