The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 17, 1934, Page 1

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5% T . e s b A L PRIV - {28 - v TN, “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” - — = VOL. XLV., NO. 6809. JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1934. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENT. R o et (i 3 ) b3 ARNDDARIIOE O ) 1. PRESIDENT UN Finds Son After 18 Years HOUSING DRIVE g Reward Awaits Captor of New No. 1 “Enemy T0 BE ENDORSED | owrve v s vipameror e men | INAVAL EQUALITY INSPECTION OF U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE LT : (BY u s c 0F c WANTED WASHINGTON, D. C. # U. S. PROJECTS (BT U Os bs UF Ul iomn cs ci rn IS TURNED DOWN - it ALEX GILLIS, LESTER GILES;** BIG GEORGE" NELSON, MURDER PR g : & Indications Are Japanese Sees Development of Great Other Organizations to Delegati W"lJAp i Eiitcrgtises Which He Back Administration’s elegation Will Again oo gt s e | Recovery Move Force Deadlock oo WASHINGTON, Nov. 17— Big LONDON ' NEGOTIATIONS BRlEF ADDRESS AT business leaders gave every indi- . cation of putting full force behind MAY AGAIN BE HELD UP NORRIS DAM SITE the imuslng drive as a means of - R T o hurring recovery and striking a United States Remains Tells Workers They Will! blow at unemployment thus pre- Stead Faaien: Be Known as Veterans venifng Ounevees (o (P . - a;tso; Rnslstmg : far to the left. . DESCRIPTION CRIMINAL RECORD on 5-5-3 Ratio of New This was disclosed today from .4 Kmd Of War an authoritative source and prob- (ua. 25 years | LONDON, Nov. 17 Rej NASHVILLE, Tenn. Nov.! ably will be the chief plank in the | b ::n::.‘?’;ul 2 Inches As George Nelson, #5437, arrested o s ANOV, 1.4 — f‘).e('- SHVILLE, . i Yénovery’ progrém which thE JIGER (' it 133 pounds ::::::qzev:::::t.Igm:;;?: tion by Japan of the British 17.—President Roosevelt has| men of the United States Chamber A Eren el low and arey alate ety s Sl ! compromises on the all -im- arrived here from Knoxville! of Commerce and other organiza- Comloxiom, (TR o | portant sti a i i ", 3 question of naval to visit the home of Andrew| :Z?;e will present to the White Occupation, oiler b s 5;;",",'%‘;}7:2:::‘ equality threatened today to se. nois, y 7, 3 oer . = ' Jackson and lay a wreath on The decision to draw up this J R AT e e reer a7 a2, | | again deadlock the Tri-Power the tomb of another Presi- program is a momentous step in bt Rrg UL e R e T al C. ve ti i ] 6516 South Marshfield St.s Naval Conference tighter than dent, Js : K. Polk, on the! | the new movement for cooperation Chicago, 110, Bt 'H‘""e*' Rt i i between business and the White| [} W wienciiiis atias ever. State House S | House and the program has been f Faila ® It is authoritatively 1 - Huge crowds are held back‘; | ratified by the Directors of the R" 37‘;;';:'."3;:“:.' i e ed that the l:puqn;:: ~‘Gu::::- by ropes while National United States : Chamber of Com- 6516 South MarshFreso Stos A M—,u m it i y Siatis, & s ent has instructed its dele- . ted a t 4 i \ b chieago, 111 oy A e s : : fi‘““rdbmen.pmv;n. ?d 1:;,dbufl1 E" Is learned that business 1“5' Lester M. Gillis Is vanted for the aurder of W. Carter Baus. Soecial Agent, Division of InvestTgation, U.'S. Department of gates to reject the English ose we.armg o mal. ges | = ;h khrnvewe!;inw;:l;f:nfowh:d !zglw | Justice, near Rninelander, Wisconsin, o» April 23, 1934. ;sugg(‘stions that Japan be toh get l‘mto the [1rtam_ shed } 2""‘“3"5.“;‘2’““‘1 s tabther- atloRilb peary Whsir b Was bent 5 ¥ha ogwig; g towa e ..:;J;::'.:f:: dsonctes ladly cramalt sy sitions) Inforaation o crimina recerd to the sewest office of the Oivisien | [granted maval equality in when the special train ar-! Army, in which he is a private, to Ft. Myer, Va, The mother, Mrs. Wil- | - eee i "% if apprenended, ple tify the Director, Division of tavestigstion, U. S. Department of Justice, Mashingt + 2 but not in fact A | liam A. Clagett, of Washington, lost t £ h fter she and the i g gl o LAt eilid s SR cofel s P L b T D ) sl ols s rived. i father separated, witkl:nr.h:htflser z;reat:nein‘;ng ii::%'éy"o:.{ni :hfig. I N s ULL TRI 3 Iots! hon 1¥ iy o/ by o £ b el g~ :’m..,,:: ,,::h,fe;;::. :;:‘:: ;;‘:;xw - v This will bring the nego- “American Ruhr i oo o e e . t ;gaern;{ :]nd m‘th‘h mrds fippioxi’mglt‘in $10,000 -wm;;. mtinotwlrzw ‘end eriminal cn‘ee;,rof Gofirg;’ ;]?.b ;:::::na to an impasse stage 4 i o . K 'ace” son, wi me No, 1 “Public Enemy” upon deaf is former associate, “Pretty Boy” Floyd. . ¥ - Plje-\ld;."t tnoose;etllt" 15“;0“_1|TALIAN BABIE Bysfmss Outl.ook BE'NG Rus H ED J SRR NG The delegates of Great Bri- tinuing his tour of the “Am- Decidedly Brighter; tain indicated they hoped the s erican Ruhr” with a smile of boyish enthusiasm as he found eager men at work| throughout the Tennes see| Valley in the development| they are carving into reality) and which he envisioned two vears ago as a pattern labora- | tory for future America. Unrestrained cheers greted the) President at every turn. New Kind of Veterans Late yesterday, at the Norris; Dam, the President told his listen- | ers that “all of you working here| and all workin; throughout the Tennessee Vall:y, working on the remainder of this great program. will some day be known as vet- erans, You will be known as vet- erans of a new kind of war, the} kind that is going to improve the| conditions for millions and millions | of our fellow citizens.” — e, — NAT. PLANNING BOARD MAKES REPORT PUBLIC Permanent Agency Recom- mended—Richer Life | for the Masses WASHINGTON, Nov. 17. — The New Deal, if the National Plan- ning Board has its way, will per- petuate national planning as a means of a richer life for the masses, an indispensable buiwark against “violent explosions.” The board’s report, made public today, recommended a permanent planning agency limited largely to educational and coordination func- tions. Comment is withheld, but per- sons close to President Roosevelt are inclined to believe he favored the suggestion of leaving “economic planning” to private “business. The board said public interest should go hand in hand with plan- ning in private interest. The report declared that condi- tions have developed which the 'TOBE ENROLLED orere Seted 1L DUCE'S ARMY Far Reaching Government Order Issued — Press Gives Out Warning ROME, Nov. 17—Prospects of Blackshirts in swaddling, clothes greeted Italy with a new and far- reaching Government order enroll- ing the man child in the ranks of Mussolini's ballilla organizations from the time of birth, as the press warned of. a crucial year ap- proaching Europe. Coincident with the announce- ment that new born babies will be enrolled in the Blackshirt pre-mili- tary organizations, the Il Duce’s newspaper Popolo d'Italia, said the tension on the continent is becom- ing grave and “it is necessary to be strong to meet and dominate all events.” Until the child is able to take light exercise, the Government's supervision will be merely hygienic. After this the boy will be developed physically along scientific lines. At the age of six the child will be- come one of the “sons of the wolf which has more intensive physical training, including elementary mili- tary practice.” TRADING SLAC STOCKEXCHANGE Profit Taking Hits Market at Short Session— Slumps Occur NEW YORK, Nov. 17.—Profit- taking combined with slack trading and no resistance being shown on attacks made on various issues, characterized the short session of the New York Stock Exchange to- day. Many shares went into de- cline at the week-end session, al- though some registered gains. CLOSING PRICES TODAY NEW YORK, Nov. 17— Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine ’ creased the problems of the Board NEW YORK, Nov. 17.—De- velopments in general trade, a more concerted action by busi- " { ness men to a haven of re- |Government Investigator to covery and momentum gained Be Calle d to Refute by retail distribution, said the 4 weekly review of Dun-Brad- Some Testimony street, Inc, made a decidedly | brighter business outlook dur- ing the past week. - TEXTILE MEN MAKE THREAT ~ OF STRIKES New Rumblings Cause Worries for Those Striving for Peace T0 CONGLUSION CHICAGO, I, Nov. 17— The/ Government today pushed its case against Samuel Insull and co-de- fendants toward a conclusion with | Harold Huling, Special Assistant | to the United States Attorney, who spent two years directing the In- sull investigaion, under call to take the stand and wind up the prosecu- tion’s rebuttal which was begun yesterday. THe Government intends to con- tradict young Insull's testimony | that the Insull fortune “went down with the ship” in the collapse of the Corporation Securities Com- | pany. From Insull's private aceountant, ‘W. A. Jarvey, the Government de- veloped that the Insulls were al- ready clear when the corporation failed with hundreds of millions of losses. The Government's answer is that the Insull losses were mostly PLANTOEND | WARFARE N GRAN CHACO Consultative Committee of League of Nations | to Act GENEVA, Nov. 17—It is offi-| cially announced the League of | Nations Chaco consultative com* mittee has reached an agreement on means to end the savage war- fare between Bolivia and Paraguay. Hostilities are expected to cease | WASHINGTON, Nov. 17—Rum- | blings of new trouble in the tex- [tile industry today added to the |Worries of the Administration in |striving to preserve industrial peace. United Textile Workers, whose | leaders gathered here for a session, | warned mill owners they might ex- pect strikes against those factdries | accused of discriminating against persons who took part of last sum- |mer’'s general strike. { Union warnings have also in- :anempting to avert strife in the | | steel industry. | | - 1 TWO HUNDRED ' ARE REPORTED DEAD, TYPHOON | his aides in dispensing patronage HEADLINERS - FOR OPENING OF CONGRESS Nye’s Munitions Investigat-| ors Must Share Honcrs with W-M Com, By HERBEK1 PLUMMER WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.—Re- sumption of the Nye committee’s investigation of the munitions in- dustry is billed as the headliner on Capitol Hill prior to the opening/ of the main show on January 3, but there’s another attraction which will rival it in general interest. That will\ be when the Ways and Means Committee of the House and the Finance Committee of the Senate tackle the problem of tax legislation for the next Con- | gress. v | Pat Harrison of Mississippi heads the group in the Senate and Sam Hill of Washington that in the| House. There will be little of the spec- tacular about the Hill-Harrison | show! In all probability it will be held behind closed doors and little known of it until the show is over. That's how tax bills usually are written. There will be, however, probably as much speculation and as much written about the deliberations of these two groups as about any- thing going on in Washington dur- ing the next two months. . i STILL THE ‘REPRESENTATIVE'! Postmaster General Farley and to “deserving Democrats” have real reasons to give thanks to Senator Norris ‘of Nebraska for his persis- tence in fighting to do away with “lame duck” sessions of Congress. It has saved them the worry and bother of trying to take care of political . appointments made by i Twenty-five Thousand Said with suitable guarantees. (wonunued on Page TWO) | to Be Homeless in : Philippines MANILA, Nov. 17—Two hundred are reported to have been killed in | the town of Mauban in the recent Pleads with é;eat Britain to Price Sees End of Campaign No Political Truce : Bringing Beer Drinkers Draw Lightning; 61 Are Killed CAPETOWN, South Africa, Nov. 17.—Sixty-one natives par- ticipating in a beer drinking party near East London were instantly killed when lightning struck the hut where the party was held. Only three in the party escaped with their lives. THANKSGIVING DINNER COST T0 BE HIGHER Increase Wili Hit East, Mid- dle West More ‘than on Pacific Coast CHICAGO, Nov. 17—In eating Thanksgiving dinner, Americans should be thankful for celery and sweet potatoes. ‘These two items on the menu, ranging from soup to nuts, are about the only two which have not gone up in price. The entire dinner cost will be about 10 to 12 percent higher than a year ago, a survey showed, pri- marily due .to the increased cost of labor and last summer’s drought. | The higher dinner price will hit the Middle West and East but the West will not feel it so strongly. Turkeys in the West will be as| cheap as last year, it is said. e FISH SALE NOTED To be frozen for fish bait, 300 barrels of herring were sold to Juneau Cold Storage yesterday by Martin Holst of the boat Wilson. — .- PLANE FLYING SOUTH Weather permitting, Capt. William Strong announces his plane will take off Monday morning on a special flight to Vancouver, B. C. — e somewhat from its insistence that the present 5-5-3 ratio | be maintained. Fears are expressed that ruinous naval armaments competition will result if the delegates at the Tri- Power Conference cannot agree on seme plan for limitation. GREAT POWER | | 1l'nited States might recede | By BYRON PRICE (Chief of Bureau, The Associated Press, Wachington) Passage of the campaign of| 11934 into history does mot mean | that politics is adjourned. | For special reasons, not even a| temporary truce in political activity | appears in the cards. Two years ago the situation was | different. The Democrats were so | securely in the saddle, and the Re- | publicans so demoralized and be- wildered, that for the time being | both sides seemed content to for- {give and forget. { During the first Roosevelt con- | | gress the submergence of party s !reached a stage seldom paralleled in history. It would be extraorai- (Kingfish Gets Everything nary if that phenomenon were re- peated again in this generation. All but Crown_, Mamle signs are that it certainly cannot from Legislature be repeated during the second fopavelt. Odngnse. BATON ROUGE, La., Nov. 17— No one questions that the Presi- irne state Legislature completed the assigned task, giving United dent again will be in control, but neither does any informed politi- |gtates Senator Huey Long every- clan expeet him to win many of thing but a royal crown and his victories in the future by de- \mantle and adjourned sine die. fault, as he did so often in the One of Long's 40 measures gave past. However small the opposition, him power to fire municipal police it will be there, and fighting. chiefs. - Another measure passed was Long’s two-year personal debt moratorium. This was offered by Slalod piatl the Kingfish as a forerunner of s “cancellation of all debts” under Some very bitter things have been |iyq 619 testament rule of distribu~ said. Republican charges that the {tion of wealth every seven years, Democrats were buying the elec- 454 is effective in three weeks. tion with Government expendi-| genator Long said the bills will |tures were designed to bring o !4, remarkable things. “There are | question the very sincerity of the|j i of things in these bills they | Administration. The replies have |q, know about vet,” said Long. been in kind. — The entente is broken. Retribu- 'REV. GLASSE READS HAUGEN BURIAL RITES {tion will be in the minds of many | public men in and out of office. | There is today no recognition, as there was two years ago, that elec- asse |tion day marked the beginning of | Bey; Johr_n A .Gl rousihe |a new era. The new era has had its funeral service for Gordon Haugen, chance, and the natural thing is|32;Yé8r-0ld Alaskan who was Killed for the enemities it has aroused to :x);l;n‘?:«i: g[ “2, %‘::;i,;h;irxi; grow stronger, rath Vi 2 3 : | grow stronger, rather than weaker, | Burial took place in Evergreen Cemetery. Close friends of the man, who was accidentally shot during a hunting trip, attended. |as time goes on. In other words, the election of Haugen had no relatives living in Alaska. Entente Is Broken For one thing the scars left by this campaign scarcely can be 11932 meant the turning of a cor- ner. Men were wary of taking a stand until thek knew a Ilittle R TE————— Wake Up; Germany Rearming, stock today is 17, American Can typhoon according to an uncon- more about the new pathway. e — great masses of people will nol|jgqy American Por tolerate nor should they tolerate|s anaconda 10% w;rm::,d 1}}“8};‘ and warned that ‘mot passive ac-|pgethlehem Steel 25%, Calumet and ceptance but a violent explosion | gecla no sale; Curtiss-Wright 3, is the alternative if we fail t0|General Motors 30%, International develop security and progress bY | Harvester 37%, Kennecott 16%, rational evolutionary methods.” United States Steel 35. jfirmed dispatch to the Red Cross | here. More than 30 other persons are ! known to be dead in seattered por- tions throughout Luzon Island. LONDON, Nov. 17.—Winston Chgrchill, former Chancellor of the Exchequer, last night charged Germany with “rearming with outmost sneed.” | The former Chancellor of the Exchequer pleaded with Great It is estimated 25,000 are home—‘ Britain to make herself, without delay, the strongest air power in the Euronean world. i % ! TERHUNE RETURNING H. W. Terhune, Executive Officer of the Alaska Game Commission, is a passenger aboard the Yukon, sailing today from Seattle, for his headquarters in Juneau. ahead. This year the election means stand until they knew a little way now somewhat familiar. Those who do not like that path- way now say so directly. (Continued on Page Two) MRS. METCALF RETURNING i Mrs. Frank Metcalf, who has been visiting . in the south, is a her Juneau home. passenger aboard the Yukon for

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