The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 2, 1935, Page 1

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i H VOL. XLVI., NO. 7080. JUNEAU, ALASKA, “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1935. CHICAGO CUBS TA b U. S. Seeks No Conquest He Declares » President Reasserts Nation Must Remain *“‘Unen- tangled and Free” 60,000 HEAR SPEECH 'AT WORLD'S FAIR Comeninndler +ih-C05es Will Take Part in Naval Maneuvers SAN DIEGO, Cal, Oct. 2.—Ad- dressing a crowd of 60,000 at the World’s Fair here today, President Roosevelt reasserted the policy that the government must remain “un- entangled and free” in the face of foreign war threats. - He urged ad- herence by others to the ideal of America’s “I am a good neighbor.” Frankly stating there is potent danger of foreigh war, the Presi- dent, within sight of the United States fiest collected ‘oft Shore with which he will partici] in war games, declared “this coffitry seeks no conquest. We have no imperial designs.” Urges Peace He gave notice that the American people “intend expeci to remain at peace with the ‘world. The Chief Executive agreed that some nations are not embracing the American principles of religious free- s dom and liberty of conscience but reminded that these violations are under other flags and called for striect adherence to these principles within this land. Referring to the domestic war on depression, he declared, “We stand once more upon an economic pla- teau. We have therefore the right to look forward to a brighter fu- ture while at the same time we must remember the mistakes of the Points to Menace The President declared the two most menacing claims that hang over human government and human society are “malice and foreign war.” He stated that never was there more genuine reason for Americans to face down these two causes of fear. There are those today who would sow these seeds of “malice,” he said, “but your an- swer to them is in possession of the plain facts of our present condiion. The cloud of foreign war is more real and a more potent danger at this moment to the future of our civili- zation and it is not surprising that many of our citizens feel a deep sense of apprehension lest some na- tions repeat the folly of 20 years ago and drag civilization to the level from which world wide re- covery may be all but impossible. In face of this apprehension, the American people can have but one concern and speak but one senti- ment despite what happens over- seas. The United States shall and must remain, as long ago the fa- thers of our country prayed, unen- tangled and free.” In Battle Exercise As the fleet forms at sea to stage a spectacular battle exercise, the President will be on a cruiser rep- resenting the “enemy.” It marks the first time the nation's Chief Executive ever witnessed the naval battle exercises, and it Is the most powerful American fleet any Pres- ident ever saw at sea. $800 Is Value of Two Stolen Kisses KNOXVILLE, Tenn. Oct. 2. How much should a man have to pay for two stolen kisses? Judge Hamilton Burnett of Knox County Circuit Court must decide this question in a $10,000 suit filed by Mrs. Ruth Raley against C. A. Fritts, her grocery man employer. . She charged he twice tried to kiss her while she was working in the store. She fought against his “ advances, she said. But he finally won out and kissed her—twice. Mrs. Raley won 8 judgment of $800, or $400 a kiss, at a hearing recently, but Grocery Man Fritts’ attorney appealed the case, claim- ing the kisses were over valued, and Judge Burnett granted a new trial. % R. WARNS AGA FOR MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE PRICE TEN CENTS FIGN WAR . A ' 9 . . e Thousands March in Annual Parade of American Legion BOX SCORE TIGERS ARE raeved S0 o ABRHPOAE Leave Ethiopia BT g Galan, 1If. 411200 BLANKED IN { Herman, 2b. 310030 | Lindstrom, cf. 401200 B B OPENER GENEVA, Oct. 2.—All Italians ’iH“"‘e"- 00 402100 L . in Ethiopia have been ordered to | Demaree, rf. 412100 be cut of that country by No- Cavarretta, 1b. 30017 0 0f vember 5: Hack, 3b, ¢ 00 1 3 o Pitcher Lon Warneke Hurls It is the frist time a definite | Jurges, ss. - 4012¢2 0 Some of Best Ball date for activities connected | Warneke, p. 30018 0 g With the Xtalio- Ethiopia crisis | [ f SU i R L G TR S ey 09090 0 0 — — — — — of His Career has been set. { Total . 33 3 727116 0 e Obervers in Addis Ababa, ac- TIGERS cording to advices received here, | ABRHPOAE EQUALS RECORD regard the move as a definite ! White, cf. 401200 FOR BIG SERIES tign of war. Ccchrane, c. 400810 R Reports from Addis Ababa | Gehringer, 2b. 300840 < state Emperer Hallile Selassie [Qrsenbass, Ib, . $10. 88,0 i SChé’:ébos); so‘é"e& %fl to ho; protes'ed to the League | KGos n, 1f. 3 0 L1 art, bhds Up agninst the all incursion of Box, T8 402100 : Htatian c;op:‘?;u Ethiopia, rotogeu, ss. ; 0 g 3 g 8’ Fairly Well Today which Rome denies. wen, 3b. [ i T The French arc continuing ne- Rowe, p. 301041 SHORT SCORE gotiations with Great Britain to- b R i g e U S PR R H E word & definition for solid | Totals . 3.0 431 0 3. oUss A ground between the two coun- | S SUNéM;“z"H run_| TIGERS s8R tries, arned runs—Cubs 2. Home o SR received Demaree. Two-base hits—Galan,' hc:c:::: I,h:::":::n. Govern- | Fox, Rowe, 1 each. Sacrifice hits— SCORE BY INNINGS mental crisis may develop as a 1 Herman, Lindstrom, Cavarretta, 1 CUBS 123456789 TL 8 each. Double play — Cochrane to Runs 200000001—23 ;c,,;:l;z :ln?xr::m:;w:: Gehringer. Passed ball—Cochrane, Hits 211101001—17 operaticn with Great Britain. 1. Struck out—by Warneke, 1; by Errors 000000000~ 19 i S e Rowe, 8. Bases on balls—off War- TIGERS 123456789 TL neke, 4. Left on bases—Cubs, 5;| Runs 000000000—0 s e Tigers, 8. | Hits 011010001—4 M u $8S0 l l n l ng Umpires—Moriarity, American, at Errors 1100000103 | - " ‘9; plate; Quigley, National at first; Ch l i 3 i BT % b SN e e M McGowan, American, at second; GAME Tomm a lenges A genoral view of the annual American Logion parade as hou ssuds of people jammed the sidewalks and streets to watch the ap- Stark, National, at third. i o mOW ‘ M proximately 70,000 marching veterans in St. Louis, Mo. The seven feenth annual convention of the American Legion cpened on Septem- | Tty 1 serles will be played in Detroit Leag UL [YLOVEC ver 2. (ntcrnationar Wiustrateq News photo) i Pla b Pl ay | e Declares lialy Will Reply Sgocks Hit;~ - |Campaign \Charges "1+ viss o | daw o e teriony oheses with Military Action— | ’ [ Today in . i | CHICAGO! Gulan up-—Marager Ouks rvm v’ ek SO0 W5 Be s A f v R rarneke brillian Report Hostilities Begun | War Clouds | . Plans Are |State of Siege WEENAL e s new ivme S e T e ke By graphers from the field; strike one,| Tigers in the first game of the ROME, Oct. 2.—Premier Benito Mussolini, in his radio talk this afternoon, told the nation and the whole world: “To economic sanctions we will reply with discipline of our people. To military ones we will reply with military -action.” | Sweeping Decline Experi- enced on Market Dur- ing Today's Session . Drop Lower Even as he made this address to NEW YORK, Oct. 2—A sweeping Developing ¢Another‘7 C@e Made by Republicans — Senator Thomas to Take Action WASHINGTON, Oct. 2—Prelim- SOFIA, Bulgaria, Oct. 2.—The Government decreed a state of 'siege and placed the country under martial law, following discovery of a plot said to be almed not only at the over- throw of the Government but also of the throne of King Boris, Combine Federal Trade Commission Makes Allegations in NEMA Case WASHINGTON, Oct. 2— The calied; foul back in boxes to left of screen, strike’two; Galan’s liner | bolinced off Rowe's glove into cen-| ter field for a double. Herman up— strike one, fanned; foul back to screen, strike two; ball one, high and inside; error, Herman ground- ed to Rowe, the pitcher, and was| safe at first when pitcher lm:ew] his mobilized nation, the League a.cline carried quoted values from of Nations was receiving an official pne to more than five points lower note of protest from Emperor Haile {oday among the active issues as| Selassie against the alleged invas- ywar clouds hovered low over Eur- ion of Ethiopia by Italian soldiers. gpe. Italians Push Over Border | Teday's stock market closed as Authoritative sources in Addis Ab- weakening. aba said that the superior would Wheat futures jumped to the order general mobilization of all his highest price level in more than man power tomorrow morning. one year on war reports. Paris reports said that the Italians pushed over the Ethiopian borders CLOSING PRICES TODAY at all quarters. { NEW YOREK, Oct. 2.—Closing Frankly alarmed by reports that quotation today of Alaska Juneau hostilities had already begun, vir- mine stock is 15%, American Can tually the entire population of Italy 138!, American Power and Light 6, gathered in the general mobilization Anaconda 19, Bethlehem Steel 35%, called by Mussolini three hours be- General Motors 44%, International fore he talked to them. | Harvester 56%, Kennecott 23, United Duce Determined States Steel 42%, Pound $4.94, Unit- Mussolini continued: “War will'ed Foundry %. be met with war. A solemn hour| is about to break in history. We DOW, JONES AVERAGES will not pretend. Not only our army| The following are today’s Dow, marches toward its goal, but 44,000 Jones averages: industrials. 128.06, Itallans are marching with the rails 3261, utilities 23.30. army. genuine Britons will associate them- 4 K' idnaper on Trial selves with sanctions to protect a barbarous people.” Famous Plane ‘Gift of God Baby’ Mother, To Be Lent Society Leader, Said to By Mrs. Post Be Gangster Moll inary skirmishing in plan-making Federal Trade Commission has an- Past fifst; Galgn scoring from sec-| nounced it has issued a complaint Ond; error for Rowe. Lindstrom up OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Oct 2.—~Mrs. Wiley Post proposes to lend the plane Winnie Mae, which rocketed to fame with Wiley Post when he flew around the world in 1933, to the Smith- sonian Institution, as insurance against damage. The Congrescional $25,000 pur- chase vote came toc late in the session to receive the appro- priation, JUVENILE CRIME PLAGUES TURKEY ISTANBUL — Sukru Saracogin, Minister of Justice, has announced that juvenile courts will be opened ‘n all the chief cities of Turkey to deal with child criminals. 1t is es- timated that in Istanbul alone the police arrest 5,000 vagabond boys and girls & year. 1 i MEXICO, Missouri, Oct. 2.—Pros- ecutors today sought to convince a| jury that Mrs. Nellie ‘Tipton| for the next campaign continued today with two developments, The Republican National Com- mittee said that President Roose- velt, despite his pledge to diminish bureaucracy, was “keeping 2700 in- dividuals sitting around the corpse| of the NRA, paying them at a rate| of over $7,000,000 yearly for so do-’ ing. It is charged that most of .| these employees are political hench- | men.” | Senater Elmer Thomas, of Okla- home, Democrat, disclosed he was go- | ing to confer with Father Coughlin| in an effort to align him and hls} followers to support Roosevelt in 1936. | Make War, N. Y. Noise | | NEW YORK, Oct. 2—New York! without noise? | The whir of subway trains under-| ground—the roar of the elevated | overhead—the horns of aptomobile51 —the staccato of the riveters as| new buildings go up— | New Yorkers won't know their| own city if Mayor LaGuardia's! “League for Less Noise” is a suc-| cess. ! Already sound engineers have be—] (gun noise surveys in various spots (and they have found one automo- |bile horn can increase the intensity | of noise in a residential section 10,000 times—or from 46 to-80 de- Muench, member of ja prominent|cipels, family, is known as “Goldie,” ddm-| The Mayor has launched plans panion of gangsters. |for noiseless days and nights, fol- The prosecutors said she is the]lowing similar experiments in Euro- person, as they pressed a kidnaping pean cities, where unnecessary charge against the onetime society|noises have been cut to a mini- matron. She is a sister of a State|mum, particularly the sounding of Supreme Court Judge and the cen-|aytomobile horns. tral figure in'the court battle over the “gift of God baby,” whose ‘birth she announced after 22 years| 1 of childless marriage, and now onlsh-lke l’ c..ned . . in Dublin Prison trial for alleged complicity in the! kidnaping of Dr. Isaac Kelly, St.| Louis City throat specialist in 193!.“ DUBLIN, Oct. 2—Because they| - v have not been provided with a| WILSONS RETURN swimming pool, a handball alley and | Mr. and Mrs. Warren Wilson have a radio, political prisoners in Ar- returned from Warm Springs Bay, |bour Hill prison went on strike by where they have enjoyed a three- |remaining in their cells and refus- weeks’ vacation. Mr, Wilson is con- ing to cooperate in the jail's edu-| nected with the Alaska‘Laundry. |cational classes, i ¥ Alleged ¢ Swindler } Arrested One Charge—A;alinst Broker Is Stealing from Rogers’ Widow NEW YORK, Oct. 2—John J. Kemp, insurance broker, has been arrested and charged with stealing $1,524 from the widow of Will Rog- ers, Detectives said his peculations | irom other clients totaled $300,000. Léng Flight to Be Made by Clipper ALAMEDA, Cal, Oct. 2— The PAA clipper leaves at 3 p.m. today for ‘Guam. The famous clipper has already covered 25,000 miles to Hawali in flights preparing a trans-Pacific air route of 6,600 miles. Today's flight will be the longest oceanic flight the clipper has made. London’s Jaywalkers * Ignore Traffic Signal LONDON, Oct. 2—A census tak- en in Trafalgar Square, where high guardrails have been erected to pro- tect jaywalkers from stepping in front of traffic, showed that when the automatic signals said “cross now,” 6,125 crossed during the cen- | sus period. But when the signals said “don't ‘crw” 13,292 people crossed during the same period. Alimony Before Smoking WICHITA, Kans—Alimony be- fore:. cigarettes is the rule laid down by District Judge Ross Mc- |Cormick. He' ordered an ex-hus- band behind in his payments to ccase spending money for tobacco. charging the National Electrical Manufacturers’ Assoclation of New York and sixteen member manu- facturers with unlawful combina- tion, conspiracy and agreement to restrain competition, The charge is the companies or- ganjzed subsidiary and sectional groups of manufacturers, then after exchanging price information, agreed to sell power cable and wire, materials.at identical prices. New Drive on Jews in Reichlan Notaries Ar:gwrn of Of- fice—Old Order Is Rescinded ; BERLIN, Oct, 2—A new and re- lentless weeding out of ‘Jews from public and business life was given! impetus today in the anti-Semetic drive in the third Reich. ¥ All Jewish notaries have been de- prived of office. They have been, up to date, permitted to continue in business on the ground they were old trench fighters, but this order is now rescinded. Rio Erects | Huge Statue, RIO DE JANIERO, Oct. 2.—This! city has begun construction of a statue of Brazil's first president, General Deodora Ponseca, which is to be 72 feet high. It will be un- veiled in November, 1936. SOVIETS TEACHING INDIAN SIGN TALK| LENINGRAD — "Bwymekhfllm,"é which turns out educational movies here, has produced “The Language of ,Gestures” in which an expert| demonstrates 500 ‘signs used by high; ball two, wide; North American Indians for inter-|-—- - tribal communication, —out, sacrifice, pitcher to first;| Herman went to second. Hartnett up—bail one, low and wide; singled! on a liner to right scoring Herman. | Demaree up—ball one, wide; out,| pop fly to short. Cavarretta up—' foul back to screen, strike one; foul back on ground, strike two; side| out, Cavarretta hit to second forc- ing Hartnett at second, second to, short. Two runs, two hits, one left on base. DETROIT: White up—ball one, high and inside; strike one, called; foul back in press box, strike two; ball two, high; foul on roof of right field pavilion; foul back against| screen; ground foul past third; out, strike three, called. Cochrane up— ball one, low; strike one, called; strike two, fanned; ground foul back of plate; out, Cochrane flied to left in short left. Gehringer up —strike one called; foul to dugout| back of first, strike two; side out, Gehringer flied to short in short center. No runs, no hits, no errors, none' left on base. SECOND INNING CHICAGO: Hack up—ball one, inside; out, Hack flied to second! in short center. Jurges up—strike! one, called; Jurges singled on ground to left center and took second on left fields fumble, War- necke up—ball one, inside; out,| Warnecke, flied to right in short! one error,| American baseball classic, the World Series, winning the con- test by a score of 3 to 0. The Cub’s ace allowed only four hits and equalled the World record with eight assists in all, Warneke was in the mound duel with Schoolboy Rowe, of the Tigers, who allowed only veven hits, one a home run in the ninth inning by Demaree. Both of Chicago’'s other runs were earned. Warneke allowed four bases on balls, Hartnett, Demaree and Fox each got two hits. FIRST TWO RUNS Chicago’s first two runs came in the first inning when Galan hit sharply over second base and raced to second as Rogell deflected the ball to short cen- ter, the hit was scored as a two- bagger. Herman hit a roller along the third baseline. Rowe threw wildly and Galan scored as the ball rolled past the first baseman, Lindstrom sacrificed. Hartnett singled to right, scor- ing German. TIGERS JITTERY The Tigers became jittery and Demaree’s home run landed in the left field stands.- While Warneke allewed only - made three errors. four hits, two hits were in the (Continued on Page Five) ———.—-—— Fans Turn Out Early for Game jcalled; ;rlzht center. Galan up—ball one, {wide; ball two, wide; strike one, . line foul to left, strike gpectators Crush Gates in (Coptinued on Page Five) | |the two; side out, strike three, fanned.| i i Dt Detroit—Large Attend- left on base. DETROIT: ‘Greenberg up—ball one, inside; ground foul to left of plate, strike one; ball two, high; out, grounded out, third to first.| Goslin up—strike one, called; ball| one, wide; strike two, fanned; ball two, low and inside; ground foul past first; out, Goslin grounded out, pitcher to first. Fox up—ball one, inside; foul back on ground,| strike one; Fox doubled off the left | field screen. Rogell up—side out.| Rogell flied to left in left center. | No runs, one hit, no errors, one left on base. THIRD INNING | CHICAGO: Herman up—ball one, ! strike onpe, | ance at Contest DETROIT, Mich., Oect. 2—When gates opened this morning, there was a crush 'of baseball fans against them and they surged into the bleachers and grandstands im- mediately the gate tenders took their stations and began collecting the pastelLoards. It was estimated early that the attendance would be 49,000 Both teams took the field at stated times and began warm- ing up. Rowe and Warnecke were the onply pitchers taking the “warm- up”’ exercises. The weather was partly cloudy (Continued on Page Five) -

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