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Oldest Newspaper in Alaska. ___M. inh.-r of The Asso.-i.-Hed Press DEVOTED TO THE BUILDING OF A BETTER NOME AND THE SECOND DIVISION. NOME IS TIIE STRATEGIC WORLD FLIGHT AIR BASE—ESPECIALLY ADAPT' D FOR COMMERCIAL ANI) MILITARY AVIATION THE NOME DAILY NUGGET VOL. 36 NO. 69 NOME, ALASKA, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1935. Per Copy Ten Cents Six Burned to Death, Score are Injured PACIFIC N.W. SCHEDULED FOR BAD WEATHER Wealthy Mining Man Found Frozen to Death, Canada Wealthy Mining Man Is Found Frozen To Death (Bv The Associated Press) MONTREAL, March 26 — The body of Stanley Siscoe, wealthy Montreal mining executive, was found frozen two miles from Lake Matchimanitou, according to word received here. Siscoe and pilot Wrathall were forced down last Tuesday in a rag ing snowstorm. Siscoe left the pi lot in search of aid and was never seen again until his body was discov ered yesterday. Whathall was found tramping in the snow at Lake Des Jardins, hungry but in good physic al condition. U S Signal Corps Tests Wide Range Equipment Terr. (By The Associated Press) SEATTLE, March 23 — The U. S. Signal Corps demonstrated the Ninth Corps Area Commanding General's new sytem of wireless telegraphy which gives him instant radio con trol of the entire strategic territory of Alaska. Whistling and ticking instruments in a test performed for Major Gen eral Paul Malone, hurled messages at the rate or from two to four hun dreds words a minute, thousands of miles from Seattle across the Aleu tians and as far as Point Barrow. The General talked by wireless telephone over the same system yes terday to Governor Troy and prom ised to visit if possible military and airplane landing fields in the Terr itory this coming summer. Short Strike Is Settled Only Few Hours Afterward (By The Associated Press) VANCOUVER, March 2 — Out only a few hours, the crew of the Border Line’s “Border Prince,” re turned to work late Monday, their wage demands having been met. The new agreement gives winch men and quartermasters two and a half dollars a month increase. The rest of the deck and engine room’s personnel were granted fifty cents an hour overtime, after eight hours, and one full day oft in seven, with pay. Messmen’s wages were in creased from thirty-five to forty dollars a month. The crew were all members of the Seafarers Industrial Union. SIX PERSONS burned TO DEATH IN FIRE AT CLUB IN CITY CHICAGO (By The Associated Press) CHICAGO, March 26 — Six persons were burned to death and scores were injured when flames trapped them early Sunday morning in the Club “Rendezvous.” Encircled by swift and separating fire, panic-stricken patrons fought for the one exit, many of them being, trampl ed. A motorist made an ineffectual attempt to open another exit by ramming his car against the outside of the building. Smoke curling up from the cloakroom at 2:30 a.m. started the stampede for the exit. The cause of the fire has. not been determined. The club is one of several night resorts clustered in the little town of Morton Grove, several miles from Evanston, in the suburbs of Chicago, the scene of the kidnapping several years ago of John Jake Barber, an international speculator. The six victims apparently died in efforts to get their wraps before fleeing from the build ing. Communications Addressed to The Nome Nugget FIELD AGENCY OF THE Federal Housing Administration Office of the Territorial Director for Alaska JUNEAU, ALASKA. PRESS RELEASE JUNEAU, Alaska, March 5, 1935. In response to many inquiries which have been received at the Juneau office of the Federal Housing Ad ministration, Director John E. Peg ues has prepared a statement in the form of questions and answers des cribing how those desiring to build homes may do so under the mutual insurance system of the National Housing Act. It is pointed out in the statement that insured mortgag es may mature over as long a period as twenty years and that as much as 80 percent of the money needed for construction purposes may be se cured by means of the mortgage. Provision is also made for refinanc ing existing mortgages & for plac ing insured mortgages on property not now encumbered by indebtedness The program is restricted to dwell ings housing not more than four families and not more than 25 per cent of the floor space may be used for business purposes. The explanation of the program as given by Mr. Pegues follows: Question' What is the purpose of Title II of the National Housing Act? Answer: Title II of the National Housing Act has been devised to provide a standardized method and type of financing for new construc tion and for the refinancing of many present encumbrances. This plan contemplates new construction and i building activity and the goneral im provement of housing standards. Question: Are there any restric tions as to type of property; stand ards of construction; location of pro perty; condition of property? Answer: Yes. The Act provides certain property standards and rules for location and construction which are generally commensurate with gool real estate practice in better localities. The building must be con structed of good material, be of a generally modern type, conform sub stantially to other structures in the neighborhood, and the location must be in a district approved for resi dential purposes and which is not likely to deteriorate or lose its char acter as a good residential neighbor hood during the life of the loan. Question: Are there ny regula tions covering the ground area of a dwelling in relation to the area of the lot? Answer: Yes. The Act provides that to assure adequate light and air in all inhabited rooms the desir able maximum coverage for single family detached houses, including the necessary buildings, is approxi mately 20% of the lot exclusive of area given to alleys, streets and easements, and that in no case should the coverage of a lot for this type of property be greater than 30% for interior lots or 40% for corner lots. The coverages may be exceeded in cases of attached two to four family buildings if the ap plicant can demonstrate that all in habited rooms shall have ample light and air. Question: Must plans and spec ifications be submitted when a loan is applied for? Answer: Yes. The applicant fur nishes complete plans and specific ations, preferably in three sets. Question: Will properties with one or two mortgages already ex (Continued on Page Three) PA A Flight To San Diego May Be Tomorrow If WP (Bv The Associated Press) MIAMI, March 26 — The flight of the giant Pan American Airways clipper plane from here to San Diego, to inaugurate a new commer cial air route from California to the Orient, was postponed, when the nineteen ton flying boat returned to its base here for propeller adjust ment, after proceeding a short dis tance. The trip may start tomor row. Court Matters A jury was obtained early lias morning in the <■:, .• 01 the 1 niUd States versus rummy Moms, eh.ag ed with assault and battery on lie person of Joe Hebert. The govern ment introduced its testimony this morning and el ised its case before lunch. Court v.an adjourned ieit’1 2 PM at whici time tli ' Uefou.-e ■ presented by C W Thornton, coun sel, started its ease. The defense concluded its case to day and the jury was out but a few minutes and returned with a verdict of not guilty. Court was adjourned and will convene again tomorrow morning at 10 o’clock, when the Bob I,arson trial will start. Council Mcclin^ The City Council met in regular session last night and transact'-1 on ly matters of routine business. All councilmen were present except Ed Seidenverg. An application was received from W. Slack for the purchase of some lots adjoining his machine shop The council took no action. -'Councilman Polet recommended the lowering of the assessed valua tion on the property of Pete Daniel son. Council approved such action. Councilman Sather reported the Finance Committee had engaged A F. Wright to audit the books of the city clerk and treasurer. The council took action to pur chase twenty-five feet of property adjoining the hospital to keep it free from buildings, and insure fire protection for the hospital. Walter Cavey reported his activ ities to the council in regard to the detection of radio interference around Nome. The council instruct ed him to continue his investiga tion. Leroy Sullivan as a member of the Nome committee of the FERA, reported the committee was discuss ing the advisability of taking a cen (Continued on Page Four) WEATHER TURNS COLD IN PACIFIC NORTHWEST FOUR DEATHS ALRE ADY (By The Associated Press) SEATTLE. March 26—With four dead, today, seasonal cold was reported from many sections, rain and dust storms vieing the snow to turn the calendar topsy turvy. The Pacific Northwest is scheduled for even more cold and unsettled weather. The deaths were attributed to storms. Fritz Johnson of Portland was killed when the wind dropped a tree into a bunkhouse at Stayton, Oregon. Wilbur Lyons, aged twenty-one, was killed when struck by a tree while following his trapline near Kooskia, Idaho. Mrs. M. A. Peterson of Yakima. Washington, was kill ed near Vantage. Wn., when her car skidded and overturned due to icy snow. John Berge, of Aberdeen, was drowned when his troll ing boat crashed against the Columbia River jetty. A dust storm blew up east of Spokane and cast a pall over the city. Many were marooned since Sunday at Mount Baker Lodge, by snow-blocked highway, and reached Bellingham late last night. Dl awing In Grand National Five Am. Out Of Sixteen (By The Associated Press) DUBLIN, March 20 —Five Amer icans were included in the sixteen persons who drew on the winner in the Irish Hospital Sweepstakes: Gol den Miller is the favorite. The Grand National is to be run Friday at Ain tree, England. The Americans were all from the East. The Americans drew a hun dred and sixty three of the four hun dred and thirty-two tickets on the winner. Each is certain to win ap proximately four thousand dollars. Tells Of More Of Mutilating Bodies Before Mis Death (Bv Tne Associated Press) OSSINING, New York, March 26 Albert H. Fish, sentenced to die in the electric chair for the slaying of ten-year-old Grace Budd, confessed this morning to the mutilation and probable murder of three other children, and a young man. The sixty-five year old man told Warden George A. Casey, at the Westchester County Jail, his story, but was uncertain whether two of them died as he said he fled from the scene after mutilating them, and be fore he was certain they had died. IVIaii the Nome Daily Nugget to vour friends, and let them know about the re building of Nome. Four Nazis Are Sentenced Hang Murder Fellow (Bv The Associated Press) KAUNAS, Lithuania, March 6— Four of a hundred and twenty-six Nazis tried on charges of conspiring to seize Memei for Germany, were sentenced to death. Ten others were sentenced to pri son; thirty were acquitted. The four condemned to die were convicted of murdering a fellow Nazi whom they alleged of suspect ing to betray them. Political cir cles feared the unfortunate effect of this on the German attitude toward the proposed eastern security pact which would have included Lithuan ia. „ May l>e Appointed Governor General In Near Future (By The Associated Press) LONDON, March 26 — Colonel John Buchan, author and publicist, will probably be the new Governor General of Canada, authorities said today. He will be the first common er ever to be appointed to the post. U S MAIL ARRIVES Pilot Jerry Jones of the Pacific Alaska Airways arrived today with the U S Mail from Fairbanks. He left again immediately on his return flight with outgoing mail.