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FINAL PORT OF CALL FOR THREE STEAMSHIP COMPANIES - HEADQUARTERS U. S. SIGNAL CORPS COMMUNICATION FACILITIES I N ALASKA PROPER COAST TERMINAL FOR THE ALASKA RAILROAD VOLUME XXII. DUMBER 182. MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS SEWARD, ALASKA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26,1927. PRICE TEN CENTS BLOODHOUNDS AID 'RUNNING , NEGRO TO EARTH EIGHT i HOURS AFTER CRIME WILMOT, Ark., Aug. 26. (JP)—Less than eight hours after he is alleged to have attacked a young married woman, Winston Pounds, age 20, a negro, was taken from a posse of Deputy Sheriffs and hanged to a tree one and one-half miles from Wilmot. With the aid of bloodhounds the negro was captured without a strug gle and returned here about nine last night. The sheriff was preparing to take him to Hamburg when the mob drove up and forced the deputies to g ive up the negro. Fifty men drove him into the country where he was hanged. PLANE OLD GLORY IS AWAITING WEST WIND FULLY LOADED AND READY TC HOP OFF FOR NON-STOP FLIGHT TO ROME NEW YORK, Aug. 26. (/P)—Th« monoplane Old Glory, loaded, fueled and pearched on the runway top. i: earthbound by a fresh east wine which halted the take-off on its pro. posed non-stop flight to Rome. Neith er Bertraud or Hill, the pilots, ap peared on the field. Mechanics saic a west wind wras needed to lift th< plane into the air. GAINES SHOWS WITHDRAW ACCOUNT ■ RIFT WITH Fill) C. E. M. GFATT, WHO ADVANCE! THEORY SYLVIA IS ‘ALIVE, IS RETAINED SEATTLE, Aug. 26. (JP)—Attorne; Robert MacFarlane and John Car mody announced they have with drawn as defense counsel in th Gaines murder case after a rift wit! Gaines relatives as to the 'best meth cd of future proceedure. G. E. M Gratt, who advanced the theor; Sylvia Gaines was still alive, ha been retained to wage a final figh for Gaines’ life. MADRID. Spain, Aug. 26. (/P) P1 edges in the Madrid pawnshoi W which is run as a city monopolj showed a decrease of 54,255 item during the last fiscal year but th municipality managed to earn 612,76 pesetas on the business. Jewelry formed the larger part c the pledges while clothing w'a second. The annual public audio of unredeemed pledges brought i 1,912,127 pesetas on articales upo * .v ch only 1,299,360 pesetas ha beer. lent. Pawnshops are municips monoplies throughout Spain. REDFEI HOPS Off FOR SOUTH AMERICA POINTS ,_ \ GYNN ISLE, Radioed to BRUNS WICK, Georgia, Aug. 26. (£>)—Paul Redl'ern, Georgia aviator, hopped off at 12:46 for Rio De Janerio or Per namubuco, Brazil. Redfern is at I tempting to break the distance and ! endurance flight records. As the 'monoplane disappeared from view his | wife collapsed. REDFERNIS PREPARED IF EK IN THE AMU "DO NOT LOSE HOPE ON MY RE TURN NEXT SIX MONTHS” STATES AVIATOR — BRUNSWICK. Georgia, Aug. 26 (/P)—‘Paul Redfern, hopped off for Rio De Janerio, 4,600 miles away. II successful he will establish a dis tance record. The first land on the i route is at Porto Rico, 1,200 miles away. Redfern said if he was forced Idown in an amazon valley he could live indefinitely with the equipment he is taking. He said, "Don’t lose hope on my return for at least six months or more.” I f A fairly smooth trip with good . weather east from Unalaska to Sew. . ard but with bad weather encounter. . ed in Bristol Bay, marked the voyage [ of the S. S. Starr, Capt. O. A. Johan >Tsen, which returned to port yester day. Aside from the fair voyage the trip was uneventful. Incoming pas sengers on the vessel included: M. L. Adams, Mr. and Mrs. W. R Sprout, Lieut. A. R. Colwell, A. Mai lemberg, Frank Osborne. Jno. Hack meister, J. A. Mulvahill, Mrs. Gou'a and two Children, Mrs. W. E. Lee Cora B. Charles, Helen Lentz, Mrs J J. Torgransen, Mrs. Lewalters, E Patterson, O. Warsenkari, H. E. Har ris, Tom Padden, Capt. V. Willsgard Dave Price, J. P. Morgan, E. Millei ) Hans Salo, A. Roberts, H. Sonberg Hans Jensen, Geo. Zihrul, E. A. Le : waiters. BY HOMELESS WMF! ■ | MOSCOW, Aug. 26. (JP)—A ne\ | wave of homeless children is sweep ;ing over Moscow. Their number, es | timated by the city authorities t ihave fallen as low as 250,-has sud jdenly jumped to some 1,500. Th new rush is believed to have com I from Rostov-on-Don in the soutl Recruited from the families o peasantry and workmen, they com . to Moscow attracted by the temp'ta Uions of a modern city. Organize _.in gangs, they roam Moscow street ( snatching women’s ba’gs, pickin pockets and raiding street peddlar; ’ practically without interference fror the militia, who have abandoned hop , of suppressing them. f B. OF E. CHIEF RETURNS s Jonathan H. Wagner, chief of th n Alaska Division, Bureau of Educa a tion, returned to Seward today o a the M. S. Discoverer, from his annua 3 trip of inspection to schools an .1 (stations in the far Westward an Bristol bay districts. \ CHARGED WITH CONSPIRING TO VIOLATE PROHIBITION LAW; SECRET INDICTMENT SEATTLE, Aug. 26. (/P)— Seven residents of Vancouver, British Columbia, some of them prominent in j liquor exporting and distilling con-1 cerns, are under indictments here on j charges of conspiracy to violate the! prohibition law, it was revealed when j Federal Judge Neterer released a j secret indictment returned by the; Grand Jury June 2, in connection i with the seizure of the liquor laden j Canadian motor launch Zev, Cana- j dian. The defendants are Oakland Lampman, managing director of the ’ Joseph Kennedy Liquor Export House of Vancouver; Harry Reifel,; secretary to the Kennedy Co., and a member of a millionaire family ' of Vancouver; George Reifel, a brother of Harry Lamond; N. Milne, ware.: house man for the Kennedy Co.; Geo. jMasie, warehouse man and Louis Bernadina*a liquor dealer. A Cana-; dian customs ^official is unofficially! reported to be among the three of: vi the 10 mentioned in the indictment as John Doe. None of the Canadians have been arrested. ! PRIDE OF DETROIT TAKES AIR FOR NEWFOUNDLAND I OLDORCHARD, Maine. Aug. 26. (/P)—The monoplane Pride of Detroit hopped off at 5:25 for Harbor Grace, Newfoundland, where the start of an j attempt on a new world circling re i cord will be made. i I PASSES OUT OF U. S. A. | EASTPORT, Maine. Aug. 26. (;P)— , The Pride of Detroit passed out of , the United States at 7:55. ) LONDON, Aug. 26. (£>)—Sir W. Mit chell Thomson, Postmaster General, ',r! warns farmers against the Socialist '! proposal for the nationalization of ag “ | ricuiture. 3 • “Nationalization would be ruinous to ~' the industry,” he declares. “The ~ British farmer is far better able to manage his own affairs than an offi j cialat Whitehall. It would be the B blackest in the history of agriculture if farmers allowed state officials to } come and teach them nationalization s or by the Liberal scheme, which is g barely veiled nationalization.” a e HASN’T LOST A DAY WHELING, W. Va., Aug., 26. (/P)— Keeping out in the fresh air and taking lots of exercise is the prescrip tion* “Colonel” William Graham, 70, would give to anyone desiring to work q 38 years without losing a single day. 1 The “Colonel” has been a mail carrier 4 since 1889, with no days lost. Altho a eligible lor retirement long ago he prefers to “carry on.” BASEBALL SCORES PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE Seattle, 1; San Francisco, 15. Hollywood, 4; Oakland, nothing. Los Angeles, 2; Mission?, 5. Portland, 1; Sacramento, 4. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York, 8; Detroit, 2. 3 Washington, 5; Cleveland, 7. Philadelphia, 6? St. Louis, 1. Chicago, 4; Boston, 6. NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago, 8; Philadelphia, nothing. Pittsburgh, 1-8; Boston, 5-1. 'Cincinnati, 1; Brooklyn, 2. MORE THAN 700 PASSENGERS WILL DISEMBARK AT SEAT. TLE FROM LINER JUNEAU, Aug. 26. UP)—The steam. Dorothy Alexander called here South bound for- extra life preservers and lumber to make steerage bunks for extra passengers. When the liner reaches Seattle it is expected it will have more than 700 passengers on board the largest number believed ever taken South o^ any steamer from Alaska. The University Com mercial club party is aboard and are delighted with the trip. AUGUST NUMBER OF A. S. S. CD,, FOLDER OFF PRESS The August number of the Alaske Travelgraph published by the Alaske Steamship company in Seattle is ofi the press and copies received in the last mail This month’s issue is de voted almost entirely to the republish ing of testimonials on their Alaska steamers. Photographs of five ol the steamers, a part of the Alaska ! fleet, and a- beautiful photograph ol Auk Lake near Juneau, appear. In. j closed in the booklet this month is la paper souvenir totem pole on the back of which is set forth interesting information about the Territory There was also inclosed a schedule of rates for fall hunting by the Alas, ka Glacier Tourist Association. ! KOSTROMA, Aug. 26. (#>)— Robbers have raided the museum here, carry ir.g away many objects of historica importance. Among the stolen things were c shroud, richly embellished with gold silver and pearls, presented to th< Kostroma monasteries by Czar Boris Godunoff in 1604; a set of churcl vestments covered with precious stones, a boyar dress, belonging t< Prince Dmitri Poljarslcy, the savioi of Moscow from the Poles in 1610. Kostroma is one of the oldest Rus sian cities, founded in 1152 and was noted for its monasteries and church es. ALASKA DUE MIDNIGHT The S. S. Alaska, of the A. S. S Co., will, arrive in port from th< South at midnight, according to thi local office. jFIVE PASSENGER CUSTOM BUILT BIPLANE EQUIPPED WITH SKIIS AND WHEELS | WITCHITA, Kas., Aug. 26. (£>)— ! Equipped with skiis, as well as the j regular landing gear, a five passen Iger custom built biplane was crated |and shipped to Fairbanks by Irl ! Beach, Witchita Airplane builder. ! The plane land3 on ice or on land | and will enter the service of the ; Bennett-Rodebaugh Airways, at Fair ' banks. I SANTA BARBARA, Aug. 26. (/P)— | Two sharp earthguakes shocks were | felt. The first at 4:45 caused people to run into the streets the second ! following almost immediately. They lasted but a few seconds. No dam i age was reported. VENTURA FEELS QUAKE VENTURA,A ug. 26. (JP)—A light i earthquake was felt about 4:40. no damage reported. DEATH INTERRUPTS CALL ACROSS TIE ATLANTIC LONDON, Aug. 26. (>P)—For the first time, death has spread its fingers :over the trans-Atlantic telephone sys tem. Charles W. McKelvey, on a stu dent’s tour of Europe, put through a , call from the Savoy hotel here to his . mother, Mrs. John A. McKelvey, at . his home in New York The call came through in due course. After a minute or two of conversation, ; McKelvey heard his mother say, “Oh. ' Kim. hold on a minute.” He waited, at the telephone, but could not hear ! anything. Repeated calls failed to I bring any answer. ! About an hour later he put through another call. Servants at the house ; told him that his mother had died while speaking to him. >• HO WORD IS REARS FROM FEIER BT COMPANY. ! , ''MIAMI STATION REPORTS HAD COMMUNICATION WITH SEV ERAL VESSELS i 1 i (MIAMI, Aug. 26. (#*)—The Hilaleah ’ station, of the Tropical Radio Tele ! graph company, reported ships east 1 of the Bahamas and south of Porto 1 Rico so far have failed to sight any 1 of the lost monoplanes. Port Bruns 1 wick radio officials said they had communicated with several vessels whose positions were reported direct ' ly or near the course Redfern is tak 1 ing on his flight to Brazil. GOES 200 MILES FOR CAT YORK Beach, Me., Aug. 26. (£>)— A woman of Cantine, Me., traveled 200 » miles to recover her cat, which was > inadvertently left here when she re turned home from a visit#