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i PINAL PORT OF CALL FOE THREE II 11 COAST TERMINAL FOR THE ALASKA STEAMSHIP COMPANIES / ALASKA PROPER RAILROAD ^purarfc t)nih| (fkitmtan MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRES! VOLUME XXII. NUMBER 195. SEWARD, ALASKA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1927. PRICE TEN CENTS WASHINGTON STATE DRV DIRECTOR LYLE TO BE SUPPLANTED MANY WOLVES IN SHEEPSj CIOTHING IN SERVICE STATES LOWMAN WASHINGTON, Sept. 10. (^—As sistant Secretary Lowman of the j Treasury Department and in charge! f of prohibition enforcement, announc ed Director Roy Lyle has been re turned to his post “awaiting the out come of the regular civil service ap pointments.” Treasury officials reiter ated he probably would be supplanted soon. . Lowman made Known he suspended Alfred Hubbard and Richard L. Fry ant, prohibition agents under Lyle, from duty for “irregularities in con nection with smuggling liquor. “Determination to rid the Federal ^ prohibition, service of dishonest and incompeten1. agents was expressed by Lowman r- an oral statement in which he declared, “If America can be made ■ *-»r and temperate in 50 years a g< job will have been done’ Lowman said that while there wrere “a lot of splendid fellows and fear less men in the service there are also many incompetent and crooked men and bribery is rampant. There are many wolves in sheeps clothing and we are after them. Lately many have been let out all over the country. The Government’s Intelligence Service has been very helpful. Some days my arm gets tired signing orders of dis missal. The customs and coast guard r' is well organized and some crooks show up in these bureaus but they go out just as fast as we locate them.” PIE OF DETROIT ARRIVES SHHM WORLD FILERS ROLLING RIGHT ALONG; LAND ON CHINESE AIRDOME SHANGHAI, Sept. 10. (/P)—'The Pride of Detroit arrived in Hong Kong at 8:30 Saturday night after a flight of 780 miles. The fliers left Hong Kong at 6:25. The world fliers made a landing on the Chinese Government airdome 16 miles outside the interna tional settlement. AKIAK, Sept. 10. (#>)—Approaching in seriousness the disasterous epidem ic among the natives in 1919 neailv 200 Eskimo have died this summer of influenza in the Kuskokwim region. Federal teachers and nurses have fin ally controlled the epidemic. The disease first struck the fishing camps then was carried to the villages. COW IS RECORD MOTHER CRITTENDEN, Ky., Sept. 10. {JP)~ W. D. Drennan is the owner of a cow which holds the record of being the mother of three pairs of twin calves, all born within 28 months. OLD GLORY SIGHTED DFFST.JOHNS COAST SAYS RELAYED WIRr NAVY OFFICIALS SKEPTICAL OF j AUTHENTICITY OF MESSAGE 400 MILES OUT HALIFAX, Sept. 10. (IP)—C. H. | Harvey, local agent for the Marini1 Fisheries Department, received a mes sage from Ottawa stating the Old Glory had been sighted approximately 400 miles east northeast of St. Johns. SKEPTICAL OF REPORT OTTAWA, Sept. 10. (>P)—The mes sage relayed to Halifax from Ottawa reported the plane Old Glory had been sighted 400 miles off St. Johns origi-1 nated at Washington and was handed to the Canadian Naval Services here by the United States Embassy. Offi cials of the Naval Service, while for warding the message to Canadian ships, were skeptical of its value. LYLE FAILED 10 CONGRESSMAN JOHNSON OF WASHINGTON SAYS CHARGE IS PROVEN — HOQUIAM, Sept. 10. (£>)—Congress i man Johnson said he had been inform ed Lyle had failed to pass the civil service examination which was one cause of delay in securing from Wash ington the decision as to his status. “In my opinion this proves the charge I made that the trouble with prohibi tion enforcement in this State wras in compentency in high places.” ALASKA SAILS NORTH! WITH 198 LISTED SEWARD RESIDENTS RETURNING: ON ALASKA STEAMSHIP VESSEL SEATTLE,Sept. 10. (£>)—'The S. S. j Alaska, of the A. S. S. Co.„ sailed at I 9 a. m. carrying 198 passengers. The Seward listing includes* W. O. Wook ren, Mrs. L. Brasher, C. W. Peterson, G. G. Lemons and wife, Mr. Short, M. R. Rice, Mrs. K. Cecil, D. B. Mauir, Joe Magill, C. Flanagan and wife, T. Workman and wife, Mrs. A. Willis, W. D. Congnon, Helen Durand, W. R. Shellhorn and wife, Miss Wilma Shell horn, Miss J. Merrill, Mrs. S. W. Dun-' kei, R. D. Weiss, Miss B. Merrill, Mrs. C. M. Schribner and son. BASEBALL SCORES PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE Seattle, 3-3; Oakland, 4-8. Mission, 2-4; San Francisco, 3-3. Sacramento, 2; Portland, 6. Hollywood, 5-7; Los Angeles, 3-2. NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia, 2; Pittsburg, 3. Brooklyn, 6; St. Louis, 8. Boston, 1^ Cincinnati, 8. New Yoork 7; Chicago, 2. AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland, 1; Boston, 6. Detroit, 5; Philadelphia, 2. St. Louis,, 3; New York 9. Chicago, 8; Washington, nothing. i l NAVY REVOKES LEAVE WASHINGTON, Sept. 10. (/P)—1The Navy Department revoked the leave granted Lieut. L. W. Curtis and En sign S. V. Edwards who planned to ac company Fonck across the Atlantic. STORM OF PROTEST IS AROUSED OVER OCEANIC FLYING SEARCH FOR OLD GLORY AND SIR CARLING CONTINUES TO PROVE FRUITLESS NEW YORK, Sept. 10. (£>)—An in tensified storm of protests against1 trans-Atlantic flying will make the | abandoment of at least two more pro-i jected oversea hops a certainty. The j prospects of a Presidential investiga tion to make such adventures safe i looms. The Navy Department openly j displayed opposition to transoceanic flights by withdrawing the leave of absence of two officers who had been planning a flight. President Coolidge voiced concern over the recent disasters and it is re vealed may have oceanic flying inves tigated. Philadelphia and Boston have withdrawn their $25,000 prizes Friends and relatives of the three men plan- j ning hops appealed to the flyers to| abandon their intentions. Meanwhile,' a fruitless search for Old Glory and; Sir Carling continued. COOLIE DEDICATES STATE COLLEGE LIBRARY | BROOKINGS, S. Dak., Sept. 10. (IP) —’President Coolidge dedicated the Lincoln Memorial Library at the South Dakota State College with an address devoted almost wholly to education and marked of absence of any refer ence to farm relief fight or other Tcontroversal problems. "His Best Donor." I HAVE NO KICK TO MAKE •V GOVERNOR JACKSON INDICATED ON BRIBERY CHARGE; MAYOR, CORRUPT PRACTICE INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 10. (^—Gov ernor Ed. Jackson of Indiana has been indicted for conspiricy to commit a felony in attempted bribery. John L. Buvall, mayor of Indianapolis, is nam ed in another indictment charging vio lation of corrupt practices act. Nam ed in the same indictment with Jack son were George V. Coffin, chairman of the Marion county republican com mittee; Robert I. Marsh, formerly a law partner of Jackson and counsel for the Ku Klux Klan during the Grand Dragonship; and D. C. Stephen son. The return of the indictment was the climax to an 11 months in quiry by three successive Grand Juries into the charges of political corrup tion in the State of Indiana. WANTED BOY ,GOT GIRL TOKYO, Sept. 10. </P)—Empress Nagako of Japan gave birth to a daughter. FILERS ORDERED HOME WINDSOR, Ont, Sept. 10. (/?)—'The Windsor flight committee has ordered chiller and Wood to abandon then trans-Atlantic flight and return home. WHEN DID ALASKA FIRST "FREE UP" DEPARTMENT ASKEO WASHINGTON, Sept. 10. (^—Num erous inquiries as to the date when I Alaska “froze up” have been received every year by the Geological Survey, Department of the Interior. Some of the inquiries, it was said, estimated the time, the estimate vary ing from 40 to several hundred years ago, and ask the Survey for a verifi cation of one of the dates. The Survey has just made public the following answer to one of the inquir ies: “The present Alaska glaciers are only shriveled remnants of much greater glaciers that have existed there in the past. Many parts of the interior of the Territory that are now free of ice have been covered by it in the past. This, indeed, is true not of Alaska only but of the whole north ern part of North America. At one time the northern ice sheets extended down across the present Canadian boundary line and covered much of the northern part of the United States. How long agt) this succession periods of glaciation began is largly a matter of conjecture. Mod ern estimates indicate that it may have been a million years ago. So we suppose that might be said to be the time when Alaska ‘‘froze up”. Mod. | era geological text books contain dis cussion of glaciation.” MOUSE IN CARBURATOR PHILLIPSBURG, Kas., Sept. 10. (IF) —John Van Wyck of Prairie View, near here, intends to carry a mouse trap in his gasoline tamk hereafter. Van Wyck’s car stalled recently. He was unable to locate the trouble and sent for a mechanic. Investigation disclosed a mouse in the carburator.