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The lamest circulation of any newspaper in the 2nd, 3rd, 4lh Divisions of Alaska “ALASKA’S HOME NEWSPAPER” The Seward Weekly Gate way ia the hest 16-pa*e Weekly in the Territory of Alaska MEMBER AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION VOLUME XVI. NUMBER 111. SEWARD, ALASKA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1931. PRICE TEN CENTS COMPARISON MADE FROM 1926 TO END APRIL THIS YEAR WASHINGTON, D. C., May 20. (JP)—in 1926 the wholesale dollar' was worth $1,364. Last month; the Labor Department found that the dollar’s value during the year had increased more in rubber pur- j chasing power than in any of the j other 550 commodities covered by j calculations ending April, 1931. j $2,212; in silk and rayonETAOIN j The coin could have bought rub- ; ber that would have cost $7,519 in j April, 1926. Last month’s dollar j was worth $2,264 in petroleum! products; $2,212 in silk and rayon 1 and $2,188 in auto tires. Among food the price decreased last month in butter, cheese, fresh i and cured meats, lard, rye and: cornmeal. The only increases'were | grains, other foods and automo-; biles. NEW YORK MAY BE BJIOED AT THAT, NEW YORK. May 19. (/P)—The thrill of a practice air raid by army planes, scheduled for next Friday night, has been denied and no one seems to know exactly why. Washington authorities indicated it was because of “violent pro tests" from city officials. Peter J. Brady, head of the city’s avia tion committee, denied such was the case. “Far from it," he said, “the maneuvers have been given wide publicity and we have made ar rangements for them." Lots of telephoning is being done back and forth and New York City may be raided yet. Meanwhile army air forces are concentrating at Dayton, Ohio, from where various maneuvers will be staged over the Middle West. Plans call for appearance in the air of 799 fighting ships at one time. PLED OF SELF-DEFENSE NICE, May 20. (/P)—Nxon Nird- ! linger was acquitted of killing her husband, winning on a plea of self-defense. During the brief and dramatic trial she wept on the stand; her mother collapsed in the crowded court room. She said her husband seized her by the throat during a quarrel and she reached under her pillow' for the revolver with which she | shot him. MULTIPLE APPROACH CHICAGO, May 19. (JP) — The Chicago Academy of Criminology, destined to provide a multiple ap proach to the problem of crime in all its aspects, was organized here. HALIBUT PRICES PRINCE RUPERT, May 20. (JP)— One hundred and 93,000 pounds of American halibut sold for 4c and 9c; Canadian, 4c and 7c. At Seattle six boats with 16,200 pounds sold for 6c and 9c. HEIRV COHON IS GOLFING GKMIPION IT BIS TOMMENT SOUTHPORT, England, May 19. (£>)_Henry Cotton won the pro fessional golf tournament with a score for four rounds of 287. Archie Compston finished sec ond with 289. Horton Smith of America and Percy Arliss of Ber lin tied for third with 290. Joe Kirkwood, American trick shot artist, withdrew after trail ing hopelessly. Tony Manero had 298 and Joe Turnesa, the other American, with only 305. i Cotton and Arliss broke the I i course record with 68 in the final j I round. STABBED IN BACK SAN FRANCISCO, May 20. (/P>— William H. Whittsorne, Sail Fran cisco attorney, was concentrating on a target in a contest of arch- i ery and by mishap was hit in j the back. He pulled out the ar- j row. First aid was given at a hospital. KETCHIKAN. May 20. i/P> —Jim Dodson, who was injured in a plane crash more than two weeks ago left for Seattle on the S. S. Yukon to consult medical specialists for a nose injury which he sustained. C. J. Alexander, of Seattle, and A1 Dano are still confined to the hospital. They will probably remain there for many weeks. Dodson was accompanied by his wife. POLICE CALLED HANDLE NICE, France, May 20. f/P)—Po lice were called to handle a crowd of 1,000 women who stormed the court room where Mrs. Charlotte Nash Nixon Nirdlinger is on trial for shooting her husband. She testified she shot him in self-defense. Police testified there evidently had been a struggle before the shooting. SAILS FOR ENGLAND | NEW YORK, May 19. (A5)— Mrs. j Lawrence Harper of California, | top-ranking American woman ten nis player, sailed for England to compete at Wimbleton. She was runner-up to Miss Betty Nuthall in the National championship last August. WALES GIVES INFORMATION LONDON, May 19. (JP)—Nineteen distinguished guests received first rand information about what the 'Prince of Wales did on his trip | to South America. He showed them | a talking film of his and Prince George’s experiences. NOTABLES CUE ALASKA ITINERARY; TO DIVE JULY 20 CUTTER TAHOE WILL CONVEY GOVERNMENT HEADS ROUND TRIP WASHINGTON, D. C., May 20. (JP)—A revised itinerary is an nounced for the Congressional party to inspect the Interior De partment projects in Alaska. Chairman Murphy, of the In terior Department sub-committee and House appropriations group, heads the party. Director Albright of the National Park Service will accompany the Park Service will accompany the June 21, via National Parks to Los Angeles, sailing from Seattle I July 18 on the Government cutter I Tahoe. i The prty will reach Ketchikan | July 20, then Wrangell, Juneau, j Cordova, Valdez, Seward, McKin- | ;ley Park and Fairbanks, returning; | over the Richardson trail to Cor- i j dova and arriving in Seattle on | ithe Tahoe August 6. ATTMEJS HOLD FLIC OVER LIO TRESPASSES WASHINGTON, D. C.. May 20.; (/P)—Members of the American Law Institute at its final session: debated the involved question of; whether an airplane trespasses! when it flies over private land. 1 Professor Edward S. Thurston, of Harvard, who presented a ten tative draft of the Restatement! of the Law in Torts, said the few court decisions had almost uni-' formly held that flying over I private land was a trespass. BULK IF i ESTHE LEFT TO SON! — NEW YORK, May 20. (/P)—The : bulk of the $75,000,000 estate of George F. Baker was left to his son George, Jr., and $5,000,000 each was bequeathed to his two daugh ters, Mrs. Florence Loew and Ev elyn St. George. A quarter of a million dollars was willed to the New York Pub lic Library and the same amount to the Episcopal Cathedral in Washingotn. Other bequests included $25,000 to his secretary and legacies from $15,000 to $1,000 to servnats. His son was named sole executor. , PASADENA, Calif., May20. (/P)—j Sir James and Lady Jeans left for Baltimore. The noted British as tronomer said his fortnight at the Mount Wilson laboratory here was of profound interest and value to him. From Baltimore Sir James will go to Washington to deliver a lec ture. He will then sail for Eng land. ADMIRAL EVANS SAILS SEATTLE, May 20. (JP)—The SS Evans, of the Pacific Steamship Co., sailed at 10 a. m. and carried 105 passengers. BRIGADIER mil PUBLISHER BURNED TO OEITH BUT SNEO 20 PARIS, May 20. (£>) — French army engineers recovered the body of Brigadier General Robert Dun lap, U. S. Marine Corps, who was | buried alive in Stoneage cave by a landslide near Trours yesterday; also the body of Denis Briant, farmer, who was with the General. The General went to the rescue of Briant’s wife who was caught in the landslide and whose screams were heard from the back of the cave. She was brought out alive. ; The General’s body will be sent home. Mrs. Briant was badly in jured and one leg has been am putated by a surgeon who re mained at the place all night. - . —. ILLUSTRATOR SUICIDES ; NEW YORK, May 20. (/P)—-Ralph .Barton, widely known illustrator, : suicided at his East 57th Street | home. MTU HER KILLS FBI ID TIEN SUICIDES EDMONTON, Alberta, May 20. | (ZP>—Running amuck, Josph Mich- i alavich, 33, farmer of Edward, near Smoky Lake, shot and killed j his mother Baska Michalavich, 70; j his brother Steven, 45; his brother’s | daughter Mary, 13; and then shot) himself. Still alive he was rushed to the I Edmonton hospital. Two other chil-: dren were reported to have escaped.! The motive for the killings has j not yet been ascertained. More de tails will be given later. Dll GOLF COURSE CHARLESTON, S. C., May 20. j (/P)—Former Senator Truman H. j Newberry of Michigan has gone j into the golf business. He has acquired by purchase the: two 18-hole courses at Summer- j ville, the country club and hotel, | and plans to make it “the best possible place for congenial people to play golf." The former senator was secre tary of the navy in President Roosevelt’s cabinet and was elect ed senator from Michigan in 1915. [ RESIGNS BIG JOB ; VANCOUVER, B. C., May 20. (/P) j—Robert G. Grosse, who resigned as vice president and general man ager of the British Columbia Pack ers, has been succeeded by his brother, Richard. AIRPLANE ACCIDENT FATAL NAIROBI RENAY, Africa, May 20, (fP)—D. Hatton, brother of the Earl of Winchelsea and Not tingham was killed in an airplane accident; As a well known big game hunter, he accompanied the Prince of Wales on an expedition last year. HEAT WAVE IN SOUTH CARRIES IN WAKE SERIES FIRE PUBLIC AND PRIVATE AGENCIES COORDINATED IN BATTLE OF FLAMES SAN FRANCISCO, May 20. (/P)— The parching heat wave entered its third day, carrying in its wake a series of menacing forest and grass brush *ires from Santa Bar bara to the northern Sierras. Oakland and San Jose tempera • jtures were 92; San Francisco, Sac Iramento and Red Bluff 90. Fire fighters fought blazes in the countryside and Forest City fire men yesterday spent one of their busiest days in years. The gover nor prepared to coordinate public and private fire fighting agencies and will use the National Guard, State and Highway Patrol in the fire service should the situation continue. LUO'S FACE MANGLED BY CIRCUS BEAR; SIRE SAVED LIFE SMALL SON PITTSFIELD. Mass., May 20. {&) —A policeman, who took his child ren to a carnival here, saved a six-year-old boy from being squeezed to death by a big brown bear, but the lad’s face was man gled before the animal released, him. The boy, John Cronin, hurrying to see a sword swallower, ran un der the chains behind which the bear was imprisoned. The bear seized him around the waist and started tearing his face with his teeth. Patrolman McDermott hastened to the boy’s aid. Seizing the bear’s ears and standing on one of its haunches, he shook the ani mal’s head until it released the child. MORE WOMEN WANTED FARM WORK IN RUSSIA MOSCOW, May 20. (£>)—“Let the Women do the Work,” has long been a quaint old Russian custom, and now the government has started a campaign to increase the female workers on collective farms. By putting more women to work on the farms it is hoped the five year plan may be speeded up. Heretofore shortage of skilled and unskilled labor has impeded the plan, somewhat endangering the possibility that it will be com pleted on schedule. RIOTING IN SWEDEN STOCKHOLM, May 19. iff) — A Swedish cruiser left here for Aad alaen, where a general sawmill strike has been ordered. A train transporting troops and machine guns to the district was stoned by strikers. Six persons including a wo man were shot and killed and sev< eral others wounded.