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MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VOLUME XXIX. NUMBER 166. SEWARD, ALASKA, TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1933. PRICE TEN CENT$ ITALIAN PLANES WITHSTOOD LONG FAST TRIP WELL CHICAGO, July 18. — General Italo Balbo, refreshed by a night of sound rest, plunged back again yesterday into the worshipping crowds that welcomed him and his intrepid airmen to the city of Chi cago Saturday. V Through crowded streets and amid thunderous cheers, the beard ed leader waved and smiled as he made his way to the office of Mayor Edward Kelley at noon for his official visit to the City’s Chief Executive. Throughout the day. great crowds lined the Lake Shore, while pilots and their mechanics inspected the 24 giant Savoia Marchetti planes. All ships stood well the 6,100 mile flight from Italy at an average speed of 130 miles an hour. Only minor adjustments are required to prepare the gaily colored monarchs of the air for the return flight. | General Balbo planned to take his air fleet to New York City to day and was even planning to ac cept President Roosevelt’s invita- j tion to come to Washington. The fleet is scheduled to start on its return trip to Italy on Wed- ; nesday. HUTTON IS SUING EVANGELIST WIFE FOR / nn'ORCE LOS ANGELES, July 13. —David “What a Man” Hutton, chorister, yesterday filed suit for divorce from Aimie Semple McPherson Hutton. In the divorce action Hutton charged that the Evangelist per mitted intimate details of their pri vate life fo be discussed publicly. He claimed that the widely known head of Angelus Temple caused him great humiliation and em barrassment by cabling him recent-! ly that she was the mother of a. newly born son. He was also hum iliated, he said, when she insisted that her recent Paris operation was; serious, whereas he learned it was a minor beauty operation. Capt, Harold T. McCam of the SS. Havre, which sailed from Cher- : bourg, France, Sunday, communi-; cated with officials of the Balti- j more Mail Line, saying that Aimie j Semple McPherson Hutton was a | passenger on his ship. The Havre is j en route to the United States and! will dock at Baltimore on July 25. Capt. McCam said that Mrs. Hut-1 ton was to debark at Baltimore and that she would, in all probability, go direct to Los Angeles from there. DIRECTIONAL SIGNALS SEATLE, July 18. — Directional; radio signals are to be broadcast; by the Army radio station at Nome to aid Wiley Post on his air flight from Siberia to Alaska, it was an nounced by the Signal Corps head quarters here. MILLION FOR ALASKA Details are lacking but the Fed eral Government is said to have set aside the sum of $1,000,000 of the public works fund for Alaska. A broadcast from KFQD, Anchor age, said that no particulars have been received as to how this money was to be distributed but that more information was expected from Washington, D. C., soon. The broad cast also said that the Anchorage Chamber of Commerce was work ing on the assembling of data of worthwhile public works projects in that region. The regular weekly luncheon and business meeting of the Seward Chamber of Commerce wras held today at noon. COUNTS NOSES GENEVA, July 18. —About 2,000, 000,000 persons dwell on this ter-! restrial globe, says a new year book j of the League of Nations. Both! births and deaths show a tendency j to decrease. GOOD REPORTS CAUSE NUMBER STOCKS TO CLIMB NEW YORK, July 13. —Stocks! whirled up to the highest prices since 1931 yesterday when another rise in commodities fired the spec ulative enthusiasm of participants on the market. An added incentive was highly favorable business news, including wage increases and improved earn ings reports by some of the coun- i try’s leading corporations. With an increasing public inter-( est in the Administration’s Re-; covery program indications are that; business and the wage-earner will : have better sailing through the economic seas which have been so turbulent for several years. i POST IS MAKING UP LOST TIME ! NOVOSIBIRSK, Siberia, July 18.' Wiley Post hopped off today Itowards Irkutsk at 9:02 a.m. Mos-| |cow time, which is 1:02 a.m. East-' |ern Standard time. This was just ! two hours and 35 minutes after he had completed his 1,818 mile hop from Moscow to Novosibirsk. Dur ing this brief stay at Novosibirsk Post barely had time to get himself some refreshments and to retune! his plane. He is anxious to make up for the 12 hours of time he lost while grounded at Koenigsberg, in! Germany. Post was four nours ahead of his the record established by him- i self and Harold Gattv in 1931, when he arrived in Moscow. BANKER TRIES TO JUMP INTO RIVER JERSEY CITY. N. J., July 18. — Joseph W. Harriman, New York banker, who disappeared from a Manhattan nursing home for the second time in two months yester day, attempted to leap from a ferry boat crossing the Hudson river. The banker made the attempt tw'ice but deckhands on the ferry boat restrained him. Harriman, according to Capt. J. W. Johnston, of the terminal rail road police, crossed the river three times. AIR-MINDED MINERS The present aviation field at Wil low' Creek is situated a couple of miles below the Lucky Shot mine but a new field is being laid out adjacent to the famous gold mine which employs nearly 100 men. The Star Air Service, of Anchorage, maintains a regular schedule and the amount of travel is amazing. The round-trip is made in about 40 minutes. Alaskan commodities shipped to the States during the month of June agregated $1,445,339 in value, it wras made known in Juneau re cently by J. C. McBride, Collector of Customs. Gold valued at $738,816 was shipped out. Canned salmon shipments were worth $432,374. Gerald Church, who has had many years experience in Alaska, received the appointment of depu ty administrator in charge of pro h i b i t i o n enforcement in western Washington. CAPITOL INTERESTS (By Bob Bartlett) | Valdez has been added to the cities which the fleet of destroyers I to visit Alaska in July and Aug just will stop. • * • * The post offices at Haines and jHyder are to be relegated to the fourth class, according to a recent anouncement by the Post Office Department. * * * * A recent conference in which Commissioner of Indian Affairs John Collier, Territorial Commis sioner of Education A. E. Karnes, and Delegate A. J. Dimond partic ipated was the opening move in the endeavor to have the federal government assume greater finan cial responsibility in the education of Alaska Indian children. At the present time the Territory is pay ing for the education of several hundred children of Indian blood, a charge, it is believed, which should properly be borne by the Office of Indian Affairs. Commis sioner Collier was sympathetic to the represenations of Mr. Karnes and Mr. Dimond. Suggested to him was an entirely new policy with respect to the education of Indian children. Under the plan proposed the Territory would take over the administration of the Office of Indian Affairs schools, and the fed eral government would pay into the Alaska treasury certain stated sums to pay the cost of operating the Indian schools. Responsibility for the medical care of the natives would still rest upon the Office of Indian Affairs. Before any plan as this could be put into effect appropriate leg islation would have to be passed by Congress. Commissioner Collier promised to study carefully the suggestions placed before him as his approval would, in all likeli hood be necessary before Congress would act. * * * * Commissioner and Mrs. Karnes left for Chicago, where he will at tend the annual meeting of the Na tional Education Association. H e will then return to Juneau to pre pare for an extended survey trip which will take him along the coast, out to the Westward, the lower Kuskokwim and Yukon, Sew ard Peninsula and the Interior. Mr. Karnes will be traveling until late in October. * * * * Delegate Dimond’s voice will be heard in Alaska soon, although he will be several thousand miles dis tant at the time. Through the courtesy of radio station KGBU, at Ketchikan, and KFQD, at Anchor age, the Delegate will give an ac count of his stewardship to date. In identical 15-minute talks he will give the high lights of the last four months in Washington so far as they have affected Alaska. The electrical transcription was made at a Washington sound studio recent ly. * * * * The Delegate recently attended a meeting of the Agriculture Ad justment Administration at which maximum and minimum prices for dairy products under the National Recovery Act were discussed. A minimum price of $2.50 per case for evaporated milk for export to Al- j aska and a maximum of $2.60 per case were figures tentatively pro posed by evaporated milk com panies. The prices quoted are in tended to be the prevailing ones for Pacific Coast states and freight charges will have to be added to Alaska points. Mr. Dimond with held approval or protest until such time he has commhnicated with Governor Troy. * * * « An Alaskan girl who has spent the last two years in Europe and who is now in Washington on a! short visit is Miss Jean Bunnel, daughter of Dr. Charles E. Bun nell, president of the Alaska Col lege. Jean has been continuing her language studies in France and Germany. While in Munich she made her home with Mr. and Mrs. Sigmund Geist. Mr. Geist is a brother of Otto William Giest, who is carrying on scientific work for the College on St. Lawrence Island. CUT FREIGHT RATES j BUCHAREST, July 18. —To stim ulate foreign trade, the manage ment of the Rumanian railways has j reduced freight rates on export j merchandise by 50 per cent. PRES. ROOSEVELT j WORKS DESPITE A SLIGHT COLD WASHINGTON, July 18. —Presi ; dent Roosevelt trimmed his calling : list yesterday and worked in the study at the White House while | treating a slight head cold con ! tracted during his week-end yacht jing trip. It was emphasized that i the chief executive had no temper- j lature and that no physician had ! been called in. The usual custom of having aj personal doctor for the president] was scrapped when Mr. Roosevelt' took office. During the day, between greet- j ing occasional callers, the Presi-1 ! dent worked on details of the huge! public works program through] which his administration hopes to; put millions of men to work before ] t “the snow flies.” TEXTILE WORKERS GO BACK TO MILLS NEW YORK, July 18. —It was estimated that more than 15,000 | idle textile operators returned to work in New England mills yester- j day and there is a possibility that! 10.000 more may be reemploved in Massachusetts upon suspension of the law forbidding the employment of women after 6 p.m. The change in working condi-' tions has been brought about by the textile code which has been submitted to the administration re- j covery program officials. The tex-i tile code affects approximately j 120.000 persons. PUG'S WIFE DROPS DIVORCE ACTION , SACRAMENTO. July 18. — A re conciliation has been effected be-; i tween prizefighter Max Baer and I his estranged wife, Dorothy Dun-1 bar Baer, the contender for the world’s heavyweight boxing cham pionship announced here Monday. As a result Mrs. Baer’s suit for divorce, which was scheduled immediately, will be dismissed, the fighter indicated. Other than to say they were j“just good pals” Baer made no comment about his proposed en gagement to June Knight, actress. Baer and Miss Knight were seen ! together frequently in the East af ter his victory over Max Schmel dng, of Germany, and one time the j heavyweight boxing champion. ' ~' SPLENDID PROGRESS Splendid progress is being made | in laying rails on the bottom of the Lowell Creek flume. The flume has j been laid with rails from the flume {head almost as far down as the {bridge on Fourth Avenue. Over | thirty rails are laid side-by-side fto cover the flume bottom and it has been calculated that 11 miles of track or a steel ribbon 22 miles long will have been placed in the flume when the work is completed. ESTIMATES FOR PUBLIC WORKS ARE SCRUTINIZED WASHINGTON, July 18. —Public building, rivers and harbors, flood control and other construction es timates were sent back to Presi dent Roosevelt’s cabinet board yes terday for reducing exercises to work off any fat which might be called “pork.” The President, after a brief scru tiny of the projects proposed un der the $3,300,000,000 building pro gram suggested that he be given time for additional study of the j projects. Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes, who is the public works ad I ministrator, said that the estimates would be carefully “considered to make sure that money is wisely spent. This is not a ‘grab bag’.” Secretary Ickes told newspaper ! men that the officials had promis i.ed that the scrutiny would be ra • pid so as not to delay the start of | construction and the return to work l of many idle PIRATES PLAY GREAT BALL TO BEAT DODGERS PITTSBURGH, Pa., July 13- — : While all the other major league ball clubs were idle the Pittsburgh I Pirates yesterday advanced to with ! in half a game of the Chicago Cubs to occupy second place in the Na ! tional League Standings by winning both ends of a double-header from ; the faltering Brooklyn Dodgers. The Pirates collected 32 hits off seven Brooklyn pitchers while beat ing the Dodgers 14 to 2 in the opener and 7 to 0 in the second game before 9,000 fans at Forbes Field. Turning in his 10th victory of the season, Bill Swift limited the Dod gers to seven hits in the first game v/hile his Corsair mates ham mered Carroll, Shaate, Heimack and Ryan for 16. nine of which were bunched for nine runs in the eight when Heimack was blasted from the mound and replaced by Ryan. Paul Whner’s triple to left center with the bases loaded featured the rally. Freddy Lindstrom and G u s Suhr led the Pirate attack each making three hits in the opener. Steve Swetonis blanked the Dod gers with seven scattered safeties in the second game and the Pirates 'again collected 16 hits off Thurs ton and Shaute. Swetonic helped to win his own ballgame by driv ing out a triple and two singles, sending home two runs and scoring once himself. The Pirate’s big inning was the fifth when they clicked four runs after bunching five hits. IMPROVES HOTEL The sidewalk and stairs in front of the Anchorage Hotel, at Anch orage, has been torn up and in stead is being built an artistic con crete wall with entrance-ways on either end, one of which eliminates the stairway. The city is lowering the walk grade in conformity with the new work which greatly im proves both the street and the ho tel. Four or five men are employed. Nineteen and one-half tons of gold and silver bullion valued at almost $10,000,00 were received in the assay office in Seattle up to the end of the fiscal year which ended June 30. Of this amount Al aska contributed $7,000,00 with the Tanana district sending the largest share of Alaska gold and silver. A new theatre is planned for Juneau, according to the Alaska Press.