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THE KUSKO TIMES VOL XII NO. 20 TAKOTNA ALASKA. SATURDAY. JULY 2. 1932 PRICE 25 CRN<*£ * Working for Legal Beer ACTIONS OF CHICAGO CONVEN TIONS GIVES ENCOURAGE MENT TO WETS. -WASHiNuTCN.—The Senate has ..consented unanimously to place on . the calendar for future consideration ..a proposed constitutional amendment which would substitute State control of the liquor question for the Eight eenth Amendment. Senator Barbour, . who is the author of the proposal,an . nounces that he will press for the • consideration of the question before the adjournment of the present ses . sion of Congress. WASHINGTON. — Consideration, before adjournment, of the question of legalizing the manufacture and sale of beer is being urged in both branches of Congress, with Senator Bingham, of Connecticut, Republican, leading the movement. The Connecticut Senator is urging action on a bill for the legalizing of three and two-tenths per cent beer and demanding a vote without, delay. On the House side, a petition re questing an immediate vote on the question of taxing beer as a means of increasing the nation’s revenue has been signed by 77 Republican mem bers. Alaska Road Commission WAS TRANSFERRED TO DE PARTMENT OF INTERIOR ON JUNE 30. Hawley W. Sterling;, superintend ent of the Alaska Road Commission for this district, is in receipt of the following, dated July 2, from Mal colm W. Eliott, president of the Alaska Road Commission, with in i' structions to release same for public information: i “The Act of Congress transferring the Alaska Road Commission to the Interior Department was approved by the President June 30th, and orders ! prescribing details thereof are ex i pected shortly. The Secretary of the I Interior has stated in his published correspondence with proponents of this bill that administration of Road Commission activities will be assigned to the Governor and that the Interior Department expects to operate through so much of the present civilian organization as can be main tained within the appropriations, re lieving army officers now assigned; also that no curtailment of program is expected except as necessitated by reduction of appropriations. Further information as to details of transfer not yet available, but meanwhile the present members of the Commission desire to assure the entire organiza -tion, so far as known, the emprising change is not due to dissatisfaction Alaska Interests At The Nation’s Capital By W. A. S. , WASHINGTON, June 13.—On June 1 the Senate passed House Joint Reso lution 341, which will have the effect of exempting the locators of mining claims from the necessity of doing as sessment work for the year ending June 30, 1932. This affects Alaska, where there have been divergent opin ions on the wisdom of the measure. In urging the passage of the resolu tion Senator Walsh of Montana said: “Under the law $100 worth of worh must be done on each claim each year. The year ends on June 30. By reason . of the distressed condition many lo cators have found it impossible to do the work this year. If the legislation is not passed, they must do the work within the current month.” The reso lution then passed without any oppo sition, having been previously passed , previously passed the House, and is as follows: Resolved, etc., That the provision of t.Sectiun .2324 of the Revised Statutes . of the United States which requires on each minin gclaim located, and un . til a patent has been issued therefor, not less than $100 worth of labor to be performed, or improvements ag gregting such amount to be made each year, be, and the same is hereby, suspended as to all mining claims in ; the United States, including Alaska, during the fiscal year from July 1,1 1931, to July 1, 1932. With the remote possibility that ; the Garner bill might pass Congress and become a law, Delegate Wicker- \ sham sought to have various Alaska L projects favorably considered and I recommended to Speaker Garner for inclusion in his bill, by the various committee chairmen. As a result the bill as introduced in the House con tained the following interesting items: Construction of a postoffice building at Anchorage, to cost $425, 000, and a postoffice and court house at Ketchikan, to cost $400,000; im provement of rivers and harbors and other waterways, Dry Pass, in South eastern Alaska, $79,000; Kodiak har bor, $77,000; Nome harbor, $253,000; Sitka harbor, $67,500; Tolovana river, north of Fairbanks, $40,000; Wran gell harbor, $56,000; Wrangell Nar rows, $142,000; all making a total of $1,539,500. The total amount to be appropriated by the bill is $2,100, 000,000. John E. Barrett, the amiahle rep resentativ ein Alaska for the New York Life Insurance Company, with headquarters at Ketchikan, was in Washington on business the forepart of June for a couple of days. The nomination of Charles A. Shel don as postmaster at Seward for an other term of four years was con firmed by the Senate on June 1. On June 1 Senator Howell received unanimous consent to take up Senate bill 4525 out of order. It provides for the transfer of the duties of the Board of Road Commissioners in the Territory of Alaska from the War Department to the Department of In terior. The bill was then considered by the Senate and was passed with out on opposing vote. In his state (Continued on Page 3.) with the manner Tm.whichr. work has been performed. In fact, the Secre tary of Interior stated .the trainsfer has not been urged, as* a. matter of economy, bu tin the interest of effect ive coordination of related . activities now handled by two departments and that the endeavor would be to con tinue the efficient operations now maintained by the existing organisa tion.” BILLY SCHNEIRLA WRITES OF CONDITIONS IN MICHIGAN Billy Schneirla, former well known oldtimer and mining man of this sec tion, writing from his home at Clin ton, Mich., to Ernie Gove, has the following to say regarding conditions prevailing in Michigan* “I can imagine the camp is quiet and, as you write, the oldtimers are passing. Still Alaska has an advan tage over some things in the States. I cannot see where conditions here are getting any better. Crime surely isn’t. The siwashes wouldn’t commit the deeds that are of common occur rence in the States. In the last month, close home here, there have bejn two beastly murders—one an eight-year-old boy, delivering papers, who stepped in where a holdup was in progress, shot him first in the shoulder, and as they passed on the way out, shot him. through the chest. T eother was in- an oil station. A fellow huys a bottle of pop and when he should pay for it draws, a gun and kills the station attendant- Life, at 5 cents’ worth of pop is putting it pretty cheap. ill me luiai cumuiunuu^ wr auui have pretty sane kind of government, but in the cities the unemployment situation has made many desperate. “In case you do not know the prices, here are some .of .the staples on the farm: Wheat.'48c, .oats 18c, eggs 11c dozen, milch cows $35 to $45, fat cattle 6c per pound, best hogs 3 l-2c per pound, and so on. We are not going to have better times until the farmer gets a living wage for what he purchases.” A second letter, written a few weeks later, says, in part: “Well, .the big Democratic conven tion is on, and you will know as sour as I that the Dems have come out for repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. But the party in power does not .seem to matter much these days. We have a nation of unemployment, over taxation, and want. I do not know how far we are going along this line but here are just a few indications which go to show that we are not a1 the botom yet. I base the signs ai prosperity on the agricultural end ol the nation. Along the main highways there is, more or less, a line of hikers out of work and looking for some thing to do. A neighbor below us has a man working for $5 a month anc board, and personally I know of many who are working for about the same wage. The report is that the new crop of wheat will bring 25c a bushel and oats 10 cents a bushel. Taxes haven’t come down, and the Inter national Harvester people are charg ing wartime prices for implements and extras. “I see no sign where this winter is going to be better than the last one. Banks have failed and bond houses and mortgage companies, and nc prosecutions. Some of the banks are opening.again and am .enclosing copy of an agreement which shows that a depositor has to sign to open .the bank and be patriotic. Anyway, you sign away everything just to he a good fellow. Alaska can’t be hit as hard as the States, and still l know you will feel th eeffects of the de pression, as it is world-wide.” Items of Importance j In Reecnt News Events l ALBANY.—Members of Congress who are clamoring for immediate .ac tion to restore beer through modified tio nof the Volstead Act will look in vain to Governor Roosevelt for as sistance. Those in a position to know have made it clear that the Demo cratic standard bearer considers any effort on hi part to influence Con gressional action would be an inter ference and not warranted by his designatoin as Democratic candidate for the presidency. He-believes, how ever, that it is within the power of Congress to change the dry act. NEW YdJ'.'.L —John D. Rockefeller, who has 'vcd through seven major degressions, is celebrating hi« nicety tlird birth lay today with the predic tor that the present strait, of eco nomic condoi* is will relax ju-t a» tKre has he jo a relaxing after every eailier deprti; in had run its course ‘ Prosperity has always returned and wi1 again," vas his comment nn the present situation. But w hat concerns the old timer more than anything else just now is his ambition to keep on living. He says be is .working hard to reach the century mark before he is called upon to answer the final roll calL His .ad vice to Americans is to avoid worry, for worry poisons .the system. jucnh.au.—me gow-seeKing e.*pe dition which was financed in Detroit and which brought five airplanes north to . transport ,the. members of the party and their outfits from At lin to the Liard district, is to be aban doned and .the Detroiters wiL.returr to the States as soon as they can dis pose of their outfits and equipment. Announcement of the abandonment of the project was made yesterday by C. O. Butcher, weathy Detroit ..con tractor. This decision was reached, he explained, after Harry Townsend, mining engineer, had submitted an unfavorable, report The party > was i organized by Thomas Mitchell,, of Detroit, and thf last several weeks have been devoted to transporting men and equipment from the .Lake Atlin base to the scene of the proposed prospecting operation in Southern Yukon. SEATTLE.—W. .'D. Corner, former president of the defunct PugetJ3aund Savings & Loan Association, has been found guilty by a jury on ten counts, charging him with fraud in handling trust funds and the embezzlement of $78,000. The .conviction came at the conclusion of a trial lasting seven years. The., jury . was out alm#st 24 hours. Francis PerweU, co-defendant, who is a former vice president of the as sociation, was exonerated by the.jury. He was charged with. aiding and abetting. This is Comer’s second conviction arising out of the .association’s toot ing. He was convicted .previously of issuing a false statement of the. con dition of the association. Both Comer and Powell were .ac quitted on additional charges of -ob taining $16,000 by false pretenses in the sale of bonds of Textile Tower. NEW YORK.—Gene Tunney, for mer heavyweight champion of the world, has announced that he will make speeches for' the Democrats in the campaign for the presidency. He has branded .as jiHy..th» report that he is going into the- campaign with th eobject of obtaining a public office. He declares that.he-will make speeches for the Democrats but will not go any urther than that, his only interest .in the campaign being the promotion of good government, which he deems one of his (duties .and re sponsibilities, NEWARK, N. J.—-Flying the .same plane -which carried her across the Atlantic on the first woman’s solo flight, Amelia Earhart Putnam, who hopped off from Los Angeles .shorty after 1 o’clock yesterday, landed here at 11:28 d'cjodk this merning, ’East ern time, establishing.a new woman’s record for a one-stop transcontinental flight. She beat the Time -of Ruth .Nichols by almost 10 hours this hav ing been made possible by reason, of the lorg stop madtt by b^l Miss Nich ols at Wichita on her flight some time ago. The elapsed time afiMrs, Putnam was slightly -.more than' *155 hours. However, the actual * -flying time off Miss Nichols was -only 13 hours, while that of, Mrs. Putnam was in excsss of 17 ."hours. Mrs. .Putnam states, that her flight was -not made for the puepose of low ering records, but to practice naviga tion. She plans to return '.to "Los An geles i nabout a week to be present; at the Olympic games. Mrs. Putnam was compelled to stop at Columbus because of difficulty in pumping fuel from the .fuselage tanks.. When the gas had been transferred to the wing tanks every thing worked smoothly and the flight to Newark was resumed. | JUNEAC.—?An order transferring : the powers and-duties of the Alaska I Road Commission and aE of its prop l erty, unexpended funds and books [from the War Department to the In terior Department has been received ! by Governor George A. Parks, as ex officio commissioner of .the Depart ment of thei-Interior, who ie given blanket authority and control over ! roads and trails ^comprising the Fed | end .system.-.of highways in the Ter ! ritory. Ike P. Taylor, who has: been con nected with the Alaska Road Com mission during the last 11 years, as -senior engineer, has been designated by .Secretary Wilbur to be acting chief engineer under the reorganiza tion, with complete charge of opera tions. The traisfer of activities, ."fif . the Commission is to be consummated | by July jCO. Taylor has announced that he does I not .contemplate any'■changes in per ! sormel or stations, which means that. , the organization of the Alaska Road i Commission toil continue to function very muchas it if functioning at the present time. NEW YORK.—The personal for tune of President' Hoover, which was ’rated ad f4,OOb^WO at the time of his retirement from busines in 1914, has shunk in recent years to an estimated $700,000, according to tin article ap pearing in the . August issue of For tune. The shrinkage is attributed princi pally to the President’s interest in or investment company whose acquisi tions are tow described mostly as lia bilities, and to his expenses and con tributions in connection with Bel gist j relief, peace cdnfereiwKrstnal 'uttn^iww j nation*.