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| e THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE-TIME” VOL XXXV., NO 5299 JUNEAU ALASK\ VIONDAY JANU ARY- 6, 1930 MEMBLR OF ASoOClA"I ED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS 'EIELSON SEARCH PLANE MISSING, FLYING TO NOME ' BELIEVES AIRMEN WILL BE FOUND ALASKA ROADS APPROPRIATION NOW REPORTED Supply Bill of Army Re- ported Today — Two Items for Northland WASHINGTON, Jan. 6.—Lacking L\ angelist Makes Her Debut at Los Angeles THEILE 6ETS A THIRD TERM . ASSECRETARY President Hoover Today Renominated Karl Theile Tcmlonal Secnelary i WASHINGTCN, Jan. 6—Kar definite conclusiops from President Theile was ‘today renominated fo Hoover's economical survey of the Secretary of the Territory of Alas- v Department, the House Appro- ka by President Hoover. The nomi- priaticns Committee has reported n on was read in the Senate the Supply Bill for the fiscal year where it will comc up for confir- of 1921 | The Supply Bill calls for an ex-| ure of $435,000,000, an in- mation. — | Mr. Theile’s third This of $442,000 over the current :rx'm as of Alaska. "He year. eq by President | The Bill provides $800,000 for nd next by Presi- roads and bridges in Alaska andv been a resident of ! pod. He has re- | sided at several points in the In- terior. He had been engaged m; business in the Kuskokwim country | before coming to Juneau as Terri- | torial Secretary. He left hosts of‘ friends in every place he has $300,000 for maintenance of the Washington and Alaska cable sys-l tem. i — e — J SENATE AND VETERAN FNlOY ’l()(Hl\lBl(l\i!«)liF AS EDUCATOR —Associated Press Photo. After 22 years as Amecrican Minister to China, John Van Antwerp MacMurray and his family, ac- nied by servants, returned to the States by way of Seattle. He will join the Johns Hopkins Uni- MD., Staff as Professor in the Department of Intcrnational Relations. ATHEISM WANES AS RELIGIOUS STRIFE CEASES IN PORTUGAL cor versity, PROFESSORHAS HOPES FOR TV0 MISSING FLIERS If Eielson, Borland Not Found in Two Months, Search Should Go On PLACES GREAT FAITH EIELSON’S EXPERIENCE Suggests that Soviet Parties Make Search Along New Loc ahtv MOSC 0\’\. Jan. 6. — Prof. Karpinsky, of the Russian Academy of Science, and Chairman of the Academy's Polar Commission, stated to- day that even if the first two months of the present cearch by the Soviet Govern- ment for Col. Carl Ben Eiel- son and Earl Borland pro- duces negative results, hope PILOT REID IS LOST;NEIMENEN - BACKATNULATO Two Planes Flying from Fairbanks Are Separated in Fog and Snow 'ONE NOT REPORTED; 'SECOND RETURN, LANDS [Pilot Dorbandt Flies Out Over Country from Nome— No Trace F! \IIHGAI\I\S, Alaska, Jan. 6. — Pilot “Pat” Reid, with Mechanies William Hughes and Jim Hutchinson,. in a Fairchild airplane, are lost somewhere in the Norton Bay district when he and Muait Neimenen ran into snow aad fog after they hopped oif from here for Nome last Sat- urday morning at 9 o’clock. Matt Neimenen, with Major 2 nd Mechanic y returned to Sam McAu Nulato Saturday afterncon 'after being unable to pene- trate the snow and fog for sided and has been r | Territorial Sv"retu | Congress Resumes After IN NURTHWEST‘ - | Holiday Recess—Long | Session Predicted oA SR : n actress at 5—an ordained " o v i, [| prencher at 1i-—and now at 14 California_Has ?leal .Sl(lLS‘ WASHINGTON, Jan. "6 —Faced |oiie of the best kiown sin- bu:u.,g After First Extensive with the tariff bill, which is not Girl evangelists in the country, } completed; the controversy over| Ihat’s the carcer——so far—of Rain in 4 Months i Prohibition and a host of other ns, the House and Senate re- today after the holiday 3 Indications are that the k before Congress will require a | sessicn lasting well into the coming summer. .- que o nvened Shoots Parents As They Are Saving Prayers ST. LOUIS, Mo, Jan. 6—Alan| Schumm, aged 17, freshman at\ l)w University of Illinois, at home | a visit, got his parents out| bed yesterday morning and] ced them if they believed in; d. He then ordered them to‘ p and while they were in pray er, drew a revolver and shot his | father, William Schumm, aged 42, to death, and wounded his mother twice. The police believe he was temporarily insane over excessive work on his studies. | i r,l Spanish Government | Is to Resign Within | Coming Six Months| MADRID, Spain, Jan. 6.—Pre- mier de Rivera announces in Loti- | ciere del Lunes, the Government organ, that the Government will resign within the next six months if not hindered in present legisla- tiin. The Premier has expressed a desire to retire to private life once he is assured of the stabili- 7ann of the councry MISSIONARY i American Woman |R. Dolorendo, John Bonfanti, shot|gelgium, Viscount Terlinden refer- .home and shct and killed hlmselr. Helen Campbell, who makes her Los Angeles debut in the pulpit at Angelus Temple as the guest ‘of Aimee Semple McPherson. SAN Fx..’\‘?f‘ISCO Cal, Jan. 6 King Winter spread a white man- tle over the Northwest states as California looked up into ck skies after a general wetting that extended to Southern California for the first time in four mornths Unsettled and colder weather is) promised the Northwest. - o IS MURDERED 00000000000 Foun] e TODAY'S STOCK QUOTATIO! Dead in Lonely Cabin in e ¢ o e 0 o 0000 o Province, Inland Africa 1 NEW YORK, Jan, 6.—Alaska Ju- | neau mine stock is quoted day NEW YORK, Jan. ¢.—The head- at 8':, American Ice 39, Bethichem jquarters of the Africa-Inland Mis- |Steel 937%, General Motors 41%, sion has received a cablegram stat- | |Combustion 7%, International H ing that Miss Hulda Stumpf, aged 'vester 86%;, - Kennecott 6 63 years, American missionary on ma 517, Montgomery-Ward 46%. its staff, has been murdered in the National Acme, no sale, Standard Kenya Colony. The dispatch is j of California 60%, Standard Ol | from Naibori and says the woman'r New Jersey 65%, Texas Corpora- was found dead in a lonely cot-'(i, 554, U, S. Steel 169%. tage at Kujabe. She had appar- Aty ently been attacked and then smothered to -death. Cathohcs of Belgium Like Pan-Europe Idea — e Kills Stepdaughter, Attacks Estranged Wife, Then Suicides, Addressing the 56th annual na- GILROY, Ca}., Jan. 6—Invading tional Congress of the Federated the home of his stepdaughter, Mrs. Catholic Associations and Clubs cf Brussels, Jan. 6.—The proposed |federation of European states has | |received the support of the Catho- ’l.c party in Belgium. TA and killed her, attacked and wound- |ring to the contemplated unionl| ed his estranged wife with an ice|gaiq. pick, then returned to his own| .1 j5 the duty of the Catholic " iparty to support the government m} MEXICO CLAIMS HIGH POSITION MEXICO CITY, Jan. 6.—The De- partment of Aeronautics announces that in proportion to population and territory, Mexico is excelled cnly by Germany in the mileage of its air mail and passenger routes. The statistics reveal that on a comparative basis Mexico leads the United States in air development. The United States has in opera- tion 22,593 miles of air lines serving 2 populay @ of 120,000,000 and an area fo es as large as Mexico | while 0 has 6,480 miles of air | routes serving a population of 15.- | 000,000. Mexico’s development in civil avi- ation has been amazing inasmuch | (this international policy which.| -whllc opening new roads to prosper- | lity, brings us nearer to peace and ! better understanding with other Eu- | ropean countries.” ! He further appealed to the coun-| 'try to “give up grim hostility to-| ward Germany in order not to ex-| WAS pose Belgium to the dangers of po- th ce litical isolation while Germany be-|United comes affiliated with France.” ipre S e — H. Keutner, Manager of the fer-|severe Air lines now connect Mexico City | tilizer plant at Killisnoo, arrived trip to with Brownsville, Tex., via Tam-)on the Margnita. pico in five hours; Mexico City with | IN AVIATION planes were flying only from Mex- ico City to Laredo, Tex. The government line expired with the revolution but with the end of the revolt civil air lines sprang up throughout the republic. The ing fros El Paso via Zacatecas, Torreon and |(Girl Is Found Chihuahua in ten hours; Mexico!| . |his hal City with Nogales via Guadalajara ]Electrocute(l in Bath Lopd Mazatlan, Guaymas and Hermo- | 2 ! place . M s ome i placed sillo in less than two days; Browns- I,Tub Parents H ;Jmm t ville with Mazatlan via Monterrey, Torren and Durango in-eight hour: SEATTLE, Jan. 6—Mary e funeral Prentice, aged 12 years, was found yesterday electrocuted Mexico City with Guatemala via Puebla, Oaxaca and Tapachula in ed to leave Washingt | Asheville, N. C., to recupe: fatigue caused by his recent > also impaired at the death of week and « consequent TRADES WINNING TICKET . Mrs. Anne Varley You- mans, who suing Vincent Youmans, song writer, for sep- alimony in Manhattan Su- ' preme Court. She blames the ‘parents - in-law for striking the note of marital discord. CHIEF JUSTICE PRINCESS JOSE FTPREPARES REACHES ROME; T0 TAKE TRIP' GREATWELCOME {Will Leave Washmf_.,ton for Fiancee of Crown Prince North Carolina to Humbert Given Greet- ing by Italians Recuperate HINGTON, Jan. William Howard Taft, of States Supremle Court, } IUI‘ ROME, Jan. 6.—Princess Marie Jose, of Belgium, fiancee of Crown Prince Humbert, of Italy, came smiling to Rome yesterday on bright winter day. She made quick conquest of thousands who hailed b r as their future Queen. The Royal train arrived on time and the Princess was accorded full military honors. Her simple grac- iousness aroused the crowds to a 'X«h"-»‘h)lzh pitch. straln| The Princess was accompanied upon him by necessity of‘by the King and Queen of Bel- o Cincinnati to attend the gium and others of the Royal fam- ily. Cincinnats, Ohio. former President is suf m insomnia and his ner f-brother, Charles P. PSEEA 05U | ————— ABOLISH PASSPORT SAS is | aration and | By GEORGE HALADJIAN (A. P. Correspondent) LISBON, Jan. 6.—Religio which divided the nation int camps when the republic was young and resulted in the closing of many churches on the crest of a wave of atheism, has subsided with the con- clusian of pzace between churh and goyernment. Separation ot the | state when the monar s ove | thrown in 1910, dis ssed the for- mer of an influeffce which had | progressed so far that polli; places |for the elections to the national | legislature were placed in the churches. From this there ensued a reaction which swung the pendu- {lum to the other extreme but now that movement has itself reacted It is declared that church a the republic is than it prior to the re In addition there is a w spirit of tolerance toward gions. |ance under Jews Benefitted One of the bodies that benefited from the changed relations was the va"s, The census of 1900 noted tonly 481 of that faith in the entire kingdom but that many more had concealed their religion because of the attitude of officials was demon- strated as soon as the restrictions were removed. | Talmuh Torahs were organized, |synagogues which had fallen into |decay from disuse were reopened, Saturday n became a day of Irest and kosher butcher shops were ‘started in several cities. al expulsion of Jews from 1 Portugal had resulted in thema being pronounced jagainst both countries by a synod of orthodox rabbis. That has not yet been revoked so no grand rabbi has been chosen for Portugal. In- stead the Jews of this country are under the spiritual leadership of the Grand Rabbi of Morocco. Evidence Seen 1 idence of the newly acquired icligious freedom was seen how- in the fact that Portuguese sent a delegate to a recent slonist congress at Zurich. Also W refugees from the Palestine riots arrived here recently, they we e received operlly by the Jewish community which raised funds for them All this is as much a contrast to the early days of the republic as to the conditions that prevailed under the monarchy. In the first flush of power, the revolutionists persecuted priests and their works without dis- crimination. No God—No Religion Atheism was fostered especially among children and groups of youths were paraded carrying ban- {formal =3 ners emblazoned with such senti- | ments as “Therer is no God” and There is no religion.” General Antonio Oscar de Fra- goso Carmona, now occupying the 1928 _not be abandoned. is ultimate in the finding of Nome. The two planes became |separated in the storm. Planes will be sent from the missing airmen and should Prof. Karpinsky pointed out that ! Eielson, because of his proven ex- € v perience in the Polar regions, Ls‘Nome aifl 4o Nawto to hank probable able to exist for a lo’xg‘f‘"' Reid’s plane as soon period even on the frozen ice pack|the weather pemits. if he failed to reach shore. . eqr The Protedtor eapresscs. tibopidl, Norton Bay is a bay onen ion that rescue parties should look ing to the north off No for the two airmen west of Cape|Sound. s North rather than east. He is urging the « searchi 5 4 g‘ earc! un.g parties to DORBANDT MAKES explore the coast west of Cape ITLESS SEAR( North as far as Cape Shelagski, el ol west of Wrangcll Island. ITALY SCHEMES T0 TRAIN BOYS FORALL TRADES By ANURUE BERDING (A. P. Staff Writer: | ROME, Jan. 6—The Fascist Gov- ernment has under consideration the most extensive cys ing boys and young mer try that the world has yei see It embraces the American sy 'cm of vocational training bur be- yond it by applying it compulsorily to e y boy in the kingdom. It would do away with the young man who goes out for a4 job and NOME, Alaska, Jan. 6.—No w¢ of the missing Fairchild plane has been received here. Pilot Frank Dorbandt hoppe:! «°f yesterday morning and flew t¢ Un- alakleet, 200 miles from Nome On his return to Nome he forced down at Solomon, 36 |from Nome, due to heavy fog Dorbandt reported by telephoue to Alfred J. Lomen, who is in charge of the Eielson search, tha’ he found no sign of the m! Fairchild airplane piloted by “Pat” Reid. Dorbandt also said there wa: fect visibility and he could ol from the fouthills to the ocean. | e said I.L- ico over the short .mfit |had gone from Norton and also from the mouth o. Yuken River. He ran into fog on his return trip. President Grosvenor, of the Avia- tion Corporation, has cabled Lomen to spare no expense in the senrch wa “apt tem o ine replies to the question “Well, what| Lomen has appointed Joe (ros- ican you do?” by saying: son to be in charge of oper: 'ions ‘I can do anything. At least I[in Siberia, can leamp.” Lomen is in daily communic:tion with Crosson who is still a Nanuk. Flying operations t This educational project is the work of Luigi Maggi, an expert in industrial pedagogics. Signor Maggi, |3T¢ at & standstill owing to s/orms names his project the “trade di-|3Rd no visibility. ; ploma,” because around it revolves| Glllam’s plane is awaiting re- pair parts for his landing which was wrecked recently. S MINOR BLAZE TODAY IN BANK BUILDING; DAMAGE IS NOMINAL the whole system. Without a trade e diploma a young man could gef a job in certain industries only as a |day laborer. The Fascist State, through the Ministry of Education, is to take the most important hand in this industrial education, as it does in practically all individual activities Page Seven) AT TS STANWORTH CASE IS ON IN DIST. COURT Mr. and Mrs. Steve Stanworzh,! charged with violation of the Na tional Prohibition Act, were being tried today in the Federal district court before Judge Justin W. Hard- |Barton. Dr. Barton, who was giv- ing. A jury was impaneled in the|ing treatment to a patient at the case Saturday and the Government |time, smelled smoke and on inves- examined its first witness, Prohl-inxatmn found the receiving office bition Agent T. L. Chidester. jand another room filled with smoke. The Stanworths are proprietors of /It was necessary to cut into the a second hand store and the Arcn- flooring to reach the fire. way Rooms on Front Street. In a| Dr. Barton, bllowing the blaze, raid on the building several weeks expressed praise for the work of ago, a large quantity of moonshine the fire boys and also great ad- liquor was seized in one of the miration in the manner in which Fire, caused by a blow toreh hen'.t used to thaw out frozen steam- pipes in the First National Bank Building, called out the Fire De~ partment at 11:30 a.m. today. The {resultant damages were nominal. | The frozen pipes were between |the flooring on the second floor |over Sharick's Jewelry Store and in the offices of Dr. George L. in a bath tub in the home presidency by virtue of the rooms on the second floor. they moved over $1,600 of his ap- as practically the entire network |eight hours; Vera Cruz with Guate- of lines has been put into operation |/mala via San Geronimo and Tapa- since the Escobar revolution last chula in six hours; Vera Cruz with March. Prior to that time only iMerida via Minatitlan and Villa- the Vera Cruz to Merida line, about !hermosa in six hours, and San Luis g 600 miles long, was in operation by | Potosi with Torreon and Guadala- '. & civil company, while government | jara, @ of her parents, near here, clutching an electric heater. ‘The death embrace was due to a short circuit caused by the moisture. LISBON, Jan. 6—Donna Mari o Tavares exchanged a state lotter o ticket for one of a higher numbe o She dropped dead when the fi o ticket won the capital prize ®0 00 09 0 0 0 0 0 o 5250000 a' GENEVA, Jan. 6—Norway and 'y | Czechoslovakia, needing each other's |tourist business, have notified the |League of Nations that they have of the two countries, abolished passport visas betwean ___ election and before that dictator of Portugal for two years, is credited with having realized that the con- tinued strife between religious and non-religious elements constituted (Continued on Page Seven) The defense is being conducted paratus without'any damage what- by George B. Grigsby and R. C. 1soever Hurley, and U. S. Attorney H. D./ - e Stabler and Asst. U. 8. Attorney G) D. A. McDomld of the Alaska |W. Folta are appearing for the Road Commission, is a Government on the Northwestern to Seattle,