The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 1, 1930, Page 1

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4 el e Sk £ 0 - o aaad B g THE DAILY ALASKA EMETRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” ]UNLAU ALASKA SATURDAY FtBRUARY I |930 VOL. XXXV., NO. 5322. CHICAGO GANGLAND GETS REVENGL; INFORMER SHOT LEADS WURLD' To Begin ()n New World’s Fazr HAS BIRTHDAY, : SHUT, KILLED REPORT MADE % YEARS OLD BY TWO MEN: 'Fathers of Eielson and Borland, Meet in Seattle 1—Bearing the loss of his son with Spartan forti- ed 66 years, father of Col. Carl Ben Eielson, ar- enroute to Alaska to aviator in case it is found. SEATTLE, tude, Ole Ei | rived here lu&( night from Hatton, North Dakota, the claim the body of Eielson was ]he\uk. : met here by W. E. Borland, father of Earl Borland \ 3 A Ngdll\' Thlee Million Pas—l —~—— 'Umted States Foyest Serv-{mechante of Bielsons plane, also lost MAKE ESGAPE sengers Carllcd—-|97,— 3 ice Created Februar) 1 It is too bad,” Borland said as he gasped Elelson’s hand. “Earl 5 # i h ch good faith in your boy." 545,000 ,_Mllfes Flown | '{ 1905—Celebration There are times when faith does not count for much. It is mvm-'F I Eoat { GO0 TN ) = and we must bear up,” F 1 replied calmly OXmer ANYCHHEnE . NEW YORK, Feb. 1—American : Citie G e A aviation carved a new niche for | Februsry 1, the U, 8, For- Miss Adeline Blelson, Wenatchee school teacher, accompanied her rme Commission As- itself in 1920 air transport op- | lest Service completes the twenty- | ather here. They both vetoed the idea of @ military funeral. sassinated Today erations by flying 179,545,000 miles | fitth year of lts existence a8 Bh ke Eielson has abandoned 'hope that his son is alive. He will leave Was ** Ker” > Aeronautical Chamber of Com- | ganization. During President Cleve- | next Wednesday for the North and go to Fairbanks to gather his son's —Was Squac €r e announced today. ] |land's administration the first, with-{effects. If opportunity is granted, Eielson plans to fly to the scene of R “American aviation established | |drawals of land for National For-|the planes crash b nited ‘States as a leader in | lest purposes were made, followed Eielson is a banker of Ha‘ten, North Dakota (:HIC:\GO, ".I" Pel: e air transport operations,” | under President Roosevelt by ex-|__ & W Julius osenhelm, aged 45 said the announcement. | tensive withdrawals covering prac- i i | g P years, iormerly investigator “The average passenger rate per | tically all the present area of Na-| AJJ7 e INF 'R I 2 TG 3 mile was ten-sixteenths of a cent | fpoally af Fuetore MELODIES BANNED IN WEDDING of the Chicago Crime Com- and thx:] ‘m' usmccr been Cl;t ;L;‘ At first these “forest resorves" SERVIC LS lfl CATHOLIC RULING mission, was shot to death by seven-eighteenths o a cenl y | S he: vt hen called, were| ————— z ; cen | as they were t! : |two men who stepped from radical reductions of most lines. | handled by the General Land Of- SAN FRANCISCO Feb. 1.—Mel-' % “Civillan and commercial fl)'{ll‘{g‘ fice in connection with their other ED BAT R | odies such as “O Promise Me,” and " automo‘blle to the side- o g gl o Erent ety work. As the forest ‘areas increased | “I Love You Truly” will no longer walk and fired six shots into tary ]l:;l (3::;1‘;.1‘3011;‘»;§lc‘:11v1t;:i.‘”w[ howsvgr, an;;ll btush:l:ss :;rew,di!1 bxe- be played at Catholic wedding cere- his body. 50 g i came desirable to transfer adminis- monies in the diocese of San Fran- & 5 ;-’»”-““’(" carried almost 3,000,000 tration to technically trained for- As RESULT OF cisco nor such operatic music as! ’:‘he tl:ivlo I:l':‘n esc:’ed lt'l“::l passengers | - | esters. grims’ Chorus” from Tann- automobile ven by a ,‘ | Bureau of Forestry ‘ mauser be played at recessionals manm. | Consequently, the handling of all under a mandate issued by Arch- i INDIGTMENT [ | National Forest areas was transfer- bxshop Edward J. Hanna. |, The police said the shoot- i b0 S RO SE0H R 5 B |red to the Bureau of Forestry, De- Archbishop Hanna's mandate In ing was apparently gang- ! Work on Chicago’s “Century of Progress of 1933 will be well Snfer way this year. The view of the Partment of Agriculture, on Febru- President En it f “5 preamble stated the report of a'land’s revenge upon a i : { 4 3 i I 1908, At that tise the|d I'eskden neritus ol | | Lake Michigan shore at Chicago in 1833 (upper left) contrasts with the Chicago of today (center). Thc‘:‘;yme D ;ores[‘:;fi o B U o B fl’fml ";"flc 00""::“3‘0“ 'zl‘:‘mc‘: “squacker.” i T & Z " 2 o . . T rown niversi ass~ n accordance wi e wishes of | N drawing at lower right shows a portion of the Columbian Exposition at (hlm'go in 1893, while um\(hanged ikl s A p v hy, E Pope Biis XI, has been acceptea,| Rosenheim, it is said, of- . GUARD GASE sketch (upper right) indicates the proposed sk ser trend of some structures for the new fair. | “Porest, Reserves" were redesignated es Away in the East and directed the clergy to “carry fered to give the State At- B Wi e T Py " pe- o R R ~ |“National Forests.” e o into effect the reseriptio con- o | 9 e preseriptions con-|torney’s office information . . By WALTER T. BROWN | 'The fundamental purpose of theh ] | Ts ® _ ik H purpose of their tained therein, that the anclent M | wylor’s Death Haunts (A. P. Feature Service Writer) I‘m ly Spring or administration is to keep the por- music, teo long unhapplly ousted SIX Weeks ‘go 8 vies Thetah-C G d | Dymg Film Star | curcaco, Feb, 1.—The snows of | 1]orp Winter; {tions of the National Forests which by & modern and unworthy sub-| 1ree oast uardsmen | winter scarcely will have melted| Watch G nd H |are chiefly valuable for timber stitute, may agaln take its place ln Free in Shoc‘ting on before glant steam shovels will be . 9B {Browth in continuous timber pro- the public workshop." Bs ANn Cl i N ht fashioning the “Century of Prog- | g ¢ |duction by regulating the annual Other melodles mentioned specl{l- hnistmas Nigl | ress” wozld’s fair of 1933 P 288 Y ®lcut so that wood using industrios | cally as unfit for church musie; R 4 o - g ® Spring or will there be six ® ‘can be supported in perpetuity. In- were “Meditation,” from Masse-| BUFFALO, N. Y., Feb. 1—Three | Ten million dollars on eall, guar-|® More weeks of winter? ® [cidentally many other things are nee's Thals, and the aria, “Mon' membey§ of |hp Coast Guard are anteed by 100 individuels ang|% . Tomorrow is ground hog :;Bccompllshed Cocur s'Quvre a Tp Voix,” from! free as the redult of t@® refusal tirms, assured the city that it again|® 42y and the answer, accord- % Minor uses of land are authorized Saint Saeps “Suigon and Deillal. the. State Grand Juty .to in- will attempt what it so successfully ® 1Dg to weather lore, will be ® gor various purposes, such as for [ o it b AT o dict them in connection with the | accomplished in 1893—entertain the ® made tomorrow. ®(residence, cultivation, industrial ¢ killing of Eugene F. Downey, Jr..| 3 . If the weatlm;uls é!ouds;l. "snes. recreation, etc. Investiga- | who was shot fatally in the Buf-! Rd Bl rainy or snowy, Mr. Ground ® |tions are made of water power re- " falo harbor raid on Christmas | e s B Hog, afier emerging (rom his ¢ |sources, particularly s they relate ‘Local [ncumbent and Fair- night { D38 votots with an ates of {hree.|® hole, will decide iLat Spring ® (to wood using industries. Also, ! banks Resident Enter Rudolph Thompson, Asa Ennis, cighths of & mile. The Windy|® IS near and remain out and e ‘any otber servide in‘connection with | i R T. and Orville Lagrant, Guardsmen, i Tatanas eliag ‘gbout ifs oo, |8 scamper abouts ®!use of National Forest land by the i ace Today were held to the State Grand Jury % 3 4] But if he sees his shadow § b | year progress—telling, also, the ® ipublic is handled, except that min on charges of second degree man- | i'“_‘u;m\; oi all na‘t:a"n)'.r. b s il ) —[\l’ will go back and there o leral claims may be initlated on un- ALL HELATIUNS R. J. Sommers of Juncau, Ter- slaughter. | i ® will be six more weeks of ® yseq lands without reference to the ritorial Highway Engineer, Demo- Downey bled to death from a Two buildings, the admini wiuter, ® Forest Service prrgpse g jorat, and Joseph Ulmer #f Faits bullet wound in the leg after the| tion and the travel and tran | . For Road Construction DR, We H. Pl FAUNCE {banks, Republican, today flled thelr FIGHE DAY, X which o, and an| tation, virtually will be completed ‘ ® o0 0@ 08 80 e [ National Forests general- bl Mexxcan and Sov1et Gov- (Semaranony of KLY other man was piloting, was this year. They are to b built T |iy are withdrawn from taxation| pnovinEN inar, . Uity fee ukedign. ! tween Thirty-first and Thir hl Congress has appropriated funds 1o | per 5 - wrtian. merer oo ermBenls in Br'eak OnL; imuhiec o, ae AP reibin T | streets, center of the expo. e, be used for road construction with- % % ' emonstrations 2 | Work on them will commence M.LA NEGR“ BEATEN in the Forests in lieu of taxes. Un- rByr(wxa‘u ‘U“ here Ia(:‘t'i — as:l?:fletsmt'g:utk::miflti: ?;ormmo! Q NAMEn { i [ |der this provision Alaska Nationall,. i 4s o result of heart trouble,! MEXICO CITY, Feb. 1—Alexan- ginoor to three. .Sommers's de- Along the shore of Laka Michi- | |Forest areas have recelved about|y o,pi and pneumonia causes, der Makar, Russlan Minister o clargtion was filed locally th¥ gan, and €1 rtifictal $480,000 annually. In addition to|,, "0 nge of 71 years Mexico, has recelved orders telling morning in the Auditor's offies the fair bullding usements and this 25 per cent of the gross re- 5 it {him to close his Legation here. |while Ulmer's came through the | exhibits will be The entrance .ceipts from Forest business is re- |" This officlally completes sever-!caple office. | will be at‘ Roo:cvelt road—a nom- I;z;::i)d fl;ec:zdmp:;::a;‘;"mw for INDIVIDUALISTIC VIEWS “cetolr re::tla.r)u t;flwt.:el:i the }t)wo‘ Mr. Sommers went to Nome from. inal 1 -tow . e break starting when 4 | m: (:: :;L S .?Own‘ NIIM:) i Wi T Very early In its existence the| Dr. Wiliam H. P. Faunce, for 20 cMO:;ac::Eirculled her represegltatlves g‘:y{,;’m‘:e:" :}ols,:"l;days ok /\ppomted to Succeed; i e ik o sastel Ac 1 d Sl f|Forest Service adopted a pollcy,|years president of ‘Brown Unluer- g on "L 00 0 it against s pxflme Rani e p;acsmtwtd v Lite' Pl E Bon dpetiog, 8 lyn?gmwx Semzrxlan e Assaulter an ayer Ol ynich it has since followed, of de- sity, had pronounced individualist'c communistic demonstrations made ' there until he. was appgolm,:d o ate [ . G shades. ce Wi . . o o' X el - t Wrangell be flashed to the skies, and re-| White Girl, Victim of :::;‘;l’:::w:‘im g ;’e‘;;"s"flf:;‘:““ education and col- peore Mexican Embassies in sev-|perintendent of the Alaska Road son a rangel fiacted 1u L aBbmarihe Anted 1ake G ia Mob ! e were establis! ; eral countrles, |Commission at Fairbanks in 1914, The memory of the William Des- oiar eorgia Viol |on December 1, 1908, several dis-| He was an advocate of liberal| et Was Surveyor General a 4 o £ ¥ o d0ieN ducation as opposed to that along | The permanent appointment of | mond Taylor murder mystery con trict field headquarters, that for e Upon the death 3 2 \; xK e asDDDepuw Col- | tinues to haunt Mabel Normand as | All that science and art have de- OCILLA, Ga., Feb. 1.—Jimmy Ir-|Alaska first being at Portland, Ore- |vocational and occupational lines, Two Fort Worth Banks Dnv‘l’;wn Burveyor-(;;necr:u c’:ta Af- loctor of Customs at Wrangell, to| She battles for life in a sanatorium veloped, and the engineering has yine, negro, accused of attacking gon. Separate Alaska districtjand believed that a young man, aska, Mr. Sommers was appointed “ke clfect today, was announced| 3, Monroia, California. = The applied, will be employed to make and killng a 14-year-old white|headquarters were ~established at{about to enter college had not| Are Temporanly Closed by President Wilson to succeed s el et LR e oftibe e plngguez Ll herg]u“é! a fairy show place. girl, was beaten to death and his Juneau on January 1, 1921. reached the years in which he was | [him. At that time the Surveyor- r. Reed has been temporarily|lare affected and she has been bed- | Adjoining tne fair sitc are the body burned, about 10 miles trom | First Withdrawal competent to choose a career. | FORT WORTH, Texus. Feb. 1.— | General was ex-officlo Secretary of in charge of the ,Wrangell office | ridden for months. Field Museum of Natural History, here by a crowd of several bun-! The first wihtdrawal of Alaska| Discussing that subject after he Two Fort Worth banks, whose de-lme Territory of Alaska. Yy e October, taking the place of (International Newsreel) “the Adler planetarium, the Shedd dred persons. The crowd took Ir-ijand for Federal forest purposes)had been president of Brown some posits at the last bank call to-| pgp Sommers continued in this the late Frederick E. Bronson, who s —— aguarium and the mammoth ath- vine by force from Sheriff Tyler. | was made In 1802, when the “Afog- | years, Dr. Faunce sald: “If I were talled $6282,000 “temporarily clos-iofice until the change of Ad- passed away in Seattle DECembfl!o e e 306 ce e s e e e elletic stadium, Soldier field Al' Irvine was captured at Mystic, | nak Island Fish and Forest Culture |entering college today, I certainly ed” today while the Fort Worth |minictration at Washington, when 2, after a protracted illness. . TODAY'S STOCK o |will be utilized for the exposition, Georgia, after an all-night man peserve” was established. The first|would not attempt to choose a life Clearing House Association worked !ne resigned and was succeeded by . Reed entered the Customs|e QUOTATIONS The pageant grounds will stretch hunt by Tyler and his deputies.| withdrawal in Southeastern Alaska |career before entrance. What does|out a plan ‘“through which de-|gar) Theile. He was apopinted e in 1004, serving a5 Immi-/g ¢ ¢ o © ® © © ® ® @ o @ 50 blocks. The north end of the When they were bringing Trvine|yas on August 20, 1902, to include a boy of 17 or 18 know about his positors may receive deposits In|mighway Engineer in 1924 and is ion Inspector and representative A ) fair will inelude two artificial 'O '“’" Jail, the sheriff was “‘."Swd}pm of the Southeastern Alaska|own latent capacities or the chang- | {fun.” still serving in that position. of the Public Health Service at! Feb, 1—Alaska Ju- |11ands, one now completed, upon by. . thg crowd at the center "é}slnnds. A second withdrawal on |ing spheres of private ODDOHUIHW\ The two Institutions were closed Ulmer Well Known the Port of Nome untl 1908, when| NEW JYQRtK'k ‘e"' ioted foday at Which stands the Shedd aquarium. Sl dThheu ;rowd °"e”1’°”rve | September 10, 1907, wa smade cre-|and public service?” by order of the Olearing House| wy yimer, a civil engineer, is he was appointed Deputy Collector ,€au mine stock is quof ¥ 8% A system of canals will enable visi- 1Y€l an leputies Tyler Was|gting ‘the Tongass National Forest| He also held that if education | |Assoclation Board of Directors, well known throughout the Terri- there. He took an active interest P, Aerioan (e ISGI,SiKAnéC:?S: tors to travel past, and through m’.'u.red b 5 | with practically its present boun-|did not show a person how to thlnkfrhe bapks are the Texas Na-|iory Pormerly a resident of Ket- in business and fraternal activities 1‘;-} Be";“'he"‘ces;::al i O"e ady,, | buildings in noiseless electric gon-| T "f"w::‘r‘:"mw”w;"ke;‘ “‘“ ll};f daries. for himself it was futile, It was tional Bank and First State Bank opivan he was at one time elected » and is one of the best liked Gov-|AUOYS B3, Cenerel MO e |dolas. Pt T pmfm‘;m | The Chugach National Forest was |his bellef that education could not {of Polytechnic, in a suburb. to the office of advisor to the ernment officials in Alaska. Hislb Grunow 16, Kennecott 59% Na-| On the ground, on terraces and _ .%o o Bealek to feath an 4| established with npearly the same|be estimated by the acquiring of o Territorial Board of Road Com- successor at Nome has not yet been | J’max ‘Acme 22%, Packard 17, 00 Toofs of buildings will be mov- h'{«-'uédy iy e boundaries as at, present on July |certain number of points, which 1 et | missioners from the First Division. appointed. Rudio 37%, National Brands 27,|in¢ sidewalks. In order to lower ™o biee muier caid the pegro con- |23 1907 The Alaska forest areas|might be attained almost by the,/ ppropriation for | From the spring of 1924 until e - |Standard ofl of California 60, | congestion at entrances, visitors will fessed upon his capture were first placed under administra- |process of memorizing a set of Nome Radlo Station the fall of 1925 he was with the MISS RAY w[NNER IStandard Oil of New Jersey 64%, enter the buildings on the roofs and i 3 tion in 1902, when W. A. Langille |tables. E Alaska Road Commission in the [U. s. Steel 184%. leave at the ground level. Father: Rusks | was sent to Ketchikan as Supervisor | In the selection of students for | Asked by President |Interior as a construction foreman. OF CONTEST; TRIP |U & " cxposttion will cast upwara I ather, Rushing to in which capacity he continued, |freshman classes, Dr. Faunce insist- — Since that time he has resided AROUND THE WORLD lof $30,000,000. Bedside of Dying 'handling ‘both the Chugach and|ed that a mere number of points| WASHINGTON, Feb. 1—Presidfalmost continuously at Fairbanks. | €@ ”” ) { . | Tongass Forests, until 1910. At that|was not sufficient to certify that a dent Hoover has submitted to Con- £} ; p . PAT NAGHEL ls ! ‘I)(lughter, Killed time he was succeeded by W. G.|man was fit to profit by a col- gress a supplemental approprlaflonlNchoLsoN No‘r 1 Miss Patsy Ray, daughter of IN JUNEAU AGAIN'(opfesses Robbing | | Weigle, who continued as Supervisor [lege course. “He may present estimate of $125,000 for the Wash- i [ » Mayor L. V. Ray a.nd Mrs. a"i A RAINIER, Oregon, Feb. 1 ® |until 1919, followed by C. H. Flory, |points without number,” he said |ington and Alaska Military Cable SERIOUSLY HURT ¥ of Seward, Alagka, wan the popu-| |Bank of Which —Less than 48 hours after ® unti] December 31, 1920, C. T. Gard-|once, “but if he is lazy or vicious, |and Telegraph System. The sum iy larity contest for a Around-the-! pqward Naghel, better known as |Father I Cashier her father, Camden Spencer ®!ner until October 31, 1922, and R.|if he is destitute of the instincts will enable replacement of the ra-| Injuries to Dr. H. G. Nicholson World trip at the recent winter Cg; “pat,” returned to Juneau on the I'ather IS e had been killed in an auto- ®!a Zeller to the present time. (of a gentleman or loyal to truth|dio station near Nome which was|of Sitka, who broke his leg near ¥ cus given in Seattle by the Seattle| sqmiral Rogers after wmplefins; ol S b. 1 mobile accident near Santa The Chugach Forest was adminis- |and honor, we do not want him.” |destroyed by fire last December. |the hip early this week, were not | Press Club. Miss Ray, as Miss Al- 'his third year at the Alaska Ag-| BOWLING GREEN, Ky., Fe . . g jhis third ye: e Maria, California, wHile ®itered by these Supervisors until| On the subject of coeducation, he ., . as serious as it was thought at aska, was several thousand votes, \ricultural College and School of |—Carl Spillman, aged 19 yefl;;s-thk':s o speeding to her bedside, Pau- ® 11920, when it was made a separate |said he was old-fashioned enough B replod tirst, according to word received f{:lz:fr gc;:g e ::;4:”{:; cgr:) | Mines attmbtnnks é‘;’;{f:f;: w;hfinpi“‘g ::;‘éer; ¢ o ® line Spencer, aged 18, died a5 unit and placed under the adminis- |to be thoroughly opposed to it, ex- | last Explodes this morning by Gov. George A. * petios; 18 e , | msd vl J'é"’ifid e e ibank at Rocky Hill, of which his ® ® restlt of pneumonia. ® |tration of C. T. Beach, followed by |cept as a makeshift until the col- Prematurely; Two Parks from Dr. L. P. Dawes who i ol SN v Y o o ges him here ones)father ls cashier and sole em- ® The girls father and two ®|w. J. McDoriald from 1922 to the[lege can afford something better Mi Are Killed|T™: to Sika on the Ranger Sy BREUER GOES SOUTH Gngem:utg his l.r:le:nl on th’: R‘o‘éf:ployee He has been charged with ® g‘e“g;'ew- eIt‘h Judd ”;d”‘z ® | present time. In his opinion, to treat men and tners Are Ru [several days ago to: attend Dr. s 1 . A NOW! were killed ® 1 Point women in exactly the same way Nicholson. z a surprise, for his name robbery and lodged in jail. The nteresting Poin ’ ~ & Leo W. Breuer, Commissioner of | ir:st.fi {hcluded on the passenger bank officials said about $3,000 was ® When their automobile crash- | It is interesting that several of |academically and socially is to| BOVNERS FERRY, Idaho, Feb.| It will not be necessary to have . Fducation, left this week on the|list. He expects to,work with a the loot. Three men participated ® ed into another, injuring ©|the men now working in the Alas-|damage both. Likewise, as between 1'—"0*;;1 ::lfln. aged 25 and Her-|Dr. Nicholson brought to a local “ Admiral Rogers for Petersburg for survey party in the fleld this com- in the robbery. The youth said ® Ralph Henderson, salesman, ®-ka District entered the Forest Serv- |the budding genfus and the com-|man Her m"lt aged 29, both min-|hospital, the message said. D a short business trip. He may con-|ing season, and in the fall will he sat in a car with one of the ® driver. Sliee very soon atter its establish- | monplace mind, he favored giving (TS, were me’" > ’:,‘" blast last 3"” ’-'l ol "";“ here “ 3 0 en while the third robbed the ® e e PG 203 bk Couer d’Alene mine. |having - left for - Juneau X ;‘;‘fog’u‘x’l"’:_‘;fi’lb;‘t“’ i snn 12;?]‘;:?}‘{”‘&5‘:;“;“82:“?"”“9 hig men joseeeeeseooe o (Continued on Page Eight “(Continued on Page Three) IThe blast exploded prematurely. lo'clock yesterday morning. 5

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