The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 5, 1932, Page 6

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6 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE T‘UESDAY APRIL L5, 1932. POLLY AND HER PALS |YOU AINT GOT A CHINAMAN'S CHANCE OF SEEIN' YER DAUGHTER WITHOUT ; SEEIN' YER WIFE ALSO, AN’ FERGIVE AN’ FERGIT/ 1 ; 7 THEN IT AIN'T THE BYGONES WOT WORRIES ME, [WAL, COME ON IN AN LET BYGONES BE i Prrs e 1. Uron e g e attractive i apartme: ale this expected 1 evening's | an ety i R [\\'ill be included in the | ent and refreshments in an DOUGLAS vill be served as usual. |are on s PP asiie | 3 | CLUB MEETING | pesto NEWS ‘ N 1 hcuse. to attend g —————— BPOTLK€ The Douglas Island Women's | Club will mee at the home of Mrs. .! O. Kirkham Wednesday even- | ng, April 8, at 8 o'clock. ing room scene | Tickets wesk and a large Installation meeting Wednesday. { April birthday party. Entertalnment | RUSSIAN CHURCH ROSE (}OGHLAN "IN ALASKA WILL NOTED STAGE OPPOSE SOVIET ACTRESS, DIES e i land feed. Full attendance desired.| MISS LINDSTROM ARRIVES |Visiting members invited. [ Adv. M. H. SIDES, Sec Miss Vivian Lindstrom who has | T R been teaching school at Chatanika during the winter returned home | {on the Yukon yesterday, her term | 1 having been completed. e e JUNIOR PLAY REPLETE WITH WIT AND HUMOR TALK TONIGHT Commissioner of Education To Address Douglas Association NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Commissioner’s Court | | | Number One. Before Charles | bate Judge, Juneau Precinct. To accommodate the men who the Alaska Juneau, a “A Suspended Honey- EUGENE MANNING. NOTICE that the undersigned was on A regular meeting of the Doug-|w: Y ko, L3l g Junior Class play, Will be gt day of March, 1932, duly g M S bod next Saturday @t 11 o'dlock. | pointeq” Administrator of the estate er on the program Friday there will be a dress re-|,r Eugene Manning, deceased. sioner of Bducation W. K. Keller. Other interesting numbers have al- S0 been arranged. An important business ing which will include the an-(ing showing at 8:15 o'clock nial election of officers, will pre- icomedy lasts two and one-half rsal for the perfonmance °‘1persons having claims against Suspended Honeymoon.” There |will be two presenttions Saturday, them with proper vouchers ‘The | (Juneau, Alaska, within six cecd the program. |hours and is full of witty speech- |months from the date of R e (u and humorotis action from fir: notice. CARD PARTY PLANNED |to last. There will be musical| pated at Juneau, Alaska, {numbers bstween each act to fill |21st day of March, 1932. The Ladies' Auxiliary F. O. E./in the st interval between cur- JAMES MANNING, will give a public card party in |tains. Administrator. the Eagles Hall Monday evening| The same stage setting remains |First publication, March 22. 1932. th bridge and whist throughout the play—representing | Last publication, April 19, 19 that extra room Rent that extra room for extra pin money or for the compan- ionship of a congenial person or for some new things for your home which you can buy on the money gained from renting that extra room. ‘An empty room is not an asset to a home nor a help in its upkeep. There are many people of fine character looking for just the room you have to offer. They first look in The Empire. Insert an ad in the “For Rent” columns in The Empire for results. DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE Phone 374 for an Adtaker Daily Empire Want Ads Pay the Territory of Alaska, Division | odox Church in Alaska are inte Commissioner and ex-officio Pro- | County Superior Court in Seatt In the Matter of the Estate of by the Russian Orthodox Church 1S HBREBY GIVEN, Czars to the Russian jestate of said deceased will present g5 meet-‘a matinee at 11 a. m. and aneven- | quly verified to the Undersigned in they are |care of Frank A. Boyle, Box 23%0, ic; reorganized Russian Orthodos | [Religious Organlzatxom Made First Appearance at Here Claim to Be 18 Years, Achieved Independent Great Success for | Agherents of the Russian Orih- (Ccnrmuca from Page One) Sey, lested in a decision of the Kinz| awarding property acquired ther when it functioned under th: Orthod the | Church as reorganized under t ap- ! Soue': Government. | All Russian Orthodox institu- | All tions in Alaska, of which bh the are 12 churches and 75 or 80 chap were established prior to th and Russian Revolution. They conte independent of the Sov- (®) Church and none of them recoz this nizes Metorpolitan John Kedrovs) of New York, primate of North this America and Archbishop-elect Val- dimir Alexandrox, who claim au-| thority and jw iction by wvirtue of the action of a “sabor,” or eccles- | astical Congress, held in Moscow | § in 1923, at the dictation, it is de " clared of the Soviet Government Will Be Resisted Alaska Russian Orthodox clergy- - < men will resist any attempts by Ao Metropolitan Kedrovsky or Arch- W‘W? bishop Alexandrox to possess or ROSE. _COTHLAN control Russian Orthodox Church o T in this Territory. ars ago, Archbishop Alex- he retirement of Lester Wallack cm the androx brought suit in the United Last Succes: strict Court for ‘Westérn | Concluding her ¢t Wal Washington Yo establish hiSunight |lack’'s, Mrs. Coghlan again went over certain Russian Orthodox |to England: in 1892 but returned Church property in Alaska, to ‘this country two years later. his contention in that ca Among her last successes we: disallewed by Judge Edwa.rd E \ ‘Pine TFeathers,” *“‘Our Betbe Cushman, Independence of Russian Ormo- dox Churches in Alaska in exis- tence at the time of the transfer of the Territory from Russia to the Urited States is declared’ .to kave been established by Article g as “Madame Prudence” w Barrymore in a revival of soasons in vaudeville, Coghlan married Clinton | a Bosgton lawyer, in 1885, | 2 of the Treaty of Cession that 18“0 Not long was signed in 1867, by Minister married John T. Sullivan her lead- Edouard de Stoechel, representing ing man in “Forget-Me-Not,” and Russia, and Secretary of State Wil- “Diplomacy,” from whom she also llam H. Seward, representing the was divorced. ,United States. In July, 1912, she became a na- Text of Article The Article says: “It is understood and ngreed that the churches which have been; paily anln an Ads pay built in the ceded Territory by - the Russian government shall re- main the property of such mem- bers of the Orthodox Church resi- dent in the Territory as may choose to worship therein.” | Some of the churches and &l of the chapels built and organized |in the Territory since the Treaty {of Cession have been erected and | estiablished, it is declared, with funds contributed by the Indian ‘population and with no help from Russian Orthodox Church head+ | quarters in Russia. | | Since the Revolution none of the | Russian Orthodox institutions® in |this Territory has received finan-, § |cial aid from the Soviet recogniz- jed Russian Orthadox Church and many of them have expended con- siderable sums in payment of ec- clesiastical salaries and for prop- erty improvements. ’ FOUR TYPES OF OFFENSE USED BY NOTRE DAME\ | SOUTH BEND, Ind, April 5&—y |Four types of offense were used by Coach George Keogan -in the !basketball campaign this year, The Notre Dame quintet alm |used two types of defense, One type of offense wmblnerl !a pivotal center with the cross- !court game. the pivot man under |the basket acting as the top of |a pendulum while two men swung {back and forth across the court! with the ball like the weight of | |a pendulum; ‘ | Occassionally the modern pro-| fessional type of offense was adopt- ed, the down-cowt men remain- ing stationary instead of swingf ing back and forth. Keogan's old| | tyle of cross-court game occasion- ally was employed, while the do-i | turalized citizen and made home in New York. . her § layed offensive was used a few times. In one game three types of offense were used. ———— e HANOVER, N. H, April 5. —; Twenty-seven letters have been awarded by the Dartmouth «Qol-, W She also arpeared fer | COLLEGE MEN MAY SOON BE IN BASEBALL Coainb. Secs Big Diamond ;‘ Future for Univer- sity Aspirants |future more big leaguers will be |entitled to write “A/B” aftef their names, in the opinion of John W. “Jack” Coombs, Duke University | baseball coach. | Coombs believes the slump in the minor leagues will force the majors to turn to the colleges | with added persistence after new | talent. | “Five years ago,” he says, “there |were almost 50 organized baseball leagues. This year it is doubtful |if 20 will start the season with teams. | “Major league clubs must get their players somewhere, as it is my opinion that they will in- struct their scouts to follow those college teams which have promis- ing material. | “The chain-store plan is com- ing fast, but until this system is firmly established, etollege grad- {uates will go first to the clubs {not having the system.” Baseball Situation Coombs said boys with some ball- playing ability are enrolling in col- leges now because they figure it i3 the first step in a Major leagus confract. Many are making ibaseball their life's vocation, he |added, and they go to college to |make a scientific study of the game, now being in the curricul- um work of some universities. Coombs conducts a baseball coaching school at Duke and last (spring 145 candidates came out for | These were | the freshman team. ¢|cut to 40, but the others had the | opportunity of playing intramural | baseball. | I the building program at Duke jample provision wes made for a rom whom she was divoreed m‘ba{ba'l playing field, with stands | afterward she|that will have a seating oa.pamty |of 9,000. Duke Baseball Popular Last year the average attend- | {ance at Duke’s baseball games be- ling played at home was about 2,- 000. In 1930, it was even gremer‘ probably because the Coombs team of that year was a winner. At the end of 1980 nine Duke players 0 Ordinance 207 A Central Heating System Is a Public Improvement and Self IT WILL NOT INCREASE YOUR TAXES! Vote | DURHAM, N. C, April 5—In the| LIABLES RETURN TO STAR FOLD ! | 8 Frank Shellenbach, spitball artist, expects to confuse batters in the Coast League again thls season. Johnny Bassler, catcher, has his work cut o;it “or him. veteran Hollywood went to the Majors or Minors to|ample suppues of paper currency. play more baseball. | Once the patrons run out of Prospects this year are not so|franc notes, they hie to the bar good, Coombs said. He has two|with their small change in ths seniors in the varsity nine that ‘hope that the machines will yield he expects to do big things. Mr. | enough to give them a seat in.a Coombs formerly played big-league |bigger game. baseball, and is one of the few - - pitchers ever to win three games | in a world’s series. That was in| 1910, when he was hurling for the | Athletics, against the Chicago Cubs. ———-——— Slot Machines Squeeze f Gene Ewart With Connors L t fate Call Motor Co. Ok B TOWe YL ANTO PAINTING MONTE CARLO, April S—SIOL;' REI?IN ‘HING machines for impecunious gamblers | have been installed in the casino here. The reason for the innovation is | the shortage of heavy playexs wlmh‘ RENOVATING Get Our Prices First SCANDINAVIAN-AMERIC!/ DANCE MOOSE HALL WEDNESDAY NIGHT ¥ i L.0.0. MOOSE 700 and ARCTIC PLAYERS Accordion — Saxophone — Piano and Drums Fox Trots — Waltzes — Schottishes — Polkas Hambos and Three Steps DANCING, 9:30 Adm. $1.00 Royal Club Ladies Free ! Grapefruit No. 2 Cans, 3 cans for S C CALIFORNIA GROCERY }i TELEPHONE 478 n Sustaining Y ES!

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