The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 11, 1933, Page 8

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1933. PAUL SEEKING T GET ACTION ON LIBEL CASE Seeks Rehearing of Motion to Dismiss, Granted ' Last Week by Court ¥ h Action ‘seeking to reopen libel suit filed last month 2 Attorney General by Cash Cole was Federal District Court when William L. Pau for Mr. Cole, filed 2 m rehearing on the defendant’s mo-| tion to dismiss the suit | The original hearing was h(‘l(l‘ last week and the suit was ordered dismissed on the ground that the summons served upon Mr. Rustgard was not properly certified. Mr Cole was not represented at the! hearing and when Mr. Paul sought to get the matter reopened on the| follov day, his motion was de-) nied WHERE JAPANESE TIDAL WAVE WROUGHT HAvVOC ‘ ) £ tHy : . e Uk bRl Two grounds are alleged in Lho‘ motion today for @ rehearing. It| i claimed that the statute, (section B 878 of the Compiled Laws of Al-| aska, 1913), on which the order| of dismissal was based, was re-| pealed by Chapter 94, Session Laws ' of 1931 and re-enacted without the, particular clause on which the order of dismissal was based. It is further claimed that the order is not supported by the record, since & “the record shows that the cnp)'; of the summons was certified.” | The case was filed here and Mr.| Rustgard served just before he and| Walker Introduces Measure for Territorial Board Mrs. Rustgard sailed for an cx-‘.‘ .. . tended trip to the States and| of Administration Europe. Mr. Cole, alleging he was| b i libeled by the former Attorney, ™™ (Continued trom Page One.) General during the political cam- paign 135;0381?:;;3;;%“\“8 m‘;’mminis!.atmn replaces his other recover $10, . | to bestow discretionary powers over M’KENNA TO BE BURIED appropriations upon the Governor | of Alaska. The new measure pro- IN LOCAL CEMETERY’vldes for a board comprised of the | Governor, as Chairman, the At- Word received in Juneau from torney General, Treasurer, Auditor, J. M. McKenna, of Long Beach, | Commissioner of Education and| California, nephew of Michael Mc- | Highway Engineer. It would act Kenna, pioneer Alaskan who died as a kind of Cabinet and have here Saturday, directed that he be|power to suspend or reduce appro- buried in the Catholic plot of priations, to prevent deficits in the Evergreen Cemetery in this city. |treasury, except those for mainte- The body of Mr. McKenna is at: nance and operation of schools, the C. W. Carter Mortuary. Serv- 5 public asylums or public homes, for| ices will be held from the Catholic | pensions, for rescue and relief of Church tomorrow at 9 o'clock. host persons, for support or relief —————— of indigents or of dependent chil- John Morrison, of the B. M. dren, for payment of salaries Behrends Bank, is a passenger on Territorial officials and employee the Princess Norah for Juneau, re- | necessary administrative turning from a vacation trip south. of the several executive department BABY CLINIC Mothers Take your babies to the FREE Clinic at the American Legion Dugout. WEDNESDAY From 1: 30 to 4:00 P. M. GEORGE BROTHERS Telephones 92—95 Five Fast Deliveries D e e A REAL BARGAIN Half gallon Wesson Oil At GARNICK’S, Phone 174 3 | measure, introduced late last week.‘ to expenses S Beis offices, and payment of bounties. The bill generally follows th lines of the original bill on the same subject, the change consisting largely in substituting the Board of Administration for the Governor. Passes Four Bills The Senate'today passed four of its own measures and transmitted them to the House. ed: Bill No. 51, to repeal section 2 of Chapter 2 Session Laws of | 1915, relative to food inspection; No. 52, to amend section 2, ® Bill Chapter 2, Session Laws of 1913, providing for the issuance of writs or orders on legal holidays; Bill | ter 66, Session Laws of Alaska, by inserting an introductory part, and Bill No. 54, a bill for an act to probihit the institution or prosecu- n of actions in the courts of | Alaska for the purpose of harassing or annoying another, and prescrib- ing punishment therefor. All of these were Judiciary Com- mittee bills. | The Senate was considering sev- eral bills, including Green's fre silver memorial this afternoon. Mr | Green appeared and was given 10 | minutes to advocate the passage of his measure in the Senate. Seek River Fishing | A memorial was introduced ‘n the Senate yesterday by Messrs. DeVane and Lomen urging Con- gress to amend the Alaska Fisheries Law so as to permit limited com- {mercial salmon fishing on the | Yukon and Kuskokwim Rivers, lim- iting the take and permitting none; except residents of the two areas to engage in fishing. -oe—— MOOSE GAIN MEMBERS At the regurar mmeeting of Ju- neau Lodgs No. 700, Loyal Order {of Moose, held last night at Moose |Hall, two new members were added |to the lodge raster. Following the initiatory ceremonies a light lunch- con was served in the banquet hall {and a general good time was had |by the large number of members | present. Art McKinnon was unani- mously elected to the position of | Manager of the Moose Baseball |team which will take the field dur- {ing the ensuing season of the City Baseball League. . — LAND OFFICE INSPECTOR { Office, arrived in Juneau on Alaska today from Ketchikan, is staying at the Zynda Hotel. o et Read the ads as curefully 2c read the news articles. HERE TOMORROW —-Direct from New York! COLEMAN'S ‘They includ-| by adding a proviso to the section,| No. 53, to amend Section 13, Chap-| -\ Bill No. 30, by McCutcheon, which| F | i ; | ‘ | | | This is a scene of destruction created by the tidal wave which followed an earthquake and caused the | Bt ,‘ death of nearly 2,000 persons along the coast of northeast Japan. The water front of the seanort of Kzmaishi, | —0d he foilowed it. in Iwate prefecture, is shown after it was swept by the ctorm, (Associatea Press Photo) | BEER BILL IS PAST HURDLES I THE HOUSE {Hellerich Measure Passes 14 to 1—Sent to Sen- | ate This Morning ‘ (Continued from Page One.) | ment of landing fields. The former | | asked for $1,000 for work on an| emergency field at Mile 30 on| Richardson Highway, and for a| | similar sum for the same kind of “projecl at Upper Tonsina on Rich-| ardson Highway. | Mr. Swanberg asked for $600 for| improvement of the field at Candle. Kills Cne Measure By a vote of 9 to 17, the House| | today indefinitely postponed House | {sought to limit the legal fee for attorneys representing administra- (tors during the probating of es- | tates. { It had a large part of its cal- endar still untouched when it ad- | journed at noon for a short time. ilL reconvened at 1:30 p.m. and was| |expected to have completed before 1 adjournment for the day. | FORMERU. S, HALIBUT RECEIPTS AT SEATTLE LIGHT| AMBASSADOR PASSES AWAY er and Author Dies in Princeton, N.J. TRENTON, N. J., April 11.—Hen- ry Van Dyke, former Ambassador to The Netherlands, died at his Princeton home yesterday. Van Dyke, undecided in his youth whether to become a preacher or a writer, eventually achieved prom- inence as both. In addition he was an educator of note and war-time United States Minister to The Netherlands and Luxemburg. “The source of Van Dyke’s versa- lity was his vitality,” a friend of long standing said of him. “He had a very real love of living—a natural tendency to obey human impulses The son of a Presbyterian minis- ter, Dr. Van Dyke was born at Germantown, Penn., November 10, 1852, He was descended from a line of Hollanders who settled in New York in 1652, later generations of which fought in the Revolutionary War, Growing up in Brooklyn, to which place his father had moved, young Van Dyke early displayed some of the aggressiveness of his ancestors. It is related that he ance attempted to “lick” an older boy for torment- ing a horse. The encounter, which ended disastrously to himself, was avenged two weeks later when he administered a drubbing to the same offender. At 16, Dr. Van Dyke was gradu- ated from the Brooklyn Polytech- nic Institute. He received his A. B. degree from Princeton in 1873 and was awarded the senior prize in English literature. Unable to decide tween preaching and writing as a career, he regarded a course in theology as worthwhile in either vocation and entered Princeton Theologic Seminary. After his graduation in 1877, he spen’ two vears in post-graduate work at Berlin. Returning to the United States he was ordained a Presbyterian minister in 1879. He tried to get a couniry pastorate, but was unsuc- cessful. Then he decided that writ- ing was probably his real vocation. Immediately he received ar in- vitation to supply the pulpit of the United Congregation Church of Newport, R. I, which he accepted on condition that he should not b= a candidate for permanent occu- pancy of the pulpit. Three weeks DOLLFUSS ON SUDDEN TRIP FROM VIENNA Henry Van Dyke, Preach-jChancellor Goes to Rome —Various Rumors Are Already Circulated VIENNA, April 11.—Chancellor Dollfuss is on a flying trip to Rome where German leaders are already visiting the Vatican and Premier Mussolini. The trip of the Chancellor is linked in some quarters with Mus- solini's campaign for. revision of the post-war treaties. With the presence of Dollfuss in Rome, it brings together representatives of the three principal nations dis- pleased with the frontier lines set up after the world war. e MRS. PRICE ENROUTE TO DAN CREEK ABOARD ALASKA Mrs. Jack Price, whose husband is one of the owners of the Dan Creek mines, was a passenger for Cordova on the Alaska today, aft- er spending the winter in the/ States. —————————— J. L. M’'GINN ENROUTE TO FAIRBANKS FROM SOUTH | J. L. McGinn, prominent mining man and lawyer of San Francisco and Fairbanks, was in Juneau to- day while the Alaska was in port, enroute to the Interior. Mr. McGinn has been in San Francisco for several months and is returning to Fairbanks to begin | his mining operations there for the icoming season. R MINING MAN RETURNING TO ANCHORAGE ON ALASKA; Jack Linke, former Alaska news- | paper man, who is now following | the mining game, is a passenger | for Anchorage on the Alaska. 1 RS £ S FORMER SENATOR AND WIFE RETURN NORTH ON ALASKA | Bartley Howard, former Tcrribor-I ial Senator, and Mrs. Howard, are jos ngers for Seward on the Al- | aska. ———— MRS. GROVES IN JUNEAU i GUEST OF MRS. FOLTA Mrs. Verle J. Groves and her daughter, formerly of Juneau, ar- rived in Juneau on the Alaska and| is the house guest of Mrs. Ann in Juneau. Mrs. Groves stopped a Folta until she finds a residence| week in Ketchikan enroute north later he was elected pastor of the‘m)m Beatle, church which he found “heavily in| debt and badly split up.” He said | IN JUNEAU AT Z¥YNDA HOTEL Court today. | J. A. Ramsay, Field Inspector for |the United States General Land g the' and you SEATTLE, Apru 11.—Only three Ischooners arrived in port today with halibut and they were from \local banks, as follows: Betty Jane |with 10,000 pounds, selling for 10%, and 7 cents a pound; Eleanora with 5,500 peunds, selling for 10 and 7 cents a pound, and Gloria {No. 2 with 7,000 pounds selling for 1‘10*, and 7 cents a pound. B H NEW CITizeN FOR U. S. Haakon Alf Eliot Hermanson, a native of Norway and subject of Canada, was admitted to citizenship lin the United States by Judge Jus- {tin ‘'W. Harding in the District His witnesses werz Bernt Alvestad and Andrew Ros- ness. | - | [ || The Florence Shop Permanent Waving a Specialty || Fiorence Holmquist, Prop. | | Phone 427 | Triangle Bldg. R — . afterwards of the circumstance, “A sense of duty took me by the back of the neck and said, ‘Stay here and tend to your job'!" He re- mained four years. In 1883 he was called to the pas- torate of the Brick Presbyterian Church of New York City and ac- cepted with the provision that he should not stay more than five years. He remained eighteen. Over- work and ill health forced his resig- nation in 1900, and he accepted a professorship of English Literature at Princeton University. There he became a friend of Woodrow Wil- son, president of the university, and in 1913 Wilson, as President of the United States, appointed him Unit- ed States Minister to the Nether- lands and Luxemburg. He remained in that post until 1917, when he re- Princeton University, teaching un- til his retirement in 1923. His mar- more, took place in 1881. “The Blue Flower,” Passion,” “Fisherman’s Luck,” for an Age of Doubt.” Burners for Ranges Circulating Heaters Heating Stoves Small Heating Plants See one of these $25.00 burners under actual working conditions at ALSTROM’S NEWS STAND Rice & Ahlers Co. “We tell you in advance what Job will cost” | signed to return to his work at riage to Miss Ellen Reid of Balt_i-l i Dr. Van Dyke was the author of many books of original prose and | verse as well as treatises on relig- | ious subjects. Among his best known | works were “The Other Wise Man,” | “The Ruling “Music, an Ode,” and “The Gospel‘; HIDDEN FALLS LUMBERMAN AT THE GASTINEAU HOTEL B. F. Ficken, in charge of the lumber mill at Hidden Falls, is in Juneau and registered at the Gas- tineau Hotel. — .. FRANK SEKINOFF HAS SERIOUS OPERATION TODAY Frank Sekinoff underwent a seri- ous operation at St. Ann's hospital this morning, and is said to be getting along nicely, S .- LEE SMITH UNDERGOES EMERGENCY OPERATION Lee Smith, son of L. H. Smith, of the Juneau Dairy, is ill in St. Ann’s hospital, following an emer- gecy appendectomy performed Mon- day morning. e eee - MURPHY BOUND OVER TO GRAND JURY ON HEARING After a hearing in the court of Commissioner Charles Sey this morning, Eddie Murphy, accused of larceny on a beat, was bound over to the Grand Jury. His bail was set at $500. Murphy is alleged to have taken food, clothing and tools and equip- ment from the gashoat It. - NOTICE TO TENNIS PLAYERS Courts will be closed several days while lines are being painted. It is hoped to resume play Saturday. —adv. JUNEAU TENNIS CLUB. RED BULLET SETS RECORD THROUGH AIR Italiar} fliemakes 426.3 iles an Hour in His Seaplane DESENZANO, Italy, April 11— The speed plane Red Bullet, with Francesco Agello at the controls, broke the world’s seaplane record here yesterday, averaging 426.3 miles an hour. The previous record was set by Lieut. George Stainforth, of Eng- land, in 1931, when he made 408.8 miles an hour, ROSSCWE SIS LA, Mrs. Theodore Ketizeson of Sitka, arrived in Juneau on the Alaska from Wrangell and is at the Gasti- neau Hotel. ———-——— A number of fisuermen and clam diggers are aboard the Alaska for Cordova where they will begin their season’s work. - Oscar Breedman, proprieior of the Windsor Hotel in Cordova, vis- ited friends in Juneau while the Alaska was in port westbound. Pre-Easter —Distinctive c | Fine Quality WASHABLE SHADES 36x7—9$1.00 9x12 Highest Quality FELT BASE RUGS Our Cash Price—$%7.20 2 Piece 100% Mohair OVERSTUFFED SUITE Our Cash Price—$78.75 9x12 Seamless VELVET RUG Oriental Pattern—$22.50 ]uneau- Young Hardware Co. “TOMORROW’S STYLES TODAY” Apparel Collection Smartest Ever! —Right Clothes . —At Right Prices . . . . Shop with us before you buy “JUNEAU’S OWN STORE” Styles . . . You Can Buy FURNITURE In Juneau for LESS MONEY than you can from the Mail Order Houses—COMPARE THESE PRICES Bed Dresser Chest Walnut Veneer OUR CASH PRICE $38.00 Delivered anywhere in Juneau Catalogue Cash Price $37.50—Plus freight from Seattle

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