Search America's historic newspaper pages from 1770-1963 or use the U.S. Newspaper Directory to find information about American newspapers published between 1690-present. Chronicling America is sponsored jointly by the National Endowment for the Humanities external link and the Library of Congress. Learn more
Image provided by: Alaska State Library Historical Collections
Newspaper Page Text
“Federal Officials Cannot Lawfully be Appointed to any Territorial Office/" —Attorney General of Alaska John Rustgard. MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VOLUME XXVIII. NUMBER 7. SEWARD, ALASKA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 1932. PRICE TEN CENTS I COAST FACE 1 ADMIRAL BULLARD SAYS TOTAL SUM OF BRIBES BUT TRIFLE WASHINGTON, D. C., Jail. 9. (A») —Court martial charges were filed Friday against 24 enlisted men of the Coast Guard service. No com missioned officers were involved. The charges were brought about through an investigation into the wholesale bribing of the Coast Guarders by liquor runners in the . New York area. Rear Admiral F. C. Billard, com- j mandant of the Coast Guard, said j t hat the investigation showed that : i few men at the Fire Island. Blue Point, Heliport and Georgia sta-, lions accepted bribes of from $80 : to $200 from, the smugglers to per- | mit them to land liquor from a! stranded rum runner. ' The admiral’s announcement was ; nade following a' statement made ■ oy U. S. Attorney Amelie. in Brook- i iyn. that the conspiracy concerned : a large number of men in the New , York area and that the bribes in volved sums which totaled up to j about $1,000,000. Billard said that :he total amount of the bribes was rifling. GUARDSMEN CONFESS 18 BEING BRIBED 81 118808 RUNNEHS ■NEW YORK. Jan. 9. (^—Whole ale bribery of Coast, Guardsmen' ay liquor runners in the New York r , r a reaches a total estimated at '1.000,000, it was revealed by Fed ral District Attorney Howard Am he, who is in charge of an investi .ation which is being made. Twenty Coast Guardsmen had >een arrested, he said, and some nad confessed to accepting the tribes and were being held for omplicity in the liquor deals. An investigation has been under vay for several wTeeks. Commis honed officers are also said to have >een involved. Guardsmen, who talked, indicat ed that entire companies had been oribed to permit cargoes to be .anded on the coast. Coast Guard officials expressed surprise at the ?indings of the investigators. POLE IP IIS SLEEVE OMAHA, Neb., Jan. 8. {/Pj—Capt. Sir Hubert Wilkins outlined plans lor a plane trip to one of the poles lere before he left for Seattle by' Mane. Sir Wilkins said: “I'm going to1 Seattle to consult engineers about' '.he construction of a special plane 0 use on the expedition I have in nind. If I can get what I wrant * 9* may have an announcement to nake.” Later he edded that the interior 1 the Antarctic continent is vir tually untouched and an attempt o disclose its secrets would be worth while. PUTS DERBY IN RING JUNEAU, Jan. 9. (^—Anthony Dimond, Valdez attorney, announc ed here that he would enter the race to secure the Democratic nom ination for Delegate to Congress. RULING IKES IT DELINQUENTS TO PAT CHICAGO, Jan. 8. (JP) — County Judge E. Jarecke handed down a ruling that Cook County 1928 and 1929 real estate assessments were fraudulent and illegal. Although technically, the decision holds good only for objectors in this case, the ruling actually affects $451,709,000 taxes and leaves Chi cago and Cook County virtually penniless and threatened with re ceivership. The court's decision directly af fects a suit brought by Mrs. Lil lian Cisar but involves indirectly $140,000,000 taxes unpaid on the ac i count for 1928 and 1929 assess , ments, $286,000,000 for 1930 and | $25,000,000 in tax forfeits. The ruling makes it unnecessary i for those who have failed to pay I taxes to pay them now and leaves Chicago with the prospect of no ! income for many months to come. The city and Cook County will ! appeal the decision. TERRIBLE DEATHS MOSCOW: -San., 9, (/?)—At least 50 persons were killed and scores injured in a train wreck 14 kilo meters northwest of here. The number of dead was increased by the freight train which plowed through the injured lying along the parallel track. MILT COMPLETED NEW YORK, Jan. 8. bP>—Gold • man Sachs Trading Corporation and the Atlas Utilities Corporation i have been virtually merged thru ! a deal in which Atlas lias become itiie largest individual stock holder j in the trading corporation. It is expected that the actual merger will take place shortly, giv ing combined resources of $160,000, 000. It would then be the largest investment trust in the world. i * * WOMAN IS MISSING NEW YORK, Jan. 8. (/P) — Mrs. i James Remsen Schultz, society wo I man living at Sands Point,. Long ^Island, was reported missing from i the coast steamship Providence, on | which she had sailed for Fall River, I Mass. Police are searching for her. -- -- ROOSEVELT EXPECTED TO IT WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 9. (/P) 1 —The resignation of Dwight Davis, 1 governor general of the Philippines, ; is imminent. ! Davis has made tentative plans j to sail to Paris next week as Mrs. ! Davis is in ill health and he is making a special trip to See her. Davis and Secretary Patrick M. Harley "have an engagement with President Hoover at which time Da vis is expected to hand in his resig nation. It is expected Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., will succeed him. i i CABINET AND PREMIER INUKAI WILL REMAIN IN OFFICE AFTER ALL I TOKYO, Jan. 9. (/P)—A confer ence to revise the Nine-Power j Treaty which was cited by Secre tary of State Stimson in a recent I note to Japan on the Manchurian situation may be sought oy Japan for the purpose of obtaining a clear definition of the term “adminis trative integrity” as used in the treaty. A spokesman for the government; j said that at the time of signing the ! j Kellogg Peace Pact that Japanj | should have made a reservation 1 j with regard to Manchuria but that j {they failed to do so. The Japanese cabinet and Prem- I ; ier Inukai, who tendered their res ignations to the Emperor because; he was nearly a victim of a bomb, have decided to remain in office. The handing in of their resigna- j tions was merely formal and neces sary gesture as the Ministry is re sponsible for the safety of the Em peror. The bomb, which appar ently was intended for the Em-1 peror. Jell under the carriage ahead of the one in which the Emperor J was riding and exploded with a; puff of white smoke. Examination of the bomb dis closed that it was composed of a number of metallic slugs. Only i one person, a guardsman on horse back, wras injured. A 32-year-old Korean laborer, who said his name was Rihoso, was arrested for the : bombing attempt. i PLEAD FOR LEAGUE ACTION ! NANKING, Jan. 9. (,?> — The Chinese government will ask the League of Nations to apply her economic pressure upon Japan, an aggressor nation, as specified in the League of Nation’s covenant. It was | also announced here that China in i tends to convene the signatories of ; the Kellogg Peace Pact and the | Nine-Power Treaty soon. WOMAN CHHD WITH l MAIL FRAUD HANGED SELF IN COINTK JAIL SEATTLE, Jan. 8. (JF) — Mrs. j Thelma Cullen, 37 years of age, on trial in the Federal court here on mail fraud charges in connection 'with stock investments, hanged her self in the county jail Thursday night. Her body was found in the dor mitory. She had climbed atop a radiator and then stepped off with a crude hangman’s noose, made from strip sheeting, around her neck. The noose was attached to a pipe in the ceiling. She WTote a suicide note before she carried her act through and said, “Nobody loves me any more because I’m broke and in trouble and nothing matters. Hqw truly I am a victim of your depression and its circumstances; but God know7s me and loves me. For nearly six months I have heard no music but I know I shall because I’m free.” ACCOUNTANT DIES JUNEAU, Jan. 9. (/P) — William Deyo, 70 years old, accountant, who came to Alaska in the Klondike gold rush, died here after he suf fered a stroke of apoplexy. He had j been ill for four years. DEM.1D STATE ENACT 11 KEEP SC! CHICAGO. Jan. 8. (/P) — Nearly 14,000 school teachers, unpaid since j April and who now face salary cuts, j gathered at the Chicago Stadium and demanded that the State Leg islature enact laws to keep school open during the city’s present fi nancial emergency. The revolt of the teachers is the * most spectacular development in the debacle that has plunged Chi cago into bankruptcy, as the city owes them 820,000,000 in back sal ary. Nine night schools were closed Monday because no money for heat, lights or teachers was available. Twelve thousand* students were ef fected. Schools in three Chicago suburbs have already closed for an indefinite period. KILLS FAMILY CAPE GIRANDEAU, Mo., Jan. 8. I (JP)—Oliver Davenport, 50 years of ! age, killed five of his children by striking them on the head with a : hammer and then seriously wound ed his wife and another child. He i then shot himself to death-. The father apparently went insane Only a 12-year-old boy escaped the brutal attacks of the parent. TOOK 'EM FOII! MS TO DECIDE NEW YORK, Jan. 8. (/P>—Investi ! gation was begun here by Federal ! authorities into the charges made by Representative W. Wood that the Democratic report on cam paign funds in 1928 contained ir regularities. J. W. Gerard, treasurer of the I Democratic committee, replied to i Mr. Wood: “We are probably as familiar with what the law requires ! as Mr. Wood can. be.” _ — APPOINTED BY HOOVER SEATTLE, Jan. 9. (/P)—Kenneth Macintosh was appointed Friday by President Herbert Hoover to serve as a judge of the United States Circuit of Appeals for the Ninth District. Macintosh was a member of the Wickersham law commission. RAILROADS WON'T HAV[ IP MCI CM CUTES WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 8. (/P) —Western railroads won a $20,000, 000 victory in the United States Supreme Court Monday. The court set aside widespread grain rate re ductions ordered by the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1928 as a readujstment in favor of agri culture. In writing the unaimous opinion upon the case, Chief Justice Hughes took judicial notice of the depres sion. POLICE HAVE IDE ARRESTS, MURDER HAWAIIAN YOUTH WAS ONE OF FIVE ALLEGED TO HAVE ATTACKED WOMAN LAST SEPTEMBER HONOLULU, Jan. 9. (#) — Mrs. Grace Bell Fcrtescue, wife of Gran - ville Fortescue, noted American soldier and author and a niece of Alexander Graham Bell, inventor, and her son-in-law, Lieut. Thomas H. Massie, of the United States Navy, were arrested here Friday charged with the slaying of Joseph Kahahawai. Kahahawai is the young Hawai ian who, with four others, was ac cused of attacking Mrs. Massie last September. The jury trying the case disagreed as to the five’s guilt. E. J. Lord, English naval man, was also named in the murder complaint. Police forced their automobile into a roadbank after a 10-mile chase during which time sev eral shots were fired. The Hawaiian youth had been lured into the car. Police said that the body w'as found in the car with a bullet through the heart. THE INDICTMENTS SIN KISMS SAN FRANCISCO, Jan., 8, Three indictments were returned by the Federal grand jury against four persons, one of them an Ala meda physician, in connection with compensation frauds under inves tigation by the government. Those indicted were Dr. J. R Basco, Alameda; Elmer J. Johnson, James B. Kuykendall and Marshal Neil Crozier. Dr. Basco and John son are charged jointly in one in dictment. It is charged that Basco made a false affidavit that he had attend ed Johnson in 1925 for tuberculosis, when he had not attended him at any time prior to 1927 and that Johnson used the affidavit in 1928 in an application for compensation from the U. S. Veterans Bureau. SESSION BE ABOLISHED WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 9, (/P) — The dogged determination of Senator Norris may be rewarded by victory at last. For the seventh time he put through a Senate res olution to abolish the “lame duck" session of Congress. This has six times been proposed iand defeated in the House; Demo cratic leaders in the House are for it. If Norris wins, the people will have another constitutional amend ment vote on the proposal to alter the present provisions so that Con gress will meet each year on Jan uary 2; succeeding November elec tions and the President and Vice President would take office Jan uary 15.