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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. XXXV., NO. 5379. ~ JUNEAU, ALASKA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, 1930, MEMB ER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS | CHARGES MADE AGAINST CHURCH TEMPERANCE BOARD IRISH LABOR PARTY RIOTS AT MEETING Senator Johnson Asked to Leave Platform, then Trouble Starts DURBLIN, April 9—Wild disorder broke out at a meeting last night of the Irish Labor Party in the Mansion House at which labor of the Dail and of the Sen were to speak," after someon: uted 1 move that Tom Johnson, arch and Englishman, be directed leave the platform.” The mover’s reference Thomas Johnson, ) was to Senator Party leader. A storm of cheering, then an up- followed. Speakers tried to get a hearing Chairs were thrown on the plat- form and an attempt made to rush i The Police were speakers and allies hurled ers back to the floor. The meeting broke up the ejection called as the invad- in di ter of several s e WHOS WHO | ND WHERE | d Sultan, traveling man, ar- rived on the Alaska and left on the Queen for the Triangle Tour. He will continue south to Ket- chi on the steamer. Arrivals on the Alaska included G. L. Church, Deputy Prohibition Administrator, who has been to the westward on a short trip. Traveling men on the Alaska were Frank Sully,who,disembarked here, and I. Lachman, booked. for Se- attle, J. H. Hart, and now U at Nome, vi while the Alaska was in port. is going south on business. Among the through passengers on the Alaska Leo Seidenverg, Nome merchant W. P. Johnson, local Frigidaire left on the Alaska for the south, on his way to a company convention in Chicago. After visiting here for a N. J. Peha and S. A. Light of the United Fruit Company. took pas- sage on the Alaska for Ketchikan. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Proper, who came north about a week ago, left for the States on the Alasgka. M W. R. Barnett and daughter are aboard the Alaska on their way to Ketchikan, where they will make their future home. V. A. Paine was a passenger for Juneau on the Queen. He has been at his fox farm near Peters- burg. Mrs. R. B. Martin, accompanied former Juneau man S. District 8. Attorney ited friends in Juneau He is Aviator Sees Fire From Air, Descends And Warns Family GREENVILLE, Penn 9—An air mail pilo identity is unknown, heuse afire duri while on flight He descended, circled ove the farm house with the mo- of his plane roaring out a warning. The sleeping the family of were aroused and escaped and the pilot cr with saving their lives 'COUNCIL NAMES OLD OFFICIALS - FORNEWTERMS ‘Re—elecls All Officers Ex- cept Three—These Are to Be Filled Later The City Council last night re- lected ali of the present City em- pioyees, except in three offices i which were allowed to go over until the next regular meeting. The po- sitions carried over were: Wharfin- ger, Night Patrolman and City En- gineer. t G. A. Getchell was re-elected as Chief of Police. Harry M. Sabin was again named as Chief Fire ‘Truck Driver .and G. R. Phillips continued as his assistant. Miss A. B. Coleman was re-elected City Librarian, John Reck, Treasurer, Dr. W. J. Pigg, City Health Offi- ,cer, Hans Neilson, Caretaker of the Cemet and C. H. MacSpadden and C. F. McNutt, Assistant Wharf- ingers. The election of Night Patrolman was delayed until Chief Getchell, |who was not present at last night's meeting, makes his recommenda- That the Canadian Government gion tg the Council. Pending will maintain a customs officer at |, widit of the City's accounts, the Alaska-British Columbia boun- Be ‘madd in Rk AR fa dary line on the Taku River to » 1o action ‘will be taken on the upervise impositon of duty on Am- inger's Appointment. erican ;zoufls was the mrmnmuop procedure, it was pointed out, was contained in advices received this|poers o’ matter of pol Wek by Assistant Collector of Cus-|ro_eioction of J. M. Davis, who has toms' M. 8. Whitfler held the position for many yea The following excerpt was taken was belleved tb be certain, Further from the Vancouver Province of Engineer's April 1: deemed advisable by ‘Questionnaires sent out to 80 Vvancouver firms by the Traffic De- | “rppo fongwing regular partment of the Board of Tradelyees were appointed last reveal unanimity in demand that'nrouo. yudson: the Custems Department keep bet-| é:x'rc:s. Light Sewers and ter supervision over goods entering Whar!: George, chairman: Krause, the new gold fields on Canadian |y o - o R % soll <4 the “Toku - River district: | ¥ D VENE Sl g gl “Reliable information indicates| .. . 4" cvoirman: Nordling great activity than last year. A 'v};{;x;n;.m'u 2 o circular: to representative firms here | Pub;lc SO &l 86 chate- estimates business expected, if pro-| " | e & £ tection is given, of more than Ten; Oeorge. Bothwell $113,000.00.” & Appearing in the April 4 issue Xinnon, of the Prince Rupert Daily Ncws;E"ihwpn' g £ = is-the following { Finance and Tax Assessments— “Advices have been received here Nordling, chairm: Messerschmidt, by Olaf Hanson, Liberal candidate|2nd George : for the local Federal constituency| Library—Bothwell, chairman, Mac that’ Hon. W. D. Buler, Minister,Kinnon, and Nordling. of Customs, has authorized the es-, FElection, Printing, etc, Ceme- tablishment of a customs office at|tary and Gold Creek—Judson, the Taku River boundary and it chairman; Bothwell, George, Mac- is understood that the officer sta-|Kinnon, Krause, Nordling and Mes- tioned there will also undertake the serschmidt. duties of immigration officer and| that a Royal Canadian Mounted a g the night members of Carl Billig, 000000 s00000e e @eecoececccecsosesco CANADA WILL HAVE CUSTOMS ON TAKU LINE Authorities to Impose Duty for Protection Against AmCl‘ican GOO(JS position wa the Counc commit- night by chairman; Krause and the | This | Fire Protection and Water: Mac- | BEN. PANGALOS SENTENCED TO PRISON TERM {Former Dictator and Presi- dent of Greece Must Serve Two Years ATHENS, A; 9.—General Tho- dorus Pangalos, who became Dic- jtator of Greece in January, 1926, |and was elected President several |months later, only to fall from |power in August, had been con- ‘demned to two years imprisonment |with loss of all political rights, by |a Senatorial Commission. Pangalos was tried particularly !for the part in alleged abuses in connection with gambling conces- sions granted to a Greek company at Eleusis, - o NEW OFFICERS NAMED BY CLUB Mrs. Marie Drake Elected President of the Ju- neau Garden Club Mrs. Marie DT;!’,:\\'{\S last night |elected to be President of the Ju- |neau Garden Club at the first 1930 meeting of that organization. Allen | | | ' |Shattuck was named vice-president jand Miss A. B. Coleman, Secretary, |re-elected. ! M. D. Williams, retiring presiding officer, reviewed briefly the history lof the Club since its organization ,some three years ago, pointing out the improvement made in the grow- (ing of flower gardens and decora- {tive plants during that period, | The ergenization will hold a jond meeting in two weeks ¥t that time the new officers will present {a program for this season's activi- |ties. DELEGATE WRITES TO | CHAMBER ABOUT BILL | PROTECTING EAGLES | i The Chamber of Commerce is In ireceipt of a communication from ,Delegate Sutherland relative to the Istatus of the so-called eagle pro- tection bill now pending in Con- |gress, according to Secretary G. H. | Walmsley. This and other com- {munications will be heard at the : |was $81,797,000 contrasted with an GHTS PARITY;MAKES POINTEDTERMS Demands 7Su.periority of 240,000 Tons Over Latin Neighbor Ford Motors Made Millions Of Profit, *29 i BOSTON, Mass, April 9.—The ybalance sheet of the Ford Motor | |{Company filed with the Massachus- | (etts Commissioner of Corporations lindicated that the profit in 1929 |indicated loss of § 1928 12,000 in 1928. | | e e e | PURCHASE CRAFT FOR SEATTLE TO NOME PERATION |Arctic Tra'nsport Company | Buys Annette Rolph for i Reindeer Industry LONDON, A ated a 9.—Frar today in Naval Conference circles by putting into terms, for the first time, attitude toward Italy's claim for parity. Jacques Demesnil, French Minis- ter of Marine, is said to have told Albert V. Alexander, First Lord of the British Admiralty, that not .only would France never concede parity to Ttaly but she demands superiority of 240,000 tons of naval {8hips over her Latin neighbor. BOMBERS ARE CAUGHT, RUSE Three Members of Chicago Ring Under Arrest in Indiana City MARION, Indiana, April 9—A ruse by which Cincinnati detectives i“hired” three members of the al- leged Chicago Bombing Ring to plant explosives in a hijacker’s car, led to their being lodged in jail |and charged with three bombings which took the lives of five men in Marion labor circles during the past six months, The three men were arvested af- ter recelving marked money from an informant and they are Joe Beckett, 25; Peter Emeclak, 38, and Harry Danford, 29, all of Chicago. The trio was enticed Nere by an informant who offered them $350 to bomb a hijacker’s car. SIGNAL FLASH - BARESTRAGEDY Doctor and Woman Secre- tary Found Dead in Fashionable Suite NEW YORK, April 9.—A signal sensation | | | | SEATTLE, April 9.—The Arctic iTransport Company, through Ralph }ancn‘ announces the purchase of the steamer Annette Rolph, from the Rolph Navigation Company of 8San Francisco. The vessel will be used between !Seattle and Nome and will sail for the north June 1. | The Annette Rolph has been on {the drydock and a large amount of |refrigerator space has been in- | stalled. The ship will operate in con- Junction with the motorship Sierra on a regular service from Seattle to Nome to take care of the increased reindeer shipments. The Annette Rolph is a wooden vessel of 2360 tons gross and was built in 1918. — .- |QUEEN HERE FROM SOUTH; IS MAKING i Spricdt B | On a special trip out of Seattle {to accommodate the cannery trade, :the Queen, Capt. A. W. Nicker- son, arrived in port at 1 o'clock this morning. Passengers for Ju- neau included: Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Sorber, Mr. and Mrs. 8. L. Boytsoff, Matt To- dal, Lols Martin, Mrs. R. B. Mar- tin, Mr. and Mrs, Madoff, Mrs. Ida F. Crecse, James R. SHharp, V. A. \Paine, Sandy Gay, C. M. Hanley, G. W. Ruotsola, Bert Ruotsola and [three steerage. On her way to Juneau the Queen called at Hidden Inlet, Burnett In- let, Port Herbert, Pillar Bay, Wash- |ington Bay, Warm Springs Bay, |Tyee and Kake. From Juneau she will call at the regular Tri-| |angle Route ports, and in addition, {Funter Bay, Hood Bay and Ex- flash caused by an overturned tele- phone led to the discovery of the Police officer will also be located HARTLEY REFUSES T(Q |mecting tomorrow of the Chamber i lat the Arcade Cafe at the noon at the same point. * The customs| officer will be north immediately. | 'GRANT EXTRADITION““’“" “ | The Chamber and other Alaska mfldR:ptr:s;:t‘;ae!.h;nspol:;nv;“;x:oeslzzes:‘l Extradition of Eddie Roberts, 17- commercial bodies have entered a lished at Tulsequah and investig:\-\ye”'“!d lad arrested at Tacoma re- Dr‘obest against the passage of the tions are being made by the Postal|Cently after indictment here Inr‘bh]. : Department and Mr. Hanson says.fobbery, has been denied by Gov. Preliminary reports on the an- he feels sure that an office will jRoland Hartley of Washington, ac- nual Cleanup and Paintup Cam- be established there at an early cording to telegraphic advices re-|paign will be submitted to the by her daughter, Lois, returned to her home in Juneau on the Queen, after. spending the winter in the States. Among those leaving for Sitka on the Queen was J. S. Jeffery. Leaving on the Alaska were Frank Dufresne and J. L. Cavanaugh, both listed for Ketchikan. Bert Caro, travelling representa- tive of the J. B. Caro company, re turned on the Alameda from a trip to Haines and Skagway. W. A. Parsons, auditor of the Northern Commercial Company, is on his way to the States on the Alameda, Bound for the Outside after being stationed at Chilkoot Barracks for somt time, Sergeant Bertelson and his family are aboard the Alameda. Among those leaving on the Ad- Evans were Miss Etolin Cam- pen and Miss Hansena Campen, who are booked for Kodiak. James Truit of the U. S. En- Corps, Alaska Road Com- mis n, wiv for Skagway on the Alameda. . LENTEN .o - SERVICE TONIGHT The regular Mid-week Lenten service will be held tonight at the Resurrection Lutheran church at 7:30 o'clock. A cordial invitation is extended to all'to attend and worship with the congregation. ————— LEAVES FOx SITKA Miss Liana Aalto left on the Queen for Sitka where she is to accept a position as nurse in the Pioneers’ Home. e BABY GIRL BORN A seven-pound baby girl was born at 11 a.m. today at St. Ann’s hospital to Mrs. Roy Sivii of Doug- las. Y istrict is amply protected for the have been given by Gov. Hartley, |cipal authorities, date.” |ceived by United States Marshnlichamber tomorrow. This drive An editorial in the News on the|Albert White, | will begin on April 15 and is expect- same day says: “It is satisfactory| Roberts’ youth and the fact that Bfi_to be joined in by all of the to think quick action is being gak.}ancther charge was pending agamstlclvlc and fraternal organizations in n to see that the Taku mining him in Washington, were said to the City as well as by the muni- CASTLE RETURNS TO (Canadian . people by the appoint- as his reasons for refusing to sign ment of customs and immigration an order for his return here. He| officers. If the mines prove rich,iwas jointly indicted with Rebert Y FINDS MARIE | DIST. COURT CLERK port, should get a good deal of JUR | i i VALORIA lS GUlLTY‘ N. H. Castle, formerly local agent benefit therefrom. Canadian labor, |for the Federal Bureau of Inves- too, will get the preference m-J stead of all the plums going to the Yankees.” | Marie Valoria, charged with cut-'tigation, visited here Tuesday while T T ting Gus Erickson with a knife, the steamer Yukon was in port. He was yesterday convicted of assault|has been appointed to the office of with a dangerous weapon, a verdict Clerk of Court of the Third Divi- THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 4 p. m. today: Fair tonight and Thurs- day; gentle variable winds. e e 000000000 of guilty being returned by a jury in the Federal District court late yesterday afternoon. Sentence will be pronounced later by Judge Jus- tin W. Harding. | Today L. Klarito, jointly indicted | with the Valoria woman, was placed jon trial on the same charge. A ® | jury was being obtained this after- ® | noon. e 00 v o 0o B HOSPITAL NOTES | e | MILDRED MORRISON IS NOW WITH LAND OFFICE Jack Zavadsky and Don Scalzo/ | were admitted to St. Ann’s hospital| Miss Mildred Morrison, who re- (yesterday for medical treatment. |cently returned to Juneau from |Both are employees of the Alaska|Corvallis, Oregon, where she has i.!uneau. |been attending Oregon State Col- | L Sjursen of Cordova, yesterday lege, has been chosen to fill the |entered St. Ann’s and this morn- | stenographic position in the U. 8. |ing underwent an operation for Land Office. hhe removal of his appendix. { ————— ! To submit himself to medical; P. 0. CLERK EXAMINATION !treatment, Frank Campbell enter- led St. Ann's hospital yesterday. | Mrs. J. G. Erbland, who entered ithe hospital Sunday, underwent an appendectomy this morning. | B | Albert Brown left for Wrangell on the Alameda. The Civil Service Commission an- {nounces an examination for sub- stitute clerk in the Post Office. Ap- plication blanks may be obtained at the office of the Alaska Road Commission and must be on file in Seattle before June 6. sion by Judge E. Coke Hill, with headquarters at Valdgz. Mr. Castle is wil known all over Alaska. He resided for several years at Nome during the early days of that community He was stationed here, also, several years ago in his work with the Bureau of Investiga- tion, later being transferred to San Francisco. Later he transferred to the Prohibition Unit as legal ad- viser for the San Francisco dis- trict. PETER TUTEIN IS HERE AFTER TRIP TO WEST ALASKA Peter Tutein, special envoy of the “Politiken,” Copenhagen newspaper, who was in Juneau last month, re- turned here on the Alaska after spending some time to the West- ward and the Interior. He will stop over here for sev- eral days before going south. He is making as thorough a study of Alaska, its conditions, and its peo- ple as his limited time will per- mit. cursion Inlet. At the latter place.‘bcdles of Dr. Maxwell Allen, aged she will take aboard a large cargo 35 years, and Florence Lapelle, aged of canned salmon. |25 years, his office secretary. She left here shortly after 2 fl,m.} The bodies were found in the with the following: doctor's office apartment, in the Hoyt Day, Mrs. J. W. Brown and | fashionable Sutton-Place section Rose Brown for Haines; Laina along the East River. Aalto, H. C. Bryson, Mrs. A. Lind-! The doctor was shot through the quist, John Hones, G. A. Colette, temple and the woman, lylng scant- man, Jack Mayne, Robert Garman the neck. and Martin Thompson for Sitka:! The Police believe the Physician Eddie Sultan for the round trip shot the girl and then killed him- and south to Ketchikan. self. — A gingerale bottle and a partly ADM[RAL WATSO filled bottle of liquor, were found near the bed. ls NORTH BOUND The telephone gave the signal (when it was knocked off a stand d_‘neax' the bed. STEAMER ALASKA SEATTLE, April 9.—Steamer A miral Watson sailed for Southeast and Southwest Alaska ports at 10 o’'clock this forenoon with 82 first FROM WESTWARD class passengers and B84 steerage. The following passengers are; mpe Alaska, Capt. Anderson, ar- booked for Juneau: V. J. Beaudin, nyeq in port from the westward Lewis Reebes, wife and two chil- ¢ 5.30 gelock yesterday afternoon dren, J. H. Bonell and five steer~ yith the following passengers for bge- Juneau: E. MacGuire, F, E. Hellnig, Anna YUKON LEAVES FOR Anderson, G. L. Church, J. Mayne, SEWARD YESTERDAY]P Tutbein, Frank Scully and J |L. Luckey. | She loaded 12 boxes of fresh hali- The Yukon, Capt. Charles Glass- (put, 11 shipped by San Juan and cock, which arrived here at 3'4510,,(. by New England. At 8 pm yesterday morning, left at 5 DM.|she sailed for the south with the for the westward with the folloW-|following passengers from Juneau: ing passengers from Juneau: Mrs. J. B, Hansen, Paul Bischoff, Margaret Lindsey, D. Rose, Frank | prg. Lydia Fell, Mrs. Sophia Kor- Anderson, Fred Jensen, W. B. Tay- honen, J. E. Huffman, W. J. John- lor, J. A. Ramsey, R. C. Kinsley, gon N. J. Peha, 8. A. Light, Gus R. G. Biddle; E. G. Wetzler, and |Norplad, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Proper, six steerage for Seward; one steer- | jonn Young and one steerage for age for Latouche; L. Reinken, G.|geattle, Schu and five steerage for Cor-| dova. Edwin Skjelten, IMrs. W. R. Barnett, Janice Barnett, . MOOSE CARD PARTY TIsrael, Muriel Mrs. A good crowd was in attendance grendible and last evening at the card party given getchikan. by the Women of Mooseheart Le-| s IR BRI gion in the Moose Hall. | B. Pfenningworth, Ladies first and second prizes p, Jarman, Bill Rechin were awarded men's trip to the Interior prizes. ! purposes. | |J. 8. Jeffery, Sam Baker, J. Her- l{ly clad on a bed, was shot mrough‘ Mr. and Mrs. Peter E. Skjelten, | Girl Baby Born to Mr. and Mrs. John Barrymore . INVESTIGATION OF METHODIST BOARD URGED Says Efforts Made to In- | fluence Legislation Cal., April was born at rday afternoon John Barry- » girl baby weighed 7 pounds and nine ounces. Mrs. Barrymore was formerly Dolores Costello well known popular 2 o'clock yes my icely band waited in ti.¢ lobby of the hospital for the arrival of the stork and was apparently disap- pointed that the new born was not a boy but was soon smiling happily and being congratulated. 0000000000000 000580 B ° . ° . . . . . ° . . . ° ° . ° ° . . . history R FRANCE FACES BAD SITUATION WET RECORDS MUST NOW BE PRODUCED Subpoena Issued for Books of Association Against Prohi. Amendment ® 0 00000 00 00 " A SRS S WASHINGTON, April 9—A state- ment requesting the Senate Lobby coAsT LEAsuE Committee investigate the Metho- |dist Board of Temperance, Prohi- (bition and Public Morals of the SEASUNUPENSI iFederal Council of Churches, has [] ‘Jbeen issued by Representative George H, Tinkham, as he took the LARGE cguwns‘wimess stand today before the Committee. | Representative Tinkham said the e |“Methodist Board for some years Seattle Wms fmm San :a}s attempted to influence and . e idirect Legislative and Executive Francisco — Mission {branches of the Federal Governs Swamped 2] to 14 ,ment and influence and interfere iy {wsth Judicial appointments of the The Pacific Coast Baseball league | A4ministration.” opened the 1930 season yesterday | Senator Caraway, Chairman af afternoon with Sacramento over- the Opmimsiies .Asld the Methodlly whelming the Missions ih the wierd- | 2087d of Council of Churches will o0’ ipening game 15 Wl be given an opportunity to appear of ‘the Coast League. |before the Committee and answer The Missions ured thres hurmrs:nepreunutlve Tinkiaav's: chorgseg end all were hit viclously for 24| hits, half for extra bases,y | WET RECORDS SUBPOENAED: With Clyde Barfoot, who never! VWASHINGTON, April 9—The lost an opening game in his “n‘"‘records of the Assoclation Against of pitohing, Lok Angeles got nway;me Prohibition Amendment have to a flylng start, Barfoot huldlng'bccn subpoensed by the Senate Portland to four hits, one a homer |/0PPY Committee and Henry Cur- by Bob Johnson in the fourth in- T30 Of New York, President of the by D . a0, hasE: {Assoclation has been summoned to Hank Hulvey proved too much |ZPPEar Belore the Committee next for the Oaks, Hollywood wlnnmgi’m“day' handily. Oakland's lone score was Chairman Caraway said the Ass a home run by Joe Mellana, pinch- sociation remsed_ to permit the Ritting for Oraighead, |Committee investigator to examine In the wildest opening day ever |th€ records and Curran immedi- witnessed In San Francisco, Seattle 2t€ly denled that permission was nosed out the Seals in the twelfth efused. inning after the Seals had tied | the count with a seven-run rally in the ninth. Dave Barbee, Seattle right-fielder | made two home runs, one double, and batted in three runs, scoring three times himself. There were about 40,000 fans at-| tending the four games at all points, SCORES OPENING GAMES ‘The scores of the opening games yesterday are as follows: Seattle 11; San Francisco twelve innings. Sacramento 21; Misslons 14, Hollywood 4; Oakland 1. Los Angeles 3; Portland 10, | 2 STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Lost Pet. 1.000 | 1.000 ! 1.000 1.000 1000 000 Seattle Sacramento Hollywood Los Angeles Portland Oakland Mission San Francisco - eee 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 000 000 | lmmrroooo o e TODAY’S STOCK . e . QUOTATIONS . . . {Deaths Are Almost as Many as During War Time —Births Fewer PARIS, April 9—Peace-time | France has been brought face W | face with the fact that deaths have shot almost as far ahead of births | in a recent number of years as | when the war torn nation was | fighting on the battlefields. ; There were also fewer marriages and more divorces in 1929. This is the report made by Fran=- cious Poncet, Under Secretary of State for the National Economy Department. Deaths in 1929 exceeded births by 12,564. COLLEEN MOORE WANTS DIVORCE & NEW YORK, April 9.—Alaska Ju- neau mine stock is quoted today at 7%, Alleghany Corporation 32%, Anaconda 76%, Bethlehem Steel 106%, General Motors 527, Gold Dust 45, Granby 55%, Grigsby-Gru- now 19%, International Harvester 1047, Kennecott 56%, Missouri- Pacific 95%, Montgomery Ward 52%, Natlonal Acme 23, Packard 22%, Simmons Beds 50%, Standard Brands 25%, Standard Oil of Cali- fornia 71%, United Corporation 47%, U. 8. Steel 195%. More Arrests Made in India “Salt” Uprising Frank Du- Gandhi, |fresne, J. L. Cavanaugh, Dorothy has been arrested at C.|with Ahanker two steerage for |the District Congress and 23 oth- accompanied | y a party of ten men, is on his | went to Mrs. Nielson and Mrs. Ber-/way to Cache Creek. He is on thejHocex at Anchorage, and two chil- ry, respectively, while Tom Dull and yyukon. The group is making the dren, are westward bound on the for mining|Yukon after a vacafon DELHI, India, April 9—David son of Mahatma Gandi Saleempur President of Lal, |er salt volunteers, while manufac- | turing salt. S e Mrs. F. Parsons, of the Parson in the States. LOS ANGELES, Cal, April §.— |The Los Angeles Examiner |Colleen Moore, screen star, |John McCormick, her prod husband, have decided to go Individual ways. She ind that she will file a suit for dive within the next two weeks on grounds of incompatibility. months of trial separation she intimated that she was /inced her permanent separat} was desirable. ——————— Only Court Procedure Will Prevent Big Me; YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, April Unless blocked by some new fight, the Billion Dollar merger the Youngstown Sheet and u Company with the Bethlehem Steell Corporgtion will become a cer ty, acording to proponents. Judge Turnbaugh has refused ienjam voting of a block of 51 Youngstown Sheet and Tube Comi=} pany shares for the merger. % L. A. Manchester, General C sel for the Youngstown said the total vote for the when counted, will show ‘otes “cr the merger. o 4