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BARNEY GOOGLE 5CW% RUTH ELDER MARRIES MOVIE HCLLYWOOD, Cal—Ruth E film actress, was married to A newlyweds at hcme 2 ORDER ABATING - NORTHERN LIGHT " FINALLY FOUND Front Street Place of Busi- | ness Abated After Five Months Elapse Although ordersd’ abated last De cember, the Northern Light Pool Room and its operators, Roy Poloff, Mike Karls and Jim Jibiloff, wers not actually forced to discont business until yesterday by one of the strangest mixups ever ricor. ed in the local Federal distr: court. Last December the three men were arrested, the fixtures and stock seized and moved out of their place of business known as the Northern Ligh{ Pool Rocm, located on lower ‘Front Street. They pleaded guilty to violating: th> Al- aska Bone Dry law, were fined and an abatement ordered entered clos- g th e for a year. -A ‘few da; after the plza of guilty was entered, the Marshal’s " offize, as ‘cus return to the place the fixtw and stock seized in the raid. Thi was done, and the three men re- sumed the business for which they are liegnsed, selling soft drinks, to- baccos, etc., and operating a pool and card room. Without molesta- tion they continued doing busi- ness until yesterday. This, t0d, dispite the fact that Judge Harding had signed. an abatement order on December 15, last, ‘closing the place for 12 months from that date. Monday, having besn informed the Northern Light was operating, the United States district attorney’s office began- an inquiry to deter- mine how and why. The abate- ment order had been prepared in that office. After some search of the records and filzs, the original order and copies for service were located in ‘the files of the office of Clerk of Court. It had never been trans- mitted to the United States Mar- shal’s cofficz for service upon the, oL € ,\aC" WA an aerial wedding trip. They were married at Yuma, Arizona. Elder gave her age as 28 and Gillespie as ter flight from Yuma. e | OF AND SPARK PLUG [Rteeny | Fivé-'bay L4 (Continued from Page One) eign nations their goods to the U. 8. Dimond Acts Delegate Dimond could not testi- fy 'bezause 'of his illness. He did, | however, file a ten siatement urging that Alaska be exempted om the bill on the ground that i application there would nothing short of ruinous. Eve: jor industry in the Territor pointed out, would ha tail optrations, perhaps t vanishing point. pendent upon the fis] Id mining for their prising by far the maj | Alazkans gainfully employed, would | have their incomes drastically cur- | tailed” or perhaps even cut off al- | together. 'The result would that the Territory would be de- | populated. Isolated mining camps where there often times is no sur- plus of labor would have to let the precious water flow past them un- used if they were to comply strict- [1y with the provisions of the law. The Delegate pointed out that if foreign products were out labor restrictions simil those in the United States, Al coal mines, already handicapp:-d British Columbia competition, mizht stand in danger of Ics | the 1ccal markets which they have | no He also noted what the cof- cf this would be on the Ter- rial treasury. FLORY HOMESOUND H. Fiory, Alaska com- jonzr for the Department of ilture, started homeward last ay. He intended to mect Mrs. in Portland and they will ed to their home in Junzau pping ke Charles foe | imported | WHAT WOULD A GULY WHO WAS PUNCH DRUNK: BE DOIN'..2? WELL - SO FAR. T AIN'T HAD MUCH HELP. BE -\ 4 WHERE WOULD HE APT TO GO..?% GOLLY - T HAVE IT! I'tL GET PUNCH DRUNK IT'S A CINCH HE CAN'T BE IN ALL THESE PLACES AT ONCE .. ST Bill Said to Be Destined to - Be Shelved, Present Congress, |at an early date. Mr. Flory was | about the most pleased man in fhe country as he started west. He has been Outside five months, and an- nounces that. is altogether too long. He was quite ill in Portland right after coming out but has fully re- covered his health now. Mr. Fiory was impressed into work at the Department of Agriculture here in connection with the President’s Forestry conservation program. A plan was worked out for Alaska, which, if approved, would give work to a considerable number cf men. It still awaits final approv- al. ' B. F. Heintzleman, teen de- tailed and will not ington for July. gel away from Wash- Juneau until June or DELEGATE IMPROVES Delegate’ Dimond continues 1w | make exceedingly rapid progress to- ward reccvery following his rgcant operation for removal of his ap- pendix. So far as he was con- cerned, he felt ready to go home | about four days after the opera- tion but the doetor did not ap- |prove. Tt is probable he will go hom> today and rest there a few more days before resuming his of- ficial duties. ALASKA PROJECTS | Soven Alaska cluded in the bill introduced week | 1t is recommended appropriate $102,000 provement of Petersbu | subject to a contribution of being made by, local interests able approaches with a 24 feet would be provid:d the im- harbor €8, assistant | ation work | W \a‘“m be provided at the MYSELF AN’ FIND OuT wharves; feet d Union W f to a line stan lowing the present mean lower low water line; and a feet wide and 8 to the south 2 cf the Fore. Service fl | Annual maintenance ¥ es by the Chief of Army En $1,250. Contingent upon assurance local interests that a ‘contract been entered into for the cons! tion of a cold storage (bill calls for the expenditur | 977,000 to provide a cha feet decp and 200 feet w at Kcdiak. Five hundred doilars an- nu would be required for main- tenance Six hundred dollars wou'd be cet aside annually to clear snazs haz ardous to navigation on the Sti | kine River. A recommendation is made that $5,000 be set aside for clearing th channel at the head of the Ege Rive Congress is asked to appropriat for Wrangell Narrows $142,000 with $2,000 for maintenance U b year and $500 anuaily | vears thereafter, to provide for a channel 24 feet deep at mean low- er low water and 275 feet wide Shoal No. 1, the easlng of cur {at Shoal No. 5, 6, 7, and 12, | removal of a rick pinnacle oppos | Anchor peint, and five small 1 pinnacles in the towing channel. The bill p! les 79,000 for diz- lging a channel 6 feet deep and 60 feot wide at Dry Pass, Finally an appropriati 1009 Is ed for 1 r imy | #£¥nt of Wrangell Harbor. A dredg- egl, basin about 400 feet by 6€0 feet 9 outh end of 10 water a ep | existing basin 11 T between {rcm of the harbor with a depth feet below mean lower low LITERARY SENSATION “Arctic "y en fy a result of the Koyu as an ou Rohert M 1 as 15 months' stay in it is hailed by EXECUTIVE yeung trans-Atlantic flyer and lespie, movie executive, after Miss 33. Photo shews the defendant and, of coi ice had been made. months, the b against hort tim y. The date of sigratura of e order was prom changad from Decembe: May 15; serv- was made . yesterday and thern L closed its the order for 4 period of on: ear from the latter date. e PROMINENT MEN FOR INTERIOR CN THE NORAH the through pas-engors cess Norah bcund for four Yukon ns who are on| to find Among i Murray cf n of the Capt. Newcomb of the Keno and Capt. McDonald c¢f the Tutshi, were all aboard the Canadian Pa- cific y to be- gin the sea Othey Int on. the Prince: Fairburn, agen and Yukon Route at b O J. K. Oram, of the Consclidated Mining Corporation making his an- nual trip to Trail, B. C, W. P. Forrest, Sales Manager for the Kel- ey Douglas Compan: wholesale ibutors in the Yukon tory, and ‘'W. Drury, of Taylor and Drury, which organization main-}| tains about 15 trading posts throughcut the Yukon district. — J. C. MORRIS PLANS TO LIVE IN JUNEAU; WILL BE JOINED BY FAMILY jor-sound passzngers dis J. C. Morris, Territorial organizer for the West Coast Life Insurance Co., of San Prancisco, arrived in Juneau on the steamer Aleutian Monday. Mr. Morris plans to make bhis headquarters in .Juneau and will be joined by his family about June 15. — i “TAD” HILLERY HERE A. R. “Tad” Hillery, oldtimer of Skagway, arrived’ on the North- western and is visiting friends here. He will return to the Gateway City on the Alaska next Sunday. @ ort channel 40 | t has been completed. at! contribution to the so- literature of = Amaerica. Of cour everyong in the Koyu- kuk knows the author and many other Alaskans will rememier him. A forester, by training, he first went to the Arctic to study tree growth and returned to study peo- ple. His second trip to Wiseman was made in 1930 and he remained there until the fall of 1931, weaving what promiszs to be a best seller out of his observations of the small gre of residents of that i ted camp His book is en- tirely sympathetic and he scribes the Koyukukers as the hap- piest people he h: ever known. Marshall served in the U. S. For- est Service and then took his Ph.} D. degree in plant physiology atl John Hopkins. He has previously i written for scientific publ tions but this is his first popular standing ciclogeal ALASKA EXHIBIT the Chi- ch ¢ S d in a nuge} ion of which| The Alaska exhibit at cazo> World June 1, ill be houw loz cabin, constru SAWYER IN NEW JOB t Walker Sawyer, [ assistant to the the TInterior, memie Highway represontativ the utiv Soen of International misgion and special 'of the general manager cf Alaska Railroad How 'with Ber! Bros. and | Ltd., insurance advis lers, at Suite 802, Nationa Commerce Building, Hill Street. Los Angeles. yer will be glad to see his ¢ friends there or to hear from them. | He is going to make a specialty | of writing marine insurance on Alaska shipments. Mr. Sawyer rit “I el Alaska des benefit twice or three tim much as in the past from her ing indus and T am sure new Delegate and Fish Commissioner will do a lot to over- ra to as fish- WHEN you pick up your newspaper and glance over the atlver tising you quite unconsciously multiply yourself a thousand times. In half or three-quarters of an hour you can, figuratively speaking, visit every progressive storc in town. You virtualy poke your head into every department of every department store. You run into the ist’s, the leading groceries, banks, theatres, all the various pla that supply the things that make this the twentieth century and life worth the living. Here is a greater choice in elothing, food, furniture, books, pictures, musical instruments, travel, enter- tainment, opportunities for investment, the service of public utility corporations that any monarch of old could command. It.wuuld easily take a thousand yous, traveling hard all day, to find out for yourself what the advertisements tell you in a few minutes morning Advyertisements descrve your attention. They deserve your confidence. Without adve pay for many of the necessities you now buy for small change would make a dollar look like a snowball on the kitchen range. LR SR ST SRS Y florists’s, the confectioner’s, the ocu- or evening. ert ing, the prices you would have to S de- | land does the annual our| e i with mining h 3 the most receni F ol 1 Iskins the bureau sustained a of $65,080 on 250,000 skins, the learned. friends ther i and silver | 1 nk I cah pos- h mo on their properties sibly aid otherwise velopments. “I am sorry billions of tons bunker facilities ridiculous. “I am a real friend to ternational Highway to Alaska I hope Alaska will p with construction of that great project. I tru the Matanuska and K will be extended. them carry the new to contract, o de- fustain any that Alask of coal for export with no the contract ha ment a pr If sold unc the bureau woul of $200,000 on hand. ions, a on sus- tain loss these seals. Essential part of the eontract reduces from $12.50 fo $10.50 the amount allotted the eompany for curing and dyeing -skins. Tt costs overnment $1.35 to kill each and deliver th: skin to St Louis.” PSR G4 B ART MKINNON HAS BULLET REMOVED AFTER 25 YEARS Art McKinnon is at home re- cuperating from the resmlts of an accident which oceurred twen five years ago, when he was just a lad. When he was cleaning & .22 calibre rifle, long ago, it exploded >xpectedly and the bullet lodged foot where it has been until it was removed at gt Anm's Hos- pital this merning. At the time the accident oc- curred the doctor decided against | removing the bullet as the opera- | tion would have necessitated cut- ting into the heel with the possi- bility of laming him, but in the years that have passed, the bullet | worked down into the arch of the Hkd ifl)i)t and was causing considerable ToitS | trouble, so that Mr. McKinnon killing. Then | geeided to have it extracted. He it ships the skins to St. Louis for | wiy pe 1aid up at home for several curing and dyeing. The St. Louils days NEW FISHERI The ‘Washington cent date says: “A new contract signed Bureau cof Fisheries, to s 000,000 in the next two v prasage the fi nvestigs ficcal affairs of the bure Herald learned exclus night. “The new contract was negot ed by Frank §. Bell, newly pointed Commissioner of F The contract, with the Fouke Fur Company, of Louis, guarante2s | u against further loss res a profit of an investigation previous contracts negotiated the bureau came yesterday afie it was announced that the saving: will reach the million mark. Why these savings were not affected fore will be asked. s Bureau or r ng of fur scals lof Islands off the ka. The bureau by e ap- never loses it5 delicate exquisite iolzym'z‘ m any baking or freezing Thats because it is Pure Vanilla. FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 Prompt Delivery Hit s EVERY MONTH IN THE YEAR S e SSSSSeS 1933 Auction Sales Dates |the seattle Fur Exchange {has always demonstrated to the satisfaction of all their shippers that it can and does sell furs in a manner superior to znyone else. Our monthly auction sales are recognized by buyers of raw furs as the best source from which to provide the world markets with their requirements of fine Alaska furs. June 20 July August September 26 25 October 24 29 November 21 December 21 Special Sales Held on request of shippers Advances will be made as usual when requested. Transferred by telegraph The Seattle Fur Exchange 1008 Western Avenue Seattle, U. S. A. 4 CARR'’S JUNEAU’S FINEST FOOD STORE if desired.