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< «“ 't THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. XLVIIL, NO. 7166. JUNEAU, ALASKA, TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1936. MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS ~ PRICE TEN CENT - ITALIAN FORCE ENTERS ADDIS ABABA MARYLAND GOES FOR ROOSEVELT BY 53 TOONE President Wins Solid Dele—l} gation to National Convention BALTIMORE, Md., May 5—Presi- | dent Roosevelt won the sixteen| Maryland votes in the Democratic | National Convention in _veslerday's‘ primary by a margin of nearly m‘e': and one-half to one l Nearly complete returns from the | 1434 precincts in the State give| Roosevelt 95344 and Col. Henry Breckinridge, anti-New Dealer, 17,- 262. | BY ALCOHOLISM NOT REPORTED Dr.V.G. Ur;Makes Claim| in Study of Chronic | Drinkers ST. LOUIS, May 5. -Alcohol is given as the unseen and unreport- ed cause of many deaths among chronic drinkers, in a study report- ed to the American Psychaitric As- sociation by Dr. V. G. Urse, Assist- jatrist in the Cook Coun- hopathic Hospital, Chicago. Dr. Urse said coroners frequently reported death due to other causes when it was actually due to alcohol- ism, but which was not evident under the usual examination. After chronic alcoholism the most com- mon and consistent findings are serious meningitis, fatty degenera- tion of the liver, puffy condition of the lungs, brain, stomach and duo- denum. The psychiatrist said repeal of the 18th amendment “doesn’t seem to show an increase in the number of alcoholic admissions to the Cook County psycopathic hospital, if am‘-] thing there is a decrease.” --- - ECIMENT OF SOLDIERS ON LONG MARC FORT LEWIS, Wash, May 5— A nine-mile long column of trucks left Fort Lewis at dawn today bearing the Tenth Field Artillery regiment on a thousand-mile march through the Washington and Idaho region. Vote for FDR Is Plea of Labor Chief WASHINGTON, May 5.—Presi- dent William Green, of the American Federation of Labor, today urged the re-election of Franklin D. Roosevelt as Presi- dent. The recommendation was made in an address before the National Womens' Trade Union League. President Green said: “We have been thrilled by the lead- ership of President Roosevelt. It and the des he has givi us and we want to continue it.” SEVEN ABOARD PAA PLANE ON INTERIOR TRIP First Flight of Season Made Today—Passengers and Express With seven pa ngers aboard, the PAA Lockheed Electra two- motor transport plane flown by Pi- lots Jerry Jones and William Knox took off for Fairbanks at 2 o'clock this afternoon cn the first trip of the season. A shipment of California oranges enroute to Nome and other points in the Interior, a shipment of strawberries from the United Food Company to Fairbanks, and a caged dog belonging to one of the pas- sengers, were among the items of Air Express loaded aboard the plane Passengers for Fairbanks were: O. M. Powell, Eldon Daly, S. A. Burgy, J. Rolnik, Mrs. H. E. Pratt and daughte‘rs Octavia and Andrea. .- UNIFICATION OF CHURCHES 15 PLANNED Conference of Methodist Episcopal Church Favors Uniting COLUMBUS, Ci..c, May 5— The general conference of the Methodist :Episcopal Church committed itself plete the topographic work, at by a vote of 470 to 930 to a pro- gram of unification of all Methodist bodies, which will giVe the church membership eight million in forty- EARLY VOTE IN 'CALIFORNIA IS REPORTED LIGHT {Only About 50 Per Cent of Registration Expect- ed Turn Out SAN FRANCISCO, Cal, May 5— The early vote was light today as California balloted in the Presiden- tial primary. The forecast was that only 50 percent of the total regis- tration will express choice. Advices received here are that Gov. Landon refused to make any com- ment. Herbert Hoover made no comment I either aside from the remark that ! he did not know when he would find i ! time to vote. There are claims that the un- lpledged Republican delegation fa- | vored Hoover aithough the spokes- ! man for Hoover denied this. 'SARGENT HERE, - MAPPING WORK Topographi;;é,ngineer, A.| G. S, Arrives for Sea- | son’s Program | R. H. Sargent, Topographical En- gineer, Alaska Geological Survey arrived on the Yukon to continue| topographical mapping of Admir-| alty Island. He expects to be work- ing on the west coast of the island | during the early part of the sea-| son, until that portion of the work is completed, and will be furnished the services of the Bielogical Sur- vey boat Seal with her crew of three, including Capt. Ken Tal- madge, a mate and a cook. Maps of all of the islands in Southeast Alaska, compiled by John R. Davidson in Juneau, from pho- tographic material secured by the Navy Department in 1926 and 1929, have been published, Mr. Sargent said. Three of the six maps, Re- villagigedo Island, Wrangell and vicinity, and Sumner Strait and vicinity, are in relief, but two of the others, Prince of Wales Island, and Chichagof-Baranof Island, are entirely planemetric, or without relief detail. About one half of the latest map of ' Admiralty Island + shows topographic relief, he said, and about one more season after this one will be required to com- which time another map will be compiled All of the maps, Mr. Sargent said, {are drawn to a scale which ap- |two countries, if approved by the proximates 4 miles to the inch, ex- Methodist Episcopal Church and the cept Admiralty Island, which ap- South Methodist Protestant Church. proximates 2 miles to the inch. The Final action is not possible be- maps can be procured from the fore 1938 because of the conference United States Geological Survey at dates of other churches. | Washington at small cost. PASTORS TO ATTEND | INVESTIGATOR ON The march is the first important. CHURCH CONVENTION mobile problem presented since motorization a year ago. The des-| pastor M. J. Jackson and his tination today was Ellensburg, 165 wife who arrived on the steamer miles away. Alaska from Anchorage will be in The column included 150 vehicles, | Juneau until Sunday, and will then sixteen 75-milimeter guns, anti-air-|join Pastor and Mrs. H. L. Wood craft guns, and machine guns. The | who are leaving Sunday on the regiment’s full peace-time strength | Messenger for Seattle. is 28 officers and 517 enlisted men., From Seattle they will drive by | automobile to San Francisco to at- IRVING PLANE ON } WAY TO INTERIOR | A. C. Kinsley of the Department {of Interior, Division of Investiga- Young Women Are Advocates tion with Adoption of Strong Resolution vention by control ized medical direction. 1.300 delegates. City, situation that now exists since the present law is neither enforced nor enforceable.” Mrs. W, Paul Is Elected Head of B:E' W. Club Mrs. Goss, Mrs. Pl'imavera Chosen to Be Vice- Presidents Election of officers was one of the main issues before the Business and Professional Women's Club at their regular meeting Monday eveni~ ing at 8 o'clock in the Council Chambers. A crowd of over 30 wo- men attended the meeting at which reports from the various chaii- men and officials were read. Newly elected officers are Mrs. William Paul, President; Mrs. G. V .Goss, First Vice President; Mrs. James Primavera, second Vice- President; Mrs. Stella George, Re- cording Secretary; Miss Caroline Todd, Corresponding Secretary; Mrs. Edith Bavard, Treasurer. Mrs. Z. Schofeld was elected as a new member to the club at the meeting last evening, over which Mrs. Pearl Burford presided. A report of the membership com- mittee showed ap increase of 42 members over last vear making a total of 58 women now belonging to the club. NORTHWESTERN ON WAY NORTH SEATTLE, May o Steamer Northwestern sailed for Southeast Alaska ports at 9 o'clock this morning with 103 first class and 62 steerage Dassengers. The following passengers are booked for Juneau: James M. Lang- ness, Bud Foster, H. N. Dillon and wife, Mrs. M. Dillon and daughter, !tion, San Prancisco, was a caller in Juneau today while the Yukon was in port. Kinsley is bound back to the Interior for his sixth season of checking up on homestead en- Itries, mineral applications, fur farms and other matters. The investigator first came to Al- aska in 1930 and has been coming E. D. Gustafson, George F. Hughes, W. T. Mahoney, Peggy Hayes. NORDALES ARRIVE; ARE HOUSE ‘GUESTS AT STOCKER HOME Hjalmar Nordale, recently ap- of Bjrlh Gontrol Association Closes Conven-'Commander of Lexington COLORADA SPRINGS, Colo., May 5—The Young Womens' Christian Association closed the National Con- adopting a resolution in favor of dissemination of birth information under author- The resolution favoring birth con- trol was sirongly supported by the| Dr. Janet Wilson, of New York described the resolution as ‘directed to combat the intolerable CAPTAIN COOK APPOINTED TO NAVAL BUREAU [ Selected to Push Navy Dept. Air Drive ‘WASHINGTON, May 5.—Capt. Ar- thur R. Cook, Commander of aircraft carrier Lexington, has been selected to direct the navy's drive to lift its air force to a par with any naval air armada in the world. Capt. Cook will be advanced to the rank of Rear Admiral when he be- tcomes Chief of the Bureau of Aero- nautics in June, succeeding Rear Admiral E. J. King who is assigned to command the aircraft base force of the United States Fleet. Cook will serve a four year term subject to confirmation of the Sen- ate. The new chief will direct navy plans to increase the air force from ithe present 1,311 machines to 1,692 i planes by July 1, 1937, to keep pace {with the new combat construction. | C.P. R VESSEL NOOTKA DUE IN. JUNEAU TONIGHT i | | | [Canadian Freighter Bring-! | ing Large Shipment for ! Whitewater-Taku Mine | The Canadian freighter Nootka | {of the C. B.R. is scheduled. to ar~| rive in Juneau tonight from Van- couver, B. C., on her maiden voy- 1 age of the season. She is bringing | ! a large shipment of freight for the | | Whitewater-Taku mines which will| be unloaded onto the river steamer Jeanne and scow U. T. No. 1 for transportation to Tulsequah to a! | | | !landing near the mine, where the | company is constructing a jetty for! a wharf and warehouse. | This is the second cumlgnmem“ the | MEMORIAL DAY ARRANGEMENTS MADE BY POST Charles Hawkesworth Will Speak at Annual Ob- servance by Legion ”A]l-Amcrican Girl e The annual Memorial Day pro-f gram of Alford John Bradford Post, | American Legion, was announced | last night by Chaplain A. E. Karnes, | | Chairman of the Memorial Day committee, at the regular Monday night meeting of the Post Appropriate ceremonies, tenta-! tively planned for the Elks Hall, will start the day's program be- | ginning at 10 o'clcrk in the morn- | ng Charles W. Hawkesworth, ' Spanish American war veteran, will be the speaker of the day and sev- eral musical numbers are planned ' in connection with the services in 1 the hall. At the Elks building a parade will form, headed by a Le- gion firing squad, in command of Lieut. Frank Metcalf, and color bearers and including Spanish war veterans, Legionnaires, Boy Scouts, a band, and others who may wish to join in the holiday program The parade will march to Fef- mer’s dock where the wreath cere- | mony for those veterans who lost i & Patsy Donovan Irish beauty and a sparkling pee- sonality won for Miss Patsy Don- ovan, dancer and actress, the title nua' ¢ Dance of Hollywood Screen guild in Los Angeles. NOME PLANE BOUND SOUTH Seattle from Interior Points | for the Whitewater-Taku, the first arriving with a crew of men last | |week on the Princess Norah. In- |cluded in the shipment last week | !was a tractor with a road attach-| ;ment which the company is using| for building a road from the river| | landing to the mine. Expensive operations are planned | this summer at the property on | which exploration work was done | | several years ago by the Alaska Ju-' neau before it was sold to the pres- | ent _ownership. - MANY LEAVE JUNEAU |+ /'« ABOARD STEAMER YUKON i : Passengers sailing from Juneau | on the Yukon this afternoon were: To Seward—C. R. Wright, Mrs.| H. Remikki, George Robinson, E.! S. Christianson, Mrs. E. 8. Chris- | tianson, Miss G. Stewart, Melvin Hall, Mrs. M. Hall, J. E. Elgan, Roy | | Mundy, H. Diamond, Ruth Ward, | Firman Smith, F. E. Pojter, Ed | Dowling, W. Domoney, Hanley Sut-| | ton, Nick Lazus, Chas. Taylor, P. G. | | Johnson, Virginia Bandy, W. Arm-f strong, Milton E. Mulligan, R. An- derson, 8. M, Johnson, A. Rippa, M. Langer, Mrs. J. M. Elgan and two| children, M. W. Ott, Geo. La From- bois, Walter Hanley, Ed Delaney, A. | Dolhanyk. To Valdez—Geo. George, A. Lipsa- koff. Jheir lives at sea will be held, the column then proceeding to the Le- gion plot in Evergreen Cemetery where the closing ceremonies of the day will be held. The cemetery plot is being cleaned by Legionnaires, a working party having completed much of the work Ist Sunday. New Members ! Four new members were initiat- | ed last night, Alfred Harper, James W .Medley, John A. Elliott and Ben-, jamin- Taylor, all of Juneau. An- nouncement was made by Referee lfe V. A. Davenport that the Post} membership team was the winner of the membership contest with the| 40 and 8. The Post team brought — 10 new members and the 40 and 8] FAIRBANKS, Alaska, May 5. — succeeded in getting only two and Enroute from Nome to Seattle with as a result will have to feed the| a load of passengers, Noel Wien Post winners. |and Victor Ross took off Sunday Jiggs Dinner | southward. They will probably stop Another Jiggs dinner is planned at Whitehorse, Telegraph Creek by the Post, probably for May 25.‘nnd Fort George. Pilot Wien in- and Tex Leonard was named as' tends to make the trip by easy chairman of a committee to ar-'stages so as not to crowd the tri- range for the affair. Serving with| motor plane. him are John Elliott and George| The plane came to Fairbanks Sat- Gullufson. urday from Nome. The passeng- i |ers are O. D. Cochran, Nome law- CANNERY TENDERS HERE ],\'er; Mr. and Mrs. A, M. Payne, A number of motorship cannery teachers at Shaktoolik, and their tenders from near-by canneries vis- | small son James; J. Stokes, Nome ited in Juneau today, including the | mining man; A. C. Mattick, Goviq Capt. Bing from the Superior Pack—vernm?nt reindeer man; Arthur S. ing Company cannery at Tenakee, Brown, Fairbanks jeweler; Mrs. the Fairweather from the P. E. | Dora Chadwick, Seattle resident; Harris cannery at Hawk Inlet, lhE} Aviator Chester Brown and Flight Willard F., from the Libby, Mc-|Mechanic Miller. The last two in- of “All-*nrerican Girl” at the an- | n Passengers Enroute to| Neill and Libby plant at Taku Har-|tend to buy a plane in the States bor, the Ajax, the Hoonah, and the|and fly it back to Alaska. Alco from the Alaska Pacific Sal- Pilots Wien and Ross have a mon Company at Kake. !load of passengers for the return ——————— trip from Seattle to Nome direct ZAPORA TOMORROW Motorship Zapora from Tacoma | and Seattle will arrive here at 10:30 REACH HAZELTON Pilot Noel Wien flew over Juneau o'clock tomorrow night and will call at Hawk Inlet southbound, accord- | ing to a radio message received from Ketchikan by D. B. Femmer, agent for the Alaska Transportation Corm- pany. | MRS. PRATT ARRIVES | Mrs. L. C. Pratt, wife of L. C.| Pratt, new Regional Fiscal Agent for the U. 8. Forest Service, ar- rived in Juneau on the Yukon to join her husband who succeeded | late yesterday afternoon and land- ed his trimotor plane at Hazelton, B. C., shortly after 8 o‘clock last night according to Associated Press dispatches to The Empire. He was expected to take off on the last 600-mile lap this morning, provided the weather cleared. Wind and heavy rain greeted the airmen when they landed at Hazelton last night. - se 00000000000 . STOCK QUOTATIONS . s e ve 000000000 ADVANGE GUARD, INVADERS ENTER FALLEN CAPITAL | | i [First Detachment of Motor- | 1zed Column of Se- lassie’s Home | AMERICANS SAFE IN BRITISH COMPOUND Emperor Abosid British | Warship — Has Pos- ; sessions with Him | LONDON, May 5. — Sir Sidney | Barton, British Minister in Ethio- | pia, has reported to the Foreign # |Office, that a large force of Ital- {ians in motor trucks entered Addis |Ababa this afternoon. ‘The Italians fought their way |from Dessye over the mountain |roads to the city and found the capital in the throes of rioting and looting ‘5 The Italians are expected to re- store order immediately, Sir Sidney Barton said. AMERICANS ARE SAFE WASHINGTON, May 5. — The | British Government has notified {the United States Government that {the American Legation in Aadis |Ababa has been evacuated safely. It is assumed that American Min- |ister Engert and his wife and other occupations of the poorly-fortified American Legation, have been tak- {en safely to the stout British com- (pound three miles across the city. BRITISH AID BELGIANS LONDON, May 5—The British detachment repelled an attack of Ethiopians on the Belgian Legation early this morning, according to |reports received here. The British |Indian troops attacked the Ethio- |pian raiders with machine guns and drove them away. EMPEROR ON WARSHIP | LONDON, May 5.—Fleeing Em- |peror Haile Selassie is being taken jon a British cruiser toward Haifa, |Palestine. It is reported here the Emperor salvaged all of the crown jewels, gold bullion and silver cur- rency and six motor cars. Advices received from Everett A. Colson, American farmer advisor to Selassie, said the ruler, who owns a villa at Vvey, Switzerland, will probably go there and live in perm- anent exile. Colson also said that reports that the Emperor is wealthy are myth- ical. He claims Selassie's holdings are principdlly in land. TO PROTECT FOREIGNERS WASHINGTON, May 5. — The United States has received assur- ances from the Italian Government that the lives and property of for- eigners in Addis Ababa will be pro- tected according to the rules of war. U. S. LEGATION REOCCUPIED WASHINGTON, May 5. — The State Department was notified late this afternoon that the American Legation in Addis Ababa has again been reoccupied by its own officials and all contents were found un- damaged. MRS. PRATT H. L. Redlingshafer. ‘ a world conference with 3,00 peo-iup each summer since. While the i, “ - |tend the general. convention of SITKA MAIL TRIP| ple attending, Pastor Wood said. He | Seventh Day Adventists which s The Irving Airways Lockheed 'S the Alaska delegate to the con- Vega plane piloted by Gene Mey- | Vention. ring left Junéau this morning at' Pastor Wood announcedvhe and 11 o'clock with two passengers, Ev_;hls wife plans to relur_n in June. erett Nowell, Blake Moffitt and| 1D€¥ Will be accompanied on the Towne representative, for Sitka, and John Giske for Tenakee. The plane will deliver mail at both points as well as at the Superior Packing| Company cannery near Tenakee. On the return trip Frank Foster will be a passenger from Sitka to Juneau. i Ball Players Requested | To Report | All ball been assigned to teams but have nct reported are requested to be at the Park tonight and Presi- dent Holzheimer will give them their instructions. Many of the players reported they had for- gotten to keep their assign- ments and are up in the air. The Prexy will straighten them out. players who have | | | mission boat by 12 other persons. Pastor Jackson has just finished a series of lectures at Anchorage, Palmer, and Matanuska and a short time ago organized an Adventist church in the colony. The Adventist church has just been completed in the colony, Pastor Wood said. Pastor Jackson will return to Anchorage after attending the con- vention. Tone Wood, daughter of Pastor | and Mrs. Wood, who has been doing post graduate work in nursing in Los Angeles will return to Juneau with her mother and father. BRI 52 1578 MININ GOPERATOR J. I. McDonald, who is interested in mining on Peters Creek near Talkeetna, is a passenger on the Yukon for the Westward. It is his first trip to Alaska, and is going to look over property in which he has acquired an interest. headquarters are in San Francisco, the field man operates out of An- chorage in the summer. | CHANNEL SOUNDINGS TO BE TAKEN NOW The United States Coast and Geodetic Survey vessel M. V. West- dahl, commanded by H. Arnold Karo, berthed at Femmer’s Dock at 4 o'clock this morning. The Gov-| ernment boat will be here about one month engaged in taking soundings in Gastineau Channel. - WESTER BETTER Wilbur Wester, clerk at the Gas- tineau Hotel, who was admitted to St. Ann's Hospital recently suffer- ing from pneumonia, is reported by the nurses as being greatly im- proved. — KARNES TO LEAVE A. E. Karnes, Commissioner of Education, is planning to leave next week on the Alaska for Palmer in the Matanuska Colony in connec- tion with school matters. pects to be gone about two weeks. & [ % pointed Chief Accountant for the PAA, and Mrs. Nordale, enroute from the States to Fairbanks, ar- rived here on the Yukon and will remain until the sailing of the next steamer to the Westward. Mr. Nordale, who was formerly PAA Traffic - Superintendent at Fair- banks, and Mrs. Nordale are re- turping from a visit to California. On the trip from Fairbanks they traveled by plane to Whitehorse and thence by rail and steamer to Seattle, about a month ago. Mr. Nordale is a nephew of Mr and Mrs. J. J. Stocker of Juneau, and the Nordales are house guests at the Stocker residence during their stay here. Mr. Nordale and W. J. Barrows, Division Enginere for the PAA, who arrived here Sunday on the PAA Lockheed Electra, left Juneau this noon on the PAA Fairchild plane flown to Sitka on the first sched- uled PAA Southeast Alaska flight of the season by Pilot Bob Els, to inspect seaplane landing facil- ities. Clark Bassett has been appointed He ex-|PAA Traffic Representative at!Warrack Construction Company, Fairbanks. To Cordova—Geo. Kerin, Chas.| Woods, J. M. Crowley, M. Triggve,| {Dr. T. J. Pyle, Mrs. Henry Allen, | Herman Kiel, Wm. Lahikian, Jack| Battson, Ed Evans, Edmond Mar- | tinson, Tom Renegun, Anton John- son, A. J. McDonald, Andrew Kal- ponen, Ed Sennie, W. Martinson, H. Gustafson, G. W. Gloystein, J.| i B .Warrack. | — e - — MINING MAN ON WAY TO VALDEZ PROPERTY William V. Snitheringale, min- ing engineer and manager of the Portage Mining Company near Val- dez, called on Gov. John W. Troy this morning while the Yukon was in port. He is going to the Valdez property of which John Irving, widely known mining man of Van- couver, B. C., is managing director. Mr. Irving will be recalled as a visitor in Juneau last summer. He and the Governor are old friends. - e WARRACK FOR CORDOVA DALY TO FAIRBANKS { Eldon Daly, General Manager and owner of the Ketchikan Spruce Mills, arrived in Juneau on the Yu-| kon and took the PAA plane this afternon for Fairbanks where he| goes on business. R JUNEAU COUPLE WED Miss Aileen J. Willis, daughter of Mrs. Gertrude Willis, was married yesterday by U. 8. Commissioner J. F. Mullen to Howard Ye..er, Ju- neau electrician. Both are well known Juneau young people. Mrs. Willis and Mrs. Bud Carmichael attended the couple. L R R MANY VISIT MUSEUM The rising tide o tourist travel was reflected this morning on the arrival of the Yukon. Between 9:30 and noon 72 persons had signed the register in the Alaska Historical Li- brary and Museum, according to A. P, Kashevaroff, Curator. The museum is one place most of the J. B. Warrack, President of the sailed for Cordova on the Yukon. travelers rarely miss. For the last several weeks there has been a growing list of visitors. CLOSING PRICES TODAY NEW YORK, May 5.—Closing quo- tation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 147, American Can 125% American Power and Light 10, Ana- conda 33%, Bethlehem Steel 50, Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and | Pacific Railroad 1%, General Mot- | ors 63%, International Harvester 82, Kennecott 36, United States Steel 56!;, Commonwealth and Southern 212, Cities Service 4%, Pound $4.96 Bremner bid 18 asked 23'% DOW, JONES AVERAG The following are today’ Jones averages: industrials rails 43.87, utilities 2945 G G SWENSON TO WESTWARD Capt. Olaf Swenson, widely known Seattle fur merchant and former Arctic trader, is a passenger on the Yukon to the Westward and the North country. Capt. Swenson formerly operated a fleet of trad- ing ships in the Arctic and has been active in the fur business for years. He had the famous Nanuk which was caught in the ice sev- eral years ago. Dow. 148.76, FLIES HOME ‘Mrs. Harry E. Pratt, wife of the Fedeial Judge of the Fourth Di- vision, and her two daughters, Oc- tavia and Andrea, arrived on the Yukon from Seattle and: left for their home in Fairbanks this after- noon aboard the PAA Lockheed Electra. Mrs. Pratt, who passed through Juneau enroute to the States last January, has been visiting at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Baker, of Oakland, Califor- nia Eight-year-old Octavia, who at- tended school in California, is ac- companied by her dog “Ginger,” who also enjoyed a plane ride to Fairbanks today. ———— POY RETURNING Clarence Poy, well known mining man from the Mineral Creek area near Valdez, is returning to his property after a trip Outside and is a passenger on the Yukon.