The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 27, 1938, Page 1

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-' 'THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” e —— PRICE TEN CENTS JUNEAU, ALASKA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1938. MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS VOL. LL, NO. 7778. AFL-C10 DISPUTE NEARS BREAKING POINT ] ] —_— * ] RESULTS OF CONTESTS IN DEMOCRATIC PRIMARIES — FIRST DIVISION | . La Boyteaux Is Local Men by . . JURISDIGTION H ‘ R o | o R R S D B[ CER R e e * Leading,Senate, POLLARDIN3RD Control in First AT PRIMARY IN SRR R (] y | | 3 T o G 5 i ol T B[ 2 B I U ING [3 | | | a | | | a | 8 % g | P e siainn! i : | | i \ [ ff: [ 3 | CE | | Fourth Division DIV, RETURNS National Bank CITY PRECINCTS R | T0HEAD NOW } | 1 | | | e | s Gt e S | ) ] .|, Rogge, Gordon, Lander, Former Speaker of House Fifty-three Per Cent of Democratic Sentiment Con-| juncau no. 1 .| M9 | 13 || 216 | 191 | 8 | 61 93 | 41| o Packers: Gnicn s B Spencer Ahead for Demo Takes Substantial | Stock Now Owned by | tinues Strong—John Mc- | Juneau No.2 bt 00 |l e 86k [Lage gl e 9% | 18 | 31 ; acKers, URIGH e “ Hou Norinati kend: Anh Resid C ick Leads: Trek Juneau No. 3 8 | 47 || m LB ee 1 i 68 | 22 13 porled Negotlallng n | se Nominations ead, Anchorage Juneau Residents ormick Leads Ticket | sneep creex 11 3 14 1.t il 6 4 4 ; I — [ — | Jualpa 6 |l Sorl CulEes 9 1 3 3 San Francisco } FAIRBANKS, Alaska, April 27.—| ANCHORAGE, Alaska, April 27.—| The controlling stock of the First While light in comparison with| Salmon Creek 15 21 || 28 | 2 8 10 14 8 10 | |2 Returns from 13 precincts in the|Complete returns from Am-norage:Nuuonn] Bank of Juneau has been|ihe 1936 primary, the three Juneaui Lynn Canal e as 17 18 ) - n 1 | 5 5 | BULLETIN—SEATTLE, April Fourth Division, including three in|in the Democratic primary gives,| purchased by a group of Juneau precincts cast a total of 979 votes| Mendenhall 8 2 || 10 12 2 e 6 } 3 0 | 21.—Territorial Senator Norman | Fairbanks, show the following totals| for the Senate—J. S. Hofman, 337, business men, it is announced to- #il o5 £ | Douglas 37 38 || 42 41 13 14 | 33 32 9 R. Walker, who came to Seat- | in the Democratic primary of yes- C. A. Pollard, 185. | day. In yeeterdag's electim, , D MUSRE 0L Ie 5 7 T 5 i 4 1 11 ( tle three weeks ago from Gov. | terday: | For Representative—Fred Broad-| Bank officials said, however, there than were cast in the 193¢ non-| gayyay 1 PR B 3 q 1 2 1 5 John W. Troy of Alaska, with For Senator—LaBoyteaux, zsoAiweu‘ 180, Thomas C. Burchett, 267, will be no changes in the manage- | presidential year election. Of this| Skagway 3 | 21 || 46 49 22 2 a3 | 12 13 | instructions to aid negotiations 'Vl Green, 258, Powers, 117. |Edward D. Coffey, 322, Karl A./ment or personnel of the bank and| number 585 called for Democratic| Haines i R R 10 9 Bl YRS 9 [ in the packers and union dis For Representative—Rogge, 438, Drager, 256, Leland R. Hancock, 126, that its policies will remain the ; i Klukwa 3 0 3 2 1| Le. A 2| i | pute, is leaving tomorrow for Al Gordon, 434, Lander, 357, Spencer.|H. H. McCutcheon, 276, C. W. Min- same. ballals:and 30 for Beynttenti 2 Menakaltlu 48 110 | 417 26 18| 4 | 1| om |l Alaska. He s: d.k “I am disgusted { 346, Smith, 320, Sorri, 284, Ghezzi, aker, 109, F. A. Roberts, 79, Harvey| The change in stock ownership| Democrats had substantial com-| poe . 1 s | 130 56 | 36 7. | e | 81 34 | 19 44 at the lack of progress, My ob Vil 8 273, Nelson, 135. | J. Smith, 250. involves the purchase of 265 shares mand in both precincts No. 1 and| wect petersburg ..... 7 9 | 4 1 5.1 12 i 2 “ 1 1 1 servations are the workers do | Returns from elght precincts in| Delegate Dimond was givéen 527!of stock, formerly owned by the| No. 2, while in No. 3, the Republi-| yoronooy go | o1 || 23| saifioz | s0o | 40 | s | 14| 4 o want ta go to their, jobs, hutthey v the Republican primary, including|and Treasurer Oscar Olson, 443. |Bradley Mining Company and Mrs. ¢ans cast 115 ballots and Democrats| giiyine 10 23|l '6) o 26 s o 10 11 17 | and all of Alaska are beix de Fairbanks, give for Representative| In the Republican primary, to-|F. W. Bradley, of San Francisco. 13- Ketchikan 121 94 Il o7 66 86 104 R T R | o6 | 102 | 10 suffer by the leaders of the —Knuppe, 248, Johnston, 245, Col- | tals were, for the Representatives—| The mining company held 250 shar-| In precinct No. 1 at the Fire Hall| o 33 2 | 39 62 38 17 l 38 | 42 i 7V S | unions whose only desire is to :‘m‘ 216, Bryant, 193, Fowler 18l. M. A. Andresen, 98, Hans Elvig, 80, es, and Mrs. Bradley 10 sham,“he;’f W"de ‘5&;750'&5;?5% 3;0 D;':O; 2 Ein | [ |t } determine who gets the dues. or Senate—Joy, 280. | Florence Nafsted, 87, M. D. Snod-|The 265 shares purchased by Ju- Ccratic an FRucaL. Na: S RES | | | 287 | 509 | 62 | o | In the eight precincts Albert grags 96. neau residents gi’\)‘es local mti\rests ‘;6;‘““1;[;51- :,he Democrats casting| it 2his I8l BByl e s RS 7 fhisd i I R e ‘ W 1 —Thred s White for Delegate had 186 and| A] White for Delegate, Will Chase the controlling interest in the insti- and Republicans 89. | ' ratory P Will Chase for Treasurer, 22, on the| for Treasurer received 95 each. tution with 53 percent of the block,| A fine complimentary vote was| REPUBLICAN CONTEST—FIRST DIVISION cific ( fi n‘nf " Republican ticket. [ ) | "P. R. Bradley and L. H. Metzgar 8iven Delegate Anthony J. Dimond | Représentatives E—— ed to | Packing CORDOVA, April 27.—Due to a|main as members of the Board of 9 : 7 = g | S 9 @ - § 5 = 3 1 toc hat trike might r g oY e 3 " | Directors. same resulted for other unopposed | 2 3 5 & <} o | 2 % ! SOBRRATY Lo N Sl p ks 4 severe storm here yesterday, the - candidates on the Republican ticket. | & 2 | g | B B ReltR 1 y ! SBFOCmEDY nek 4 voting was light in the primary el-| Among the Juneau men purchas-| . : : g s | 7R i B B their employers for recognitior | ] P 1 Bank | HOWard D. Stabler, unopposed for| o B a 1 Saattle e ection, about half the recent city|ing stock in the First National Bank & NCCn 0 W0 f | ' £ | Seatt) ! ; . y ire Beas ] e Republican ticket, i ; ; election. In the Democratic prim- in the change are President of "he‘led his HEkEL: 16 Jutieai. et WO i i | i IR before the I mese ! ary Delegate Dimond was given 102|bank, John Reck, whose stock UT-| oto “ajport White, Republican Del- | : el [ [ i MG TIE AT St (0 O : and Oscar Olson for Treasurer, 86, chases at ‘l"i“d“"‘l“ e i"d";f‘“":pgam' At s ibier gS ank | i ‘ A | | i [ [ e Alieo. ket i A 2 NOME, Alaska, April 27. — Three| For Democratic Senate—Hofman, to stock already held, apd Elwoo ha 4 . i % B * & & 5 .| @ bluff. We e experi H B ne s Prisecaa | o POl Y8R McClain, Cashier, through whomixfll ?,rli:“‘l’::r"rmi‘zli‘;‘;vl: r::g;:gd} Juneau No. 1 | o 82 | 135 | 110 | 96 | 66 | 88 Sena_lor and MI\" U!Uhl( luff of the AFL b v|¥ votes and 92 Republican votes were| For Democratic Representatives the deal was managed. |25 ‘ : | Juneau No. 2 Vo kT A A e Staging Neck and Neck [havent eot o AT cast in this city yesterday in the|—Burchett, 64, Minaker, 59, Mc- number of other Juneau resi-|“p 4o pe i 0 | Juneau No. 3 ... 58 41 5 5 : > et | POYEOLS S GG s 1 primary election. The count fol-|Cutcheon, 52, Coffey, 35, Smith, 32, dents have taken portions of the|gon, e Sm;{f,‘;"f,i‘,i,y'“;'},d?; e Sheep Creck 3 2 2 | 3 1 2 | 3| Contest for Nomination | that the Labgr g. lows: Dimond 266, White 78, Chase | Drager, 27, Roberts, 19, Broadwell, Plock of 265 shares exchanged. Their| ;o4 the three Juneau precincts| Jualpa i 5 8 10 5 ] 3 4 : = the CIO oui~ 80, Devine 95, Laiblin 198, the lat- 12, Hancock, 11. names will not be released, it was by 29 votes over Crystal Snow Jennei Salmon Creek 6 6 7 10 5 5 3 With comy returns in from 21 two to one ter two candidates for the Senate| In the Republican primary Al said, until a later date when the ;4 four Juneau men were high in| Lynn Canal 1 15 10 15 9 10 11 :'Jl $ha, 59, preot Ty in the First, Div-| g . : on the Democratic ticket; for rep-lwhll.e for Delegate, 43, and Will Degotiations are completed. nominations for the House on.that| Mefdenhall 8 11 11 15 3 10 10 |ision, including the le 8 ardo said -4|.,.> with him . ap resentatives, Democratic ticket —|Chase for Treasurer, 53. For Rep-| B Ca | ticket. ‘They are-John -MeCormick, f gias 2t 26 28 32 30 18 2 jsan, g jEe Q10 Board wing iR Cockburn 111, Dowd 107, Kubon 107, | resentatives—Andresen, 45, Snod- J. P. Anderson, James V. Davis and Wacker 18 3 3 ] 3 2 C |y 9‘*‘"“ Seattle, and Jack Moore, Lyng 210, Martin 173, Mobe 22, O’- grass, 43, Elvig, 42, Nafstad, 41. LUYALISTS IN Henry Messerschmidt. McCormick | Saxman 20 10 12 14 20 iyl ay ¢ n. of i | Oy ia ; ; Connor 154, Porter 112, Seiffert 64. . led the field in the city precincts| Skagway 21 34 15 | 82 28 35 18 ng ¢ low Jenne of Jyn-| 10 s SMARaN S Gi BOS A There was no Republican contest. | VALDEy RETURNS i | with a total of 407, Anderson was Haines .. B 11 11 7 15 6 12 LUy 85, veles Jor e SEREEE S “”'“ Hetersont, - Presifen I g VALDEZ, April 27.—Returns in coUNTEH MGVE second high here, Messerschmidt, Klukwan [ 17 o8 32 4| 28 onsitesits ot B i ,‘j‘,m";“ o i Valdez in yesterday's primary give, | third, and Davis, fourth, McCormick = Metlakatla L R &7t S Fror nltial] ofie of the st et s Republican, Al White for Delegate, | carried all three precincts with a ~Petersburg 27 19 12 14 20 | 13 12 g i S "““ vl ‘““ Pty AN 38, Will Chase, for Treasurer, 38, substantial majority. - | West Petersburg 1 1 1 2 1 O s W e S e in salmon For Republican Representatives — On the Republican slate for the Wrangell | 189 113 39 58 86 39 56 I““ (1_' ”l' :“‘ ‘,l"”, “‘-"“ ‘” "'I ""'_‘ * ‘n‘ b ';“““‘ 3 . PI-ANE cHAsH Andresen, 38, Elvig, 32, Florence House, Frank Foster led his ticket Stikine 118 1 u 8 11 6 6 | ..' .ufln 1 -‘m n‘. ‘1 tinal officia Iw-“ \:”-’k“ vk A;m— § | Nafstad, 38, Snodgrass, 35. e | here followed closely by Mrs. Mil-| Ketchikan 61 58 45 70 29 40 32 ?xt : LJ‘I B R en carn i whom D R' A E In the Democratic primary, Dele- [nfantry Attacks Follow | dred Hermann. The other high can- Sitka [ s ATl B S fedas dakieq Kerpliikan] A gate Dimond, 66, Treasurer Olson, . o | didates for nomination in this race - x R . {55: | Crashing Artillery | were Frank Price of sitka and Jack Totals ..........| 652 | 5e1 | 892 | s43 | oo | a4s | ase by 31 Roden gathering his leud in BAY MUDBLE ils — ——— e e smaller precinct e south April 271 —CIO | For Senate—Hofman, 40, Pollard Barrages, Report | WilsgHal uuasy 3 y end of the Division Canner 15 aye seeking to oot 5 | o |Instead of being hard-up as we| " o opooee & for Hot negotiations with sal .u-;' y\y-fier 7 Wreckage Repqrtccl Locat- For House—Drager, 13, Hancock,| g0 pE URGEL, Span, Apri 21, GANNERY MAN |found. them, four years oo, they|\omination. Johm McCormick, J.|after the ARL Cannery Workers Une ed on Mountain Slope— | 1., Mccuicheon, 31, Minaker, 4, _a smashing Loyalist coumer-o:-;DIMuNn GIVEN |ended the last season wilh mOney| . Anderson, James V. Davis and|ion, the Lidependont Flipino Can 2 : ' 3 ' fensive has s%uck the Insurgent| 5 9 _ Henry Messerschmidt of Juneau are| ner smployees Unfon and the 1 ] Ground Crew Searching |21 Burchett, 23, Cotfey, 42. |columns a hard blow on the Pyren- | AWAITS LABUR |Our company employed in lts one- joqqing. MeCormick apparenily Is|packers” attorney had stipulated that i TR | e B nes front in Northern Spain. | LAHGE vnTE IN | }line Plant ASSgE 145 flsherman and| cortain of nomination and the other| the CIO pledge list represented a | VISALIA, Cal, April '«‘7-—Jo\=eph‘FATAL THAGEDY | The Loyalists retook strategic po-| | E |50 to 60 cannery workers last year.|y) oo pave substantial leads. Messer-| substantial majority of the 1937 Elliott, Superintendent of the Se-| | | T.ln addition to the wages paid out, _ ” 1y , }workears - § | sitions on the Valladero Heights in schmidt, low man of the four, w VRrRELs quoia Natiooal Fores SCULE Srorn | }Laavarst sector with crashing art-| s ETTLE MEN | we purchased supplies to the amount )., 4ing the next highest candidate,| The Filipino union and AFL stil crew is reported to have reached | illery by Ut |of $15,000 in Alaska, and our taxes . o o ke of O s contend that the companies hats | 'y barrages that paved the way 3 |A Walker of by 69 votes in [ have the wreckage of an airplane, whlchg A irm_ infantry attacks, { | it | paid the Territory are about $5,000 the returns from the 21 precincts. no regular employees on ount of | vanished Monday with all four pas-| The Lo a’l” 4 Viteo" datin: ta bavel Frank Wri h : J |1f we fail to operate, there will be| " "\\ . penublican te. Frank| the se al nature of the work atid | sengers, residents of Visalia, and| A o o b 2 A gl | ran right, Jr'v 1IN JU-ahout 200 or 300 people in Hoonah, g e e ks of0 wit B A stopped an Insurgent offensive at-| Delegate Amasses 1,575 | Barnes of Wrangell, Prank Price of | ¢an therefore ba vith un- i said to have been killed in a crash. | b s W Ben R g , | neau, Hopes Plant Will [employees of our company and thelr iy cuci cote of Junean and Mrs | 100 they wish Earlier, forest rangers reported a | | ! S an: Fome Votes in 21 Precinct | " | dependents, who will be without , e sl G iy gl shall : |ano De La Bella in the Tremp sec-| recincts | Operate at Hoonah | Mildred Hermann of Juneau are| rsha e for - plane crashed on a mountain slope | 1tor | . . | funds. leading, Barnes and Price apparent-| the Alaska Packer on. sajd and a ground crew started for the| PR A, e L ) 1 of First Division | Mr. Wright, who is on the board o gl A et t e Akt ; Both sides admit heavy casualties, 3 . : ly assured of nomination. Frank|'hat the operafors w hesingn . designated location. 'F. Is Alleged to H. One of the first of the Southeast of his company and its secretary mpocte. of Juneau was in fifth posi-| About concluding an agr with The plane, a private craft, was fly- | armer (s Alleged to Have AR Alaska Delegate Anthony J. Di-|Alaska cannery operators to ar-|and treasurer, will leave Juneau on yon o o FnEes W8 B T BORE) any union, on account ends ing to Death Valley from visalia| Killed Wife, Roomer | [fuond -amasipd & Jorge complimen- | rive north, Frank Wright, Jr, is|the company’s new tender Point Mr’: a;‘{(o;mm:luord 2:;1: @ 10 deTeat! ing decision of the Labor Boad and disappeared in a storm. . I & c[ . ec| | ;tary vote in yesterdays' Democratic|in Juneau waiting for news of the Sophia as soon as he hears from A' Anarariv’ et voi +| which is trying to delermine juris~ The dead are reported to be Dr.| —intimacy Claim, primary, 21 precincts in the First|cannery workers jurisdictional dis-|Seattle the outcome of the juris-| .o ity M B WO B diction, & O. N. Lamber, Mrs, Lamber, Mus, - Division, including the larger ones, pute before leaving for Hoonah |dictional disputes being waked there. |yt gy 1o D SLBROY | maituer Boterson, seneral it Frank Blain, mother of Mrs, Lam-| PHOENIX, Arizona, April 27— WINDS TAKE giving him 1575, The Delegate 1| where he is superintendent of the| It the disputes are settled they |\ gran in the offverr mitny| 3€¢F O the Red Salio s ber, and Dorothy Davis, the doctor’s| Mrs. Stella Francis, 49, boarding unopposed for the Democratic nom- | Iey Straits Salmon Company’s can-| will operate—but if they aren’t, like .:mnn thap n‘ ) ,e oITEN m‘!mnry‘ said that the ju v office nurse. | house operator, and a roomer, Louis ination. | nery. | other Alaska canneries, the It'y'or 1024, but 1oes Jian h,\ e DEMAEL o only one pro PO T = P. Tripoli, 30, were shot and killed FI I E Al White, Republican candidate, Before leaving Seattle on the Yu-|Straits Packing Company will be ni‘"}; n,r":h.'r,n”‘” ;"';",', ,"‘ e, face, that final @ [last night. |for Delegate, who will oppose Di- | kon lnst Saturday, Mr. Wright had forced to suspend for the 1938 sea-| b’ n most of the procineie, the| 0T nions m . HN LAND“N ‘The police arrested the husband of mond in the September general el-|spent three days sitting in on lhe‘son, Tiohald: pare n in mo: _"f t n- precinets, the s tanine tiae G . the woman, A. K. Francis, a farmer o | ection, polled 761 votes on his ticket| hearings of the committee appointed| “We don't want to suspend opera- i:?: Al re‘;{:,% :“d,hf"‘u,?g 5 ':m ik for questioning. Francis told the Proper!y Da_maged, Large in the same number of precincts in by the labor board of the salmon tions. We have spent a lot of money e o ey OTIATIONS OPENED PAssEs AWA | police he shot Tripoli after another| * S " l ]( d b this Division. |industry to meet with representa- on our plant and we know suspen- 108 FRANCISCO, | |roomer had informed him that Trip. ection Blacke y A total of 1,347 votes was given|tives of the Alaska Salmon Purse|sion will mean a hardship to the Fizo " Wort, busine 4 ioli and Mrs, Franics had been inti- Dus[ Gales Treasurer Oscar Olson in 21 pre-| Seiners Union. people of Hoonah, but conditions JUNE MITCHELL TO o 3 ogr i mate. cincts in the First on the Democrat-| “There are two issues still involv-'may be such that we will be forced BE SURGICAL NURSE L eruoon that his s Father of Former Gov. of DENVER, Col., April 27—Devas- |iC ticket and Republican candidate| ed, as far as Southeast Alaska can-|to shut down this year.” | entered negoti with i " Kansas Dies as Resul[ ALASKAN FINED tating winds that are sweeping enst,;’g;“ H. hChflse of Cordova received neries are concerned, before a set-| Frank Wright, Jr., is one of the AT JUNEAU CLINIC n Canning Company. ! f H Di | IN SEATTLE FOR of the Great Spine, Rocky Mountain on his ticket. tlement of the cannery workers dis- second gencration of salmon can-| 2 { oue of the three of Heart hsease [ range, have already caused the death | Howard D. Stabler of Juneau, un- putes can be reached,” Mr. Wright ners. His father, late head of the Miss June Mitchell, graduate Y Alaskan operations b 5 | FUR SMUGGLING |of five persons, damaged property | 9PPOsed for the Senate in the Re-| said. 'Carlisle Packing Company, Was one nurse of the Virginia Mason Hos- -, 0claved by the three-way unios ¥ KANSAS CITY, April 27.—John/ ? - |and blacked the sections with dust|Dublican primary, received 628 votes| “These are hoth jurisdictional.|of the old-timers and a recognized pital in Seattle, arrived in Junc lictional fight, confirmed the' Landon, 82, father of former Gov.| cparrE April 27. — Adolph | 8ales. in returns from 19 precincts, leading The first has to do with the AFL-|leader in the industry for many aboard the Yukon to become CIO mnegotiations had | Alfred M. Landon, is dead here as|yout 5. of Ketchikan, was fined| A tornado developed and shat-|Dis ticket in the three Juneau pre-| CIO cannery workers bargaining years. member of the nursing stalf of the d. but added: “Weligies S a result of heart disease. 14250 in justice court here on a|tered a rural school near Oshkoss, cincts. |agency dispute. The second is a| e Juneati Medical aad Surgical CH urance that the CIO Landon, who started a successful charge of smuggling furs from Al- Nebraska, and two children are re- ) e | dispute between the Alaska Salmon‘MRS HE NTHAL Miss Mitchell is to be the WL e oup ceal with,” = career as an oil man in western ... Floyd Banta, State Game ported to have lost their lives. Three L] | Purse Seiners Union, with 1,600 e gical nurse at the clinic, re g rson, general man- il Pennsylvania, transferred his In- proecoeotectinied that Vogt mail- |2dults are also reported to have KlNL . | members in Alaska, and the salmon| RETURNS TO CITY Mrs. Verne Soley who has And spokesman, said til U terests to Kansas in 1904. He s“"led elght' marten and two weasel | been killed near there when the g Purse Seiners of the Pacific, with| substituting for the past six week ¥ s ¢ s bands dowil bed N fered a series of heart attacks l“‘;pelt.s to a woman friend here who tornado struck a farm house. | headquarters in Seattle. Each is| AF!'ER LONG TR[P Miss Mitchell will fill the vacancy | .. : 5 hearing to be cons week. The former GOVErnor Was at o513 them for $160. The village of Lisco was isolated ~j“NEAu BUUND | claiming jurisdiction, as far as fish-| left by Beatrice Massey Jones, Who | ; ‘Mondsy, the. company: | . his father’s bedside when he passed ‘ for many hours by rain, hail and |ing goes, from Yakutat south.” | Mrs. Simon Hellenthal returned is now in Seattle. the ,‘,,;“ 'Z-“‘,)"" i ‘:,“",vr unigns, away. Alaska Game Commission offic-| Wind which snapped the communi- i ! Mr. Wright considers the 1abor|t, jupeau on the steamer Yukon - Ticioper i ')“‘l"m\” L_‘(::““"”' and : . ials here said they hold a warrant| cation lines. SEATTLE, April 27. — Steamer| Problem as far as his company 15 atter several weeks of travel in the, CONFISCATED FUR Marshall - Midkn skt e TITERRTT inles | concerned, a local one. Except for 1 ¥ Madison, atiorney for LI m vm 's for Vogt charging him with viola- Mt. McKinley, of the Alaska Steam-| 3 P! States. the. Alacka Pasker st o ool {tion of the Alaska game law. He DIVORCE RLANNED ship Company, sailed for Southeast| €™ key men whom they bring Up| judge Hellenthal also returned SALE NETS 53555‘“. o probably will enter ne ':;u:uon‘: |is listed by the commission as an IN GOTHBERG CASE | and Southwest Alaska ports at 10:30 {FOm the south, the Icy Straits Com- o the Territory on the Yukon, but Public auction of furs by the with the CIO Union with alien. o'clock this forenoon with 306 first|PANY employs natives from Hoonah continued through to his Valdez Alaska Game Commission this ations as y agway —a— Hearing in the case of Kenneth |class and 106 second class passeng- | ARd & few white people from Juneau | peadquarters. . afternoon in the basement of the P NG | GRIMES PASSES THROUGH |Gothberg, charged with wife deser-|ers. and Hoonsh. | Wnile in the States, the Hellen- Federal Building netted a return of KODIAR. E & Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Grimes are|tion, was held in U. 8. Commis-| pagsengers booked for Juneau| - 'We feel that we have a definite ¢ngls visited their son and daugh- $3,555.75,officlals announced. Eighty M. B. Kraft. wife of a promin= | SKAGWAY, Alaska, April 27.—A passengers on the Yukon enroute |sioner Felix Gray's court this morn- |apoard the Mt. McKinley are H,| Place in the economic scheme 8s Te- | ter, John and Mary Claire, who are four lots were sold at the lively ent Kodiak business man, is & ¥us total of 121 votes were cast in the|to Seward and transfer there to|ing, Gothberg agreeing to take care | mymperman, Frank Boyer, T. Buffen, S37ds the natives of Hoonah” MT attending school, Mary Claire at bidding The furs are hose which kon passenger bound for Seward el primary here yesterday as compared the steamer Starr, whence they will [of his wife's bills and pay her $30|Mrc 5, Punches, Francis Regan,| Wiéht sald. “Since we started to yhe Chicago Art Institute and John have been confiscated during re- and iransfer o the steamer ; » to a vote of 250 cast in the municipal|go to their Ouzinkie home where per month pending & divorce ac-|andrew Longmire, Mrs. J. Rosea,|CPeFate in 1934, the Indians have u; the University of Michigan law 'cent months in connection with Mrs. Kraft has been Outside m i election. ‘M.r. Grimes has a trading post. tion, the Commissioner said, Miss Terry Martin. gained in money and employment.' 10l at Ann Arbor, game law violations. last fall. s i A |

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