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- DEFENDANT OF THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” THE LIBRARY 04 COMGRESS BERIAL RECORD MAR27 1946 VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,200 JUNEAU, ALASKA, THURSDAY., FEBRUARY 21, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CH\TE CANADA, RUSSIA GE GOVT. ACCUSES ROLLING PLOT Defense Hinges on Meeks Possession of Money Prior fo Murder Delivering the opening statement ! for the prosecution, U. 8. Attorney Patrick Gilmore, Jr., this morning “unequivocally” demanded the re- “turn of a verdict of “capital mur- der” against George Harrison Meeks for the alleged slaying of Clarence J. Campbell. | The chief prosecutor kept his opening remarks brief. He outlined | a sequence of circumstances which he contended will firmly establish the guilt of the defendant. He pre- faced his description of the events| to be brought out to prove Meek’s | guilt by asking the jury’s patience | through what he said will “un-} doubtedly be a lengthy trial.” Failure of a defense move to postpone its opening statement un-! til the conclusion of the Govern-| ment’s case, brought Associate) Council for the defense, J. J.! O'Leary forward to summarize the defendant’s view of the circum-, stances. O'Leary made obvious that he had been but recently called into | the case for the defense by fre-| quently interrupting his address to turn to either his client or co- MET BY Gl HUBBY TRUMAN SAYS NO SHIFTING STOWAWAY BRIDE i i President Does Not Want Two from Same State in Cabinet Either | 15 MOVED UP OF CABINET, INTO CONTROVERSY | Red Hat Is (onferred On 28 (ardinals VATICAN CITY, Feb. 21.—Pope Pius XII conferred the traditional red hat upon 28 new Cardinals to- day in a magnificent religious spectacle witnesses by 20,000 per- sons in the great Nave of St Peter’s. TOMPETRICH i IN CUSTOMS Collector of Customs James J.| Qonnors today announced the ap- proval by the Secretary of the Treaswy of his nomination of J. T. (Tom) Petrich to be Assistant Col- lector of Customs for Alaska. Mr, | Petrich has been in the Customs ’mmou"mi SITES TAKEN UP, HEARING | s | WAEHINGTON, Feb. 21.—Oppo- sition to the Interior Department's plan to redistribute salmon trap Isites in Southeast Alaska was ex-| pressed today at a hearing bv-y fore Acting Secretary of the Inter-| jor Oscar L. Chapman. | The Department proposes to| ?, 'SECRET DATA’ IS OBTAINED: IS ADMITTED But Sovieis—Eome Back with Charge Canadians Made Rropaganda (alifor DEBARKING from the transport Alexander S. Shephe brunette stowaway bride Mrs. Gladys J. Tousson, with her husband S/8gt. Collins L. Tousson of Egan, La, Ofi that Mrs. Tousson, soon to become a moth transport at Liverpool, England. rd in Boston, I 22, leaves the si er, boarded the U iddies WASHINGTON, Feb. 21.—Presi- dent Truman said today he is not ready to announce a successor to nterior Secretary Harold L. Ickes nd spiked reports that a Cabinet shift is in the making. He told a news conference . he had discussed the Interior post with | | Supreme Court Justice William O. | Douglas, but left up in the air whether Douglas would get it or even whether he had been offered the M | job. 1ip. (Internatienal Soundphoto) counsel for prompting as to facts.| He held up his client as an un- schooled farm boy from a back-| ward section of the State of Geor- gia; one, who on ‘going -out into| the world, had “brushed against' the sordid side of life and become tained;” who had taken to drink, gambling and bad company. ) It was to Meek’s proficiency at the “four-five-six” and his game of good fortune at ‘‘shooting craps” that O'Leary attributed his client’s possession of a large sum of money which U. S. Attorney Gilmore had held up as a damning fact against the defendant. The defense coun-' sel averred that it would be proved by the testimony that Meeks’ had won that money at .Anchorage, gambling, and that he later kept it in his possession as a secret horde of which Juneau City Police offi-; cers found him in possession here —prior to the killing of Campbell.| Innocent Man i It is on that fact — that Meeks| was in possession of the money be- fore Campbell’s death—that the de- | fense, from O'Leary’s statement of | the defense case, most relies to| establish that George Meeks is “an’ utterly innocent man.” | (Continued on Page Two) { BY ALLAN FISHER NEW YORK, Feb. 21.—Five Es- kimos, camping out in the Medison Square Garden in an atmospl | of pre-fabricated log cai metal canoes and sing-song bailrers held a family council today to cope with a good neighbor crisis pre- cipitated by California school chil- | Stump Eskimo Family On Exhibitin N. Y. Gty winds-swept Empire State Building' observation tower. ther, suppose we write a note Overhearing him, an onlooker said in rich Brookiynese: “Ain't that something? well as me.” - | At one point, he appeared to have ruled out Douglas because he said he did not want to have two Cabinet members from Washington State. Lewis B. Schwellenbach, Secretary of Labor, is from that State. But he made this comment when |asked whether Gov. Mon C. Wall- igren of Washington, a former Sen- |ate colleague, 4s under considera- tion for Ickes ‘place. Mr. Truman {said Wallgren would make a good secretary of the Interior, but you ;an't have two Cabinet members ifrom the great State of Washing- | ton. 1 “That would seem to bar Douglas {too,” a reported observed. 2 “Draw your own conclusion," the { President replied. ‘When angther newsman suggested thet Douglas gave his legal residenc: as Connecticut, the President cor- i ‘Wullu‘ Walla, Wash. Commenting on another report | pointed to the Supreme Court if Service as a Deputy Collector since | 1922/ prior to which time he was Chief Clerk in the Quartermaster Corps at Camp Lewils, Wash., fol- lowing his discharge from the Army in 1819. Previous to that time he was connected with the General Land Office in this city and the Uniited States Coast and Geodetic Survey in Alaska waters as a young man. Collector Connors simultaneously announced similar approval of the promotion of Deputy Collector Wal- ter B. Heisel as Deputy Collector, Appraiser and Acting Assistant Col- | lector. Mr. Heisel has been on the | local staff of the Customs Office | since 1923 and from 1909 until his | transfer to the Customs, he was con- | nected with the General Land Of- | tice, both in Alaska and in the | States, in various cupnqlfieq’ ’ — e | In a long majestic ceremony rich LONDON, Feb. 21, Husts, frankly admitting that its represen- tatives had obtained “secret data” in Canada, maintained that the in- formation was “insignificant” and accused the Canadian government of fostering an “unbridled = anti- Soviet campaign.” “The Soviet military attache in Canada received from acquaintances among Canadian citizens certain in- formation of a secret character which, however, did not present a special interest to Soviet authori- ties,” the Russian government, said in a statement broadcast last night over the Moscow radio. The statement indicated the in- formation concerned radar and atomic energy. $ Anti-Soviet Campaign with cclor and the ancient tradi- amend the Alaska Commercial Fish- | tion of the Roman Catholic church, ing regulations for 1946 to provide the Pontiff bestowed upon the new a maximum of 20 traps may be Princes of the church the flat, operated by any one individual or broad-rimmed and tasseled symbols corporation. It said that last year of their dignity. {eight companies controlled 221 of They will receive the final sym-ithe 297 sites. bol of their new rank — their rings| Representatives of the salmon in- — at a secret consistory tomorrow, dustry were on hand to protest concluding week-long ceremonies 'against the proposed amendments marked by the Pope's world ‘broad- /to the regulations, contending that cast yesterday. in would cripple production of Alas- 3 A ka salmon, disrupt established trade Woeis (Geremanies 'and cause loss of millions of dollars Climax of the week's ceremonies ¢ cqpital invested in the business. came when the new Cardinals were oy, hearing is expected to con- escorted to the throne and received tinue for several days. their red hats for the Papal | At the same time, the statememnt AR e O = hand after Papal Advocates had B U l l E T I N S seid, Russia deemed it ‘“necessary completed preparations for the canonization of four candidates for WASHINGTON--Edwin W. Paul-to call attention to the campaign, stainthood. The Pontiff, a golden wearing i bishop's mitre without jewels, sat ey brushed aside today fresh de- hostile to the Soviet Union, which mands that he ask President Tru- SEV | Following iwo days of dogged ex- al tion of prospective jurors, IlmlJ sel murder charges against suddenness that startled the filled ! District Court here, yesterday after- | He speaks English asthat Schwellenbach might be ap-|noon at 3:30 o'clock. | Repeated waivers of peremptory al altar. EN woMEN lon a red throne in the confession- { silver trumpetes sounded “Thou At Peter” on his arrival. Voices of the Sistine choir swell- MURDER luR led through the great Nave at fre-' ! ‘quenl intervals during the ritual. Crowd Cheers A storm of cheers burst from the from the basilica. At the end of the recessional march, his scarlet clad bearers slowly turned the red and gold man to withdraw his nomination to be Undersecretary of the Navy. Pauley. told a reporter he wants his name to go to a Senate vote because he is confident he will be | confirmed. | DUBLIN—United States Legation 0n of ‘twelve: citizenis™to hear | crowd as the Pope's Tecesstonal be- officials said today they had re- I Oz‘mrge gan at the end of the ceremony'ceived so many epplications from to San Ysidoro,” Bumaroon said. |rected him to say Douglas is from | Harrison Meeks was reached with 2 ang continued until he was borne Irishmen wanting to join the U. S. ! army that it had been found nec- essary to prepare a specially print- ed reply pointing out that only American citizens can be enlisted has started in the Canadian press and radio . . . . The position tak- en up by the Canadian govern- ment is directed toward the en- couragement of this campaign in the press and radio. It is not compatible with friendly relations between the two countries. “One must recognize,” the state- ment- continied,” “vhat - the mentioned unbridled anti-Soviet campaign was part of the plan of . the Canadian government and is aimed at inflicting political harm to the Soviet Union.” Attache Is Recalled ! Douglas went to Interior, the Presi- { challenges, by the defense, had many I said el P - | times 3 4 & portable throne on which the Pope dent said emphatically that Schwel- | times raised false hopes that a trlal‘was carried, back toward the altar. The statement, later handed to the Canatian Charge D'affaires in overseas. the Soviet ih-nbach is going to stay where he is. He added that Clinton P. Ander- son, another mentioned for Ickes { post, will remain as Secretary of | Agriculture. That is definite, Mr. : : Washingfon with s . {Truman said, as long as they want Governor Gruening - - e | There is no constitutional pro- hibition against two Cabinet mem- WASHINGTON, Feb, 21.—Senator | hers from the same State. Presi- Magnuson (D-Wash) and GOV. E.| dent Roosevelt had two or more New Gruening of Alaska returned yes-|yorkers in his Cabinet at various terday from Ottawa where they dis- ! ¢imes, cussed with \members of the Can-| adian Parliament the question of lcmlstructing a road connecting lhe' Pacific Coast with the Alcan High-,szw m IS SEI " ASRECREATIO dren. | “The only Eskimo family in (hcl United States”—so billed at the Na- | tional Sportsman’s Show—was in | danger of disillusioning the entire | 40-student third grade of the San Ysidoro, Calif., grammar school,| who had, requested gifts ranging from polar bear skins to ivory. | Papa Bumaroon combed his ex- tentive English vocabulary for suit- ably grave words. He looked at his family, brought hére from Nome, Alaska, and said: “My, we're in a spot.” In his hand he held seven letters, written in childist scrawls, but im- peccable English, which had been entrusted to the Associated Press’ piacige = ,President Truman and request Sec- | by Joyce F. Hettich, San Ysidoro yeary of “State Byrnes to offically | teacher. She asked that the ‘et-{i"\'itt‘ Canada to appoint delegates | ters be dellvered (0 the Eskio ¢y go' into:the quieshith with an| Magnuson Back in B s Magnuson said he would report to jury had been arrived at; but cachi 5 his chair had been followed by a Governmrnb‘q::;; Pl saein challenge. 1° Last juror to enter the box wasl Gregory Cardinal Aganianian of Mary E. Haas, of Juneau. As usual, Armenia, dean of the new Cardiné Ishe was subjected to lengthy ques- 3;’115, was led toward the throne ke- tioning before tween two Cardinal Deacons to re- her qualifications | { were passed, for cause, by both sides. ceive his red hat first. h Ihlt-‘Plope {Then the defense rose, again to'°moved his mitre and then replac- {accept the jury as constituted. The ©d it. 'The Armenian knelf, kiss- proseeution huddled, then it, too,|[¢d the Pope's foot, then rose and declared satisfaction with the trial | Was jury. | cheeks. As finally . selected, to decide {whether George Meeks is guilty and | shall pay with his life for the mur- | der of Clarence J. Campbell,” the Jury is: Gets Hat The cowl of the Cardinal's er- mine cape, cappg magna, was plac- ed over his head, while Mgr. Carlo | Respighi, Perfect of the Congrega- Val A. Poor, Douglas; Liv Husvik, tion of Rites aind Master of Cere- I Petersburg; Ruth gWm-d 'r;.om;l:"nmnles, ‘held the flat-brimmed hat |Sitka; Jean Talkington, Juneau; | OVer the head of m‘e :'}ee“"l! Car- i william D, Burfield, Skagway; C. dinal, the Pope recited: L. Skuse, Juneau; Mary E. Haas,| “To the praise of Almighty God kissed by the Pontiff on both' NORFOLK, Virginia. — Vice Ad- miral Theodore 8. Wilkinson drowned today when his automcvile | plunged overboard “from a ferry. His wife managed to escape when he pushed her through a door. He was decorated lust year for his am- phibious “force accomplishments in the South Paciiic. MEMPHIS, Tenn—The Iederal | Conciliation service has agreed to seek settlement of the grievances of 250,006 telephone workers who are threatening a nation-wide tel- ephone strike, NUERNBERG—/4 Cardinal’s let- ter to Pope Pius XII describing German outrages against the Caih- clic church in occupied Poland was submitted by tre Scviét prosecu- | tion today as evidence against the Moscow, asserted that military attacheé in Ottawa was re- called as soon @s “the above men- tioned activities of certaln mem- kers” of his staff became known to the Russian government, because of the “inadmissibility” of those activ- ities. Y The statement said the Soviet embassador and’ other members of the embassy In Canada had ‘“no connecticn whatsoever with the matter.” Government circles in Canada ac- knowledged that the affair was fraught with serious diplomatic po- tentialities. A brief formal reply to the Soviet accusation was cx- pected scon. “POLITICAL CAPITAL” OTTAWA, Feb. 21--A Canadian spokesman declared today the Rus- The W_;;l;inbion, Merry - Go- Round| - By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON—The leak which sprang the big spy story in Can- ada came when the Soviet ordered home one of ils agents. He had been in Canada for some time, had | come to like Canadians, and was not sympathetic with certain So- viet tacties. He suspected also that his gov- ernment was aware of his changed viewpoint and that this was the reason for his abrupt order to re-| turn. Soviet officials suspected of | straying from the narrow pnthz family. Gifts Wanted “Will you send me a piece of American delegation. & Juneau; Frances Worobec, Juneau; |and the honor of His Holy See, re- The Common Council of Juneau. | zsther Erbland, Juneau; Rex G.|ceive the red hat, the distinctive in special meeting Wednesday eve- | fermann, Douglas; Paul Ecklund,|sign of the Cardinal dienity by .slans were making “political capi- tal” out of the Canadian espionage !case and indicated his Government 22 Nazi leaders on trial for war | crimes. {unteered: ning, passed a resolution authoriz- eSS . 2 'WRECKED YUKON . ing application to the Federal BENEAIH wAvES | Works Agency for an advance plan- (niing loan for a civic recreation {building, in an amount not to ex- SEWARD, Alaska, Feb. 21~—The|ceed $200,000. liner Yukon, which broke in lon Necessary features of such a build- after grounding on rocks in John-|ing, as finally settled upon by Ju- |stone Bay Feb. 4 with the loss of 11! ipeople' has disappeared, visitors to!Ppresentation to the Council are: the scene reported. | Swimming pool for probably three | Only bits of wreckage on the|months use each year. !beach testify that a liner died{ Possibly a rifle range—strongly !Lhere The two portions of the|advocated by Lt. Col. J. P, Williams, vessel remained in sight for many|of the Alaska Territorial Guard. days before plunging beneath the| A 'Teen-Age Club and general waves. recreation room with snack bar. polar bear skin about three-fourths of an inch long?” said Delbert C. Caldwell. “Please send me a pie of ivory about one-half an inch long.” “Please send me a bow-arrow,” said “Sammy.” Stella Miranda vol- “We are learning about Huskies, Totem Poles, Polar Bears, Tundra and about the Umiak.” “Ida Mary” was solicitous: “I hope that you will not get too warm.” Papa Bumaroon, a seal hunter and fur trapper, had just mushed into Manhattan from the home of | neau Weman's Club, sponsors, lor‘ ! Thane; Mrs. J. W. McKinley, Ju- |which is meant that even unto aeau. |death and the shedding of blood Seven women, all housewives, and | you will show yourself courageous five men, now hold in their hands for the exultation of our holy faith, the fate of the accused. |for the peace and outlet of Christ- l Ordering that the jury is not to ian people, and for the augmenta-| be secluded during the present trial, tion of the Holy Roman church. Judge J. W. Kehoe cautioned the In the name of the father and of al panel, not only on conferring|the son and of the holy ghost.” with any persons regarding the| The octogenarian John Cardinal case, but also against reading daily |Glennon of St. Louis was the sece rewspaper accounts of the proceed- ond escorted before the throne. ings. The Cardinals wore purple robes, The remainder of the venire, was |ermine shoulder capes and their excused until 10 o'clock Monday [new scarlet skull caps. nerning, when, the Court advised ST T Ko SN QUOTATIONS the jurors, it is likely that they wi | STOCK i a Queens friend via subway with his family. They were brought here! from 'Nome for their first U. S. It was suggested that, if the A. B. Hall site is finally chosen, pres- ent foundations of that building again be excused till a later date, | tas the Meeks case is expected to NEW YORK, Feb, 21, — Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine sometimes hays heen liquidated fol- lyigiy, by David Irwin, the Arctic| 1owing - thetr cetaun, Shd. s may lexplorer who organized air rescue have influenced the agent’s confes-|ieams for stranded army fliers in e HolIDAv i may be converted. Also, the recrea- tion building now.conceived may be planned for future additions, which consume several days. AR PRISONERS BROUGHT HERE ‘Three prisoners brought here stock today Is 10%, Alleghaney Corporation 7%, American Can 967%, Anaconda 48%, Curtiss-Wright 10%, | . WASHINGTON — President Tru- | {:man's ncmination of Paul A. Por-| |ter, as the new OPA chief, was to- | day confirmed by the Senate. WASHINGTON — Heads of the !two major railroad brotherhoods ' have conferred with President Tru- ! |man on the prospective strike of 1 300,000 railroad workers, Strlkei votes among members of the bro-| therhoods are being counted, and the trend indicates that 99 per-‘ cent of the workers favor a nation- | wide railroad walkout, | . | LANCASTER, Penn. — Lancaster Transit workers voted today to end their 16-day wulkout. Their strike srew into a general AF of L sym- pathy strike call. But and trolley operators ratified an agreement ' would deliver an early reply to Mos- cow's charges that Canada had bedn carrying on “an unbridled anti- Soviet campaign.” The spokesman intimated, how- (Continued on Page Two) FORMER PRINCE FORSAKES THRONE WEDS COMMONER NEW YORK, Feb. 21 - Former Frince Carl Johan of Sweden, and Mrs. Kirsten Wijmark, the woman for whom Re renounced his title and succession rights to the Swed- ish throne, were honeymooning to- sion. This particular agent was for- tunate in having his family with’ nim in Canada. If they had been in Russia they would have been sub-| *ject to retaliation. *Therefore he | surrendered himself to Canadian authorities and revealed one of the most amazing networks of foreign | Alaska. | Eskimo Habitat | Bumaroon also answers to the un<§ Eskimo sounding name of Tom Brown. Juneau will observe Washington’s birthday tomorrow by taking the day off. Stores will be closed, also Federal, Territorial and City offices. {vak 2; and Emouruk, six-months — ;mornin& |English equivalents: Velma, Juckl Housewives should also remember (could include a second floor housing |a combination gym - auditorium- Idance floor. The whole problem is still undér study, but bowling alleys He calls his wife Esther.. The schools closed this afternoon,and a nursery now seem definitely The children are Kamak, 4; ok-iflnd remain so until next Monday/| “‘out.” Before passing on the $200,000 |limit, the Council decided it is the from Wrangell Wednesday in the custody of Chief Deputy Marshal| Flossie Doolin are: Robert E. Tremble, bound over| to the grand jury for forgery, bond | $2,500; Joseph Samuels Jr., bound | over on a charge of asault with| {intent to comrait rape, bond $500; | Tnternational Haryester 91, Jones, faughlin Steel 48%, Kennecott 53%, New Yock Central 30%, Northern Pacific 31, United Cor- poration 6%, U. 8. Steel 88%, Pound $4.03%. Sales today were 1,540,000 shares. Dow, Jones averages today are as industrials rails hetween the union and manage-!day-—as plain Mr. and Mrs. Carl ment which they said provided a J. Bernadotte. 112 cents an hour wage rise. | '{‘he couple was married yesterday |in” the chapel of the Riverside NEW YORK-—-A British broad- | church (Interdenominational). The cast says a h\xtin:y has broken out |Prince, fourth in line for the in the north oi Celebes Island. All|throne, said he and his cornmoner military and civil power has been Lride would spend their honeymoon reized by local troops. The local | “scmewhere in the south.” land Phillip. jand get their orders in early Sat- |absolute tops the City can hope 10 | sara Dora Kuntz, six months sus- | {ollows: 195.62, intrigue in recent history. British decret intelligence worked for weeks in tracking dovn every segment of | information. Special agents were even sent from Washington and Londen. Since then, the Russian has been | in constant custody of the Cana-| dian Mounted Police. His where- abouts are kept a strict secret, and he has been moved frequently from orie place to another. The Canadians want no repetition of the case in which Krivitsky, former high official in the Soviet ' secret service, was found murdered | i (Continued on Page Four) ‘ered with caribou skins. Their booth at the Garden is Broadway's version of an Eskimo urday morning for Sunday. The Alaska Daily Empire will habitat—a packing box throne cov-|publish — as usual. With | them are Dix and Johnny, two of | Irwin’s giant Alaskan Husky dogs.| Well, sir,” sair Bumaroon — he| went to Government school — “I! shopped around for whale skin and ivory before I left Nome, and could |a Staff-Sergean: in the Army Air, /not find any.” Bow and arrow? He doesn't use them. And he has no bear skin. “Yes, we do get pretty warm | here in these furs,” he said. But he figures the furs will be useful when he takes his family to the ELLIOTT R B OBERTSON IS NOW OUT OF ARMY Elliott Robertson, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Robertson, until recently Forces, has arived home after three and one-half years service, the last several months of which he was stationed in Japan, He plans to remain in Juneau, and at present is in his father’s law office. finance without Federal aid. ————.—— WASHINGTON — President Tru- |1t would be prastical to try to abol- ish peacetime conscription through- out the world. R OO { GEORGE R. BETTS HERE l George R. Betts of Hoonah has arrived and is staying at the Hotel { Juneau. — e e — FROM ELFIN COVE Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bringer, resi- ,dents of Elfin Cove, are guests at the Baranof, i man said today he did not believe | | pended sentence on conviction ot“ negleet of children revoked. | e L CULBERTSONS LEAVING | J. Steele Culbertson, Fisheries | | Management Supervisor, and staff | nember of the Fish ahd Wildlife | "| Service for the past 15 years, leaves | jtoday to take over his new posi- tion as Assistant Manager of the Alagka Salmon Industry with W. C.‘ | Arnold in Sea‘tle. i Culbertson who came to Alaska in 1931 will be accompanied by his wife and family. The Culbertsons will fly by Pan American Airlines 1o Seattle, 63.34, utilities 3927. - eee Margaret Shafer, from Seattle, due tomorrow night or Saturday morn- ing. North Sea, from Seattle, due pos- sibly late Monday or Tuesday. Denali scheduled to sail from Se- attle Saturday. Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver February 26. Baranof scheduled to sail from Seattle February 28. Columbia, from the west, sched- uled southbound Saturday. froops there had been considered | among the best and most loyal of ! ony under Dutch command. i WASHINGTON— President Tru-| man expressed belief* today that| Vfroducticn and distribution will hit | ‘ts postwar peak before long if everybody works and eooperates. He told his news conference that lie had hoped last fall that restor- ation of full eivilian production would have been achieved by now. B ~A. R. RAMBERG HERE A. R. Ramberg of Anchorage. is a guest at the Hotel Juneau. Bernadotte is the Swedish Royal Family name. STILL ‘A PRINCE STOCKHOLM, Feb. 21. — The newspaper Aftonbladet said today King Gustaf V probably would re- vort formally to the cabinet coun- cil Priday that Prince Carl Johan had married against the King's wishes and counter to Swedish constitutional law. s Until then, the bridegroom will technically continue as a Swedish Prince. Carl Johan married Mrs. Kirsten Wijmark, a Swedish di- vorcee, in New York yesterday.