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(3 . b A ) THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. L.XVI, NO. 10,220 GUARANTEE CITY COUNCIL AIRS OUTLOOK FOR AIRPORT Liberal Mat?lfig Funds for Alaska in Measure Before Congress Preliminary plans for the propos-| ed Juneau Airport Administration Building, submitted by architects Foss and Malcolm, touched off the brightest round of table talk at last evening meeting of the Juneau Common Council. Saving their throats for their “swan song” on April 5, the present Council took it easy at this next- to-last time it will sit in regular session. Submitted with the airport build- JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1946 PRICE TEN CENTS SENATE LENDS | EARTOBAKER ‘Publisher’s Views on Mal- | fers Perfaining to Body “ Called For i Pursuing its x.-(;;!ly adopted pol- |icy of deferring its regular order of g | business till after presentation of the day's choice tit-bit, Alaska’s ing request from Ketchikan Senator | N. R. Walker that Ketchikan Chrenicle publisher William L. Bak- !er be called to the stand to give his | body.” . | By unanimous consent, the Ser- aa geant-at-Arms was dispatched for 3 | Mr. Baker, but the morning hours Gl JANE — jane Adams — formerly Poni Adams — holds some of 32,861 letters her press agent said came from GI's after | | publisher’s appearance so the { pleasure of hearing his comments was involuntarily deferred. nate this morning heard an open- | | views “on matters pertaining to this | whiled away without the Ketchikan | T0 RUS HOUSE DISINTERS PROGRESSIVE TAX ‘Lower Chamber Reverses Previous Session Stand on Basic Science Law The Basic Science bill (H.B. 39) serupulously scanned for “bugs” and amended, was passed unani- mously by the 21 representatives i present at this morning's session {in the Territorial House. The major amendment substi- | suted “one layman” for the Com- missioner of Health on the pro- posed examining board. T%e Com- | missioner still may serve as one of ! the two medical doctors for whom the bill provides. The amendment-balanced board now consists of two medical doc tors, one doctor of chiropractics, cne osteopath and a layman. MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS MAYOR REPORTS ON CITY FUNDS UPON EEH TRAPS “resent Adfifiistrafion Isi Going Out with Health- ier Bank Balance Mayor Ernest Parsons last night resented to the City Council an stimated bank balance as of Aarch 31, 1946 showing a net gain f more than $13,000 over when his dministration go——despite the jouncilman Harry Lea that this dministration has spent $65,000 aore than any in Juneau’s previous alstory. Figures presented by City Clerk 3, L. Popejoy, at the Mayor’s re- uest are: Punhds on hand as of February 28, -1946—$22,430.91. Funds in bank at present—$13,- Estimated 1946—$7,790. took office a year contention payroll for March, of i3 | I | SNOWY WEATHER IOh’ Women! RAISES HAVOC IN e Here's a Tip; o CITY LAST NIGHT i i The heavy, decidedly wet snow during the past 20 hours ending at | noon today, certainly raised havoc jwith transmission power lines, and 16— caused short circuits and complete i { ATLANTIC CITY, March One way for American housewives | Plackouts ak: s for the 40 roent ‘1 In several parts of the city last .to ma up for the percent cut | yiont power ott sertyhin: e [in wheat and 20 in fats for thelevening and strests were blanked. starving peoples overseas, is to add| At 2 o'clock this morning, power 1 veast to many of their home-cooked 0N Gastineau Channel went com- ipletely off and remained so for t f | y urs, his fore. nts showing that this|T€ATIY two hours. Again thi: brimenta hnowing: that . ¢ h!m:nn at 9:15 o'clock, power went off addition of yeasts i8 both palatable and one of the greatest improve- 5 ove| At 3 o'clock this morning, Her- mantd possible « in-~mutritipn Were Emnn Porter, fire alarm expert, said ¥ 9 Experi= | onr vouits: B : mental "biology by Barnett Sure,\”"“‘ circuits had been knocked out ihead of the Department of Agricul-! = |ture Chemistty cf the University of ‘gnl::feclllr}:l' | Arkansac. I | He showed by animal feeding {that yeasts are one of the finest and remained so until 10 o'clock. alarm clocks were sev- consequently many workers were ilate on their jobs and when the fourth went off, hej eral hours behind this morning and ing plans were letters from all gov- | ernment agencies which will occupy quarters in it, as well as from the| three airlines which have indicated R g 1o oot oo oos NON-ALLOPATHIC she appealed for aid in choosing a new name. Additienal amendments to clarify Popejoy stated that not yet de- |fources of protein, and furnish bet- | Getting down to the daily cal- ’erdur, the Senate this afternoon completed the full reading of lengthy Senate Bill 1, the Green-Shattuck | Workmen’s Compensation Act. The | measure was read without interrup- ' osited funds received in the last ew days for last-half taxes should oring the bank balance at the end of this month up to an estimated 311,664, which would not include the bill's wording and make one vear's immediately previous legal practice in the Territory an exemp- tion from board examinations were adopted. This latter ruling the “back door clause” force applicants iquor tax refunds expected to be A T et ter proteins than those normallyi present in the wheat that Ameri-| |cans are asked to give up. 'rhe! 1 | ers yeast, the latts i er a byproduct of{ | breweries. POTSDAM -~ PACTNOW | ~ GIVEN OUT ‘Churchill, in Plea fo So- viets, Tellsof Agreement on Dardanelles - NEW YORK, March 16 —Winston Churchill called upon the Soviet |Union last night to insure contin- {uance of war-born sympathy of the | English-speaking world for the Rus- slan people by submitting its inter- national problems to the United Na- tions Security Council. { “It the Soviet government does not take advantage of this (Anglo- American) sentiment,” he said, If, jon the contrary, they discourage it, ior they chill it, the responzihility !will be entirely theirs.” The doughty wartime leader of Great Britain said Russla’s failure |to evacuate Iran should be thrash- ed out in the council's forthcoming New York Meeting, and he warned |tion with the understanding that |amendments be withheld till after | DOW holding licenses to heal in the |a Senatt Committee of the Whole ! Territory who have not yet arrived hearing to be held on the bill next|here to take basic sciences exam- Menday morning. The bill was con- | ‘nations. It does not apply to vet- tinuéd in second reading so that,|erans whose service interrupted | following the Whole Committee ses- | their practice. . {sion, it may be thrown open to| Other Bills Passed {amendment. The public hearing on| Also passed this morning were: {the bill was asked by author Joe, HB. 17, authorizing city coun- veen, at the request of other mem- | cils to provide for garbage disposa’ eceived this month from the Ter- { i He said that these yeasts can be; itorial Treasurer. | On the other hand, when ““\'u.&s‘d readily to enrich corn bread,| yresent Mayor and Council took |ice: meat dishes, soups, CSP"‘:‘""" fice last April, they faced a bank | thick soups and gravies, katchup., , (chili, tomata juice, peanut butter, verdraft of $1,734.02. sl figures sub- |chocolate milk, malted milk, also in| nifted by the Clerk, but pol.n!cd‘h"e“d‘ muffins and clam chowder.! wt by Councilman Ed Nielsen 1| TR, FONAM WEE e fact that the City has an out. |18Vrs of the dishes | |yeasts used for this purpose are |both the ordinary sort and brew-| SEATTLE, March 16.—The steam- er Alaska will not sail today, mei Alaska Steamship Company said st night, due to a demand by the deck crew for changes in living aid not to change| gy, jers, The Sailprs Union of, the | Pacific has asserted present quarters | bers of the body. | systems, zoning and planning com- tanding contract for sidewalk in-| tare far too removed from crew { washrooms. The sailing was post- ' | The Senate took cnly two votes this morning: On recess until 2 :mmtam, 18-2; the emergency i clause stricken. jo'clock this afterncon, which car-! H.B. 31, which would up the sal- R ey tallation, work on which will nm%(lOls pA( SERVES referred to the War Shipping Ad-( poned indefinitely and the dispute | |ried, and on a motion to suspend | aries-of election judges and clerk: the rules by Senator Don Carlos! tv $156 per diem, unanimously, witk | Brownell, which lost, 3 to 11. | emergency. s Object of the Brownell motion was | Trap Tax Up Again o require that any bills referred to | The Fish Trap bill, passed by the enate committee on or before the | House but: blocked in the Senatc ' fifteenth day, must be reported back | 1ast year, reappeared today entitlec to the floor on or before the twenty- | HB. 52, authored by the Commit- fifth day. Brownell stated he wish- | tee on Fisherles Fish and Game ed to avold any measures being left | The bill sets the following ‘flxi se cummfged/w‘iflmcf | NO'"(E OFRE‘IURN ; 0" BARANOF ISlE‘cro Political Action Committee | o " iserved notice today that it was re- Sdn';;'*v Alfls“rSM;‘hT::'“'M“',turning to the political wars by | an rs. Robcf! i e y nx)t;lxlaunchjxxg a campaign fo nominate Irs. De Tray's brother, Hubert|,.; eject Congressional candidates ministration at San Francisco. e — TROLLER BURNS; CREW IS SAFE KETCHIKAN, Alaska, March 16. ~The Coast Guard cutter Alder wes | en route here today with Henry i l | { { that an early and great test for the UNO would come from Russian pressure against Turkey over the Dardanelles. (Washington sources said last night that Iran already had inform- ed the United States that it wou.. ask UNO to reopen the Iran- Russian situation at tke E-_arity Council meeting which opens here March 25.) Gliarantee Offered Churchill made the first public disclosure that America and Great Britain had offered a at the Pctsdam conference “a joint guar- ‘antee of thé complete freedom of the (Dardanelles) Straits in peace and war, whether for merchant ships or ships of war.” “To this guarantee Turkey would gladly have subscribed,” he con- tinued, “but we were told that was not enough. Russia must have a fortress inside the Straits from which she could dominate Con- American, Pacific Northern and| Alaska Airlines. All stated their approval of the preliminary draw-{ HEALING (oNTRol ings, though some suggested minor revisions to be worked into the iy BILL IS PASSED Also submitted with the drawings, which call for a three story struc- | H H < ture, was the Foss and Malcolm bill | BaSI( S( ience Mea)ure covering the portion of the plan-| R ning job so far completed—approx- Taken Up by House tely one-third—$1,933.33. Pay- 1 mt of the bill was authorized. I-abor BI" Passes ’ What About Funds? { During the discussion, the mat-| Simultaneous review of both ter of funds for final construction HB, 23, the non-allopathic heal- afain came up. Architect Harold ing control bill, and HB 39, the B. Foss presented a letter to him pasic science bill, high-lighted by ym E. L. Bartlett, Alaska’s Dele-| testimony from an MD. and a in Congress. Replylng to a chiropractor, prompted passage of query as to what Federal match- the former and top calendar billing ing funds are available for such a of the latter measure at yesterday's purpose, Bartlett replied “not a yfternoon session in the Territor: dime, now,” except the Federal j.| House. Works Agency advance planning| Tpe House Committee of the loans. Planning of the structure|wpole heard Dr. G. Lee Stagg, is now going forward under such'getchikan physician, expand pre- an FWA advance. | The Delegate ,added, however, that a bill is now before a Con- gressional conference committee which makes available Federal funds for airport facilities. Grants to territories and possessions were left out of the original Senate ver- sion of the measure—SR. 2—but were tossed in by the House of Rep- (Continued on Page Two, The Washingion By DREW PEARSON (Note — Today, Drew Pearson awards the Brass Ring, good for one free ride on the Washing- ton Merry-Go-Round to ex-Gov- emor O. Max Gardner of North Carolina.) WASHINGTON—There has been 80 much Senate furore over Presi- t Truman’s Pauleyesque ap- peintments that one official quietly took the oath the other day almost | unnoticed. He is O. Max Gard- | ner, ex-Governor of North Carolina, now Under Secretary of the Trea- sury, an early planner of the New | vious pro-basic science act testi- nanging fire on the Senate calendar mony given earlier this week Dby lat the end of this special session— Commission of Health Dr. C. Eal!iag happened at the last regular ses- Albrecht to include critizsm of | gion, {H.B. 23. | The Senate adopted the report of | Dr Stige said the uon-allopathic |the Joint Committee on Rules of pill was unnecessary inasmuch as the Senate and House that next lits provisions are coversd in the Monday, the fifteenth day be estab- sasie science law and they it seeks |lished as the deadline for intro- {tn govern all b.anches of medical | duction of bills and that the fol- | practice except major surgery lowing Saturday, the twentieth day, | Scoring unqualified drugless healers | be the deadline for interchange of ke cited the harm aliegedly done |measures between the two houses; i»wo of his patients oy d,~ug1955;without rule suspension in each | bealere un Ketchikan. case. Doelker Tes'ifi s Messages receivea from Governor | G. A. Doelker, chiropractor, on the nature of House Joint Resolution { other side of the guestion, directed No. 1, to pay legislative salaries | at the Basic Science Act, which hfithe quarter-million dollar tubercu- denounced as “hypocritical, illogi- | losis control appropriation. cal, reactionary, unconstitutional, | 2 | monopolistic, biased and unAmeri-| Eight House-passed bills were re- can.” | ceived from that body. The eight, Establishment of a Basic Scienc-:tflpped by the House version of the les examining board would foster|Veterans Loan-Bonus Act — with |“a medical dictatorship” to force |their Senate committee reference— medical heéaling on the public, Dr.|are: | Doelker continued. e f | He cited an instance in which, he fairs and Finance; H.J.M. 1, peti- said, the supreme court of the | tioning Congress for 75 per cent civic state of Washington (which passed | public works grants-in-aid, to Muni- a basic science law in 1927) found|CiPal Affairs; HB. 1, liberalizing the American Medical Association|Unemployment Compensation bene- guilty of violating anti-trust 1”512?:';:?;\:;.1“;; &izfllgfi: 'P;Ilr;arg in discriminating against non-med- | dlvéch Blecting of asavors, Jhatclary i Yesterday's second witness, DI.| Ernest Gruening announced his sig- | some pointed verbal flame-throwing |and expenses, and Senate Bill 3,/ | HB. 44, Vets Act, to Veterans Af- | irates: $200 for the first trap, an additional $100 for each succeed- |ing trap up to the twentieth; $1,- | 300 each for the twenty-first to the | thirtieth; $1,400 each for the thirty- | first through the fortieth; $1,500 each for the forty-first through the fiftleth; and $1,600 each for any {‘additional traps. In addition the | bill calls for a tax of $2 for each | 1,000 fish caught in excess of 100,- 1 000 fish during the taxable year in tall traps owned or operated by the same person, firm or corporation. New Bills Also new bills today were: Liguor Closing Hours | H.B. 51, by Peterson and Han- ‘iord‘ setting the following hours ior holders of liquor licenses: Mon- { day to Friday, 10 a.m. to midnight; | Saturdays, legal holidays other than | licensees shall remain closed from 2 a.m. Sunday until 10 a.m. the fol- % lowing Monday. The bill is similar to H.B. 36, previously introduced by Peterson and Hanford, except| that it adds a section providlngl penalties for minors who falsify their ages. The bill was referred | to the Health committee. H.B. 53, by Huntley (by reques!),‘ to regulate grading, inspection and labeling of potatoes; to the Agri- culture Committee. ——— - —— Yager, were safe here today after heir troller piled on the rocks at the southern end of Baranof Island ast Saturday. 'They were rescued “hursday afternoon by the crew of he steamship North Sea, little the worse from exposure. -~ ‘ndicments in Jap War Crime Cases Postponed TOKYO, March 16—The return of indictments against Japan's top war criminal suspects, once promis- ed by Alliled headquarters for mid-March, has been postponed to | Sunday, 10 a.m. to 2 a.m.; and all {the end of the month by the delay/cense tb wed. in arrival of come international military tribunal members and counsel. Joseph B. Keenan, chief of coun- sel for the international prosecution section, announced he would leave by plane tomorrow for China to review documents, interview wit- nesses and obtain evidence. P NATIVE WOMAN PASSES AWAY TODAY Mrs. Annie Anderson, 90-year old native woman, died early this morning at St. Ann’s Hespital, She AGED IR <o Aninkand sapminces |y ical healers in basic science ex- @ ot o v ! aminations e 109.38 wi:hc:!:‘elem:lsr l:g:‘ To neutralize the startling pic- istration. When he arrived, he {ures drawn by Dr. Stagg of the re- |and Municipal Affairs; H.B. 18, in- |creasing wolf and coyote bounties, | Fisheries and Game; H.B, 20, Health {Department Act penalty -and sav- (TB Control Bill First fo Be son, residing in Juneau. { ]i,s survived by a son, Henry Ander- | 1 R Melliena and Donald Roberts of ffavorkie ta.JAUCE e { the troller Juneau which burned at And PAC had authority from the ! CIO Executive Board to register and | Ratz Harbor after the gasoline line ifioek voluntary contributicns of s“a o B g |least $1 from each of the approxi- | v ¥ o, Imately 6,000,000 CIO members for; “F&: its expenses. A similar campaign | jamong 5,000,000 CIO workers in the 11944 elections brought less than 1 $600,000. Both men are from A STEAMER MOVEMENTS s Alaska not sailing from Seattle 4 ‘today, indefinitely postponed. io : | Tongass scheduled to sail from {Seattle today. - - Juneau Man i Columbia, from west, southbound, st 1 SEATTLE, March 16—Homer C.|scheduled to arrive at 4 o'clock this !Millard, of Juneau, Alaska, and jafternoon. { Florer.ce V. Dalamater, of Detroft, | North Sea, from Sitka, Mich., have applied here for a li- |bound, scheduled to arrive at o'clock tonight. | Baranof, from west, southbound lubuut 7 o'clock Sunday morning. south- 1 ' JUDGES, CLERKS ARE ! Al;:nan, tron; M;ventil zsgheduled sout ¥ ¢ NAMED FOR ELECTIQN |ouenvoue 2boyt Joreh | Judges and clerks for the City| LOGAN STEPETIN DIES {clection on April 2 and the Terri- | torial primaries on April 30, were| Logan Stepetin of Douglas died named by the City Council as fol- | Thursday afternoon at the Gov- | lows: i ernment Hospital at the age of 50 ! Precinct No. 1—Judges, Mrs. Wil- | years. He was born October 16, 1895, liam Byington, Mrs. Edwin Sutton,iond was a member of the Russian {Mrs Charles E. Rice Tierks, The | Orthodox Church. i Rev. W. Robert Webb und the Rev.| The deceased is survived by a Robert Treat. daughter, Hilda James, who is at Precinct’ No . 2-—Judges Mrs. | present at Point Bishop, where at- ! George B. Rice, Mrs. E. L. Hunter, | tempts are being made to notify {sprang a leak as the boat bucked | w d i .Se "l ! Princess Norah scheduled to sall e n a e ]from Vancouver March 19, | exactly the opposite of Ed Pauley. He opened a law office, but sults of Ketchikan, Dr. non-allopathic law would keep un- E ficd” healing in| e S iha | Ings clauses, Public Health; H.B. 38, | pinball and slot machine licensing, | Taxation. \Passed, Signed The remains are at the Charles|Mrs. Thomas Parke. Clerks, Mrs.|ber of the death of her father. An- W. Carter- Mortuary, pending run-IHowurd Simmons, Mrs. Harold | other daughter lives in the Aleu- eral arrangements. Smith. tians. Precinct No. 3—Judges, Mrs. Gud- | mund Jensen, Mrs. Fanny Robin- ———— ROBERT GOGLE HERE The remains are at the Charles W. Carter Mortuary, pending fun- simultan he resigned f e me“ll)e enu::{m I:nn:nnglmCon n;?_l desirables from obtaining licenses . Politics and a personal law | PY putting applicants through tests practice, he felt, did not mix 1¢ | @s stiff as anv provided for in the H 3 " Lo | Basic Science Act. Ed Pauley had done the same, no Bill Is Passed important voice would haye been| him in th .| He concluded by saying that as it “::&r:gl}:emzsme Ao w:sh?:;:obs | stands H.B. 39 is a weapon for the | Two more Senate Bills, both re- | quest measures introduced by Shat- tuck, were put put before that body (this morning: S.B. 26, providing for |a mobile marine clinic for the De- |partment of Healtid (o replace the | “Hygiene”; S.B. 27, making a sup- Curtain-raiser Senate bill 8, the| { tuberculosis control measure and | first bill to pass both legislative | chambers in the current extraor- dinary session, was enroute to Sec- ‘retary of Alaska Lew Williams to- ! day after returning to the Terri- Robert Gogle, of Anchorage, is a guest at the Gastineau Hotel. S SITKA MAN HERE Victor R. Hanlon, Sitka, arrived here yesterday. He is st.ying at the Gastineau. eral arrangements. .- ison, Mrs. Albert Carlson. Clerks, The Rev. Walter Soboleff, Grant Baldwin, INFORMATION WANTED ' — e i An urgent request has been re- [eeeeesovecee -zcelved by Brigadier C. Q. Taylor, . L3 Balvation Army, to locate Ole Vik- /e WEATHER REPORT ¢ |tor Gunnorskog. His last known | | i | stantinople. Out Of Harmony this is not to keep the | Straits open but to give power ol iclosing them to a single nation. {This is out of harmony with the i principle urged by the United Ctates representatives of the freedom of {the great waterways of Europe, the {Danube, the Rhine and other rivers which run through so many differ- ent countries. l “At any rate, there was the of- fer, and I have no doubt it s {still open, and if Boviet Russia still persists in putting pressure on Tur- key, the matter must in the fist instance be pronounced upon the {United Nations Security council. 1 Great Test “Thus early will come a very igreat test for the world organiza- iton on which so many, indeed I 'might say all, our hopes are found- |ed.” ' Churchill's speech climaxed a | public reception that included a iC- 'mile trip through the city in an open car during a drizzling rein, and an official welcoma by Mayur Willilam O'Dwyer at City Hall, where he received the city’ gold medal and distinguished serviee certificate. SCOUTING HEADS MAKE PLANS FOR SUMMER CAMPING Scoutmasters and members of Troop Committees from Juneau and Douglas met last evening to view the new Training Film and to dis- cluss problems of their respective units. Pllms weie shown by the courtesy of Harry Sperling, S2nior “But, Max Gardner, then Governor of North Carolina, had come to know Pranklin D. Roosevelt, then Gov- ernor of New York. And, on July 82, 1932, just after Roosevelt's nom- ination, Gardner wrote him a let- ter suggesting the New Deal and setting down with amazing fore- ht the left-of-center policy which Roosevelt later followed. GARDNER DEVISES NEW DEAL “It is my opinion,” Gardner wrote FDR, “that the American people are on the move, and I firm- ly believe that your liberalism, if medical profession to use for “the s < . {plemental appropriation o the De- annihilation of drugless healers. ] | partment of Health for administra- .B. e , X | amendments. The emergency clause | were referred to the Health Com- a'co was adopted to permit im-}mmee, then to Finance. mediate biockage of "undwrables."‘ ‘When the Senaté convened again Earlier the House unanimously |this afternoon, at 2 o'clock, a special | passed H.B. 30, the Hope-Hennings order of business was to be ques- minimum hour and wage bill. The | tioning of M. P. Mullaney, Tax | bill provides a 40-hour week :;xid‘Commmwner nominee, as to his |a basic hourly scale of one dollar |qualifications for the office. and repeals the present minimum | - wage scale for women. TURNED TO FEDERALS Speaker Jesse Lander signed and | sent Senate-wards th: House ver-| Clarence Manning, charged with sion of the veterans’ i1 (H.B. 44) |alleged theft, has been turned over torial House with the Governor's signature late yesterday. OLOFSON IN TOWN - The bill, which calls for $250,000' John Olofson of the Flshcrmnn's‘; . to fight “the white scourge,” was*umon has arrived in Juneau from: e passed unanimously by both Houses. | Ketchikan. He is stopping at the ! . i .- — ! Gastineau during his uisit here. /e IN POLICE COURT i R e 4 | WOOLF FROM SEATTLE I Fines or jail sentences have been| G. Woolf of the Fruit and Trade!e given to the following persons ar-| Association in Seattle is a guest at| e raigned before Judge William Holz- —— .- - ° (U. 8, WEATHER BUREAU) Temperatures for 34-Hour Periad Ending 6:30 o'Clock This Morning e o o In Juneau—Maximum, 37; minimum, 32. At Afrport—Maximum, 37; minimum, 32. WEATHER FORECAST (Junesu and Vielnity) e address was Juneau in 1938. {Scout Planning Committee Chair e | Anyone knowing of the presennman of the Alaska Council. o jlocation of this man, are asked to [ & Harold Smith, Cam Activ- o ket in touch with Brigadier Tay-|ijjeq Chairman of thel:.ln (glmnnu :}l‘"' telephane ”5'- |Channel, was in charge of the G ERNN By oI 5 ‘meeting. Pl 2 smma .| IN FEDERAL COURT menting . ADgLIE e IR 'camp at Eagle River were discuss- ®| In the case of the U. 8. vs. Rich- o4 ‘Members of the Gastineau Dis- ® (ard McRoberts, charged with draft ¢riet Camping and Activitics Com- e evasion, Judge J. W. Kehoe this mittee will meet soon and announce meimer in City Court: ‘ Edwin E. Luoto, charged with, being drunk, $25; Howard P. Fulory, | drunkenness, $25; Eva Meisenzhal drunk and disorderly, $25; Linda! | the Gastineau. L ———————— HUGH RAMSDELL HERE Hugh Ramsdell of Ketchikan 15 a ‘guest at the Barancf. — e - - e for sentencing at 2 p.m. Monday. -' Other matters disposed of in the session were: Edwin A. Peyton vs. Mary Irene Peyton, divorce grant- ed; petition from Billy Howard e Mostly cloudy with ocea- | ® sional light snow but with | ® some sunshine this afternoon e # and Sunday. Lowest temper- Sgi. Lewis A. Brubaker nmved:' ature tonight about thirty Kelly for change of name to Billy o far enough, is bound to e and HB. 21, whick Welle, drunk and disorderly, $25; degrees. Howard Carlson ordered granted; e | morning in Federal Court set tlme‘dewm of the camp. Scouters pres- ent at last night's meetiny were: Arne Shudshift, Thomas Cashen, H. E. Smith, Harold Zenger, L. J. Jewett, Frank Hungerford, Herbert Mercer, Donald Hungerford, C. L. Wingerson, Jack Jones, Dr. Van Sandt, D. W. Stephenson, FHarry have a stabiiizing effect in its ap- —_ (c’outimml on Page Four) conenirates | to the Federal authorities following arraignment before Judge Holz- heimer in Municipal Court, tax collection in the hands of the Tax Commissioner. Rudolph Isler, drunkenners, 10 days in Juneau yesterday from Anchor- ' . in jail; Ray Perkins, drunk and dis- 'eauage and is stopping at the Bar- e orderly, 15 days in jail. anof Hotel, . Helen J. Hulberg vs. John E. Hul- nerg, divorce granted. Sperling, Harold Gribble and Del- . . . . . bert R. Hanks. JA NOW REVEALED