The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 31, 1946, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS — PRICE TEN CENTS %:—## ¥ STALIN TURNS/REDS HAMPER ANTHRACITE 'PRESIDENT & | BARB AT SENATE | IN ALASKA FOUND | ‘ for 00iNG bury, BY F. HewTzieman SET TO CLOSE IF MEN STAGE i Trealment of Nominees— , on Prospective Indus- e ‘ Health Given as Reason | Hard Coal Pmpemes ors His Strike-Draft WASHINGTON, May 31—Presi-' Numerous prospective industrial Guard If Maritime | economit advisory council. ester B. Frank Heintzleman, just, . Re(OTd VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,285 s : MR .- WL 5 b S RVRSRIRDRG G\ R SR A : ekt iIRUMAN TOSSES | SPURRED INTEREST | JUNE 11 DATE PLANS ACTION DOWN 2ndBID U. S. MISSION MINERSNOW INSISTS ON | ROM TRUMAN'N NO. KOREA ON STRI KE LABOR BllliPresident Complains of Regional Forester Reports}HAllBUT AREA.BIG WAI_KOUI e ;Pau|ey Party Under Iighf!Sofl Coal Mines Reopen as;Chief Exech?ve Still Fav-% Council Nof Lined Up | rial Developments | Early Closure Makes 19463w“| Use Nav—y,WSA,CoasI for Refusing Invitation | Soviet Restrictions- | | | OTON, May 31—pres-! rospee | Shortest Season | fo White House | Unable fo At " | Close-75,000 Qut | Legislation [0 g Blving txoubie Jaiag b " art]wors std, tocay 5y Rogtoaal Fove| Strike Called (v e sssoourms pamst) | { WASHINGTON, May 31—Breth | e iont of ‘what e, i ater being In-the pacifs Northe [od I Jumetu by, both ‘whe | WASHINGTON, May S1—Press WASHINGTON, May 31.—Presi- n y jons Commission, seeking to| The nation’s e ?:3;;'1”1111;1;:;1“1:{“0;::5;(‘1 l;f”fl:si-g:tr:rlr)nme if the Russians romgovcd miners went on strike today as;wholeheartedly in favor of the em- ed. the difficulty of getting the west since the first part of May. [and Wildlife office and the U. S :‘::." e\E"““r:xI:nn?'Tn ':‘d;y :Iv::r':‘(: Washington about 30 days ago, but |machinery from North Korea, is the vanguard of the 400,000 strik-|ergency striker-draft legislation he ;right :0!} OF | JRNE V0 /RO the| on his arrival in the South, Mr. Customs Service stating that the k‘fl,p “‘z smp{ runnln!poln the Sl osolined Hecause His doctors |operating under such tight Te- ing soft coal miners began return- nas‘nsked of Congress. ,klndlo ueatmen;}mme nominations Heintzleman represented the Ju- :eason for halibut fishing _m Areas bshicBhis n;tioxawlde et advised him against a long jour- |strictions in the Soviet occupa-ling to’ work under an agreement; His proposal to induct men who 1BCEINS before the Senate and) inimeau Ohamber of Commerce at thejOne and Two, extending from Oape| UL " U oo oty "“’“d i ltion zone that Edwin W. Pauley,!reached Wednesday with the gov- strike against the government, the Congress. | meeting of the Pacific Nom‘wes[‘fllanm. Oregon, to Cape Spencer, am"nny A ongshoremen an ney. At a news conference, Mr. Tru- man said that he asked Stalin to make a sccial visit here while the /Paris conference of Foreign Min- | isters was in progress. The confer- ence ended two weeks ago. |reparations ' chicf, has protested. | Pauley’s assistant, Dr. Ernest L. IKlein, disclosed the protest today land presented this version of the situation: ? Col. Gen. I. M. Chistiakov, Rus- |sian military commander, has bar- { ernment. Union sources described the | strike in the anthracite fields as 100 percent effective. “ At Hazelton, Pa., a union spokes- |man said “there are no collieries |in the anthracite field working.” | It was his second invitation to|red the 10-member commission from|He said all anthracite districts had Stalin to visit Washington, the President said. The first was made the time of the Potsdam confer- ence last summer and refused by Stalin for the same reasons of health. Asked whether he had any plans for seeing Stalin elsewhere, Mr. Tru- man replied he had no immediate plans. A newsman asked whether this the !two of five industrial areas in- commission had selected for | spection. A fiter plant has been closed to the mission, on grounds that it housed Soviet troops. The mission photographer has been forbidden to take photographs ‘on official trips, thus rendering |difficult the substantiation of any levidence the mission finds. | received notices from UMW head- cuarters in Washington *not to | work until the contract is signed |and they get further notice to re- turn to work.” The strike became | effective at 12:01 a.m. at expiration of the miners’ contract with the | operators. Negotiations between cperators |and UMW representatives were jscheduled to be resumed today with ca:h;xol:eig;f:uzsofillzsfis pgr li:’:::’g? reports that UMW President John j o | Lewis would join the confer- ;’c“"“‘ui“‘:{eg‘;“iz‘g‘ztgzr"'e 3“55’“"5"e11ces. Both groups of miners are mus ; 3 | members of the AFL-UMW, | The reason given for forbidding| "y o qay's negotiating session in ture, g | . i the mission entry to one important i Mr. Truman said however, that ;... i1 area was that a large;Ncw Ym,lf ended in ffll.lur-e. ‘ was significant since the answer could mean that negotiations were under way for a Truman-Stalin conference, sometime in the fu- The President offered this com-|Trade Association held in Victoria, Alaska, will close at midnight, on ment when a reporter noted that!p ¢, The meeting was a two-day Tuesday, June 11. i three months have passed since he affair and the group attending rep-| The closing was announced by H. was authorized to name a lhree-‘,.f.semed all the principal commun- A. Dunlop, Director of Investiga-| man advisory council under terms,jties of British Columbia, Wash-|tion for the International Fisheries, jof an act designed to stimulate em-!ington, Oregon, Idaho and Western|Commission, which regulates the ployment. Montana. At the request of the|commercial taking of halibut. Wat- Mr. Truman said he was having juneau Chamber, Heintzleman ad- ers from Cape Spencer to Cape! |the same sort of difficulty in find-|gressed the meeting on the subjgctlsagnk. comprising Areas Three and ing someone to be Undersecretaryof the desirability of an auto-ferry Four, will remain open. The clos- lof the Navy. 'and passenger service along the In-|ure order is based upon an esti- Another difficulty, the President gije passage from Seattle, Van- mate of the date by which the com-. told another reporter, is in get-'couver and Prince Rupert, B. C.|bined quota for the two areas, | President told reporters, has been | erossly misrepresented and misun- derstood. It was not intended as a provi- sion to draft labor, he said but to |draft citizens in an emergency. (Already, the Senate has knocked jout the striker-draft section of the iemergency legislation Mr. Truman usked last Saturday. The bill came under fresh Senate attack today.) Even a sheriff, the President re- ! marked, can deputize any citizen to enforce the law. He merely wanted authority to | deputize experienced men to work for the industries seized ,by the government, Mr. Trpman explained. The President's assertion at his news conference came after he had declined to comment on a state- ment by A. F. Whitney, President of the Brotherhood of Trainmen, that he had signed his political death warrant in forcing an end to the railroad strike. of ( ting Senate acceptance of some ap-lserving Ketchikan, Wrangell, Peters- 24500000 pounds of halibut will! pointments. Iburg and Juneau, and connecting be taken. Fishing for halibut com- The President said he hoped to!ywith the “Chilkat Gateway” at menced on May 1. ¢ appoint an Undersecretary of the maines to serva the Interior of/ Dunlop added that the June 11 Navy shortly. He gave no clue a5 alaska and Whitehorse. |closure makes this the shortest sea- to whom he had in minc. i ; son on record for the areas affect- Edwin W. Pauley, California oil-| Ceming To Alaska ed. Fish and Wildlife Regional man, asked Mr. Truman to with-| Much of the remainder of Mr. pirector for Alaska, Frank W. Hy- draw his nomination for the Navy Heintzleman's stay in the North-/pes —confirmed that statement. after a bitter fight in the Senate WeSt Was spent in discussion of In- Hynes listed these closing dates for Naval committee. ;dustrial enterprises in Alaska with Area Two during the past four| N RS +firms showing interest. The “tre- years: 1942, June 29 at midnight; 'mendous shortage of lumber for 1943 June 20; 1944, July 9; 1v4d,! | The President told his news con- | forence he would use the Navy, the War Shipping Administration, the Coast Guard—and the Army ag well—if necessary. At the same time Mr, Truman said the labor controversy in the maritime field looks very dark. The Administration, he added, is making all necessary preparations to keep the ships going and noth- mg will be left undone. In dealing with the situation, the President said at another point, he will go just as far as present laws allow, He added that .the emergency legislation he has asked of Con- gress would go very far in facilii- tating operation of the ships. The seven maritime unions threatening a strike June 15 have snnounced united wage increase demands ranging from 22 to 35 cents an hour, A s n for the ‘operators his reference to no plans in the g i i s mobilization of Soviet troops is mmediate future did not MEAN|yncer way there. ‘ that there was a plan in the works. | SRR - ANe The subject came up at Mr. Tru-| Pe was asked whether he had any | | plans to see the Russian Chief of AROUND woRlD State. | | Mr. Truman then was asked whe- Io WA R D E A D | { ther he was ready to make public his correspondence with Stalin con- | cerning a request for Russian co- operation in a world food pmgx'nm= Stalin turned down the President’s | plea, explaining it came too late in | (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) America’s war dead were honored | around the world yesterday with| flowers, taps and rifle salutes. ! 3-WAY (RASH OCCURS HERE ~ EARLY TODA A three-way crash involving a Itruck, a taxi and a private auto Seized by the government greatly !Fere this morning resulted in no, injuries to occupants of the various vehicles, but in some to the truck, considerable damage He was asked whether damage | |zeen a report that Whitney had the in Southeast Alaska,” he stated. ing is only one day later than last Hynes elaborated, the cur- | transeript of one of the Presidential \ ou"lmmlmm of the firms with which he year, | strike conferences. He replied t,hnv.‘ A L 'hnd dealings has alieady gone )nm,nm' season is -much shorter due {American ’ Asiatic Export Co. Its twe of more weeks earlier. | saying that the Senate’s elimination De- Alaska subsidiary is known as the of the revision permitting the; HEADQUARTERS, Alaskan |drafting of strikers in industries partment, May 31.—Contracts for Alaska-Asiatic Lumbter Co. The ering the catches landed during the construction at Fort Rlchardson‘w"ngell mill ' has keen cutting fiyst two weeks of the current sea- weakened the pending emergency and Ladd Field totaliing $23,492,000 about 25000 feet, b. m. of lumber son gave indication of the early thave beens negotiated and are now per day. The new owners are ex- closing, as approximately two-thirds awalting the final' approval of the panding its capacity to 90,000 f. b.'of the quota had already been :whecher he planned to sign the!Undersecretary of War, a spokes- m. per day — the same Size as tht janded then. The heavy landings A report released previously, cov- | labor legislation. | But the President declined to say is attributed to the vastly increas- housing is leading many lumber'jyne 12. H pokesma he had BIG CONSI UCTION {companies to consider establishing Although the 1946 scheduled clos-' said that they “go far beyond any- thing asked before.” | For all longshoremen, 3 3 an 22 cents for those now A month, 27 cents for those earning $140 to $175, and 35 cents for. those making more than $175. The demands were. announced in a statement by Joseph Curran and Harry Bridges as co-chairmen of a “committee for maritime unity." The committee is negotiating with 'the shipowners under govern- “he d@id not read Mr. Whitney's Ga i Wrangell and purchased- thie. Jumber {6 the fact.that the opening daté | statement. o § L aEs, { mill there. Primarily a lumber- this year was much delayed. Pre- ! Mr. Truman was emphatic in ‘exporting firm, that company is the yiously the season has commenced | labor-opposed Case bill setting up man for Brig. Gen. Harry A. John-!Juneau Lumber Mills. to the taxi and almost complete PP g up K ' ment auspices. view of other Soviet commitments. Led by President Truman, Mem- ¥ e If any such correspondence is ‘orm services were conducted de,?;;“:';fie:’t zzzupr::;t;tatuk::'in-’ given out, Mr. Truman said, it through most of the day in Arlmg-;mflsecmm of West Tenth and “E” would be released by the State De- ton National Cemetery, where he-s!reets 5t 10:38. 6'clock, - ATha truck i partment. {the unknown soldier and 70,000 " oo by the R. J. Sommers Con- | a permanent mediation procedure for dealing with threatened strikes. .. son, commanding the Alaskan De-. pour or five other concerns, ed numbers of boats fishing the partment during the temporary ab-igeintzleman said, now either have close-in areas One and Two. | sence of Lt. Gen Delos C. EmMmons, imen in Southeast Alaska or intend It is anticipated that the quota; said today. This is in addition %0:to send them up soon to investi- for areas Three and Four will be the contracts previously announc-‘gaie other prospective lumber or reached ahead of schedule also, al- BIG CLAIM FILED A civil action to recover $12,478.59 alleged to have been advanced in >, Gov. _Slevenson Not To Seek Reeledtion; Gives His Reasons ‘other veterans. | Fresher graves drew pilgrims in | France and Italy and on the blood- lied isles of the Pacific. | Wreaths and flags were placed on the isolated graves of several thousand men whose bodies have {yet to ke removed from Germany. ters at the base of a monument | In Tekyo, Japanese placed flow-| "NOT GUILTY" PLEA struction Company, was driven by, load of rock for the marine ways! Approximately $13,350,000 will be buildings at {fill. The taxi, belonging to .the SHOO'""G EPISOD Richardson and $10,142,000 at Ladd |Royal Blue Cab Company, was Field ltravelling south on “E" street. It' | New construction contemplated |was driven by Art Van Humbeck. Mrs. Margaret McKowan, who ' under the recently negotiated con- The private car, a 1933 Ford, Was has admitted shooting and critical- tracts includes the following: ed for a headquarters building ““d;plywood production enterprises. Alvin Larson. It was travelling, 200 family units. tnorch along “E” street with a tullrMADE I“ wnANGEll‘ expenced on ': Limestoine Development Fort! The Regional Forester also dis- iclosed that he had had more ex- jtensive dealings with the Alcoa! Mining Co., a subsidiary of the jAluminum Corporation of America, & which is putting in a large lime- stone quarry at Edna Bay on Kos- though most of the smaller boats engaged in halibut fishing this year fof the first time are not like- ly to dare the high seas to fish the more remote banks. ———.——— o0 00000 e >e e WEATHER REPORT o | Schneider b {Snyder) and Sam Asp. It is stated money and goods by the plaintiff for the use and benefit of the co- | defendants and never repaid, has been filed here with the Clerk of (the U. S. District Court. | Plaintiff in the action is Carl | Rubenstein, Defendants are Mary (also known as Mary :that at the time involved, Asp was { " 2 2 |driven by Herman Geil. 'ly wounding her Wrangell Tele-| Fort Richardson: Barracks for ! . (U. 8. WEATHEK BUREAU) ’ . AUSTIN, Texss, May 3L—Gov- wom vied Japan i aate, | As the accident was described,|phone Gompany-owning husband, 2000 men, 36 married offioers'chusko Island and has PurchasedJ ;opporyiures tor aeoue periea o |l trader dofng business et ernor Coke R. Stevenson announc-| " yovo nianos from Hawall flew O¢il made a right turn into the Harvey C. “Tex” McKowan, has quarters, 104 married enlisted men's!-z;n °’$f:e I::m. tx“:;;‘;“;‘: @ Ending 6:30 o'Clock This Morning .i::"‘::h“:“dfi" the "‘mam ‘Salt ed that he will not be a candidate ;00" wreaths to Guam, Saipan, intersection from the east on Tenth|peen charged with the crime of quarters, 64 civilian family quart- \'lcep Brmil i b oy g AR . ’m:ned inrt;" lurz B:‘lma "t:; for re-election. He said his de-!mnian, Okinawa, Wake, meay}:}slreet thho:xt, n.” is claimed, halt-«shooting with intent to kill,” a ers, bachelor quarters for 200 offi- | 10y‘ed e Readiaiilhe) S e B In Juneau—Maximum, 64; iol o elfl-wdymt exccur’ cision was made in keeping with Iwo, Kwajalein and Tarawa. ling at the “Step” sign there. |felony, it was revealed here today cers, bachelor quarters for 240 clv-!p tion and. 90,0000 6hs. (. full! ® minimum, 45, i e ast will an ament oi the time-honored precedent of ai" 'y 41 coroteries of N qy.| The Geil car struck the right py Rotert Boochever, Acting Dis-|illans, plus warehouses and bulk | oPe! and 9, o At Alrport—-Maximum, 63; e | Fdward Schneider, deceased. emeteries of ormandy, f th i which knock- | facilities fe trol o-|ship load) of limestone will be | In addition to recovery of the governor serving only tWo terMS. |prencn civilians joined Americans [TORt Of the taxi which was knock- jtrict Attorney. storage facilities for petroleum pri ¢ e in ships ® minimum, 40. : RRTRTe i lin the traditional moments of si-|¢0 into the path of the oncoming{ gpon arraignment before the U. ducts This project will also in- shibped out avery 10 days in ships, J 2 amount claimed advanced, the . {lence 'and the placing. of wreaths. truck. The taxi struck the left!s Commissioner at Wrangell, the clude extension of existing utility 5“"’;“;“ tl;!;d “especillly recondi- v WEATHER FORECAST o {Plaintiff asks interest at six' per- k ", w h‘ t e’ e BOceRhAN tob “where | fTont portion of the truck. None | gistraught woman pleaded not guil- systems for the new housing. j U purpose. p CIukiann bl VIebaY) pes Iv:em from November 3, 1943 and 1 aS lng On‘me guns of war once ru‘mhle;i They °f the vehicles was said to have|iy to the charge. She-waived pre-| Ladd Field: Barracks for l,OOOi The limestone will go to various J o | COStS. dealt solemnly with the pas't ané!been travelling at excessive speeds.|liminary hearing with the result men, 28 married officers' quarters,'Pacific Northwest polnts for sale _ oo o ieht and Satur- e - ,e— H’rr % GO-ROllndiwxm the future hopefull: g | The rate of all three was estimat-that she automatically has 64 married enlisted men's quarters, for many purposes, but primary uc2 J day o EIDER CALLS IN Y | Jeinder g . w. u{_ led at from 18 to 20 miles an hour. peen bound over to face the grand 48 civilian family quarters, quartersiwill be for reduction at the, com- o ¥ o| Captained by Alvin T. Pickett, 3 T ;,ury at the Ketchikan Court termfor 160 bachelor officers, bachelor | pany’s Portland, Ore., plant of a p AP APIIPS Pt GNP R who as Lt. Comdr. Pickett, piloted By DREW PEARSON (o‘s"l A'Rll"“ next fall. . quarters for 80 civilians, a bach-[certain type of aluminum ore . the U. S. Panamint into Junegu ' +darbor last Navy Day, the Fish RUDOI.pH s"ll It is understood that her bond elor officers’ mess, plus warehouses {found in the Willamette Valley. | is to be set at $5000. Mrs. Mc- and bulk storage facilities for pe-| while south, Mr. Heintzleman NEW YORK, May 31.—Closing|anroyte to her summer station at u"(o"s(lous AS iKowan, an expectant mother, has|troleum products, as well as an ;):- also studied new methods that hm-..-l1 been released into hospital custody |tension of present hospital facilit-)heen devised for the extraction and| ‘ “One of the larg-| ‘uotation of Alaska Juneau mine| godiak. Mrs. Pickett is also aboard gosmiarox —p aamini | ONHOPS YESTERDAY STOCK QUOTATIONS, Iixc, s veue R oot & a leaders were split wide open | ovér the loan to France during a! Alaska Coastal Airlines flew the secret and significant meeting of following to Ketchikan yesterday: James Black, Joseph Chandler, E. Lindenmeyer, S. Einstross, H. Fair- RESULT OF FALL Wmtu Adyvisory Council. of ' v Bill Rudolph, a member of Ju-: Ineau's Volunteer Fire Department, s in a critical condition as a result | Vinson, chairman; As-fhurst, D. Halvorsen; from Ketch- 5 Secretary of State Will fkan: W. B. Claxton, C. Wheeler; sion. |cal facilities. This project also in-iest producers of peat on the North-| 5 United States Marshal William | cludes extension of present utility west coast” will, he said, investi- poration 7%, American Can 102, T Mahoney loft Juneau by plane facilities for the housing cohtem-'cate Alaska peat deposits in the Anaconda 49%, Commonwealth and ney u by pl i {Southern 5%, Curtiss-Wright 8% this morning for Wrangell on offi- plated. lvicinity of Petersburg during the Southern 5%, iy B clal business in connection with the, Present plans call for the building |month of June. {TRternntiount Jearvester 101, Jeatt: g | ic. |ies and additional air corps techni-!pajling of peat. |at Wrangell, following her admis- | g pe: 1B day is 9%, Alleghany Cor- | ydentist of Skagway, i the Eider. e DR. C. L. POLLEY HERE Dr. Clayton L. Polley, wellknown arrived this Clayton, Secretary of Commerce{and from Hawk Inlet: Tom Mor- of a skull fracture suffered in a, shooting of McKowan. | this summer of the construction | ‘necou 59, New York Central 27%, Henty Wallace, Chairman Marrin- gan; to Petersburg: W. H. Hick, G. | fall while fighting a fire Tuesday | | facilities mecessary to carry out Tourist Resorts | Northern Pacific 33%, United Cor- |morning on a combined business and pleasure trip. He is visiting at er Becles of the Federal Reserve Patton; from Petersburg: R. Hayes, ¥ . Board, and William McChesney |C. Dick; to Sitka: Other angles occupying Heintzle-|noration 6%, U. S. Steel 91%,!the home of his mother, Mrs. Edna Martin, head of the Export-Import Clayton teed off by proposing hat the Council approve the $650,- 000,000 loan. Secretary Wallace said ne approved but wanted the record to show that he supported the French loan for economic’'and not for political purposes. “I want the record to show,” countered Chaipman Vinson, “that 1 favor the loan for good and suf-| ficient reasons, both econfémic and political. Up to this point, the meeting was mild. Clayton casually announced that he had checked into the legal- | ity 9{ the present French Govern- {J. Miller; from Sitka: L. St. Ger- imaire, S. Thompson, F. Martin, R. Wieno, A. B. Hicks. | To Haines: T. Haas, W. Gold- smidt; to Hoonah: William Paul, |Jr., S. Johnnie, I. Felton; from |Hoonah: R. F. Morgan; to Peli- can: Willlam Verncn, J. Rusch, Heino Kemola, Dallas Casperson; from Pelican: Mrs. G. Fox, T. B. {Johnson. —————— | EYEING FISHING Wwilliam Walsh of Seattle, neph- |ew of Thomas J. Ryan and cousin tn Mrs. Walter G. Hellan has ar- !rived here on a vacation visit and jis the house guest of the Hellans. Mr. Walsh expects to be in and it and that it was ca) of | bogii RARIC, of about Juneau during most of the accepting and mpnying.me loan, regardless of what happened in the menth of June. He andsMrs. Ryan have a fishing trip planned to Ten-| | | has remained unconscious since he | was taken back to the hospital | Wednesday, after having apparently iapsed into unconsciousness during | the night. e, | FROM THE STATES Arrivals from the States regist- ering at the Baranof are Moe | crusan, San Francisco, Calif.; Dr. 8. K. Claurch, Pacific Grove, Calif.; J. F. Hagenan, Mt. Vernon, Wash.; | Mrs. Madge M. Uth, Seattle; Hen- lry ©. Price, Seattle, Seton H. Thompson, Chicago, Iil.; L. F. St. Nadeline Osborne, ‘Texas. San Antonio, - e - — 3 TWO FROM ANCHORAGE Marian Valle and Emilie Olsen ! VISIT HERE SOON Gene Raymond and his Juneau by private plane sometime| this weekend, according to word re-| {to keep in radio contact with Mr. |Raymond’s plane when it arrives in Southeast Alaska sometime within the next few days. Although there thas been no official release of the fact, it is assumed that Jeanette | Germain, Seattle; Betty Parker and /McDonald will accompany her hus- Allan filed suit against the | band here. The trip is apparently Klan today to recover $685305 lnI “In view of the world shortage | & # Jeanette - McDonald may arrive in Pr e i start in the spring of 1947. ng the winter, it is expected that incipal construction program will i s Siullamili Iceived here yesterday. | KI Kh | | “Alaska Airlines has been nsked.Ku UX Kian IS Sued for Big Sum ATLANTA, May 31.—U. 8. Col- cctor of Internal Revenue Marion Ku Klux |resort. possibilities In Southeas information to concerns which are, investigating prospects of a railway car-ferry service to Prince Ru-; Ipert from Southeast Alaska towns. 3 In line with the Regional For- iest Service office’s program of con-| tinuing to press for early develop-| ‘ment of a pulp and paper industry lin Alaska, Heintzleman discussed |the matter with several of the ‘large producers in the Pacific| i Northwest and also with large users| 'of paper and paper products. |back income taxes the governmem.lol pulp products, all are showing a pleasure cruise. % | charges 1s due. imuch interest in Alaska prospects,” R R. H. WILLIAMS ARRIVES R. H. Williams arrived here yes-| - - «FROM BARROW |be declared, “but there is nothingi definite to report in the way of Henry Moy, |Dight. ! |the program at both stations. Arch- 1 5 oo " Attending physicians report ne' MOVIE STARS MAY | itect-engineer strveys will continue (MaN's attention were: Contacts With | pound $4.03%. during the summer and fall. Dur- |8 numker of firms studying tourist Sales today were 1,310,000 shares. Dow, Jones averages today are |the material necessary will be or-|Alaska; furnishing a great deal of|q5 foliows: industrials 21228, rails wife|dered and received, and that the 67.90, utilities 43.55. — e BRINGS PRISONER Louis Rapuzzi, Deputy U. 8. Mar- shal at Skagway, arrived here this morning on the steamer Princess Louise, with a prisoner being trans- ' ferred to the PFederal jail here to, serve a four months sentence im- posed by Mary McCann U. 8. Com- missioner at Skagway. The pri- soner, Hjalmar Erickson, was sen- tenced on a charge of indecent ex- posure. - e — THREE FROM PETERSBURG Mrs. Kenneth Weldes, and Mr. and Mrs, G. A. Nicholson, all of ! Polley. A ‘FIVE FROM ANCHORAGE Anchorage residents registering ! bere yesterday were Art Beaudin, !Dr. and Mrs. L. B, Johnson and | aaughtdr, W. D. Pond, Homer ii. ;Sulml!er. and George E. Leigh- +ton, B e PROM TAKU HARBOR R. M. McParland arrived here yesterday from Taku Harbor. He |1s a guest at the Baranof. S—p P —— Miss Sue Kennedy, of the Alaska |Credit Bureau staff, safled on the | steamer Princess Louise on a three- | weeks vacation trip which she | plans to spend in Vancouver, B. :C., Seattle and Portland. 2 elections. This gave Fed —— - e s Gy akee and vicinity. Both are ardent of Anchcrage are registered at thelterday from Pelican. He is staying| Margaret Kirchner, of Point Bar- prospective installations at this Petersburg have arrived here and Robert F. Morgan, a resident .of Gastineau Hotel, ot the Gastineat, row, is staying at the Gastineau. timc.” are guests at the Baranof, Hoonah, is a guest &t the Baranof. (Continued on Page Four) sports fishermen,

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