The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 24, 1946, Page 2

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ol @ Fub . s s LA At b b o A a b Al 4 o b A ik st & o o 2o B8 28 Y : ' YACHT DEERLEAP The Campbell Church yacht Deerleap, registered from Vancouv- er, B. C., arrived at 5 p.m. yester- bear hunt and will leave for Van- THE DAILY ALASKA EM Browder Held In London by Is Kept Incommunicado on Trip fo United States - | from Moscow | LONDON, June 24.—Earl Browd- er, deposed head of the Commun- ist party in the United States, was| held incommunicado today by the British Security Police, acting on specific orders of the Home Office, PUTTING THE NEWS v Print! ‘ s Browder was picked up Saturday ! night on his arrival from a six weeks stay in Moscow. Authorities (said he would be allowed to con-| iinuv his trip to New York to-| TnOrrow. “It is very simple,” a Home Of- fice spokesman said: He arrived| | aturday night and was due to| leave Sunday, but there was no w | A dress that moves |seat for him on the plane. Then ihe was to leave today but the | flight appears to have been can- | zelled 1 “Since be has no permission to| (remain in this country, he must | | “ither wait for a plane at Heathrow | Aitport or return to Paris. He is] | waiting at the airport.” grm.'rlufly «eopoints up its silhouette news with print...as note the deep arm holes. fuller skirt. flattering i “No one is neckline! Black with | Eccurity police said, | allowed to come r him for any| shocking pink, lime, | purpos2 whatsoever. An officer “I daubt that {at the airport said, :\'uu will even see him get on the | plane.” ! Browder was lodged in the Gra | brick barracks of the Security | Police at the airport. The Ameri- {can embassy said it was advised |that Browder had a tramsit visa or turquoise. Rayon crepe. Sizes 8 to 16. 22.95 authorizing him to stop in Eng- land hol 1) M 73 Others 1850 to 2775 any ennfle ome from Moscow New Clippers To Be Bought, Pan American NEW YORK, June 24—A $4,500,- 000 contract for the purchase of 20 Convair 300-mile=an-hour, 40-pass- ,B. d/,/(. BEKZS&CJi go. QUALITY SINCE /887 Dennison who said Church’s yachts Electra and Acquilla are due here in July. Guiding the party were Ralph Wooton and Lester Elkins, both of Pel burg, and Lee Ellis of Wran- gell. “Smoke” Thomas, a fourth guide, developed blood poisoning in IS IN, OUT TODAY ways. Although reacl OLE ANSEN NEW S e — 1 ENTRIES FOR SOAP | BOX DERBY CLOSING | HERE ON TOMORROW for Soap Box Derby entrants to get SEND MONEY ORDER TO BOX 1991 JUNEAU, ALASKA PRICE $1.00 British S. P.. Temorrow will be the last chance Brili;h Inferim Government Plan 0f India Rejected LONDON, June 24—The Con- ess Party’s Working Committee ected today the proposal for an interim government for India made by the British, Reuters reported from New Delhi. A decision whether to accept the long term phases of the independ- ence plan was expected tomorrow. PR 10 MANY BEAR SEEN SHEEP CREEK BASIN Tourists planning to hike around the Sheep Creek Basin area “had better take a gun along” according to the opinion of Ed Payton of Alaska Liectric Light and Power Company. While mountain hiking yesterday alcng the Annex Creek power line, Mr. Payton counted seven bears, two blacks, and four brown ones, and a cub. One bear “probably steod about nine feet long,” said Payton, and lone cub got within 10 feet of the hiker with its mother just about 40 feet behind it. Payton said he wasn't sure of his measurements. He didn't stop to verify them. PRIEETE 43750 PEARL ELLIS FUNERAL T0 BE HELD TOMORROW Funeral service for Pearl Ellis, 25, of Yakutat, who died last Tues- day 2t the Government Hospital, will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the Charles W. Carter Mortuary chapel. The Rev. Walter Soboleff will officiate. Interment will green Cemetery. follow in Ever- '« Mrs. Ellis is survived by her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown; four children, Virginia, Franklin, Leona and Willie Ellis; two sisters, Sally Aguiler and Ida Frank, all of Yakutat; and two more sisters and a brother, Annie Houts, Dor- othy Brown and Harry Brown, all of Juneau COASTAL LINES ON SUNDAY HOPS Alaska’s Coastal Airlines flew the cnger Clippers was announced to- following passengers yesterday from day by Pan American World Air- Laks Florence: H. Smith, Ela Smith, L. Jaly, Jack A. Glover, Mrs. no decision has been A. E. Glover; to Pelican: Olaf Hem- 2d as to where the new Clip- nen, Lecna Burphy; from Pelican: pers will be used, it was said that George A. Karppi, Arvo M. Wahto; they would be suitable for the Alas- to Hoonah: Jim Langdon, Mrs, E. cay from the Peril Straits, Chat- Rcdman Bay and was flown back kan routes out of Seattle, or for Mercer; from Hoonah: Jim Lang- ham Straits, Sitka and Tenakee to Ketchikan the Latin American operations of don, Nellie Hanson, Robert Hanson; €d.” areas at conclusion of a 12-day the Company. Built by Consoli- to Sitka, M. J. Hagen, J. Carrillo, dated-Vultee, they are scheduled for Sadie William, T. Marting; from couver today. delivery next summer. Sitka: Mrs. Cecil Pennek, A. Van' Aboard were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mavern, Vern McGraw; to Ketchi- Features of thy v twin-engine v G. Belcher and four children; Ray- HARBOR MASTER Clippers hx‘c)ludeecr;:i,;1 r)rgwe:rgle;. Kan: Mary Shaw,< Dr. Hester, J. A. mond Low and Mrs. A. Bancroft, Ole Ansen ioday took over the tjon ang air conditioning, auxiliag o Feterson, G. T. Allgood; from all of San Francisco, and their position of harbor master, succeed- jot exhaust propulsion and reversi- Setchikan: Elder Lee, Bill Hanson, catch, eleven Brownies and one ing Ted Jones ble pitch propellers to provide Frances A. Nelson, B. F. Heintzle-, black bear. Jones has returned to his former chorter landings, man, N. R. Walker, James B. The Deerleap is skippered by D. work aboard J. V. Cole’s pile-driver., 1n addition to a full passenger Cauley, Sam R. Broadbent; from i —— - - - — load, the new Clippers will carry Fetersburg, J. B. Oterg, John Man- 3500 pounds of cargo and baggage. — e, — WHITE ON AIR Albert White goes on the air to: night at 7 o'clock speaking in the] i interest of the Alaska Taxpayers " League. “ndy IR A o 0 Approximately 1,500,000 Indians still reside in Brazil. PIRE— JUNEAU, ALASKA New . |MAJOR GENERAL New Govl. INGLES HERE ON In France, " iwspecrion i Chief Signal Officer, U. S. i Communications Sys- tem, Pays Brief Visit Major General Harry C. Ingles, | Chief Signal Corps Officer of the United States Communication Sy tem, from Washington, D. C., ar- rived in Juneau yesterday and in- spected the Juneau ACS office this morning. He left by Pan PARIS, June 24.—France's third post-liberation coalition govern- ment was organized today by Pres- ident Georges Bidault with eight | ministers of his own party, lhe’ popular Republican movement MRP), seven Communists and six Socialists. Bidault—who kept the Foreign Affairs portfolio handed him by Gen. Charles de Gaulle a year and 1 half ago—staked his future, that| of his party on a cabinet formed cnly after sizeable concessions by American Air- the Communists, who threatened WAays'this morning for Whitehorse from their insistent demand that @nd will return to Juneau tomor- trade union demands for 25 per-|ICW morning on the Princess Nor- ah and then proceed almost im- mediately for the States. I Traveling with the General is Capt. Clifford Fellows, former of-! ficer in charge of the Juneau and cent wage increases be met. They agreed to Bidault's ceiling of 15 percent salary boosts for low- wage brackets and a suggestion for a worker-employer-government con- | ference to study the whole problem of wages and prices. NANKING, June 24—Commun- ist leader Mao Tse-tung declared: today the Chinese people believed | that U. S. Army and Navy forces in China “have become a grave menace to the national peace, s curity and freedom” of the troub nation. The head or Sitka ACS offices, and now Com- manding Officer of the Seattle | Chief signal officer of the U. S. (RIIICISM IS |army for 3 years, Maj. Gen. Ingles, |of the European theatre. He is a |graduate of West Point, class of ‘vtu the infantry, but his training as BY (oMMUNlSI‘uu electriczl engineer led him to, | field. communications system he heads and points out that it was handl- day during wartime — averaging ! 42 million. i Signal Corps office. previously was deputy commander HUR[ED AI u- S: 11914, and immediately was attached switch over to the communications He takes pride in the world—witie ing as much as 50 million words a ik O e MR A. C. Adams of Excursion Inlet, has arrived in Juneau. He is stay- ing at the Baranof. | au Chincse Com- munists issued a statement at his Yenan headquarters—by far the stongest criticism yet leveled at U. S. activities in China ying the people felt the departure of Ameri- can military forces was “long over- due.” It came at a time when the effcrts of Generai Marshall, spec- jal U. S. envoy, to bring the govern- ment and the Communists together had reached a crucial stage. Tersion had teen increased carl- ier today when a mob beat up a party of Leftist “peace delegates” from Shanghai as it stepped off a train at Nanking's railway station Trke Communists charged the gov- a self-insurer NEW FISHiiG PERMITS PUT OUT ON SALE Sperts fishermen out on the lakes and streams after next Sunday, June 30, are required by law to hav® a new 1946-47 game license in their pockets, Jack ©O’Connor, Fish and Wildlife Game Manage- ment Supervisor aflvised today. The old licenses expire at midnight, June 30. O’Connor stated that new license forms were being put out to the is- suing agents here today and~ frem tomorrow on will be available at Juneau-Young Hardware Company, v Thomas Hardware Company and the Juneau Drug Co. He also warn- ed that possession cf a 1946-47 li- cense is no permit to fish or pro- tection from the long arm of the law until July 1 is actually here. O'Connor - also pointed out that the change in game fish bag lim- its goes into effect over all of Southeast Alaska at midnight, June 30. The present limit, 20 trout per day, is cut in half beginning July 1. Possession limit will be two daily bags, as now, but the total then will be only, 20 fish, BUDGET BUREAU OFFICIAL HERE Regional rorester B. Frank Heintzleman - has returned here from Ketchikan, accompanied by Sam Broadbent, Agriculture De- partment adviser for the Bureau of the Budget. Mr. Broadbent is mak- ing his first trip through Alaska— “‘getting an education,” he said. | Later this week, he will go to the| Westward and will return here| ernment's “secret police” were re- 1. AGRICULTURE sponsible for the incident. € Sy Mao asserted that the United 2. DAIRYING o 2. 4. States had given aid only to the Kuomintang government and served notice that the Communists “are adamantly opposed” to a bill intro- duced in Congress earlier this month requesting continued U. S. military air to China. Since Japan’s surrender, Mao in- sisted, United States aid to the gov- ernment had “enormously increas- — e — | e 0000 e e o WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. WEATHEK BUREAU) Temperatures for 24-Hour Perlod Ending 6:30 o'Clock This Morning e o o In Juneau—Maximum, 74; minimum, 50. At Alrport—Maximum, 73; minimum, 45. VALENTINE WEATHER FORECAST . (Juneau and Vicinity) | | | Variable cloudiness and i not much change in temper- {o ature tonight and Tuesday. . ‘e e0 00000000 \ - dy ‘MARINE FORECAST FOR THE PERIOD ENDING TUESDAY EVE- NING: Protected waters of Southeast Alaska and outside waters, Dixon Entrance to Yakutat—variable winds under 15 miles per hour. U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU i JUNEAU, ALASKA |in under the deadline. . | After tomorrow night the appli- WEATHER BULLETIN i ~ cation period for entrance in the PATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M., 120TH MERIDIAN TIME | 1 Max. temp. | TODAY | races will be closed, and full con- o e ! B 1 1- 1 { ] | cortanbin atil b tushed . il | last Lowest 4:30a.m. 24 hrs, Weather at ! eer, the light retreshment g w be e towd) gaion 20hwse | temp. temp. Precip. 4:30am. l) f i for the Big Day, the “Greatest Q::::x:'ge > g; ‘ ;: » ;;:fi: g{gfi:i . | " | - ll { | Amateur Racing Contest in the! | ev erage orf millions o | World,” July 325. ’gz:'zglva o s g:g:g;' | ] | All Soap Box Derby contestants! pooc 8 | 52 g 5 jand those wishing to sign up- for 1 | 45 49 64 Cloud temperate people... iance ‘il mee tomorrow g a8 0 G u(-‘(h:].cal(: OBC:IO(;k in the Prgsl}:]);terxtttxl ‘Haines n | 56 57 0 Cloudy : s - YR, SIBSINCE IR PR 10 fore -t U | % 56 0 Pt. Cloud, O]ympxa Bl‘erl‘lg Company | sponsor racers are asked to be pre- J::eg:: Airport ..... 73 ; 45 48 0 Pt. C,mflyy‘ OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON, U. S. A. sent Ketchikan 58 | 52 52 .01 Cloudy 1 The announcement was made by Kotzebue . 49 | 42 42 Trace Cloudy Don Skuse, General manager for |neGrath 55 | 49 50 an Cloudy the Juneau Soap Box Derby. Nome ... 3 44 1 40 40 02 Cloudy Fi L T L | Worthwdy ... % | i 48 Trace Claudy . Petersburg 70 |62 52 Trace Cloudy Portland .. 67 | 52 55 .05 Cloudy i R s A L E Prince George 4 | 40 40 0 Cloudy Prince Rupert | 54 Seattle 67 49 52 01 Cloudy Roden’s e n SR B e Whitehorse % | 45 45 0 Cloudy % “ , Yakutat e 47 | 48 od“ 0 Cloudy *—(4:30 a. m. yesterday to 4:30 a. m. today) ALASKA M ' N ' N G LAWS WEATHER SYNOPSIS: A low pressure trough extends along the GOSSARD BRASSIERES Canadian-United States border from Montana to "ll:) 1:33:):;: c_r‘mst, A A SIEB S H H - ridge of high pressure extends from a high center aboul miles west Coverlng LOde, Placer, 011 and Coal Locatlons of northern California northwestward into Bristol Bay. Temperatures CULLEGE ,GIRL BR s E were cooler yesterday over Southeast Alaska but continued above normal y 3 e & over the northern portion. Rain has fallen during the past 24 hours at 3 wat er B.i h 1S Mill S. ies d T 1 many stations over the northwestern United States, southwestern Canada GRE ATLY RE I ’UCED 1 an u land southwestern Alaska. n ghis, nneis MARINE WEATHER BULLETIN TO CLOSE ouT Reports from Marine Stations at 1:30 P. M. Toady With Forms and Explanations . . . Easy for th F'and Vel (Sea Gondition) = a Station Weather Temp. Dir.and Vel. (Sea Condition) 2 p §%: SY Or e Cape Decision Cloudy 55 8 4 3 feet - . Prospector to Understand S f— R p 3 Eldred Rock Pt. Cloydy 62 SSE 5 Zero T . Five Pinger Light Cloudy - 57 S : 1(:lnlm Women's Avsaner . . . Guard Island . Cloudy . 8 8 oot Written to Assist the Miner and Prospecior Lincoln- Rock Cloudy ~ 5% ESE 6 1foo G . 5 Point Retreat Pt. Clous 59 (SW 14 2 feet “It’s the Nicest Store In Town Variable [ran | | Baranof Hotel Building DOMESTIC SERVICE FEDERAL RAILROAD EMPLOYEES BLDG. | | i | % | | MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1946 from the Interior in about two weeks. Broadbent was a former Forest Service official in the Montana re- gion, before joining the Budget Bu- reau staff. He was met at Ketchi- by Mr. Heintzleman. ————— — SCOUT CUBS MEET All Juneau Boy Scout (;ubs will meel tonight at 6:30 o'elock in the Evergreen Bowl for softball and ~ other recreational ~activities, Cub Master Bob Treat announce: ———— kan PENOLA INC., Chicago, Ill. Notice to Employers Workmen's Compensafion Insurance A new Territorial Law requires all Employers with three or more employees either to file a certificate of insurance or qualify as with the Alaska Industrial Board. ceptions are the following employments: The only ex- We are now prepared fo quality Employers under this new law which goes into effect July 1, 1946 See Stan Grummett for Immediate Coverage JUNEAU INSURANCE AGENCY - PHONE 253 Gossard Foundations 2.95 Venus Foundations 295 College Maid Pantie Glrdle All Elastic 2.75 Sizes 24 10 28 Pes——

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