The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 26, 1946, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT ™™ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE: —JUNEAU, ALASKA Harold E. Smith fo Refire From Alaska Branch of U. S. Forest Service on July 1 Harold E. Smith Administrative Assistant in the Alaska branch ol the U. S. Forest Service, will re- tire from active duty on July 1, after 35 years with that organiza- tion Smith received his first appoint- ment in the Forest Service on July 1 as an assistant Forest Ranger on ites Natfonal Forest in home state. He was to Siuslaw National August, 1913, and work- Chief of a Land Classi- the Forest in ed there fication p y until November, 1914 when I turred to his former position on the Deschutes. He left for Alaska in May, 1919. This was not Smith's first visit to the Territor: he had done some placer mining in the Nazina River district during the summer of 1909 The first two years on the Ton- gass National Forest were spent & Ketchikan and Craig. Smith’s next assignment was as Forest Ranger in charge of the Admiralty District ¢ at Juneau from 1921 to 1931. Thc} next six years he was in charge of the Prince William Sound di: trict of the Chugach National For- est with headquarters at Cordova followed by 4!: years with the Re-| 8 tivities When this program ceased, Smith was again placed in charge of the Admiralty Division at Juneau in| 1941 held this position for a| vear. Since 1942 he has been at-i tached to the staff of Regional| Forester B. Frank Heintzleman, | who states that Smith has made an enviable reputation in Alaska | through his marked ability as a! Forester and as an efficient public | servant Following retirement, he and Mrs. Smith will visit Lake Hascel- | korg to enjoy some fishing before | leaving for Lake Samamish near Seattle where they expect to make their future home. ( ning at 7:30 o'clock. Plans will be ional Office at Juneau on CCC m-‘ LITTLEST CORPORAL IN BERLIN | | i | \ | FIRST SERGEANT and Mrs. Marvin C. Gerber “inspect” their young son, Franklin, the first American baby born in postwar Berlin. The newcomer was officially appointed a corporal by Maj. Gen. Frank Keating. The father is from San Antonio, Texas, and the mother is the former Andree Fertelle of Amiens, Franee, where the couple met. (International) HARBORNEWS i Bud Fields has about one more mwonth’s work on his 45-footer Government Dock. in the CAA power barge at the KARLUK FISHING CASE MOVED 10 4th DIV. COURT Jurisdiction over the injunction proceeding brought by the Alaska Canned Salmon Industry against the Fish and Wildlife Service over fishing regulations at Karluck, Ko- diak Island, has been transferred to the United States District Court for the Fourth Division, at Fair- banks. According to advices received here, Third Division Judge Anthony Dimond has dlsqual.lfled himself from sitting on the case, because of possible prejudice in favor of the Karluck Indians. Dimond, during, his service as Alaska Delegate in| Congress, was instrumental in se- | Il curing creation of the Karluck Re~{ servation. Under attack regulation prohibiting any type of commercial fishing for sa]monf within 3,000 feet of the Karluck! Resefvation, except by permit from the Karluck Indians. George Folta,' Interior Department Counselor at| Large, and Theodcre Haas, Counsel | for the Alaska Native Service, are | now at Fairbanks, representing the: | i | is a new fishery| Interior Department. RIO OF ELKS NOW I | atternoon. \nickel variety—was taken from the 12 AMWU LOCALS made for the Fourth program and committees named. It is very im- portant that people turn out and . Magnus Hansen's Explorer was due Fields will install a Gray 121 with to sail for Ketchikan today wkere a five to one reduction when the she wiil acquire new coat of boat is finished. C(ONVENTION BOUND | a | ARREST MADE AT TENAKEE; SLOT MACHINES TAKEN One felony defendant and three slot machines were netted yester- day by Deputy U. S. Marshal Walt- er G. Hellan on a flying trip to Tenakee. Arrested by Hellan and arraign- ed here before U, S. Commissicner Felix Gray was Honario Floresco, Filipino restaurant operator at Tenakee, on a charge of assault with a dangerous weapon. Floresco posted $1,500 bond, and it was ex- pected that a perliminary hearing on his case would be held here this | Two of the slot machines seized as gambling devices by Hellan were taken from Floresco's restaurant. They are a five-cent and. a dime machine. The third machine — merchandising establishment oper- ated at Tenakee by Dermott O'Toole. Under the law, the Mar- shal is required to destroy the ma- chines. PAN AMERICAN HAS 16 IN; 18 FLY OUT Pan American Airways yesterday {lew the following passengers to & and from this city: int. The Explorer will return ! From Seattle: Gran Brechan, SIGN AGREEMENT give a hand in planning programs ‘The WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1946 and assist in carrying them out, so here in five days or so before go-' troller Helena arrived Tast Three Juneau delegates to the|David Cottingham, Ed Holbrook, &= the committee asks that they have ing out after black cod [night from Deer Harbor for sup- Elks Grand Lodge Convention at|Mary Holbrook, Ruth Moscrip, Mrs ON FISH PRICES a good attendance of residents at —_— | plies. Vew York City, will be on their {Aleta Thorendal, Margaret Brec- = _ tonight’ meeting. + V. E. Fulkerson’s Inga arrived; _ ~-convention bound—tomorrow. ; han, Mrs. Harold Stjern, Mrs, Mar- Alaska Marine Workers Union| mpe Finance Committee has al-'{fom Seattle late Monday and is| The Coos Bay yacht Cygnet is Ellis Reynolds, current 420 Ex-|ia Riley, Mike Haas, Dorothy Mil- Headquarters today signed a purse seiners and gillnetters agreement for its 22 locals in Southeast Alas- ka from Yakutat to Metlakatla,|jjst will be available for residents with J. Stecle Culbertson, Assistant|, ribe their donations tu—: Manager of Alaska Salmon Indus-| ...4s the July Fourth program. | try, Inc. 1 Tre 250 Yakutat fishermen and pady been named with Sante De- san, chairman and Val Poor. De- ! it \a HERE FROM CHICAGO 40 Haines fishermen have been on! p,":1q’ Betty McCarron, nieces 80 trolling. | will fly south to Seattle tomorrow.!Bringhurst, Erwin Baldwin, Ro- {| AUDITS TAXES | strike respectively five da andl' s “and Mrs. E. P, MeOardon| ) DEAD IN HOSPITA[. At Scattle, the trio will join the|bert Manthey, Earl Byers, Don | two days when the AFL Union af-| i yere on the Princess Nor-! 1B last night from Gustavus for g special Elks train leaving that city | Marquardt, Nellie Hamilton, Edward { NEILL CLARK d COMPANY ‘ filiated with the Sailors Union of ah. The girls, high-school junior umgm_ mr_ l]}(‘ Civil Ar'runaulm\‘ 5 on July 3. ‘Hamflwn, Carl Bergstrom, Lester {! M an A the Pacific f.\cct‘pted m.o @m-mh _u[- and senior, will spend the summer Administration’s installation ther WAS UNDER ARRESI Past District Deputy Walmer has | Franger, Wilfred ‘Wright, Ethel : Established 1940 i fer made by the Industry. F‘lshnpg here sfter making the long trip was John Peterson Emma B‘ indefinite plans for visits to Wash- | Wright. "; Public A ant: Audit T C 1\ i began at Yakutat June 17 at mid-| =0 b b et Peterson expects to leave again to-| OSLO, Norway, June 26.—Henry ington D. C., Milwaukee, Portland, A | able ATCOIINTS = A UG WITE, s AWE SPORIPE OIS night and at Haines June 25 at 6 Pllgmv ! Johansen, husband of the Norwe- Oregon and Seattle before return- ! PROPERTY BOUGHT i 2[]8 Franklin Sh‘eet _— Phone 757 ; a. m. William L. Paul, Jr, who signed on behalf of the AFL Union, stat- ed that gains at Yakutat amount- ed to 33 1-3 percent over 1945 ’I‘hel form of contract actually signed was an amendment to the ASPSU- AFL 1941 contract, also used by IFAWA Local 30. Minimum Prices Mr. Paul stated that as usual the MRS. BONNER HERE Mrs. Robert Bonner, Jr, and| Seattle home. it SALLY RAND WINS | THIRD ROUND WITH contract provides for “minimumj E. J. Buchanan’s Iamalone is Jchansen was sent to the hospital taken out by: = prices,” and if the market warrants| FRISCO p0lI( E waiting for a new shaft before and placed under the best possible’ B. E. Feero, for & three-apart- prices will go still further up. EM .heading for Elfin Cove. Buchanan medical care, said Labbee Lund, ment addition to his property at|| ‘The minimum prices for Soulh-‘ 'said he hopes to leave this week. Chief of Criminal Police. { Third and Franklin streets, esti- east Alaska for all purse sSelners| o, ppanc1eco June 26, _IHe s doing minor carpentry on the| Johansen denied charges at a mated cost $6,000, Foss and Mal- ;:;d qgllllne'.}wrzza! H:mres fln:i;ak\;-Js,L‘ll}, Rand told her nightclub au-|1maloné. He plans to take his hearing last June 27 of having colm architects; J. M. Greany, for. & will be cents for pink sal “| dience today that with police wait-iram”y with him. +made $1,500,000 from building Ger- a one-room residence addition at mon, 22 cents for chums, 42 cents, for cohoes and 53 cents for red or| sockeye salmon. In case fish are| too plentiful, the per share limit has been raised from 750 to 800. A delivery price of 1 1-2 cents per fish will be paid from any, point instead of beyond 15 miles from each cannery. Pre-season and post season work for fisher- ing to arrest her for the third time | in 24 hours, she had quite a bit' to bare. “Police car rides are dull,” the, fan and bubble dancer said, “and getting pretty silly. “But fan dancing must go on.” t the wings of the stage and waited, men will pay $132 1-2 per hour early \sterday and again last| colje Larcen is painting the N straight time and $1.47 overtime, night they had booked her on yivian June after e e HUNTING and FISHING PARTIES retroactive to April 1, 1946, with! skilled labor paying the going scale. The longshore rate will be the same as the nearest port of; regular steamer call, Juneau and Ketchikan. 2 merger Approved Mr. Paul stated that on June 20, the National Labor Relations Board | the show. in Washington, D. C., approved' The finale brought the gown the merger of the Alaska Native down around her ankles, but in- Brotherhood and the Alaska Salmon Stead of just Miss Rand there were | Purse Seiners Union into the new long-handle drawers and a gilded| AFL body the Alaska Marine Work- | corset left. rushed back from jail for her post-! midnight show. Sally, wrapped in ermine, danced, wafting feathers, , The coat came off, and Sally !danced in a flowing gown which | nightly had failed to cling through | e ers Union for the purposes of the| The policemen silently strode cannery workers elections due this away. summer. —_———— DOUGLAS NEWS ARRIVE ON BRANT Mrs. Leonard Johnson, her sister + Mrs. Douglas Gray, and her two boys David and Allen, arrived yes- lefday on the Brant from Seattle. Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Gray are daughters of Mrs. Robert Frazer and sisters of Bunte Fraser of Mr. Paul stated that Icy Straits gy ” fishing is due to begin July 1 and“ KIDHAPER IS indications are for a strong run of fish. Northern fishing ‘is ready MERE[Y FA]‘HER to begin the first day of the sea- son, otherwise the AMWU-AFL Executive Board would kave held| 'N (AR IRouBlE out for a higher price for red and | cohoe salmon, and except for thel! fact that CIO has already signed NASHAU, N.H, June 25—A gar- in Ketchikan, where fishing does 88¢ mechanic brought about the not begin until July 15-25 happy solution of a “kidnaping” Mr. Paul stated that as secretary that touched off a two-state hunt of the AFL union and his assistant vesterday. Secretary Louiss Collier of Ketchi- Harold Scott reported to police kan will visit every cannery in that a youngster, reported snatch- Southeast Alaska to obtain strict €d and tossed into the trunk of an application of the cannery work- automabile, was his 1l1-year-old ers contract signed June 15 and SOR he had placed in the ¢ompart- the fishermen's contract. ment in an effort to find the A source of a rattle. The report of two firemen that they saw a man stuff a boy in the trunk of a Massachusetts car and then drive off speedily, sent Massa- ,chusetts and New Hampshire police and the Federal Bureau of Investi- ‘ganon into action. Several hours later Scott walk- ed into police headquarters and said: “I guess I'm your kidnaper.” Police Sgt. Bernard McLaughlin said Scott explained that he had placed his son in the trunk to hold down the hinges in the belief that Douglas: Mrs. Gray will visit with they Wv"_’ the Fausa of the rattle.| " ’ e was unaware that the novel the family here while her husband # 4 - Douglas Gray is stationed in the PROthAuLE -Rpd 'oausad i kidnap Amgnms as. Refige Manager for 1M until he saw the headlines {6 Pl and ARG Bepvice, Mrs, . the Nasbau Dally Telegraph— Johnson joins her husband and two children, Bobby and Stuart, at their family home here. about seven hours later. sl i lion. s FAST STEPPERS | NEW ALBANY, Ind—A sign on the courthouse lawn boasts that « in the Small Boat Harbor di gan announced this morning that She will head for the Cape Cross !will go on the Harbor grid socn for daughter Pauline, arrived yesterday Frobese’s new packer, aboard the M. S. Brant from thmr‘l‘lobese will be gone all summer. 1He plans to pack in the Elfin Cove plant. He said he may possibly re-| ing for Funter Bay. ,is Art Kobbivik's Dorothy. Kobbi- i A police squad of six stood on mrin cove charges of indecent exposure. She gon Hawk Inlet Cannery. He hopes to leave at the end of the week. Welding and Machine Shop has been making repairs on the Doug- las Cannery machines prior to op- July. cooling system on the twin engines | 't supplies. - 'due to sail for Sitka today pending alted Ruler and Grand Lodge Re- val of additional passengers by presentative, is to leave here to-| |plane. Expected are Mr. and Mrs. night aboard the Seattle bound | ;.Iuhn Hawkins of Coos Bay and steamer Alaska. Leonard Holmquist ! Jake Hillstrom. and John Walmer, 1944-45 Grand | Ledgze Representative of the local | lodge and 1944-45 District Deputy Grand Exalted Ruler, respectively,| ng freight and loading rolling grounds soon. Ben Melvin's troller, the Doris K 'HENRY JOHANSEN IS new prop, after which Melvin will ! gian soprano Kirsten Flagstad, died ing home following the New York Tuesday in a state hospital pre- convention. He expects to return jsumably from pulmonary cancer, here about August 1. Past Exalted Ithe chief of Criminal Police an- Ruler Holmguist will stay even! nounced today. longer in the States and will not rea to the Pelican Cold Storage! When he died Johansen still was come home until the end of August. {under arrest charged with economic i s T if collaboration with the Nazis during BUILDING PERMITS the occupation of Norway. Permits for construction issued! Takeh ill some weeks ago while here during the past week by City| in an internment camp near Oslo, Engineer J. L. McNamara were | Due out at midnight is Fred Vonja D. urn to Juneau on brief trips he Pelican plant is overcrowded.' | man barracks during the war and 1724 Evergreen avenue, $350; A. G. Reams and Lown left this morn- still was awaiting trial. | Hammer, for a new asphalt and: Miss Flakstad had been living Sn’grave] | southern Norway, | Due to leave in four or five days. - deadisn i | avenue, $100. e a5 e | Alaska Airplane Charter Co. TRANSPORTATION AIR AIR FREIGHT SERVICE for CANNERIES———MINES—— Larsen will patrol for the Charter Service by Day, Week, Month or Hour Rates on Request for All Kinds of Chartered Flights P.O. Box 1262 Phl)lle Red 795 Taylorcraft Juneau Dealer DEAN GOODWIN—Pilot TOM WHITE—Pilot HANGAR—1% miles out Glacier Highway Lester Linehan of the Juneau ning of the cannery sometime in The shop also is fixing the For that band-box look you admire so in summer, ireat yourself to one of our im- peccably beautiful . . . One or Two-Piece DRESSES n Linen Finish Crash Jersey Gingham Crepe Eyelet Socrisp. . . cool and charming N at JONES - STEVENS | during the past week. rocf at 318-C Gastineau ! ler, Barbara Roly, June Culver, Elizabeth Ann Corcoran, Mrs. Mary Mowry; frem Fairbanks, Ann Dills; to Fairhanks, Allen Webb, Joseph White. To Seattle: Magnus Pearson, Ar- thur Hansard, Lillie Moody, George SYSTEMS Moody, Samuel Bringhurst, Lenora A house and lot in the Malony Block here has been purchased by Herbert W. Cuff from the J. F. Malony Company; in the only real | estate transaction recorded here FAIRBANKS OFFICE—201-2 LAVERY BUILDING Kinloch N. Neill INQUIRI ABQU:I‘ PUR MO ,AT_“LY ACCOUNTING SER i | [ | | 1 .- John W. Clark VICE The word mob is derived from = the Latin mob! excited crowd. Fior business and ledsine weas f v 3 Sp;i;ts styled to strike the smartly casual note so popular with America's best dressed men. Beautifully tailored down to the last quality detail . . . with piped seams . ; . hand-selected buttons . . . meticulous needlework and other hallmarks of a master shirtmaker. The Stradivasi* is truly *'as fine as skilled hands can make”, | FRED HENNING The House of Swansdown 4th JULY MEETING The Fourth of July meeting will 25,000 population hasn't | this Ohio River city of more than had a be held in the City Hal] this eve- traffic fatality since April 15, 1944. | m— Seward Stljeet ; Complete Outfitter

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