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L { » H O M & § [ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” = VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,358 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS JUNEAU, ALASKA, MONDAY . AUGUST 26, 1946 PRICE TEN CENTS = RUSSIA BACKS YUGOSLAV BLASTS AT U.S. BRITISH_TROOPS | SEEK"FROGMEN" IN SINKING TRY Residents of Palestine| Fishing Village Are | Rounded Up Today SEDOT YAM, Palestine, Aug —Two hundred residents of this Soviet Asked v For Cause of Huge Demands Australian Questions Abil-| ity of Former Enemies fo Meet PaYOffS tiny Jewish fishing village were| | rounded up by British troops and| PARIS, Aug. 26.—An Australian| Palestine police this morning in al delegate to the peace conference to-| move said by officers to 26 be di- day proposed that Russia be called rected at finding the “frog men” upon “to justify her reparations | who almost succeeded in sinking demands,” and asked that a special | the immigrant transport Empire| “on the spot investigation” be made | Rival in Haifa Harbor last week of the ability of former European! The village was surrounded by a enemy nations to pay the Su\'iet's:bnundv unit before dawn and the $900,000,000 demands. villagers were herded into barbed E. Ronald Walker made the pro- wire enclosures for questioning by posal to the economic commission | police while Army crews searched | for the Balkans after the Italian|homes and buildings. Mine detec- | the Communists’ 14th Military Dis- Chinese Reds Give Warning ToU.5. Troops Marines Mfi\g Through3 Communist Areas Will | Molofov Does Walkout From Freedom Fele Soviet Diplkoimat Gets Huf-| fy Over Seating Ar- WINNER Be Stopper, Searched HSTIANGHO, China, Aug. 26.—A demand that U. S. Marines notify Chinese Communists before moving troops through Red-held areas has come from a Communist Army offi- cer who warned that Marine ve- hicles would be stopped and search- ed. Kwang Chih-tao, Commander of rangement at Paris PARIS, Aug. 26.—Official cere- monies marking the second anni-| versary of the liberation of Paris! were marred yesterday by the ab- rupt departure of Soviet Foreign! Minister V. M. Molotov and Ukran- ian Foreign Minister Dmitri Manu- | ilsky, in an apparent huff over the seating arrangement The two who left the grandstand even before President’ Georges Bi- dault had begun his address, were trict, issued the warning. Forces under his command attacked a commission had approved two more | paragraphs of the preamble of the| equipment and dogs former :Mal'lnf‘ convoy July 29 near An- d for mine detection in Ger-| ping, taking the lives of four Mar- tor uses seated in the second row under an| alphabetical ~arrangement which Italian draft treaty. | many were used in the search. | Soviet Forelgn Minister V. M.| Brig. R. H Bramer, Commander| Molotov responed: |of the Second Brigade, who was| | . in charge of the operation, said| Australia has not had her fields. | i1 48 ¥ vies revastated.” | the village was cut off before cities and industries revastated. [ dhwis "and: bwie; belidve ciie. raid) | He described Russia as “lenient” wac o complete surprise to the in asking for $300,000000 from Ru-! yijjacers | mania when “billions of dollars of | ge aid the village, only five| damage has been done MOIOtOV) mijes from Haifa, was one of thel pointed out that Russia had in-lyaceq for persons who blasted the| ercased the time allotted for Pay-fepip and added: “We know the mept from Alx to wight yeats. | village has harbored illegal forc Russia has asked reparations| from Rumania, Finland, Hung: FOR PROTOCOL’S SAKE ! and Italy. The United States, Great: ;ppusarEM, Aug. 26.—The Arab Bl‘ltflh: and i""ccds‘d ?Ota:;cm;f‘ Higher Executive Committee re-| reparations demands of any SCi . eqeq Great Britain today to in- figure in the draft "““efe that| yite the exiled Mufti of Jerusalem b2 ro;:‘%“ :gccre;:;:.eesp‘:glr;vrence,w forthcoming London talks on prepar o 4 % Palestine. h:hc‘ml;s:];anoncm:;is“?;n::wdfitg‘ An Arab spokesman said private-| percent of the entire document. No 1SN e DINRSE W B IGRUER] hatever has been madewor protocol alone.” The Mufti is in, ProgIess WALy T our. treatios,(Dad odor with the British for con-| Tanly three | sorting with Hitler and other Axis half hours' ¢ ey e i ehate before 16 foes during the war, and an invi- SR consuIme I tation to him was regarded as im- words of a Netherlands amendment and seven words of an Australian | Possible. amendment were adopted by thej R e R Italian commission and the fourth and fifth paragraphs of the treaty| finally approved. There are more KEN AI'EXANDER than 55,000 words in the five treat-| Mov[s up STEP | ies. | The Netherlands amendment, ON PAA lADDER adepted after revision, had the ef-| fect of giving Italy greater recogni- tion for her part in the war against |ont of Chanechun to aid the garri- placed the United States (listed as “Amerique™), Britain, China and France in the front row of benches. Bidault'’s address, calling on the nations of the world to forget par- tisan pre-occupations and strive for the peace for which the war was fought, climaxed a nation-wide observance of the anniversary. The Communist said Government| In Paris the weekend was devot- troops were instigating clashes be- ed to a series of gay celebrations tween Marines and Communisis, and processions through festooned adding: | streets. A serious note was main- “Step by step the Kuomintang! tained, however, by the wreaths (Government Party) is getting Am- | piled before wall plaques through- ericans into China's civil war.” |cut the city marking spots where |unknown Frenchmen fell in the 'fight to free Paris from the Ger- man occupation. - 'ALASKA COASTAL IS KEPT HOPPING Alaska “Coastal Airlines was busy ‘over the week end, making the following flights with thesz passen- gers: to Pack Creek: P. Rich; from 'Jack Creek: M. Pierce; to Skagway: Ted Lawrence; from Skagway N. Reid, S. Reid, B. Reid, and Mrs. G Army moved toward Changct A g i P BNUN W. Hooker; to Haines, Mr. and the Manchurian capital and its = new Sixth Army marched inlu\JMl';Nli; po;:;“', l_” Kc_",c?"k“"' W Jehol Province to the west—where 1 i a;; j( d“fimlcls.‘;‘,""m‘ N press reports indicated fighting a:‘%l';:e Jml)(élr‘x;mer.l P‘“({“{)‘Iiing l\;‘l“ three ints. Inclu vas p : : L points. Included was theip ™ Gimore Howard Banta, I ines and wounding 11. Wang appeared before a truce headquarters team investigating the Anping incident. He listed “belli-' gerent acts of U. S. forces against Communists in my area” and de- nied that Communists had ever taken any “belligerent actions to- wards Marines.” WAR FLAMING ANEW PEIPING, Aug. 26.—China's in- ternal war flamed anew today in Manchuria, where opposing Gov- ernment and Chinese Communist armiés were moving to new battle positions. A surprise Red attack already had isolated the Govern- ment garrison near Tiehling, im- pertant station on the vital Muk- den-Changchun railroad. Government reinforcements push- ed north out of Mukden and south son at Tiehling. The Government’'s First Germany. | ——— DRYDENS RETURN | Juneau High School principal,! Lingyuan area 75 miles west of r e ) - SEATTLE, Aug. 26.—Appointment Chengteh, Red-held Jehol capital. Searle, G. Leach nnfi F. Peterson; of Kenneth P. Alexander to the ~ oonenctine reports hid the fat and from Ketchikan: A. C. Kuehl, position of Assistant to the Man-| o~ poe i oS e nction Ben C- Miller, Mrs. R. Renshaw ager, Alaska Region, was announc- 8 =t Junction a4 mrs, D, Ellis. |about 150 miles west of Peiping.| . Wrangell: Tom Sandborn; to Mr. Floyd Dryden, and his wife Airways. He will releive Dhan| were returning passengers on the Mukerji, who has been transferred §. 8. Princess Norah on Saturday to the airline’s division headquart- night. They have been away from e€rs in San Francisco. Juneau for the summer, spending For the past year and a half, the time visiting in eastern wash_‘Alexander has been Station Man- ington and northern Idaho ager and District Traffic Sales i < Manager at Pan American’s Ju-‘ RN Ineau station. » he washington Before coming to Juneau, Alex- ander served Pan American at Fair- Merry - Go- Round baks as traffic representative, assis- By DREW PEARSON tant district traffic manager and |district tratfic manager. Before jcoming to Pan American, he was employed by the Canadian Pacific |Railroad at Skagway. WASHINGTON—Admiral Chester| Nimitz, hero of the Pacific and one| SEATTLE, Aug. 26.—Appointment of the most efficient leaders of the of Richard Johnson to the position | Navy, has indicated to friends that |of station manager at Juneau has he will retire as Chief of Naval peen announced in Seattle by Pan, Operations after about one yeadof| American World Airways. | his, four-year appointment. Johnson has been affiliated with Backstage reason is that Nimitz!pan American since 1940 and has finds his job chiefly requires lob-iserved in Paa- stations at Juneau,, bying naval appropriations through | Whitehorse, Kodiak, Anchorage and | Congress, and he would much rath-|Annette Island, Alaska. Prior to er be at sea than playing politics.|his appointment as the executive Purthermore, Washington society isofficer at Juneau, he held the same running him ragged. !position at the airline’s base at| Mrs. Nimitz doesn't feel the same|Annette Island, near Ketchikan. | way at all about Washington so-: Prior to coming with Pan Ameri- elety—which perhaps is one reasonjcan, Johnson was with the Astoria - why the Admiral wants to get out & Puget Sound Canning Company of the Capital. He hates dinners,!in Alaska. He attended the Uni- loathes cocktail parties, and feels|versity of Washington in Seattle. ed today by Pan American World| con i unict forces began the siege Petersburg: . P. Ohmer, E. Gruen- 22 days ago and the Governmen. f . ing and O. Grenier; from Peters- last week acknowledged the situa-|y,;0. F Baker, I. Bucholz and Mrs tion was “very ecritioal” M. Lee; to Tenakee: John Davis, 5 Jr. and Pete Warner; from Sitka NANKING, Aug. 26—Gen. Chou|ty wrangell: E. Stohmeier and En-lai, Chinese Communist chief: yway § " § A 4 |Wayne Wiegel; from Sitka to negotiator, today blamed the United | petersburg: Dorothy Simde; and to States for the breakdown of the pycx Creek, U. Pearce and Dean Chinese peace parleys. | Williams. 5 The United States’ policy of pro-| T, ‘Tulsequah: W. 8. Bissett; |viding continuing support for the|from Tulsequah: T D - s S 5 : (o} Chiang Kai-shek government basicly iy payi - i JgRt and to Taku Lodge: Mr is responsible for the failure of aq Mrs, J. J. Meherin, gLon':unc wpeclar envoy General Marshall gojgen, Alex Holden and Sandy and Ambassa_dor Stuard to mediate Holden; frem Lake Florence: Wylie the civil strife, he charged. Compton, L. D. Sturm, Wyliz J Nevertkeless, Chou offered in a compton and L. A. Sturm; from two-hour press conference, to Tenew syagway: Myrtle Ferrel, W. A the discussions with Nationalist wynne and Ted Lawrence; to Sit- negotlators if the Communist Party ks: Mike Roberts, J. Moore, Clyd® received an iron-clad guarantee poperts, Roy Coy, Mr. and Mrs. R. from Generalissimo Chiang Kai-\noore, N. Cropley, Robert Fisch- shek that a nationwide cease-fire o, james Peacock, Pat Moy and CHR R be lssued at the con-pen Miller; and o Pelican: Mrs clusion-of the. negotiations. {M. W. Soule, Mrs. R. Preston, Con- ki oot ) oy i nie Maddox, C. Paddock, Mr. and ART HEDGES RETURNS |y G Wahto, Karen Wahto and A. A. Hedges, Alaska Director, ; wanto, USES, returned this weekend from' 1" goonan: R fgorgan, M Seattle where he has been on offi-|p,oyn K. St. Claire, Duncan John- cial business since the fifteenth of|. ;) ang o, Ragina; from Hoonah: this month. : |Walter Jewell, Ginger Collier, During his stay in Seattle, Mr. meanor Jackson, P. Joseph, J. Dal- Hedges assisted in having the of-iton and G. Dalton; from Pelican fice there transferred from the s P, Mosher, William S. Hart, Ranke Building to Room 407, 619 a1 Bosi and Howard Banta; from o JUDGE JOSEPH R. McCARTHY, Marine Corps veteran, smiles in his home town of Appleton, Wis., and with reason, for he won the Republican nomination as Senator Republican nomination as Senator, Robert M. LaFollette in the pri- mary. (AP Wirephoto) Georgia Unit Yoie System Has Approval ATLANTA, 6—A three- judge Feceral court upheld today Georgia’s county unit vote system of deciding Democratic primary elections and refused to invalidate ncmination of E a fourth term as governor The tribunal dismissed a suit of an Emory University professor and an Atlanta woman civic lead- er which sought to have the unit system declared void and the nom- ination of Talmadge cancelled The judges said its was their unanimous opinions that “an inter- locutory injunction should be de- Aug The votes upunun' said “these unit also appear in the electoral coll in choosing a president, so there have been presidents who did not receive a majority of the popular vote.” In the July 17 Democratic pri- mary, Talmadge won the nomina- tion under the unit vote system although he trailed James V. Ca michael, backed by Governor Ellis Arnall, by about 14,000 votes in the statewide popular vote total. INDIA STABBING BRINGS THREAT, REPRISAL MOVES NEW DELH1, Aug. 26— The Hindustan Times, edited by Devadas Gandhi, hinted today as pcssible Congress party rey s against the Moslem . League, which is blamed for political violence. Commenting on the stabbing of Sir Shafa’At Ahmad Khan, 53, a none-League Moslem appointed to the Congress-formed interim gov- ernment for India, the Hindustan Times said ‘“violence is a game at which two can play.’ Sir Shafa’At was reported recov- ering today from seven stab wounds by two unknown assailants. A strict curfew continued in old Delhi where five were killed and 70 were injured in Bazaar riots Saturday night in a new outbreak ifrgm one of its most colorful and|Richmond of Toledo; A. S. France of dissatisfaction by Moslems over pjtterly fought political campaigns|of Fremont, O, and C. McAldwell formation of the new government. gene Talmadge to JOHNSON HITS SHIPMENTS OF | ((ULL PRODUCE tAlaska Railro;d Manager Also Airs Pilfering Troubles in Talk \E, Aug. 26.—Spoilage perishable produce reaching Alas cities is causing protests from mer- jchants and consumers, Col. John !P. Johnson, General Manager of {the Al Railroad, said here Col. Johnson, enroute Wash- {ington for conferences with Feder- |al officials, conferred here with steamship officials to try to deter- {mine the cause of such losses. i CULLS GO NORTH | “The consumers up there are of 'a strong opinion that shippers in iSeattle are sending the culls to {Alaska and reserving first class Iproduce for local trade,” Johnson 'said. “They fell that because |the distance the fresh vegetables, other perishable foods Imust travel, that they should re rceive the better merchandis: | Another cause for concern, John- !son said, “is the amount of pilfer- ing which takes place in shipments of merchandise to Alaska, and |which cost the railroad a total of 1$60,000 last yes { Johnson said that last year his irailtoad handled 2449 claims for stolen goods, and that the pilfering occurred before the merchandise reached the railroad. He said cartons would be rifled and then led up again, so that the loss |was not discernable until the pack- agé was opened. | Trese pilferings occur not only aboard ship, but also on the docks, he said, “and those who do it are leve: If we can determine a loss {before it somes to us, then it is the responsibility of the steamship company, but so much of tke time {we can’t.” None of this thievery takes place on the railroad, since the s are !locked and special agents ride the trains. { Johnson will go in the interest of obtaining equipment for the railroad, !described tke road's present equip- iment as “antique.” Te said 70 per- ‘cent of the equipment is 40 years {old, and was relegated to the Alas- ka Railroad {rom the Panama \Canal and from United States lines as they received modern equipment. R in a W fruit and to Washington new AFL SAILORS WILL DECIDE ON WALKOUT AFL i | i " sailors will meet in all Pacific coast 26. SAN FRANCISCO, Aug "purts tonight and may decide on a ,walkout in protest against the . Wage Stabilization Board’s rejec- Ition of a wage increase, Harry Lun- | deberg, Secretary of the ¢ ailors { Union of the Pacific, announced. Such a walkout would affect both east and west coasts, he added. B JESTER VICTOR IN ! TEXAS' GOVERNOR | RUNOFF ELECTION | DALLAS, Texas, Aug. 26.—Texas ltoday was beginning to recover {in history. of | He | PRIBILOF HERD | A"EMPT 10 | " JMilliow Now. SHOW MIGHT IS CHARGED Count Up 131 Per Cenlj from 1945, Though Fur | Take Is Smaller I Transport Incidents -Dub- By oo iy, 30 - Su bed Inflated fo Bring {rabi i Pressure on Tito 3,386,008 animals. i | The annual census was taken (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) August 10, and the results an-| The Russian and Yugoslav press rged the United States with nounced Saturday by Secretary of € | the Interior Krug jconducting a planned campaign This represencs 731 percent over of 3,158 extinction, now contains against Yugoslavia today as search partiss renewed the hunt for two issing American airmen lost in the When the government took over L'“:“:,‘I:‘d ‘,’,rv m:hhlem%w.:rs;lr:hp&?: active management of the herd in! 'y Thrt L T declared the {1910 it contained only 132,279 ani--ypjteq States was “attempting to mals. While being developed to it [yt pressure on Yugoslavia” by a present size through the limiting of qicpiay of military might, including killings to 4-year-old “bachelo the Mediterranean cruise of the air- and other conservation SUres, craft carrier Franklin D. Roosevelt. the herd bad produced 1367322 The prondcast, heard in London, skins at a prefit of more than $10,- 5aid the incident over the two 000,000 to the government (transports and the ensuing United During the 1946 season, which gtates ultimatum has been “infla- clesed Aug. 1, 54,423 skins were ta- ted” by “sensation-mongers and ken. This is a decrease of 12441 mischief-makers." skins under the 1945 take. The Fish and Wildlife Service attributed the; decrease to the late arrival of the herd on Alaska’s Pribilof Islands. increase of 1945 census an the LIES AND SLANDER Borba, official organ of the Com- munist party in Yugoslavia, said || More than 25000 seal skins will the campaign against Yugeslavia [be scld at a semi-annual public had been “invented” and had | auctien by the Fouke Fur Company 'Feached such proportions “it has at St. Louls Oct. 21. At the last forced the Paris peace cohference sale in St. Louis April 29, 28,032 Into the shadows” Glas, another | skins were sold at an average price | Yugoslav paper, printed the head- of $87.51 yline, “Campaign of Lies and Sland- | e e R jer” over an article on the inci- ,dent. | The Moscew papsr Pravda lauded YA HT pARIY ' Yugoslavia. as a country with {enough “nerve to stand up to lts Ilegal right,” and said the United | DIVE BOMBED !State press “as if under a band | i !leader's baton, raised a _frenzied ;cg\mpulgn against Yugoslavia.” Navy Planes Mistak White Hull for Target ~Drop Three Bombs HONORS TO FLIERS Plans were completed at Belgrade for the Yugoslav Fourth Army to accord highest military honors *to the three American fliers whose bodies have been recovered from € the August 19 incident. Their bod- ies were to be brought under Yugo- \slav military escort from their common grave at Koprivnik to Bel- !grade | The U. S. Ambassador to Bel- DETROIT, Aug. 26.—An investi- gation was ordered by Navy offi- cials today in the accidental dive- bombing of a private yacht in Lake Erie Sunday by three Navy planes, ‘grade, Richard C. Patterson, who on Thursday discussed with Tito the American ultimatum shortly after the release of nine occupants of the first plane forced down August 9, (conferred for several hours yes- + Bl ey wooale e, lga‘uerdny in Vienna with Gen. Mark QP CHIARRE, DANING So 0o A" W, Clark, American commander in tross,” escaped serious injury when Austria il R pravtice ™ pyrkey sent demands to Yugoslav- | boras 'ia for information on the condi- The planes, piloted by reserve!io ‘o a tenth occupaht, a Turk- officers on a weekend training mis- .o captain whe was wourdetd b cion, were from the Grosse Ile Na- iy 4 i fire frem Yugoslav fighting planes. val Air Station. Navy officials said "_L » they apparently mistook the white| rORTRESS GOES THROUGH boat for their similar-appearing | floating target 5§ | UDINE, Italy, Aug 26.—With e ¢ T 'machine guns loaded and uncov- Albert Reisig, of Toledo, owner . g ered, an American flying fortress of the r, suffered minor burns { rived here from Vienna today "“fi“?h_‘l’fk‘ e e i r’wl[h a cargo of mail and freight— Z “‘(‘:"‘f’ ; 1‘:“‘]“-“‘1. -h“‘(;]ml? ;’ ithe ftirst American plane to fly the e Ottawa River Yacht Club who| o1y oute from Vienna since the talked to the men when they came|yycodauc shot down two trans- ".‘.“w' .s“nd they related lh.vzl the | orts earlier this month planes made three bombing runs. The pilot of the Fort, Lt. William On the first run three of the @ Hyutchins of Los Angles, Calif., bombs were dropped but none came | .4 he had orders to fly to Udine close,” he said. “Only two lmmbs‘,md back. {were dropped on the second Iun.; g4 was reported here that a Fly- | “The third time they came down jn. portress would henceforth maks one of the bombs struck at the|yn. yun daily. | water line near the gas tank. Sev-| Hutchins said he flew at 10,000 eral of the men jumped overboard.” feet “along the prescribed corri- | A Navy crash boat, which aldor, avoiding Yugoslav territory.” | spokesman said was in the area to| The bomber carried a nine man warn off pleasure craft, rescued;crew, but no passengers. It was un- | the: men—George W. McKinley,|derstood here that passengers will Frank Szczeiska, Jr, and C. N.inot Le allowed on these flights, BODIES RECOVERED and H. 8. Fresch of Swanton, O. | BELGRADE, Aug. 26—Four flag- Ancther person was killed at Alla- habad last night. - — Beauford H. Jester, member of| Reisig stayed aboard to fight the draped coffins bearing the victims {the State Railroad Commission and fire, but the boat burned to thelof the Aug. 19 plane incident to- ¢ 4 B, jan attorney-farmer from Cnl'bi(‘ana,}\‘«alel‘ line. He estimated damage at day were taken from the Julian ACCIDENTAL SHOOTING Iwon the gubernatorial nomination |$5,000. !Alps to Ljubljana with Yugoslav “Death by gunshot woundsover Homer P. Hainey, former pres-| !soldiers paying honor. The bodies through the head accidentally in- ligent of the University of Texas in| ‘of the American fliers were taken flicted by Noble Webb” was the the Saturday run-off election that| ‘from a tiny grave near the spot verdict returned by a coroner’s jury climaxed a campaign that kegun| Iwhere their plane was shot down {ll-at-ease at receptions. But Mrs.! Replacing Johnson . as station | Second Avenue. All correspondence sitka: Vic Heino, Mike Roberts, B Nimitz loves them and insists on'manager at Annette Island is Jo-|IS now addressed to the new loca- T Thompson, Ernie Carter, Mrs dragging her husband along when seph Goding, which position he will tion, he said. He also attended aljean Carter, Jens Gyldneye and E she makes the rounds. Ihold in addition to his present|fiscal meeting to allocate available jonhnsone; from Sitka to Lake The rigors of war in the Pacific!position of district traffic manager | Fesources. | Hasselborg: Charles Conway, John ; RS Ul i i have now begun to look like heaven'at Ketchikan. {Conway and J. J. Conw: from in contrast with social Washington| - BRAMERS TO DENVER Igxcursion Inlet: Frank Metcalfe | Ms. John Bramer of Denver, and from Chatham: Antonip Fsti- R STOCK QUOTATIONS -MISS DEAN RETURNS L3 r #nd when the right time comes| Colorado, and her daughter, Miss gory, Ignacio T. Buccot and Ted A next year, the Admiral plans quiet-| ly to pull out. Note—Grandson of a Texas ho- tel-keeper, Admiral Nimitz hopes to retire to Texas or the California coast. PRESIDENTIAL SEASICKNESS Those who suffer from stomach maladjustments when they travel by sea or air will be glad to know ‘ Returning to Juneau on the S. s.| Jannine Bramer, flew south via\Rflnjo_ | Princess Norah Saturday night was! PAA after a two-and-one-half-| | Miss Emily Dean, freshmar and month visit in Alaska. sophomore English teacher at Ju-: They were in Juneau after spend- | neau High. ling the time visiting mothet: Morton Sontheimer, New York Since the dismissal of school in daughter of Mrs. Bramer, Mis.|City magazine writer, arrived here May, Miss Dean has been visiting John Heneisen, in Pelican. The| fronf Anchorage this weekend for with her family and relatives in' Bramers were enthusiastic. about a two-day stay at the Baranof { South Carolina and Tennessee. She | their first trip to Alaska and re-{Hotel. Mr. Sontheimer is in Alaska ‘repon.«; a very enjoyable summer,|port that they changed their minds!on an assignment from American was her first trip there in about a lot of things in the Terri- Magazine to do an article on Alas-! tory. ka Radio, Inc., in Anchorage. - MORTON SONTHEIMER HERE as it three years, which sat at the inguest several days ago regarding the death of Hubert Martin at Eureka. This in- formation was received from Wal- Huntley, U. commissioner at Palmer, Mr. Martin was killed las Tues- day in a hunting accident near Eureka roadhouse. He was accident- ally shot by Mr. Webb, a carpen- at Fort Richardson, who was stalking a caribou through dense willow growth at the foot ou a hill, ter ter nearly five months ago. The fate of the fifth occupant of NEW YORK, Aug. 26—Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 6%, American Can 100%, Anaconda 44'%, Curtiss Wright 7', International Harvester 91, Kennecott 53, New York Cen- al 22, Northern Pacific 26%, U Steel 87, Pound $4.03': HAIDA ON PATROL | Sales today were 760,000 shares. The CGC Haida left here Satur-| Dow, Jones averages today ate: day and will make a haljbut patrol| Industrials 19699, rails 60.84, utili- before returning to Ketchikan, |tes 40.38. With an estimated 98 percent of !the vote tabulated by the Texas election bureau, Jester held a land- slide count of 683605 votes to 355,- 888 for Rainey, or a total of 65.76 percent of the 2,039,493 votes count- ed. s - the plane was not known. His body may be under tbe burned plane wreckage -o TRIPPERS RETURN Mrs. J. K. McAlister, Marilyn | McAlister and Gloria Gullufson re- turned from Skagway Saturday by plane. They report having a won- derful two weeks vacation in Skag- way and Whitehorse,