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e 'y THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” S VOL. LXVIIL, NO. 10,567 JUNEAU, ALASKA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 1947 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS TORNADIC WINDS KILL 20, INJURES 50 (LUEFOUND OF INCOME TAXES — WARLGOMS, | MISSING PLANE | T0 BE TRIMMED | NEAR VANCOUVER FOR canapians BELIEF OF “Bright Object” May Be| Sales and Luxury Iaxes,? GEN, (R AlG Scene of Crash-Weath- | However, Will Remain b ;, er Delays Search as af Present 1Says Necessity for Pre- | { VANCOUVER, B. C., April 30.—| OTTAWA, April 30.—Most Can- paredness Is Now- P—A “bright object” spotted on|adians today greeted with enthu- one of the lower levels of 5000- sinsm the news that the projected Defense for Alaska foot Mount Moriarity, 20 miles|1947-48 federal budget will trim R west of Nanaimo on Major General Howard A. Craig, Vancouver | their income taxes an average of! Island, provided searchers with 29 percent, but they expressed dis-'Commander-in-Chief of all Armed their only clue today to a Trans-|appointment that sales and luxury | Forces in Alaska, predicted last Canada Airlines transport, which|taxes will remain unchanged. |night that the United States pro- disappeared early yesterday near| Some labor officidls were eritical |bably will be involved in war with- the end of a Lethbridge, Alta., tO:(,f the fact that the new budget— in the next ten years. He said Vancouver flight with 15 aboard. |which calls for expenditure of $2,- that if such a war comes, Alaska Royal Capadian Air Force planes (02,000,000 in the new fiscal year— Must be strengthened and prepar- —grounded last night by ceilings!proposes removal of the excess pro-|ed for such a conilict almost zero—stood ready to searchigits tax, They contended that if Gen. Craig, speaking before the the rugged east side of the islafldjma: levy could be removed, lower|Encampment Banquet of the Al- for the missing craft as s0On 8S|pyacket income taxes should have|a<ka Department, Veterans of they get a break in the weather.pee eliminated entirely. | Foreign War: at the Salmon Ground forces wers preparing to| Gaieries -of the House of Com- | Creek Country Club, emphasized move to Moriarity from Nanaimo|yong were jammed last night when the necessity of preparedness now. to investigate the “object” spotted|jpinance Minister D. C. Abbott pre- He said that during the war which yesterday by an RCAF ther._who;se“tod the budget mx_g,vhv. come, Alaska will be the reported visibility too poor to iden-; e pinance Minister said the;Principal shoulder of the U. S. be-| tify it as a plane or its “"C'CR"surpln.\ first since 1930, compared | C&USE he belisves llml‘ the war age. 5 > with a deficit of $2,123,043,000 in will come from over the top of The mountain is approXimately ous 4 0ng would be applied against | the_world. g ; 60 airline miles west of Vancouv-lio.,.qa:c $13,000,000000 debt. He G0 Cralg poluted out that er'’s sea island airport. the plane’s; ... e surplus reflected the iact world dlplommav are Ql:lllem(\.tui, at destination. It is about 20 milesi) & o o ion s “enjoying a Present. and when lh.n_ hf)p.pcnm west of Nanaimo, island coastal i 3 o R ¥ he said, there is no other way out o just 40 iles across m(‘vdeglee of prosperity never excee " lexcept war. He pointed to previous 50 HALIBUTERS ARE F. W. WILLIAMSON ENROUTE TO BANKS IS RETIRING TODAY ~ FRCM P. S. OFFICE come, Gen. Craig declared that in Alaska, there already exists a joint F. W. (BilD Williamson, Cadas~ tral Engineer in the Public Sur- staff operation, which he heads, rand which consists of represen- vey Office, Bureau of Land Man- agement, retires from active ser- tatives of the Air Forces, the Army vice today. and the Navy. These representa- Entering the surveying service as tives report directly to him in- stead of ‘their immediate superiors. chainman in 1904, at Cheyenne, Wyoming, Williamson advanced He said this is, to his knowledge, the only real joint staff operation existing Aat present time in our through the various grades to his present position as Cadastral Engineer. LJ Armed Forces overseas. He came to Alaska in 1906 as Gen. Craig dd that he is con- stantly striving to build up Alaska assistant to J. Frank Warner and since that date his residence in as a defense bastion and that, at! Alaska has been continuous. In present, he iz making ' efforts to unify Alaska’s comynunications 1920 he resigned to engage in busi- ness on the Kenai Peninsula. In which he said are now, divided in- 1937 he was recalled &nd reap- to four commands: the Alaska Communications System of the pointed as Cadastral Engineer, and |he has served in that capacity Army Signal Corps; the Army Air- | since. ways Communications Systems of DOWN FROM NORTH Williamson's unusual ability as | | | | | | In time for the May 1 opening of the " halibut season, "Juneau's local fleet of nearly 50 craft iced up at the Cold Storage the first two days of this week and sailed for the fishing grounds. Most of the craft will be work- ing in Area two, from Cape Spen- cer toward the Southeast; while an estimated half-dozen will con- tinue into Area Three, from Cape Spencer westward ‘The first boats are expected to begin returning to Juneau early next week, probably on Tuesday, while the larger craft may remain on the banks for as long as 10 days or more. The Ketchikan fleet also is re- ported to have left for the banks for the opening of the season at midnight tonig R the Air Force; the Navy commun- ications system, and the Civill Aeronauti Authority communi- cations System. He said that he Lelieves the integration of these four units is vital to the defense of the Territory. He said that he is also enlarging Mr. and Mrs. Howard Dodge from a surveyor and Chief of Party housing facilities within the Terri-| Koyuk., and Mrs. Evelyn Mullaly bave long been recognized, and, tory and has already reopened the from Kobuk have come to Juneau for many years, the more difficult port of Whittier for transportation and are regisered at the Hotel Ju- Surveys in all parts of Alaska have of supplies. | neau. been assigned to him. In 1915 he SR BRI was placed in charge of the par- o ities that were surveying the Mat- Moscow IS DE(KED | The washlngto lanuska coal fields and since that i date he has been responsible for | the field work in many other sec- our FOR MAY DAY' | Merry- (Go-Round e of the Teritory, He made. v R !the surveys of many townsites in REVIEw Bv SIA[I“ , s 3 Alaska, and among those com- By DREW PEARSON pleted in recent years are Kodiak, | h WASHINGTON_It wasn't talked ' Whittier, Sitka and additions at 20 Sows e about outside Congressional cloak- | Petersburg. —In hls' ""‘F“’l WOrK soviet capital was decked out in rooms, but astute Speaker Joe Mar- he has visited many parts of Al yojgay regalia today in readines tin engineered the sudden reversal|2ska and the landscape, from . iomorows May Day celeb of the House Banking Committee Ketchikan to Kotzebue, is dotted|tio, expected to be the larges when it voted 14-10 against a 10|Vith stakes placed under his di-)gnee tpe ywar. j percent general rent increase.Just | €CHO™ ‘ | Prime Minister Stalin, who was one month ago the Committee had | ¥nroushout his long career m;away on vacation during last year's voted 9-4 for the rent boost. ‘wgovemmgnn s wmmmso"‘May Day celebration, is expected Before the closed-door committee 128 merited and pnjoyed fhie ,gon'ito,be on hand in Red Square to! session got under way, Martin call- |fidence of all those }:m_de; WHOM | 1eyiew the parade from the tribunal ed in Chairman Jesse Wolcott of D¢ has worked. He has been Te-|aio; penins Tomb. | Michigan and other Rer.nuhlmans‘sl’em'ed 'y &l . have. seA:led‘- 0 e Sy i ! to whom he gave some dutch-uncle |U2der him and e hak enzied ke | pz)li:}i;;al!:'m::nw:se to increase remslleaving Aldhks. They are going to| TIE y Marfm argued that it would be%;:elr homfi :’nflKe:-ndal L‘ik:io';? 5 D up' SEAII[E; “poor psychology” to endeavor to| Y8 NN aREtTed. yacation. | raise rents now, - because we donot | Lfish\ng boats here were still tied up . Xnow what strides the building in- | EAR]’H SHO(K [today by th dispute between the | dustry will make in the next year.“ ll“ishmg Vessel Owners’ Assocxauon[ “Give the builders a chance to| There was a 10 second earth and the Deep Sea Fishermen's Un- see what they can.do,” the Spehk-shock last night at 9:42 o'clock but lion over the percentage of the er declared. “If we get more rental \no damage has been reported. If catzh to go to the owners and the construction, rents will come down 'one was sitfing in a room, the|fishermen. without any action by Congress. | shock was just as if someone had{ About 200 Seattle vessels were | “Personally, I am against Con- jdropped a heavy article. The shock | kept in port by the controversy. | gress setting any flat rate for rent Was noticed in all sections of the| “The union is standing pat on its increases at this time, or for that[city. One excited person phoned demands” Harold Grotle, union' matter, price increases of any kind. |the Empire office and wanted to'secretary said. : Something like this might lead to know if the mine had set off a SEATTLE, April 30.—P—Halibut adding, “he’s a grand guy COL. DURANT IS iFfiREIGN. RELIEF FOUNDGUILTY IN | BILL IS SLASHED | THEFT OF JEWElSl BY HOUSE ACTION i , o 1 Military Court of.Eight!One Hundred Fifty Million, Colonels Deliberates |- Trimmed from Orig- ' iy for Eight Days inal Amount 124 - DAY STRIKE i | - FRANKFURT, Germany, April' WASHINGTON, April 30.- P | 30 (M—Col. Jack W. Durant was.The House passed a 8200.000.000; IN HEllo RANKS sentenced today to 15 years at'foreign relicf bill today aiter cut- hard labor and dismissal from the'ting §150,000,000 off the sum asked | E“DS "Ew YORK U. S. Army for participation in'by the administration and clamping ' (] the bizarre theft of 1,500,000 oftight conditions on aid going to| % Hesse royal jewels from Kronberg|countries under Russian domina- NEW YORK, April 30.—®—Four Castle. ! tion. striking telephone unions settled After deliberating for two days,! The meastre now goes to the with the New York Telephone Com- the U. S. Military court of eight'Senate where the Foreign Relations pany today for a $4 a week wage colonels convicted the 37-year-old' Committee ulready has approved!increase and other union-sought Chicago Air Force officer on eightithe full $350,000,000 figure. {improvements, the union announced counts. These included theft,| Pinal passage came after the| The agreement settled a 24-day smuggling jewels into the United{House shouted down a motion by strike by 37,000 employees of the States without payment of customs Rep. O'Konski (R-Wis) to return company. Under its terms they will and signing another officer'’s name the bill to committee. The House. return to work tomorrow. without authority in an attempt|ajready had voted to trim thefunds| Other gains listed by the unions to hasten a discharge from the gnd fix distribution standards in a statement handedy pickets by army ; where Moscow might be involved. | their leaders were maintenance of Durant’s wife, former Wac Cap-| > { membership and an extra day of tain Kathleen B. Nash, a former | | vacation granted when a holi country club manager at Phoemxv‘B'G MEEI"NG OF i falls during a regular vacation per- Ariz., was sentenced to five years liod, at hard labor last September 2'7‘ AN for her part in the embezzlement. '".I or Julv : AR Maj. David S. Watson of Bux'-: FOUR ’ ANOTHER STREN lingame, Calif, was sentenced to! PHILADELPHIA, April 30.—(h— Ehise maaie th thie. SRR ARMETRG plA""ERS 8P M IThe strike of 6,000 maintenance & “trial ‘which- ended™ Insks OSIOBER 4 #B78a | workers against the Bell Telephone , i~ ¢ ——e Company of Pennsylvania ended i The Fourth of July Committee today with agreement on a new 'MMEDIAIE A('"o" !\vfll meet tonight at 8 o'clock in contract providing wage increases L {Room 5, Shattuck Building, it has of $3 and $4 a week. NE(ESSARY o" "A]’l :been announced. and all organiza- An official who declined use of od tions are requested to have a rep- his name declared these terms (EMH’ERY PROJE("‘ (resentative present. | “likely will set the pattern for set- ! Committee members at this tlement of the telephone strike on ——— time are Mrs. Lucile Johnson, a national basis.” Juneau City Council will meet BPWC; G. E. Almquist, Moose; B, beugy?_" he added, “that tel- in_ special session this evening at Esta'rpok, VFW; Harry Sperling, ephone wage talks in Washington 7:18 jn e Council Chambeis to Chanber of Commerce; Rod Dar- wil) e in setflément in less than consider a land gift of $9,100 to nell, Rotary; Fred Henning, JMA; 43 hofirs” the U. 8. Army for a National Milo Clouse. Territorial Sportsmen; A il Cemetery. Waino Hendrickson, American Le- Waino Hendrickson from ' the Davis, P-TA; William J. Walker, Governor of Alaska and Delegate Kiwanis, and Lou Hudson, Elks. | E. L. Bartlett that the Army is Any organization not represent- leE" wRA"GEll putting tefore Congress a bill to ed on this list is invited to send authorize immediate construction'a representative. } DREDGE CONIRA(I of a National Cemetery here. Chairman Waino Hendrickson Army plans, which call for an will present plans of decoration, Plc iR ultimate expenditure of over a finance, and floats, which were WASHINGTON, April 30.—(® million dollars, do not include pur- discussed at the Executive Commit- A contract for dredging Wrangell chasing the necessary property. The tee meeting held last week. Narrows, Alaska, has been let to Charles Switz estate has been| Executive Committee members the Puget Sound Bridge and purchased by a group of local resi- are Waino Hendrickson, Chairman; Dredging Company of attle. dents, and offered to the City for, Bud Nance, Al Zenger, sr., Rod Army Engineers, advising Dele- $9,100 for the express purpose of:Darnell, Frank Hermann and Mrs. gate Bartlett of Alaska today using it for a National Cemetery.|Virginia Wells, Secretary. The Army asks that Juneau do-| AN e iieipasiny nate the land; and, according to the word received by Mayor Hem{AlASKA COASIA drickson, if the land is not given| immediately the Army will look} elsewhere in the Territory. Amll"[s FlIES 23 - >-ee - & f MEXI(O VIS"'S Alaska Coastal Airlines report- tinue the work. led five passenger flights yester-' TR !day, carrying a total of 28 persons l" wASHINGTo“ {in and out of Juneau. The planes DANES MOURN AS touched at Sitka, Chatham, Hawk Inlet, Funter Bay, Haines, Skag-, Fu"ER‘l (ORIEGE Miguel Aleman, President of Mex-| "5 belican and Tulscquah, B. C. y " {Mandy, Mrs. Mullaly, G. Graham, ';;]:'V;S:"‘g““‘ oy e T’*S“ianu E. Dennis; Martin Ebona was 3 ruman giving him a cheery & - - - 4 endoff from the White House and‘{(h,):,;gte:: wci;':ri:"}'m(.':nd Louls, COPZNHAGEN. April 30.—f— alling him “a grand " Lo i Half a million Danes stood in si- 8 8 guy. ! Return passengers from Sitka i 2 A8t e dhedk HesAe baich | Sitka jent mourning today watching the e were Gordon Graham, Priscilla e i the visiting Chief of State and!p. o % cortege of beloved King Christian g C iParker, Dr. Edith Sappington, Dr. x through black-decked members of his party at the exit|c. E. Albrecht, B. Martinson, M. S s of the south portico of the White s g 3 ,streets to his burial place in Ros- B v A. Young and Catharine Sher-'yiide Cathedral House, where Mr. Aleman spent the ; wood. para < i night. H Slevad Bheidon. * sias giawn ml ?recedlng the hp?ne 'were a'nx Waving to the Mexican President|Haines, and Mr. and Mrs. smry;u“;:ry ?etm":;ufmi, ;"sumw:fl‘ o as the automobile procession left|to ‘Skagway Travis -A. Stepin B::‘"es g e i i the grounds enroute to Arlington [refnrned with * the plane from Iml;ledin'.ely behiAdYiths Dikarss a:md a visit to the tomb of Amer- Skagway to Juneau. Pelican P“"‘Ixing Prederick and his brother, ica’s Unknown Soldier, Mr. Truman sengers were Mr. Hoyt, Mrs. Oze-' ’ : said to reporters: “I think he’s having a nice time," ed for the company to do $500,000 worth of work on the northernmost at Frederick Sound. | i The dredging is to be to a until the present $500,000 priation is exhaused or appro- | | Congress i jnimus and James Liva; to Tulse-| King Haakon }quah, B. C.. B. Mickoviels; and!gng prince George ifrom Pelican to Juneau, Ed Blan- pet. i j“mg' | Weeping »persons were numerous % among the throngs of watchers. Boulder Dam A g i "ow Renamed ¢ } “ocx ouol‘ilo"s R?li‘::tfllxzfsimml;‘:!? was placed { NEW YORK, April 30-‘Cl°5i“g!abourd a rail car at the Central Hoover Dam 1 quotation o!IAluska Jungnu mine ‘station to be carried to his crypt [slgck today is 4'%, Amex‘flcan Can among his ancestors in historic p it 191%, Anaconda 36%, Curtiss-Wright Roskilde Cathedral. WASHINGTON, April 30—(P—|47 International Harvester 81'2, The King's old friend, Engineer ?res)dent Truman today signed Kennecott 44';, New York Central p, N, Hansen, was at the cen- legislation renaming Boulder Dam}lfi’w. Northern Pacific 16%, U. S. trols of the funeral train. Christ- Hoover Dam. Mr. Truman used four VII of Norway of Greece were | Steel 70%, Pound $4.02'%. /ian had requested before his death pens in} \Prince Knud, walked side by side.| Sales today were 780,000 shares.'that Hansen drive the train, just as| WRANGELL SHINGLES SOUTH ‘stgning the resolution and sent! INew Million Dollar Firm TakesOver JuncauMills; Fadilitiesfo Be Expanded The Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc, scheduled to change ownership at 5 p. m. tcday with control be- ing transferred to a new million dollar corporation, the Juneau Spruce Corporation The new concern, owned primarily by gon lumber interests, expected | complete the details of negotiations v, D. D. Dashney, of Portland, Ore., who is here to handle final nego- tiations, said the sale involves pur- chase of the Juneau sawmill and lumber yard, the Juneau Logging Co., the Juneau Motorship Co. a lumber yard at Anchorage and a sawmill and lumber ‘banks. All of the old companie: | will be combined into one new cor- | poration. » Forming the corporation with Dashney are R. C. Hastings and Williams Ruhmann, also or Port- land. The Board of Directors con- \sists of: H. F. Chaney, Portland, {Company President; Thomas W {Dant, Portland; E. S. Hawkins, Juneau, Vice-President and Resi- dent Manager; Geqrge B. Schmidt, Juneau, Assistant Man- jer; J. 8. |Forrester and Freeman Schultz, Coos Bay, Oregon; and Jens Jor- |gensen, Coquille, Ore. to its | Capitalization The corporation is capitalized at $1,000,000, which has already been completely subscribed. The stock is divided into 5,000 shares of pre- !ferred having a par value of $100 each and 50,000 shares of common iwith & par value of $10 per share. | E. S. Hawkins, company |ager, recently moved to Juneau from Lebannon, Ore., where he was the proprietor of a logging opera- a small sawmill. { The Juneau mill will be closed {all day tomorrow for inventory. Dashney said that it will be se jeral days before the exact pur- ichusu price can be determined be- cause of the huge inventory and |appraisal neécessary to be made. tion and A To Expand Facilities The firm contemplates some {changes in its plant here, which {will continue to House the main |office of the firm. The new own- ers expect to invest additional ilities and modernizing their op- lerations. Everything will be done, more efficient. | As soon as a sufficent supply depth of 24 feet and width of 300 of logs can be arranged, a two-shift by Al The work will be carried on schedule will start in the Juneau correspondent, the story of un eye- mill, which will mean the em- ployment of an additional 80 men. approprites more money to con- Sixty more men will be employed as soon as more can be established George B. Schmidt, assistant manager of the old company, will ept by the new company and |given the same title but will have 'additicnal responsibilities. He is logging camps to be placed in charge of all re-: tail sales in Alaska. |are contemplated for members of the staff. Rutherford To Retire ! Roy A. Rutherford, President of the Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc., |will be retained by the Spruce Corporation as a consultant for 130 days. Rutherford founded his concern in 1904 j Fairtanks. He came to Alaska in 1901 and has \remained in the Territory since ‘that time. He has operated saw- imills at Valdez, Ruby and Hot Springs as well as at Juneau, Fair- {banks and Anchorage. He pur- |chased the Juneau Lumber Mills in 1919 from' the Worthen Lumber Mills and has made his head- Iquarters in Juneau since then. | Rutherford, now 70 years of age, plans to retire as soon as his af- ifairs in Alaska are concluded. He has already purchased a home in He visits to a No changes the other iScnme and will reside there. |expects to make occasional to the Territory, but hopes ;be able to take easy for i while, at least | e > - " STEAMER MOVEMENTS it Merrill-Lynch averages today are he had on all the King's train-| yard at Fair-| ' town of about 200 population, cent. Texas City, ” e G bRcHBEA. the TOWNS IN 3 STATES HIT HARD Property Damages Runs Into Thousand of Dol- lars-Buildings Razed WORTH, Mmo., April 30 —(P—Tor- inadic winds whipped through !small towns in Arkansas, Missouri and Towa, leaving at - least 20 dead today, injuring more than 50 and causing thousands of dollars |in property damage. | Hardest hit was this northwest Missouri town with a population of (233. Thireen persons were killed and approximatey 45 injured. Only half a dozen buildings in the town were left standing. At least seven persons were kill- ed in Arkansas where vicious winds ilast night lashed the small com- munity of Bright Water and swept close to Garfield, not far from the Missouri line. A tornado also struck Clio, Ore-| a in southwestern Iowa, causing ex- tensive property damage. No loss of life was reported, however. The Tornado that hit Worth, swept through the center of the town, wiping out the entire busi- ness district. Two of the town's three churches and its brick school house were among the buildings demolished. Practically every tree in town was clipped off. Al Dopkins, Associated Press. re- porter who also vered the re- here as greater proportionately than that at the Texas town. N. A. Combs, a Worth mail car- irier, said he doubted if the town (would Le rebuilt. At Worth dazed survivors today searched the ruins of their homes. Many of them wore bandages and some limped as they wandered over | the nightmarish scene where the tornado left only 13 houses stand- ing on the north side and eight on the south side. An indicarion of the force of the wind was given by an eight-foot two-by-four timber which had been of money in the company for the driven completely through the body the action, said the contract call- purpose of expanding present fac- of a horse. west of the city a tree small branches had Just stripped of 13' miles of the Narrows, starting taid Dashney, to make production several chickens impaled on the re- maining branches. The following account is written Dopkins, Associated Press witn Eye Witness Actount A 37-year-old school teacher was i the heroine today of this tornado- battered and sorrowing town where almost a fourth of the population was killed or injured by yester- day’s devastating winds. | Mrs. Anne Trump was credited with saving the lives of her pupils by herding them into a cave just before the tornado demolished the school house. Gets Warning Warned by a passerby that a strong wind was approaching, Mrs . Trump rushed outside with Max Lee Murdock, one of the pupils. They saw a cloud resembling & | tunnel. Mrs. Trump said it looked | “just like pictures we had studied in science classes.” ! “I knew we had to find a cave 'and I tried to recall one nearby. I finally thought of one about ‘half a block away at Bill Setzer’s, and I started the children into the cave. “As soon as I got the children in, I started toward my mother’s jhouse, My mother is an invalid and |T knew she would need help. I got about a block irom Harry Harris' 'house and I was walking right into the storm. | As Mrs. Trump walked into the |storm, she related, she took one |quick look back over her shoulder | to see if all her pupils were under | cover. . “When I looked back I saw the school alreaay was gone,” she re- |lated. “I walked a few more yards land took one more look and saw tation national price-fixing and I do notiblflsn s think this is within the province| Repors received by the Weather| Twenty six hundred bales of ce-|them to Lawrence Ritchie, secre-'as follows: industrials 170.64, rails'trips through Denmark of Congress, except in Extreme;B“Tfliu i:nd urlsfl A(CGS flflw !h;idar shingles have been shipped tary to former President Herbert|45.22, utilities 33.98 { - - cases.” jmovement was felt at Gustavus an Il'l'm'n Wrangell, bound for Honolu- | Hcover, with the view to Hoover's 5 > - Il HALEY MOVES OFFICE ig - e ri- i Later, when the closed-dopr 'Skagway. (u. | distributing the pens as he pleases. | TWO SALESMEN HERE { The Territorial Office of Veterans dn:leul s ol \L‘:[o:leg“ gy e Banking Committee convened, the| h “0' £ N - > - | e — J. F. Cavnar, with Ford Motor Aifairs today moved to its old qual ;’wn.u-ess Louise scheduled to sail A only Republicans who spoke out| AT HOTEL JUNEAU | SUMPTION SELLS 1 GASTINEAU GUESTS {Company, ard H. R. Buchser of ters in the Pederal Building. Nor-|from Vancéuver, 9 o'clock tonight for the 10 percent hike were re-| Frank Mandy from Seattle, How- | George Sumption has sold his| Gust Hagevik, Samuel Hutchin-'Colgate, Palmolive, Peet Company man Haley, Veterans Commissioner, | presentatives Howard Buffett of ard K. Bain _and Sherman Andrew{interest in the Reliance Shrimp son, J. M. Atkinson and Robert both registered from Seattle yester- stated his office is now located in from Olympia haye been newly Co, at Wrangell to John Silverton,|Curry, all from Seattle are at tie day at the Baranof Hotel Buscher the House of Representatives “boil- (Continued on Page Four) “registered at the Hotel Juneau. also of Wrangell, Gastineau, * checked out this morning. er room,” No. 222, Northern Voyager, from Seattle. the town disappear. I felt sure my - due at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon.|children were safe for I had seen Terrifying Cloud “Then the terrifying black cloud Palisano scheduled to sail lmm‘seemed to engult me. . . ." Seattle May 2 | “Murs. Harrls was sick in bed and Square Sinnet scheduled to sail| from Seattle May 2 ll ICnrtllyzvxéd on P&a;bul