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- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” —_— e ——— VOL. LXVL, NO. 10,619 “ JUNEAU, ALASKA, MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1947 " MEMBER A SSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS EXTENSION RENT CONTROL IS 'Alaska Hanna Glacier BIGPLOT CONFERENCE U.S. FLAGS |How (andidates for Fourth (OMEDOWN : 0f July Queen Stacking Up OVER MINES e Cecelia Thibodeau, Ann Thompson and Betty Bonnett, the three lead- ing Fourth of July Queen candidat:s in the order named, are redoubling their efforts in the last few hours before the midnight tonight deadline | for getting votes in, and excitement is running high. IS NIPPED INFRANCE "ATPARIS IS ~ DEADLOCKED Government Restores| Over 2,000 Coal Produc- ers fo Their Owners | "(By HAROLD W. WARD) , tion Ball to be held Thursday night, WASHINGTON, June 30—®—|ing to the committee. running rather close fer a place in right up to the last minute. Lois Nicholson, Rdath Dawes, Pat Hogue and Emma Nielsen are all fearly afternoon tally by contest officials | knowing how many votes will be dropped in the ballot boxes before midnight tonight, and there’s always a big chance for any of the girls | Results of the Queen contest will be made known at the big Corona- fhree Foreign Ministers Conspiracyi_o Overthrow| Meeting in Critical Republic Discovered- Arrests Are-Made PARIS, June 30. | Minister Edouard the Queen’s Court, according to the Of course, there's no way of (A—Interior Depreux an- (By TOM WILLIAMS) | PARIS, June 30— Toreign | July 3, in the Elks Ballroom, accord- | The Goverament lowered the Am-‘ Contestant Sponsor Votes [nounced today the discovery of a erican flags over more than 2500 !Cecelia Thibodeau American Legion 76.300 | “very widespread” plot by an or- | soft coal mines today and mrma}ly:Ann Thompson Central Labor Council 72,300 |ganization known as the Black hird session which may decide, restored the pits to the private Betty Bonnett Rebekahs, Odd Fellows 68,400 | Maquis to overthrow the French |ghether Europe can organize eco-| owners after 13 months of federal| Lois Nicholson Rainbow Girls 29,600 | Republic and set up a military dic- gomic cooperation transcending po-! operaticn. Rdath Dawes Parent-Teacher Association 27,000 | tatorship. Mtical and ideological differences. The contract dispute which|Pat Hogue Rotary Club 26,100 | Depreux said Gen. Guillaudot,| Informed sources said there was| prompted Federal seizure of the}Emma Nielsen Kiwanis Club 23,100 | Inspector General of the French no agreement between Soviet For-| mines May 22, 1946, still was un- Marilyn Merritt Juneau Chamber of Commerce 17,100 | Gendarmerie; Maj. Jean LouscanAI,ign Minister V. M. Molotov on! settled, however, and another strike | Betty Lou Hared Lions Club 12,600 |eau-Lacau, a rightist resistdnce !gne side and Britain's Ernest Be-| at conclusion of the current 10-day | Claire Folta Soroptimists Club 3 10,500 | leader who before the war ac- ¢in and France's Georges Bidault, vacation July 8 is a definite pros-{Edna O'Connor Business and Professional Women 10,400 | knowledged that he was a member jon the other concerning the Mar-' pect. Rosemary Doogan .Veterans of Forengn Wars 9,500 |of the anti-Republican Cagoulards ghall aid-Europe plan | With the Government steppingHarriet Maurstad Teen Age Club 9,300 | (Hooded Ones), and other officers| These informants predicted a/ aside as operator, it will be up tolLenora Qlson ‘Women of Moose 6,100 |and civilians had been arrested. !showdown, saying the French and the owners themselves to make|Harriet Stonehouse Elks and Emblem Club 5500 | A usually reliable semi-official!the British planned to restate their| terms with the miners. If they|Lily Ann Maurstad . Sons of Norway 3,700 | source said earlier that four French ipmposals for European economic don't succeed by July 8, the min- ers are expected to stay home. The Government gives back the mines in the same condition found them 13 months ago—empty of workers. e Andrew Bakkei ity i Pulp Timber Maska Indiéns Blocking generals and several civilians had recovery after weekend disclosure {been ‘mplicated. ‘of the Russian view that the task Depreux told a news conference of the conference was merely to that whole units of the French Army decide the amount of financial aid | |might have been involved. ineeded from the United States and | He said first details of the clan- whether such aid could be ob-| H ™ ‘destine organization of former right ained under the proposal advanced e's a on | wing resistance leaders, monarchists py Secretary of State Marshall. - ’ and Vichy collaborationists became |kncwn to French police forces late | THIRD SESSION FAILS ! PARIS, June 30—#—The third session of the conference of Brit- ‘ish, Russian and French Foreign lin 1946 from police informers. SR 0| Renamed Pefers; Many By VERN HAUGLAND WASHINGTON, June 30.—(P-— Unless objections are raised in the next 30 days, there no longer will be an Alaskan glacier named after | Marcus Hanra, the Cleveland poli- | Hanna died, the U. S. Bos | tical leader who twice helped elect Geographical Names, by William McKinley President. Instead, the Hanna, second-larg- name in honor of W. J. Peters, one of the geological survey engineers who pioneered the area. The gla- cier, 13 miles long, encircles the northwest end of Mount McKinley. A. H. Brooks and D. L. Raeburn | APPROPRIATIONS | FOR GOVI. DEPTS. ARE NOW SNAGGED Only Two Have Cash with| Which to Operate Past Midnight Tonight WASHINGTON, June 30—(®—! Congressional Fiscal Experts went | into a huddle. today over ways of financing Federal agencies as the | discovered the Other Namgs (Ijgnged‘ of the Geological Survey, the first white men to set foot upon Mt- McKinley's slopes, named the gla- cier for Peters in 1902. Two years later, the same yeal d on recial the glacier for vas never accept- request,” renamed Hanna. The name Ministers of France, Britain and|est northward-flowing glacier in the g jn Alaska, and except on official |sion of hahmslu met late today in a critical| Alaska range, will take its original mapg the glacier has continued to|told I3 be known as the Peters, jeorge M. Wright, naturalist who first nest—the only one yet found—of the rare surf- bird. Wright was killed in an auto- mobile accident near Deming, N. M., in 1936 Ofticial sanction was given to t name of Mount McKinley's two spires — 20,300-foot South Pe: highest poiut in the North Amc can Continent, and North Peak, about 19,000 feet high. Tigara Village, given its Eskiri » name officially in 1905, will here- after be called Point Hope—prinei | pally because the lighthouse, mis-| ston and postoffice on Point Hope ! never became popularly knewn as Tigara. The westward-flowing, 16-mile stream which empties into the Ne-' nana River in the Fairbanks meri- I fiscal year neared an end with only dian, and whkich was named Hose- One name, 41,200-foot Mount Wright, south of the junction of the Sanctuary and Teklanika Riv- ers, perpetuates the memory of| he ! SIGNED PRESIDENT ~ NOTIFIES CONGRESS Says New Law ""Plainiy In- adequate” But Lesser of Two Evils WASHINGTON June President Truman signed an exten- rent controls today but Con, the new law is plainly inadequate” and added: “It is this bill or no rent control all. I have chosen the lesser of 36— |two evil Mr. Truman in a 2,500-word mes- sage to Congress: 1. Labeled the new rent law t unsatisfactory.” Jrged Congress to adopt a six-point legislative program = for housing. 3. Called for a full Congressional investigation of the real estate lob- by, wii¢h he branded “clearly sub- versive” and guilty of ruthless disregard for public welfare.” Mr, Truman accused the lobby of consistently seeking to weaken rent control and of being “openly proud of their suecess in blocking a com- prehensive housing program.” He sald.the bilt he signed into law “irreparably weakened" Federal rent control, but that he had no cholce because rent controls would have ended at midnight tonight. - HearingIsOn T | WASHINGTON, June-30. — #— SHIP wRE(KED | Efforts to work out a proposal ac- | ‘Ministers ended in complete dis- MANY IMPORTS ARE T0 BE CUT BY GR. BRITAIN Dies, Wrangell WRANGELL, Alaska, June 30— Andrew Bakke, wellknown Sou(h-‘ east Alaska fisherman, died Satur-i{ day night after an illness of sev-! creement - tonight, a British in-,0n€ of 12 regular appropriation, anna Creek in 1816, will become h:vrm:mv. said. bills" cleared by toth the Senate known oifictally as<Lignite Creels.- 1 s d the House. |the name Alaskans have ‘used all’ British Foreign Secretary Ernest D e S all \Bevin rejected the Russian propo-| OBly two of the departments will | along (I-IMB'NG | features v ‘ceptahle to both sides of the con- | | troversy over legislation authorizing | the Forest Service to contract for; pulp timber cutting in Southeast sals for aepplication of the Mar-jhave cash with which to operate| - ’ Othér Changes chall plan of economic aid to Eur- Past micnight unless something is Some Mount McKinley 5 e g “ ates done quickly. The two are the!pnamed—I o} become eral years as the result of stom-! 3 % ¢ ope as “asking the United States O ' { named—long enough ago to become ach ulcers: He suffered an attack ¥ r:.]“k? cgntlnued "Odal}' ?ISSKB b A t' l E I d 1 c for a blank check,” the informant Treasury and Postoffice Depart-'yidely accepted—for persons prom- of the heart and was rushed here A elh "p(l)as:l ICRAETS: ARAUARMIIS) VRP - DRDv | crion Is Xpe( ed 10 Lon- reported ments, whose appropriation bill for!inent in Alaskan history, and now Thursday from Sitka and taken to! A hearing before the House Ag,i_" How would the Soviet Union like the year beginning tomorrow is on|yecommended: for official recogni- | . L] serve Her Shrinking k President Truman's desk. i » asked for a blan bl ot Both Senate and House the Wrangell Hospital. Death fol-{Blown 1,000 Miles O" nave| 10 culture Committee has been tenta- Al:(‘hdeacnln Tower lowed a hemmorrage. tively set for tomorrow DO”aI' SU I check?” he quoted Bevin as de-| ° o ull a granite G Bakke was inducted in 1941 in 2 DDY manding. {passed a stop-gap measure allow- yower)ike peak on the Summit Pass| [ i s 7 att) Course, Wrecked on | "Delegate Bartiett (b-Alaska) tola ks ANdING. yestion of Soviet For. g unfinanced agencies to INCUr| o proe e mier At mmfilfarihquake Breaks Levees I l 1a reporter that a first draft of a S afld | resolution giving the Indians’ views |of the situation was rejected by SAN DIEGO, Calif., June 30__,mjrepresentntives of the Interior, Ag- i o eq riculture and Justice departments eign Minister V. M. Molotov, who €Xpenses in anticipation of theirree haif o mile northwest of South acted as chairman at today's ses- Pending appropriations. But there|peyy Named for Hudson Stuck sion, the Ministers will meet again iS 8 question whether h’ffy €an| ppiscopal Archdeacon who led the at 4 pm. (10 am, EST) tomorm‘"-‘“‘““"‘/ meet thelr payrolls. tirst ascent of South Peak in 1913. LONDON, June 30—(#-—Chancel- lor of the Exchequer, Hugh Dalton, announced today that Britain {would cut imports of tobacco, gaso- cal discharge in 1942, Funeral services will be held! Tuesday under the auspices of the American Legion. Threatening Thousands A Senate resolution permitting v {— Five weary and sun-blacken: . : (line and newsprint during the year ——,re——— Harper glacier, between South —— | California fishermen, blown 1'000‘pfl';£1:celpi:1‘;irl:s‘ t?leaicrgnl'elr‘eencfl.mb”‘begmmng tomareom: . 40 -.oulsarve them to make Bct‘ualA expen(‘nilxxres"and North Peaks and descending ST. LOUIS, June 30—@—The STE‘MER MovEME“TS {miles off their course, were enmum‘l a YIS in 85000000 her shrinking dollar supply. SouRD u {is before the House ppr?pra D""Juorthcuslw;u-d about three myles, Mis ippi River climbed to a new !back to civilization today after six 1°ndS. sald to contain 85000000 "y, " o44ition, Dalton told the Committee. Some members of that| \ po ne teerall ' 3,500-foot ice- 103-vear record here today and U. w5 r' t of pulp timber. | weeks of near starvation on a deso- | P0ard fee Princess Norah, from Vancouver, ... pocific jsland off the Mexican | 1he resolution before Congress scheduled to arrive tomorrow after- i coast, would autherize the Forest Service D08 { The five fishermen, missing wi'.h‘“J Imakgllcontracts with logging and Northern Voyager, from Seattle {the 45-foot boat thistle out of San “’“é’ x:)xdc‘oncems, wnhdthe movneyl due Wednesday. jPedro since May 19, were rescued | to be-held in escrow pending & final | determination of the Indians’ rights. House of Commons, he would ask 'Parliament for authority to put an import cuty on motion pictures, if necessary, to economize in foreign exchange. Dalton said a severe shortage of | reluctant to accept 'my Ei Npbs At ;9’3"‘"’"@9 slu'c Tel i «mnur,:xslm” separating Harper glacier from S Army Engineers \\‘.Alll(.(l that the !n because it permits exper *lthe head of Muldrow glacier— for battle for two remaining “critical” the rate contemplated in the| levees thi a8 was “f 1 i e » Jhich | Arthiur : Herper, a. member of the 'BVEES i SO AIEA. WAS SAST. STOHS | President’s budget estimates, which y over” with another crest pouring | s 1913 expedition and first the Committee hopes to reduce. | b 7 o down from the mouth of the Mis- The 11 snagged appropriation souri River. " CELEBRATE NEXT MONTH, SEATILE man to |reach the top. Karstens Ridge, descending from uare Sinnet, from Seattle due . Tt 1§ “ | o s B " - r- bills are the main business before g ke ‘ot P Wfinasda I’labe Satu_rdn_\ by _v.he tuna c_hppexg The. position’ ot Jemes 'Carry. dollars was developing “in almost| SEATTLE, June 30. (- Suuld sl e S el last | the base of Browne Tower horth- A' !uul earthquake at 11:25 p.m, e {Normandie from pin-point Clipper- | 11 A di i ' 'all parts of the world.” |dough veterans of the Alaska gol gress as & i 5t eastward for two miles to Karstens' (EST) vesterday brought the threat llors Splice, from Seattle, due ton Island, a five square mile coral | SOV 10T Afi £ Zodipn h‘”‘ ages of | ".in particular,” he added, “our rush will relive their experiences scheduled month of its session. | “for Harry P. Karstens, guide |0f breaks to walersouied barriers July 10. {atoll, some 1,700 miles south of here | SOutheast Alaska, is that if the| .. "pyne of credit under the An-|in memory next month in Seattle, . ¢ ! holding back the river from thous- b QI ek | “Baranof scheduled to sail from (anq 900 miles from the Mexican |1ndians own the lands they should where 50 years ago the landing of a AI_ASKA AIRlI"ES ileMUL::;illgw expedition. ands of acres of ricn farmland on |glo-American loan agreement is Seattle July 4. | mainland | be permitted to negotiate their oWy oin g p £ 1d” from the Klondike Tatum, 11,100 feet—for he Illinois 1o Tail. the fne b . g drawn upon much more rap-|“ton of gol 4 4 g o the inois side hut the Engineers ““Aliska scheduled to sail ’mm] First word from rescuers to the | °oPtracts and fix the terms. lidly than we expected. It is our touched off the mass race north- ! 'R;':ev”' Tatum member of the 1013 | oy "1, tevees were reported dam- Seattle, July 8. Coast Guard and Navy here indi- |, = =0 Al !clear duty to take further steps to!ward. | ADDS “Ew plANES Lo s ; aged by the tremors which lasted Princess Louise scheduled to ar-!cated the men were in “fair condi- el i clost the gap between our necessary| Plans for the International Sour- | | For Sourdough Miner Wbol 1lvs. SAEOBAK. gve from Skagway at 7 o'clock to-|tjon,” but not elaborate. The Thistle | WEATHER REPORT imports and our exports.” |dough Reunion, Inc., here July 24- | | Pioneer Ridge, cesccnang north-| The Chouteau Island levee, merrow morning and sails south® was shattered on the shore, but none | ® Temperature 12' 24-Hour LTI s T, 127 are well under way, officials of 5 adkiand o Rlmist 10 s from ling 2,000 acres across from 6ne hour later at 8 o'clock. \of the crew were hurt. i ® Perlod Eading 7:30 o'Clock OLSON BEFORE GRAY |the host Seattle Alaska-Yukon Pio- | North Peak to Gunsight Pass » St. Louis, broke at two Aleutian, from west, scheduled | The Navy requested the Nor-| ‘This Morning | k s 3 | neers said today: The international | SEATTLE, June 30, — (P Alaska | DAmed for the party of Sourdough points today but Engineers said southbound Saturday. mandie, a San Diego vessel, to take | |_Prank E. Olson, Jr., Who W8 ar- |, poongon will be Seattle's first| SE s SUARR A0 | miners, including William Taylor, other bairiers would keep water » AT A By AT Iv.hg fishermen to the Galapagos In Juneau—Maximum, 55; | ested Friday night for being drunk. |G, .0 1949 {Alslines suURSiNcen. dodey it i Bas Hater Anderaon :,d two men ,,‘“!muj‘uuv of the nearby Venice and HERE FROM NORTH DAKOTA |Islands, about 1800 miles farther|® minimum, 46. | was to go before U. 8. Commlssion- | “psore than 1500 sourdoughs from 2dded thred four-engine DOC-4's %0 MoGancgall and Lioyd, who made Granite City industrial arcas. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Daub of |south, and said it was sending a At Airport—Maximum, 54; e er Felix Gray today to have a sus- |y, ypjted States, Alaska and Can- | ~ the first ascent of North Peak in! Fresh appeals for volunteers pended three months jail sentence | can Airlines cargo schedule to the e . . . L] . L] . . Fort Clark, North Dakota are re-;craft from Panama to pick up the|® minimum, 44. 1°€ 'ada are expected to attend the re- 1910, Also Anderson Pass, at 6,000 Were made by the Engineers in gistered at the Baranof. I victims, ® WEATHER FORECAST zevoked. ‘Olsan WhS soeusd Of vio- |unicn Tovitations have been-ex-|THTHOT. Seattle sales | feet overlooking the Muiirow gla- jthelr efforts to save dikes South of e The Thistle’s crew members were | ® (Juneau and Vieinity) lating the provisions of the sus-|iondeq to Gov. Ernest H. Gruening max, o | ola adlart oy Andaisor East St. Louis and 100 miles South ¥ Capt. -William Noble, Charles E. ® Variable cloudiness with e pension. Be k"ece"‘e‘;‘d the SUSpen- | or Alggka, Rex Beach and Robert :‘:r';flgf;cxs‘:d 't‘r":m";n:;‘;ufic;; | Patker Pass. 14600 feot, loading to &t Chester, Ill, while hundreds of 1 sion last week in addition to per- 1 Py Ry y > i 2 2 The w aShlngton}w"‘““' Glibert B, Stetnie, Robért|® "2 stowels loulght SNC 8 | nent revocetion: of his deivers | it (musd or LT e o tnird Teassd drom, Ospitel Also| EMPer giacier, and Browna Tawer |WEEINS Waeae gyaciRted Rant el {Marchal] and Walter Richards, all |® Tuesday. Warmer Tuesday o] lof the north, and George ck, th thwest end of Karstens homes ahead of the flood. | vi P i license and 2 $50 fine for reckless lines, an Eastern concern. With the |on the southwest end ¢! arstens | V9 o % 3 g Merr Go Round {* e A L | drivi : TIOM AL AResbag 301 the QRnadian | new equipment, the Alaska Jine will | Ridge— for Herscheg C. Parker and | The river reached 30.3 feet here - - |driving. g : g s ny ahlgre: of Me- Y | ': smn&ruscmnnnon | o B e Fatamprr e e |have five DC-4's and seven two- |Belmore Browne, who almost—but ?(":: Il"“l“" F .“f“l_“_ll“"“' f‘\’“‘\;\_f“ W PLABSON Two DBIROYERS @ (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 +.m, today) SITKA DOCTOR HERE HERE FROM KETCHIKAN engine DC-3's in service. not quite—reached the top of ‘M)U;‘d"‘lw L urg B o By DREW PEAR i log T s oy | Dr. P. A. Moore of Sitka is a| Shirley Mills of Ketchikan is a i, gy Mount McKinley in 1912 ; s 0 T i st at the Baranof Hotel. guest at the Gastineau Hotel. Mount Koven, 12,180 feet, near po s TON-—Thi: nar dod ® since June 1, 4.16 inches; guest a "Ew H | e o A fu..tfimk! ARE "ow BOU“D |® since July 1, 9572 inches. ® = mrem | | Karstens Ridge, and nearby Mount Price Confrols " ) | le At Airport — 81 inches; e | Carpe, 12500 feet—for Theodare| mgg column. Working newspspermen. al- . | Koven and Allen Carpe, killed in a 0" See How so call it “thumb-sucking.” Reason | ® since June 1, 4.15 inches; e ‘ 2 o 4 i | jdescent near Muldow glacler in . for the name is that supposedly you | - : 5l .July.l, 6.”3 .i"m:s‘ : : rot ama'lon 1932, Evel’ylhlng ups! don't have to wear out shoeleather gpATTIE, June 30.—P—The de- | BN | IS Now DBIG“ED Other names apyroved in the st A igpl R g, Xeu Mk & o9 ot ’°“r;;{m3’;i’:a ek At B e fOf' BARANOF SOUTHBOUND | ; o { {Mount Meiioley _area: Mount CHICAGO, June 30.—W— : i B n, Alaska, today carrying| Ty garanof arrived in port from WHEREAS, Friday, July 4th, commonly called “Inde- rooks and Brooks glacier, for On this first anniversary of the I am stipposed 3 , July A4th, i WASHINGTON, June 30. — (P— b R ao.::?ng:vst:ev 'c':’;f,ch;:'uffi,';‘; :he A vl Rff"“s"s on a two-week | 1o westward Saturday evening at pendence Day”, and Sunday July 6th, 1947, are legal Holidays Army engineers are designing a pre- | . Brooks: Mount Mather, first| cnd of Federal price controls, il bl ae Tocete peBIAd tr?lglr:mxd cl;u 5. 2 o 18 o'clock with the following passen- | in Alaska; and the Governor of Alaska has officially pro- fabricated temporary Arctic shelter dlr(’?lur of ""f Nildl.h\)ml Park Tu- pork con the dinner table costs e cesiroyers are due at Xeb~|gers for Juneau from Seward: Don claimed Saturday, July 5th, also a Holiday, and urged the for troops which can be transported | Y\¢; Muldrow glacier, for Robert| 78 percent more than it di& a the scrap basket of a closed-door chikan July 3, the 13th Naval Dis- Congressional committee-room. trict said. During a fur-day in- | However, you get awfully tired of ‘formal visit in Ketchikan the re- these crouched-under-table posi- ‘servists will be given a two days tions, and besides, even a calloused shore liberty. Leaving Ketchikan critic such as I sometimes gets July 7, the ship will return to Seat- | worried about the way the world isl'.le July 12. drifting. | iy i So if tolerant editors can put| CREAMERY MAN HERE up with a “think” column, here' Ken J. Lindsay of the Washing- | goes. {ton Creamery Company of Seattle | Racently I noticed two editorials is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. in Observatore, Romano, the Vati-| e b, % gy can newspaper which exprsses the| FROM METLAKATLA i, Lillian Leaske of Metiakatla is a (Continued on Page Four) guest at the Gastineau Hotel. Adler, W. C. Kalmar, J. M. Little,' Samuel McAfee and Elmer Lund. | She left for Seattle at 11:30 o'clock Saturday evening with the following passengers: Don C. Tag-' art, Mrs. Tagart. Edwin F. Penr-l tholl, B. H. Turner, Mrs. Turner,! Mrs. Billie Jaegel, Carl Jaegel, J.! G. Doerr, Mrs. Doerr and Ken-| neth Dice. Elmer Lund was the | | | | residents of Alaska to recognize and observe the three days as Holidays; and r | WHEREAS, the Common Council of the City of Juneau ! has authorized the Mayor to urge all inhabitants of the City to observe the three days as Holidays,— Now, therefore, I, Waino Hendrickson, Mayor of the City of Juneau, Alaska, do hereby recognize July 4th, July 5th and 6th, 1947, as Holidays; and accordingly urge all inhabitants of Juneau to recognize the three days as Holidays, and to celebrate as we do so our glorious heritage of Independence and Liberty, and our great privilege of calling ourselves Americans. 3 | only passenger for Ketchikan. R e FROM LONG BEACH S. C. McAfee of Long Beach, Calif,, is at the Baranof Hotel. (Signed) W. E. HENDRICKSON, Mayor. i ————— o ——— A —————————t by plane or glider and erected quick ly by unskilled men. The shelter, the War Department said tonight, will be capable of pro- viding an interior temperature of 70 degrees Fahrenheit while the ther- mometer outside hits 70 below. It also will stand up against a 125- mile-an-hour wind. | The units will be used for bar- racks, administration buildings, warehousing, shops, post exchanges, hospital and mess halls. Construc- tion will be such as to permit re-|Hardy Creek, Havenstrite Ridge and | Ange) moval and quick assemblage. 4 Muldrow of the Geological Survey; Wickersham Wall, for Judge James, Wickersham who led the first at- tempt—an unsuccessful one— to climb Mount McKinley, in 1903 | Also: Carlson Creek, Clearwater Creek, Mount Deception, Farthing Horn, Gunsight s McKinley River, Muddy River, Mount Silver- | thorne, Traleika glacier and West Fork glacier in the Mount Mcxm-‘ ley area; and Clff Creek, Cynthia| Falls, Forky Creek, Gaikema Creek, | Tonnie Creek, elsewhere in Alaska. vear ago, beef and veal 62 per- cent more. . Other foed, clothing, and liv- ing cests in general also have undergone sharp rises, trade and government figures show. Within the year. many prices zeomaed to record peaks, top- ping the highs of the 1919-20 postwar peried. e FROM PORT ANGELES and Mrs. Ed Haman of Port s, Wash., are registered at the Gastineau Hotel, Mr.