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HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” e e VOL. LXVI,, NO. 10,637 FEDERAL POSSE HU Alaska Shipping Case Is Stated at Hearing; New Proposal Is Submitied | DUTCH ARMY | DRIVING ON, JAVABATTLE stttk T 8- 409 HOMELESS ~ publicn Forees | A€ DESULT OF EAVY RAINS By STANLEY SWINTON BATAVIA, Java, July 23.—P— Pennsylvania Town Dam- aged fo Extent of Mil- People’s Army” on the big neigh-| nowledged that Dutch troops in| City employees dispensed disin- | scorched earth tactics were be—{H | lion Dollars, Report boring island of Sumatra also were | East Central Java were only 12)fectants and lime to all seeking gun today by Indonesian Republi- can forces ahead of a determined Dutch army drive to slice Java in two, a broadcast Indonesian army communique announced. 3 At the same time oificial Dutch dispatches from Sumatra said ir- regular Indonesian soldiers of “the| applying the tactics. These dis-| ERIE, Pa. July 23—(®—House- patches said the irregulars burned |holders, merchants and industries more than 100 homes before eva-|today were offered use of the city’'s cuating the town of Arnhemia, a resources in cleaning up after few miles south of Dutch-held Me- |record-breaking rains which left dan. Arnhemia, now is in Dutch /more than 100 homeless and caused hands, the dispatches said. {damage estimated at well over An Indonesian communique ack- |$1,000,000. miles from the key Indonesian &id in restoring flooded basements. stronghold of Malang, and were Firemen were kept busy hosing iout flood debris in homes, stores iand factories. | Scores of families evacuated yes- = terday during the height of the The w aShlngton Easked by city officials to stay with Merry - Go- Round {relatives or remain in the hastily By DREW PEARESON Jage was to stock in stores, air eon- WASHINGTON — Secretary of gjtioning and heating plants, and State George Marshall took nO|equipment and supplies in factor- chances on press leaks when heijes. One of the worst hit plants, agreed to confer on “German re-|the big Erie works of the General habilitation problems” last week|Electric, was still totaling up dam- with a Congressional group led bY!ngES, Officials said the fotal might Representative Acolph Sabath of run over a half-million dollars. Illinois, white-thatched, 81-year-old| Among those evacuated yesterday Dean of the House ‘;were several score Negro families “This is an unusual meeting, for |living in the (Continued on Page Eight) ———ee— jers until all danger of disease is | eliminated. City officials said the worst dam- I seldom confer with members of | housing project. Congress except when I am called | e before a committee on some matter.l Marshall reminded his callers.| “Therefore, everything said here! arano ere must be considerea strictly off-the- record.” ! Events justified this precaution, ! for the Secretary of State found} oun es himselt caught in a swirling, three- | 5 heur controversy, during whick: the | junprecedented nine-inch rains were |arranged City Hall annex quart-| Franklin Terrace of LAMBAST RUSSIAN DELEGATE | i WASHINGTON, July 23.7‘.‘?"»‘\ LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y, July 23. Rep. John J. Allen, jr., (R-Calif) |—(P—Soviet chairman of a House beommit- | ister Andrei A. Gromyko's top de- tee investigating the Alaskan ship-|puty in the United Nations was ping situation, expressed the opin- lambasted today in one of the ion today the group will present strongest personal attacks ever a plan for permanent relief ofimade in the UN. the Territory from excessive freight| After Alexei N. Krasilnikov had rates. {delivered a 30-minute speech cas- “Some program of legislative as- tigating the western powers for sistance to insure adequate Sser-itheir opposition to the admission |vice at reasonable rates is neces- of Soviet-supported Albania to the { | | \ ! i sary if the Territory is to con- UN, Britain’s Valentine G. Law- tinue to develop and to grow,” ferd said in measured words: Allen said in a statement. | “I1t is deporable that we should Expressing confidence that thelpe subjected day after day, week group will work out an overall gjier week, month after month to program, Allen said: Ithis junk about provocations, lies, “If we are successful in doing s0,!pgises and repetitions. We are pre- and I feel sure we Will be, T gymed to be intelligent officials foresee continued and growing de-|ung not a gathering of illiterates. velopment of Alaska. Should We! «we draw our conclusions from fail, T fear that the Territory's! oo and not from slogans. I term growth will be strangled through)i.. goviet specch a regrettably of- the cutting of its life line to the fensive production.” continental. TRThd (i | Col. W. R. Hodgson of Australia His - subcompmittee -of ‘!he RouKy took the floor immediately to de- Merchant Marine Committee start-| ... ed hearings yesterday to obtain 'Ht.)w glad I am that these meet- |data on which to base legislation. ings are now open to the press (It will have another session to- P' ¥ % ! | Previcusly we have had to put up !with calculated abuse and distor- MOrrow. ri it was suggest- . At the heagings it g tions of this particular represen~ |tative of the Soviet Union for a ed that the Alaska shipping com- panies might operate from Oregon 2 {and California, as far south as long time. !San Diego and Los Angeles. Allen said the committee want-| o ed to hear testimony from all in- IRUMAN IS |from shipping interests in Wash-| |ington state and the people of} Alaska. |- ‘He received with favor a sugges-| tion by Delegate Bartlett of Al-| | hearings on the Pacific Coast, |in the three states, and in Alaska. M a ! Allen reviewed the shipping; |ing recent_freight rate increasesI WASHINGTON, July 23— !under the interim plan of opera-|Breaking precedent, President Tru- tion to remain in forece until next man took his old seat in the Sen- jof the Territory have said theysaying he had spent the best ten joaunbl beas, years of his life there. Allen, Reps. Bradley (R-Calil)|" Grinning happily, the President, ;!eu urged that th_e committee hnvelwfl“‘ed onto the Senate floor un- its recommendations ready "‘he",annuunced after lunching at the the next session of Congress c€on-| capito], venes in January. 1 | Democratic side as Senators and |gallery occupants rose and ap- —,— - terests in those states as well as aska that the committee hold | Ipmblems of the Territory, includ- i e 3 July 1 which, he said, the people:aw today and made a brief speech |and Jackson (D-Wash) and Bart- 5 former Senator from Missouri, | He took a rear row seat on the plauded. {FLAGS IN ALASKA = JUNEAU, ALASKA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1947 Deputy Foreign Min- | " MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS —— SAWNILL HOMES " 60 10 DOUGLAS | INSTEAD HIWAY Scores Secu | Queen Ann's Avenue iportion of the City. The site can accommodate 90 homes but Hawkins said that hi apegr | iCosts and Facilities Make Change of Plans Neces- | | sary for Employees WRE(K AGE OI: Plans have been changed for the location of housing facilities for \ employees of the Juneau Spruce Corporation. E. S. Hawkins, Resi- ’l o s I P l A N E dent Manager of the Company, an-| | nounced today that the Spruce Corporation has abandoned its idea of locating homes for employees on IS R E p o RTE D Ithe Douglas Highway and has, in-| stead, completed negotiations with | {the City of Douglas for the pur-| SEATTLE, July 23.—P—A pick- chase of sites within the city limits led mountain climbing party fac- {of that town. |ed a dangerous climb to the pre- l Hawkins said that the company cipitous, crevasse-picked 10,000~ ihas purchased approximately four|foot level of Mt. Rainier today to lsquare city blocks from the City of check on what may be the wreck- Douglas for the sum of $1 and age of the Marine Corps transport other considerations.” The sale was|plane which vanished with 32 japproved by the Douglas City men aboard on a San Diego-Seattle Council and work has already been |flight last December 10. started by contractor Bill Manthey! Thirteenth Naval District Head !for clearing and leveling the ground |quarters reported the “tentat ‘on the new home sites. The prop- identification of ‘the wreckage by jerty is located on Fifth Street and |Assistant Chief Ranger Bill But- in the south ler, on Tahoma Glacier on the |mountain’s southwest face. But- up tojler rTeported that he sighted el\hx'ought field glasses from a high !does not contemplate constructing |r'dge late Monday a plane’s bucket more than a total of 40 homes. Ten 'seat, a piece of a plane's metal houses will be erected immediately | Skin” and what appeared to be !wun work scheduled to begin next |another piece of wreckage. ! ‘week. | oyt <oi-ckon - SR ! | e s ' soweamace- WETS ADM, LOSES ' The homes will cost approximate- | N | IIy $2,500 each and will b'; rented | {to company employees for lbmxtl 'lo (AA SIo ‘ |“ { 1$%340r $40 per month. Hawkins ex- | {plained that ‘themoney “received OF"’BAu. lE‘GUE {from rents will be applied on the | % S | itotal cost and that the -employee {will be given full title to his home {when sufficiént rent has been-col- In one of the most exciiing and best played softball games of the| season, the CAA last night defeat-| jlected to cover (he cost of the oy (he veterans Administration 5 | house. to. 4 { The original plans were discarded | At the end of seven innings | becguse; of fre afi\'n.ntag_e 9% water,the score was tied, 4 to 4. The| and sewage facilities in Douglas‘Vets went out one, two, three in' {which were not available on the the top of the eighth. LaRue of! ‘highway site. Another factor Was | the CAA then drove one through! the enormous cost of improving and ¢hir4 pase, and scored on an er-' ifilling the land on the highway lo-'yq. | cation. | The CAA, Veterans Administra- T <o AT |tion and Wachusett are now tied! {for first place in the league, with | ! {three wins and one loss each. j | In the second game last night, g ithe Subport defeated the Teen-Age (lAIMs Io 'Club, 7 to 4. ,Marvin, Subport |third baseman, got three hits in {four trips to the plate. i i { ‘ | The standings: i { American Legion Report Wants Overhaul UN Charfer \CARPENTERS CAN TS CRAZED KILLER SLAYER OF 2 NOW HUNTED AT FAIRBANKS rify Council; WASHINGTON, July 23—@— wh canling the securty comen | Warrant Issued for Leon “perpetually hung jury,” the Ameri-| . can Legion today proposed an' Jones, chafged wl'h overhaul of the United Nations . charter to bobtail the Big Five| Doub|e cnme veto and set up a “tyranny-proof”! WOrly: polldsciares: | FAIRBANKS, Alaska, July 23.— Climaxing a year of study, the|;m A federal posse, including 25 Legion's recommendations — Were|imeq soldiers from Ladd Field forwarded in a letter to each|goured the rugged wildetriess member of Congress with this ac-|country along the Alaska High- knowledgment. Iway from both ground and air to- It may not be possible or eX-)gay in search of an armed man pedient to attempt to bring about|ganted for the crazed ax slaying changes oW, LY. we' balleve they|of two men after an Indian camp suggest a goal which must be ’“"dxmklng party. tained in order that the United! wpe yictims, whose hacked bod- Nations becomes fully effective.” |joc were found beside cabins of the The veterans organization C"""Indinn encampment, were identi- tended that its recommendations|fiaq as Donald R ‘Hnn‘is 33, a would “lay a solid foundation for!.,netruetion empioyee ab . the the elimination of the ntomlcurmyvs Big Delta project 100 miles threat.” It said further they “are g uth of Fairbanks, and Carl indispensable to bring about an|apnstrom, 68 long-‘tlme trapper adequate substitute for the grim|gng pr’oupec.!or in the Little rules of power politics.’ |Gerstle River area where the kill- Specifically, the Legion proposed'mgs occurred. these charter amendment, de-| Afier excited Indians described slg(x;ed ks ; . ’ {the slaying in an on-the-scene in- ive “more v(rccl:ye represen-iguest, U, S. Marshal Stanley J. tation of the nations” on the Se-|Njchols fssued warrants for the curity Council and abolish the girest of Leon Jones, 43, a fellow veto in cases of aggression "°r'cmployee of Harris' on the army preparation for aggression.” project. Give the Security Council “ade- " ¢y g Commissioner Everett B. quate powers” to prevent aggressive|gmith who conducted the inguest, war by creating iron clad interna-igaiq the key Indian witnesses, llr' tional controls over atomic weap- gng Mrs. Frank Felix, m’ th‘ls. c‘;m and all other means of mass gtory: * estruction. Harris, the suspect killer and TR a lhh'd"fln“flflfi?'%%‘m camp land tried to get Indian women to join a heavy drinking party. A |fight broke out and the third man drove away. Then, they said, the suspected killer picked up an ax land struck Harrls several times. o“ I"IER'OR Jo | Seeing Ahnstrom in front of his ‘cabin about 100 feet away, he went |over and struck him down. Experienced carpenters can get' The Indians said the killer col- over the union scale of wages on lected supplies from various cabins, construction jobs in the Interior Picked up a 22 caliber rifle, shot of Alaska according to a promise four sled dogs at their stakes and made today by George Hite, Nome disappeared into the brush. contractor. Hite is building a new The bodies of Harris and school at Teller and has several Ahnstrom were brought to. Fair- other contracts, both Army and | Panks today. private, in that area. He said that | P ¥k G he is desperately in need of exper-' Y fenced carpenters and is willing to‘IRu(K FIRS' lom transportation costs for good men. | of FRE'GHI ovm Hite is in Juneau this week con- | pay up to $250 per hour plus ferring with Dr. James C. Rynn.' GET HIGH WAGES ten Congressmen bluntly charged| Alaska Steamship Company's | Io HAlF'S‘AFF I" | The Senate at the moment was & R that certain State Department and !Baranof, under Capt. J. Ramsauer, | busy with routine, minor bills. i i‘;‘m 3 | Territcrial Commissioner of Educa- | HAI"ES (u'orr Army occupation officials were |with Dave Doran, purser, arrived| HONOR or BISHOP But when Mr. Truman appeared, BE SETT[EDg B g 3 1 tion, on the plans for the school conniving with ex-Nazi interests to|in Juneau yeSterday afternoon at | Senator Vandenberg (R-Mich), the | Ev;'“hus tt 3 ) building at Teller. Funds for the | rebuild Germany into another po-(4:30 o'clock from Scattle and| i | presiding officer, promptly recog- ! Fipoiand 3} building were appropriated by tne , Advices recelved by the Empire entlal war menace. The ten Con.|Ketchikan. She sailed for the| In Alaska, all flags will be 1oW-|niseq the President and welcomed e o 4 1045 Territorial Legisiature but the [0 A M. Machin, secretary of aines [ imerce, gressmen were: Sabath of Illinois, Folger of ‘North Carolina, Huber | Westward at 9 o'clock last night. { Disembarking in Juneau were ered to half staff tomorrow in re- spect to the late Bishop Walter J. | Vandenberg then said that he! him warmly. Japanese - Americans on | T e e building has never been completed becauseé of the shortage of both |state that on July 9 the Dezadeach | Trading Post received the first of Ohio, Madden of Indiana, Morris | the following passengers from Se- | Fitzgerald whose funeral will berecognized the “Senator from Mis- l labor and bullding materials. of Oklahoma, Blatnik of Minnesota, | attle: Mrs. R. F. Angel, Greta L.iheld tomorow in Spokane, Wash.|sourj for five minutes.” i weSf COGS', Alaska, Ha' [ i will make a quxckg st to l;e:;‘:: shipment of freight trucked over Sadowski of Michigan, Holifield|Beckman, Ellen Brower, Mrs. G.|The request came today from Act-| Senators applauded as President! waii Affected by Bill later this week, before returning to ¢ Haines Cutoff Highway. and_ Douglas of GCalifornia and|M. Davis, Calvin and Gary Davis, ing Governor Lew M. Williams Truman arose and began a brief | 11 Altec Y ! : < 3l | The Dezadeach Trading Post is Eberharter of Pennsylvania, all|Mis.” Pearl Dore, Claire J. Dore,|in the form of a proelamation. talk. He said the Senate had been | e | SAN FRANCISCO, July 23.—(@— Y !lccated at Lake Dezadeach, 125 Democrats. Geneyxeve Eseman, Jane Higgins. Bishop Fnz;erald was the head|yery kind and that he never had| WASHINGTON, July 23—®— p_ O, Peterson, general chairman GEES”" ;mlles up the road from Haines. The Each of the ten put questions to| Vivian Jack, Flora and Nancy|of the Catholic Church in Alaska nad a more cordial welcome any-|The House passed today a bill au- of the Brotherhcod of Locomotive MANAGlNfi freight was taken to Haines and Kammann, Arthur Lawnicke, B. and will be honored by requiem | where ” ithoring the Attorney Gen"EnginePTS, dropped dead today af- landed at the Port Chilkoot dock Marshall as the meeting opened. He ! made notes and then answered the questions -in order. Marshall took vp in detail Sad- owski’s complaint that German coal production is only 40 percent of pre-war capacity, explaining at first that many of the mines -were bombed. However, the Michigan Congressman interrupted to say that only 15 important mines were ! bombed and they had been back in operation for a year and a half. GERMAN COAL SABOTAGE When Marshall sarted to com- C. McNallen, Mrs. Dave Ramsay,?muses throughout the Territory. Steve and Dave Ramsay, jr., Mrs,{He died at Providence Hospital, in Mabel - Rundafl and two children,|Seattle, Saturday following a long Kenneth Shudshift, Greta Vinson, illness. He came to Alaska in 1939. V. C. Arnspiger, W. C. Atter, Paul! Williams' proclamation urged; O’Burt, William Donahue, Donald | “that all ilags throughout the Ter- Emmans, Silas Malther, Char!es[ritory of Alaska be lowered to half Metjay, L. S. Tanner and Georgestaff between sunrise and sunset, | Staber. | Thursday, July 24..1947 as a token |~ From Ketchikan, Ray Cavanaugh, | of respect to Bishop Fitzgerald. Maude Hamlin, Mr. and Mrs. W.| ———e———— | P. McCreight and Mrs. E. M.| O'Kelley. vp"A Boarding the ship for Valdez| were Mr. and Mrs. Al McGowan | and Thomas J. Fremaker; for| —_—eo— teral to settle claims of Japanese- { Americans for losses arising out of their forced evacuation from the ARMED MA" w"“ | West Coast, Alaska, and Hawaii PISIO[ ARRB‘ED !during World War IIL £, | ter talking with the Presidential Railway Strike Board at the Pal- ace Hotel. —— €C MEETS ORROW ] Attorney Herbert L. Faulkner will |take up the Lempke Bill, Con- Mou“l EDGKUMBE 1tsk:erim :xy cthe Canadian Pacific ‘ SCHOOL AT SITKA “rransporiation t | “Transportation to the Interior | By truck has begun,” states Machin Fred R Geeslin, Assistant Sup- erintendent of the Alaska Native [for the Haines Chamber of Com- Service, has been detailed to Sitka CAPITOL BUILDING Senate. WASHINGTON, July 23.—P— Police today arrested a man armed with a pistol in the Capitol just five minutes after President Tru- man made a surprise visit to the | The evacuatjon, affecting Uov"wlgressionnl prescription for settling ipersons of Ji 1ol“dfl”ed shortly after Japan at-|gylar meeing of the Juneau Cham- Itacked Pearl Harbor. Most of ‘he;ber of Commerce tomorrow noon |persons were removed to War Te- iy the Gold Room of the Baranof jlocstian centers. | Hotel. The House Judiciary Committee | e estimated the cost of the claims| KETCHIKAN PEOPLE HERE nese ancestry, Was war Veterans in Alaska, at the re- | merce. The Cutoft is in good con- dition, he adds, and the port of for the purpose of assuming com- plete charge of the Mt. Edgecumbe ;School and Hospital. Don C. Foster, ANS General Superintendent, said |today that Geeslin will direct the jinstitution’s affairs for at least 30 days and possibly for 90 days. | Geeslin is expected to overhaul | |Halnes is conveniently located so | that supplies can be trucked either 1!0 Fairbanks or Whitehorse. ! The Northland Transportation | Company’s Alaska makes a regular call at Haines every two weeks, and | Canadian Pacific vessels stop there ' frequently. “It is believed,” says Machin, FROM ANCHORAGE;3 { Senate. ito the government would amount| s John Griffin and son of the entire Sitka operation with | “that the Port of Haines will be at the ment on the importance of A1Cordova, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Go- hearty diet for work in the mines, jngs william Treffers and Clifford Sadowski cut him off again: |Baxley; for Seward, Irving Huff- “The German miner is seltmgiman, Mr. and Mrs. George Will-| 4,000 calories & day, Mr. Secretary. jams, Mr. and Mrs. S. C. John- The Polish miner 1s working on an |stone, C. Loughmone, D. R. Taylor, average diet of 3,500 calories—and|c. W. Rector and Earl Hunnicutt. he is producing 50 percent more ——,——— coal. I don’t think there. is any STEAMER MOVEMENTS doubt that the slowdown in Ger- 'FLOWN, RETURN TRIP Northern Airlines | The Pacific | |brought nine passengers in from Anchorage yesterday and on the return flight carried two passeng- lers to Yakutat and six to Anchor- Edward F. McGinnis Senate Ser- | geant-at-Arms, said the ‘man iden- | tified himself ‘as Clifton R. H. Spires, 39, of Augusta, Ga. ! He told reporters simultaneous presence of Mr. Truman ‘and Spires | in the Capitol was “purely coinci- dental.” . Spires was arrested by two Capi- | !to approximately $10,000,000, ———ll e FLORIDA PEOPLE HERE Dr. and Mrs. M. D. Worley of Tampa and Mrs. Gladys Van Der- vier of Miami are registered at the Baranof Hotel. - —— PORTLAND MAN HERE Ketchikan are stopping Gastineau Hotel, ———.————— WYOMING COUPLE HERE Mr. and Mrs. George Nath of Cheyenne, Wyoming are guests at the Gastineau Hotel. — — GLENDALE WOMEN HERE Vivian Jack and Genevieve Ese- | age. tol policemen in the men's wash- ‘R. T. Kaser of Portland, Oregon, | ,the view of increasing its efficiency. ' | There has been no active head of Y'Y the project since the resignation | of Virgil S. Carrier. | o | tusy frém now on.” i R STOCX QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, July 23—Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine | Alaska Transportation Company’s|stock today is 5, American Can {freighter Northern Voyager re- 92, Anaconda 37%, Curtiss-Wright | FREIGHTER IN PORT man coal production is the result of deliberate sabotage, designed to prevent the industrial recovery of non-German countries before Ger- many has herself recovered.” Sadowski added that German coal production 1s largely under the direction of a Dr. Lahr, now Minister-President of the North Rhine Province. Dr. Lahr served the Nazis as a key official in coal and steel production. Only recently, reminded Sadowski, Lahr said pub- licly that since German steel pro- duction has been limited, there is B A" Dt e deedl i e (Continued on Page Four) Square Sinnett, from Seattle, due 8 o'clock tomorrow morning. Alaska, from Seattle, due Satur- day. Aleutian scheduled | Seattle July 26. Princess Louise scheduled to sail from Vancouver July 26. Lucidor scheduled to sail from Seattle July 29. Princess Norah scheduled to ar- rive irom Skagway Friday morning at 8 o'clock and sails south one hour later. Baranof, from west, is scheduled scuth sometime Sunday. to sail from From Anchorage to Juneau were: Henry Benson, Ralph Mize, Mrs. Sztuk, Nellie Sztuk, Mrs. I. Don- ley, J. P. Galligan, M. .L. Wooley, George Hite, G. Tonneson. Juneau to Yakutat: E. Archibald, Allen Owen. Juneau to Anchorage: L. Gorley, Betty Brewer, Anne Johns, W. Orr, M. Grossman, Paul Butt. — e, - MRS. ANGEL RETURNS Mrs. R. F. Angel, who has been on a short vacation trip in Port- land and Seattle returned on the Baranof. room on the first floor of the Capi- is stopping at the Baranof Hotel. tol's Senate wing. The Senate floor, | v where Mr. Truman addressed the | ANCHORAGE MAN HERE Senate, is up one flight. Bud Nock and J. Sidney Rood of McGinnis said Spires had served Anchorage are stopping at the Bar- 17 months in the Army and had anof Hotel. been a patient at a veterans hos- Py A A A pital in Augusta. | HERE FROM KALAMAZOO ——— Stanley E. Smith and Raymond NOME MAN HERE | Roash of Kalamazoo, Mich., are re- George Hite of Nome is at the gistered at the Baranof Hotel. Baranof Hotel. ————————— —_————— | ARRIVES ON NORAH HERE FROM PETERSBURG W. B. Tobey of Tulsequah, B. C. M. R. Rice of Petersburg is re- arrived on the Princess Norah and gistered at the Gastineau Hotel. is staying at the Baranof ,Hotel. man<of Glendale, Calif., are guests at the Baranof Hotel. - e PETERSBURG . COUPLE HERE Mr. Baranof Hotel. —_—— ARMY COUPLE HERE ! Captain and Mrs. Frank J. Bat- |tersly of Ladd Field are stopping at the Baranof Hotel. - WASHINGTONIAN HERE Wash,, is at the Baranof Hotel. ' mained in port over last night, un-|4%, International Harvester 0%, |loading her 350 tons of general Kennecott 47%, New York Central | cargo for Juneau. She is due to sail | 16%, Northern Pacific 21%, U. 8. and Mrs. Neal MacDonald | of Petersburg are registered at the, |ut 2 oclp~k this afternoon. | Steel 747, Pound $4.02%. e | FROM LOS ANGELES | 4o | Flora and Nancy Kanunaun and| |Ellen Brower of Los Angeles are stopping at the Hotel Juneau. | - e 7 SEATTLE PEOPLE HERE Seattle people registering at the Baranof Hotel yesterday were Mrs. and Howard L. Lewis. Sales today were 1,080,000 shares. Averages today are as follows: | industrials 184.98, rails 50.84, utili- ties 35.64. - - - e MRS. DORE RETURNS Mrs. Solon Dore and her daugh- ter Claire returned to Juneau on the Baranof yesterday. They have been visiting Mrs. Dore's sister, James Hay of Richmond Beach,|Marjory S. Kafer, Ray Cavanaugh Mrs Charles Kounkel in Seattle for two months,