The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 23, 1947, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

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,

Other pages from this issue: