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HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1947 ~ MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS E IN B.C. CITY NIGHT BLAZE DOES DAMAGE PORT ALBERNI VOL. LXVI, NO. 10,666 THREE MILLION DOLLAR FIR CRISISIN |DEFENSE OF iWarni_ngNoIe CAPEHART |NEW THREAT |ANS School Closing Is First | GREECE IS | HEMISPHERE On Greece by PARTY IS | FACINGNLRB; | Step Toward Federal Govl. llNSOlVED’1 BRQA_DENED! legioi’sHead OlD(ASESUP; Withdrawal, States Warneg FORMING | American Attemptsfo Form |Proposal Made af 1A Con- Natl.Commander Demands Senaor Tells of What May Union Challenge Under o2 Congress e e Federst x ovm Seor” st wouta GOVE, Assembly Ware- New Government Is | ference Approved- Special Congress Ses- | Be Expected from Pulp | "Taft-Hartley Act Arous- e veation Tiekd In Alaska.” wes ex.[fuaniite for the oxrn e ween:| house, Wharf.in Ruins 4 | ) £ . Ipressed here this morning bY|ers in outlying communities (suc F Pronounced Failure [ Includfs _Alaska | sion on Defense Development . ing Apprehension iw%fig:tfmfig ot the ,:“t;ruis’._- ‘ ;‘wfi,c‘)_gg,‘l,;g& m“”“il“““’ ,,k::. Freighter Burns (By The Assoclated Press) | QUITANDINHA, Brazl, Aug. 26.| NEW YORK, Aug. 26. — (P—Na-| SPOKANE, Aug. 2. — m—sen.voxg:‘gl:ni?T?;:. N::?{mlmamb:]s‘zna?:n::i‘;‘ximfif 4in e F:l:::;%y%:; i{“ f;ff ‘gi)zfizgl?i?\? ‘%;“i?-l PORTACRINRS . 0. Ak | " (M—Damage was expected to rise as |lowed to teach school. Warne conceded that Ryan's view might bef;‘:: ‘z:f"m'go‘: herle M‘: 48 flre- right, but added he does not be-| it “OTEINAE O BIEY ¢: T :: i th : chers # lieve e efforts of ANS teachers the $1,500,000 Government A bly American attempts failed to solve|—P—The Inter-American Confer-| tional Commander Paul H. Griffith, | Homer E. Capehart (R.-Ind.), Chair- I the government crisis in .strife-‘ence received today a proposal,‘sounding a serious warning amid the {man of a Senate subcommittee en- Relations Board voiced frank but torn Greece today. {backed by the United States, to de- | festive preparations for the Ameri- ‘Iroule to Alaska to study newsprint |private apprehensions today over | conference. The situation in Greece, hemis- | can Legions’ 29th annual convention | production, said today he thought |what a union challenge might do|{ That the Congress intends that lto their “plans for applying new! the Territory take over all educa- Building and at a succeeding press where fend the entire Western guerrilla warfare continued in the phere from the Arctic to the north, was described in Washington!tarctic as a “security region” by Chairman Eaton (R-NJ), of the;military U. S. Foreign Affairs Committee, | nations. forczs of all Alaska as containing “all the elements for{were included in the zone. touching off a major war.” A dispatch from Tehran, Iran,|{the measure was composed of The subcommittee which drafted| Sen.|soon after his arrival from Wash- [opinion that the Federal govern- and Greenland |hours . . An-|opening Thursday, said that “the | Alaska could produce 1,000,000 tons with | critical situation which has develop- jof newsprint annually within five American|ed in Greece within the past few |years. . could spread into world | | conflagration on a moment’s notice.” Griffith called a news conference Taft-Hartley Act policy to 3,600 old NLRB cases. “The problem is to go into South- least Alaska and invest money in paper mills,” he said. “I'm of the mously that some CIO unions are considering asking the courts to rule on the legality of this pro- { ment must make capital investments | eedure, because: A CIO official disclosed anony-| ltion duties, the Assistant Secretary| thinks is borne out by the action| of Congress this year in not al- lowing the full amount of appro-| priations required to operate all| !Alaska Native Service schools.| Warne considers that the Congress are “overrate For Visiting Schools At the conclusion of Ryan's tes- timony, the Assistant Secretary de- clared his feeling that the Interior Department is all for uniting the‘ Warehouse and Wharf, while out in the harbor stream, the 8 S. Sampet, 10,000-ton British freighter lay low in the water, almost completely de- stroyed. Members of the Fire Marshal's said Iranian and diplomatic offi- | Vandenberg (R-Mich) and repre-|ington, D. C., where he said he had ! school systems i % _cials were investigating reports|seniatives of Brazil, Mexico, Peru|talked to President Truman. Asked | to induce industry into the Terri-| 1. The Taft-Hartley law went!forced the closing of a number of v‘s::;' u\,}v,?w,,fis"'gml.::,u“&;m:ir‘°m°° still were attempting to un- that 10,000 Barzani Kurdish tribes- and Bolivia. A larger sub-com- by a reporter if he favored sending tory.” into full effect only last Friday{ANS schools this year as a fist|;, * o "pocrer Ryan and nmeyff,""‘" thie arigin of i, bidss, A men, “backed by the Red Army,” imittee of 14 nations quickly ap-|troops abroad to support the Tru-| Other members of the Senate sub- | while, step toward total withdrawal Im'"n'rermorml ottoliln 10 Zr L roke out last night and raced had gathered in Russian Azerbai-|proved the measure. Iman Doctrine, the Legion Com-|committee on Alaska paper produc-| 2 Tne cases involve conditions [the education field. (K. hsioutinite. progian. 15 THER through 600 tans of plywood in, the jan. One high diplomatic infor-| Under the ‘proposal, any attack mander replied: [ tion accompanying him are Senator |Which existed under the Wagner: He is therefcr, definitely of the enq which should: | warehouse and 1,500,000 board fest mant said this might be “anotherion the vast strategic area would| Should Send Troops |Goin (- Washo.~ Senator Murray |National Labor Relations Act. |opinion that an “orderly program”(“ 1" ACile education of all chile| sy s the dock preparatory to de- move in the Soviet war of nerveslinvoke Gefense measures under the! «r gon't see how you can enforce | (D-Mont.) and Senator Ellender | In calling for a separate review for assimilation of ANS school|gre, {livery to lumber-hungry Britain. on the eve of parliament's con-|proposed hemisphere treaty of m“"anything without using police. If it | (D--La.) of each of the old cases NLRB'charges into the Territorial system, | 2—Eliminate duplication of school Flames Jump Quickly Senator Capehart said government | Gencral Counsel Robert N. Den-;"mcn do the best we can to hold|ra/lities A | The blaze jumped quickly to the g {600,000 board feet aboard the Sam- sideration of the Russian-Iranian cil agreement.” | tual defense. | takes troops we should send troops. | ' 2 “An armed attack by any state| urr and when Greece is invaded investments in Alaska might include {ham has expressed the opinion to it.” In that way repetition of| 3 provide for eventual (perhaps, pet, moored alongside for loading. There is strong opposition in!against an American nation Will|there's no use to wait like we waited , the development of power plants, |they can be examined in the light!this year's sudden dumping Oof over a ten to 20-year plod) L ar Iran's parliament to ratification|be considered an attack against BEbinio UM S NI | construction of housing in existing |of the Taft-Hartley Act and moc-|consideratle additional burdens| vear period) [gix small tugs towed the blasing 8 | before. If there is no other way to Ty consolidation of all schools into yegsel, plates ped, bot! or new towns, and improvement of |ified if necessary. ‘upon unprepared schools of the|ihe Territorial system. | P e h anchors 3 | dragging and no steam in her boil- To Ryan's objection that such ers, out towards the open sea, programs framed locally are con-\ Two firemen, James McGregor tinually upset by the Indian Of-|and John MacFarlane were in the of the agreement, signed in Moscow 'all American states and each onelgin them but to send troops, then | in 1946, to give Russia control ofjof the American states assumes!go'should send troops.” i water {ransportation. exploiting oil deposits in northern|tpe obligation to aid in facing such | % 2 A | The Senator also will conduct air- { Griffith, who lives in Uniontown, | ot hearings at Anchorage and Some NLRB officials, however,|Territory could be avoided in the acknowledged that if a number: future. of unions raised a challenge to lhls‘! This morning’s hearing before Iran. g . ‘an attack, exercising the indiv;dual‘Pa said that the Leglon’s executive | magpans Bl bl e e e s 4 ulgarian Crisls tor collective right of self-defense! - | Fairbanks. 3 o \Warne was pres over by e . In Bulgaris, meanwhile, the recognized by B rticle 51 of the committee, which began pre-con- | gys schedule includes: Leave Se- |suits the result might be to “ham-|Governor of ~Alaska, with the f,‘:f t;‘fih;: “c‘;i;mtw;:;m T:::f:: hospital with injuries suffered du- Communist.dominated . Fathotland |United. - Nations. Charter,” thel Yention sesslons, was almost unani- gye by plane at 8 a. m. tomorrow; [string” the board pending a final| Assistant Secretary - attended bY|changes in the plan e nat |08 the Battle ‘whish: browkhs ou Front government moved to out- agreement said. (mously in favor” of the Trumen |jeye Ketchikan on a Coast Guard |judicial determination. IJoseph T. Flakne, chief of the|pian is not available jgrery avallable plece of northern law the principal opposition party,! The agreement of the security Policy of aid to Greece ““‘? Tur- | o tter Thursday morning to inspect | “genham bas had nothing tojAlaska Branch of the Interior| pr J O, Rude of the J“n“uxv“““’“"“ Island - fire - fighting Nikoal - Petkov's - Agrarians:+~ The zone specified: “The region re- key” and any other small countries | 1o mongass Forest, returning Fri- | on. this point. " :Department's Division - of = Terri<|geno) Soare " rotibesl Hake w,equtpu;e,n't.' e In holding that the old cases'tories, and by Df. Harlan H. Bar-| i Destroyed bill was expected to pass tomorrow. ferred Petkov | himself is under sentence;the geographical area defined by to of death on charges of plotting|the Panama Declaration of Oct. 3 against the government. The Soviet Union today rejected ent, for ,area lying ktetween one and thej a British-American request 1939, the North American Contin-| the; Alaska ‘Territory, and consultation on the sentence, hold- other.” ing this would ke tantamount to! interference in Bulgaria's internal! affairs. i Greece, Bulgaria’s neighbor, was in the grip of a crisis brought} ahout by the resignation of th‘:-‘ cabinet of Populist (Royalist) De-| metrios Maximos Saturday. Con- stantin Tsaldaris, Premier-desig- | nate, has been unsuccessful thus| far in attempts to form a new government. | American attempts to solve !he! - {GREECE IS YET WITHOUT GOVT.; U. S. PLEA FAILS ATHENS, Aug. 26.—(P—The Lib- al Party of Themistokles Sophou- lis, 26-year-old former Premier, re- crisis failed when Themistokles So-|fused tonight to join a new govern- phoulis, 86-year-old leader of the!ment under Constantin Tsaldagis. main branch of the Liberal party, ! insisted at a conference with U. S.|or Royalty Party, was Foreign Mini- | MacVeagh, ster and the most active member of the Demetrios Maximos Cabinet which fell Saturday. He said earlier adminis- 'wday he hoped to form a new gov- | Ambassador Lincoln that he (Sophoulis) become pre-i mier. Dwight P. Griswold, i Tsaldagis, leader of the Populist, trator of the $300,000,000 U. S. Aid;ernment by nightfall “on as broad a Program in Greece, conferred with jcoalition basis as possible.” Sophoulis at his home last night.| An authoritative source said Gris- The U. S. Embassy conveyed toi { Sophoulis its wishes that the Lib- wold stressed the need for polmcalseruls participate. unity if'the U. S. aid mission was to succeed. | | The Washington| Merry - Go-Round STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Aug. 26.—(®—Clos- | ing quotation of Alaska Juneau imine stock today ‘s 4%, American | {Can 89%, Anaconda 36%, Curtiss- Wright 5%, International Harvester 851, Kennecott 46, New York Cen- By ROBERT 5. ALLEN (Editor's Note: While Drew Pearson is on a* brief vacation The Washington Merry-Go- tral 14%, Northern Pacific 20%. U. 18. Steel 70%, Pound $4.02%. Sales today were 620,000 shares. Averages today are as follows: in- in the treaty includes |having “a foreign ideology forced lupon them.” | Asked if he thought the United ’iNations could resolye the situation developed over the weekend, Grif- fith replied: | UN in Swaddling Clothes ! “1f the United Nations is mature !enough it should handle all world |affairs, but we belieye the United |Nations is a baby in swaddling ‘clo!hcs without the power to act. !is capable of acting at this time.” Griffith issued a prepared state- iof Congress “for the specific pur- !pose of enacting universal military | training legislation and for the pur- pose of strengthening our national | defense.” While the Legion leader disclosed that preparedness would be the | “theme” of the Legion convention, preparedness also was the watch- word of city officials who remember that 500,000 persons attended the I this year, with Legion membership | more than tripled. The parade is jexpecved to last 12 hours. | —_— e | i CCDFISHER IN ALASKA COAST from Dufch Harbor to in Greece, where a government crisis | I don't believe the United Nations | i Iment demanding a special session | iPowerfuI Navy Tug Is Sent: | day night to Ketchikan; leave Ket- |chikan by cutter Saturday morning | for Juneau, arriving Sept. 1; visit | Sitka Sept. 2; hold airport hearings | i at Anchorage Sent. 4 and Fairbanks | | Sept. 5; leave Juneau Sept. 7 for| | Seattle. | Drowning | At Seward | | SEWARD, Alaska, Aug. 26—®— | Earl Stewart, 32, formerly of Seattle, | | drowned Sunday night in Resurrec- | | tion Bay here, but his fishing com- | i panion, Alfred Noyes, was rescued | |after clinging for four hours to a capsized boat. Both men were em- | iployed by the Standard Oil Com- | | nany. i | The two men had been picnicking {with their families at the head of | s hen the e~ | Resurrection Bay but staved behind jate Small Business Committee at] Andidan't know hEwBADS b expe"' | to fish. When they failed to return, | Ketchikan, and accompany v,hem‘ | Mrs. Stewart became uneasy and to Juneau. | walked down to the Standard Oil | | Dock where she heard what seemed ! to be cries for help. She notified authorities who rush- | ed to the dock and saw boats already | massed in the area of the accident. Glen Elder, owner of the fishing | | scow Snippv, picked Noyes up. Noyes i | was still suffering from shock and | exposure today. He said the bay was | {calm when he and Stewart started out but a sudden wind came up !and upturnéd the rowboat. | ! Stewart came here from Seattle | in Oct., 1945. He is survived by his | widow and three children, Lawrence, ‘morning when |PATIi DAVIS OFF can be reviewed in the light of /rows, special consultant on settle- the mew act, subject to possible!ment problems. | modification, the General Counsel' Fish Enforcement Asked | believes a good example is provid-i Territorial Commissioner of Edu-| ?}drrfl};mne p;:(f:g:;’ngcgnvoll\:?ll ";‘;w'cuuon James C. Ryan presented e 4 " {the case for Alaska schools and loversville, N. Y. and the CIO- yas followed by two working fish- Fur and Leather Workers. jcrnmen, Carl Weidman and H. B. T 3 Manery, who called for more en- {forcement of conservation regula- Ausn OFFI(IAI.S tion to protect Alaska's salmon. Ryan first discussed school lands, 'o Mm (OMMIHEE asking the Interior Department’s e Iaid in securing Congressional set The Governor of Alaska; Lew M. aside of a¢ least four sections of Wwilliams, Secretary of Alaska;lm"d in each township of the Lieut. Comdr, Edward P. Chester,|Territory for school purposes and Naval Aide to the Governor; Willlrevenues. He pointed out that two Godding, head of the Alaska Office | Sections in each township are now of tie U. S. Department of Cam-!so set aside, while in four of merce; and George Sundborg, con-"he States the number of. school sultant to the Alaska Development|scctions is four out of cach 36. Board, were on board the U. S. The designation of four sections Coast Guard Cutter Wachusett this|Was made in these four stacs, Ry- it left here for|an said, because of the poor qual- Ketchikan, They will meet Sena- ity of land. Alaska lands on the| tor Homer Capehart and the Sen- |average are everl poorer, he held.| { The school system can derive| tvery little benefit from the sot-| ting aside of sections of tundra| and mountain, Ryan concluded. In stating his view of the present {dual school system in Alaska, Ryan also contended that there should| 'I'o MUSIC (ouEGE be some definitz long-range policy ifor uniting the ANS schools with ithe Territory's system. Lauding the Patti Davis, daughter of Mr. cocperative attitude of local ANS| and Mrs. Trevor Davis, left on thejofficials, he charged the Chicago| Princess Norah for Vancouver, en-|2nd Washington offices of thel route to Chicago, where she wiy: Office of Indian Affairs with con-| resume her studies at the (:hmgoi"‘“"g attempts that have be:n Musical College. Patti is in hermade by the two school systems second year and is majoring inito work out problems together. the cello. Ryan again urged adoption of She will be joined by her sxsler|‘h9 plan he laid before the In- dian service and Congress® while comment on the unfairness of this year's sudden unloading of the Na- tive Service school on the City.| There are many problems that will be very difficult to deal with, im-' posed by the additional burden, he| replied to Warne’s question wheth-| er the Juneau Public Schools would Lte able to get by. Ryan| added that the problem is much| more acute at Sitka and particular-| ly at Haines. In the latter place,| the sudden discontinuance of the ANS school has left the commun-| ity in “desperate plight.” Wholesale Violations | Weidman stated his background a union fisherman with 21; years experience in Alaska fish- ing. Pointing first the very budi present condition of the fishing| industry, he declared that never | before in that 21 years has he seen such “wholesale violation of the! law.” Every day fishermen are feining the creek mouths. If they are caught they cheerfully pay a $25 or $50 fine then go back out' and make $100 a’'day violating the| law some more. That's why there| are no fish, he contended. The| salmon can't get into the streams| to spawn their eggs. He pointed| to traps as spurring violations be- cause the lone fisherman operat- ing legally has no chance against them. Weidman urged that the Fish and Wildlife Service should have at least a one million dollar a year appropriation, with 75 per- cent of that spent in the field of enforcement and propagation. Also, he said, confiscation of boats| is the only solution to violations.| Manery agreed, point for peint,| with Weidman's views. | Julius Heinemann of the Juneau; as Destroyed on the wharf were three Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway gondola cars, one loaded with Jum- ber and a valuable electric dock crane. Herole lives to tow ing structure, Standard Oll storage tanks, less than 100 yards away from the sear- ing flames, were untouched as was the nearby Alberni Pacific Mill, one of the largest on the Pacific Coast. n crews risked their 2 cars from the flam- FIRE AT VANCOUVER VANCOUVER, B. C., Aug. 26.—(® —All that remains of the $300,000 fire last night is five fire-blackened buildings of two Fraser River Flats wood products firm. The blaze start- ed when a night watchman was rak- ing sawdust into a hopper which backfired sending flames to the ceil- ing. The blaze quickly spread to the nearby Spruce Specialties Com- pany, where damage is estimated at $200,000. SURGING RUN OF CHINOOK SALMON, COLUMBIA™ RIVER Largest One-day Catch in Six Years Reported- Deadline Today ASTORIA, Ore, Aug. 26—P— Commercial fishermen worked against a noon deadline today as dustrials, 177.73; rails, 48.04; utili- 11, Anita, 4, and Ronald, 1. His|Constance next week in Chicago.{ Round is keing written by his old partner, Robert®8. Allen.) i ties, 35.48. ——.———— TWO MORE AT ACS Aid Schooner SEATTLE, Aug. 26.—®—A pow- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glen E. Stew- Connie will attend the University art, live in Seattle. —e—-—— of Michigan, at Ann Arbor for her i ! | junior year. She attended both the iin Washington last year: That the {Territory Le paid $100 tuition for| ‘ench native pupil in Territorial schools, with ANS schools then Central Labor Council spoke brief- ly, setting forth Alaska’s underlying problem as that of not having enough people. He urged that the a surging run of Chinook salmon moved upstréam resulting in the largest one-day catch in six years. Landings yesterday exceeded any q | WASHINGTON— The Washing- Bernice Johnson and Ann Thomp- |erful Navy tug from Dutch Har- | University of California and the] :::mfi;:yfom%::;se'&w“ds rd ::: :rflv&:og:’e:“;t‘x‘;iuae;: ;msf"fe;f kor was speeding today to aid me‘: eeee e s ce e :IUnxversny of New York, and lor|b9‘:‘3 1ntes:;tet:mstoA;l;e ofAfll:lB:l: Interior Department give all the|since 1941, with boats averaging Recipients of the bob-tailed dea- ol i lnrmearlo wlt{: the: 4ss-tlon Seatftle codfish elwhoone; + WEATHER REPORT 0]“" past year has been working :};sc;r: ‘zsmr: i, St :l‘]dt 1!r can to such projects u;z.ooo pounds each. The total for oration is Field Marshal Bernard{me ‘oo Het;dqursyof&lecuve Wawona, buffeted by dga zsl an . .‘wlth the American Friends sofle;y} G i Ldlcated et at of the Veterans Alaska Co-|the 800-900 boats was estimated L. Montgomery. Occasion: Thelgo oo loved as a telet {low on supplies after 11daysof un- oy g R et .‘m“ Mexico City. She is taking ud:rth a‘ T e Phig operative Association at Haines./at more than a million pounds. distribution in the U. 8. by me’opernu;r £y Thzmpson e cr:x successfully gyinzh 18 u;al}( ;rom » iy :&on;in o ola combined major of language and |'® 4 t: V:wm:nt o;lxz c;susml:)sn l:o A(‘;mt Troblem Communication | Canneries hired extra workers to British Information Servicd Of| pryyicess in the July 4th Queen Con- Be'Irqmz f;:‘htxxl;zl D:;LH:E ;;sé BEGIEISRN mx:n g | music. ’l:::e L :ryy_ ens S V;ox:f‘l :iior: of dv.he rte:u:ar kl)(ear- \p}l“tx‘ess r:he catch, working through Montgomery's amazing POst-oPera~'y "\ embloved in the ACS long |said the 156-foot, three masted|® minimum, 51 S o i e ¢ ini promdenilgtin Tk ba sieided fo he KD | 0. Dol tional report of the war in the gitance telephone office, e cked for help yesterday,|® At Airport — Maximum, 56 © SUIT AGAINST VETS e s evers| (s tho tiivs he Sl sllow aska | Eports Siabom. S ahe o —— i‘;:dwf;eer :;asel(a ;:n Pr?;n{iet con'f e minimum 50, i ol State that h\;s Indian pup’ils re- trl?) waf; mfl(e:h :o‘c’o:hir:llo;“rlg: ::—e :::tled az:'n;:n::fin".f n:ere)o::; ; . Y B . ; £ S & pafi,:_r--‘"fhihiegz:":su:: z;w.?::. : A ML RS T :1msnder in Kodiak ordered the. tug o Wl;?‘:‘:f'_:’?:srn : I" (Ol.llfl TOMORRO ]:;lvesptt:tio? ugderr:oxz:w Xpl:g riving he has heard Alaska's prob- |river towns at the end of the sum- \ ing concoction of misstatements -3 to proceed to the we:n‘.. H tl'n ed.l b e 4 ! 5 :ne“f el!‘flm WEDM": S oo lems and knows they are tough. The | mer commercial season at noon to- ) o fact, half truths, innuendos,| DERBY DEPOT The Wawona, owned by the Rob- ontinued cloudy with rain ® A suit by the Territory of Alaska, | G¢ ager DS C. Foster|greatest problem, in his vicy. is that |dsy. ~Commerclal {ishing will ‘sot * omissions. and self-glorification. g ® linson FAsheries of Anacortes, has|e® tonight and showers Wedne:s- ® {on behalf of the Territorial Trels-! ; ervened that Alaska 1sr le;fn of c?mmunicauon—the difficulty of | resume until Sept. 10. That Montgomery should com ® |no auxiliary engines, but pre.vlously e day. Not much change in @ 'urer, against the Alaska World W:r" cat\;u 02 :bnnc(el of ) n s!:nlgen.ng idea.s back and rorth over | Commercial catches as high as pise this kindofa document is not'® One more boat has register- ® {had completed several trips lntoIO temperature. ® |II Veteran's Board is to te heard :e: es (mAl i:: ul‘ C!ZE;I! z.me long dnftance from Alaska to|18000 pounds were reported by emarkable. On the kgsis of past|® ed with the Alaska Travel @ |sub-Arctic waters. . i ‘Z‘I;RECI:ITA‘!‘ION ®in U. 8. District Court here mmu,_{:ea l‘l‘esd om“ ahe nati :'es. :': | Washington; the difficulty of getting | fishermen. ~Gillnetter Henry Kok- performance, the report is wholly! Bureau, and has space for ® | The weather bureau said heavy e (Pas ours ending 7:30 a.m. today) @ |yow at 2 p. m. The suit asks forl ‘p i lbe“:‘i‘k‘o CSET“ 1}: understanding and quick action. jko said he was giving away the in character. What is remarkable four persons for strip fishing @ |storms have swept alternately from|e In Juneau — 1.35 inches; ® |¢he return to the Territorial Treas-|® nce Oklch states e Californ Warne concluded that the way m{salmon to' other boatment when & that the BAtian. gofernments o 08 Falmon Derby DRy, Guf- 8 Jhotih {9 south for more than a|e since August 1, 536 inches; ® |ury of $350,000 appropriated by ,he.and it i receive“comp!nn- which he can help most is in trying | his craft became overloaded with should not only permit thé reporg| ® dav. Phil Senour reported ® |week in the area of the pass, at|e since July 1,869 inches. |Legislature to the Board for use(Uon for = TACAM pupils, Alaska, to devise means for speeding the ex- 6463 pounds of salmon. ' to see the light of day, but to dis-i ‘h;:‘ afternoon. & Siithe Hp.of the Alaska Peninsula. (@ At Airport — 123 inches: ® |in inaugurating the Territorial ShoMd mot SO L change of ideas and information e ———— tribut it in this country at this ive more persons ve They said, however, that storm|e since August 1, 439 inches: ®|Veterans loan program. i eport between the Territory and the De- FROM SEATTLE lication is @ blunder)® Made applications for space. @ |conditions are expected to let up|e since July 1, 6.97 inches. . e —r— !ing the mind of the Congress on|partment. SEA’ Sime. Iis publichecs . ti | There have been no more @ [slowly, minimizing any risk to thefe . GETS DIVORCE ithe matter of tuition is something| To reporters’ questions in press —— g 2 oppensiv'es :’:‘;‘o%m:; ‘:;u:s |® boats registered for accom- @ stalled schooner. 00000 s 00000 !that the Interior Department could |conference, Warne replied: Virgil Baker, representative of the u‘l):l tgsomter?;iMmml that hlgh-havéy' modating persons who wish e,—— PSP PG R Kirsten Hancock was granted a be able to work on. Warne said| 1—He isnot in touch with progress ?Hnfl':l Electric C::IDIN' Oftmfl 5 tional reports are not ® to troll. PETERSBURG MAN HERE KETCHIKAN MAN HERE divorce in U, S. District Court to- he would look up Ryan's pro-lon requests that the President ap- |'S S pping at the Baranof Hotel. PORLODEraty L] . Chris Dahl of Petersburg is regist- | A. W. Almquist of Ketchikan Is day by PFederal Judge George W. posal when he returns to the Na- B £ RO & Also from Seattle is Clarence J (Continued on Fage Eight) Martindale. Folta from Loren H. Hancock. tional Capital. e o 00000 0 0 ¢ o o ojeredat the Baranof Hotel. staying at the Baranof Hotel. & A RO R v ST (Continued on Page Four,