The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 26, 1948, Page 1

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L (L3 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” [ —— VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,794 JUNEAU, ALASKA, MONDAY JANUARY 26, 1948 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS 27 DIEIN WITNESSES ARE BRADLEY 1S Wotiieo tonay HEARING ON BIGLABOR (Confessed Slayer of Two PHILIPPINE NOMINATED, FARTHQUAKE HIGH POST. IN MEEKS' TRIAL Two witnesses we! recalled to the witness stand this morning to stify in the case of the U. S.| FISH TRAP LICENSING | { | i { | | | TALK FEST Wivesfo Be Questioned IN NATION SHAPES UP PRICE TEN CENTS (OLD WAVES 0n1937 Kidnap_iqg Case KILL SIXTY Families Are—Buried Alive in Slides-Widespread Damage Caused MANILA, Jan. 26—(®—Many ter- ror-stricken families fled Iloilo in the central Philippines today as in- termittent tremors spread fear of a recurrent of the Sunday earthquake that killed 27 persons and caused widespread damage. A total of 47 shocks had been counted there by noon today and most sent frenzied residents rushing out of homes and other buildings, Possibility of a higher fatality was indicated. Meager reports from Pan- Government vs, George Meeks, in WASHINGTON, Jan. 26.—®— which Mecks is charged with the ‘I’urldvm Truman today formally| murder of Clarence Campbell on | nominated Gen. Omar Bradley as|December 9, 1945 | Army Chief of Staff to succeed Gen. First witness recalled was John Dwight Eisenhower. Ritter, who confirmed previous H. sent the nomination to the testimony that Meeks admitted to /Senate which must approve it before rcwing money for transportation n take the Army's top, to Juneau from Anchorage. Ritter, Bradley ¢ oSt he wrcte a letter for to Edward Schwaesdall, who the money be White House did not specify the date on which Bradley will take cquested that over the duties. The nomination was/| r saying that Meeks was made effective simply on the date proke. He also d that Meeks | of his being sworn in told him he had had a letter There have been reports tha ten to Schwaesdall asking him | Eisenhower wanted to leave about'to forget that he had ever loaned Feb. 15. ! him anything ; L., McNamara testified | had drawn the sketch of | the flcor plan of the Keystone| Rooms, which had been presented Now 54, Bradley has been Chief| of the Veterans Administration but| left that post two months ago. Dur-| ing the war, he commanded the 12th 26.—D- j SEATTLT, Jan. 26—(®— Griz- traps in ystem for WASHINGTO! Jan Legislation to place fish Alaska under a licensing sty ot STASSEN WILL £ 5.5 2 15 years will be opposed at a joint plmest incessant questioning House-Senate Committee hearing by | | slaying wives No. 2 and 3, faced residents of the Territory. ls Annou"(ed : ’ |new quizzings today for possible Packing companies will support —_— | ! connection with the 1937 kidnap- (BY HAROLD WARD) | | murder of 10-year-old Charles the legislation already approved by their representatives. AMI, Fla,, Jan. 26.—(®—TI son “We are going to insist that if the AF startling new turn in the y Matt , leadership assembled today tol ! The Committee dogs not kill the bill t the deepest plunge into nation-| investigation of the elderly matri- outright, it conduct hearings in Al-'al politics it ever has attempted,| | monial club Romeo was disclosed aska before taking final action,” with repeal of the Taft-Hartle — ilw\‘ County Det. Chief Adam Ly- Delegate Bartlatt (D-Alaska) told & Act as its prime announced objec- (BY JACK BELL) |8 i, who said that Hayton bears reporter today tive WASHINGTON, Jan. 26 :mblance to a character sketch Bartlett said the Alaskans insist The 15-man Ewccutive Council |The decision of Harold E. St drawn of the kidnaper's face. fish traps in the Territorial waters went into mid-winter session, to be to take on Senator Robert A. Taft in' Ransom of $28,000 was asked of be abolished climaxed Fetruary 4 with a m the Ohioan’s home State found ‘Taft his parents, Dr. and Mrs. W. W. The till was drawn by the Inter- inz of the Federation’s full-d pporters ready today to force an Mattson, after the boy was taken jor Department after long negotia-| political strategy group of 30 mem- | even earlier test of sentiment for the from his Tacoma home Dec. 27, tions with the fishing interests and bers | Republican Presidential nomination. 1936. ‘The money was not paid Imon canners, It provides for a' President Willlam Green, whu: They disclosed plans to make an and 15 days lafer the boy's badly beaten body was iound in the wcods six miles south of Everett. hopes to raise $8,000,000 in voluntaryjall-out race in Taft'’s behalf in the contributions from Federation mem-|April 13 Nebraska free-for-all. That reduction in the number of fish traps at once, sale to the highest ay Istand, said two families werefamy Group in Europe. to the court as Government's ex- Luried alive by o big landslide at| Bradley has been a long-time ad-{ ;i Number 9. McNamara said' Hanini on the Southwestern Coas . of universal military train-|, ° :hv‘ (‘n‘-ll)é(‘ Iru‘m‘ the K’r\--‘ § Near Miagoa, a seacoast town, - ing and one of his jobs as Chief R' “\ e P rmmm}-e: s of two fishermen believed to have| ¢ siaff is expected to be that of b ‘h‘ B nm“‘ hmiv “h[ been drowned as a tidal wave hit|geping this idea to Congress. It e EN A | the Southern Coast of loilo Pro-|gmong the legislation President Tru-i ywiniam Didelius, formerly an| VInGg wrse’ Tocavied, {man asked in his State-Of-The-Un Fear mounted in hard-hit loilo}{on mecsage City with each new tremor. On re-| ¥ i A JUNEAU ELXS WIN ‘ quest of Iloilo’s Mayor, the Philip- pines Weather Bureau informed re- sidents the tremors were aftershocks and not destructive e - PAA CARRIES MANY ON WEEKEND FLIGHT pan American Airways over the this weekend carried 55 passenge Those from Seattle to Juneau were Donald McLain, Ken Axelson, Bob- bie Axelson and infant Jerold, Ken BOWLING MATCHES FROM KETCHIKAN ; Juneau bowlers wound up on top; night in a six day bpwling rnament against men’s and wo-( men’s teams from the Ketchik: Elk's Club. The matches were playedi on the local Elks Club alleys and! were concluded yesterday , The visiting keglers were guests: Axelson Jr. Andrew McDonald, El-|of honor ata Bowler's Banquet sm—; la Siverly Rock, James McGhee, urday at the Baranof Hotel whichi Moine Miller. was well attended. They will leave, Dorothea Pelka, George McCrack-, €351¥ tomorrow morning omn bm\rdl the en, Lillian McCracken, Joe Burns, James Cooper, Cecil Arado. Rokert Turner, Joy Turner, Rob- ert Turner, Peter Warner. ' Riley Furlong and infant Mickey, Irene Furlong, Naney Furlong, Judy Furlong, Michael Furlong. H. R. Blood, Margaret Craig, Mary Blackard, Betty Amundson, Ann Davis. Juneau to Seattle: Dick Dalziel, Fred Frotese, Bob Rrice, Harold Warner, Harold Bates, Cecil Casler, Alaska i Additional competition will be! held tonight in singles and doubles? matéhes tetween the high players' ot the four teams. X Representing Juneau will be: E Hagerup, men’s singles; Joe Snow and Art Burke, men’s doubles; C Barragar, Women'’s singles; B. Lav enik and M. Funk, women's doubles. | Representing Ketchikan will be John Halm, men's singles; J. Bailey| and K. Flagler, men's doubles; P.| Leslie Sturm, Hazel Forsen, Elroy Bailey, women's singl ‘M. Moore Ninnis, H. S. Graves, William B. and G. McConnell, women's doubles. Stolz. > > - S Keammer, amsra earncy. WORLD DAY OF PRAYER Elizabeth Briggs, G. M. Leake, Jack swaer, B oweon, wima sonr, SET FOR FEBRUARY 13; | PLANS ARE MADE HERE' Juneau to - Annette: J. A. Talbot. | The local members of the Unm-d& Annettee to Juneau: Ross B. Mor-| Harry Larson, Joseph Bassett, Wil-| Councll of Church Women held a ry Lorenzen presiding, in or-j Wrange!l May ran e a o’ ‘The meetings this year will be’ rison, liam Bratz. | meeting Friday, Jan. 23, at thej \!";' to make plans for the W'(?ll(l‘, H i |held at the Salvation Army Hall| Juneau to Fairbanks: Bill Martin, ,,,,, wodist parsonage, with Mrs.} ! Day of Prayer on February 13. | all ; This is a union meeting of For Te"- House Protestant churches of Juneau who ! | join with churches all over the ! | world in special prayer on that} WRANGELL, Alaska, Jan. 26- H day Mrs. Doris M. Barnes, Mayor of qye tpeme for the day this yeari Wrangell, and an insurance broker, .. .rne. world at Prayer, which is filed for the Territorial House t0-| o oniv hope for a World of! day on the Republican ticket | peace.” t eace ) - ——— TR O A | The Washington DOLORES ZEiS IS ! ) nt with the FBI, was then re-| alled to the stand. He said that visited Meeks in his room on| night of December 19, ! he the | had asked h'm where he obtained jrc-oyeos the 16 hundred dollar bills which! had been found in his possession by police the previous night Meeks said he won the money by | ambling in Anchorage, and stated hat he had placed it in the keep- ing of Attorney Willlam Paul shortly before Didelius arrived. The | defendant showed him the receipt.} Much of Didelius’ testimony, carrokborated that previously giv-! e¢n by other witnesses. He identi-| fied marks which he had made in the lining of the suit which had been found in Meeks' room, the coat of which was stained with bloed, and the trousers of which had been washed. The garments weré cntered as Government’s ex- hibits rtumbers 16 and 17. | Discrepancics 4 The witness than read Meeks' statement, ~ Government exhibit number 18, which had been made on December 15 and signed by both Meeks and Didelius ording to the statement, Meeks had spent Sunday alone in' his rcom, and had not gone out| until 5:30. Virginia Brown had previously testified that she spent the day with him. Meeks said that { he had gone to the Dew Drop Inn dinner, had visited several and upon returning to the' Keystone Rooms had discovered | that his wallet, with $1600 in it, was missing | He suspected Peter Vincent, who ! had taken eight silver dollars from | him that morning, of stealing the, billfeld, and became embroiled in, a fight with him Police later | found the money in a magazine | in his own room where he had put ! it himself i Meeks also stated that on Mon-! day evening he visited Kelso Hart- | ness and Lena Brown in their) rocm, and that he had thrown the wallet on the flor. He said he, was intoxicated at the time. I He later entrusted the money to Attorney Paul. He also main- | tained in his statement that he. ad never seen Campbell nor heard ' his name prior to the crime. He said that he had brought| $2600 in gambling winnings from | Anchorage with him, but admitted | to borrowing money from Ritter | and George Skinner. He said he! and !, | lations under former Se bidder of the traps relinguished by the canners and sharing of the licensing feds with the Territory Representatives of the big salmon packers on the West Coast have signified an intention to attend the hearing and testify. Five represen- tatives of Alaskan fishing interests They are Stanley are here to testify Anchorage; A. A C ., Jr. Kodiak; Lee Bettinger M r of Kodiak; R. R. Warren Anchorage, and C. C rlson, Cor- dova The hearing will be conducted by Senator Magnuson (D-Wash) and Rep. Tollefson (R-Wash) as repre-! sentatives of the Senate Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee| and the House Merchant Marine| and Fisheries Committee, ! While the fishermen are here it| is probable they will be asked thefr views proposals that the fish-| ing industry be represented in in-, ternational negotiations by a top {light department official i i & | DISCRIMINATION SHOWN | WASHINGTON, Jan, 26. Re-! tention by the United States of con- trol over salmon fishing in Alaskan waters is a discrimination against Alaska, an Interior Department of- ficial testified today before a Con- gressional Committee. | Mastin G. White, the Dup:u-v-} ment’s solicitor, said that the Or- ganic Act of Hawaii gave control over fisheries in Hawaiian waters{ to that Territory but that just the{ cpposite was provided in the Or- ganic Act of Alaska. i White testified at a hearing onj an Interior Department bill propos-| ing a licensing system for fish traps! in Alaskan waters. Senator Moore (R-Okla) Chair-y man of a Joint $ouse-Senate Com-| mittee considering the bill, asked White if the difference in the Organ- ic Acts of the two Territories was not discrimination against Alaska. White replied it is and said he could not, plaint the discrimination unless it} because of the importance of; i L salmon as a widely used food Philip D. McBride, Seattle, Chair-| man of the Board of the Pacific} Ameriéan Fisheries operating 56| trap sites in Alaskan waters, said his company has an investment of: nearly $7,000,000 in that business. | He said that like other companies! Pacific American in recent years had | taced a constant changing of re ary of! the Interior Harold L. Ickes. Mc-| Bride said he and other industry re-| presentatives finally agreed to the present bill as a compromise in hope of ending the procession of ch;mgml | Gold Room Spring flowers decor- {the w bers to finance the AFL's political|test comes three weeks ahead of the vities, says the newly-formed |Chio balloting which Stassen an- itor’s political education league” | nounced he will enter. may even go so far as to endorse! Taft himself was silent on the a Presidential candidate this time.|Nebraska development, but he left In other years the AFL has scarc-Ino doubt that he welcomes the com- dipped its toes in the swirling|petition on his own grounds where, 1t of a presidential contest.|he insists, Stassen “has no chance Lyskoski said he would confer today with Jack B. Wilcox, special !agent in charge of the Seattle FBI office, on the similarity between Hayton and the sketch. During four days and nights of almost constant questioning, the 62-year-old retired merchant ad- ely Principally, however, the AFL and for success. mitted in signed confessions that CIO both will concentrate on Con-! The former Minnesota GOVernor pe killed his second and third gress. said in his weekend announcement yiyes 1d led officers to the shal- e edPrmamener ithat he has a high regard for Taft ), forest graves. -eo Ble OPENED 0" land would have preferred the test 5 to come in some other state. NEw MENDENHAI.[ 1 “But,” Stassen added, “The dif- | ferences between us on both foreign REP. IHOMAS Is BR'DGE pROJE(]‘]:md domestic policy represent the | major issues within the Republican STR'(KE" AI SEA B |Party and before the country. It is The Territory Construction Co.,| important that the people have an ai— of Juneau, was the low bidder to- opportunity to express their views NEW YORK, Jan, 26.—(f— Rep. day on work to be done on the upon these policies prior to the Na- j parneil Thomas (R-NJ), strick- Mendenhall River Loop Road bridge. | tional Convention next June.” en seriously ill at sea, is being Three bids were received for the! In saying that Ohio appears to rushed to Cristobal, Panama, to- project and were opened this morn- aiford the only opportunity for such day aboard the SS Ancon. ing by the Juneau office of the Pub- a test, Stassen apparently had in An army bomber dropped two lic Roads Administration. |mind that just about everybody gits of blood plasma alongside the The work calls for the rebuilding who amounts to anything in the ghiy jast night, but Capt. David of the structure which has been GOP Presidential contest Is likely gwinson, the Master, radioed the clos®d for several years. Bids will to find his name on the Netraska piane crew that it was decided not to stop the ship to pick it up. | Bad weather already had delayed be forwarded to Washington, D. C., preferential ballot. for final approval. \ e e Territory Construction Co., ‘The i the ship. R. J. Sommers Construction Co., of off again today from Balboa, Juneau bid $93,071.87 and David Ny- 1 if plass till u‘ Bret. of Beatile; bid §98.808.10, | Coastal Rambler from Seattle, due Canal Zone, If PRsma b sren, 3 1508.10. | needed. USSR A 'to arrive at 7 o'clock tonight. | VISITING BOWLER |eouver 2t 11 oleloo ihis' fofencon EMBI.EM (lUB GUESIS and sailed early this afternoon for Skagway. Will return to Juneau Wednesday at 8 a.m. sailing south Spark plugged by Lillian Uggen, one hour later. (hel’i:]ismlng inwlc:; from Kfim_ Aleutian, from Seattle, scheduled kan were entertained at a luncheon to arrive sometime tomorrow, may- Saturday afternoon in the Baranof be about noon. Jumper Hitch scheduled |irom Seattle February 3. steamer said the ship's doctor ten- tatively had diagnosed the 52-year- old Congressman’s illness as “‘mas- sive gastrointestinal hemorrhage” (or bleeding in the stomach. Themas, chairman of the House Un-American Activities Committee, | leit here Wednesday with —Mrs. to sail! Thomas. While he did not an- | nounce the purpose of his trip, ated the tables e 5 “ Ketchikan guests were Mrs, Jane Denali, from west, sceduled | there has been discussion in Wash- Bailey, Mrs. Ruth Stump, Mrs. Jean southbound January 29. i ington of alleged subversive activ-| 5 b —— |ities in the Canal Zone. 5. Dorothy McKenzie,! rson, captain of the LUTHERAN LADIES AIL Mrs. Gladys McCon- PLAN TWO > | - -ee EVENTS . nel, Mrs. He Arthur, Mrs. Peggy AlASKA MA l“ Bailey, Mrs. Kay Halm, and Mrs.. A the Ways and meeting of Maxine Moore and Mrs. W. Koefel Means committec of the Lutheran | IR'A"G[E ROUTE | Ladies Aid was held Friday, Janu- of Skagway. | ary 23, and a cooked food sale was | | planned for Saturday, January 31,| juNEAu (IIY B D {at 11 am. in the order office of pRA('”(E IUESDAY were a'.s'u made for a luncheon to be held at a later date. the Sears and Roebuck Store. Plans >-or—— PLEADS NOT GUILTY Stedman, N Mrs, Mae Pe bowling tean Steamer Alaska of the North- land Transportation Co., sailed on the triangle route Saturday night neau tomorrow morning at 1 o'clock, sailing south one hour lat- er, o3 Passengers booked for Sitka were at 8 o'clock in the de School Robert Shannon, of Sitka, en- W. A, Miller and wife, E. J. Low- Auditorium La Tuesday night tered a plea of not guilty in U. 8. ney and wife, H I. Lucas, Jean 14 of the bandsmen reported and District Court today to a Grand Kovaleska, Miss M Meredith. Director Alfred Ventur was highly Jury indictment for embezzlement| For Skagway, M. A. Moe and pleased with the snappy rehearsal of union funds. Date for trial will| wife. which resulted. Several new mar- | be set later. . ches and selections were given the - - band will hold sday night The Juneau kly practice Tu B Dispatches from the Panama line . 4t 11 oclock and is due in Ju-| jon another occasion, with a wrist BUSINESS MEN SOUTH in regulations. % i I once over at the rehearsal and will JOE McCANN HERE Third Blast g;lgeping Mid- west, Upper Atlantic ~Warm in Miami (By The Assoclated Press) The third cold wave within a week moved into the north central part of the nation today as the death toll of the second, still gripping the south and east, ‘rencht‘d 60. A weather bureau forecaster said the new sub-zero alr mass, | which moved southward from Can- 'ada into the great plains—farther | west than the first two—would | keep the midwest and upper Atlan- | tic comstal region frigid at leaSt until midweek. | The new waves efiect was not | expected to be felt in the south- | eastern part of the country, how- ‘ever, and probably will not bring | lower temperatures than already | have been experienced in the cold | wave series. i Where It Is Cold Watertown, 8. D, had the na- | tion’s lowest official temperature ! this morning—27 below zero. The | Ohio valley had a second succes- | sive bitter sub-zero night with the |official low of -6 reported at ! Columbus, O, and Loulsville, Ky., | and much lower unofficial readings |in hilly southeastern Ohio. The | northeastern states had a low of | =20 at Binghamton, N. Y., with -12 i at Albany, N. Y., -11 at Portland, Me,, and -8 at Hartford, Conn. Moderates in South . Moderating of temperatures in i the still chilly south was reported with Mobile, Ala, which record- ed 22 gbove Sunday having a 34- | degree minimum today. Milder weather was expected to reach the . South Atlantic Coast by Tuesday DI ¢ s Another storm, developing in the southwest, had brought snow and freezing rain to Texas and was moving eastward across the south- "ern states, already chilled by snow and sub-ireezing temperatures over the weekend. No Relief In Sight Meanwhile, little or no relief was in sight for New England and osh- er eastern seaboard states where | scme points were digging out of ,an accumulation of snow measur- {ing more than 20 inches. | Chill weather also continued on | the West Coast, with temperatures | generally in the 20's. Fresno, Cal- ifornia, hed an early low of 44 | teday, and San Francisco 47 | While the rest of the nation shiv- {ered yesterday, public beaches n | Miami, Fla., reported their largest | turnout of the season with a sin- (ny T5-degree day. | RAIN OVER PACa -« | SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 26 —®— A disturbance moving eastward in | the Pacitic near the Aleutians was ld(z.scnbeu by the weather bureau | today as a possible producer of rain | for parched California farmlands, !which in the rich San Joaquin |valley have gone rainless 36 days. Southern Calticrnia received its first—just a trace—precipitation since Dec. 29 and the weather | bureau forecast scattered showers, | In northern California, the fore- {cast is for continued dry through Tuesday. But the storm near the | Aleutlans may bring rain later in the week, the weather bureau said. e L A IRA P. FARNSWORTH Merry & GO i Round. AsslG“ED, pAlMER’repnld Skinner in cash once, andE Miss Dolores Zeis leaves Tuesday, | January 27, by boat and rail, forl By DREW PEARSON i | Palmer, Alaska, where she is being 1948, °by The Bell Byndicats, | gasigned ty the Territorial‘Depart- ment of Health as public health| nurse to replace the former nurse,! 7ASHINGTON— Smail manu-|aps Ruth Zeile, who married about | facturers, at their wits' end six months ago. i for lack of steel and blaming their | M Zeis was born and raised, woes on the black market, should in st. Louis, Missouri, where shei take a look at the new board of lalso took her nurses training and| directors of General Motors. It secured her Bachelor of Science; might help them to understand | Degree, with a major in public! where all the steel is going. health nursing. i What happened was that Gen-| In St. Louis, Miss Zel; worked for! eral Motors recently elected Rich-|five years with the St. Louis Visiting ard Mellon, of the famous Mellon Nurse Association, first as a statf (Copyright. family, to its board of directors. nurse, later in a supervisory capac- There was an interesting reason |ity. | for this. General Motors manu- ————— factured the staggering total of INTENTIONS TO WED | The iollowing marriage license| 1,925,858 passenger cars and trucks i applications were received over the last year—nearly one-half of all the automobiles produced in the ! weekend by U. S. Commissioner | U. 8. A, | Felix Gray: { Obviously, General Motors had; Axel Henry Nelson and Bonnie plenty of steel or it could not have Lee Hulse; Darrell Dee Buckner| hit this record production. But Gnd Carmen Jean Hulse, all of| apparently it wants more. For Juneau. Richard Mellon and family are -, the biggest stockholders in Beth-| Mrs. Jeanne E. Trump of Gus- - | tavus is staying at the Baranof (Continued on Page Four) }ng] | watch. Views Body H Didelius said that he accompan- ied Meeks to the morgue to view| the bedy of the victim, and that; the defendant claimed he did not know who he was. ¢ The witness also confirmed pre-| vious testimony, that he had over-| heard a conversation between John Kalinowski and Meeks, in which the latter asked Kalinowski| to leave town. Meeks didn't want! him to testify that he had met | Campbell in the defendant’s room | on Sunday morning. | Upon cross examination, Didelius inspected the coat and pants which had been introduced in evidence and said that there were several| holes and spot which had not been there when he had sent the outfit to the FBI office in Washington for blood tests. | He stated that he had also sent! | | | Campbell's clothing, sections of tained wall paper from Meeks' oom, and Meeks' knife to the ! Washington office to ascertain if there was human blood on any of the items. According to the re-| port which was returned to him, the wall paper was not blood- C e 00000000 000000000 s be put on the racks tomorrow night, Joseph A. McCann, Deputy Col- ! lector in charge of the U. 8. Cus- toms office at Fairbanks, was & | through passenger today on board Ithe 8. . Princess Norah. He is en- | NEW YORK, Jan. 26.—#—Clos- | route to Fairbanks after a vacation | STOCK QUOTATIONS WEATHER REPORT * (U. S. WEATHER BUREAU . (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. toduy @ . In Juneau— Maximum, 39; minimum, 28. L . " L ing quotation of Alaska Juneaulin the States. { 2 3 i s IA.L“;";DN " Masimum, 35 .Hmne stock today is 4, American| On his return trip, McCann will| WIYRUDE S, |Can 78%, Anaconda 33, Curtiss-visit with his mother, Mrs. Mary | WEASHER SQRECAST Wright 5, International Harvester | McCann, U. 8. Commissioner at (8] Vi it RN A, Vislr) 88, Kennecott 45, New York Cen-| Skagway. He will take the rail-| . . . nl‘é’;“:“m"‘(‘!‘“fi::‘d;f““:{;’ut“‘;: oltral 14, Northém Pacific 18%.road to Whitehorse and fiy in to| o s Yimicel e 1%, Pound 4o, Fairbans. 13 winds 10 to 25 mPh. 2| Sales today were 650000 shares e = a2 BECIPITATION @ | Averages today are as follows:| COAST GUARDSMEN HERE s 24 Nouss ending 130 e Lee? & |Industrials 17015, ralls 5002, ufil-| Lt John . Mackey, A. A La- Jan 1.7 1010 mche; ;mc; .rmes 32.35. | Monica and N. Wirsching of the July 1 ‘llv82 inché« L ol —l—— {USCG from Annette Island, are PR s ¢! MRS CARRIGAN RETURNS |registered at the Baranof Hotel ne; since ®! ! e 3% 0 jflf‘y 1, 653 inches; since 2| Mrs. Roy Carrigan returned dur-| ANGOON VISITORS i 9 34 ing the weekend from Anchorage,| Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Soboleff of i ® | where she visited with the members | Angoon are {of the Juneau colony in the Cook|Barancf Hotel registered at the o b Inlet metropolis. While there she| - - stained and it was impossible to!was the houseguest of Mr. and|! Hans Engbremmer of Ed Eng-| determine the blood type on any' Mrs. Lu Liston |dahl of Pelican are registered at| of the garments, beyond the fact | - llhe Gastineau Hotel that it was human blood FROM L. A, CALIF g - >-o - Court was recessed after his tes- Dorothea Pelka from Los An-, H. R. (8lim) Blcod and Ralph timony until 2 o'clock this after- geles, Calif., is registered at the! Young, Sr., of Sitka, are register- noon., Baranof Hotel Jed at the Gastineau Hotel. | vessel Terry. Several of Juneau's merchants and business men left yesterday via :FIlES "IwAY E"GR PAA for the outside to attend the| (] w Market Week in Seattle and to| transact other business in the REPUBLICA" II(KEI states. { Ira P. Farnsworth of Fairbanks, Those att, the Mart Week . e atcading. the M e 4 -year resident of Alaska, filed are Cecil Casler and Harold Graves. today with Auditor Frank A. Boyle The others are on buying trips for | their respective businesses: for Highway Engineer on. the Re- Dalziel, Harold Warner, Hal::)llg | pub_llcm\ ticket. Farnsworth sent his Bates, L. Sturm, E. Ninnis and w.|9eire 0 tile on the Reputlican Stoltz ticket to Albert White, Attorney q for the Republican Party who says Farnsworth is a capable Engineer, a |long-time resident of Alaska and ¢ 3 oy, Bctive in the American Legion. m;‘]“‘;se“;"i‘;:;“‘“fiz;”m“ljf’; B9 This completes filings on the Re- trict Court for want of prosecution: rpubllcan Mekat. Othors JaK i (ue 5 * luntil the end of this week for major - CASES DISMISSED Lyfl‘:‘n% E. Lynam vs. Ingrld:omc“ and legislative posts for the 5 4 2 s Republican primary on April 27. The Most Reverend Theophllus| ~whpite stated that an office will vs. F. Evegeni Olendy. |be opened in Juneau at 224 Ferry John D. Abbott vs. Edna Abbott.|yay within a short time which will Cotton Engineering Corp. vs. the pe the headquarters of the Republi- {can Party in Alaska and the of- DU < 50 Tl | 40 | fice will function with members of RUTLEDGE ON TRIP |the Republican National Committee Franklin A. Rutledge, mining en- | and the Republican Territorial Com- gineer icr the U. S. Bureau of mitiee of Alaska for the coming mines in. Juneau, left here over elections with an office force to meet the weekend via PAA for a one gll requirements of the forthcoming week business trip to Seattle. |campaign. | .

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