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| v THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALl THE TIME” = VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,807 JUNEAU, ALASKA, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 10, 1948 MBLR AbeClATLD PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS NELSON 10 HANG HERE ForTojoand 24 BIG ARREST Death Penally FBI MAKES ONMARCH 1 Other Japanese Convicled Smr of Jim El- len to Die on Juneau Gallows Austin Nelson will be hanged at the Juneau Federal Jail on March 1 as scheduled. An order of execu- tion was signed this morning by Federal Judge George W. Folta Nelson was convicted in April 1947 for the first degree murder of gro- ceryman Jim Ellen on Dec. 22, 1946 and was originally scheduled to have peen hanged here on July His execution was stayed the last moment so that he could give evidence against Eugene LaMoore who he implicated in the crime a bis accomplice. LaMcore was convicted week of the same crime but here last time TCKYO, Feb. 10 M—The prosecu- tion indicated today it would ask the death penalty 24 c ‘In T J effect, ofr Japanese I am asking for Hideki Tojo and war leaders. John WiIIi;rfi;on, Labor Grain Drops and Livestock Secrefary of Party, Is Taken Into Custody the | death penalty for Hideki Tojo and| 1, 1947.1 has net yet been set for his sentence. | 1t is expected. however, that he will! be sentenced sometime this week. - e — POLITICAL ANGLE ON MARSHALL PLAN' (BY OLIVER W. DE WOLFE) WASHINGTON, Feb. 10.—P- Senator Reed (R-Kas) said teday failure to enact a rkable” Ma; shall Plan could scuttle GOP el tion hopes Reed described himself as no great champion of the European recovery Bress. y clambered tor Joseph B. Keenan. summation Iu\ for rop ‘The International Tribunal today e motion for a dismisscd quittal of about I am a defen The trial tegan Jun He will begin the Allied case 7:30 pm. today asking 3, 1946, ————— OLDEST SURVIVING FESTIVAL, MARD! GRAS, (ELEBRATED By KRIS KREEGER JEW ORLEANS, Feb. 10— ! New Orleans went on its annual Mardi Gras bender today, celebrat- oldest The pe costumes, e the co! in the ‘The ted t migh ised if ll\t scene. notice pre- them rogram (ERP) now before Con-! o jse s de | euised as de But in a letter to a fullm\,,“ bottles, ople staged over stumes streets Greek busir have they he 1t one and parades, danc- been had chanced g a modern version of the world’s surviving dres festival ed in fantastic gaudy parades another to who years sur- upon shepherds 5,000 a bit But nobody would have or gypsie -what with folks dis- cards and aspir- s and convicts, Dej € e arre in effect| Williamson employment of Manila'!Communist States. A Th n, i tye department ¢ Williamsor igure agair ment in whom the has taken acti Departm ,a member of ti ional Co an Am , whereas mx records in Scotland 45 ye itte cial most Communist the Justicz Depart- n thus far” | 1t said Williamson, | Communis 5| “h the Immigration Service officials took Willlamson FBI cust ng his He d Williamson 1} self as a native partment cfficials said hey added Department was ents there without 1502 or bone¢ oc2edings S represe of Califor a Part been pos- 1 eitizen for many he is an alien, showed he ago. today announc- tation of John etary of the; sharp United | was born and into| d him- De- He claimed that he was torn there 1903 but ords were destroyed in Fran that the sco earthquake and fire. Williemson ‘High Pol a5 a officials member Board” of the his birth san' dascribed of the! Com- munist Party in this country. 1he) said he had been affairs since he was ctive in party| a 15-year-old Kansan which he made public today,’ apes and ballet dancers youngster in Scallle‘Wn\h, in 1918 hE_;;cImvfl St Traditional climax of the af- M i g “The international point of View' . was the parade of mule-drawn in the Nartheastern part of the Uni-! 0,40 1oq by Rex, King of Carni- arga'e ruman ted States and on the Pacific Coast] " Is Not Enflaged is so different from our Midwesterni po.. (his vear, was Dr. Alton] point of view, that if the Marshalli oo,,0p, nternationally known sur- To Be Maf"ed Plan should fail (of passage) and gecn. His queen was Elizabeth Lee Prezident Truman could hang the responsibility on the Party, and if— “Between this time and Novem- act to be passed, a Communist Gov- ernment should be chosen to xephm(fl the present Government in Imly. France or any other important west- ern European country, the Repub- lican candidates in November \\uu]d\ not carry a state east of Ohio |ex- cept perhaps Maine and Vcrmom:| cr any state on the Pacific Coast.” > Brig. Gen. Gaffney Gomg {o Greece WASHINGTON, Feb. 10— Airfcrces today assigned to American mission in Greece Brig.|approved by Gen. Dale V. Gaffrey, who has been serving in the training sec- Command. He was born in Met- huen, Mass. — - e Negotiations broke down last The waShlngton Thursday when the company and unicn failed to reach an agree- Merry GO Roundlmcnt on the union’s demand for 140 tents per hour raise. Union ok : President Joseph B. Dougherty By DREW PEARSON isaid the PTC countered with an' fcffer of six more cents an hour (Copyright, 1948, by The Bell Syndicate, | Motormen and conductors at nc.) I WASHINGTON State George Marshall plain talking on the pehind his European Recovery Plan of Secreary Republican| ¢ i i | Niche president blishil Ler, through failure of a workable ;’," e icholson n, P. Nichoison, of the Company, ->-> debutante daughter first Times-Pica and vice- une | Mrs. | TRANSIT STRIKE IN PHILADELPHIA STARTS MIDRIGHT PHILADELPHIA i Philadelphia's three bus and themselves set for strike The wa 000 subway today lkout, A--The | in Philadelphia’s third major the | pertation Feb. 10.—(A— million trolley, braced travelers for a midnight tonight which would result trans- ! tieup in five years—was 2 majority of the 11.- members of Local 234, CIO- Transport Workers Union, employ- tion of headquarters of the Alaskan,ed by the Philadelphia Transpor- tation Col The mpany. contract between the com- 'Er.nny and the union expires at the time set two-man for the cars and did s(,meihoxu on one-man cperations “philosophy” | | maintenance workers receives from strike—midnight. $1.20 per; (94 cents to sldfl an hour. of | transit | | White WASHINGTON, Feb House 10 id today Presidenti ITruman’s daughter, Margaret, is no- cngaged to te married. Presidential Press Secretary Chas. G. Ross was asked about a puhh\hul‘ report that Frank Handy of Ypsil- Price Break - Confinuing OF (QMMIE; Again Today Russia to Publish Secret Sell Around Yesterday's | German Documents of | INGTON, Feb. 10 <'Y~-v'l'hl‘i artment P fr described | important Party )dy this morning as he was leav- t New York City. 1 to Ellis Island and d to await’ Lowest Quotations NEW YORK, Feb. 10. SENSATION " PROMISED BY SOVIETS rop srare per, World War Il (P—Girain By EDDIE ice which rallied sterday | MOSCOW, Feb, om last week’s break, reswmed|sians premised te drops today and lhes(nck‘w\.w GIL 10. day German documents they MORE —B- Rus- to publish e their charges that the said - Navy Iug Mafaco Arrives TAFT TAKES Here for Recruiting Duty NEW ANGLE, FOREIGN AID Can't Afford fo Give Away So Much that Price Con- The Navy Au\llmn Tug, the Mataco (ATF-86) docked at the Subport at 5 o'clock yeste y af- terncon. The primary purpose of lhc visit of the Mataco is to en- list men for the regular Navy and {to organize an inactive reserve in| Juneau, MAN APPROVED FOR FISHERIES' | Men between the ages of 17 and 2 32 may joint the inactive reserve Secrefary Marshall Writes . requtrements tor this particu- {lar service are us follows: all ex-| Letter to Rep. Tollef- {xavy en may join the mmactive | reserve without a physical; ex son on lssue | Army, Marine or Coast Guard mu | pass a physical examination was selling at around yesterday's | wc prov | lowest prices. western allies paved the way for WASHINGTON, Feb. 10.—(P—Se- fore they can be accepted, how Meanwhile there were scattered; World War II. cretary Marshall told Rep. Tollefson ever those who have not had pr reports of further declines in cost-| The Soviet information bureau (R-Wash) today he is ‘studying vious military training and are be- oi-living items. "charged last night that the United plans to have a top State Depart- tween the ages of 17 and 54 do grain market at Chicago had | States, Britain and France had, injment official I e International net have to pass a physical. more than opened when | their relaticns with Germany, pro-|Fisheries protlems. He :aid that he Commander Babb stated that he wheat and oats were down three vided Adoli Hitler with the thought the outcome will be accept- has authority to enlist men for | cents a bushel and corn dropped ' stre 1 to launch the second able to the fishing industry, the reguiar Navy if they lm\-on'(l as much as 4': cents World War Marshall told Tollefson in a letter had previous military training. | Hog prices were at yesterday’s ~The Russians said it was done he felt the Department had lacked those of the Army, Marine Corp | ‘lu\\:'sl quotations at Chicago as by a “golden rain of Amerlcnn'mmdin ation in handling fisheries and Coast Guard wishing to en- suppliers put cnly 5000 hogs on doliars” and by French and Brit- pruLl'nn and thac fisheries “must list in the regular Navy will con-; |sale. The trade had expected 15,- ish diplomacy a mcre clearly defined respon- tact the Commandaiut of the 17th) 000 would be available to purchas- he Russian statement was in s v"“l.‘ within the State Depart- Naval District at Kodiak, Alaska, ers. re to the U. S. State Depart- ment." He said he is having a thor- in the Naval Personnel office, of ! At New York, stocks were lower men's publication Jan. 21 of 260'Oough review of the Department’s the Naval Operating Base. | all along the line and cotton pri- documents captured from the Nazis handling of fishery matters made ces fell more than $1 a bale in dealing with Russian-German re- and also has discussed the subject Alaska Rescue Work ! carly. de&lings. Jaticns prior to world War II. with Secretary Krug of the Interior The Mataco has an interesting . Consumers were hopeful of meat Russia said its charges were sup- Department histery and part of that has been | | Largains after yesterday's sharp!ported by “important documents “When the results have been fur- rescu work in the past few months drop in livestock prices, but econ-!'which were captured by Soviet ther developed T hope to reach a in the area of Kodiak and sur-, warned them not to be 002 Tio0ps ing the smash-up of deciion that will be acceptable to rounding territory { optimistic Hitlerite Germany.” you," Marshall wrote. On January 2, the Mataco was ! g Publication of these documents! Tollefson had urged the Secretary called upon to rescue the sur-| PRICES DROP HARD will help present the true picture | to have International Fisheries prob- vivors of the ill-fated cannery NEW YORK, Feb. 10—®—Pri- ©f how Hitler's aggression and the |lems handled by a top Department tender Spencer, marooned on Cape ' ces fell like ten pins today on second World War were “in real- official. His plea was repeated 1ast Kanatak in the Shelikof Straits, In: ,mm.mdm and securities markets. ity prepared and developed,” the | Week by representatives of the fish- Letween blows, the Mataco picked | e break was sharper in many 'statement said | ery indus up the survivors and returned them | sspects than last week and was - b orngy i o to Kodiak. On January 12 the | more widespread. Cotton and sev- Aleutian Mail ran aground on jeral other commodities joined . Arch Point in the Shumagins. The | grains in crashing. eu Ian ere i Mataco answered the call again Stocks tumbled $1 to $5 a share: { and picked up the Aleutian Mail i Many closed at the lows of the dayt and towed her to Kodiak [ ' Associated Press index of 60 lN FlAME During the wai, the Mataco was '8 was down to a new low nrou e es commissioned on May 29, 1943, with | since last Juf | a complement of 97 otficers dnd { Cotton and grain, both down ! — enlisted men. After her shake- th » _““nunm fell. the daily limit of $10 a in eir bale (than a The | Last Lmit anti, Mich., would become engaged 1o Mg et soon. Handy is the son ! of G. C. Handy, Publisher of the| va anti Press. aid “Is she | reporter asked. “Not to my knowledge,” “Margaret is not engaged to be mar: ried.” Mrs. | Mrs. Truman, “definitely Thé answer is positively no” Ros about to get engaged?” Ross Sneeze Powder Sales Increasmg ASBURY PARK N. J., Feb. P facturer, the 8. S. Adams, reports the past 38 years of 1,000,000 vials ot sneeze powder. Gesundheit! D WALKER GOES SOUTH manager week vacation The |y, the States. —— e “Slim” tered is xvgmvred at a recent meeting with repre- | sentatives of the U. S. Junior ( M "p II Chamber of Commerce. ry o I I(s The Junior Chamber spukwsxmn had suggested to Marshall that the | E ' p F d United States invite outstanding | n ers "(e ue young farmers of other nations to an anual exposition for the ex-i WASHINGTON Pw 10411!&'1‘)1» change of information on livestock | €ry of “politics” echoed on both| preeding, soil conservation and!sides today in the election year other farm techniques. “That scunds like an idea worth: considering,” responded the Secre-| man and Senator Taft (R-Ohijo). The latest jab came from Secre- of Agriculture Anderson. at in Juneau, is said. | Reathel Odum, Secretary to| also said the report| is not so.” - - 10. novelty manu- sale durln[,l more than | i ery a passenger i present are paid $1.12 an hour “"Homh on the Baranof for a three and business BLOOD FROM SITKA at Bicod of Sitka the Gastineau Hotel. D A\(‘HOR!\GE \'IBITOR Norman G. Lange of Anchorag at the Baranof Ho - l-'ROM KETCHIKAN is regis- | medities daily week on three Lard, for the year, grain cocoa that lowed. Livesteck {day's lowest I plies were cut | 11,300,000 | fin { be night The stock market wext into one lof its most dizzy | months all 1 and The departments. industrials i fairly fast ! further close many s price of the day after shar limits, they fell start. time limit drop in oats, wheat {and corn followed a one-day rally the market had hides, slump was ince December 31 Cost-of-living ocst worsted | fall many | Woolen Co., instances, items but American announced a of 8 to 12 percent on men’s suiting fabrics - Last Words of W, 3. Walkes, rebtbssntasive q,,dnilsenhower fo for the West Coast Gru- {Fellow Soldiers trlp i | jso | message t tha WASHINGTON, IGcn Dwight D. Eisenhower | tarewell to the troops he command- |ed ky saying that “my fondest boast shall always be ‘I was their fellow Idier”. The Army today made public the he sent out on vhen he retired as Chief of Staff. said in part: To the f heart , toth by my service wit! d soybeans and I cottonseed oil all joined the com- the full prices held at ligures as fresh sup- back severely tailspins extended Railroad slipped Prices mid day. cks were at the low Volume of about the Feb. American soldier: Departure from my present post breaks many ties that are dear Cliff Emaild and Hugh J. Sin-ime. But the separation is not com- | price feud between President Tru-|yett of Ketehikan are registered (plete. 1 take with me the knowledge the Baranof Hotel. SARSSGp a5 law and in my h led the break. in more yesterday ropped the extent Lew] yester- over | john Mrs. Wm. F. Smith, Eva Sulliven Thomas, in ten to stocks after a dwindled At the Hall, Lola biggast Con were down price for next McMe=! Watson. Ketchikan to Juneau R. Cavanaugh, anley Zuern, [} Hoisington, Holloman, Virginia Jones and infant. V. A. Kanka, O. I. King, J. E Ruth Martin, Oberg, Newbold, Oscar |Okerg, Mr Gamble, C. Hi Ernest Carl Sonderland, Walt 1len, Carli, er J. U Green, John Herman, Fred Berglof, G. N. Hoyt, Fred We!r( Wrangzll to Juneau: Doris Barnes, Bennett, Roy Peratrovich ‘The Aleutian ward at 4:30 this afternoon with the following passenger: and D. B. Kinkl - Mrs. V. Pet Wm. F w. H. Taylor, R. B. Frazier, A. Johnson, Stucl sails for - Don s: E for £ The Aleutian docked at the Alask: Steamship dock at 11:30 this fore- aoon with the following passengersp from Seattle and Southeast Alaska.! Seattle to Juneau: William Carter, L. B. Chantry, Mr~, Sharon Gamble, John | 1. House ckey, John Hoisington, Mrs. D. Innon, Mus. Mrs. erson, Staley R. ky, Ivan L. Gordon Roy L. C.; Mls Emily Oscar Mrs. Smith, A/ Twenty or more persons died today J. W. Brown,| l '|flames quickly out cf control. C.j S 2 Japanese Cabinel C. s. Cain.| Cha the ward rl Bennett, | i stay West- A, Shaffer TRINITY GUILD WiLL GIVE VALENTINE EA. Members will Silvel P bade 10. and Saturday to| own you shall | nounced given at Trinity Church All hold r Tea 5:30 friends Channel area 4 by Mrs. Alice Brown and her com- mittee in charge toda; of t their Saturday, The Trinity annual it tea will Guild Valentine | was an- be Parish Hall of the Holy m in p. between 2 the asked to attend | - oo p. m. | i Gastineau (ompelenl Alaska Natives fo Secure | Deed fo Land Now { | | | mier rafter 351 years under foreign rule, 'PAPERS LEADING 11947, ST. JOHN'S Nfld., Feb. 10.—®— down cruise in San Francisco Bay, ! she began one of the longest tows an old people’s in history; a floating dry dock to me Brisbane, Australia. This trip took A fire official said more bodies 43 days and nights and she cov- may be found in the ruins of the cyed 6,800 miles. ructure. It was a three story concrete building which shelt- ered indigent and ill people. Some occupants escaped. Some |suffocated or died of turns while \UH abed. Nine bodies were found in beds in one room, Scme reached windows before collapsing The cause of the fire was not known. A 50-mile gale fanned the The when fire enveloped Meets First Jap met her first Jap around New Caledonia and the Ellice Islands, and her fi battle star was earned in the landing opera- ticns at the Gilberts. After a 50 day sojourn she participated in the She to win her second battle star. er battles the Mataco participated in were Carolines, Marianas, Pe-' laus, Shima The Mataco has a great history , and those having served aboard R i H Bod her during the war have a right' es gfls 'n y to be proud and share in her hon- ! ors. Only those in the war fleet ! M— The anese Prime Minister and his inet have resigned, but they will on the job until a new Pre- is .elected. In China, as the civil war continues, thousands are fleeing frcm the danger spots, but the only escape is by air Ceylon has won its independence Oth- weather was below zero. - TOKYO, Feb, 10 Jap- cab- of the fleet. Opportunities | The opportunities afiorded er than they were (years before the war. even in And in India the people of Delhi are paying their last respects to the remains of Mohandas Gandhi. Thursday his ashes will be consign- ed to their last resting place, the three Indian rivers held by sacred Hindus. expense of the Navy This af- fords many gpportunities in train- ! tion not Always obtainable | everyone in civillan life. e Those wishing further Navy should contact Commandér | . Babb akoard the Mataco, now an- chored at the Subport. Officers aboard the Mataco are: Lt. Officer, IN AD INCREASES ! Commanding Oificer, Murphy: Executive . (Jg) Harry E. Welch; enant CHBOSN, Walter E. Furm- erie; Engineer Officer, CHMACH, ' | Alonzo G. Anderson; H. Faltnoski, CBM; P. D. Hallum, CMM; G. F.| Walker, CMOMM; M. J. Kulicz CEM; L. A Milstead, CPHM; M. | Hakus, CCS; T. Juniel, CCK. Open house aboard the tug was held this afternoon from 1 to 4 v'clock and many visitors are report- NEW YORK, Feb. 10.—-(®-—Na- tional advertising increased by a greater amount in newspapers than in any other major media during The volume in newspapers was up 35 percent over . 1946 figures,' while total national advertising e: | penditures in -all major media ad- vanced only 164 percent, aceord- {ing to the trade journal, Printer's L trols Needed at Home By JACK BELI. CHICAGO, Feb. 10.—(A—Senator Taft (R-Ohio) aid today the mlu! States can't afford to “give way” so much to Europe that price controls will be at w st ! e w for a former ch home. needed again Taft came here to begin a mid- inter hunt in ates for ation support. Accompanied by Mrs. il invade Minnesota major speech on ounds of Harold E. Stassen. Minnesota Governor hallenged Tatt to Taft, midwestern GOP Presidential nomi- he Thursday the home The has battle over Ohio delegates to the Republican N dc mate purpose of any ational Convention. i un address prepared for declared om at home must be “the ey Taft, who bas called for a cut Truman for the first a | meeting of the Inland Daily Press ! Association today, ! tor the Ohio Sena- that individual free- ulti- foreign pol- in | the $6,800,000,000 proposed by Pres- ident 15 months of the Eurcpean recovery L program, the peeple turies to udded : “We should not ke actuated by purely altruistic deside to improve condition of a lot who have failed do the job for 1or selves.” ‘The Obhioan said of other cen- them- this country wants peace and freedom through- out the world. But, he continued, “it s certainly not worthwhile to adopt a foreign policy so Lurdensome on our people that it will destroy at home the very freedom we are trying to protect. “We can't give away sums Lol large .that they force controls and 3 overnment regulation and high prices and shortages,which threat- en the very condition here at home w ¢ oare trying to protect,” Taft criticized what he he said. termed the New Deal theory that a higher standard of living ecan be. produc- ed by m “government handouts.” He said this country nust instead “put a floor under the es- sential requirements of our lowest iy icome families so that > ‘Phl]ipplnv.s. and ()kllmwfl,'woRD or CA""O“ : extreme landing operations of the Marshalls 5|nrdslm) and poverty may be elim- | inated.” GIVEN CONSUMERS NEW YORK, Feh. 10. (A -—Econo- ean know the pride and honor of mists have a word of caution today serving on these gallant ships and on the sharp drop in livestoek pric- in beihg a part of the personnel es. They wam consumers not to be too optimistic about receiving bar- men eq g the | lard, ‘gains in commodities. Bacon, ham and steaks were pric- little permanence. to ' sent Chicago levels—at least lower in many stores in the Navy today are far great- throughout the nation, whils flour, sugar and bread ulsc were An enlisted gyailable at reduced prices, but the man has the opportunity to learn'reductions have appeared on a small many trades and vocations at the scale and there is no certainty of its 1 market analysts expect ing and modern fields of Lducd-<KlBh\ prices to stabilize around pre- temporarily. |few Lelieve prices will return to informa- recent peaks, however, Larring crop tion in regard to enlisting in the'failures There is a general feeling among range price trends. tary of State. “It's in line with|tary FROM VANCOUVER {not end as long as I live, Assurance | ok, dh what we are trying to do—helping | Anderson said Taft, a candidate 1ois Naughton of Vancouver, v.uf such fellowship is my most prized WwASHINGTON, Feb. 10.—(®—The In December, national advertising: S others to help themselves. There|for' the Republican Presldential| ¢ j5 registered at the Ga;nnrau,pos,e sion, for no man can have Sengte passed yesterday a bill to|€xpeenditures were 10 percent higher | i ISR has been a lot of misunderstand- ' homination, acted for “political rea-{ gote]. }a more worthy comrade and 10yal permit jssuance of unvestricted deeds|than in the comparable month ! I | i ing in Congress and elsewhere ‘W*"( W\h*‘" he d":’j’;‘;:: ';:" k:‘:' - ifriend than the American soldiel. 1o townsite lands in Alaska to na-11946, but there was little change| S 0(K UUOIATIONS . about our European reconstruc- ;ml" ratlon was (ryl : P i - eee - tives c 1t to mana elrmm the previous monm i .1 0 tion program prices high for political gain. | SIEAMER MOVEMENIS I NAVY MAN HERE thc?r L?:d;.:‘;;?r]fml 9 > | NEW YORK, Feb. m.ram—cms-io “The job before us it mot so, Meanwhile, —meeting President l Lt. (jg) Harold W. Nielson Of | The genate eliminated sections |ing quotation of Alaska Juneau. e much putting oil in heaters or|Truman's request, the Senate-House| Aleutian, from Seattle, in port,|the NAS dispensary at Kodiak, iS which would have required renun-' IMPERIAI.S lOSE | mine stock today is 3%, American ' o food on the trbles of people less) Economic Committee voted 8 to 0| and scheduled to sail for westward registered at the Baranof Hotel. ciation of tribal rights and claims| | Can 764, Anaconda 31%, Curtiss-|e fortunate than ourselves. It is to o Tevive grain rationing to liquor at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon | - against the Government due natives. WRA"GEll GAM w.,gm 414 Tritarnafional Mervent: ba encourage others, to give them the | Producers through October. Clove Hitch, ATC, from Seattle,! SEATTLE MAN HERE The measure went back to the ler 811, Kennecott 43%, New York incentive to improve their econ- RN | scheduled to arrive at 9 tonight. Frank Wright, Jr., of Seattle is| House “for action on the amend- S Céntral 1% Northern . Pacific omic condition. We supply the POLICE COURT NEWS Baranof scheduled to sail from szummynw at the Baranof Hotel ments. WRANGELL, Alaska, Feb. 101 u Steel 69':, Pound tocls, so to speak, but they do attle Saturday. S i | - The Wrangell High School basket-!$4.03', the work themselves.” | Inez Vosotros was fined 825 this| Princess Norah,' scheduled to ;,,.41 TAKU MINE VISITOR | WASHINGTON VISITORS ball squad deteated the Imperials| Sales today were 1460,000 shares Nobody can truthfully call that Mmorning by City Magistrate Wl!l-“nve from Skagway tomorrow at| Axel Eld of the Polaris Taku! My, and Mrs. W. H. Swan of of Juneau last night by a score of | Averages today are as follows - iam A. Holzheimer on a drunk and |8 a. m. and sails south one hour Mine at Tulsequah is registered | Aberdeen, Wash, are registered a! 37 to 34. The game was slow and industrials 16565, rails 48.13, Wtil- (Continued on Page Four) disorderly charge, ll"'“‘ 9 a m at the Baranof Hotel ‘the Hotel Juneau Wrangell lead throughout ities 5 5 i il ® 0 v 00 0 00 0 WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU (Past 24 hours ending 7:20 & m. toduy In Juneau— Maximum, 33; minimum, 14. At Airport-- Maximum, 31, minimum, 5. WEATHER FORECAST (Juneau and Vieinity) Increasing cloudiness ' to- night and Wednesday: not so cold tonight with lowest temperature in Juneau near 20 degrees. PRECIPITATION (Past 24 hours ending T:30 a m. today In City of Juneau-—None; since Peb. 1, .10 inches; ince July 1, T291 inches At the Airport— None; since Feb. 1, .08 inches: since July 1, 43.26 inches. ® s 00 0 0 00 00 price analysts that the consumer |should not expect too much, too soon. In particular, these experts Lewis J. want to watch trading over a per- Lt. ! iod of several more days before mak- First Lieut- ing a prediction on definite, long-