The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 30, 1948, Page 1

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THE DAIL VOL. LXVIIL, NO, 10,978 JUNEAU ALASKA, MONDAY, AUGUST 30, 1948 ————?—fi Maritime Strike Talks Nearing Break Off SPY HUNT SHIFTS T0 NEW YORK Charge Made that Chamb- ers Got U.S. Job While Drawing Commie Pavml NEW YORK, Aug. 30—(®— % | congressional- spy hunt moved to this city today and a new chapter in the continuing story of Whittaker Chambers. He is the agazine edi- tor who has been a key witness in hearings held by the House Com- PRESIDENT BACK IN WASHINGTON AFTER VACATION Presidential Campaign “in; the Works' - Stassen Also to Make Talk WASHINGTON, Aug. 30—®—| End of Salmon Run President Truman returned to Washington Sunday from a $-day R TG yachting vacation and the first WASHINGTON, Aug. 30—®—lipine he did was to arrange for Assistant Secretary of the Inter-{, coference today with Secretary or C. Gorard Davidson left by, giate Marshall. Mr. Truman air for Omaha today on the first| i get a review of the interna-! leg of a trip to Alaska. tional situation. Davidson told a reporter he will| rye president looked bronzed and DAVIDSON 1S COMING T0 ALASKA Assistant Secrefary of In-| terior Wants to Be on “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” - ALASKA 36 PERISH IN CRASH OF PLANE Northwest Airlines Ship Is Struck by Lightning, Hits Atop Bluff Taku Glacier WINONA, Minn, Aug. 30.—#— e public is invited to attend] Thirty-six persons died as a{the fshowing of films relating the storm raked Northwest Airlines t of Mt. St. Elias two years plane crashed atop a wooded Mis-|agoiwhich will be screened’ tonight sissippi River bluff near here yes-)at [ o'clock in the Grade School terday. auditorium. Malcolm Mduler, who A human chain wound its way|wasia member of the party which M. ST. ELIAS PICSTOSHOW - ATSTONIGHT !i!iger and latody Now| Preparing Trip to | Registrafion of Men Is Underway in Nation WALLACE IS GREETED BY BOOS, CHEERS Progressive Party Candi- date Campaigning South -American Activities. m‘:‘;'::,;?nin members moved to!confer at Omaha with officials of Manhattan today for Chambers’ own ; the Union Pacific Railroad regard- story of how he landed a United | ing the concession contracts for | States Government job while draw- three national parks. ing pay as a Communist agent. He will be at Portland, Oregon, fit as he left the yacht Williams- burg. He told newsmen that his Presidential campaign itinerary is, as he expressed it, “in the works.” But he said he does not expect to be able ‘a 150 foot ravine today to bring to announce a definite| dowh the steep and rocky side. of|scatba St Bliss, returned to Juncau| Of Mason-Dixon Line late} yesterday from the current Seward Glacier trip, will be on, DURHAM, N. C, Aug. 30— 'hand to commentate the silent col- 'Henry A. Wallace today moved fur- or films and to speak before and ther into North Carolina-a state out the mangled bodies of 26 per- sons trapped in the wrecked fu- selage. The new development has been Wednesday for the first meeting unfolded by Chambers himself in secret testimony before the House| group. And it has led one Commit- tee nfember—Republican represen- tative Richard Nixon of California —to make this claim: Nixon says that for the first time, the Committee now has a definite probable link between the pre-war Red underground activity described by Chambers and the wartime Rus- | sian spy activities related by nnoth»i 1 er witness, Elizabeth Bentley. Both Chambers and Miss Bemle” have told of serving as Communist ! couriers. But there was a five-year gap from the time Chambers said | he quit the Communist Party in; of the newly-organized Oregon-jgchequle of speaking engagements and-California Land Advisory COM- | yptj] he returns from his Mich- mittee and for a session of Inter-ljoan tour next week. ior's Pacific Northwest Co-ordina-| tion Committee. | will open the Truman campaign for Davidson will arrive in Alaska:ine coming Presidential elections. just ahead of the closing of the| The Republican National Com- salmon fishing season. He said|jitce announces that Harold Stas- he is very anxious to see thelge, wijll answer Mr. Truman in salmon run and the final stage of | {he same city, Detroit, the follow- the packing, for purposes of com-!j,, day. Republican Presidential parison with the Columbia River| andidate Thomas Dewey, in the} and Puget Sound fisheries. {meantime, has been offered al In Alaska Davidson will "‘S“lumely peg for some remarks onj Juneau, Ancporaze, Fairbanks “"diforelgn policy by a French move Mount McKinley Natlonal Park. toward a United States of Europe., Upon his return to the states; pewey long has advocated such His Labor Day speech in Detroit The bodies of 10 others were carried out last night. None of the victims were from the Pacific Northwest. The crash occurred between Wi- nona and Fountain City, Wis, on the Wisconsin side of the river during the heighth of a severe electrical and rain storm. fetest to sportsmen and photo- | The plane was one of the air-|graphers alike. Relating the sec- | lines newer Martin 2-0-2 ships and |ond successful scaling of Mt. Elias was bound for Minneapolis from ithe films cover in detail the out- Chicago with 33 passengers flfld{sundlnl points of the 25-day trip.; b | after the presentation. - Bill La- toddy, also a member of the St.| Ellas party, will be on hand for| commentation. Proceeds from the showing will be directed toward the founding of a Memorial Library in Juneau, and. promise to be of unusual in- three crew members. ¥ i . Expedition Successful | It left Chicago at 3:5 pam, and! agper returned to Juneau: yes- although due in Minneapolis nt'w ¥ to report a very successtul! 5:3 p.m., apparently was behind tul it hieh has | schedule because of the storm. JERU e SR ton W el he will attend a session of the|,gjtical organization of Europe. American’ Bar Association at Se-|anq his friends say tha#t if his attle Sept. 6, hearings of the Scn-ic.mpaxxnlng runs true to form hei ) just been secured in the Seward | NWA’s Twin Oitles headquarters | giagia) and Mt. Vancouver areas. said its last message from the|nppe. said he is very well satisfied which greeted him yesterday with a mixture of boo's and cheers. Wallace ended his first day south of the Mason-Dixon line at the home of a wealthy Negro here a few hours after his oratory was inter- rupted by egg hurling, pickets and catealls. ‘The Progressive Party presidential candidate addressed the state con- vention of hiseorganization to cilmax a day of whirlwind activity which included speeches earlier at Norfolk and Richmond, Va. Virginia Campaign Obviously pleased with his recep- tion in Virginia, the former vice- president declared upon arrival here: “If what I saw in Virginia today, and what T see here is any criterion ( of what we’ll get further on, then bthose under MPIRE MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS Drafi-Age | By JACK RUTLEDGE WASHINGTON, Aug. 30.—P-- ‘This is R-Day—-Registration Da} It's the first step in America’s plan to build up its armed forces with a peacetime = draft. , .Beginning today and continuing throught Sept. 18, nine and ,a half million men 18 through 25 yeats old will go to registration centers and fill cut posteard- sized forms. Registration doesn’'t mean these men will be drafted. Actually, it's just a sort of official census of drait-age men. Only a fraction- of the millions who register will be drafted into the armed forces for a 2l-month stretch during the next two years Maybe one out: of every 42, Fol example,” all 18-year-olds and veterans will register, but 19 and most of the! veterans are exempt. And millions of others will be deferred for var- ious reasons, But they must regis- ter, anyway. Most of those eventually induct- ed will be under 22. And almost! all of them will serve in the Army. The Navy, Marines and Air Force hope to 1ill their ranks with vol- unteers. [ { Emiploying the same frame of | mind as when contemplating a !rlp' to the dentist's chair, the vulner- able males of Juneau (those bornl after Aug. 30, 1922) seem to bel postponing their trips to the loeal Selective Service offices as long as! S— PRICE TEN CENTS STATEMENT IS MADEBY H. BRIDGES IWLU Head Claims Employ- ers Flatly Reject All Union Demands SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 30.—M —The International Longshoremen and Warehousemen's Union said to- day contract negotiations with the West Coast Waterfront Employers Association are “on the verge of breaking off.” Union and employer negotiators have been meeting since Saturday in an effort to avert a Pacific Coast longshore strike scheduled for Sept. 2. An employer spokesman, when told of the union’s statement by ILWU President Harry Bridges, said: “There has to be two parties to negotiate, and we still stand ready to negotiate.” Bridges' “breaking off” ‘statement was issued after a half hour meet- ing this morning. Bridges said “the employers flatly rejected all union demands.” The waterfront picture became much more difiicult late yesterday when longshore spokesmen termed the latest employer proposals “com- pletely unacceptable.” They reaffirmed that their coast- wise strike called for next Thurs- day, when an 80-day government possible. Both offices, located mllnjuncflon explires, would come off plane was at about 5 pm. and|guy ¢pe data the party was able| 1937 until the Vassar graduate chm' ate Public Lands Committee at | iwill take advantage of that sort cf yead: “Am ' descending - through' b 3 Lo ] she tegan her spy work. i However, Nixon says that Chnm-l Eugene, Ore., on the three ‘“Y“‘nmmg to express his views not his government job from two people | following, and will address the| federation but on | N€aVy overcast.” The plane thenj g ul inthe use of radar only on European federation but on i "o, " ong oot ere, successf! 4 2-;“‘”““:' y. before Wi ‘%el;?‘:;:; bers has told the Committee he got Miss Bet ... ... I Portland’ City ‘Club Sept. 10, Kot o Ayt foreign | 5, ChamBeE? 0FeF Comn- | Frs iy el i""l“" aspects” of “American” TOreleh | Ty rogh witness ol the COTOnEr | vy o o the sincier. : policy. ‘he saw the plane fall into the ra-| ok, &l " E thi Progressive convention was held. A Relating several highlights of t e.zruup of men, mostly veterans, po- munist, testified today he obtained | ) a $6,000-a-year Federal job in 1037| jvine on Sutters Ridge after light- i, p, Miller pointed to the instance ; 7 through Communist influence. 2 ining shattered a wing. f > lice said, marched into the meet roush ol ng !when the Norseman plane With /o carrying critical banners. T'll ve satisfied.” the Kline and Federal Buildings,|on schedule. In-hospitality flared for the first s 51 reported today's registration as mov-; But Robert Mayer, spokesman for ing. very. slowly, with only a_small! the employe number of prospective genersls hav- | cutlcok Wwas v A ing stopped in to pay their regards’ Harry Bridges’ CIO longshore un- by' 2 o'clock this aftevnoon. 'jon, through spokgsman Morrss It was further gnnhounced that: Watson, said the employers had not Loth Juneau offices will be openioffered to continue the present and eager during the noon hours. form of hiring hall—key issue in < > ‘the talks—and union security. Hurri | ! | MURDER vl(IIM when S8 J¥pe. pamed 01D Innd civilization. Commending M"“"Tod.xy," the -banhers read, .m(,fh;:s h:" s;;:e "-;-r:,,:' '3‘“ ™ irice King and Dean Goodwin for 4 chair hit one of the banner car- el ughmmig It struck the| €Xcellent repairs to the plane, Mil- |rjers at the crowd estimated at 1,300 plane. A part or.a ing fell o“der said it was miraculously re- whites and Negroes sang “The Bat-| and ihe ship started @own.” i conditioned and flown back to tle Hymn of the Republic.” ! The cr;shp won Aib w.orst i Yakutat where more permanent re-; The presidential aspirant was' NWA's history. Thirty, persons dieg | Pairs were made. {barely into his speech when boo's Whidn: bite ‘of the Hns's Otent| Plane Taxied jand firecrackers interrupted. | plarips smashed (oto. Ghaine of| AMSer correching thib smls, WORK-| HIg proposed s 84.800.000,000, Fed- ldn Alsskan mountaln st March 'S On the fuselage and poundingeral Ald Program for the South and | {the bkent prop back into shape, as he attempted to continue his| King began taxiing the plane 'message, eggs were thrown into the | 30. Less than twa Dibnie S8 NWA[arnux\d the ice cap. Finding that audience from side doors of the ito be satisfactory, he took albuilding. Earlier, a subcommittee mernberI i recommended contempt charges for' J. Peters, whom Chambers described ! as director of an “elite group” of} LA TS 3 Communists in the U. 8. Govern-1 Pos} Office Also Probably in Set-Up — New Edu- cational Program i i | | | of the employer group, said the union statement was “pure hokum, intended only for confusion.” “On the hiring hall, we made HATTERAS, N. C, Aug. 30— Foisie was speaking of the em- North - Carolinians battened down!ployer offer, accepted by eastern along the coast today for a big{maritime unions, to leave the hir- Llow expected to hit tonight. jing hall as presently set up pend- 5 { The employers emphatically de- ‘ane nied this. Frank Foisie, President w i v arnlngs the identical concession that was {made in the east last week which {prevented a strike,” he added. Rep. Richard Nixon (R-Calif.), the | memkber, said Peters should be cited | for contempt of Congress for refus- ing to answer questions as to his; Hurricane warnings were display-|ing court determination of its le- alleged Communist affiliations. | ed from here to Wilmington asa Wea- ! gality under the Taft-Hartley Law. ther Bureau advisory placed the, The hiring hall now has a un< “In 1937, Chambers testified, “I| AP i 1 Chambers, now a senior editor for | (A“‘Dl‘" poll([ ! Howard Rackow, a farmer living|_ . . Time zine, said he. got the| fon Perry Tsland in the Mississippi| o on he c':f;’fed":d :‘Z"::u‘:‘:;: “Wallace, The Hitler” government post within 24 hours River, told the coroner he was get- ( e e dpd oy | “Send Wallace to Russia”—"Wal- after applying for it. He told his C! ting 4GS atodk: okt of Ui stori | L0- AR EXOUp. Sranded WA BOCL ilace is a mockery"af Bouthern con: | story to a subcommittee of the i ing but 75 miles of ice between It |yentions"— Wallace, the Hitler ofl Houge Un-American Activities Com- | | mittee. | KIMBALL, Nebr., Aug. 30—®— [Cnnadinn- police who found the body ,of John McComas in the wilds of British Columbia report “general circumstances point to murder.” The information came from J. Shirras, Commissioner of Britis] iColumbia Police. £ { His wire to Kimball County At-| !torney Kenneth C. Fritzler said off-iWas given a National Safety Coun- cil award for having flown more| decided to break with the party hutI I didn't want to leave Washington without making some sort of a rec- ord as I was afraid I'd be asgassi- nated. “1 went to Peters and told him Ieyer_also hoped-for by the islandersip, c., that a murder warrant was|Twenty-seven bodies were recovered could not float around Washington ! without some sort of occupation.” The Washirgton Merry - Go- Round BY ROBERT §. ALLEN (Copyright. 1948, bl' 1!," Bell 8yndicate, ne. (Editor's Note — While Drew Pearson is on a brief vacation The Washington Merry-Go- Round is being written by his old partner, Rovert S. Allen.) I ASHINGTON Gov. Tom Deweyhas been doing a lot of unre- ported high-powered’ conferring. Among those he has counseled with in these private talks are Speaker Joe Martin, House Floor WASHINGTON, Aug. 30—(M-Two‘mers are “proceeding to Kimball by { American institutions, the post!nn- for further investigation with ] office and the voting booth, will|Kimball officers.” ' make their debut in a northern out-| Fritzler earlier was advised by nni post—the Pribilof Islands—this fall.!inspector Duncan of the Royal The opening of an airport, how-'mMounted Police at Dawson Creek, this fall is still two or three yearsipeing prepared against Gustav distant. |Wlegner. 24, in connection with the The Pribilofs, far out in the Ber-|deatn of the 52-year-old McComas,, ing Sea north of the Aleutians, are |Veterans Administration employee | noted chiefly for the herds of fur'at Dayton, Ohio. i seals that spend the summers there.| wiegner, told that McComas’ They have 508 Aleur and about 30 ‘Lody had been found and the mur- white inhabitants. der warrant was being prepared, con- Ralph C. Baker, Fish and Wild-|tinued to insist that the shooting life Service official, told a reporteriwas accidental. Wiegner, also of on returning from his annual Vis“ll)aytou, said he would waive extra- to the islands he had completed ar-Idition. . rangements for establishment of { A dispatch from Fort John, B. C.,; voting precincts so the islandersisaid the body, with a bullet hole at' can take part in the fall zlect.ion&’;hg hase of . the skull, had been Baker added that a postal in-imangled by wolves. spectator in the Aleutians told him a| 1t was found by a trapper’s dog a Pribilof Postotfice probably will bejfew minutes after police had turned set up in September. the animal loose as an aid in their Heretofore the mail center has|search. Police removed the body to been the Fish nd Wildlife Office|Fort St. John to await instructions. at Seattle. l Baker said the Pribilofs cannot SHOT BEHIND EAR long shot, put it into the air amd ':;:;:le:t. L e R u"{fle-w into Yakutat. The plane was repaired there and flown back into! the glacier during the past few lduys to pick up the party. Miller ‘smd it was necessary to leave much of the scientific research equip- ‘ment on the glacier, but a party west i n V] ras! ek Airfiies Wlp il c”hhe"’\under the ‘direction of Colonel { Wood was making plans to go into near here late Sunday. This brought the death toll to 37. The| 37th body wés identified as that of| the area a second jime next Richard L. Sullian, 37, of Minnea- | March. polis, chief engineer for Mid-Con-| tinent Airlines. Previously announc- | ed ‘passenger and crew lists had car- ried only 36 names. — .- - Waslnhgion Sia Given Opfion, 90 27 BODIES RECOVERED WINONA, Minn, Aug. 30—(P— { today from the wreckage of a North- : Near Tcp of Mount Relative to the scaling of Mt. Vancouver while on the Seward Glacier trip, Miller said that he and another person were able to! reach the 13500-foot level, but! were forced to return to the bnsel frcm which they were working due to sickness and the approaching winter weather. Miller said that a party of four undertook to scale Da F li the better than 15,000 foot moun- ‘Itain but that altitude sickness on 's' er" ne |the part of one member and badly frostbitten feet on the part of an- SEATTLE, Aug. 30—M—Stock-|other forced the party’s return to holders of the Puget Sound Navi-[the 8,000 foot level. gation Company voted today to give BULLETINS The crowd rose to its feet and Wallace pleaded: “Pease sit downl Please sit down!"” | EGGS FOR WALLACE GREENSBORO, N. C., Aug. 30.—! (m—A shower of rotten eggs and tomatoes greeted Henry Wallace when he arrived in Greensboro to- day. An emergency squad of Green- | boro police was called out when a beoing crowd unloosed the eggs and tomatces at the presidential can- didate. A short time earlier, Wal- lace had received a similar greet- ing at Burlington, N. C. ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Voters| have approved a $300,000 bond issue for the purchase of a diesel gen- center of the tropical hurricane about 250 miles south of here and moving north-northwest or north! at 10 to 12 miles per hour. Storm warnings were displayed as far north as the Virginia capes and as far south as Charleston. f Present indications are, the Bu-i reau said, that the center will pass} over or very near Cape Hatteras to- night, probably before midnight. Along the coastal area threatened by the twisting windstorm residents, made what preparations they could against the hurricane. l The Red Cross alerted disaster workers all along the coast and an-! nounced at Atlanta 355 special dis- aster workers were being sent into} the threatened area. | The military began moving its airplanes out of the possible path, UNSC Rejeds Plans | erating plant. The vote was 345 to 119. PASADENA, Calif. —Instruments leader Charles Halleck, Sen. Styles|expect regular air service until the Bridges, N. H., and Sen. William |present 3,100-foot airstrip is length- Knowland, Cal. ‘ened to 4,000 feet and broadened In these conferences Dewey 'hasifrom 90 to 150 feef. He said this will presentéll the main outlines of his!take at least three years because campaign strategy. He has sought|{much other essential construction, advice, but in the main his opera- :such as building roads and houses, tional plans are definitely formu-|is to be done. VICTORIA, B. C., Aug. 30.—M— A gunshot wound behind the ear caused the death of John A. Mc- Comas, Dayton, O., who disap- peared while touring the Alaska| Highway early this month. This was revealed in an autopsy performed Friday in Fort St. John in California recorded a relafively severe earthquake about 5500 miles from here. The direction is not! determined. the state a 90-day option for pur- Taku Glacier Next With Miller and Latoddy at the case of its ferry system for $5.975,- head of the expedition, a six man I Companly officials said the devision was “not unanimous” but they did not disclose the actual vote. A two- thirds vote was necessary for ap- proval. (Continued On“Page Two) SAN FRANCISCO-- A typhoon: is moving along a course in the Far Pacific between the Phillppln; » e o jcil late today rebuffed its president lated. They are as follows: 1. The GOP campaign will get under way the middle of September and continue at an undiminished pace until election eve, November 1. Dewey will make a Labor Day speech. He doesn’t consider necessary to race around as exten- sively as President Truman will do that day. Dewey will confine his electioneering to a major speech at an important gathering. 2. The President’s attacks on Congress—his chief campaign issue 1 |r.he Territorial Department of Edu- body in the wilds of it1100 pupils and four teachers, and Baker said he had arranged With|go)lowing the finding of McComas' Col- cation at Juneau to provide an ad-|,mhia 106 miles north of Daw- visory service for the Pribilof Edu-| . Creek. Part of a .22 call cational Program. The St. Paul Island school has!i, the back of the head. STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—(®—Clos- @ 0o 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 o o o|ing quotation of Alaska Juneau . ® mine stock today is 3%, American . e|Can 81, Anaconda 36%, Curtiss- that at St. George Island 50 pupils and two teachers. Three teaching posts are open at the St. Paul school. e — i TIDE TABLE bullet was removed from a wound |’ WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU) Temperatures for 24-Hour Period « In Juneau— Maximum, 52; minimum, 41. At Airport— Maximum, 54; minimum, 33. FORECAST (Juneau and Vicinity) Mostly cloudy with inter- mittent light rain tonight and Tuesday. Not much change in temperature. PRECIPITATION i ————— \ I STEAMER MOVEMENTS R Princess Norah, from Vancouver,|® scheduled to arrive tomorrow afs {ternoon or evening. 3 Baranof, from Seattle, due late tomorrow night or Wednesday morning. * l Alaska, from Seattle, due some- time Thursday. George Washington scheduled to|® sail from Seattle tomorrow. . Islands and Okinawa. PALESTINE Count Berna- dotte’s Chief of Staff says the Jews have accepted United Nations | proposals for banning fighting ml Jerusalem. A reply from Egypt; is expected soon. Bernadotte's spokesman made the announcement after meeting in Cairo with De- lense Minister Haidar Pasha, G SN o ( FIRE IN HOSPITAL There was a small fire In the Emergepliy Meeting By LARRY HAUCK LAKE SUCCESS, Aug. 30—®-— The United Nations Security Coun- ~Russia's Jacob A. Mallk--by re- fusing to approve the agenda for an emergency meeting he had sum- moned:. | The vote was 2 to 0 with seven af-! tirmative ballots needed for pasuge.[ The Soviet Ukraine voted with| Malik. The other nine delegates ab- stained. The unusual action left the Coun- cil with nothing on the table to} debate. —>oe ——-o MRS. BERLIN ARRIVES Mrs. Margaret Berlin, who will be teacher, also teach-in-charge, {of the Willoughby Avenue School, returned to Juneau on the Princess | {iar. below the ion-hired tcher; the employ- ers say the dispatcher, under the law, must be neutral. Folsie said the employers’ offer of an eight-cent wage hike “puts { longshorenien 15 percent ahead of the cost of living increase, based on Labor Department figures.” The unign called eight cents inadequate, increases granted by other major employers. Meanwhile the National Labor Relations Board went ahead with plans for a poll of the union mem- bership on an earller employer off- er of a boost of five cents an hour straight time and seven and one- half cents for overtime. The un- ion .has announced it would refuse to vote. D New iiovommenl Is looked_[t_)r, France PARIS, Aug. 80—(P—France look- ed for a new government, the 11th or so0 since the war ended three years agc. The involved French political sit- uation did nothing to bulwark the west agalnst Russian pressure in Berlin and Germany. Premier Andre A Marie resigned when Socialists rejected his wage and price program, Robert Schuman, Premier until 32 days ago, looked over the field to decide if he could command a majority. RGP o0 R GAMBLING DEVICE CASE DISMISSED In the City Magistrate’s Court, Judge William Holzbeimer this af- ternoon dismissed the case against John L. Sullivan, proprietor of the Clover Club, William Sweeney, 0000000000 r00n0 proprietor of Sweeney’s Bar, and {Julian Chon, owner of the For- 4 { get-Me-Not Curio Shop. The SKAGWAY VISITOR! {three men were charged with alleg- The Misses Eleanor and Merylin ed use of gambling devices in vio- registered at lation of City Ordinance 311, Sec- ltion 9. ,The case was dismissed be- "cause of lack of evidence, '::u K t";f‘ with the ‘counter-/ o | Wright 10%, International Harvest-| Prince George scheduled to sail | ® (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 am. today bl chith ge6 MOng With | ¢ o|er 20, Kennecott 57%, New York|from Vancouver Sept. 1. e In Juneau — .2 inches; i1 T h‘:l“’;"lhl '-hhia i o o | Central 17%, Northern Pacific 82'%,; Aleutian scheduled southboundi® since August 1, 4.3 inches; ard of Chinmim; ""“;'u_ Nes » ®|U. S. Steel 8%, Pound $4.03%. at 6 o'clock tonight. le since July 1, 11.68 inches. il o| Sales today were 690,000 shares. | Princess Louise scheduled to ar-|e At Airport — .16 inches; Low tide, 17:36 p.m., 46 ft. ®iwas promptly put out. The fire York Legislature, and also, on allle High tide, 23:35 p.m., 164 ft. o{ Averages today are as follows:|rive at 8 o'clock tomorrow morn-|® since August 1, 3.09 inches; @ originated in a plle oi waste lint. Boyd of Skagway oceasions, have %fly Y o 'industrials 18209, rails 60.34, util-:ing and sails south one hour later ® since July 1, 7.93 inches. ©'The laundry was in operation this'the Baranof Hotel Sunday. (Continued on Page : s ® 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o o ities 3475 at 9 o'clock. © ® © 9o 9 ¢ 9.0 o ¢ o moning again. BAKER, SUNSET ELECTRIC, 4 laundry of St. Ann’s Hospital on ¢ ! Saturday afternoon. The Juneau| ® Volunteer Fire Department was!' ® |called to the scene and the fire Louise. AUGUST 31 Low tide, 5:27 a.m, 0.1 ft. High tide-12:00 noon, 13.5.fv. D

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