The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 7, 1950, Page 6

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PAGE SIX IMPCRTANT FOOD REPORTED FOUND, | | Wildfowl Don't Gather \Down Mexico Way, But [Planes Love Atapulto | ANDERSON SAYS, | Clarence Rhndl', dlr(‘rlnr of thec | Latest research has revealed that; canned fish rich in amino acids, the protein acids essential to | human development and growth This was reported today by C. L Fish and Wildlife Service, is back his desk in the Federal Build- today after an absence of six | | weeks, during which time, he con- | [ferred with Washington officials jcn coming regulations and loaned Anderson, director of the Territorial oyt a land plane for a migratory | Department of Fisheries, Who! wildfowl census in Mexico, | learned of the nutritional value of| The plane, which he flew from ca fish products at the Na- here to Klamath Falls before turn- | tional Canners Convention at Atlan- |ing it over to an agent to pro- | tic City, N.J, which he attended ceed to Mexico, turned out to be | while in the east a type of Beechcraft “Reluctant | rson returned yesterday Dragcn” because of weather con- the trip which took him as|ditions, magnetos which wouldn't | as Washington, D.C. |always furiction and wheels that | He said the research dey lways hold up the plane of the National Canners organiza- of cold weather. tion reported at the convention that' Despite these minor difficulties canned fish retains its amino acids.'he said the Mexican flight wa These acids are a result of a break- (the first successful survey made in southern climes, bec wo down of proteins. They are the lat- | the est important nutritional find. jother attempts were styraied be- “The fact that they have been ' C3USE the planes then refused to fly altogether. found in satisfactory quantities in ;" b G canned ‘fish: produdts willl e gooa’, Lhe Census showed thay imigfa¥ news to both producers and con- '°7Y fow!, douit BLINEL AV SR SRR sumers of canned seafoods,” he said, | 20rder in the numbers belleved. A | The census, held to ascertain Anderson went east to attend the just where and how many birds Fish and Wildlife Service conter- 8 ence in Washington, D.C., on fishing A e regulations for Alaska in 1950 the winter, and participated in by Canada, Mexico and the United | He said he is not at liberty t0 gioieq ‘showed that only about 1 fl‘l] what ('h:u.mes have been made percent of wildfowl winter “Gown in the regulations, but he indicated Mexico way.” that some of the recommendations x made by the fisheries men at hear-' The ings held last fall in Alaska had west coasts been incorporated in the 1950 regu- said, being lations, some had been rejected and in famous Acapulco during which compromises had been reached on nothing was heard from the ob- others. servers. It was surmised they were He said changes in the regula- surveying wildlife of a different tions will probably be announced nature, hence their silence in a few days when they have been Rhode said the Service plans given an O.K. by the Secretary of some changes in policies and per- the Interior. sonnel, but could release no in- Anderson spent five days in formation because most of it must Seattle where he conferred with come from the Interior Department Washington State Department of in Washington, following its pre-| at all is ing from far sartment | wouldn't 'because both east and | of e nation, Rhode held up several days plane skirted | kan, | Murphy, 33 TRAVEL SOUTH, 17 ARRIVE BY PAA Pan American World Airways arried 33 passengers on southbound flight 906 yesterday, 14 tor Ketchi- kan, and 19 with destination Seattle. Going to Seattle were F. M. Tyvoll, Col. John R. Noyes, L. Banta, N. F. Nelson, George Anger, J. A. C. A. Watts, J. Batty, L. Bermel, J. Kennedy, Glenn Harris, Herman P Ederson, G. J. Giachurski, V. Tele- gus, W. Podgorny, I. Kiritschenko, J. H. McKinnon, W. Tyndall and Ross Mahr. Mrs. Dell Henderson and Larry Zach got off at Ketchi- as did passengers overcarried from Seattle the previous day be- cause of weather. Arriving from Seattle were C. L. Anderson, George Chappelle, Bob Erickson, Arnold Hildre, Mrs. Scott Wiliam Read Jr., and Olarence Rhode. Five passengers got off at Ketchikan Skiers and other Juneauites who had gone to Whitehc for the Winter Carnival tournament re- turned yesterday on the flight which had 20 passengers for Ju- neau. Among those going on to Seattle was Aubrey Simmons, member of Parliament from the Yukon Terri- tory, who was enroute to Ottawa. REPUBLICANS SET FEBRUARY 14 FOR ANNUAL DINNER Tuesday, February 14, has been chosen by local Republicans for the annual Lincoln Day dinner. The event will be in the Baranof Hotel Gold Room Terrace. Committee members are Howard Simmons, Earle Hunter, Ray Beach and Joe Mangan. Those wishing to attend ar ed to make reservations wi Baranof Hotel, telephcne ©° € PORT SNETIISHAM TRAPPER CASE SET OVER TO THURSDAY The trial of Sanders A. Wilson, Port Snettisham trapper arrested December 6 and subsequently charged with illegal trapping and possession of poison, will be held at 10 a.m. Thurs it was announced today. The case, to be heard by U.S Commissioner Gordon Gray, was originally set for this morning, but due to difficulties arising in obtain- ing a jury, it had to be postponed. A jury panel was picked this morning, and witnesses were lined up to appear. Assistant District At- torney Stanley Baskin will present the case for the government, and Attorney M. E. Monagle was to ap- pear for the defense, although in event he cannot appear, Wilson said he would represent himself. Wilson was arrested by a and Wildlife Service investigator 10 as permitted to remain on scene and ordered to appear when his case came up on the calendar. BASKET Bail TONIGHT 1st game, Juneau Hi vs Columbia Lumber. 2nd game, Moose vs. Ju- neau Hi Junior Varsity.—adv. 421-1 Trinker, , iiding, ‘| By resolution it was decided to in-! Fish | days before opening of the trapping | season, and his gear confiscated. He | the THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA DIRECTORS BOARD COMMUNITY EVENTS | OF ATA WILL BE | Topax ~ INCREASED T0 30 "in st re e on"vi i At Night at Teen Age Club with The Board of Directors of the| square dancing. Alaska Tuberculosls Association held | At 8 Pm—Knights of Columbus in ) their quarterly meeting Monday Parish Hall. i February 8 vening the offict 'S - | . | evening o S At noon—Kiwanis Club, Baranof. dred Hermann in the Valentine ks i o | At 8 pm.—Elks Lodge, PER night. with Mrs. M. O. Johnson, Rl i livedine L aiet Y President of the Board in the chajr, ~L-ernoon and . e hibit,” AFL hall. At 8 pm.—Trinity Women's Guild, pase tl ze of the B F LmiNindhe: v monthly meeting in Rectory. | ers, the full numb 1) f::;’l];‘l,":;" ‘h\l _“t S ewed At 1:30 p.m.—Garden Club at home " 'The date of the annual | ot Mrh; UBKICS (LIEERG : oAl meeting| 5¢ § pm—VFW Auxiliary in CIO the association was set for of - { Hall Thursday evening, March 30 and| . & o Cardinal. O1ib)spects] a nominating committee was a “",v“'“(, in Parish Hall pointed to survey the field and pr % " i . sent names of people concerned v?ulh; 5> i(‘mwhc At ol the problem of tuberculoel control | A[R‘ic;%"p e ASveBOr N caiE ok | in the Territory who would be in- ot s N | terested in serving on the board. | V oU> At home of Mrs. Peter Oi- All persons who have purchased! "4 I Christmas Seals and have expressed ! |a desire to be considered members | of the Alaska Tuberculosis Associa- At February 9 At noon—Chamber of Commerce at Baranof. f At 9 p.m.—First rehearsal of Com- tion are eligible to vote at nual meeting. Out of town c":r:mlxlz ! munity Chorus, Methodist church. tees and seal sale sponsors are be-| At 8 P-M- —CREIIE GRS FRIo ing requested to appoint Juneau| ™ Fectory: residents to act as their repreaenl,lv‘ February 10 tives at this meeting. A program n; At noon — Soroptimist business being prepared which will outlinei meeting, Terrace at Baranof. the essential program in the field | At noon—Alaska Crippled Childrens | of tuberculc control in Alaska| Association, Board of Directors, and the part that a voluntary agenc Baranof Hotel. +like the Alaska Tuberculosis Asso-| .y 7.39 pm. — Basketoall, local| C‘“‘l“’“ plays in (hat RIS teams, then House of David| The Executive Secretary, Mrs.) .o .. ' oo 1 | Frances L. Paul, reported tyhat, Boe; 2ot O e 1949 Christmas Seal Sale had been| 5V very successful and that although|At 8:15 pm thc complete reports are not yet in) Farish Hall ! the central office the returns as of Ehpan- Bln.ooees | this da already cbove last| Rite Temple. year's total. Fenrusey, 1 The Board also deciced to set up P(‘;’,:'M sl a revolving fund of $1000 to 8sSist| o\ g 1, <on< of Norway in Odd the Department of Health in mass{ panows Hall i X-ray surveys which will be orga-{ ¢ 10 b juneau Tirements 44th nized on the community participa- , annual ball, Elks Ballroom. Ron plan, February 12 ; “TTSQ‘"‘E""“""‘V' At 7 pm—Filipino youth organiza- tion, Parish Hall. { Johnson, Mi February 13 Mrs. Ruth Dunlap, H. R. Vander-{ ¢ g .,/ _ alaska Potters - est, James McNaughton, Jac! Hall club rooms. Burford, Dr. Clayton Polley an Mrs. Frances L. Paul, executive sec- 8100, pm.-tions Olub (evpning Sobars % meeting and family Valentine's Y. Day party, Baranof Gold Room. February 15 At 1:30 pm.—JWC social-program | meeting at home of Mrs. Ray G. Day. -CUA vard P ai At Scottish | | | a | 30 - Trinity Tea, | of the board presemi were Mrs. M. O. Mildred Hermann at AB i At MORE SEALS SIGHTED AT CRAWFISH INLET| 5o "™ The Sitka-b: Gu'uJ"’u 8 pm.—Women of Moose. cutter Cahoone yesterday sighted | February 17 an additional 200 fur seals in the]At 6:30 pm.—VFW auxiliary covered | vicinity of Crawfish Inlet about dish dinner at Dugout. 20 miles south of Sitk: February 18 Guard headquarters her At 7:30 o'clock—Rotary Club din-| day. ner-dance, Baranof Gold Room. A protective patrol of the area February 20 was ordered last week after Fish|At 7:%0 p.m —ANS and ANB meet- | nd Wildlife Service officials had ing in Hall. i sighted a herd of seals there. Thel February 21 cutter last week counted 400 in a|At 10 o’clock—Juneau Shrine Club | herd at the mouth of the inlet. i annual Washington’s Birthday Urban C. (Pete) Nelson, FWSj dance in Scottish Rite Temple. research biologist, said today that! _— the seals normally stop in lhnt' Spinach is believed to have been vicinity during their northwawd| transplanted from Asia to North QArrica by the Moors. the | st taying for a month, seals apparently go directly a the Gulf of Alaska to the Pribi! Islands, he said. f Important meeting, Be there 7:30 pm. —adv. 421-1t Dr. Rebert Simpson OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined — Glasses Expertly Fitted SIMPSON BUILDING—Phone 266 for Appomtments | | BASKET BALL TONIGHT | troop committee. | 0ss | DEEP SEA FISHERMEN'S UNION| TUESDAY, Bert Lybeck, Mrs. and Mrs. Donald Clark. AMERICAN LEGION POST HOST T0 BOY SCOUTS LAST NIGHT American Legion Boy Scout Troop 613 and Explorer Post 713 were guests of the Juneau Post No. 4 of the American Legion and its Auxili- ary last night at the Legion Dugout. The special joint-meeting w: held in honor of the 40th Anniver- sary of the Boy Scouts ot America which is being celebrated through- out America on Boy Scout Week, February 6 to 12. Commander Robert N. Druxman turned the meeting over to John Tanaka, Vice-Commander of the post and Chairman of the post’s wives, DOUGLAS NEWS HOME FROM Y. T children jeturned ye:ferday PAA from a five weeks Whitehorse, Y. T., where they vis- ited over the holidays. The family prolonged their visit to cover the Ski Carnival. MASONS MEET The Scouts of Troop 613, under will hold a Stated Communication the direction of Scoutmaster Vernon | this evening at 7:30 o'clock in Harris, gave demonstrations of knot | Eagles Hall. There will be work tying and first aid. The Troop bugler [in the M. Degre performed the opening and closing X ceremonies of the meeting. Bob Ripke, member of Chester Zenger’s Explorer Post 714, gave a talk explaining the functions and THAT WATER SUPPLY With still no break in the weath- er, permitting new water suppl Douglas is still one of the favored Henry Harris ! About forty Boy Scouts and Ex- plorer Scouts attended the meeting along with 20 Legionnaires and their | Robert Schoppert and three | via visit in Gastineaux Lodge 124, F and AM FEBRUARY 7, 195( of southeast not for iong. cities maybe Officials checking on the cit water supply, state it is graduall being depleted,” through continue use, and the constant drain b residents, letting taps run in ex cess of the quantity needed. How ever, a large emergency supply’ the Alaska Juneau ditch flow i immediately back of the dam, an( Douglas Mayor Mike Pusich is ne gotiating with the AJ Co., for par !nl‘ its flow to be turned into th jdam With the exeception of two home known to be without water becaus’ jof frozen pices and a turned o! main, all other residents in th 'cily have a water supply, witl the recent repairs to the St. Am Avenue main, giving water & ito that end of town i So, although Douglas is still for- § !tunate in regards to water, official 'again warn of moderate use, es pecially in permitting running tap: !m run excessively. BASKET BALL TONIGHT i | § 1st game, Juneau Hi vs Columbia Lumber. 2nd' game, Moose vs. Ju- neau Hi Junior Varsity.—adv. 421-1 goals of the Explorer Scout move- ment. Maurice F. Powers, Scout Execu- tive for the Alaska Council of the | BSA, spoke on scouting and the part | the Alaska Boy Scouts will play in/ the forthcoming National Boy Scout Jamboree in Valley Forge, Pa. Several Juneau Scouts will take the trip in June. A special train will take the boys from Seattle to Penn- sylvania, stopping at many points ot interest along the way. Powers then presented the charter for the Ex- plorer Troop 713 to Comrade Bert Lybeck, chairman of the 40 et 8 troop committee. After the refreshmenis were | served to the visiting Boy Scouts, Comrade Bill Liddle presented a color movie, “The Revival of Scout- ing in Italy.” The picture showed the re-birth of the Scouting move- ment in Italy after its 15 year sup- pression by the Fascist party. Refreshments, including ice cream, coffee, hot cocoa, sandwiches and fancy cup cakes, were served to the enthusiastic crowd by Mrs. BOURB S »NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORAYION, NEW YORK. N.Y. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT WHISKEY! Broq.ls; « 86 PROOF] ! t tudebaker fashion’s efernal iriangle FROM ANCHORAGE Ludlow G. Anderson of Anch- orage is registered at the Bar-j anof Hotel. Fisheries officials and officials of sentation to Secretary Oscar Chap- the University of Washington School man. of Fisheries. { He picked up the returned plane He said he had found two biolo- in New Mexico, flying to Seattle gists in Washington he hopes will prior to taking off for Juneau. He join the Territorial Department of Waited five days for weather to Fisheries. clear, but it wouldn't, so came here | “They’'ve been working in the Via a commercial airliner. past on the same problems we've' The big land plane, a new ac-| been working on” he said. quisition of the Service, carries | lonly some five hours gasoline, and | (with Annette Island closed in, the FORMER A“(HORAGE chance was too much, he decided. After attending the coming meeting (op IS Fl“ED sso FOR Jof the Alaska Game Commission | in Anchorage, he plans on return- DlsoRDERlY (ONDU( ing to Seattle to get it back here | ) . A man who claims to be a form- er Anchorage . policeman - pleaded MRS MURPHY RE‘UR“S guilty today in City Magistrate F.| O. Eastaugh’s Court to a charge' FROM ouI(K BuSlNESS of disorderly conduct. ¢ He is Sumner G, Lueken, whoi TRIP TO SOUTHWEST was arrested on a complaint sign- ed by W. A. Miller, night clerk; pypnougn pusiness matters kept at a downtown hotel. The complaint {, . Scott L. (Mernice) Murphy charged that Lucken stood in the.well occupied on her recent trip lobby of the hotel and calledi, myoeon, ariz., she did find time Miller obscene and abusive names. ‘m attend one concert, play a lit- It further charged that he Ie"tl(fl golf and go across the Mexican fused 4o leave the lobby and l'm|l)mdm for dinner. She left Juneau | to his room when requested to do so \January 27 and returned yesterday | L/ "?“e"‘“ Boton, via Pan American. Police quoted Lucken as saying| pjcunnointed in not having time that he had been a member of i, soe her mother in Redlands, Cal- the Anchorage police force until a i s and her daughter in Oak- short time ago. }land, Mrs. Murphy hopes to visit He was fined $50. them this spring. S R SRR She has tentative plans to at- HEMLOCK ARRIVES, DEPARTS|i.ny (he Northwest Regional Girl The Coast Guard cuttter Hem- [S()Co‘g“fi?:::::mi:g?mh 16, 8nd 8o lock arrived here at 8 p.m. last night and, after re-fueling, de- parted today at 1:30 pm. to ser- VANCOUVER, B. C. Feb. T—P— vice aids to navigation at Sentinel Opening and closing dates for the Island, Point Retreat, and Eldred !scckeye salmon f.shing season and Rock. a proposal to ban all sockeye fish- ing outside the three-mile limit were to be considered today by the | 1Intemanondl Pacific Fisheries Cum- 1st game, Juneau Hi vs Columbia | mission. Lumber. 2nd game, Moose Vvs. Ju-| The three-mile ban was suggestcdw neau Hi Junior Varsity.—adv. 421-l|ycslerday by Alvin Anderson, Com- | mission Secretary and Director of | Washington State Department uI Ficheries. Proposed dates for the season are July 1 to Sept snckcye 15. “The thinking fellow Calls a YELLOW* @ Dependable Service @ Courteous Service @ Rapid Service PHONE 22 OR 14 FOR A YELLOW CAB “The best fleet of cabs in town” ‘86 to' 14 IN FACTORY DELIVERED PRICES ~ Sensationally lower prices now ' give you the benefit of Studebaker's all-ti Come in now! See Studebakers excel in sleek modern styling—in gas economy —in restful ride = in handling ease — in freedom from costly repairs—in solid values! STUDEBAKER'S REALLY, ROLUNG ! - reduces prices on all 1950 passenger car models a SAVINGS TO YOU OF me peak production ! for yourself how the strikingly beautiful 1950 "next look” See your Studebaker e emier it Wclou»\ solved for spring! Here's a perfect threesome that subdivides into the smartest suit and topcoat of the season! Jacket and coat are boldly plaided . the single-tone skirt is knife-pleated at your knees to make walking wonderfully free! By Swansdown, for the in-and-outdoor days ahead! In Miron's purest worsted. Exclusive with us MADEMOISELLE As shown in e 9. 9 0 e 0 0 0 9 00

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