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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LXXV., NO. 11,641 JUNEAU, ALASKA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1950 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS Another Alaska Subversive Suspect Arrested INFO ABOUT DEAN T0 BE WITHHELD Newsmen &;d fo Reveal Nothing Concerning Missing Commander TOKYO, Oct. 25—(®—The U. S. Bighth Army asked newsmen today te “withhold any information re- lating to Maj. Gen William F.| Dean,” missing commander of the | U. S. 24th Division, [ “It is very important that noth- ing be said” about the daring Gen- eral, a public information officer added in a written request trans. mitted by teletype from Korea. No information as to reasons for the request was given. | Since the Allied offensive began | in uuu-Septemoer there have been | recuirent reports that Dean may be | alive. Some American prisoners re- | ported recently they had heard their eaptors talking about Dean— but none of the prisoners had seen him. AP correspondent Leif Erickson | reported by telephone from Eiglih | Army headquarters tonight that he | had been unable to learn anything | new on the General’s whereabouts if he still is alive. Dean disappeared July 20 during the 24th Division’s bitter withdraw- al from Taejon, in South Korea. JOLSON PROVIDES * MiLLION EDUCATION OF NEEDY STUDENTS NEW YORK, Oct. 256—(®—The| New York Post said today that jazz | singer Al Jolson left “close to $1,-| 000,000” to three New York colleges to help’ educate boys who are poor. Post columnist Earl Wilson said Jolson, who died Monday night in| San Francisco, left an estate of about $5,000,000. i His will bequested “several hun- | dred thousand dollars” each to Co- | lumbia University, New York Um-‘ versity and the College of the Clty‘ of New York to be distributed to| needy students “regardless of race,] color or religon,” Wilson wrote. | | NOME VISITORS Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Whitmore of | Nome are registered at the Baranof Hotel. | The Washngifioni Merry - Go-Round Copyright. 1950, by Bell Synaicate, inc.! By DREW PEARSON ENROUTE, On West Coast—I do | not know what his family will have | written on the gravestone of Henry L. Stimson, who died last week, but | I do know what I would write. 1 would write: “Here Lies a Man, Who, When All Others Gave Up Hope, Labored For The Peace Of His Fellow Men.” Henry L. Stimson was Secretary of State in the Hoover Adminis- tration when I was 2 young news- | paperman covering the State De- | partment. At first a critic, I grew to respect and love him and to consider him a great man. As T look back on it I am ash’ amed Of the way I sometimes heckl- ed Mr. Stimson. Bill Flythe of the | INS. and Lyle Wilson of the U.P. and I used to think up all sorts of embarrassing questions to ask him at press conferences. And once I induced the late Fiorello La Guar- dia, then a member of Congress, to tack an amendment on the War Department appropriations bill so that no money could be spent for| Stimson’s military aide. A Secre- tary of State, entrusted with keep- ing the peace, did not need a mili- tary aide. The House of Represen- tatives voted it—though the Sen- ate reversed the House and res- tored the appropriation. Looking back on it, and consid- ering the great things Stimson die for peace, he was entitled to the extravagance of a military aide— if it tickled his vanity. Strove Hard For Peace Mr. Stimson was a queer mix- ture. He was Secretary of War in SEEKING BUILDING LOCATION Seattle Firm Is | Looking for | Site for Apartment in Juneau Myer Lurie of the Lewis Construc tion Co., of Seattle is in Juneau this week seeking a location for a |out of eight contested Senate seats DEMOS WIN HOUSE; SENATE EVEN 8-8; FINAL VOTE COUNT With most of the absentee ballots | counted, the lineup for the lower house of Alaska’s legislature stood today at 15 Democrats and 9 Re- publicans. The Republicans have won slx; to assure an eight-to-eight party split in the Senate. Only one House seat appeared | still in doubt. It is the fifth seat in | ‘the Fourth Division. The unoffi- All precincts, except Goddard Hot cial count of the absentee votes at ' Fifteen Preals Return \Ior Alaska on | large company to come to Alaska | under the FHA and that the oper- | ‘auons of the company were very | | Anchorage 'NEEDED IN ALASK | to Anchorage. two cabinets—Tatt'’s and FDR’s. He e (Continued on Page rour) | Fairbanks left Thomas A. Jones, | | Nenana Democrat, ahead by three | votes. Before the count of the ab- | sentee votes, he had pulled ahead of Alden Wilbur, Republican, by 11| votes. Two outlying precincts were still unreported in the division. It was commercial and apartment build- ing. He is accompanied by his arch- itect, Earl Morrison of Seattle and | T. R. Sumpter of the Washington Mortgage Co. “We feel that there is a need in Juneau for from 85 to 100 more modern apartment units,” Lurie |y jate reporting precincts that said today. | ‘allowed Jones to overcol Wilbi The Lewis Construction Company %early lead. 3 e, ursi 2 G IR LHiRr O OUTER The House standings by divisions | in Alaska, having over $17,000,000 Iappears as follows: worth of Federal Housing Admin- | g e : < A i First—Five Republicans and three | istration insured projects under | : mocrats. way at the present time, all in B " s Second—Three Anchorage. Lurie is conferring with one Republican, Clinton C. Staples, director of FHA [\7 SePUC Bk @ b and B the contemplated | Wvossg it 24 { Republicans. Fourth—Three Republicans and two Democrats. | Latest returns today from Nome | | (Second Division), including absen- ! | tee ballots but with one distant precinct missing, for four House seats were: | | Jymes Wells (D) 902, W. W. Laws | (R) 893, George Madson (D) 857, Frank Degnan (D) 812, Peter Reader | (R) 738, Rose Bronson (R) 734, Nels (R) 664, Axel Edman Democrats and Juneau project, Said Lurie of Staples, “He has| led the struggle for all this new housing, not only in Anchorage but throughout the Territory.” Staples pointed out that the Lew- is Construction Co., was the first efficient. “This company has ov-| ercome the high cost of utilities, for | an instance, in two of its Anchor- | Swanberg projects by building around a cen- | (D) 621. ! | tral plant supplying all services,| In the Second Division’s Senate | |1t also stockpiles equipment and | races, the two Eskimo members of | | supplies in Anchorage by averaglng|fih5 house were apparently assured Current pibjects handled threugh Juneau FHA office are 682 unil costing $7,750:800 in the Panorma View and Richardson Vista; 84 unils $950,000 in the Jefferson Court | Apartments; 80 units, $850,000 in Alaska. SUPERVISOR SAYS MORE SCHOOL BLDGS. shipments of 28 carloads of mater. |¢f election to the two Senate seats. | il every week. Construction contin- | Rep. Percy Ipalook, Republican, al winter in contrast to the traditional | Rep. William Beltz, Democrat, had | seasonal building which has been | |633. Charles O'Leary, Democrat, who | other exterior work is compléeted 4‘ dropped behind with 809. Sen.; during the gocd weather and inter- iCharles Jones, Republican, trailed Lurie added that Col. J. P. John- \reelection son, general manager of the Alaska | chairman of the Alaska E‘leld Com. KIwA"lS Io uu“(“ mittee had been most tion in Alaska. | Lurie’'s company built the geo-| “EXT w E D N ESD AY physical building at the University \ thel The Christmas Seal drive in Ju- ts | NEau will be launched next Wednes- which has sponsored the drive for ! the past four years thereby retain- the Linda Arms Apartments; 360 | | use of tuberculosis fight in the com- units, $4,200,000 in Hollywood Vista; )m“m‘Y Apartments; and 280 units, $2,000,- | Harris will be chairman. He passed 0. |0uL Kits of seals and posters to Ki- meenng today at the Baranof Hotel. ;Each club member will.canvas busi- | ues the year around uncurtailed by | Wales missionary, had 901 votes, and | common in the north. Concrete and | had led the field on early returns, ior work is performed in winter.” | with 727 in his unsuccessful race for Railroad, and Kenneth Kadaw, | assisting in expediting consv.ruc-! XMAS SEAl DR'VE of in {day by the Juneau Kiwanis Club ling 20 percent of the funds for the 128, units, $1,300,000 in the E. E.| For the fourth year, Dr. Henry {wanians at the regular luncheon ness houses in the district assigned Dr Harns reported that 1948 was | ® | the best year on collections and em- ! phasized the importance of starting | early and winding up the drive as oon as possible. Among the uses of the Kiwanis TB funds are such things as fur- pishing drugs for health clinics, | transportation for TB patients who | need it and assisting with education for patients. Last year the clud purchased a movie projector for “Enrollment taxes the capacity | the sanitorium at Seward for this | of schools,” he said. “There are not | Purpose. enough school buildings for the | | number of childrén.” b i s g R g, .{ He visited three new schools! which were opened this fall—those | | at Chicken Mary’'s Igloo and Cop- per Center. His tour took him to the Second | and Fourth Divisions. He also as- | sisted in the field of another sup- visor—Dr. Dorothy Novatney visit- ing highway schools from Fairbanks | Kenneth Clem, education super. visor of the Territorial Education | Department, returned from a sxx-( week survey of Alaska schools to | | make a comment similar to that of his chief, Dr. James C. Ryan, after his trip to another district. WEATHER REPORT Temperatures for 24-Fiour Period ending 6:20 o'clock thys morning In Juneau—Maximum, 41; minimum, 31. At Airport—Maximum, 43; minimum, 27. FORECAST (Junean and Vieinity) Mostly fair tonight and Thursday. Lowest tempera- ture tonight about 28 degrees in Juneau and as low as 20 in outlying areas. Highest Thursday near 40. Dr. Novatney is now on a school | survey of the railway belt from ' . Seward to Anchorage, and will e continue via Prince William Sound | ® beiore returning to Juneau in time | ® for Thanksgiving. . FARMER TO PALMER Bill Farmer, administrative as- sistant with the Reclamation Bur- eau office here .since its opening | in 1948, has left for detail at Pal- mer to set up the Eklutna project office there. — A. L. Florence of Ketchikan is PRECIPITATION @ (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today City of Juneau — Trace ® snce October 1—6.93 inches; ® since July 1—29.03 inches. . At Airport — 001 inches; ® since October 1—2.71 inches; since July 1—22.05 inches. | COMPLETE ABSENTEE TALLY; STANDINGS REMAIN UNCHANGED 366 Ballots - Close Vote Recorded +Tally of the First Division’s 366 absentee ballots, completed this morning, showed no change in the relative standings of the candidates. Springs, have reported their vote. Inasmuch as only four votes were cast there in the primary election, the following standings will not change: For Delegate to Congress: E. L. (Bob) Bartlett, 4572; runner-up | Almer J. Peterson, 2056. For Trea- surer: Henry Roden, unopposed, 5339. For Commissioner of Labor: Henry A. Benson, 3792; runner-up Ross E. Kimball, 2544. For Divisonal Senator: James 3976; runner-up-Frank Peratrovich, 3268. For Divisional Representative: Doris M. Barnes, 4107; Frank G.| Johnson, 3286; Waino E. Hendrick- | son, 3277; Ed Locken, 3254; Andrew Hope, 3185; James Simpson Mac- Kinnon, 3130; Vernon E. Metcalfe, 3088; and Amelia A. Gundersen,: 3084. Runners-up were Marcus F, Jensen, 2964; B. D. Stewart, 2939; M. L. MacSpadden, 2922; W. O. Smith, 2709; Ralph A. Bartholomew, 2589; Clyde O. Peterson, 2581; Rob- ert E. Coughlin, 2418; and R. T. (Dick) Harris, 2354. The balloting was close in the House race, leaving the last seat wide open for a change until the| | absentee count, only 46 votes sepa- | Nolan, 4117 and Elton E. Engstrom,| said civilians are being evacuafed i Communist China. rated the last three candidates. The | vote might well have seated Marc | | Jensen, who trailed Amelia Gun- | dersen by only 122 votes and Vernon | Metcalfe by 126. Three-hundred seventy-two bal- lots were received, but 6 were judged | invalid, making the total 366. Indi- | vidual standings in the nhsemeel vote follow: Bartlett 243, Peterson 95, Roden 294, Benson 194, Kimball | 119, Engstrom 197, Nolan 230, Perat- rovich 161, Barnes 224, Bartholomew {130, Coughlin 110, Gundersen 141,] Harris 94, Hendrickson 159, Hope 161, Jensen 143, Johnsn 164, Locken 185, MacKinnon 163, MacSpadden | 141, Metcalfe 145, Peterson 125, Smith 140 and Stewart 141. SNOW SKIPS TOP OF HAINES CUTOFF Road experts in two offices here were inclined toward unbelief to- day, on receiving the report of Haines Highway conditions, right after early snowstorms. “The summit is open, there is no snow,” Patrolman Al Lubcke re- ported to Frank A. Metcalf, Highway Patrol chief early this morning. “A little snow on this side—at the foot of the switchback—will be cleaned off in just a little while. “Cars are going through without any trouble.” The Alaska Road Commission re- ceived a similar report by William | J. Niemi, who drove ffom Anchorage to assume his new duties as chiel of the operations division. He flew iin from Haines this noon. Word from Canadian officials of i the Northwest Highway System is that they “will do everything pos- sible to maintain the Haines cutoff this winter.” STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Oct. 24 — Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mil stock today is 2%, American C 102%;, American Tel. and Tel. 152 Anaconda 37, Douglas Aircraft £l General Electric 49%, Motors 51%, Goodyear 6! cott 67%, Northern Pacific Libby, McNeill and Libby 8' dard Oil of California 76, Twenticth Century Fox 23%, U.S. Stecl Pound $2.80%. Sales today were 1,900,000 sha! Averages today are as follows: !/ dustridls 23149, rails 68.90, utilit 40.97. STEAMER MOVEMENTS Princess Louise scheduled to from Vancouver Saturday. Freighter Coastal Rambler sch uled to sail from Seattle, Morc Oct. 30, Stan registered at the Baranof Hotel. at this time of year. COMMIES MARCHING ONTIBET New Troubfireaking Out in Indochina as French Lose Bastion - (By Associated Press) As the Korean war entered its final phase, radio Peiping said that Chinese Communist troops are mov. ing on Tibet “to free 3,00,000 Tib- etans from imperialist oppression.”| The broadcast from the Red China capital did not mention the size| of the army moving westward to the mountainous region called “The Top cf the World.” In North Indochina To China’s south, French mili- tary spokesmen in North Indochina from Laokay, last French bastion on the Chinese frontier. French troops have been withdrawn from outlying positions arcund isolated Laokay and are digging defense lin- cs in anticipation of further attacks | from Communist-led Vietminh reb- | els. The French claim the Vietminh are being trained and equipped in | THe report that Communist Chin- ese were marching on Tibet stirred Astan capitals. .\At New Delhi, the Indian foreign ministry said it hadi reperts of “certain troops move- ments and incursions” by Chinese | Reds along the China-Tibet border,I A Tibetan delegation which has | been seeking to settle Tibet-China relations peaceably is due to lewve Néw Delhi today for Peiping to | continue talks begun with the Red | | Chinese Ambassador to India. The Communists have accused | | Tibet of being friendly with Amer- | .&,an and British “imperialists.” The spiritual ruler of Tibet i Dalai Jama, a 15-year-old who is | under a priestly regent. Other than the Red Chinese broadcasts, there was no word of march on Tibet, where already winter snows and icy mountain passes would make travel by foot soldiers difficult if not impossible (CAP UNITS TO VOTE ON CIVIC PROJECT AT MEET TONIGHT Squadron seniors and cadet corps | juniors will be asked to decide on sponsorship of a hurry-up com- munity project at the Civil Air| Patrol meeting tonight. Commander Allan G. Marcum asks a full at- tendance at the 7:30 p.m., weekly meeting in the Natiopal Guard Armory. The question will be “threshed | out” tonight and, if the group votes to undertake it and have fun as well, committee assignments will be made. There will be a showing of another film in the series of motion pic-| tures produced by the Civil Aeru-‘ nautics Administration. This one,| entitled “Damage Control” is chiefly | concerned with the chemistry of | fire and fire-fighting. i Further work will be done on the | CAP L-b aircraft and walkie-talkies. | Aviation-minded boys and girls | aged 15, 16 and 17 are invited to attend, as well as interested adults.| RAINBOW CARNIVAL EVENT ON SATURDAY The Rainbow Girls have made| final plans for the Hallowe'en Car- | nival to be held. in the Scottish Rite Temple next Saturday night| tarting at 8 o'clock and ending at | midnight, | There will be special entertain- ment and also many different booths, | Another big feature of the eve- | ning will be the awarding of the| Rainbow doll “Honey” which will| be at 11:30 o'clock. MARRIAGE LICENSE | John Lincoln Asp, Postal Senlce\ iispatcher, and Ruth Violet Wilson, | rederal Housing - Authority w.no-} rapher, applied yesterday to the| S. Commissioner’s office for a| :arriage license, i DRIVE MADE T0 END WAR, KOREAN AREA {Southern T@s Thrust fo Near Border as Reds Take fo Flight (By the Associated Press) South Korean troops thrust within 32 miles of the Manchurian border tonight in the drive to end the war. Red Koreans fled in ox carts and afoot before five northward driving Allied divisions. (At Tokyo, informed sources said U.S. and British troops in Korea will stop at least 20 miles short of the Manchurian border. (They said the purpose was to minimize the dangers of a border clash. Korea borders on Russian Siberia as well as on Red China's Manchuria. (South Korean forces will go on to the border in pursuit of Korean Communist remnants, these sources caid.) The Republic of Korea (ROK) Sixth Division was reported closest |to the Border. It was: four miles west of - Hoemoktong and about 20 miles northwest of Huichon in North Central Korea. The Sixth veered northwest at .| Huichon, taking the shortest road Iroute to the border-marking Yalu river. Its route was carrying the | ROK’s away from Kanggye, reported new command headquarters of Red Korean Premier Kim Il Sung. THE REV. MORGANS LEAVE JUNEAU FOR OTHER PASTORATE At the request of Rev. and Mrs. Morgan, who have received an mvnanon to consider the accept- ance of a new situation, their re- lease from the pastorate of thec | Methodist Church in Juneau has been complied with by Bishop Ger- ald Kennedy, and the announce- ment of the Morgans’ departure was made at the meeging of the church board ‘Tuesday night by Dr. P. Gordon Gould, director of Meth- odist work in Alaska, In his statement to the church ‘group. Mr. Gould said “In compli- ance with their request I am recom- mending to Bishop Kennedy that Reverend and Mrs. Morgan be re- lcased trom the pastoral resp sibility of .the Methodist Chiirch of Juneau as of November 30 and that Bishop Kennedy appoint a new minister to the Methodist Church of Juneau as of Decembeér The Rev. and Mrs. Morgan, both | ordained ministers, came to Ju- neau fifteen months ago to take this pastorate. They have been in Alaska just ten years, and intend to remain in Alaska. Plans of their | next work will be announced soon. Mrs. Morgan has been active in preaching, in service clubs and com- munity interests while in Juneau. Author of a book about Alaska that has been accepted by a pub- lisher, Mrs. Morgan intends to get busy and complete two more books that she has promised to finish by the end of December. SEEKS DIVORCE e Dorothy Price, represented by Wlllmm L. Paul Jr., has filed suit in Dmrlct Court for divorce from Warren Price. She charges incom- patibility and asks that he be awarded custody of their child, Warren Glenn Price. The Prices were married in Sitka June 13, 1948, L. HOPKINS IN TOWN Mr. and Mrs, Leonard Hopkins, Alaska sportsfishermen and sales representatives, from Anchorage are in Juneau at the Baranof Hotel. U. . Fighfer Plane Is Hit By Anti-Aircraft Fire from (hmeseS|de, ReportNow WASHINGTON. Oct. 25 — @ The Air Force said today an Ameri- can F-51 fighter plane was hit yes- | terday by anti-aircraft fire from the Chinese side of the Korean- Chinese border. A spokesman said the pilot flew the plane out to sea but had to put | down there. He was picked up by a United Nations naval craft. He said the American plane was three miles south of the border when fired on from the Chinese side. This was the second report ef American planes subjected to anti- aircraft fire from across the Chi- nese border. Dispatches from Korea yesterday said two U.S. Marine planes were fired on Monday. Neither was hit. Statement by Marines | The Marines were quoted as say- ing they were five miles inside Ko- rea. The Air Force spokesman told re- porters at the Pentagon that op- erations of United Nations planes in North Korea normally are con- fined to an area 20 miles or more | from the border. They are allowed to go nearer the border, he said, on specific missions. The Chinese Com- munists have protested several alleged border violations by Ameri- can planes. Combat Cargo Lift The Air Force spokesman said planes delivered 1,200 tons of sup- plies yesterday to the Pyongyang area, He said this was more than enough to support all U.N. military operations in that area. Of a total of 300 sorties flown by the Air Force during the day, 283 were listed as “combat cargo lift.” A sortie is one flight by one plane. } An Army spokesman told reporters he has been unable to obtain any | confirmation of report$ that a Com- | munist column is moving from nearl the Korean-Manchurian border to- ward the South Korean Sixth Divi- sion, which is spearheading the U.N. advance in North Korea. The Army spokesmen said also that no. information has been re-| ceived here recently regarding Maj. Gen. Willlam Dean, former com- mander of the 24th Division, who | disappeared in July durlng the battle for Taejon. 106 PASSENGERS FLY PAN AMERICANTUES. Pan American World Airways had | a busy day yesterday bringing 19! passengers here from Fairbanks; 22| caught the southbound flight; 25 ar- rived here from the south. From Fairbanks: M. Mitchell, Mrs. E. Langley, Sanders Vender, E.| Jones, Laura Octuk, Rebecca Nug- lene, Vincent Abloogalook, Delbert Jackson, Chester Carlson, Stella | Carlson, Ivar Skarland, Major John | Aldrich, Virginia McLaughlin, Mrs. Kathryn Rice, Marian Boland, | Glenn Franklin, Larry Reed, John | and" Mitchell Allen. Twenty-six | others went on through to Seattle. | Twenty-two arrived in Juneau | from Seattle: Peggy Ashby, Betty | Bearden, M. Boland, Erwin Brown, ! LEADER IN ACW UNION IN CUSTODY - |President oT?ealtIe loa:alr 1-C Is Arrested in California SEATTLE, Oct. 25—(M—A second leader of the Alaska Cannery Work- ers' Union, Local 7-C of the Inter- national Longshoremen's and Ware- housemen’s Union, has been arrested as a suspected alien’ Communist under the new national security law. He is Christ de Larn Mensalves, who has been an active leader and president of Local 7-C. He was taken into custody at Stockton, Calif. Immigration agents picked up the 41-year-old Filipino for Seattle im- migration authorities. He was the fourth Seattle man | picked up in the national roundup of aliens. One of the first taken into custody was Ernesto Mangaoang, also a Filipino, who is business agent for the cannery workers union. ALASKA CANNERY WORKERS OFFICIAL IS UNDER ARREST Mangoangmuslody Bu) tion Being Held SEATTLE, Oct. 25—Arrest of an Alaska cannery worker officlal as {an alien Communist will not affect the election in which his union competed with two others for the right to represent non-resident Al- aska cannery workers. Votes in the election which ended September 27 have been impounded iby the National Labor Relations Board and will be held secure until a final eligibility check has been completed and unfair labor charg- es in the case decided. His office hopes to complete the case and count the votes by the close cf November, NLRB Regional Director Thomas Graham said Tuesday. Almost two-thirds of the Alaska industry’s 2,100 non-resident work- ers voted in ithe election which pitted three unions, Local 7-C of the International -Longshoremen and Warehousemen’s Union, Local 77 of the United Packinghous2 Workers and the Alaska Fish Can. nery Workers Union of the Paciiic, Ernest Mangoang, arrested early i this week as an alien Communist, was business agent of Longshore- |men’s Local 7-C. MINING AND TAX LEGISLATION AT (C MEET THURS. Tax incentive legislation will come up for the third time at a regular luncheon meeting of the Juneau Chamber of Commerce tomorrow at the Baranof Hotel, Robert Booch- Milton Dahiel, Therese Donnell, | Harold Foss, Gary Ormbrek, C. F. T. | Penny, T. J. Pyle, C. F. Stovall, M. | Stovall, George Sundborg, Wads- | worth Lincoln, (Patricia Baxter, | George Hopkins, Myer Lurie, Fxnlew McGrew, R. J, McKinney, E. Mor- rison, Roy S8umpter, James Truitt. | Coming from Annette were: Ed | Ferrell, 8. C. Little, and J. Ison. Seventeen went through to White- ' horse and Fairbanks. Southbound flights carried three each to Annette and Ketchikan. For Annette: Glen Jefferson, E. D.! Quinn, A. C. McMaster. For Ketchi- kan: L. Reed, Bob Bartlett and B. D. Peterman. Seattle-bound were: Charlie Cork, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Neilson, Mrs. Leo Collins, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Hobbs, Hazel Britton, E. O. Can- elses, A. G. Woodley, Elmer Daniels, F. Kline, J. P. Hanson and Mrs. M. Hay. ACS MAJOR HERE Major John Aldrick, with the ACS | at Seattle arrived in Juneau yes- terday from Fairbanks. He is at the| Baranof Hotel, | ever, President, said today. Phil Bradley, Jr., consulting en- | gineer and member of the board of directors for the Alaska-Juneau mine, will have some interestifig things to report on the future of | mining in Alaska. All members are urged to attend. ERUNETTE? BURNETT? BOTH AT LICENSE OFFICE Two recent changes in personnel of the Fish and Wildlife Service License Bureau constitute an in- vitation to confusion. Jim Burnette, formerly of Charl- es Warner’s Machine Shop, is the new license officer, succeeding Clay Rew, who went to the states. Helen Burnett is the new license clerk, taking the place of Ruth Sharon, who resigned and is on & trip to the Holy Land. And Helen Burnett is a brunette. McCUTHCHEON HERE Stanley McCutcheon and Buell Nesbitt of Anchorage are in Juneau enroute to Seattle. They are at the Baranof Hotel,