Daily Sitka Sentinel (Newspaper) - December 9, 1958, Sitka, Alaska DAILY Sitka's Newspaper SENTINEL Member of The Associated Press a copy VOLUME XIX Tuesday 9 1958 NUMBER JW Blasts State Dept O President of commission critic of 1951 treaty aty Grand jury indicts Goldfine Little chance to make big change in rules SEATTLE H American state department secrecy on fisheries and other matters of interest lo the public was day by the president of the Inter- national North Pacific Fisheries Commission Edward H Allen Seattle ney who heads the commission declared in a speech lo the Alaska division of the Scat WASHINGTON ffl A federal today indicted Boston I Bernard Goldfine on new lino is complicated by the a charge of contempt of congress fact lhat at least in 1957 pink I salmon of Russian origin were I Thc indictment was jyas in Keno today tor a marriage found hi huge numbers mine on this side of the line Harry Bridges tries to get married Egan undergoes minor surgery j JUNEAU Ml William underwent minor surgery at St Ann's hospital here j The Democrat was operated on to correct a condition that pained him his successful election campaign physician said the would be hospitalized about three or four days It will be next week the said before Egan will be able to begin work preparing to lake over as chief executive of new state I Egan had hoped to begin work j yesterday but a medical trip up resulted in the RENO Nov Wt West coast long instead labor leader Harry Bridges I The first chore reportedly be the drafting of an for a marriage license which to submit lo first 22 questions put lo him authorities said he legislature when it convenes Coldest weather of season makes millions shiver zero m by The Associated Press The coldest of the son made millions of Americans shiver today The intense cold settled on most of northern slates while on refusal Allen praised house subcommittee on not get cf the commission Native oversight winch last Friends in Jan re- j Particularly at tlis year's meet ing in Tokyo he said the ily lone of discussions proved how much progress has been made But he thinks a firmer state with Sherman Adams San Krancisco 58 and Miss Nickey Sawada 32 an Am ithen assistant to President of Japanese descent flew fa Reno last night to be married Dist Atty A Dyer Jensen said The committee heard Russian subs chart oceans stand would have made valuable gifts to however Nevada law bans today's problems if it had Adams and that Adams had con- Carriage of and j Jaded federal agencies The Nevada law never been taken in 1951 when the ori ginal treaty was negotiated At that time Allen said the state department settled for galing Goldfine enterprises The questions Goldfine refused answer were mostly about his i been tested in court Bridges twice married lie chamber of acceptance of the absten dealings with a One of the things that bothers tion Principle instead of insis he controls me is the secrecy absolute to house voted a ci much of our activities Just this he Alaska salmon ll had Hation on Aug 13 was registered at the Hotel here Miss Sawada n Francisco legal secretary not registered week I received a letter from the state department stamped all over it Of course I have lo answer in the same way But many of these mailers are ones lhat the public really ought to know I of our activities could be out open and I wish the stateN activities could fe conducted more jUIen told the chamber audience that he Japan to agree shift the commission ther west in the Pacific ocean protect the Brislol Bay red mon slocks the Japanese fleets are depleting Meanwhile lie predicted that restrict its salmon fish ing as it did past year and not invade waters north of the Aleutian islands with the same ruinous wide-open fishing it followed in 1057 If the Japanese restrain selves the commission president said stocks of Bristol Bay red salmon may be maintained even restored a little in the years be- fore the abstention line is ed west of ils a- long the meridian of 175 west longitude However he warned any deci- sion of the commission requires unanimous approval from ils Uni led Slate Canadian and Japanese representatives studies indicate that all stocks of U S fish in- all Alaska salmon except the Bristol Bay reds are adequate ly protected by the present line Investigations prove that red salmon from Bristol Bay in waters at least 10 degrees west of the present line Allen said However the task of setting developed and conserved A precedent S property I The law provides for maximum rights to the Alaska salmon was penalties of a year in jail and a set in the he recalled when fine of for each count of secretary of state Hull contempt proven in court warned Japanese fleets off from Boston office said he the grounds they had been fishing was not in today and near Bristol Bay be no comment at present Alaska Statehood Stamp IT ISN'T lhat to worl long hours it's just lhat I like my job so much thai I hate li stay away from it COURTESY IS kindness i action The next you thin of making an- remark re member to be courteous HAVE BEEN all da to get some Information out Fairbanks Tho having as much trouble with II union in question as wo are JUST TWO weeks and you can start pecking at the packages but you don't dare open them un- til St Nick comes around T MAY warm-up anil snow Then again it may rain hail or if the sun doesn't shine THIS IS THE ALASKA stamp which will be issued in Juneau on the day the territory officially becomes state It features the Alaska flag superimposed on a map of the territory and a scenic view of Alaskan mountains It is blue in color similar to the Alaska flag The Post Office department has had two plates made ons like the stamp above is for 1958 the er carries a 1959 date The president is expected to bring the territory into the Union either late in December or early in January ROB FARM OF CASH Tenn as f repairmen three men solve his issue ook more than from he sate of a prominent farmer day The leader of the trio ed with a gun forced Mrs J W loffey and a neighbor Mrs nie West to He on the floor under j a quilt warning them If you j CARACAS Venezuela H look kill you sands in Caracas last night was away at the time Commission to ask for help from government by Rex Thomas Ala Ml The ivil rights commission said day it will ask the justice ment to take court action if to compel witnesses to testify and produce records for s hearing in Alabama hearing ended af the statement Six public refused lo testify yesterday about voter re- procedure of them declined even to be sworn as witnesses Still another circuit judge Gporge Wallace refused even to appear i i The southern resistance kept the commission from getting ter registration records in any of the six countries where the files have been The records had been taken over by state By midmorning the snow on courts or slate officials ground where it had not drifted The commission got records measured 53 inches Most of it from the probate office in swept off Lake Ontario since Macon county but they showed Sunday noon In the worst slorm Sen Goldwater abandons anti- labor stand WASHINGTON Jfi One of the staunchest Republican advocates of legislation to curb political activity by labor unions has evi dently abandoned Instead SenT Barry M water says business and labor leaders should get together and agree voluntarily to limit their political efforts Goldwater who will be senior member of the senate labor committee is one of the few con- Republicans re-elected in November lie disclosed his change in altitude after a series of conferences with secretary of labor lames P Mitchell Mitchell lias been President major spokesman on labor policy in the past ter because of his committee post is expected to handle labor bills in he senate Goldwater said he and Mitchell have decided there probably isn't much congress can do about re- union political activities without running counter to the constitutional freedoms of speech and association Mitchell confirmed that saying he and Goldwater had come lo conclusion it was impractical to recommend legislation lo northeastern section caught the of n snowstorm The mercury shrank to -32 in Minn -31 in tional Falls Minn -20 in ford III -19 in Mason City Iowa Presque Isle Maine -18 in Iowa -12 Paul and Moline and ford 111 -11 in Madison Wis in Fargo Sault Ste rio Mich and Fort and -3 in Omaha and Soviet submarines Ion Ohio are lo range the world's oceans A fresh topping of snow i special charting missions two inches fell on Moscow radio today said the Oswego subs would follow up work done by Soviet scientists in connection with the International cal Year program Together wilh surface vessels they will conduct oceanographic surveys in areas of world's particularly in the southern The broadcast said the first of a fleet of specially equipped sub- marines will pul lo sea shortly lo make a survey for the Soviet re- search institute of marine fishery and oceanography ELL FREEZES OVER 37 inches of snow has len here since Sunday noon atop 11 inches already on the ground Thus the blanket reached a depth of four feet and even more in drifts Police patrol cars delivered while snowplows labored to restore transportation and supply lines in the city of Chicagoans fell sling of coldest day since lasl Feb 17 It was -7 in Chicago and -13 O'Hare Field on the ern edge of the city Two men froze to death in the who had crawled into hole under a sidewalk and a peddler whose body was found in the snow The snowfall spread into ern New England One ship was aground and an- other was frozen in the ice in St Lawrence seaway The Grain Miller went aground near burg and the Paul Manion was in the ice in Soulanges Canal The slorm which dumped snow falls ranging from more than a foot lo three inches across the li ANN ARBOR Mich snowball stood a pretty chance in Hell today The head man reported Hell frozen over with six inches of snow under foot The ture got down to 10 above zero overnight Hell is a tiny Michigan com- munity 18 miles northwest of Ann Arbor The head man is mayor Erdly Van Sickle Rockies and midwest areas reach Pi A Jed New England during the night good The southern boundary of the bell was Ohio river Pennsylvania and York area Thousands riot in Caracas Soviet's top policeman loses position transferred Gen Serov relieved of his duties by Harold K Milks MOSCOW The Soviet Union's op policeman Gen Ivan A rov has been relieved of his job The announcement in tlic Soviet government newspaper Izvestia today said he had been red to other duties but gave no of what they were Serov's successor as chairman of the committee for slate ty also was not announced Most foreign observers in Mos cow believed Serov may perhaps have been given an even more important job He has long been a friend and close S Khrushchev who heads bolh the government and the Communist parly Some western experts on believed Serov had because ia announcement did not give his new post the customary when a Kremlin official is in charge of security ments on premier Khrushchev's trips He was widely known er for directing the plan to liqui date elements in the Baltic countries in 1940 Serov was last seen by western correspondents at a Kremlin re- ception JO for Wladyslaw head of the Polish Com- munist party A slight ed man with blue eyes be was usually friendly and informal in public chatting free ly with foreign diplomats ant newsmen it receptions having been Humphrey tells of Khrushchev talk WASHINGTON Sen Hubert Humphrey today gave Eisenhower a lial message from Soviet premier Khrushchev dealing with Russian nuclear explosions Humphrey just back from cow also old Eisenhower about secret Soviet developments in the field of rockets The senator gave the president an oral report on the conference he had with Khrushchev Afterward Humphrey told newsmen his report to pr regarding nuclear ex- plosions and developments in the field are the two secrets which he had staled earlier had told him He added hat the Soviet pre- mier hart asked him specifically to pass on Eisenhower the in- formation dealing with Russian with Soviet security organs explosions lie described almost from the beginning of his I explosions as being of career Serov got some of substantial size very powers of Lavrenty after Humphrey said Khrushchev support of a losing presidential threatening la's dictatorship a constitutional regime No word on developments in the Venezuelan capital had been received in New York since short I y after midnight Overseas OSWEGO N Y Hi Another pilone operators said their half-foot of snow swirled onto pels to Caracas were out of order city today The rioters were supporters of The mayor appealed for more pear Adm Wolfgang Larrazabel help to battle the mounting drifts of the junta which took con- Mayor Vincent irol of the government after the ing a state of emergency overthrow of dictator Marcos More snow for Oswego N Y police chief had been ex- so him 0 pass on to edited in 1953 He formally took some dcal command of the committee which wilh crisis Tbc is the supreme police said he personally gan in April suggestions as Serov was one of she numerous to powers officials now in top Soviet ranks who worked with Khrushchev when the present premier was Communist party boss in the Ukraine during World War II promoted Serov a army eral had become well known abroad in recent years for being rov was head of slate security in that southwestern Soviet republic declined to provide any detail regarding he tion he passed on to Eisenhower He said it is up to the tion to decide whether the can public should be informed Big Three agree on assistance in Closing Wall St BY BROKEN CRIB tn The slock market closed higher in lively but some prices were below ish Drugs and selected issue I DALLAS Tex Wl A old baby boy was killed by a ken crib Detectives said the child awoke their best at the hom a naP aild apparently s ed for toys on the floor They ed yesterday asked the civil de- fense to supply snow plows and rescue operations Communities outside the storm erea also sent plows Perez Jimenez In returns from Sunday's presidential election he was trailing former president Ro- mulo head of the but on page four only names of voters already registered ami contained none of the requested information about prospective voters who have been turned down continued OD puse tour n the history of this city of Seventy per cent of the city's treets his morning ml the others were open only to one-way traffic continued on page four GIVE DAY'S WORK CHICAGO HI Most Chicago bers take the day off each But not this week An cs barbers will cut hair as usual and turn proceeds over to the fund to aid families affected by the Our Lady of the Angels grade school fire Dec 1 stopping tests GENEVA Lfl The United Stales Britain and the Soviet Union promised unlimited cooperation and assistance lo a planned con- trol lo police a ban on nuclear tesis il was learned tonight An analysis of wording of the two draft treaty articles ready approved by the nuclear weapons powers showed scope of the commitment However ing in the two articles is ing until a final treaty is drawn and ratified by the three powers The United Slates and Britain so far have secured complete viet agreement to the western view on controls made wide gains Volume was estimated at 000 shares compared 000 yesterday said a screw missing from a guide rail allowed Mickel Dupuy irith 3 530 edge his head between the sleel frame that supports the Gains of fractions lo a point were made by key stocks ger advances were made by issues Pipeline and al gas stocks continued mostly higher Closing prices of representative I mattress and the safety bars Peace justice death Byrd ruled American Tel and Tel ISO up General Motors down A Steel up Hi Marine forecast from Tuesday to Wednesday Outside waters Dixon Entrance cast lo southeast wind Long-range government 20 lo 30 mph bonds shaded lower in lisht Cloudy south of Sitka Fair over Corporator firmed of Sitka Occasional snow what but still duns narrowly spreading slowly northward from the downside Dixon Entrance Warmer