ALASKA FISHERY AND FUR-SEAL INDUSTRIES, 1922. 65 



Co. The J. D. Roop Co. operated the plant of the Standard Salmon 

 Packers (Inc.) at Tenakee; A. P. AVolf & Co. leased the plant of the 

 Sitka Packino; Co. at Sitka; and the Mitkof Island Packing Co. 

 continued to operate the Petersburg cannery of the Petersburg Pack- 

 ing Corporation. The Noyes Island Packing Co. was reorganized 

 as the Steamboat Bay Packing Co. The Stuart Packing Corpora- 

 tion became the owner of the floating cannery of the Mutual Pack- 

 ing Co. The Sea-Coast Packing Co. purchased the Craig cannery 

 of the Columbia Salmon Co. 



In central Alaska the Emel Packing Co. operated the Valdez Pack- 

 ing Co.'s cannery at Valdez, the Star Canning Co. took over the 

 floating cannery of the Hayes-Graham Fish Co., the cannery of the 

 Hiller3^-Scott Co. at Cordova was transferred to the Cordova Pack- 

 ing Co., and the Snug Harbor cannery of the Surf Packing Co. was 

 operated by the Polar Fisheries Co. The Cordova cannery of the 

 Pioneer Packing' Co. is now listed under the name of the Pioneer 

 Sea Foods Co., and the Seldovia Cannin^g Co. was succeeded by the 

 Seldovia Packing Co. For operating purposes the Carlisle Packing 

 Co. and the Canoe Pass Packing Co. consolidated and used the Cor- 

 dova plant of the former. 



In Avestern Alaska the floating plant of the Carlisle Packing Co., 

 previously operated at Kwiguk Slough at the mouth of the Yukon 

 River, was moved to Koggiung River, on Bristol Bay. 



NEW CANNERIES. 



Fifteen new or heretofore unlisted canneries were operated in 

 Alaska in 1922. Of these six were located in southeast Alaska, as 

 follows: A. & P. Products Corporation, at Hidden Inlet on the 

 site formerly occupied by the cannery of the Hidden Inlet Canning 

 Co.; Big Harbor Packing Co., at Craig; Ness Fish Co., at Peters- 

 burg; Red Salmon Packers Association, floating cannery Retriever^ 

 at Dry Bay and later at Ketchikan ; R. J. Peratovich, at Bay View ; 

 and the Dobbins Packing Co., a floating plant at Petersburg for sal- 

 mon and crabs. 



Central Alaska is credited with six new canneries, located as fol- 

 lows : Anchorage Packing Co., at Anchorage; Kamishak Canning 

 Co.. at Kamishak Bay; Kodiak Island Fishing and Packing Co., at 

 SeAvard; North Coast Packing Co., at Ninilchik; Robinson Packing 

 Corporation, floating cannery Azalea^ at Zachar Bay; and Hopp 

 & Danielsen, at Uganik Bay. 



One new cannery was opened in western Alaska at Ugashik River 

 by the International Packing Co., which operated the motor ship 

 Santa Flavia as a floating plant. After the close of the season on 

 Bristol Bay this cannery was moved to Uyak to pack humpback 

 salmon. W. F. O'Connor and Charles Homeier put up small packs 

 of canned salmon on the Yukon River for local use ; their plants have 

 not been listed heretofore. 



CANNERIES NOT OPERATED. 



Forty-six canneries were closed during the season, of which three 

 are probably permanently out of business — the F. H. Madden can- 

 nery at Abercrombie abandoned by reason of the enforcement of 



