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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL, THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” —— VOL. LXVI, NO. 10,177 MEAT PLANT BLIZZARDS RAGING IN 2 SECTIONS 0ld Man Wfier Hitting Paris of States with Freezing Swat (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) Old Man Winter laid “aside his indifference early Friday, - became serious and turned up with blizzards in two sections of the nation. And the weather man predicts some drops in temperatures for othér regions later Saturday and Sunday. A New England blizzard came dur- ing an eight to 20-inch snowfall. Heavy winds from a storm centered off Nantucket caused gusty winds as high as 40 miles an house in the Boston area. A cold wave sweeping over the northern plains produced blizzard conditions in the Dakotas and east- ern Montana. Temperatures ran from 10 to 20 in North Dakota and were continuing to drop. The northern plains chill will move south and east. Temperatures in the southern state will rise today and then turn to colder Saturday night and Sunday. The central states will feel the cold effects Sat- urday. ‘The Washingtoni Merry -Go-Round| | | By DRFW PEARSON | WASHINGTON—When Prc’sidcnl‘ Marry Truman was Senator Harl'_\" Truman, he sometimes entered the | Senate chamber and sat down at| | his desk grumbling. : “Just got another kick in /pants from the White House, he | would tcll colleagues. “They've just appointed another Stark man to a| nood job." “Stark man” referred to | supporters of Gov. Lloyd Stark, leader of an anti-Truman Demo- cratic faction in Missouri. | Today, however, Senators wish that tht ex-: ator from Missouri had a better memory and would think back to those by-gone days. One Senator who especially wishes it is Jim Tunnell of Delaware, who has just received the most re- sounding kick in the pants recent- |1y given by the White House to any alleged friend, H | Senator Tunnell has been one of the most loyal of all the Roosevelt- ‘Tx'un\an supporters. He has slaved | night and day for their program. | He is one Senator who canbe ab- | | solutely depended upon. Partly be- | cause of his loyalty he faces a dif- ficult re-election fight this fall, | with the DuPont Republicans pre- | paring to put a tough candidate in : ‘he field against him. Until recently, they planning to pass over John Townsend, a staunch friend of the DuPonts, but considered a bit out-of-date because of his iso- the | had been | ex-Senator JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 25, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS SAVAGE TORTURES | ARE UNFOLDED AT NUERNBERG TRIAL PAA Prize Winner Gets Eye View of Capital City Mrs. Floyd Miller, winner of the all-expenses-paid tour of | Alaska LONGSHOREMEN OF | 3 COAST STATES TAKE STRIKE VOTE 1 H . |awarded by Pan American Airlines Naz| Defendams Rlp Ear |to a lucky bond holder during the Developments Follow Fail- ure fo Negotiate 1946 | {8th War Loan Drive, got her long- Details Related NUERNBERG, Germany, Jan. 25.| —~French prosecutors, describing | Nazi refinements on medieval tor-| tures, charged at the international | war crimes trial today that Gestapo {agents placed burning wads of 0il- |horse and other interior points. soaked cloth between the toes of French prisoners. | Assistant Prosecutor Charles Du- | bost produced documents which he| said showed that youths in F‘rem-hj prisons also were burned with sol-| dering lamps and bitten by police dogs. As the story of savage tortures un- | folded, Nazi defendants were unable | to conceal shame over the actions of the regime of which they were a| part v il Franz von Papen, pale and shak-| en, ripped the earphones from his head and sat thereafter with his palms covering his face. Hjalmar, Schacht and Joachim von Ribben- trop also cast off their headphon ‘ Grand Adm. Karl Doenitz sat wood- | enly with his chin on his chest as| though unable to face the court- room i crimes court also has;| heard testimony of more atrocities; by former German chieftains. A, morning. Mrs. Miller, a hos at the | Baranof Hotel in 1840, has been 1ook= ing forward particularly to her stop- | over in this city. She was to have|than 30,000 longshoremen in Califor- arrived here early this week after|nid, Oregon and Washington will' a stop in Ketchikan and then com-|VOte next week on a recommendation pleted her to through White-|{made yvesterday by the CIO Inter-| |national Longshoremen’s and Ware-| housemr | n’s negotiating committee | ito strike on or before April 1. | The strike recommendation cli-| maxed a day-of rapid fire develop- But when Mrs. Miller glimpsed the ments in the six-months old nego- Territory's capital city this morn-|tiations between the union and ing she was southbound on a plane|Waterfront employers over the 1946 from Whitehorse to Seattle feontract. With PAA planes still not land-| Harry Bridges, ILWU president, ing on the icy Juneau airfield un-|made the following moves: til hazardous conditions have been! 1. Appealed to President Truman 12moved, the prize-winner got only & to intervene to aveid what he called birds’ eye view of her favorite Alas- an “inevitable” West Coast shipping kan city. 2, tieup, T0 UNOMEDDLING IN CASE OF IRA the wage-hour law Frank P. Foisie, President of the BULLETIN — LONDON, Jan. ~—The United Nations Secur- SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 25.—More | Manager Ken Alexander of the local PAA office had planned a special tour of the city for the Air-| lines' personal guest. waterfront em- of breaking off effort to nullify I'waterfront employers association, de- 'nfed that negotiations had been broken off and said they were “mere- 1y suspended” because of the union's irefusal, in violation of their con- tract, to work two ships in Port |Gamble, Wash., and Portland, Ore,, ‘quashed in Court here this morn- Moon Contacled by Army; Radar Echo Bounces Back ONE INDICIMENT RETURNED TODAY BY GRAND JURY. Charges Dr?pEed Against? McNulty in Sitka Rifle Selling Case E One “true bill” was returned in| District Court here this morning by | the grand jury, indicting Louis J. Sedlauk, of Juneau, on eight counts| Army today claimed the world’s of larceny by check. |first sclentific contact with the A “not true bill" was returned onimoon in a Jules Verne feat which a charge against Peter J. McNulty spanned 238,000 miles of outer space of Sitka. McNulty had been accused {py radar of selling a Territorial Guard rifle/ Government astronomers said the and charged before the U. S. Com-|achievement might lead to the ans- missioner at Sitka with embezzle- | wer of the age-old question whether ment of government property, on any form of life exists on the moon. which charge he was bound over. Another possibility was that it Still' another criminal case was|might usher in radio control for super-range jet or rocket projectiles which coud be kept hovering omin- ously above the earth in the strato- spherc The War Departnnt reported that the results of the experiment promise “valuable peacetime as well as wartime applications.” Far- BULLETIN EW YORK, Jan, 25.—The sound that the mcon cent back to the earih lasted half a second and took the form of a 180-cycle note, or somewhat higher in pitch than the hum heard on a home radio when a station is not tuned in, Army officers who conducted the tests related. The echo also was recorded visually on an oscilloscope, where it appeared as a series of jagged, saw-tooth lines. An oscilloscope is an instru- ment for showing visually the changes in varying current. WASHINGTON, Jan 256.~The ing when Presiding Judge J. W. Kechoe signed an order dismissing grand larceny charges, originating at Ketchikan, against L. F. Edenfield | and Joe Dce. U. S. Attorney Pat Gilmore, Jr, moved for the dismis- sal without presentation to the grand jury, because of insufficient roving space ships were listed as one S WILL BE SEIZED TONIGHT GOVERNMENT MAKES MOVE IN BIG STRIKE Snag Hit, However, as (10 Workers Refuse to Refurn to Work (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) Government efforts to restore nor- mal meat supplies by seizing strike- bound packing plants hit a snag to- iday when representatives of 193,000 striking CIO meat workers announc- ed their men woud not return to work. Some 55,000 striking AFL meat- workers have agreed to return when the government takes over the plants lat 12:01 a. m. ‘The CIO decision, which marks ithe first time in a major dispute that labor has refused t6 work for the government in seized plants, ame as peace was restored between two rival labor unions on another front. ¢ John L. Lewis took his 500,000 | United Mine workers back into the | American Federation cf Labor. { Truman Strikebreaker | “The President of the United |States, in directing the seizure of the plants, has engaged in a strike breaking action, the sole effect of which can be to play into the hands {French witness today said a special | las a result of a dispute. imassacre was held for Gestapo: Iationist record. evidence. However, Townsend will now be Council formally agreed to- day to discuss the temse mili- of the “less likely” applications. In the New England states there of the packers . , . The government were such snow recordings as 21 inches at Rumford, Me,, where mod- erate snow still fell during the morn- ing. Hartford, Conn.,, had an 8-inch fall and Concord, N. H., had 13 in- ches. | The winds were particularly strong in the Boston and New Haven area. their candidate—thanks to Harry ‘Truman. For the President has just appeinted Townsend as Alternate U. S. Delegate to the United Na- tions. This automatically takes{ away the taint of isolation, ele- vates him to a position of prom- | | Hartford was whipped with 15-25 .nence, and remakes his political | mile winds. ! future. Chief Heinrich Himmler at the! Mauthausen murder camp in 1944. | Fifty Russians were executed and; 47 American and Dutch flyers were tortured and stoned to death. The | Americans were forced to carry lalge] quantities of stoneé up from a quarry all day long—while barefoot dressad only in their underwear. and | The deep south shivered as freez- ing temperatures extended as far as northwest Florida. In Miami it} was 50 which is low for this time| of the season. It was the most crushing blo“.nM‘:-nnwmle——accordlng to the French fuithful Jim Tunnell could have 1eceived T At first, politicians blamed Secl retary Byrnes for the appointment itness—they were stoned and final- | ly beaten to death. i e S | tary-political situations in Iran, B u l l E -I- ‘ Greece and Indonesia at its | I N S‘ next meeting. The Council thus | disregarded a request from So- | * | viet Kussia that it decline to WASHINGTON — Secretary of | take up the dispute over Iram. '%?Ee Byrnes returned from Lon The next meeting will be held 01 today and said he was “greatly | gratified” at the progress made by the United Nations organizations auring the last two weeks. Monday. LONDON, Jan. 25.—Soviet Russia in a letter to'the United Nations _ Y i Security Council today said that she PARIS — President Felix Gouin The first radar contact with the seizure order is a complete double~ ATOMIC BOMB TEST 10 COST BIG SUM moon was made on January 10, it was disclosed, and that feat has been successfully repeated several times since. The experiment has been carried Zut by Signal Corps scientists, work- cross because prior to the announce~ |ment of the'seigure this union had /recelved from ~high governmental offices that the order would contain | provisions for making efféctive in- | creases..4in. that the (acts ¥ wages) WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 —The test {18 at the Evans Signal laboratory at | finqing) panel might recommend. of the A-bomb versus the modern Belmar on the New Jersey coamlne,, Lewis Seated by AFL The Army released the first de-| arship stacl Lt S rop- wirship SHCRURDTORSS 0a nupll?:;[ tails of it last night. csition that will cost close to billion dollars, if not more. | Lewis, who left the AFL in 1936, | formed the CIO, and then left that | It tock onty one and & half seconds ' organization for his United Mine The exact amount was impossible the report revealed, for a radar echo, Workers, was elected immediately to was “categorically opposed” to the is reported to have told his So- (o calculate, but Navy figures sup- (o0 bounce back from the moon, nor-(a seat on the AFL council's policy | international peace body's taking up cialist party teday that only a plied an indication of what would mally about 238857 miles distant rmaking body. >-oo— - Sample temperatures about the #e, however, had nothing to du\SK' (I_UBBERS counitry early Friday were Boston|with it. Then they blamed Town- | MEE'I' TON'GHI {Iran’s case. $2,500,000,000 loan from the United pe involved in the forthcoming ex- from the earth. The vacancy of the council was | Disclosing Soviet strategy in deal- States could save France from periment in the Paeific, Bpecially designed equipment used ; created by the withdrawal from the {ing with Iran's appeal for council chaos. ! This is what they show: jin the test shot radar pulses out AFL in October, 1043, of Haryey laction to halt the alleged interven- It cost $230,000,000 alone for the into space at the speed of light—|W. Brown, president of the Machin- " ition of the Red Army in Iran's in- WASHINGTON.-President C. E. hulls and engines of the 47 U. S. 186,000 miles per second—and other | ists, and ‘Hartford 32; Albany, N. Y., 28; send’s son-in-law, Prew Savoy, who Grand Forks, N. D, 9; Atlanta 30. |was among the group which helped | Winfer Quarfersof Circus Up in Flames| SAN ANTONIO, Texas, Jan 25.— Twenty trick monkeys and a chim-| panze burned to death when a $27,- 500 fire dastroyed a warehous2 here‘v nd party last summer. Replied! On short notice, a Juneau Ski Club avoy : |meeting today was called for this| “I only wish T could plead guilty. |evening at 8 o'clock, in the Ski Shop | 1t would have put me in right with lat second and Gold streets here, ! by father-in-law.” |accompanied by the disclosure that Now, however, President Truman several important announcements | has confessed that he did the job |will be made. i nimself. He is the sorriest man in| All officers, committee chairmen! the world—and has said so to Sen- land members and everyone else in-! ator Tunnell. But the appointment ;terested are asked to be present. It ternal affairs, the Soviet answer de- Wilson of General Motors testified combat units assigned to the guinea @pparatus picked up the returning clared the Iranian charges were today that “if you want higher groundless and incorrect. wages paid you are going to have, Instead of United Nations enter- some awful bad strikes before the ing into the affair, Russia proposed men go back to work at the wages that the differences between Tehran at which the men were working be- combat types which also will be tar- cess of the experiment could make and Moscow be woked out in direct negotiations between the two_coun- st I tries. LONDON — Great Britain The Russian position was set forth joan Greece 10,000,000 pounds ($40,- ore.” pig fleet. echo. / It cost more than $100,000,000 The War Department frankly ac- more for the Navy transports which knowledged that it was impossible at make up about half of the 47 non- this stage to forecast what the suce possible. Maj. Gen. Harry C. Ingles, Signal gets. Moreover, Navy men have estimat- will ed unofficially that the operating Corps chief, said the immediate sig- | expenses involved in staging the nificance was that scientists know last night which housed the Winter|.an't be changed. He did exactly 'is expected that the meeting will be!in a letter from Russia’s chief dele- (00.000) without interest to help experiment next spring will run ap- for the first time with certainty quarters of a traveling circus. Two, large trucks, a house trailer and cir- cus equipment were lost in the blaze.| ! tor concerned. Woman Scienfist | 0f SwedeninU.S. NEW YORK, Jan. 25—Dr. Lize! Meitner, Swedish woman scientist’ i whose research helped in the devel-i opment of the atomic bomb, arrived by plane early today from _Hum. England. A nephew, Stephen Allers, said the physicist, who fled Nazi Germany in 1938, was en route to Washington where she planned to teach at Cath- olic University. ———————— Almer J. Peterson, Anchorage at- torney and member of the Terri- torial House of Representatives from | the Third Division, today filed his! tne same thing he once cussed out |brief. Roosevelt for —making an oppoint- Though no very, recent first-hand| rient without consulting the Sena- 'reports are available, snow condxtions{ {over the Douglas Island meadows are i believed to be good for this week iend with today’s snow figured tAJi : . £ 3 limprove the situation. Quite good | Some 0t Jimmy. Byjpes €XPe- | \iing was found last Sunday on diters recently have really pepped ! g g H up old-line State Department diplo- , pdcked surfacesiig aoh the 2 . oo |state of affairs is thought still pre- inats when it comes to admitting s, . ! FEuropean refugees, vailing. Cooperative effort by all EUROPEAN REFUGEES | When President Truman first, | proposed filling unused U. S. immi- gration quotas by admitting home- | |less refugees from Europe, State | | Department diplomats said they | !had neither funds, nor the person- r.el—nor perhaps even the disposi- ition. However, some of the South Cnr-l olina blood which Byrnes has in-| ‘ccted into the State Départment | i tmen who drink coca-cola instead | jof tea) decided that Presidential j orders should not be kissed off so; airily. Though no money was available,( ickiers is expected to be necessary, however, to break down the crust for; best sliding. . ! The Juneau Ski Club's outdoor committee plans the usual feed of | hot dogs and coffee for Sunday and primary and advanced skiing in-| struction will be continued under the direction of President Tom; Stewart and Dean Williams. | A short trip up the Crooks Trail will be the special event of the day, it is announced. STILL NO TRACE { lius, Jr., reiterating the stand taken gate, Vice Foreign Commissar Andrel siapilize skyrocketing Greek cur- Vishinsky, to Norman J. O. Makin of rency and assist the nation in re- | Australia, President of the Security storing production. { Council. The statement was released by the UNO information _service just tWo ,dministration today promised dis- hours before the Security Council ,pleq war veterans an adequate ! was to go into session to decide supply of best quality artificial ap- whether it should consider not only yjances “even if the Federal Gov-' Iran’s charges against Russia, bul .nment has to go into the artifi-| also Russia’s charges of British In- iia] arm leg and eye business it- ! terference in the affairs of Greece c.i¢ at.d Indonesia, { Although Russia voiced her opp&s‘-“ WASHINGTON—President Tru- ition to council consideration of . .. today ordered a temporary Iran's case, she dces not have a veto postponement in the return‘to Ger- | on whether 1t will be discussed. |ang of “contract” prisoners of | The question of taking up all three . %y yiey of a U. S. agricultural cases will be decided by a majority labor shortage. | vote of the 11 members and unanim- | ity is not required among the five, gpaAyTLE_A marriage license principal powers. & 1 application was made by Paul 8.| 1. 8. Deloghis Fawaxd. 8, Siaitin- | Duval, 39, Cordova, Alaska, and Caroline I. Rourke, 43 Seattle. yeswerday by Secretary of State {James F. Byrnes, told the American delegation early today he was pre- pared to suppert a proposal for coun- candidacy for the office of Alaska|tney finally went to the Bureau of Delegate in Congress with Auditor! and out cil consideration of all three cases LEWISTON, JTdaho —The first | |all-Indian chapter of the Veterans, of Foreign Wars will be installed | Frank Boyle. Peterson is running on the Republican ticket in the April Primaries. By becoming a candi- date for the Delegate's job, Peter- son eliminates himself from candi- dacy for re-election to the Alaska House. a1 s BARANOF LAT) | the Budget squeezed |enough cash money to hire new | consular personnel. Already they | (Continued on Page Four) AT M TEWS HAVE TAVERN Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tew, form- |er Juneauites, are now . operating |tne Sail-In-Tavern, a short dis- !U. 8. Commissioner Felix Gray re- ,Steamcr Baranof, from the west,|tance from the dock in Edmonds, radiced at 3730 o'clock this after- | Wash.+ noon sh¢ would arrive at 7 tomor- | - eee o — H row morning and sail south at 10| WEATHER MAN HERE am. 5 Ottis Bobbitt of the Weather Bu- | - HERE OF MISSING | PIONEER OLIVER! ported this afternoon that the search | party combing Douglas Island for missing Nome pioneer William A. Oliver had no success up till noon; today. . H The searching erew, under the di-| rection of Highway Patrolman Em- mett Botelho, was out all through ‘@ |Roads Administration. at. Lapwai, Idaho District Com . mander Ed Wright reports. i YENAN—A C-54 transport plane bearing American Red Cross medi- cal supplies landed at this north| China communist capital today to help combat an outbreak of spinal| meningitis, which has killed two Chinese and stricken 19 others. PR SN Y AIRFIELD WORK IS AUTHORIZED It was reported today that sand- ing of a 60-foot strip of the Juneau Airport was completed yesterday by voluntary services of the Public This morning, the field manager here received authorization from the SIOIK OUOIAHONS Civil Aeronautics Administration to | NEW YORK, Jan. 25. — Closing | proximately $100,000,000. The pay that electrically charged ionosphere of perscnnel and costs of supplies envelops both earth and strato- woud boost thab total. sphere. The multi-layered iono- No estimates are available on the sphere starts about 39 miles above ships that will be used in the test, an altitude of approkimately 250 but all are of the mcet costly types, miles higher. R | Looking to the future, the War PACIFIC NORTHERN - Department said it may be possible {with the aid of radar data to con- L struct detailed topographical maps Alnu"!s BR'NGS 1 ol distant planets, and also to de- |termine the composition and atmos- ¥ q pheric characteristics of these celes- tial bodies. Pacific Northern Airlines arrive vesterday from Anchorage with | N A Pilot Joe Morris, First Officer Dick 2 Chamberlin and the following pus-‘D b Ii “o Sty ‘uemonilization Washington Curtis, C. C. Bnb—I bett, Raymond Chamlis, George C.| In A'aska Speeds Jones, Miss Nancy Lee Jones, Mas- | ter George Jones, and Charles u ' Go d R ' Halgrimson. | p a o a e On the return flight to Anchor-; age were: R. E. Deardorf, Mr. and. HEADQUARTERS, Alaskan De- Mrs. William Lund, and A. J. Gri-|partment, Jan. 25.—During the per- zell; to Cordova, Mr. and G. Gour- jcd Jan. 13-19, a total of 675 military man, and Frederick Hansen: to personnel and 30 civilian employees Yakutat, Mré: A. B, Milton; to Ko- ;n( the War Department in the Alas- ! diak, E. W. Cosgrove. {kan Department were returned to the R o | United States, a spokesmart for Brig. © e 000 dve e s e eGen A M Guney, commanding WEATHER REPORT . *¢ 'the department during the tempor- (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU) . lan'y absence of Lt. Gen. Delos C. Em- Temperatuses for 24-Hour Period @ mons, said. Ending 6:30 o'Cleek This Morning It was estimated that approxi- e o o mately 80 per cent of the returnees In Juneau—Maximum, 36; were for separation from the ser- minimum, 25. vice. At Airport—Maximum, ‘This figure reflects a considerable ' minimura, 15. increase in the tempo of demobili- | WEATHER FORECAST zation within the Alaskan Depart- 29; Green said Lewis would attend next week’s session of the council. | Steel Strike Situation Another ramifieation of the steel strike was felt in Pittsburgh where an association representing 56 steel fabricating companies charged their 50,000 employees were kept on strike jby the “insistant refusal” of CIO president Philip Murray to consider their individual needs. The associa- quon. which seeks wage contracts sep- !arate from the basic. steel industry, charged its members were “caught in the middle” by the wage increase WASHINGTON — The Veterans' one German and two Japanese war- the earth’s surface and extends to{qemands and a government promise {to raise the price of steel. More Men Latd Off The five-day old walkout of 750,- 1000 CIO steel workers will force the ilayoff of 15,000 employces at the Ford Motor Company tonight, the company reported, and it sald 25,000 additional workers would be affect- ed in a week. L The giant steel strike, biggest single industrial dispute in the nations his- tory, which showed no indications of approaching settlement, threat- ened to involve thousands of other workers in Allied industries. ————— LOGAN STEWART BACK FROM MINE SWEEPING Logan H. Stewart, of Juneau, rotor machinists’ mate, first class, USNR, recently arrived at San { Dlego, Calif, on the 1,000 ton i minesweefler U, S. Skirmish. The ship, one of 14 in Mine- craft Squadron 12, participated in numerous sweeping operations planned to clear the sea lanes for invasions in the Philippine and Borneo area, and aftgr the war to | make Japanese waters safe for’ !hhlppln& again. In November the :quadron cleaned out 2,100 mines in one month from the Korean 3traits. PR Bl 11 Py DOOGAN OUT OF SERVICE John M. Doogan, Juneau young (Juneau wnd Vieinity) ment, as during the period Jan. 6-12, man who has served with distine- the morning, concentrating its ef- |continue the services of the PRA on inclusive, 347 military persounel and lion in the armed services, has been 12 civilian employees were returned. honorably discharged at the Separ- The total military personnel return- | ation Center at Fort Lewis, Wash. ed for sgparation since V-J Day has | i quotation of Alaska Juneau mine | stock today is 9., American Can| | 99, American Power and Light 19%, | reau at Anchorage_ has arrived in [forts in the Treadwell district to reimbursement .baslvs angi it was Juneau, He is staying at Hotel Ju- i which is believed the likeliest trail planned to continue sanding opera- neau. |leads. Search was to ‘be continued | tions tomorrow. o o o Light snow or rain tonight and Saturday. Slowly rising FIVE FROM STATES New arrivals frem the States re- | with lowest gistering at the Baranof yesterday were: Helen Harris, Mrs. Percy A. SITKA DEPUTY HERE Thorn and John Likeness, from Seattle; and Mrs. W. C. Myers from Portland, Ore. — eee - — TWO YAKUTAT VISITORS 0. S. Alseson and Mike Hammer of Yakutat arrived in town yester- day. They are stopping at the Bar- | iown and is registered at the Bar- | Minfield Home, was dismissed this alleviate critical conditions at the follows: anof. . ness and expects to return to Sitka Fred Bryant, U. S. Deputy Mar- shal at Sitka, flew into Juneau ye: terday afternogn on official busi- | as soon as weather permits, e R. E. Deardorf of Platinum is in | anof. ’ in the same general sector this af-| ternoon. % P Sy HOSPITALIZED Frank Carteeti of the Minfield | Home was admitted to the Govern- | tonsilectomy. | Raymond Bocatch, also from | morning following medical care. The PRA, whose primary respon- Anaconda 47%, Commonwealth and Southern 4, Curtiss-Wright 9%, In- | ternatioral Harvester 94z, Jones- Laughlin Steel 47, Kennecott 54, New York Central 33'z, Northern Pacific 33%, United Corporation sibility is road maintenance, hadgits equipment ticketed for highWay work today. 7Today's snowfall may result in further delay on airport maintenance since all PRA facilities ment Hospital this morning for a may now have to be devoted to the 6’2 U. S. Steel 88, Pound $4.03'% Sales today were 1,760,000 shar Dow, Jones averages today are as | industrials 19949, 66.30, utilities 40.78. roads, it was explained. However, n‘[ was, believed that the snowfall will airport, unless a thaw ensues. a0 00 eene 20000000000 rails | temperature temperature tonight near freezing. Southeasterly winds 20 miles per hour. ® 00 000 00 00 e o - SATRES TO LOS ANGELES and Mrs. John Satre and FROM WRANGELL daughter, after visiting a Geraldine Workman, and F. G. short time in Seattle have left for Hanford arrived here yesw,vday‘m Angeles where he will take an from Wrangell. They are guests at Advanced course in watch repairing the Baranof. ‘They expect to return to Juneau. now passed the 24,000 mark. | HURLEY DISCHARGED | Robert E. Hurley, of Juneau, has ' been QJonorably discharged at the | Geparation Center at Fort Lewis, Wash, He has been with the ACS idunnz the second war. { R } FRANK BRYANT HERE Frank Bryant of Sitka Is a guest at the Gastineau.