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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” e a— VOL. LXVL, NO. 10,219 5 PROMINENT (A JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS _ PRICE TEN CENTS ——— e McCUTCHEON SENATE SEAT (HALLENGED Solons Launch Inquiry Info! Qualifications = of Third Divisioner The right of Steve McCutcheon, specially-elected Third Divisioner, to sit in the Senate of the Alaska Legislature, was officially chal- lenged this morning, at that body's brief session today. 1DEVELOPMENTS | IN LABOR TROUBLE; | AFL IN SPOTLIGHT {Green Takes Fling af Gov- ernment’s Policy-Lewis in Key Position | WASHINGTON, March 157—\Vnh‘ the postwar wave of CIO strikes subsiding, the rival AFL has moved | linto the center of the labor pic-| (ture with two developments: ! 1. AFL President William Green, |often conservative in his utterances, | lashed out in a vigorous, jabbing; {attack on Administration wage-| price and labor policies. AFL anger| {has been rising for weeks—not di- | | 1 Shakes Dice for 36 Hours; Loses $196,000 RENO, Nev.,, March 15.—For 36 hours, onlookers reported, an un- identified man sat at a table and played dice, sending for coffee and never eating, and lost $196,000. That comes to spending money at the rate of $5444.44 an hour. NADIAND IN SPY | | HOUSE PASSES 3 BILLS; DEADLINE IS COUNCIL IS | serFormeasuRes, IMPRESSED | i | A joint rules committee of the) | Territorial legislature today set | deadlines of March 18, for introduc- | tion of bills, and March 23, for m-l | terchange of legislation between the ! CHURCHILL WiLL | MAKE REPLY 10 | CRITICS FONIGHT, "Former British Official fo| Address 2,000-Pickets IRANIANS READY 10 FIGHT; WILL DEFEND COUNTRY Russian Concentration of Troops Regarded as two bodies, in a report read in the House today. The deadline may be advanced by suspension of rules. As they stand they provide for the usual 10-day period for each house to pass on the other's bills observed during regular legislative sessions. Lacking new matter, the House busied itself with third and second reading of bills (the order was re- The game ended with a roll of a single dice. Each got an ace. In the roll-off, the houss man got a| trey, the guest—described as an easterner—-a deuce. Club owners would not identify the player nor confirm his los- ings. H A e Definite Threat | TEHRAN, March 14.—(Delayed) —Gen. Ahmed Consulting Engineer Straightens OQut Sev- eral Matters | | day the Iranlan army was “ready he is expected to reply to critics i Juneau's City Council sat up and|to fight to the last man” if Rus- of his Fulton, Mo., address became “all ears” last evening ns:smn troops move toward Tehran | possibly to Generalissimo Stalin’s 'Consulting Engineer Henry L. Gray|from Karaj, 20 miles northwest of |denunciation of him as a “war- gave them the benefit .of his 40| here, where he said trainloads of monger.” /years experience devoted largely to! troops and ammunition are arriving! But the former British Prime valuation of public utility proper-|nightly. | Minister clamped down a complete Are Ordered Qut Sepehbod Amir Churchill put the finishing touches NEW YORK, March 15—Winston | ;Ahmedl, Minister of War, said lu~“|uduy to tonight's speech in which | and | SENATE GETS versed by a decision of the rules The challenge, voiced by Fourth ... ™., employers but at the committee) and passed the follow- ing: ties for rate setting and other pur-| “Iran has shown to the world it news blackout on the speech’s acl- ual content, and a member of his | poses. |1s a peaceful nation, but if Russia Division Senator Leo Rogge, was prefaced by a Judiciary Committee report on Senate Bill 5, introduced by Senator N. R. Walker, which would require that candidates swear to their qualifications for the office sought at least five days prior to any election. The McCutcheon issue has been bubbling in his own section ever gince the special election at which he was named to fill the seat made vacant by the death of his father. Previous statements have been made that court action would be instigated to unseat the new Sena- tor; but that course has not been actually pursued beyond a request that the U. S. Attorney here move {o intervent. o action has come from the District Attorney's office. In reporting on the Walker bill this morning, Judiciary Committee Chairman O. D. Cochran stated: Must Quality “This bill is apparently designed to require a candidate for Delegate to Congress or to'the TLegislature of the Territory of Alaska to show by the filing of an affidavit to the Canvassing Board before the count of the ballots that he or she is qualified to hold the office for which they are a candidate. “The Canvassing Board being purely a ministerial body, they would have no power to determine the fact of the qualifications of the candidate for the office of Dele- gate or a seat in this Legislature from such affidavit or otherwise, and could do no more than count the ballots and make their certifi- cate of the vote canvassed. Hence, the filing of the affidavit as pro- vided for in this bill would not ef- fect the purpose for which the bill is designed. Law On Question “A careful examination of the law governing the question of the election and qualifications of mem- bers to the Legislature and Delegate to Congress clearly shows that the Congress of the United States is " (Continued on Page Two) The Washington Merry - Go-Roun By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON—There was some | i‘gm'ernment and the CIO. | | 2. AFL Vice-President John L. |Lewis, boss of the United Mine! | Workers, finds himself in more of| la key position than ever in his |wage negotiations now going on| |with soft coal mine owners. Recon- | {version Director John Snyder told| a reporter that with the settle-| ment of several major strikes, “The one hurdle remaining in reconver-| sion is early, amicable settlement of labor contracts in the coal indus-| try.” | ‘The AFL President described the| economic situation as dark and confused. He said neither labor nor industry knows where it stands or {where it is headed. Last night in a specch at Car: bondale, Pa., Green called for a new wage-price policy to be drafted with |labor, industry and agriculture as- |sistance and said it would be put | |in effect only for one year. Am‘r[ |that, he asserted at the annual) dinner of the Carbondale Central Labor Union, all government con-| trols over wages and prices should be dropped. e jHousewarming Party For Young Couple Is Big Affair Last Night, “housewarming party” was giv- en Thursday night in the American Legion Dugout by Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pollock and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Haydon, honoring Mr.! and Mrs. Wm. Geddes, Jr., who re- cently purchased a home on Gla- cier Highway. The table was attractively decor- ated with a centerpiece of a log cabin surrounded by a miniature forest, complete even to the little dog waiting at the door. | Delicious refreshments were serv- ,ed after an enjoyable evening of cards. The guests were Mrs. Wm.! Geddes, Sr., Messrs, and Mesdames |Fred Orme, Art Kassner, Bert Mc- {Dowell, Olaf Westby, Wm. Karki, Harold C. Aase, Darwin Hoel, Bert |Alstead, S. H. Swanson, Olaf Swan- son, Martin Brendall, W. S. Nance, ,Olaf Bodding, John Lowell, John ISunderlanv:l, D. B. Femmer, Wm.| Graves, R. F. Kronquist, Andrew | |Hildre, Ole Westby, Joe Alexander, |C. F. Wyller, Henry Harmon, John ‘Winters, Harry Sturrock, Frank Ol- son, Milton Nyman, N. L. Mathi- son, Pete Hildre, Olaf Larson, John ! | | H.B. 28, the pinball and slot machine control measure. H.B. 1, the Hennings-Krause un- employment compensation benefits ball. . HB. 4, the primary blanket bal- lot referendum, which passed unan- imously. 6 NEW BILLS Bonding,' Vocational Re-! habilitation, Pioneers’ Trustees Change | final passage of the two latter bills. Salary Resolution Signing of House Joint Resolu- Topping a list of six new Senate|(jon 1 by Speaker Jesse D. Lan- Bills introduced today is No. 20, byK der (the resolution provides for the Senate Committee on Territor- | jegislative salaries) brought brief Rules were suspended to permit staff said that the only copy of | the talk in existence is the one Churchill will use in its actual dc-‘ livery from 10:30 to 11 p. m. (EST) | at an official city dinner. Meanwhile, the Greater New York | ICIO council announced it would| {throw a cordon of pickets around |the Waldorf-Astoria where Mr. Churchill will address 2,000 guests Noticeably impartial and out-| commits an overt act, not only standingly lucid, Mr. Gray's testi-|€very soldier but every boy and mony before the Council left that|®irl in the streets will fight to de- body with a far clearer understand- | fend their capital” the General ing of its position as a panel sit- ! said in an interview immediately, ting to regulate the rates of the following an audience with Moham- | Alaska Electric Light and Power | med Reza Pahlavi, Shah of Iran. Company. | The Shah, he said, plans to pre- Throughout the longest and most|Sent the Iranian question agaln to {consistenly interesting session ym\lhe United Nations Security Coun- " s o g to develop in the current rate hear- i, Which will meet in New York {% the climax of a day-long clty! ing, Engineer Gray, though called| City later this montb. { ey las a witness for the light company,| Ahmedi said the Russian garri-, . M(I"]“" For P;]”“f" g 1 did not completely support that Son at Karaj had been “increased ! Saul Mills, council secretary, Inj r ¢ " 4 are | fOUr " that e ' & call for pickets last night, said firm’s indigated stand regarding rate | fourfold” and that there were oo .0 e Jeader was “fo- ial Institutions. The measure would | applause and a suggestion from base issues; nor did he more than| “three times as many Russlans in s menting a new world war” and CASE MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT IS ARRESTED Four Scientific Workers Named as Giving Secrets to Russia OTTAWA, March 156—The Roy- al Commission said today that its investigation of the Canadlan spy case had, disclosed that Dr. Ray- ' mond Boyer, assistant professor of chemistry at MeGill University, had transmitted to the Soviet Union full information regarding his sec- ret work in explosives. The Commission also said three other scientific workers engaged in sccret research for the government during the war had given the So- viet Union highly confidential da- ta. With publication of the names of these four, the Commission has now identified eight government employees it said were operating in a Moscow-directed “network” In Canada. Fred Rose, known as the first and only Communist ever elected to the Canadian parliament, was taken in- to custody last night. He was not abolish the present Board of Trus-|Rep Warren Taylor that a “con-| partially endorse tke other-end- Azerbaijan as a month ago.” named by the Royal Commission, tees for the Pioneers’ Home and | the He termed the reported concen- added Is was “disgraceful” that New |set up a new board to take over ils\[ functions. voy” be appointed immediately to deliver the resolution to the gov- ernor. of-the-line position on which |City administration’s attack Ipresent rates has been based. on questioning by York should give “official recogni- | tion and a public platform to a| man who so recently was repudiated ! tration of troops and equipment a “definite threat to Tehran” and added that all necessary precautions Chief innovation of the bill is that‘ Lander also signed H.B. 20, which| Under direct the Governor of Alaska would not H. L. Faulkner, were being taken to meet it. by the overwhelming majority of | be a member of the proposed new Board of Trustees. The Governor is Chairman of the present Board of three members. All members of the new Board provides savings and penalties |company counsel clauses to health legislation, on luti‘uy qualified himself as a public| return from the Senate. utility expert, licensed in the State The morning session was notabie 'of Washington as both an electrical for two speeches by Rep. Walter |and civil engineer. A graduate ot E. Huntley first against slot ma- (the University of Washington, Gray | would be appointed by the Gover- | hines and the second against li- (liied complete or partial apprais- nor with confirmation by the Legis- ' quor, {al of 55 light and power companie:, lature. Huntley sought to block the li-!for differing purposes, as a part of Most significant of three new censing of slot ‘machines, pmvm_ihb' background. In addition, he measures submitted by the Educa-|eq for in H.B. 28, declaring ,,h“:scrved for seven years as Chief En- tion and Public Health Commit-'pe had not seen enough slot ma- |gineer for the Washington State tee is H.B. 23, which would em- chines in Fairbanks, Anchorage, Public Service Commission and the power the Board of Education as|juneau or Ketchikan to w”mmiagency which preceded it. ex-officio Board of Vocational Ed-|{he fees called for in the bill and! Wide Expericnce ucation and would create the ma-|that the measure would “sell the| He has represented cities, states, chinery for a program of vocational | souls of the people” by seeming wlinduslrles. receivers, bond houses, rehabilitation in the Territory. Five |legalize the one-armed. bandit. 'F‘ederal agencies and has served on; thousand dollars is appropriated. | In “Wrong” Place ‘Invo arbitration boards. At present| Another far-reaching new mea-: Rep. Curtis Shattuck prnmptly'h" is retained by the Clark County,! sure is Senator Don Carlos Brown- | replied: “Apparently Mr. | Washington, Public Utilities Dis ell's S.B. 24, i Territorial Huntley {,,in the valuation of the hold-| s S.B. 24, creating a Territorial | nas not b p * places. | S has not been to the ‘wrong’ places S D Pasitis Power end| Loan Commissioner authorized—. There are plenty of slot machines | N8 G i vith the consent of Congress—to{in operation and I think we should |[i8ht Company and one other elic-| bond the Territory for these spec- [get all the money out of the op- ‘L.nc utility for use as evtd?nve In & ified purposes: Veterans loan and | erators that we can. A high ncense'tondemnnuon cage to be heard bonus needs, road improvement and ; fee should act as a deterrent “”se:xmbar 1‘.r 1946. N extension program, airport expan-ime purchase of slot machines. ;‘;q‘km 'y.mg h*‘v«l’lf‘-;~52 “0]1“ sion and air-navigation facilities| The bill passed, 13-10, with theine{ 5 ulkner’s qulest I;H n_! rought program, expansion of public school | emergency clause stricken. ,Oul_,r;’et n(x;tenn‘ P ;"‘5’ I facmt{es. expansion of Uni'_lersity: Huntley later urged that H.B.| & fll Tay, ldn" “Xnngt T? 1‘5,‘ facilities, construction of buildings|zg, the referendum bill on the?y:.m K‘;’E C'}“s ‘;"8!0 Ofl" 2‘;5:“ for Territorial institutions and! feasibility of Territorial control and | B i tles . ne other permanent installations of a i 3 | AL S Dien | sale of liquor, be shot to first place ‘witness said he ha voters in his own country.” The General said that Iranians Occupying the deis with Church—: W""{d '?“‘ “go out to meet the "o he 42 foreign ambassadors ‘?USMBYL" or even E“:e“ fortifica- 44 ministers to the United States| tons outside the city. land official representatives of the Iran’s intentions are only peace- United Nations organization. ful, but our national security is U. S. Unrepresented al stake,” he added. "Tehran wil n. ypited States itself, how- be defended to the last man—even .uer will not be represented offi- i boys and girls will help—if this ex- clally. Undersecretary of State | treme and unlikely measure be- pean Acheson, orginally scheduled comes necessary." SHORT SLATE FOR COUNC {to make one of the welcoming ad- | |dresses, will be unable to appear | ;because of pressure of other busi- ness, the State Department said !lut night. { And it still was not known | whether Russia would be represent- ‘ed. An invitation waa sent to An- {drei A. Gromyko, Soviet ambassa- dor. But the Russian embassy said he was not in Washington at the time and that a reply would Le made later. Facing their final regular meet- l i | ing before election, this evening at 8 c'clock, Juneau’s City Councilmen: ¥ | were unable to uncover much busi- | (Allrok“'A ness demanding their attention. At least, Mayor Parsons stated that about all he knew of in the, way of highlights for tonight's sec- | S {es made public March 4, i but Superintendent Josephat Bru- net of the Royal Canadian Mount- ed Police said at Montreal that Rose would be arraigned on charges “most definitely” connected with the espionage case. Today's Royal Commission report elaborated on the general charg- giving “spy thriller” details of operations under pseudonyms. The earlier re- port sald the military attache of the Soviet embassy had sought to {obtain secrets of the atomic bomb, radar, electronics and the where- {abouts of numerous United Statis military units. BULLETINS NEW YORK--Winston Churchill told a luncheon gathering at the Metropolitan Club today that the world must stand by the United Nations organization and “nothing must be done to mar its integrity and unity, or weaken its sovereign power.” As he earlier entered the city hall to receive the city’s gold medal and distinguished service certificate from Mayor William O'Dwyer, a police-estimated 1,000 Communists booed and hissed the Briton. WASHINGTON—The House to- day approved by voice vote exten- wgovemmemal character. Appl‘opfla'_: on the calendar. A letter signed by | | tion is $20,000. ithe Rev. Robert Treat, Methodist | dersen® introduced 8.B. 25, which |president of the Juneau Women's d never s52en A ond regular March session are: ‘ LOS ANGELES, March 15. —! | By request, Senator Andy Gun- " pastor here and Mrs. Harold Smith, | case where they were not ulveni 1—Discussion of the proposed new garthquake shocks felt over south- 50‘2":’1‘::“8?1"3’ RSt x_mm.‘b\!flding code prepared by City En- er nand central California this e fu C > gineer J. L. McNamary and a clvic morning continusd until midday and | would appropriate an additional pederation, citing the alleged evils $125,000 for Department of Public|inherent in the consumption of in- Welfare use during the Temflmdfl"toxicaung beverages was read in of this biennium. Allocation of use'gupport of Huntley’s motion. Bu of the money by the Department|tne motion failed, 12-11. jof the Federal Power Commission committee. | (much referred to' by City Utility| Engineer Walter T. Stuart in pre- |senting the case against the light icompany) are: To administer Fed-| ieral ownership in water power| 2—Action on transfer of a pair of liguor licenses. 3—Perusal of preliminary draw- ings prepared by Architects Foss and Malcolm for the projected is: Relief of Destitution, $75,000; The House received a substitute administration, 50,000. { version of S.B. 9, the Alaska World rights, license users and investigate' Ajrport Administration Building. values and rate returns in inter-| SIS SR |caused earth slides which broke the Los Angeles aqueduct in Sand Can- yon, in the Owens Valley, the City ted. | An additional heavy shock was Bureau of Water and Power report-{ gion of the second war powers act for nine months beyond its June 30 expiration date—that is, until March 31, 1947. The act gives the government its rationing, allocation and priority powers. | ATLANTIC CITY — UNRRA%S ranking officials expressed convic- tion today that the organization’s felt in Los Angeles and San Ber- nardino at 11:20 a. m. There were | relief work would have to be car- The two othér Health Commit- |war II Veterans Act, which Sncor-a_q,au, commerce. The FPC has| tee measures are* S.B. 21, appro- porates all Senate amendments, highly significant back-stage argu-| ment behind a relatively insignifi- | cant recent news item that the body of the late Turkish Ambassa- | priating $10,000 for a survey of hospital facilities in Alaska, to| be made by the Department of Health; S.B. 22, appropriating $30,- Krugness, Emil Samuelson, Nick Bavard, The Rev. and Mrs. G. H.| Hillerman, Mrs. L. M. Ritter, Jennie Larson, June and Johnny Winters, | dor, Mehmet Munir Ertegun, would be sent back to Turkey on the battleship Missouri, Real fact is that the return of the Ambassador’s body was merely incidental. He had been dead two years, had been in a sealed vauit in Arlington, and there was no rea- son his remains could not have re- mained there longer. Real reason for the return of his remains at this time was that some of President Truman’s close diplo- matic advisers had proposed send- ing a flotilla of battleships, cruisers and destroyers to Turkish waters, officially on a goodwill trip, though actually for the purpose of having American ships in the Easfern Mediterranean when Russia is ex- pected to crack down on ‘Turkey. At the rate Russian troops have been massing on the Turkish bor- der, this crackdown may come at|the Pioneers of Alaska, Igleo No. 6./ southbound late tomorrow or Sun: day. any moment. The British have sg- cretly promised the Turks to give them whatever assistance posslhle,fn Cochran, Leo W. Rogge, An- about March 20. and Truman was urged to have a healthy force of American naval vessels near Turkey as an indica- tion of ‘this country’s. interest in preventing aggression. The State Department, however, ruled against sending any large force of American vessels into the R PO S (Continued on Page Four) |Carl Swenson, Harry Sperling, Brice Mielke, Paul Byron, Nels An- gder.son, Dan Ulery, Torris Natter- istad, and Harold Swanson, and the guests of honor, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Geddes, Jr. 'LAST RITES TODAY FOR MRS. JOE GREEN The remains of the late Jose- phine Amelia Green, wife of Sena- tor Joe Green, were laid to rest this afternoon in Evergreen Ceme- tery. Attending the funeral service in a | body, the House of Representatives| adjourned until after the funeral service, and the Senate adjourned| for the afternoon. i The eulogy was spoken by the\ Rev. Dean C. E. Rice, Chaplain of| |Ernest Ehler sang at the service. | | The pallkbearers were Senators O. derw Nerland, Tolbert Scott, Allen| |Shattuck and N. R. Walker. Funeral services were from the Chapel of the Charles W. Carter Mortuary. e E. W. Donaldson of the Upjohn Company, Portland, Ore., has ar- ived in Junesu and is staying at the Baranof during his visit here. 000 into a Department of Health surplus property revolving fund for purchase and resale of surplus med- | ical supplies and equipment. Committee references directed for the six new bills are: S.B. 20, Ju- diciary; S.B. 21, Finance; S.B. 22, Finance; S.B. 23, Finance; SB. | 24, Finance; S.B. 25, Finance. —————-—— Alaska scheduled to sail from Seattle tomorrow. Tongass scheduled .to sail from Seattle tomorrow. Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver March 19, North Sea, from Sitka, scheduled southbound early tomorrow. Columbia, from west, scheduled southbound 3 p. m. tomorrow.' Baranof from the west, scheduled from the upper body. On request of Alaska Linck the House agreed to consider H. B. 39, the basic science law, and H.B. 23, which provides for a non-allopathic healers’ examining board, at 3 p.m. today when some of the Territorial doctors will ‘appear to testify on the legislation. The House members attended the funeral of Mrs. Joseph Green, de- ceased wife of Senator Green, in a body this afternoon. A recess was 1jurisdiction over a limited numier: !of public utilities—the AEL&P is' not one of them—but there has been a recent tendency on the part of Western States to adopt its ruleu.’ no immediate reports of damage. The California Institute oi' Tech- ried on beyond this year. Rep. Reece May Be | 60P Nat. Chairman, HAVANA—Author Ernest Hem- ingway and his fourth wife, Mary Welsh of Chicago, were honeymoon- ing today aboard his yacht. They nology said the 11:20 shock was not as strong as the one at 5:50 a. m, which it declared compared | which do not differ greatly from |those in general use. lgrPC azcoum-[ ‘YAEHINQTON' Mateh lb—mflu-' ling rules have nothing to do, direct- i E:n A Replublicun Ioaiatate: ware: g2 e ste reported lining up today behind | 74 hird Point |Rep. Carroll Reece of Tennessee to P o J;e“;_m P °‘G“s Company icceed Herbert Brownell, Jr., as| i dotaloni” by the 'f; : s“pfamirGOP National Committee chnlrman,i {Court. (on which the City has bas- | Teo% 58 JeaF g sosenieiye) o 106 Tegiont) ‘does 1ot sanGHION | T At FOULEN mae st t Ppos congressional distriet, reportedly has taken until 3 p.m. today. lany one formula for fixing vamcs.:“‘d he was ready to Tesign from linstead it permits wide latitude to with the disastrous Long Beach | quake of 1933 and would have been | | The bureau reported shocks were; quite destructive in a settled arca. A break in the Los Angeles Aqueduct is about 150 miles from this city. There was no threat to the Los Angeles water supply, due to large storage reservoirs below the break. still continuing at a late hour this “|Congress and take over the chair- morning, causing huge boulders to regulating bodies—if the Court does| not lke their decision, it will throw | | them out. | 4—That in his opinion, quality! Be Suppressed 1 (Throughout France 150, CCis, "B e et PARIS, March 15—The French actual original cost and deprecia-| government ordered the suppression tion, as well as many other factors of legalized prostitution throughout varying in the circumstances and| all France today. ;hm.ory back of each particular| Paris, Strasbourg and Grenoble!case, all are elements to be con-| previously had takan such action. sidered in fixing rates—not just| The French cabinet adopted a'any one of them alone. series of laws extending previous| Comparing his own valuation of! | Prostitution io manship on a full time basis if he roll down the mountainside over an were married here yesterday. SAVANNAH, Ga.—American del- cgates to the international mone- tary conference generally see small likelihood of an early entry of Rus- ¢la into the world bank and fund. WASHINGTON—Gen. George C. Marshall, President Truman's spec- ial envoy to China, returned to the capital today and was symmoned |to Brownell, who quit to return to|feet of the roof of the aqueduct{ is selected He probably Wc\lld;areu about .10 miles long. serve without pay, friends said, as; The center of the disturbance, it has Brownell. {was added, apparently was in Indian The National Committee, of which Wells valley, near the community Reece is a veteran member, meets of Inyo-Kern in the High Slerra. here April 1 to pick a successor| Ong boulder tore off about { promptly to a White House con- ference. AN A J FIRST IN SERIES OF RECITALS IS TONIGHT 12 law practice. — .ee - STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, March 15.—Closing and some five feet off the top of |the sidewall, releasing about half | A Chopin recital by the advanced |the water flow and spilling 100,000 mysic pupils of Mrs. Carol Beery {gallons a minute across the state Davis will be given tonight, start- highway. ing promptly at 7:30 o'clock in the Aleutian scheduled southbound {measures which forbade the pros- the light company as of December titution of minors as well as acult 31, 1945 — $1,418620 — with that | R g i Pr ‘wemen and ordered all houses of made by Black and Veatch for the| | quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 9%, American Can 92%, Anaconda 45%, Curtiss-Wright Some patrol roads along the aqueduct, main supply of Los An- geles’ water, were closed by huge auditorium of the Northern Light Presbyterian Church. Two recitals are scheduled for to- Miss Gronia Toughluck of Cflnl-!pms"',unon closed. X well, and Russell Johnson of Kake,! A communique said no date had! fox ; » | 9%, International Harvester 86%, Clty, Gray declared that, x’"::ice‘xennecou 52, New York Central neither had previously seen boulders or sections slippped down morrow, the beginners at 2 c'clock the mountain, the bureau said. jn the afternoon, and the inter- Holes were knocked in the roof of mediates at 8 o'clock in the eve- were admitted yesterday to the been et for closing houses of pros- other’s report, he would have ex-| 28%, Northern Pacific 29%, United Corporation 5%, U. S. Stee] 81%, the aqueduct at several points. | e ning. A vesper organ recital at Government Hospital for medical |titution in Paris. Ipected a greater difference than is care. shown when both are reduced to Pound $4.03%. |4 o'clock Sunday aftornoon will St AR FROM LOS ANGELES (o same basis. The big difference Anna Lorraine Wallace was today _ Mrs. 8. Taylor and Mrs. R.'jg giq j5 i v’nlunlon“&‘:! the Gold discharged from the Government Schultz of Los Angeles, Calif., are ___ i Hospital, . guests at the Baranof. (Continued on Page Two) _4 follows: Sales today were 1,060,000 shares. COTTEN FROM SEATTLE Dow, Jones averages today are as Samuel L. Cotten, of Seattle, is industrials 191.66, rails stopping at the Baranof Hotel dur- 62.19, utilities 40.05. ing his stay here. close the series. The public is cordially invi‘ed to attend these recitals, all of wiich are at the N. L. Church.