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PAGE TWO THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA LONGSHORE Reds Tighten POLAND OKS |rr STOPPAGE, KETCHIKAN About Domain laska, June 25 work stop {AN, A remen y, with wat H i nani H “nothing unusual” in Gruening ac- Uie ter mave, SUpPression in Rumania ~ Atomic Energy Com. i nothine unusual” in Gruening ac- | icial word on| : P e Yo e ot Despite Potsdam Pact Supports Gromyko . |ton and added: it S e 18 The ateathel o i “Neither the Governcr nor any r Northern Voyager arrived yester-| WASHINGTON, June 25.—Acting] NEW YORK, June 25—Poland to- 01 the Alaskans on the trip were .y and is layi anchor in' mid- |Secretary of State Acheson said|day endorsed the Soviet Russian DrOMOHng the inferest of any air- 3 oA v 4 line. They came here asking for nnel {today that Russia has flatly reject- plan for outlawing atomic warfare. "0C . b CIO dockworkers stopped work strong United States protest! Dr. Osdar Lange, Polish delegate Cc'iification of & route from Alas- use they aran't being against suppression of news free-|to the United Nations atomic en- K t0 the midwest to be flown by er wage boost in Rumania, and has forced ergy commission, sald his govern- &7 Alaskan “"“‘;"‘ e Y 15 strike 'Reuben Mar 2 of the Christian ment gave full support to (ve pro- \mmaterial to them what company But the|Science Monitor to leave that coun-|posal made last week by Andrei A,|WOUd oOperate the route. Y mployers, Pres- try Gromyko, of Russia. | Blames Politics nt J. A. Talbot of the Alaska| Acheson told a news conference| It provided for a “draft conven- _Willlam D. Baker, publisher of portation Company s the the ed States had registered tion airing at the immediate out- the Ketchikan, Alaska Chronicle t the incres ter Administration ' Max the will Wi dvises oper ors of boost - ROTARY (LUB HAS been twrned down in both | places. Word had just been received from pou(v Dls(uss,o.g he Soviet Ministry of Foreign Af- ; “Alaska has mo vote in Congr 49 fairs, he said, contending that the Lange saidtheRussian plan con- and no politicians to represent us by Ameti argument furnished no tains “all the basis ideas” brought here” Baker told a reporter. “If Teday’s lunche heeting of the foundation for rescinding the So-|forward by Poland at the January we can’t charter a plane and come neai: Botary © was devoted viet action against the American meeting of the U. N. General As- here to tell the government offi- discussion of organizational poli- pressman, sembly in London. cials and the people what we want regarding membership The Kremlin takes this view, Poland’s position was made known we would be in a fine fix. W2 elassifications | Acheson said, despite the fact that @fter Alexandre Parodi of France would have no representation at AOLON W ken on any mat- the American government considers fold the coinmission his government all. I talked with Senator Mag- it 4 i s such as sol- suppression of news freedom in @pproved “in principle” the United nuson (D-Wash) and he said he| Rcta mbership from Rumania a violation of the Pots- States plan for atomic control and had no objection to Alaska having ial ¥ ol groups was dam agreement made a year ago for outlawing the atom bomb. a direct air line to the midwest.” mundly discussed 7 by Premier Stalin, President Tru- . - Piriadh ntative man and Prime Minister Attlee. | U. 8. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU { rea spoke Acheson said the Christian, JUNEAU, ALASKA Luiefly on hi as it pertains Science Monitor has advised the WEATHER BULLETIN urveyin wal needs in State Department that Markham DATA FOR 24 HOURS ENDED AT 4:30 A. M., 120TH MERIDIAN TIME Kk left Rumania June 22, and is now| Max. temp. | TODAY Seated the head table were in Athens. Col. General Susmkqv. . last | Lowest 4:30a.m. 24 hrs. ‘Weather at | ncmbers of the new Executive ' Soviet military authority Station 24 hrs.* temp. temp. Precip. 4:30 am. Board now takinz over Rotary ad- i Bucharest, had ordered him out| Anchorage 63 42 42 [} Pt. Cloudy tive proble for the com- &t-the latest by today. Barrow 40 33 33 0 Pt. Cloudy shar THey st P00 N Benecke Markham had written stories on Bethel 44 44 0 Cloudy Ed Keithahn, Ja conditiol in Russian-occupied | Cordova < 62 40 40 Trace Pt. Cloudy Dr. Willjam Commur dominated Rumania to pawson 70 | 51 51 0 Pt. Tloudy y " Rivers, also a Which the Russians objected Bdmonton 53 | 43 AL Drizzle-Fog b the board: was- not. pre- g JedE i U e Fairbanks | Brn. e 47 02 Pt. Cloudy ¢ & ‘Haines A 54 54 0 Pt. Cloudy e (OURTCONVENES; o=, E £ & 1= 3 ‘Jlll'lull Airport 70 48 51 Trace Cloudy COASTM. MR”HH Bu‘l’ BUS'NESS IS Ketchikan 56 52 52 05 Fog = [ | Kotzebue 42 09 0" HOPS YESIERDAV, McGrath | 62 44 44 Trace Pt. Cloudy " DUT OVER TODAY Yos: g TR Northway 67 48 51 0 Pt. Cloudy Alaska Ccastal Afrlines flew the | ; $ifet LT Petersburg 51 51 0 Cloudy fellowing passengers yesterday: to; Confinement of Judge George F. portiand 66 52 52 1 Pt., Cloudy usequah, B. C., J. P. Hara, Mrs,' Alexander, who entered St. Ann’s| prince George | 40 43 21 Cloudy A. Dahl, S. Dahl, Martin Dahl, | Hospital here this week following Pprince Rupert 60 0 Lane Dahl; to Sitka, P. .pernil- | Nis arrival from Ketchikan will \gan Francisco 47 Clear la, M. Hern, S. Qu G. T { delay the handling of business by seattle 48 48 44 A. Larson, Mrs. T. Decker,|the U. S. District Court which was sjtka 51 52 0 Pt. Cloudy tit {to re-convene here this afternoon Whitehorse 7 4% 54 02 Rain Hoonah, Ron Livingstone, | @t 2 o'clock. | Yakutat 58 48 49 Trace Drizzle’ Dyer, H. V. Davis, T. Cald-| The Judge is expected to be able | —(4:30 a. m. yesterday to 4:30 a. m. today) 1 Oliver Anderson; to Polaris, 0 take the bench later this week. WEATHER SYNOPSIS: The ridge of high pressure continues from Maloff, E. Schombel, Ann I the meantime, the Court will a high center located south of Kodiak Island, latitude 35 degrees, north- Schombel, B. Schombel; from Ex- i be called to order and adjourned ward cver western Alaska. A trough of low pressure extends along the cursion Inlet, James Williams, R ydaily by Clerk John Walmer. southern border of Canada over the great plains northeastward to | Williams, Florence Martin, M - northern British Columbia and southern Yukon Territory. Rain has FROM KETCHIKAN fallen during the past 24 hours along the border of the United States Johnson; to Ketchikan, A. Halko,! R. Phillips, H. Anderson. 1 - 0'CONNOR GETS NOMINATION AS SEN. IN MARYLAND —fe | (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) | Herbert R. O'Connor, 49-,\&“‘-] old two-term governor, upset Sen- ator George L. Radcliffe, 69-year- | old Balitmore business man, for the | Democratics . Senatorial - nomination in Maryland on the basis of late unofticial returns from yesterday's ikan, are at the Baranof, primary. Rad is third pre-elec- tion casualty. nator Charles G.| Gossett (D-Idaho) lost a primary fight recently and Senator Ray mond E. Willis (R-Ind) withdrew in the face of expected cefeat in| a party convention. I William Preston Lane, Jr., Hag- erctown publisher, won the Demo-' cratic Maryland state will nomination for governor of over J. Millard Tawes, organization candidate. H be opposed in November by r Thecdore R. McKeldin of Baltimore, who won the GOP nom- ination over Herman L. Mills. Lane, former State Attorney General, is Maryland's Democratic National | Committeeman ! D. John Markey, a former Brig- rdier General, won the Republican Benatorial nomination and will op- pose Governor O’'Connor in Novem- ber. Meanwhile, in North Dakota, two more Senate seats were at #take in voting today and in In- diana the Democratic state con- vention choose former Governor M Clifford Townsend for the place be- ing vacated by retiring Republican patiently. this year. Semator Raymond E. Willis In- . diana R 2 have ady chosen W n E. Jenner -eo — MRS. AUGUST AALTO. FUNERAL TOMORROW Funeral services for Mrs. z\u':u&!' Aalto, Douglas pioneer who died yesterday, will be held at 2 pm tomorrow in the Charles W. Carter Mortuary Chapel. ! The Rev. Herbert Hillerman will | officiate at the last rites which will| be followed by interment JOOF pilot in the Douglas Cem- | the { ry. { Ernest Ehlers will sing during| the services. | of part mediate destruction weapons in whatever world they may all Iron Curfain” RUSS. PLAN . Soviet Insists on News Polish De@te fo UN Sen. Mitchell Seeks Flight FOR A-BOMB Investigafion {Continue¢ jrom Page One) its objections to the treatment of lawing of the ‘production, keeping blamed “Washington state politic- am in both Moscow and Bu-'and use of weapons based upon 1ans A p t a month ago and that it atomic energy’ and also for' the im- ka's efforts to get permission for for attempting to block Alas- such an Alaskan airline to fly the route the to the midwest, which would give of Alaskans quicker access to the ¢ 'BRANT IN PORT " WITH BIG LIST OF PASSENGERS Well loaded with passengers for Juneau from the States, the MS Brant, flagship of the Fish and wildlife fleet, docked here this morning. Captained by Jim Collins, the Brant left Seattle last week | and called at Ketchikan and Craig | enroute. | Juneau passengers aboard the! Brant were: George O. Black, Ho-| mer J. Campbell, Ernest A. Gates,| Mrs. Douglas Gray and two child-| | ren, Mrs. May Johnson, Miss Mary | Lee Council, Miss Doris Bartlett, Miss Mary Sperling, Miss Shirley Kleweno, Mrs. Robert Bonner Jr., and Miss Roberta Pauline Bonner. Mr. Black is enroute to Cook In- let and his summer post as Dis-! trict Fisheries Agent. Campbell and Gates will assist Fisheries Agent George Bates Cordova. at Mrs. Gray is the wife of Aleu-i tian Refuge Manager Douglas' Gray and will visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Felix Gray, at Doug-| las. Mrs. Johnson is her sister. |died of head | Seven others died previously. The “misses” aboard are well- known Juneau girls: Miss Council | is secretary to Alaska’s Delegate' in Congress, E. L. Bartlett. Miss| ' Bartlett is the Delegate’s daugh- ter. Miss Sperling is returning to' spend the summer with her par-‘ ents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sperling. She is a student at the University of Minnesota. | Mrs. Bonner and her daughter Roberta are the daughter and granddaughter of August Aalto of Douglas and will visit at the Aalto { home. Mrs. Aalto died yesterday. | B | ® 600 00 e - 0w WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. WEATHEK BUREAU) o Temperatures for 24-Hour Perfod ® | Ending 6:30 o'Clock This Morning @ | e o o In Juneau—Maximum, 68; minimum, 51. At Airport—Maximum, 70; minimum, 48 WEATHER FORECAST (Juneau and Vielnity) cloudiness with Warmer Variable some showers. . . @ . . . . ° . . . . - ° . . o Wednesday. . . e e 000000000 Princess Louise scheduled tb sail from Vancouver 9 p.m. tomorrow. | Freighter Clovehitch scheduled tto sail from Seattle Saturday. 1 Princess Norah scheduled to sail | from Vancouver 9 p.m. Saturday. Alaska, from west, due probably | tomorrow. No definite word at 3 pm. R FROM ANCHORAGE Earl Cooper has arrived here Mr. and Mrs. L. Bates of Ketch-|and Canada and from the Dakotas to the Pacific Coast and at scattered | from Anchorage. He is staying at | points over western Canada, Southeast Alaska and western Ala: ! the Baranof. aiting is tough on us, too | In the meantime . . . Our friends have kept calling us up and asking, “Hey! Where's that new Packard I ordered weeks ago?” Many of these are old friends— Packard owners since 'way back. JUNEAU " Junean, Alaska For months we've been hoping to present each and every one of you with the new Packards you've ordered, and have been waiting for so Last fall, the outlook was good. Packard was confident it would double its pre-war output in 1946. (The factory is equipped to turn out far more than that.) Look what has happened! Then came material shortages. Parts shortages. For reasons completely beyond its own control, Packard was able to keep its assembly line moving only nine days in the first quarter of T But to make life more complicated, every- body seems to want one of these grand new Packards. Over 65% of the people out to buy new Packards are now driving some other make. Honest, it's gotten so we hate to answer the telephone or look our friends in the face. But... really Anyway, you can depend on this: As fast as the factory ships cars to us, we'll do “everything we can to deliver yours at the earliest possible moment. So, we hope you'll be patient a little longer. We're doing the best we can, and so are the folks at the factory! 8N Your patience will pay off! One of these days, the shortage of parts an!:l materials is bound to ease up. And when it does, those twin-assembly lines at Packard will roll. ASK THE MAN WHO OWNS ONE OTOR CO. NINE OTHERS ARE INJURED IN ACCIDENT rcontinued from Page One) list in the flaming wreck of a chartered bus reached eight today as one man died in a hospital ! hours after the bus carrying Spn- kane’'s Western International League baseball team plunged down a mountainside high in the Cns-l cades. | George Lyden of Tensed, Ida., a| pitcher, was the eighth ‘Victim. injuries and burns The two survivors said an dentified “wrong side” driver caused their bus to leave the Snoqualmie highway and| plunge down the rocky hill. ! “I saw the headlights coming toward us on the wrong side of | the road,” Levi McCormack, 33-/ year-cld Spokane outfielder, mld; newsmen at Harborview County! Hospital. “The road was slippery, our driver applied his brakes. He swerved across the road into the guardrail. We went through. We went down. I've never heard such hell. T don’t know why we didn't smash the other driver. It might have been better.” uni- automobile WSCS IS TO MEET ‘ TOMORROW. EVENING The Evenihig Circle of the Wo-! men’s Society of Christian Service of the Methodist Church will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the home of Mrs. Olaf Westhy on Beh- rends Avenue in the Waynor Tract. The study project on Africa will be continued. Mrs. Jane McMul- lin is devoticnal chairman for the draft He | Snyder Is Secrefary Treasury Takes Oath—at_(leremony'—* Truman Shakes Hands with Hundreds WASHINGTON, June 25.—John W. Snyder was sworh in today as the 53rd Secretary of the Treasury. He tcok the h of, office in the sence of President Truman, who mained to shake hands with the hundreds who attended the cere- mony. Th: oath was administered by Snyder’s predecessor in the Secre- taryship, Fred M. Vinson, who be- came Chief Justice of the United States only 24 hours earlier. Old Washingtonians could recall no precedent for the general public joining in a Presidential hand-shak- ing at such an event. Mr. Truman walked over from the White House to witness the office-taking of his long-time friend from Missouri. Snyder, a former St. Louis bank- er who passed his 50th birthday last Friday declared that “I shall besi, and it is my fervent hat I shall be equal to the hope la % DRAFT ACT PASSED BY HOUSE; RAISES SERVICEMEN PAY WASHINGTON, Jurz werd “from the army that nokody in July and August, 25.—With evening. the House today passed final bills i - e ST 5 continuing the Draft Act and rais- T. 0. HAN HERE ing the pay of servicemen. T. O. Hansen is in town from 'Tho draft extender, replacing a Petersburg. He is registered at the stopgap act xpiring at midnight Baranof. ning times. the vacationist. 4040 or Sunday, permits the induction of THE SEASONED TRAVELER Goes by Train With faster Union Pacific trains now operating . .. with long-deferred business, family and pleasure trips to make ... withall America to see. . . with ample space available —why put off travel? Fast, comfortable Union Pacific trains will take you wherever you want to go-—NOW’!. Recent schedule changes of Streamliners and steam- powered trains eastbound, westbound and locally have cut several hours—in many cases— from previous run- These changes, which became effective on June 2, work to the definite advantage of the busjness traveler and For complete information, inquire ... A.L.IVES, G. A.P. D. 1300 Fourth Avenue Seattle 1, Washington be Spec'ilfic - s YNION PACIFIC RRILROAD e awo rue it will | Union TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 1946 19-year-olds, but drafting of 18-year-olds. compulsory service of inductees to 18 months, prohibits the drafting prohibits the It limits of fathers, fixes the size of the armed forces and requires the dis- charge, at their request, of fathers in service on August 1 of this year. ‘The pay raises range from 50 percent for buck privates and ap- prentice seamen ‘0 10 percent for five-star gencrals and admirals. Both measures were sent to the Senate, where similar speedy ac- tion is expected, dispatching them to President Truman for signing. - e ‘ BIOLOGIST ARRIVES Assigned to the Regional Fish and Wildlife office here for the summer season—to collect and cor- |relate data on the trap catch of pink salmon in Southeast Alaska— ! Rchert Hacker, of the Division of Fishery Biology lab staff at Se- jattle, arrived here yesterday by PAA plane. He is residing here at the Hotel Juneau, with Juneau Dis- | trict Fishery Agent H. Clay Scud- | der. —————— LICENSE TO WED A wedding license has been issu- ed here by U. S. Commissioner Fe- jlix Gray to Patrick D. Robinson and Fayma O. Baker, both of Ju- | neau. The license was posted to the couple at Bristol Bay. > WORKERS GO TC TAKU The Libby, McNeill and Libby cannery tender Fairweather left |today for the Taku Inlet cannery, ; with approximately 20 workers and their families. e s A T. 0. GIVAN HERE { T. O. Givan of Seward has arriv- ed here. He is staying at the Bar- { anof "during his visit. S Pl JACK LIKNESS ARRIVES Jack Likness arrived in Juneau | yesterday and is a guest at the Baranof. e SR HANS FLOE ARRIVES Hans Floe of Hawk Inlet, is in ,town. He is a guest at the Bar- anof. — i The ancient Etruscans invented dental restoration and false teeth | by fitting artificial teeth in bronze bands or “bridges.” ?nnfic’