The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 28, 1946, Page 1

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A “ALL THE NEWS VGL. LXVIL, NO. 10,309 SKYWAR SEER EXPECTS ATOM TEST TO FLOP De Severslfiut "Under Blanket' Before Full Bikini Opinion Told BES Tl Ky SENATE CONTINUES DEBA Accident in Afomic PlantCausing Death O WILL DROP ATOMBOMB ALL THE TIME” THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE DAY, JUNE 28, 1946 " MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRI SEAMEN'S - SCHEDULE PROPOSED .Man E;_qlaineds | LOS ALAMOS, N. M. June 28.— “‘It was like you were standing |near an arc welder when he struck | the arc.” ‘ Thus did the army today describe the atomic chain reaction set up |1ast May 21 when Dr. Louis B. Slot- | | WMC at Seattle Drafts New Convention = iWage, Hour Committee of | ANCHORAGE AIR | | MISSION FEELS | ENDS ACHIEVED 1 rect Mid-West Air- way by Flight | Reccgnition gained for and inter- | est focussed upon the “inland” air| route direct to Alaska from the| | Attention Centered on Di- | \ TING OPA BILL PRICE RAISE HOT ACTION FORCANNED | KEEPING UP SALMONSET' ON MEASURE Ten Per Cent Hike Approv- President Told fo Sign It ed to Cover Increased When Passed as Best Costs and Taxes “"We Can Get” 9,800 ARMY WAR LEADERS UP FOR PERMANENT RANK Doubled Officer Corps Ask- | ed by Eisenhower Gefs | Committee OK | dent Truman has nominated 9,800 “top cream” veterans of World War | [ | | Mid-West a result of the pio-|II as permanent officers in the re-| — | SEATTLE, June 28.—The wage|neering charter flight sponsored| gular ‘army. WASHINGTON, June 28—OPA KWAJALEIN, June 28--Maj. tin, 35, Winnipeg, Oanada, was { e W 3 . WASHINGTON, June 28.—Sena- Alexander de Seversky, smunch‘ |burned fatally during an experi- and hour committee of the World by the Anchorage Chamber of| They were selected by the War today boosted price ceilings Ollitors pressed u price-raising OPA apostle of air power, predicted to- day that if the atomic bomb ex-| plodes “exactly as planned the dam- ON SUNDAY | oratory. |work early this morning on an The report also disclosed that the | international convention calling for |ment at the Los Alamos atomic lab- | Maritime Conference finished its| age will be very slight and dis- appeinting.” | “I don’t think much of the atom| ] test,” the outspcken Major declared.| Here is program for Sunday's He has said before he thinks the historic atom bomb drop: destructiveness of the tomic bomb| The time — (depending on the has been overdrawn. |weather) 9:30 a.m., Monday, July De Seversky made his comment 1, Bikini time (5:30 p.m., Sunday, (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) | ! accident that cost the life of an- & minimum wage of $64 a month| {for seamen, an eight-hour day on; other scientist, Harry K. Daglian, 24, New London, Conn., in Septem- ber, was “almost identical.” In both cases equipment slipped, allowing fissionable materials of the type used in atom bombs to come together swiftly instead of un-| glcrm of the eight-hour day on near- |trace ships. | |tee got through its final meeting distant trade ships and a modified In contrast to their previous| night’s heated session, the commit- Commerce is expected, by Alaska’s Goverfior, to exert a definite in- fluencé on determinations reached| in the North Pacific air routes case, 1‘or;bm toward final passage today Department from an original list,‘cunned salmon by 10 percent i and advised President Trumar to of 108,000 applicants, all of whom consumers, canners and wholesalers. held temporary commissions in the| The jump at retail will amount wartime citizen army. (to a rise of two to three cents he sald here today. | The nominations, which went to!for a one-pound can of pink salmon The Governor accompanied the the Senate for confirmation, will|and four to five cents for Alaska Anghdfage group on the promo-|bring the cfficer corps of the re-|red salmon, OPA said. tional® flight and, while personal|gular army to its authorized! It stems from a 10 percent in- criticism ensued for him from strength of 25,000. i(‘l'exxsc in canners’ »prhvs for all Washington State Senator Mitchell, |canned salmon, designed to cover he is Confident the Interest of the A Senate Military subcommittee wage and operating costs as well as take it "‘Thls is the best bill we can get out of Congress now and it is either take that or nothing,” Democratic {Leader Barkley (Ky) said he told {the President. “Even if it had Inothing in it but rent controls, it would be worth signing.” Barkley and other Congressional as he arrived with a group of Eastern Standard Time) Bar contoab Be PRACI e s ! wi;h :ut a few bralel skirmishes | ;erritory has been well served byl:::l:::dx 53%33“2?3-r d:;\brli‘:: Gt::]s ’,{TZLS‘“ levied by the Territory of jeaders visited the White House scientists and congressmen to ob-| The place—The Marshall Island 1" yany times at the laboratory. | adjourned at 1:30 a. m. the. telp. He indicated that, s & 0o 50 0 L A that! . during . the forencon to urge Mr. serve the Bikini test seheduled for!Atoll of Bikini, 2,300 miles west of Seven others working with Slot-| ‘The draft of the proposed con-| result’ of the cross-Canada excur- The increase will be felt at re-| (Truman to sign the measure. They ay (Sunday, U. S. time). |Hcnolulu; 2,600 miles southeast of vored, Dag. | VeNtion was sent to the conference|gon full review will be given the|'Ne - additional officers may be tail when the new pack, carrying reported, however, that the Presi- Mgl‘:dd{d not hn:’e a chance to elab- | Tokyo. ]?n“‘fgz b:;:\:g"gm“:l;:;‘? afea: Pag |drafting committee for Drepam‘;norlhgln route recommended by‘ needed for the next 25 or 30 years. the f\lgher cannery prices, renches]dem gave no sign of his lnwn!l::a. orate before he was hurriedly es-| The scene—Bikini Lagoon, about |tion for submission late today 1O the @ivil Aeronautics Board ex-| The War Departmens satd it em- the stores. Present stocks of can-, wne pijl requires thousands of corted to an automobile by Brig./10 miles wide by 25 miles long, De eription of Accident the full conference session for i1s|amindes. Whether the CAB will Ployed a new screening process in ned salmon are ot changed In price ceilings to be revised to cover Gen. Roger R. Ramey, Commander formed by the low islands making The army gave this description|action. | then gecide in favor of the inland!the selections designed to find “the Price. lcost increases, bars interference of the 20th Bomber Command, ana Brig. Gen. Thomas Powers, Assist- up Bikini Atoll. The target—fifty warships, in- ant Commander of the Army’s atomic test operations. Ramey and Powers grasped de| Seversky by each arm and virtually whisked him into the nucomoblle‘fcnmss flying six miles up. away from reporters. The purse—(as announced by the It was the second eyebrow raiser Navy) “primarily to determine the for the reporters during the day. effects of the atomic bomb upon Earlier, Maj. Gen. Anthony Me- naval vessels in order to gain in- cluding two old U. S. battleships and two old aircraft carriers. The weapon—the nuclear fission bomb, to be dropped by a Super- of the accident: | “An accident piee of equipment slipped. brought the material swiftly to-| gether beyond the critical point. This resulted in a tremendous en-| ergy released within millionths of a second, which was evidenced to the| persons present through a sensa-| tion of heat and visual perception of a blue glow around the material.| The convention is the last of occurred when a eight upon which committee work| This|has been completed. TWO COMVER- |y, gaig: byt the Governor seemed tions have already been approved by the conference, one regarding! food and catering aboard ship and| the other on the certification of! ship’s cooks. | Five others await final confer-| ence action. | Among resolutions adopted by the| route or will certify a North Pacmcl carrier cut of Seattle can not now fairly sure “we’ll get the northern/ route.” ! The_ Governor, the 20 Anchorage- | ites abd Ketchikan Publisher Wil- liam L. Baker, who were on the| trafl-Blazing circuit to Edmonton,| Fargoy Chicago, Washington, D. C,,| Minneapolis-St. Paul, Great Falls best leaders in the world today.” Voluntary withdrawals and fail-| Set To Cut Operations If the industry had been held to the old prices, OPA with dealers’ normal profit mar- ,8ins, limits food subsidies, sets up ure to pass rigid physical exam- explained, inations trimmed the original ap- plicant list from 108,000 to 81,000, the Department said. |cannery companies were preparing to cut down operations to guard against possible losses and thus * Those who failed to make the 9uce the flow of salmon to market.” grade in today's list will have nn<i The increases apply to canned other opportunity if Congress fol«‘“’mon produced in the Pacific lows the recommendation of Eis _|Coast States as well as Alaska. The hower and the Senate mbc::‘_‘Weat Coast last vear contributed a board to remove controls from certain items, and eliminates a iregulanon compelling clothing man- iufacturers to turn out a percen- |tage of low-price garments. { Much of the OPA’s ' authority over food prices is shifted to the agriculture department. The price control law itself is extended for a * “In the words of one of the plenary session yesterday was one men present, ‘It was like you were asking the International Labor Of standing near an arc welder when fice to study the posibility of it _about 10 percent of the-total pack i |and the new action preserves ine changed. price relationship between their out-| 1 ast-ditch arguments by Senators Auliffe, army ground forces Iepre- formation of value to the national sentative, said he believed this fi"“detense;" “secondary purposes are atomic bomb test would be the last|{, afford training for Army air ° and here, arrived at Juneau airport | full year and rent controls are un- ¢ in their chartered Alaska Airlines| planes shortly past 5 o'clock last 3 if "an international agreemcnt 1O yvrees personnel in attack with the limit atomic purposes was reached. The General added that he though such an agreement would be signed. been scheduled shortly after the mid-air bombing with a third deep water experiment early next year. e ————. e ———— SPANISH SUB IS SUNK, COLLISION; 46 MEN ARE LOST MADRID, June 28.—The Spanish energy o peaceful ‘atomic bemb upon military instal- {lations and equipment.” | e .———— | | et ooty st the SPY DEFENSE SAYS siue " ENGINEER'S DATA | | WAS OPEN SECRET g SEATTLE, June 28.—The defense fired its heaviest broadsides today |in an effort to show that “confi- | dential” data marine engineer Her-| | bert Kennedy testified he sold to |Russian Navy Lt. Nicolai G. Redin he struck the arc. | “The blue glow resulted from’the| .icnization of air particles by radia- | ternational seafarer’s charter. tion emanating from the fissionable | material. There was no explosion| in the sense that there were no me-, chanical effects, no debris, no| In Flash Time . “In the millionths of a second| in which this occurred, the im-| mediate area and all in it were bombarded by intense high energy gama rays and netrons of all| energies — fast, intermediate and| slow. There were no Beta and nol Alpha rediation . . . “Dr. Slotin, at the instant of the mishap, knocked the equipment apart, thus halting the intensify- creating an intermational fisher- ’ . i _Mvcmm. The air voyagers were en- Peis ojaipe. sibiar lo the tin | tertained ‘here last night at the | Governor’s House. While the Governor is remaining | at his desk here, the plane party was to take off for the home port, | Anchorage, at 3 o'clock this after- noon. A request from Fairbanks | that the plane call.there had to be| | igncred because of welcoming home | TAXES FOR TAXEDROP 71y Has e, — imoved a step near a peacetime tax | submarine C4 sank yesterday near was freely obtainable, visually in the Balearic Islands with the 10ss| geattle's harbor or in papers, books of 46 men after being struck by ang magazines sold on newsstands the destroyer Lepanto, the Navy ever since V-J day. | announced today. The 30-year-old Lieutenant is on The accident occurred during tria) under two indictments charg- | maneuvers of the second destroyer | squadron and submarine flotilla.| The submarine sank almost immed- iately with all aboard. The 1,536 ton Lepanto was dam- aged but reached Puerto De Soller on the west coast of Mallorca Is- lands without loss of life. he Washington erry - Go- Round By DRE@ARSON WASHINGTON—Civilian Produc- ifon Administrator Jack Small, worried over race-track construc- fion: while veterans are denied homes, has now sent out orders to his branch offices to spur veterans’ aousing -Some of these problems were dis- cussed with Small at a recent clos- cé door meeting with representa- tives of the major veterans' groups, when Wesley Pearce of the Veter- ans of Foreign Wars broached the subject of the new race track in Monmouth County, N. J., which is being built with CPA okay. * “Now, wait a‘minute,” interrupt- ed Small. “That particular race track was started before .we had/ established emve building con- ing espionage and conspiracy in| connection with details of the U. {S. Navy's new type destroyer tend-| er, the USS Yellowstone, built in a Seattle shipyard where the 69-year- jold British subject, Kennedy, was | test engineer. ; Cross-examination by defense at- torney Tracy Griffin today gave Kennedy -his first opportunity to get to the jury his own feelings in regard to the part he has played in' the case against his erstwhile friend. He denied that, after he had contacted the Federal Bureau of Investigation regarding din’s purported money offers for specific data on the Yellowstone, he acted as an agent provocateur. BILLION 'SAVED" 10 TREASURY AT FISCAL YEAR-END WASHINGTON, June 28.—Pros- pects appeared good today for the Government to finish out its fiscal years Sunday more than $1,000,000,- {000 better off than President Tru- man forecust in April. But th: 12-month deficit. still |tion were apparent. ing radiation and averting serious consequences, possibly death to his| companions. He was grasping part| of the equipment with his left hand! at the time of the accident.” | The report told of immediate re-| moval to the Los Alamos hospital| of the eight men, and the wait of | several days before effects of radia-; Slotin died| in nine days. | “The medical men began to trent‘ the accident victims as soon as they were admitted to the hospital,” the report said. “This treatment,| in general, consisted of many trans-, fusions of whole blood and plasma and fluids, principally glucose and suline.” Y COASTAL AIRLINES MAKES DAILY HOPS Alaska Coastal Airlines flew the following yesterday to Petersburg, H. Adseno; to Sitka, D. H.Bennett, E. Engstrom, Mr. and Mrs. P. Mor- gan, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Bates; from Sitka, M. L. Brown; to Ex- cursion Inlet, R. Willlams, J. Wil- liams, Florence Martin, M. John- son, Mrs. F. Williard; to Hoonah, R. S. Schoppert, Alice White, M.| Douglas, Mrs. H. Douglas, J. Huil- man; from Hoonah, R. Hayes; to Pelican, Mrs. A. Lambert, D. Un- derhill; from Lake Hasselborg, Ed Browne, D. Sasseen, R. B. Brown, R. A. Henning, Tony Joly. ——— structure tcday with a new budgef | reducing personal income, corpor-| ation and excess profits taxes ef- fective the first of the year. | ‘The business world, although get- | ting the reduction in the excess| profits®levy, was disappointed in not having this wartime measure abolished altogether, as it has been | in the United States and Brnain.‘ Income laxes for most persons| will be cut from 10 to 15 percent| low income brackets—approximate- | ly one-fourth of all those now pay-| ing taxes—will be freed of the Br- | den they began bearing during the war. This will be done by raising the} exemption level for single persons from $660 to $750 and for married| 'persons without dependents from| $1200 to $1500. In the United! States single taxpayers begin pay-| ing on $500 income, in Britain on $490, and in Australia and New| Zealand on $700. | Flat rate, taxes on corporate in-| comes are to be reduced from 40 to 30 percent, and the excess pro- fits tax is cut from 20 to 15 per- cent, with sole proprietors and| partnership exempt. Sweel ‘ And Hot! Too, Too Hot! ‘ | The Juneau Volunteer Fire De-| partment made a “sweet” early| morning run today. and between 550,000 and 600,000 in| - | Italians voted also on June 2 to (By The Associated Press) | OTTAWA, = June 28. — Canada| pRESIDENT. | I Veteran Statesman Enrico:‘ de Nicola Accepfable | as Compromise ROME, June Zo—znrico De Ni- cola, veteran Neapolitan statesman, was elected provisional president of ‘ the new Italian Republic today by; the Constituent Assembly. He re-| ceived 398 of the 504 votes cast. De Nicola, 68, was assured elec- tion earlier when the Christian Democrats, Socialists and Com- munists agreed that he was ac-| ceptable as a compromise. When the President arrives in| Rome tomorrow Premier Alcide De Gasperi’s sixty party coalition will resign. Because of the strong showing of De Gasperi’s Christian Democrats in the June 2 Assembly elections, De Nicola is expected to ask him to| form another government. The depose King Umberto II and the Rcyal House of Savoy and estab- lish a Republic. BARED VICTORY DETROIT, June 28. — Property Gamage estimated in hundreds of thousands of dollars was left today al Sen 3 v | chinook salmon (other = than troll-* o agh Sheoiey WU Bi TWISIER- (caught) sold for canning on the 'l ;West Coast in spring and sum"-)nukky early this morning at the of fresh salmon results from the | The incresase are designed toj that averaged from 1936 through| FOR M-l'flmopi in the destructive wake of a short- lived but vicious tornado that tore ready incurred, OPA said that the! ———a-— y yput and that of Alaska. ‘who fi : | Stmultancously, ‘OPA boosted BY an permittil '“,\%my,,‘u%,‘;,'";:?w [two cents a pound the fishermen's ' ;¢ midnight Sunday ¥ limited to one hour, however, as a i Not For Fresh Fish end of an eight-hour filibuster by o/ SHORI llvED‘lfl“" action, which applies from !provide the industry with a per- i PEACE DECISION into Detroit yesterday afternoon. new price scale takes into account! by prices for sockeye, steelhead and g o 1ol result of an agreement obtained by No increase in the retail prices ‘Senator O'Danie) (D-"Zexas). e s are U, 5. WILL PRESS " s 4 centage of profit equivalent to In addition to labor costs, al- The twister, second in the area jncreased Territorial taxes on fish- in little over a week, swept across ing traps and a levy to be made' the Canadian border from Windsor, this year of 10 cents per case on all leaped the Detroit river and hit 2 king and red salmon, and four northwest industrial section about cents a case on other species. In a mile from downtown at 3:37 pAm‘nddMon a tax of one-half of one In the three minutes it lasted, percent also is being levied against PARIS, June 28-—Secretary of State Byrnes has served notice on !the Foreign Ministers Council that {he intends to press for a decision on the calling of a general Europ- iean peace conference, an Ameri- {can informant said. land bruises. The tornado was far ized in Washington, D. C. today,| { twister, which claimed 17 lives and | yesterday. the tornado ripped roofs off more the market value of the total Alas- than a score of buildings and piled ka pack for the year. automobiles like kindling in a mile-| TOO LITTLE - TOO LATE long area. | SEATTLE, June 28—P. E. Har- There were no fatalities, although ris, salmon broker, said today in-! seven persons were treated for cuts creased prices on salmon, author- At the same time, ihe Moscow jradio was broadcasting a report ithat there was a trend in United States foreign policy toward a sep- arate peace in Europe. “Thers is no question,” a Mos- cow commentator said, “that there are people and organizations in the United States who place their pur- ty or other internal political in- terests above the interests of in- ternational peace, to say nothing of the fact that undoubtedly some ele- {ments in the United States are not at all pleased at the prospect of a stable and lasting peace.” The ministers, considerably en- couraged by the solution yesterday |of the Dodecanese Islands and the {French-Italian border questions, in- structed their deputies to bring in skeleton drafts of peace pacts for Italy, Bulgaria, Rumania, Hungary less destructive than the June 17 were “too little and too late.” | He said the increase would do injured hundreds. Windsor, which little to stimulate production for ore the brunt of last week's tor- which it was designed. “We ex-| nado, suffered only minor damage pected and need at least a 20 per-{ jcent boost to offset heavy labor,| transportation and other costs,” he KETCHiAN GROCER 3“:(:. pointed out that the OPA in- e | i i |crease meets Mss than half of the Dlfl IN SMmE additional production costss and is {too late to be of much, if any e benefit to the salmon packers. Funeral seryices for Frank X.| - Trinko, 58, Ketchikan grocer, who died in Seattle last Monday uuerlMo'HER IS DYI"G' a short illness, will be held at 3 and Finland for today’: 5 y's session. o'clock this afternoon at the Home osMu"n “om ls A British source said that with Undertaking chapel in Seattle.| lall five treaties before them, the Burial will be at Acacla, i H-YIHG lo "onw" ' ministers would be able to hke up Mr. Trinko went to Seattle in| |any topic they desired. This might 1911 froin Vierna, Austria, and was| Notified that his mother is dy-ilead to further discussion of the for 15 years owner of the Salmon|ing, Osmund Stople, local halibut | knotty problem of Trieste, consid- Bay Grocery. He moved to Alaska | fisherman, left ,by Pan Amsncan(ered the key to solving the re- seven years ago. | Airways yesterday for Sandied, Sta- 'maining issues. An outdoor enthusiast and early|vanger, Norway, to be at her bed-| ——— Northwest skier, he was a charter side. He expects to fly all the way member ‘of the Seattle chapter of | in hopes of arriving home while his | SIOCK wol"m 3 Turn Verein, a co-founder of the|mother is still alive. Seaieion Sahalie Ski Club and a past mem-| Mr. Stople will return for the| NEW YORK, June 28.—Closing * Sy @000 0o e ic®e vl A2l fire call at 8:30 oclock| OMAHA, Nebr. — Marty Kaplan,| ber of the Washington Ski Club. |fishing season next spring. He has|duotation of Alaska Juneau mine m_‘,‘l:(au can’t blame me,” he insist- owlm m‘gp"s‘::mmx:f;o‘n::jyn:m-’ WEATHER REPORT © |hailed firemen to the Indian V"-Jla, was leading on the last lap of| He is survived by his wjdow|been fishing on the Cross Boundl”“”kmm:’vh Aa%. flAclltthln&' Cor- ed. “T admit that it was a mistake.|cver into the books for the new|® (U. 8, WEATHEK BURRAU) ® | lage. |a swimming race, headed for an|Hermine, and daughter, Prula, of with Captain Sievert Anderson. [ PO '; %, American Can 99%, But it was started last November, fiscal year. @ Temperatures for 24-Hour Perlod | There they looked around for a|upset victory over the favorite. |Seattle, and a brother, Rudolph| A group of his Scandinavian ;‘)":"“ a 47, Commonwealth ,and before we instituted these stop-| Latest Treasury figures indicate|® Endine 6:30 o'Clock This Morning e | fire. | His final efforts were such that\Trinko, and sister, Mrs. Marle|{riends gathered at a dinner party > uthern 5%, Curtiss-Wright 7%, orders on non-essential construc-|that revenue receipts may top the| ® ] .Mn :.dm “ . H’I‘here was one—in a stove injhe swam right e:uz of l;:;s swi:: Tippman, of Vienna. Wednesday night to wish him Bm'n:';‘:";':‘;‘:‘:‘l;:"’”;': g’e:&:G: . The. materials were already |$42,932,000000 Mr. Truman foresaw|® In Juneau—] um, 65; e|House No. 7. |pants, and finished an embarrasst — Voyage. | ) :n the ground. The" contrlctmi April 11, while actual &xpenditurué' imum, 54. ®| On the stove there was a kettle— sccond. ¥ FERERE SR D0 BESIL LIy !Nurthern Pacific 31%, United Cor- couldn't get by with anything like \may fall below his m,au,ooo,mt- At Airport—Maximum, 68; @ |in which sugar was being boiled Up| Hosp““l MIB LUM SEE RITES jporation 5%, U. B. Steel 80%, : that now.” % estimate by more than $1,000,000,-|® minimum, 52. o |for syrup. | SmMER MOVEMEMS gyt ‘Pound $4.03%. Small did not, however, explain 000. . ®| The syrup had boiled over. | B 20 p P‘mi”"“‘ hh}; L‘:mz See, 'u:‘:'fl‘ Sales today were 1,101,000 shares. ¥ why the race track hadnt been| Most of the “saving” appears at-|® WEATHER FORECAST | The house was filled with smokei Princess Louise, from the south, ) c Inr':‘ sd ospital has discharg- une‘:n :“l ew a p.an. ay | Dow, Jo.nes averages today are stopped by the CPA. tributable to the slow progress of|® (Juneau and Vielnity) ® | —but the fire was still all in Lhe‘schmuled Yo arrive tomorrow af- ;4 flé . nd, medical patient, and ‘l‘l the Charles W. Carter Mortuary as follows: industrials 20562, rails Just before the meeting broke|the foreign lending program, in-|® o | stove. ¥ | ternoon or evening. Sk Exsm -:} o?::::}.:w'lj z:tle:,n ;::mh':e;:ng:n‘:’y“::e::. v-;m 6581, utilities 42.10, VFW's asked cluding the British loan still he-|e® Fair tonight and Saturday. ®| The firemen returned home, at| Princess Norah schedu sal Hospi - 3 — e about t.h‘a Jl:fl_(:::n ndmm:‘m £ fore gongrus‘ Thus it may con-!e Warmer Saturday. ©18:38 o'clock, to their own hotcakes | ffom Yancouver 9 p.m. tOmOITow. mitted Ethel Edwards of Yakutat|Peters. | Forty-three percent of the U. 8. stitute merely a deferment of zhml . . ® |and syrup. Occupants of No. 7 had| Alaska scheduled to sail from Se- and Charles James of Angoon. See, a pioneer Juneau resident, population lives in communities of (Continued on Page Four) outgo until fiscal 1947, ® 000000 0 0 0 > 0 o their hotcakes withcut syrup. ‘»'aule July 6. There were no discharges. was buried in Evergreen Cemetery. less than 2,500 persons.

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