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e VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,349 speaking, impartial,” the editorial said. HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS s ——— JUNEAU, ALASKA, THURSDAY. AUGUST 15, 1946 PRICE TEN CENTS = | yesterday. | “Who won this war—the United| sary. “If Congress and the Truman ad- TISH TROOPS GUARD Leap to place the Soviet Union in a bad light.” corporated. No effort to resume T oehs sigpoie conciliation will be made this week, in his § will return to Washington the af- terncon of Setember 2, Labor Day. harder than ever to obtain the better grades of beef during the HOLY LAND Chinese Reds |SOVIET HINTS| rreepom o press At PARLEY GREAT LAKES LINCOLN wu.”OuII 6 - - Outlaw Group § =i RS \ For Life . | i . 4 s z | ~ Turn Fire On U.S. ENRICHED &1 { SHIPPING HIT Brings Death _ RELIEVE A. E. « ! f . | - L. LXNOIS JEeWwWS i | SAN BERNARDINO, Calif, Aug.! I g h 115—A runaway truck, speeding 100 : \ s Y Inertn of Baker, jumped off the g = o e e lon ; i ! |road into brushland but remained | i 5 Ea £ 3 i —— |right side up. Its driver, Joseph| = Terrorists Mak S d H i e H Davis, 27, leaped from the vehicle ! ni H | Communist Underground Byrnes Aims Answer af ew Sirikes Hamper Mofor 22 =7 o “|Veterans Administration ake Jecon Hon o™ 3 % | " i o | . z e Reported Planning | Reds-No Recompense | Car Industry - 3,000 | 1 Director Transferred ' Threat fo Bomb Pales- . Large Scale Strife for Millions Spent | - Chrysler Men Out ,Iruman Plan; to Education Field | fine Post Office LTl | Hebuiy | (il R el NANKING, Aug. 15.—Chinese| PARIS, Aug. 15 — U. S. Sec- (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) | M " | Anthony E. Karnes, manager of ;ppue Communists, rejecting Chiang Kai-|retary of State James F. Byrnes, A CIO national maritime strike | the Regional Office of the Veterans II‘,.,i\,',,;,:L'm' f“‘fp c‘(‘:’l';“l’f“’““:" shek’s peace program, today step-|in an address patently aimed at an tying up shipments of iron lr (a Ion | Administration in Juneau since its baiEth the G PO:mm:“ '; | ped up their assaults in the north|Soviet Russia, told the Peace Con- , coal, grain and oil on the {opening on April 20, is belng trans- pape S0P CREE Rl e: . and turned their verbal fire upon|ference today that economic t Lakes today and new walk-| {ferred to the VA regional office o iaq o revolt against Great Brit- § ‘General Marshall, U. S. peace en-|treaties concluded in contradiction s hit the motorcar industry. | in Portland, Ore., it was announced . o tp0 ou(l'n\\‘.d Z.\"ll Leumi or- LY. voy. of the Potsdam Agreement would | & ? | “However, a scheduled strike of | today by D. M. Shute, Deputy Ad- oo, o0iion ‘ (The Communists’ Yenan radio,|lead to “enslavemen) and ex- white coliat, workers in six Inter-| ministrator of the VA branch office| ™ A" |\ "o oy ¥ 4 s on las t, th . recorded in San Francisco by the|ploitation.” NEWSPAPERM}N SIT Al_s long t:fble in Luxem_bourg Pa(l:a::i Paris, a'i,‘}:he niticnal Harvester Company plants SR {in Seattle. st “"dnnzfo\'nm‘:;z::::::l :;: Assaclated Press, reported the “Iib-' At the same time Bymes took| Rules Committee goes into session at the Paris Feace Conterence: LAY | —a dispute the company feared| . | ‘The transfer was made at Karnes'|yom throughout Palestine were dis- eration of the railway town of exception to Russian allegations—| Were attending the meeting for the first time after it was agree might bring action Preslden' 0“ Tomorrow request in order that he might re- |, oo o 6 ik . o they were to be admitted to all parleys among diplomats and granted 3 e sdlized field, voca- | Upted for more than an hour, Ly Lanfeng, 30 miles east of Kaifeng,| made duringg the debate on Italy's Tete ‘froedom on aul aspects of the conference, (International) among the farm . . fturn to his specializ eld, voca- pymbe were not found in either and railway towns and stations to|statement to the conference—that| SOMP ete press om il asp J eqitipment production workers—was on 18-Day Crulse 10 tional advisor in the vocational re-' ..o the east of Lanfeng up to Hichu-|certain nations had enriched them-| 2 o i g deferred for one week for further . habilitation and education division “"py 1 50000 ¢ ¢ | 50,! 0 200,000 armed ang, 40 miles west of HSUChOW.”|selves during the war. Bigotintions, Coast of Maine jof the Portland office of the VA, [yt (ool o #0000 Armed | These gains, Yenan said, put about| ‘Now what great power enriched SOV'ET (HAR“S The CIO Maritime Union threw e {, Karnes, a veteran of World War \s.,,5010 awaiting possible trouble t a 70-mile stretch of the Lunghaijtself during the war?” Bymesi L picket lines around major Great| WASHINGTON, Aug. 15 — Pl'r‘sl-‘"' was commissioner of education .ot Jews, arotued ‘Nasitigsa railay under Communist control) |asked. “I certainly know of none.| ” " B K | Lakes ports and called on all sea- dent Truman will leave Washing- foF the Territory from 1933 to 190, 1o00) jowish jmmigrants were being | Government _dispatches Teported |1 nope he (the Soviet spokesman) | { to join the strike and within ' ton tomorrow for an 18-day yacht-|20d before that was superinten- go.o.aq to: Cyprus, 48 S that authorities in Changehun, the | was not referring to the United| & Mew hours at least 22 ships were!ing vacation in New England wat- dent of schools in Ketchikan. Another 800 illegal immigrants | Manchurian capital, and in Tientsin ' gyates 0’ uNRRA STAND tied up ers Ernest E. Lincoln, who has been! ., neoy ‘Haita aboard a 300-ton § Were taking ~speclal precautions; Bymes declared that the war ¢ Detroit, an estimated 3000 White House Press Secretary|Manager of the VA sub-reglonal iooner aster o 21-day voyage. All ! sgainst riots after recelving In-|og the United States $400,000,000,- | — 'e loyees of the Chrysler Cor-|Charles G. Ross disclosed - plans |°Lfice ““A",“l‘i“’""‘"‘ “l“:._b‘""’[‘ ‘:]‘" faced deportation under the Brit- ' telligence reports that the Commun-, g59 “loaned by the American pub-| | llE B Shl menis of 0” b RUSSIp ration’s Kercheval body plant for the cruise, aboard the Pr ‘3“”‘“‘ o "€ ish policy to halt lawless entrance ist l:"‘;"tgmg"fc was planning large|jjc v put it was “seeking no re-| i nip Y sent home when 15 men dential yacht, U. S. 5. Williams- el‘::‘e::p(;;m::ex,:( ’(‘j‘:“:“n:;x‘;“zf':_'"“;; into the country In which the { seal isturbance. | compenzz | H ';Eexl out in one department fol-'burg. It will c the President 2 $ Arab population is dominant ; cl:;;gazgofls p"x:: g.’i?ffi"?fii'reé’l | Secks No Recompense profs o | from Ausiria to (zechs |l winz the reprimand of a worker.'into the Narragansett Bay arealt‘:: ;f;:‘ b:"(l‘uri\li:x‘;“:('qu(lz)xx’;:; ;"“[‘1: Irgun Zval Leumi, which asserted ! . m, 4 - | ecks No Re s s § ; ; : s I 2 onitiac, Mich., a strike of AFL and up the east coast of Maine. authorship of the Ki D - | ed guards and strict searches of| “Before America was anackcd"waflllng Given of New Are Under F"e ISR vaticg, Mich,, 38iks, of AR fand ups €. loffice procedure for his new posi- | » e King Pavid Ho Basiras. “ande ¥ Belly 'snd. olher | Wrankiin D. Roosevelt. anpdameed| teqmstérs haited haulaway delivery It will be the Willlamsburg's HAh t21 bombing last month in which 2 | . f*new Pontiac automobiles. first voyage under the command 3 91 rsons were killed, called | amusement places. | that the United States would be the Action UnIeSS Price | GENEVA, Switzerland, Aug. 15— b s of Capt. G L. Freeman who was| Lincoin, ‘before joining the VA. ., Nowsits revolt in a brondcz': i e s e e | F ' A H Id The Russian delegation the| NMU President Joseph Curraniine Executive Officer aboard the | Was With the War Manpower COmM- g, "ay outlawed radio transmit- | ment planes dropped leaflets over|“America has asked for no recom- ronis Are ne UNRRA General Council, E’amh.g estimated the union’s Lake mem- cryiser Augusta, which carried Mr. mission -at ) Juneau and was also o #arbin, Tsitsihar and other impor-|pense other tran the freedoms she Fake & E g bers at 4,500, and a spokesman at 4 o assistant director of the USES ", tant Communist-held cities, but did \ | political considerations for an Ams W00, y Truman to Europe for the “Big o | e broadcast, made over a secret S ;sought for all mankind. America, WASHINGTON, Aug. 18,7 The erican. demand that the Sovieslstrike headquarters in Cleveland rpyee” conference at Potsdam. The | piges 0 (o0 | loy- TAdlo statien, urged unification of '+ mot report the contents. seeks no territories or recom-|CIO repewed today its demand that 16 bstwaen 4,000 and 5000 other it CI0N8 ~the War .6 WS eMPIOYS iy H d . The C ke’ | Bthaniclpstion b | CIO repe: that | Usion. cease “withidraw e “ ) 4 Augusta’s skipper, Capt. James: H. t supervisor for Siems-Draks- L[EUn. Hagans &n the so-called e Communi neip ! pense. . | President Truman. eall a labor- products while UNRRA is shipping | Seamem. were expected to join the poskett, r 1 o roals /e UDEFRS0 i g “Stern Gang — similar resistance h it Y > products while U is shipping Foskett, recently became the Presi Sound, Navy tractors in L] 1C D":iy‘ P"blfsd"dl ::d :}:‘e“‘un enan| Byres added that the United|management conference. President supplics into that country, has de- | WOTk stoppage. dent’s Naval Aide. ‘v:‘;g_'k' el O et of Worlq Crganization — into a single Jewish k "’:; ‘,{::;‘Z’;V:cb‘;flme i me“ml_ States was willing to help in the Walter Reuther of the CIO auto- clined to discuss the lswe. ¢ A union spokesman in Washing-| Freeman replaces Capt. John H. yweo'y s “? army under an underground Ziom- ] o to ‘baune. boutibies- i Btine.” economic rebirth of any nation. mobile workers warned also of a “The Russian delegation refuses | fon said the NMU had modified Kevers, former commanding offi ¥ g ist government. [ } b 1 Y | Ho Spoke after Porelgn Minis- new round of wage demands unless|,, ¢oyo pare in discussing this ques- | drastically its nine union demands. cer of the Williamsburg, who r | Calling upon all Jews to volunteer [ Past Communist criticism of U. S. to) jan Masaryk of Czechoslovakia full inflation controls are restored. SRR COLBSIHE S Sk | e oBISr GRINK. SOUGHE MW AXs. 1 cAREIY” Setii ; Whelr Sorvite 400G h L “aid” to Chiang’s government had a4 to]d the conference that Hun- tion,” Nicolat Feonov, Russtan | 1 CHe B e O e of| aery peured. i | th d rdwuh : edmm’ [ been combined with personal Praise, garian Foreign Minister Janos G Reuther took the floor at a | Spokesman, told the UNRRA Policy | 44-hour wee and ‘maintenance 0%| Mr. Truman and his White House, or : PryRosed UERSTRFound . JOER ' for the American mediator. . Lt oloes ooy meeting of CIO officials after CIO Committee yesterday. rmion merersiay staff, plus George E. Allen, Presi-, emmen, fhe /ynaeaces eIl | : ongyosi had tried to “gloss over i o 3 : ¥ At New York Federal conciliators' dgential intimate and Reconstruc-' | “We must exert our every it Until Marshall returned briefly to|, ™ o¢ions record as an Axis sat- President Philip Mwray had de-| Feonov said the whole matter, be- ¢ i ool e H | st th inst ¢ i | the United States last spring, ey oy o (o0 B lovakia Clared that a labor-management ing political, was “outside the podge (5o TPIRKISE BRVE BRI ATRTE) oA SRINERs cUGTERR. durector, B Jengin, SRUHRL I RER. R 5+ “was, at that time, generally ; ~ . addre; be?ore {l]e sarley conference is more urgently -neces- of UNRRA" and was “merely a move to \‘lll&.l e str "A o CDmm\m Cu- | will board the Williamsburg at| WASHINGTON—The Agriculture 5 2 S ¥ Y tions workers at Press Wireless In- 2:30 p.m. (EST) tomorrow. They | Department says it's going to be, U. S. ON SIDELINES e R | . " # 2 sition by delegates from the Uk- LONDON, » -— - Nations or Hungary?” the peppery ministration continue to surrender ot i 0 the Federal mediators said, but| It will be Mr. Truman’s first of-|late summer and fall. The Depart- . i mum:'l': "1‘2 Bmfig"’nf:_ ;Masaxy‘k derr-mnded‘ }ndxgn:an%ly 85 to big business we will be compell- " “powover Piorello H. La Guardia, | /N¢Y may have another go at it ficial vacation since he entered the | ment has found that 45 per cent ..o ooy today that the Unit- ac ur amps ‘h: denied Gyongyosi's charges thaticd to take action on the Wage' ynNpRA Director-General, told the | €4')Y next week after arguher white House upon the death of|less cattle are being fattencd In'oq giates has refused to partici- ] A ;‘]e Hunesrish svbguy in ??"-Ch‘{' fronts,” Reuther declared. committee that he intended to en. | 202l has been explored. How-|Franklin D. Roosevelt, April 12, feed lots than a year ago, the n...”u "vno ion for dividing Pal- i oK on Add“'onal Z;‘lfit: B s ithlessly e “If they dom't protect us on the force the organization’s resolution tC‘t‘lv\ ]F‘ei’f"‘tfl;e Dé‘:::;fi'dfil:l-] r;‘:‘ 1945. sharpest decline ever recorded from oo o recommended by a Brit- gz | “With the exception of a few Price fronts w2 will have to de- | No. 81, adopted at the Atlantic Olty | © "ol o v o el on what that e !the month of August. | ish-American Cabinet Committee of 4 “ip FIShmg (ra"‘ge“flamies we did not hear from mand higher wages. meetig, eises Ulis kol were | o e | ! experts, - leaving, Britain to ' cope N Mr. Gyongyosi a clear condemna- Murray said wages are being TEpPRISS Mo miovided thab mhppltes | T Lo ¢ of CIO AmericnnvIuRKEv w'llING NEW YORK—Transjordan’s ap- With the problem by herself. —» ¥ g “rolled back” while the cost of liv- 0f an occupied country would be; ° Sioppage . President Truman made the Unit- fi tion of 20 years of the semi- g e iused to meet: rvelief ds before ( Communications workers has hob- plication for membership in the 3 ¢ - | Pascis sci o g increaces. . . no ! i i resh dif- ed States de - TOKYO, Aug. 15—General Mac-| st, Fascist and always feudal iDi e o T ;f b neecs bEOTe!pled the transmission of foreign! I IAI.K HA United Nations ran into fresh ed States decision known in a let i’ Arthur today authorized the Jap-'jegimes in Hungary,” Masaryk said. BT R I W W AL U | news dispatches. | ficultles in the UN membership ter saying he could neither ac- ! | anese government to construct 211 Record Second To None ez lad 5 R S i o N | committee today. The Committee CCPt nor reject the plan at this 3 steele fishing vessels aggregatmg‘ He maintained the CZECI‘DSl('-‘DEATH OF (HAS feumx?' Cfi:ngu::);:n:md‘e:]:;‘:ez pf\;lo];: i AI‘ DARDANE[[ES!mpmbem expressed some doubt time without "ths support of the 24790 gross tons and 17 Wooden| yakia's record on minorities “is sec- . » eting i that. T hakbie e mtnct i i iabout ‘Transjordan’s ability to, American people”, these sources | fishing vessels totaling 1940 grOSS| ond to none in Europe during the ot vt | i maintain territorial and political | Said. | tons. period between the two wars.” 1y, Dockey DeREPRL B Red. Army A k S S i M !integrity, in view of her military| (In Washington, Presidential | wo wars. {and some firms in Czechoslovakia. {Ankara Says Soviet Must intcerity, in y| o Weshlikie Sem | There was loud applause in the 1If that's politics, ‘it's okay by me GAIHER'NG "ow | falliance with Great Britain. 85 Sel 24 ~ . . { Conference chamber when Byrnes i y ot d g 'I'ake D m d B f i i ke said President Truman has sent to ] 3 |said the United Stat 1d offer ybut T'll tell you the fact. emandas beiore |the British government some sug- y n on 3 e acwonia olier ", The Director-General had men- . AS 5 The White! ge: 3 “reciprocal friendship to any na- tat &l 2 | A" Mon'r ux Na“on WASHINGTON he te | gestions he thought might be help- i i tioned previously in his quarterly { € S 1 House has warned against specu-'ful in the Palestine situation. Merry - Go-Round By DREW PEARSON VIENNA.—(By Wireless) — Har- old Ickes did the U. S. Navy a great favor when he blocked the ebullient Ed Pauley from becom- ing Undersecretary of the Navy| but, unfortunately, Ickes wasn't able to bar Pauley from other! tion.” | Soviet Minister V. M. Molotov lis- |tened intently as Byrnes spoke in {a firm voice, referring to recent speeches by Russian and other |sion that other countries were more democratic than Italy be- cause they have harmonized their |views with the Russians.” Cries of “hear, hear” sounded from the benches of English speak- Slav delegates giving the “impres-. Many Juneau friends were sad- dened today by the rews of the death, at Hollywood, California, of Charles D. Beale, former manager |of the Capitol Theatre here. Acccrding to a letter just receiv- 'ed by Homer Garvin, present Capi- tol manager, Mr. Beale had been hospitalized -at Hollywood for five \weeks before death took him. | Funeral services were to be held |this afternoon at 2 p. m. at the |report an agreement by Russia io ideliver oil to Czechoslovakia and( SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 15. ANKARA, Aug. 14.—(Delayed)— |lation on President Trumap's’ re iply to Britain on the proposed be He (The suggestions - will not made public here, Ross said. discussed reports the Russians were | Members of the International Sour- Premier Recp Peker declared w-inmvmuon plan for Palestine. The' hit at what he termed “the print- ! withdrawing large amounts of oil j{ from Austria. / JACKSONNOTTO | QUIT HIGH COURT among the hardy characters search- ing for the fabled “fist-sized” gold I wuggets along the Yukon following their discovery half a century ago, open a three-day reunion here (St. Francis Hotel) today. The meeting, first since the get- together in Seattle four years ago, doughs of the Klondike, who were day that Turkey was willing to'contents of Mr, Truman’s note have!ing of uninformed statements, gos- consider Russian desires 137 revis- not been - disclosed, although Brit-|sip, and what have you" with re- icn of the status of the Dardan-|ish sources already have sald un-|gard to the Palestine situation and elles, but only in consultation with | officially that Mr. Truman has op-!the President’s part in it.) British officials, who had made lall the nations which signed the|posed the partition plan submitted | Montreux convention in 1936. by an Anglo-American commission. |it plain that the plan for dividing ! “This is an unchangeable point,”| | Palestine into four zones in a ithe new Premier declared in an ad-| SEATTLE—Boeing Aircraft Com-|federal state depended upon sup- dress to the National Assembly, out-!pany has helped to usher in the|port of the United States, say {ing delegates when Byrnes referred Hollywood Cemetery Chapel. | WASHINGTON, Aug. 15 — Ju is expected to attract delegates from |lining Turkey’s position with. re- fields of endeavor. You don’t realize how grateful the American public should be to Ickes until you've witnessed Paul-| ey’s wiork elsewhere. All over, Europe other Americans are now| trying to pick up and put togeth-| er the broken pieces resulting from| Pauley’s clumsiness. ~ Here in; Austria you see the results of one| of his worst blupders. | When any good business firm| signs a contract it first brings in} expert lawyers to scrutinize that| contract from every possible angle. But when the United States signed to Italy’s new “democratic gov- ernment.” Points To Russia There was a clear reference to Russia when Byrnes said that the draft treaties “permit every coun- try to exploit its own resources and to allow the free flow of goods between countries.” There was ringing applause when he said, “An equal open door pol- icy will not cause exploitation but hinder it.” Soviet Delegate Andrei mildly criticized Byrnes, the Secretary of State Vishinsky declaring “Carried the contract on German repara- the discussion backward and not tions, influencing whether Ameri- can boys will fight again, we brought in a political pal of Harry Truman's, skilled in button-holing delegates at the Chicago Demo- cratic Convention. At Potsdam, Pal Pauley okayed the reparations agreement giving the Russians the right to take German property in various areas—but he forgot define German property. In Austria today, (en. Mark Clark is now trying to atone for s For instance, when -_— (Continued on Page Foun) to| {forward,” then launched | discussion of Hungary. ! “we have the right, the legal {right, to demand indemnity for our losses,” he said, but “the Soviet into a I make it easier for the former en- lemy states to pay their repara- tions.” “One of the reasons for the dif- ficult position of Hungary is the lenormous amount of material which was transferred to Germany and is now in the American zone and has nQt been returned.” Puring the seven years that Mr.| in Juneau he was! Beale resided very active in local organizations. {He was a charter |dent of the group in 1987. In 1940 {he was president of the Chamber of / |Commerce. He was also a mem- Iber of the BPOE. | In January, 1942, he was replac- led as manager of the Capitol Theatre by Homer Garvin. After he Jeft Juneau he became a.part- Iner in the Globe Lumber Com- pany of Los Angeles and for a short time was manager of a B. F. Shearer theatre in Santa Barbara. 1 "He is survived by his widow, Mrs. |Vera Beale, of Los Angeles. ., CLARENCE WISES RETURN Union takes a line designed to, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Wise re.;Rabbt turned to Juneau Tuesday from Seattle on the Princess Norah. | The owner of the Juneau Hotel {and his wife have been visiting 1relnt1ves in Seattle for three weeks. During his &bsence, Mr. Wise's duties at the Hotel Ralph Wright, member of the: |Rotary Club and served as Presi-: tice Robert H. Jackson said after a White House call today he ex-| to be present when the Supreme Court next meets on the first Monday in October. { That was his reply when asked: | whether he plans to resume his | jnormal work on the bench. ! Jackson saw President Truman | {for the first’ time since returning | from the Nazi war guilt trials at, Nuernberg. He /' had nothing | whatever to say as to whether his | discussion with Mr. Truman today covered the public criticism he directed in June at his fellow| ! pects sourdough organizntions in San Francisco, Oakland, Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, Tacoma, Yakima, Denver, New York City and scores of “members at large” from else- where. VA HERE NOW SET TO HANDLE LOAN . The Veterans Administration an- tries, rounces that ¢he Loan Guarantee .ryrkey considers new convention which would be formulated by the powers and which would charge Russian and Turkey jointly with de- fense of the strategic points. “Turkey is loyal to her interna- tional agreements and we hold |above everything else the integrity and sovereignty of our nation,” Peker said. “The Turkish govern ment has made a note of Soviet the Straits |demands and is ready to study the Associate Justice, Hugo L. Black. | Division is now fully equipped to'question one for international con- ' \era of pushbutton warfare, Com: (30 Boeing-trained men is now at ‘ly-developed supersonic rocket, “Gapa”, designed to seek out and jdvsn'oy the enemy. Development jof the rocket was disclosed in Washington today by the Air Ma- V’Lenel Command of the Army. PORTLAND—Captain M. D. Mac- Rae of the AFL Masters, Mates and Pilots, disclosed sailing of the Augustine Chevalier last night from the suppesedly closed port iof Coos Bay. Captain MacRae says e pas” i ! pr AL A ; LONDON—At a two-hour | ference today between Colonial Sex | retary George Hall, and a num-!| ber of leading Jews, among them! Stephen Wise, of New| ‘York. It is said the Jewish lead- lers offered these proposals: That Goldstein Bldg. !the proposed Jewish zone in Pal-| - ~ estine be increased to about 1,800 BOSTON—An Army jet plane square miles, that the Jews con- made a flight today from New trol the immigration into their! York to./Boston. The time was !zone, and that they be guaranteed|2! minutes and 51 secondds. Only con- banks or other lending i tions to Veterans of World War II. All veterans seeking information use the facilities of this Di- to iin a specified number of years. jet plane streaked through the sky guarantee or fnsure loans made by gultation within the framework of| institu- | the Montreux convention to which | |she and eight other nations, in- duding Russia, are signatories. regarding G. I. Loans are invited She has expressed her willingness, to revise the convention to pres- vsion which is located in Room 203, ent day needs, but only through!' |agreement with the Montreux na- *|tions.” ‘The other parties to the Mon- |treux conventions are Bulgaria, France, Great Britain, Greece, |Japan, Rumania and Yugoslavia. Juneau were taken over by Mr.!full sovereignty in their area with-|the smoke could be seen as the Military control of the Straits is now vested solely in Turkey. the ship left with a partial cargo following a union ultimatum that it would be tied up if it remained longer. The Captain declares that the port of Coos Gay is still closed. FAMAGUSTA, Cyprus—The first jthe British from Palestine came {ashore on Cyprus today under | heavy military guard. The Euro- pean refugees, including many women and children, were placed in a camp encircled with barbed wire, few hundreds of Jews diverted by| hey now feel that they have to Ispect to the Soviet proposals for alpany officials disclose a staff of seck a new solution. Informants said Mr. Truman had Black Sea|wendover, Utah, testing the new- | advised Britain, as the mandatory | power, to go apeld with any ac- {tion she deemed wise under the | circumstances. | The government decided, how- |ever, not to make public the text [or details of President Truman’s |letter to Prime Minister Attlee. | STOCK QUOTATIONS | NEW YORK, Aug. 15 — Closing | quotation of Alaska Juneau mine |stock today is 7, American Can ]101. Anacenda 46, Curtiss-Wright 7'%, Internation Harvester 93%%, Kennecott 57':, New York Central |23, Northern Pacific 27%, U. 8. | Steel 88%, Pound $4.03%. Sales today were 620,000 shares. Dow, Jones averages: Industrials 20247, rails 62.35, utilities 41.35, ,o NYGAARD | [ REYV. HERE The Rev. Ernest H. Nygaard, of the Lutheran Church in Sitka, is in Juneau for a brief time.