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

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,360 S ——— PRICE TEN CENTS JUNEAU, ALASKA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS — SEAMEN'S WALKOUT MAY Greek Turmoil Further Mixed By Soviet A Departure of Russ Ambas- sador New Complication On Plebiscite Eve 16 FOUR IS INED UP V. CLAIM PROBE Ministers Expected fo Meet Tomorrow on Speed- Up Measures hisc | PARIS, Aug. 28.—The Big Four, ATHENS, Aug. 28.—The impend- lined up solidly today against an%mg departure of K. K. Rodionov, Australian proposal for a special| Russian® Ambassador to commission to investigate repara- complicated the diplomatic turmoil tions claims, while American|in which this nation found itself sources predicted that the foreign today on the eve of a plebiscite ministers council would meet to-|expected to return King George II morrow in an effort to find meansito his throne. of speeding the work of thei Rodionov applied to the govern- month-old 2l-nation peace con-/ment last night for a visa enab- ference. ling him to leave the country, thus Willard Thorp, deputy ass\stantlcappmg a week of diplomatic de- U. S. Secretary of State, outlined|velopments, including the departure the stand of the United States on of Isador Cankar, Yugoslav Am- the Australian reparations proposi-|bassador to Greece; a formal tion and speakers from Britain;charge by the Ukraine against and France concurred. Soviet For-|Greece before the United Nations elgn Minister V. M. Molotov had|Security Ccuncil, and the forth- | Greece, | U-N COUNCIL Sockeye Mark |ATOMIC POWER MEET OPENS s Sef by B.C.| “Nor FAR Kway WITH (lASH% Fishing (ralli Ele General Elecric Soon b Wi Takes Over Hanford Ukraine Charge Against|Salmon Hauls Jumping as! Plufonium Plant Greece Is Topicof | AdamsnRiver RunHits | Three-Way Bickering | Puget Sound SEAYTLE, Aug. power for naval ships is just around a scientific corner or two. ! This is the prediction of a top- VANCOUVER, B. C, Aug. 28— An all-time record in the salmon industry on the British Columbia coast was reported today by Cap- { tain Nels Floe who said his boat | LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y, Aug. 28.—The United States today blccked the applications of Al- bania and outer Mongolia for admission into the United Na- tions after Russian and Aus- tralian opposition forced it to withdraw a motion for blanket acceptance of eight applica- tions. | I \ | 28. — Atomic | BE AVERTE HALSEY SAYS/Remainsof 5 |SAILOR UNION US.WARSHIPS Fiiers Turned WILL HOLD UP DO AS PLEASE Overfo Army STRIKE MOVE L | | "Nobody’s Damn Business All of Crew Now Known| Where We Go,” De- | Slain When Transport \WSB Will Conduct Rehear- 'in Wage | ( claresFleet Admiral }’ Shot Down by Tito-Men P | for SUP-Vote Now On SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 28— Harry Lundeterg, president of the AFL Sailors’ Union of the Pacific, {said today strike action would be held in abeyance after a strike deadline of Sept. 4, pending out- come of a rehearing of wage in- creazs by the Federal Wage Sta- bilization Board. A strike' vote by union member- ship was in progress today, and probably will be 95 percent in favor of a walkout, Lundeberg sald. He announced receipt of a tele- are “free, U. 8. Army transport, were trans- H | 3 ram from Chair g ! Halsey's comments were made at|ported today across the Morgan yyit lhf ;‘m';"’l;nuwon vg:_‘: ‘l.h(,r,l?n .k,-“p of a general mlws'k:;;‘\:)r“"d')r a Yugoslav guard ()Imr“mi“x a rehearing of the Board’s conference, | 4 order denying. wage increases of AIDUSSINA, ON THE MOR- GAN LINE, Aug. 28.—Five cof- fin: containing remains of Am- erican fliers shot down by Yu- goslav fighter planes on Aug. 19 were handed over to Ameri- can m ry authorities by the Yugloslavs at 1:30 p.m. today. WASHINGTON, Aug. 28—Fleet ;Admirul William F. (Bull) Halsey, |replying to reporters’ questions| about current deployment of U. S. | warships, today said: “It's nobody's damn busim-;.J | where we go. We will go anywhere gwe please.” | | The wartime Commander of the | Third Fleet made it clear that he| BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Aug. 28.¢ }dld not mean that American ships —Five containers holding the re- could intrude into the coastal wa-/'mains of American flyers, who died ' | ters of any foreign country. He dé-|cn August 19, when Yugoslay ngm-; clared, however, that the high seas'er planes destroyed their unarmed fought the proposal for two days. | While Italy was presenting her| views on redrawing the Italian| frontier and a military commission | was debating its procedure of op-| eration, as yet not begun, there! was speculation as to what effect a proposed meeting of the Big Four | tomorrow might have on the delib-| erations now bogged down by more | than 300 amendments to the five draft treaties. | Thorp, financial advisor to the U. S. delegation, was supported by{ Herve Alphand, French foreign of- fice spokesman. Glennville Hall, British delegate, FREIGHT CAR | flight official of the General Elec- tric concern, in Seattle to address the clectrical engineer convention. GE's apparatus department, de- .}caugh! 15.225 sockeye in one set|clares atomic power will be pro- | near Sockoke off Vancouver Island;duced at Oak Ridge within two | The boat is the T1-foot Bligh Is-|atomic power uses will be com- ;lnnd, owned by Canadian Fishing | mon. | Co. Ltd. The official points out that high —Great Britain and the Nether-|000 choice sockeye yesterday with|stalled on naval vessels. He ex- lands clashed with Russia in the each valued at approximately $1.}plains that only a ship is big United Nations Security Council to- | They are fishing the “Adams River”{ enough to handle the problem of |Ukraine charges against Greece, —_— | protection from radio-activity. but the council postponed tempor- | REACHED PUGET SOUND ! Prentice is also in the northwest coming visit of a U. S. naval force, |arily a decision on whether to hear| ppyjINGHAm, Aug. 28. — The The unexpected announcement| Dr. Oscar Lange, of Poland, the ... hoq puget Scund and peak of Rodionov's departure with his council president, reminded the ar- |, peq gre expected tomorrow and family was made without any offi- guing delegates that the councll| pq,y canneries at Anacortes, cles said his presence in Greece the apphce_muns of nine nations rm"duy. during Sunday’s plebiscite and the membership in the U. N. The dele-| ~ 4t/ 0 " Gone of improvement Sun- almost certain return of the King|gates then agreed to hold the UK-|q o popio nauls jumped sharply Continued on Page Two) |5 in s 2 ! e jagenda in suspense until the mem- g, jyon Igland and in Rosario bership question was concluded. | Strait RUSSIAN FROTRSES An Anacortes concern reported gate, protested against an attempt |by Britain and the Netherlands to! “B“d :'2?38:::‘ gfi;:’o:é'rgzé?rzgnz block consideration of the Ukraine| ' 2 " Z i to be on hand when GE takes over | the atomic plant at Hanford, IWasl\mgton, September 1. Produc- {tion of plutonium will continue at iHanlmd, Prentice si ———e———— BULLETINS { | WENATCHEE, Wash. — Firemen {are mgpping up after the worst {blage in the history of Wenatchee, The ‘ifre was brought under con- trol at an early hour today after Pressure Charged (The Moscow radio charged Mon- day that the Mediterranean cruise of an American task force was tie lin with the Yugoslav-US situation and that the United States was trying to put pressure on the Bal- kan nation with a show of naval strength. (The Ccmmunist Daily Worker in Londd today attacked the Mediterranean cruise as “a blatant example of gangster diplomacy” ,and said it threatened British as well as Russian interests.) Asked by reporters if he includ- | | The remains were taken from| 'Ljubljana to the frontier town of Avaizza, near headquarters of the q/U. S. 88th Division, and delivered ;o0 to U. 8. military authorities. !Morgan Line divides Amgerican-| British and Yugoslav occupation forces in the disputed Venezia Giulia area of Italy. { All of the crew of the C-47 trans-' Iport were killed, for several days,| Ihope had been held for the fifth! | member of the crew because of con- | |flicting stories that one or two para- | 'chutes had been seen floating from ' ithe plane. It was the s2cond U, 8.} |Army transport downed in Yugo-/ The | i more than $17.50 a month, the same as granted CIO seamen. AFL seamen had negotiated an e of $27.50 monthly, but the amount allowed under the Bourd's ruling was the same increase as received by the rival CIO Nation- al Maritime ‘Union. e eee ACCUSED WAC CAPTAIN MAY Bruce Prentice, an assistant in | vesterday. years. Prentice says that in 25 years LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Aug. 28.| Boats were averaging 3,000 to 4,-|cost atomic power will be first in- day over the validity of the Soviet!'run creating a shield thick enough for Incompatible the case. main run of sockeye salmon has cial explanation, but left wing cir- must meet a deadline tomoIrow on penynoham and Blaine reported to- |rainian item on the provisional| g, ergay at the salmon banks o Bndset A. Qroniyks, WeNis deh"average receipts of between 1,500 | Columbia River Packers' Association supported Thory for the United| Kingdom. | A French foreign ministry source; sdid France had accepted last Mon-| day a British proposal for a Big Four foreign ministers meeting to-| morrow, the first such meeting since| July 13, two weeks before the peace | conference convened. | A British spokesman confirm- /| the Russian acceptance of a| meeting of the council, adding that | Foreign Minister Molotov had in formed British Foreign Secretary ;. .o.q back to a normal peace territorial controversy had Bevan of it yesterday. { Dr. E. Ronald Walker, Australian| delegate, answered the Big Four line | " (Continued on Page Two) ——— STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Aug. 28.—Closing; quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 6%, American Can, 99, Anaconda 42, Curtiss-Wright 7, International Harvester 88, Kenne-| cott 51, New York Central 20, Northern Pacific 24, U. 8. Steel 83%, Pound $4.032 | Sales today were 2,100,000 shares. Dow, Jones -averages today are: industrials 190.03, rails 57.59, utili- afi 38.98. ‘ The Washington| Merry - Go- Round 'Bv DREW PE, N (Ed. Note — Dpew Pearson, who always geis restless on va- epflon. last week interrupted his vacation long enough to yrite the following column on hal Tito. Pearson, ineci- dentally, spent two years after, last war directing relief york in Yugoslavia. A town in southern Serbia, “Pearsonavatz” is named for him.) i NEW YORK—When the full de- dfls of the Teheran Conference are told they will show that after Josef Stalin and Winston Church- i1l finished dividing up the Balkans —one of the worst things FDR let them do—Stalin then sold Churchill on the trigger-happy little dictator who has just caus- ed such a crisis between the Unit- ed States and Yugoslavia. Marshal Stalin, at that stage of thé Teheran conference, was in expansive mcod. He had beaten down Churchill’s insistence that the 20d front against Hitler be staged through the Balkans and had put across an agreement instead that Russia take over Rumania and Bul- , with Britain getting Greece and Yugoslavia, So at this point, Stalin gave his friend Churchill some advice. The Adriatic coast of Yugoslavia and thé areas in which Britain is es- pecially interested, he said, are (Continued on Page Four) { o’clock. SHORTAGE IS BOTTLENECK WASHEINGTON, Aug. 28—The government marshaled the powers cf eight agencies today to deal with |a freight car shortage officially | termed one of the worst blocks in time economy. Reconversion Director John R. Steelman said the struggle to move record crops and mounting factory output had developed “a threatening transportation crisis.” He warned that failure to solve the problem could have ‘grave ccnsequences” for the reconver- sion program in the next months. In a statement from his White/ House office last night, conversion chief called on the agencies for “prompt and vigorous action” to relieve a situation which finds the railroads carrying more freight than before the war with one-third fewer cars. 4 STEAMER MOVEMENTS | Princess Norai), scheduled to sail’ from Vancouver on Saturday, Aug- ust 31. ! Princess Louise, scheduled to sail from Vancouver tonight at due| Alaska, from Westward, sometime tomorrow southbound. i Aleutian, scheduled to sail from| Seattle tomorrow. Due here about September 1. Tongass due in Juneau tomorrow night southbound. Sword Knot, from Seattle, due sometime Friday, August 30. Clove Hitch, from Seattle, due at 7 o'clock tomorrow morning. Northern Voyager, scheduled to sail from Seattle on September 6. Estebeth scheduled to sail for Sitka and waypoints at 6 o'clock tonight. e e PRISONERS OUT The following prisoners George A. L. Johnson, Donald W. Johnson, Paul Johnson and John Huff. Guards were Deputy Mar- ‘ioppose the admission of Siam few left | aboard the North Sea for Seattle:| icharges. Britain and the Netherlands join- |ed forces at the outset of the meet- {ing, with the Holland delegate con- demning the Ukraine charges as |being “unsubstantiated accusations” against two U. N. members, i | As the council turned to the ques- |1%42 Adams River run. [tion of new members, Lange read A total of 200 purse seine boats a letter from Siam which had just, 3¢ fishing this year. ibeen handed to him, asking that| . R MR the Siamese application be held up until the Siamese-French 1ndoc$:zfARMv WEAIHER PATROL OF NO. | tender, and the Lemes 4,200. Tues- day receipts for 16 canneries ex- ceeded a quarter million reds, it was estimated. The scckeye reached the salmon banks four days later than the settled. France had indicated in/ {committee meetings that she would | at the present. H SUGGESTS ADMIT EIGHT | Herschel V. Johnson, United States delegate, proposed that the| FAIRFIELD, Calif., Aug. 28.—The council recommend the admission’'Army today began a check of the of all eight remaining applicant weather that forms in Siberia and states. !moves eastward across the North “If the United Nations is to ke Pacific to North America. successful, no state can be left out| the re-|of it any longer than necessary,” he be a daily weather patrol on a ists today triangular course from California tolgains in fierce fighting in Jehol | said, Johnson’s resolution listed the ap- | Kodiak and on to Anchorage, Alas- Peoples’ Republic, ~ Afghanistan, when a B-29 tock off from Suisun Transjordan, Ireland, Portual, Ice-|Airfield this morning. The round land and Sweden. |trip will require 24 hours with a stopover at Elmendorf Field near REPORI’ ‘ Anchorage. lOST WEEK E" |flights from Aleutian bases down |to the coast of Japan. i Eventually the Army—probably Mr. and Mrs. Pred L. Turpin ré- Army spokesmen here emphasized TURPINS 'next month—will begin similar g turned here yesterday from a brief that the weather patrol will be for “week end” vacation to White- the use horse after getting off to a rnthericmeny, confused start last Sunday. e CAMOUFLAGE!! Missing the Princess Norah to Skagway by 'approximately two CHICAGO, Aug. 28.—James CIiff, 17, was the complaining witness in |minutes, the Turpins wired to have| Boys Court yesterday against two of commercial aviation | | !their baggage, which had already| |been Ioaded on the ship, transferred | to the White Pass railroad. | With their luggage on its way, to Whitehorse, the Turpins startedi brothers, identical twins, charged a campaign for a seat aboard a| With assault and battery. |pan American Airways plane. Fin-| Cliff told Judge Joseph J. Druck- jally Sunday they made it. Arriving|€r that either Peter or Jerry Re- in Whitehorse, they learned the | Dieri, 17, blocked his way as he luggage was an unknown factor, Walked along a south side street among railroad officials. and ordered him to cross the street. | When the train arrived, however, hhe muchly-discussed bags were |aboard. beaten. Cliff told Judge Drucker he was the|ers struck him. And both of the twins denied having hit Cliff. Judge - Drucker informed Clff (no longer the “week end’”) Turpins returned home to Juneau. Friends say the Turpins are now it had wiped out three warehouses ed the Mediterranean as an area, y that should be free to our ships|*/2Vie this month. PACIFIC BEGUN| and a furniture store and damaged fother buildings. Officials estimate the damage will total from one-half | lto three-quarters of a million dol- lars. without criticism, Halsey said em- phatically, “anywhere at all.” Traveling Salesmen A self-styled “traveling salesman” | for the U. S. Halsey returned Sat- WASHINGTON — Sale of 21,-' 1000 combat airplanes which cost| !$3,900,000,000 was approved today by ithe government — it will get $6,- 1582,156 for them. Most of the planes are obsolete fighters, bombers and other technical craft. They are to ibe used only for serap, salvage and other non-flight purposes. ! through Central and South Am- erica. At re- his first meeting with grizzled veteran of Pacific fighting said he favored more good will cruises of American ships. — - cearzs — sone csccusv e NINE PRISONERS {Johnston says it is inconceivable! MAKE BREAK' z 1] ithat Russia would want to fight a |war in the forseeable future. But, isays Johnson, the “foreseeable fu-| {ture” must be limited to two years.! ( NANKING — China’s Commun- urday from a 28,000 mile air trip; porters here since his return, the‘ STILL AT LARGE VICTIMS IDENTIFIED War . Department formally has! FRANKFURT, Germany, Aug, 28. i notified next of kin that five Ameri- _The prosecution in the jewel theft |can officers and men were killed of Captain Kathleen Durant, has or were believed to have been kill-'just about completed its case. But ed” {n the Aug. 19 crash of an the defense is preparing to ask the | Army transport plane shot down by ’Unlted States Supreme Court to in- | Yugoslav fighters. {tervene. The War Department listed de-| A hearing before one of the | finitely as killed, Capt. Harold justices will be sought in Washing- Farnsley Schreiber, New Albany: ton on a petition for the immed- !Ind. His wife was listed as Mrs. iate release of the WAC captain on Marcia Schreiber, and his father|the ground that her constitutional as Ralph H Schreiber. jrights have been violated since she Those believed to have been kill- | was arrested. ed were: 1 N s o | Capt. Richard H. Claeys, whose Laser, aary cues ves ot 5¢| Y @leranCongressman Defeated by Veferan | Charles, 1. Capt. Blen H. Freestone; mother, ! Mrs. Harvey S. Freestone, Burley, Idaho. The first of what eventually will, 1 admitted government |Province but claimed 8,000 of Gen- |plicants as Albania, the Mongolian ka, was inaugurated by the Army eralissimo Chiang Kai-chek’s troops fwere killed or capture in other |fresh battling just north of the Yangtze between Nanking and | Shanghai. WASHINGTON The Justice |Department said today it is inves- ’itignnng identical bidding and {monoply practices' in the sale of {many products bought in cast quan- tities by Federal, Statz and City governments. WASHINGTON — The United States intends to claim all gold in |Japan about $200,000,000 (M) MONTGOMERY, Ala., Aug. 28— ¢orp Matthew M. Comko; moth- A fire at one state prison hereé and op npyg Tilley Comko, Maenessen, an exaggerated report of a whole-'p, sale escape at another nearby threw Corp. Chester J. Lower; parents, law enforcement machinery here npp ang Mrs. Chester Lower, En- into high gear during the night. tield, N. H. Patrolmen were rushed to high- - WA U e e e vate en- FULL FARE IS MUST ON ANCHORAGE MAIL !way Patrol reported that 50 con- victs had tunnelled their way to freedom. i Later, the report was corrected.| _ . - 15 developed that . onls: nine: BoKsl, o AREL: (GEYEAL - EnOW . anne ‘ . tcdey announced that mail dis- victs, scme of them long-termers, . had escaped. Seven were recap atched over the new mall route as- tared. and the searof/eopitiued fox| RRaduDe; Pastio Norkiseh Alts (lines from Jyneau to Anchorage must have air mail postage or it (will go by boat. Prior to Auguust |21 when the assignment was made JACKSON, Miss, Aug. 28. — A young one-armed war veteran has lswept out of office a six-term § Mississippi Congressman claiming ito be the target of opposition from | Negro voters and the CIO-PAC. { Twenty-seven-year-old John Bell ! Williams was the victor yesterday {in the run-off Democratic primary in the seventh district. The loser was 61-year-old Dan R. McGehee, Williams claimed that McGehee's !injection of the Negro-PAC issue was a smoke screen “in a last ditch effort to rescusitate a dead politica® | career.” | | 1 SR GO SR REPORT ON HOUSING 10 "BE GIVEN TO CHAMBER He refused, he said, and was badly | After resting up for two days ,umble to say which of the broth-/ worth — to help defray American , fire which damaged it heavily {occupation costs, it was learned t0-| and which night Warden W. D. |day. Also the U. . will claim rev-|woson caid was started by con- enue from Japanese exports as "C"‘victs. cupation, paymenns_ and in addi-! Oddly, both tion hopes to obtain Japanese 8s- . ng the escape—dnvolved workers at sets held by neutrals. | the prison cotton mills. Weston said 13 | Negro workers in the mill started WASHINGTON Secretary of“he fire at Kilby. { Agriculture Clinton P. Anderson to- | |day ordered new livestock priccj |ceilings which will result in an in-/ crease of 55 cent a pound in the; average retail price of beef and| 2.5 cents for pork. Former Vice-Pres. Dawes Is 81 Now CHICAGO, Aug. 28.— Gen. Charles Gates Dawes, the only liv- | | | | | SEATTLE — High ranking offi- cials of the Standard:Oil Company iare in Seattle for a board meeting. incidents—the fire| ing Republican former Vice Presi-| the other two today. |by CAA, regular mail was carried | The sensational report was spread | while the cotton mill at Kilby pri- by plane to Yakutat, Cordova and Anchorage. | son hée was still smouldering from ‘The regular Juneau Chamber of jCommerce meeting will b2 held to- {morrow noon in the Gold Room ot the Baranof. 5 Tomorrow’s program includes a U. Marshal W. T Mahoney,‘€Port by Mr. W. Burr Johnson, left Jast right aboard the North|chalrman of the special housing Sea for Ketchikan on official busi-|committee. Johnson will report on ness. Mrs. Mahoney was a Seattle @ recent meeting with George Cop= passenger. {len and T. O. Hoagland regarding SRR Itheir plans to expedits the building CONNORS ARRIVE lof houses in Juneau. hiad | The Rev. Robert Webb. Secre- James J. Connors Jr. and son,|tary. also announced that the Exe- Joseph Connors arrived by plane Cutive Board will give a report on | from Seattle and will visit here two | the resolution regarding the estab- or three days. jlishment of a city planning council * in Juneau. PRI L S PR SRR MARSHAL TO KETCHIKAN (-3 | | L5 B WILL MARRY TOMORROW !'shal Sidney J. Thompson, Olaf Pe- adding to their set of life-guiding principles, the axiom “Be on Time.” e .e——— BATAVIA — A Dutch military report today said that a company of Netherland troops had killed 92 Indonesians and captured 30 in a foray against “heavy opposition” near Soerabaja. —— - WASHINGTON — Another black market in cars was reported today terson, James M. Eddleman and Paul A. Paulet. - eeee — - TWO FIRES YESTERDAY No damage resulted from the two small fires late yesterday after- noon. The 3-9 alarm was turned in at 4:30 for a chimney fire and the 2-1 alarm at 5:45 for a stove fire. ——e— | presecution was impossible unless'H, D,"Collier, board chairman, re-| \ The { International Military Trl-lapproxunntely one million dollars. idence that Keitel, in his capacity he could identify his assailant and ports that Standard is now engaged dismissed the charges. ‘in a modernization program in| PR S, |Alaska. The firm plans to con-| NUERNBERG — Defense counsel;vert business in the Territory from | scored a point today to the benefit barrel facilities to large bulk hnndl-l of Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel. ing. The Alaska program will cost| bunal admitted into the record evi-| FAIRFIELD, Calif. — The final as Chief of the German High/mechanical check of the Super- Command, had opposed all measures | fortress “Dreamboat” is being made,‘ |his 81st birth ! dent of the United States, observed | A marriage license has been 4!‘ JOINS OPA STAFF day yesterday but, “‘:ed by U. S. Commissioner Gray to| Charles G. Ellett, former travel- his request, there was no formal Henry J. Phillips, 55 and Mary\i““ auditor for the U. S. Engineer- celebration and no birthday i‘“’"’iareen, 67, both of Juneau, who wiil | "8 Dept. through Mexico, has beexi views. | be married here tomorrow. ‘assigned by the OPA office in Gen. Dawes spent the day at his| LS TRP BORE | Washington, D. C., to the OPA office at the City National Bank| FISHING TRIP !staff here. and Trast Company. L e | Mr. Ellett has been with the U, 3 PRk Dy Norman Banfield, Dick Britt, S. Government for many years. He FROM KENAI ! Morton Sontheimer, and Brooks is being stationed here for approxi- Hanford flew to Lake Turner and mately a year. Having just returned from Mex- CARROLLS ON VACATION —this time in New England. OPA |for bacteriological warfare. |As soon as the weather clears, the Harry Carroll, Baranof Hotel Chef, and his wife left yesterday for a month's vacation in Wash- officials charge that cars are be- ——— 'big specially-equipped plane will Mrs. L. Rounds and family have arrived here from Maine N. H. by Lake Dorothy Monday for an over-| night fishing trip. . The group ing sold at a thousand dollars over| Baltimore handles approximately ington state. the ceiling by a ring operating out of Boston. 9,000,000 tons of cargo annually along its 40-mile waterfront air. They are enroute to their home in Kenai, and at present are re- gistered at the Baranof Hotel. ltake off for Honolulu to load up for what may be the longest air flight in history. . chartered an Alaska Coastal Air- lines plane with Hunt Gruening as pilot. ico, M. Ellett gives his permanent address as Clarksdale, Miss.,, where his family home is. He is staying at the Baranof Hotel at present.

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