The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 16, 1946, Page 1

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| | | i “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” # THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,375 JUNEAU, ALASKA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS T — PRICE TEN CENTS RULY FREE TRIESTE IS DEMANDED Connally Urges City Be Made Symbol of Peace, Security in World WALLACE IS [MOLOTOV IS EXPECTED TO | | | b i ! Thinking it was a mouse, he | PARI®_ Sept. 16.—Soviet Foreign 'reached for a club and took an Minister Molotov, differing with angry swing in the dark | Secretary of State Byrnes, declared; He flicked on the lights to find | co mmerce Se a etary.lomght that Poland’s western fron- he'd kayoed—a burglar, who was| fiands by His "So" Pol_ {tier was established at Potsdam. | about to climb out a window with | f o For more than a year, Molotov $100 from Hughes' billfold. icy for Russia” Speech \Dark; Robber 'Knocked Out MEADVILLE, Pa., Sept. 16.—Wil- {liam Hughes, caretaker of the Elks | Club here, heard a scratching noise | |Swings in ‘ is;\id. the frontier has run “along the sl iviors | line Swinemuende-Oder-Western ‘ | Neisse.” | PARIS, Sept. 16.—Senator Tuml WASHINGTON, Sept. 16.—Secre-| pyrnes said in his Stuttgart! | Connally, replying to Soviet Min- i ‘ary of Commerce Wallace and tOD|speech that the United States did State Department officials confer-| ot consider Poland's western fron- | red with their respective advisersitiey as having been fixed definitely today to determine whether either on the Oder River line, and that should make a new move publicly jt was subject to further review. | in_ the intra-administration row! As early as Nov. 26, 1945, Molo- | cver relations with Russia. tov said in a statement, “tae con- Aldes at the Commerce Depart-trol council in Germany has ac- |ister V. M. Molotov, today demand- ied that the peace conference es- ON STRIKE —_— ! Citing the principles on Trieste TOKYO, Sept. 16.—Some GO.OOOJHEI‘?EG upon by the foreign minis- members of Japa's Congress of In-|ters council, Connally asserted these independent of both Yugoslavia and Italy. ment generally expected Wallace cepted the plan of the evacuation|dustrial Unions remained off the|agreements should be honored for|when he tried to cash a check, was. from Po-ljob today in the CIU's demonstra- |the sake of peace. Yoshida Cabinet. ‘Let us make Trieste the symbol the CIU, declared Yoshida's policy |the Texas Senator urged. makes no provision for workers' Not Mere Paper State policy rescinded there is no way but 'U. S. Senate’s to fight to overthrow Yosifida. |committee, addressed | Without his removal there can be | political commission. foreign the would try to find a way to carry of German population an his fight to soften United States land.” He said more than 2,000,000 tion against the policy toward Russia in the face of Germans have been evacuated so opposition from Secretary of State far. Byrnes and the State Department.l - - oo — But his actual curse evidently was being determined in today’s meet-! DISP[A(ED polE ngs behind doors closed to report-| ers., | At the White House, Secretm‘yj (RIM'NA[ GANG | no real industrial rehabilitation.” Charles G. Ross said that President | Some observers considered the|state.” Truman had no appointment oodayI SAID BROKE" u |CIU campaign against Yoshida an| “It must be a real state, with with Wallace, had not heard from |attempt to regain prestige lest when |its own character, its own strength, him over the weekend and had no the railroad workers called off their its own independence and its own plans, at the moment, to see him| FRANKFUR', Sept. 16,~Amcn._threateued strike. | dignity. later this week. can troops are said to have broken' The rail workers’ agreement with| “The free territory must not be At the State Department, gfficials up a gang of looters, black market- the government not to strike was|a satellite of Yugoslavia on one said they hoped that Wallace would eers, .and bootleggers in a raid on|viewed by some as repudiation of hand nor of Italy on the other. Both decide against making any more a Polish displaced persons camp Support of the CIU, which has been | Yugoslavia and Italy must accept speechies on foreign policy unless at -Wetzlar, Germany. accused of leftist leanings. our settlement in good faith. he, first clears them with the State| Sixty perscns were arrested, in- The seamen’s strike entered its| ‘“There must be no mental reser- Depertment. Information as to his cluding the leader—identified by the!seventh day. The Transportation vations,” bhe declared, glancing actual course was lacking there,!U. S. constabulary only as a Pole Ministry said 67 vessels totalling around the table as if to warn both however. |by the name of Ballon. | 145,000 ‘tons were idle, | nations. At the Commerce Departmeml Ballon is said to have sworn: GREIRE o Ty 1 T <o ‘The Senator made no reference Wallace aides said Wallace had no|vengeance on Germans for the! "S" u S it the controversy arising from last immediate comment on the reaction murder of his parents and three| ! e | week’s speech by Secretary of Com- to his speech—including President |brothers during the war. He is sus-i | merce Wallace on American For- Truman's repudiation of his ap-'pected of having killed 45 Germans| Salmor .anded at the Cold Stor-€ign policy he devoted proval of it. ‘and three Americans. German police and UNRRA officials cooperated speech to com- | age over the weekend totalled 102,- nearly all of hi ste proposal made 1000 pounds. No halibut or black ment on the Tri | | | MARINE UNIONS CLASH ON TWO TEEN-AGERS FACING CHARGES | OVER SLAYINGS | BARSTOW, Calif., Sept. 16.—Two ‘teen age youths were enroute to their home in northern California | te day to face charges of slaying one boy's father and stepmother. They are slim Billy Anderson, 16, and Nathan Edwards James, 15 whom District Attorney Lloyd Hew- itt of Sutter County said had con- fessed the slaying Sept. 8 in Yuba City of rancher W. H. Anderson and Mrs. Donnie Marie Anderson, Billy's father and stepmother. With them in their brief flight from California, but not implicated [tablish Trieste as a truly free state, |in the dual slaying, was 12-year-old Marilyn Hodge. Hewitt and Sheriff C. W. Car- penter of Yuba City planned to take the trio by auto to Yuba City. Billy was taken into custody here transferred for questioning to San Barnardino and returned here se- Katsumi Kikonami, chairman of |cf peace and security in the world,” | cretly last night. Nathan and the girl were picked ‘rights “and in order to have _(ms' Connally, who is chairman of the Kingman and brought here las 2 i relations | night to rejoin Billy in a union that | Columbia and Alaska in 1948, will Coast Guard Ttalian | was marked by silence when the{he built in Vancouver, B. C. for|Guard surface craft still prpss«d| up in Topock, Ariz, questioned at He said that two boys passed each other in ihe | Trieste must not be “merely a paper | jail. Forly]fiers Beat Seahawks SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 16.—The San Francisco Forty-Niners struck pay dirt for the first time yester- day in the All America pro foot- kall ronference, thanks to a hardy prosssetor named Dick Renfro. Mr. Renfro, who learned his itrade at Washington State, panned out all three touchdowns in the Forty-Niners' 21 to 14 victory over Miami’s Seahawks, before an esti-| mated 25,000 customers. | |Last Jump of |Parairooper | Ends in Death TANKER | BOWLING GREEN, O, Sept. 16 | —Gerdon Lahman, 18, of Eagle | | Rock, Calif., only 10 days out of IN Tw | |a paratrooper regiment, dropped | 3,000 feet to his death before a . s d of 1,000 at a “Flying Tiger YT i Air Circus” here gesterday, when t his main chute failed to open : mainoute tuld 0 apen” Twenly-four Seamen Res-| was found in his clohing:, (@A While Seach Made , gory, what a helluva y to |dle. .. this is my last jump. | fOr 14 Sfi" Missing l H D NORFOLK, Va, Sept. 16.—Twen- ty=four { Norwegian seamen, picked |up in the Atlantic by rescue vessels after the tanker Marit-11 broke in | two 148 miles off the North Caro- | Coast ports today while planes | surface craft continued searching for 14 others member of the Nor- | Lieut. Comdr. J. R. Scullion, Coast Guard Public Information Officer - at Norfolk, said today it w: un- SEATTLE, Sept. 16.—A 5,000-ton | likely that additional survivors of passenger steamship expected to be! the foundered 7417-ton Marit would eady for service between British| be found but that Army, Navy and aircraft and Coast the Canadian National Coast their search | | Steamship Company, company offi-. The S. S. Gulf Hawk, which res- :r‘mls disclosed today. |cued six men from a life raft last ¢ The $3,000,000 vessel, largest pas- M&ht, was proceeding toward Dela- ]"enger ship %o be constructed in' Ware breakwater. westeun Canada, will be built a¢| The tanker Pan Amoco, which ithe Yarrow plant of Burrard Dry picked up 18 survivors yesterday was | | Dock Company, Ltd. heading toward Morehead City, N.C. | "Work on the vessel will be un-| The Gulf Hawk radioed the Coast i dertaken as quickly as materials are GUard last night that the six sur- avallable, the company said, | vivors aboard were in “fair to good"” S | condition and required no medical | attention, | Comdr. Scullion said today the | Coast Guard's first information was that the Marit broke in half at | ncon Friday, but that it is believed Lib. occutred Saturday, as the hurel- !cane which swept up the coast last 3 H From Sbu'h week was not in the vicinity of the y I Marit on Friday. ‘Norah Here = —————— | WATERFRONT (10 MASSES ' PICKETS AT NYCHARBOR Negotiations to End Ship- ping Walkout Collapse on Twelfth Day (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) The twelfth day of the nation- wide maritime strike found New York City’s waterfront tense today with threats of clashes between thousands of picketing CIO séamen ind AFL longshoremen under in- structions not to “respect any Jommy picket line.” CIO National Maritime Union leaders hauled out tiaeir most for- midable weapon-the massed picket lines with marchers so closely link- d it is virtually impossible to 2queeze through—as negdtiations to end the walkout collapsed. Police strength was bolstered hroughout the sprawling dock areas, CIO leaders said 1ast night there i might be trouble if the AFL long- shoremen attempt to breach picket iines, as they did Saturday to help unload the S. S. George Washing- ton. Fourteen liners with more than 0,000 passengers—half of them Army and Navy personnel-—were due in New York port during the day. First Clash The first clash between the op- nosing unionists came in mid-af- ternoon shortly after the French liner, Colombie, arrived with ,p’- /72,000 52, About 150" longshoremen, accord- +2g to a police account, crashed the NMU picket lines and started re- Princess Norah, Ctpa.G.O. Hugh- moving baggage. In the confusion which followed, one AFL longshoreman was arrest- R |cod was landed. | Saturday by Molotov and echoed 1 ™ San Francisco, which lost its first, 6> Purser F. A. Campbell, arrived morning by the Yugoslav game in the new league to the New WALLACE STANDS PAT :Wth the Americans in the raid, in‘ WASHINGTON, Sept. 16.—Secre-|which four liquor stills, American| B. F. No. 6 power scow, skippered this : ‘ tary of Commerce Wallace said to- cigarets, cash, and army clothing|by Axel Neilson, had 60,000 pounds eputy Premier, Edward Kardelj. day “I stand upon my New York were said to have been found. [ for Sebastian-Stuart from the Taku Draw Iren Curtain speech”—A speech on foreign policy| The American government’s week- | river. John Martinson on the Isis, In an hour-long speech, Kar- at sharp variance with that of!ly report today asserted that crim- brought in 15,000 pounds of troll deli declared western powers were Secretary of State Byrnes. President |inal activities of displaced perzons|salmon- from Swanson harbor for!attémpting to “draw a heavy iron Truman repudiated Wallace's views constitute a major law and ord-|alaska Coast Fisheries. |curtain around the Mediterranean Saturday as U. S. policy. ler problem in Bavaria. The Helen, skippered by Al-|Sea- / Wallace's statement given to re- | cert Wallace, sold 12,000 pounds to| Connally asserted Europe, which oorters shortly after he returned to' . | Sebastian-Stuart; and Jim Sharp's Nad produced two world wars, must his office from New York said: GAMBEI.I. IS (U'I' | Sophia brought in 15,000 pounds of 40 its duty for peace. | speech. It was interesting to find | ——,——— that both the extreme right and| | HAS JOB AT ANCHORAGE th. extreme left disagreed with the “T stand upon my New York | king salmon for F. E. Booth. “World peace,” he said, “is more views I expressed.. Feeling as I do| 'N BER'"G SEA Mary Louise Kiser, with however, that most Americans are, Federal concerned about, and willing to/ ‘flon in Juneau, has left for work for peace, I intend to continue, SEATTLE, Sept. 16. — Heavy, cherage my efforts for a just and lasting storms sweeping the Bering Sea there. peace and I shall, within the near have prevented the Alaska Steam-| Seormem Sl e e future, speak on this subject again.” ship Company’s freighter Square; FORESTER BACK !Knot from discharging badly need-| Regional Forester B. Frank! The Washington ferry - Go- Round rence Island. | The cargo includes food, gasoline | leman visited iand other freight shipped important than a few miles of terri- tory or national pride. “The challenge to peace is here, the Yight here on our doorstep, right Communications Commis- here on this table. Trieste must An_:not be another Danzig. It must be to join the FCC staff free from intrigue and conspiracy.” ol e | | STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Sept. 16.—Closing ed winter supplies for the native|Heintzleman returned this weekend quotation of Alaska Juneau mine settlement of Gambell on St. Law-|from Ketchikan and vicinty. He stock today is 6'%, American Can b | leit Juneau early last week. Heintz- 88, Anaconda 39%, the Alcoa Mining 6%, Curtiss-Wright International Harvester 81%, from | Company’s limestone quarrying op-| Kennecott 46, New York Central {Seattle by the U. S. Office of In-|eration at Edna Bay and reports|17'2, Northern Pacific 21, U. S. York Yankees a week ago, was su- perior on the ground but the Sea- hawk’'s proficiency in the air had the winners hanging on at the fin- ish. San Francisco had an edge in first downs, 15 to 6, and in net yerds rushing, 169 to 12, but Miami was ahead in passing, 159 to 135. — e — DAVIS THINKS COLLEGE FJORD FINEST SCENER {in Juneau at 3:30 o'clock Saturday {afternoon with the following pas- 'sengers disembarking here: James!| !Akey, E. W. Bliss, Margaret Bliss, Y Roy Davis, Lily Follett, Charles, The finest natural scenery in the !Fredfluks, Arthur Fremlin, Charles World is to be found in College M. Grenaux, Eleanor M. Genaux, fiord iA“E“C George, Carol A. George. Prince Willlam Sound, near Port ! J. Billy Graham, Barbara Hen- K Wells |drain, Clarica Hildremyr, Laura M. This is the opinion of Trevor (Mills, Virgil J. James, Mame Kils- Davis, Juneau camera enthusiast !strom, Sally Layton, Robert Propp, Who has just returned from a month ed and taken to 54th street police station because he struck an NMU picket, police said. No charge was olaced against him immediately. Many other longshoremen were on the job along the waterfront hut they had not passed picket lines to get there. Some men, an- xious to return to work after 11 days of idleness, reported for work sarly, befotre the CIO pickets were tispatched 1or duty. |Edward Prothero, Allen Redd, John PENGUIN CALLS ON |Scopaz, Charles F. Self, Charlotte PRIBILOF JOURNEY :seit. sandra L. selt, Freda swanson, Robert Swift, Golden Waltman, ssel | 3 Tue AND .bam: Wlfld]dfle flve“slfl'!)orothen Whelan, Leroy R. Wurs! Penguift’ Pribflol Islands h‘Jppytand Florence Zimmerman. ship, Capt. Giovanni b 4 K""dm“‘{ Leaving Juneau at 11:30 o'clock docked here at 1 o'clock this morn- | o Skagway were the following log. ‘emBe Srom. Ressle 1o me!vflssungcrs: Mr. and Mrs. William fur seal islands ¥ ! Barrington and infant, James M She was to leave this Bne“wu""]{amer, A. O. Waananen, Ruth with siapgashotiled. o radiak stid Barlowe, Lou Jacobin, Alice Dunn, Sand Point, enroute to the Pnbi]ofs.'ob_cm. Selmar, E. Godfrey, Burnie Aboard as passengers are Mr. a_nd Durie and Patricia Mollett. Mrs. Kenneth L. Cohen, returning % e ot 2 to their post at King Cove after a summer outside. Mr, an Mrs. Co<| [ hen, brother and sister-in-law of‘MISSOURI S vo'I'E to the Westward, on a special pic- ' ture-taking mission for Prince Wil- liam Sound canneries who have formed a pool to obtain a picture eccrd of salmon spawning areas in that section. This is his third year on the mission. College fjord is “like Tracy Arm, Taku Inlet and Lynn Canal, all rolled into one,” Davis declared, Perfect photographic conditions prevailed while he was In College fjord—blue skies and no haze. He reported that this year he had the advantage of unusually fine weather | throughout the trip, the best he has vet experienced in the Sound area. |He returned with more than 3,000 | in the northwestern part ofl Men Urged To W.~v Joseph P. Ryan, President of AFL leagshoremen, was covering the waterfront in his black limousine, urging his men to go to work where steam was up and winches ‘ould be cperated. Twice he shouldered throuify | masses of the NMU pickets alone, unmolested, to confer with his men, “We don't respect any Commy picket lines,” he said. “If the AFL seamen will give us steam, we'll work.” There was no indieation that AFL seamen, who had the support of 210 seamen in the early days of he strike, would return to work until members of the rival union, too, had won a pay raise. The AFL seamen won their de- mands in a ruling by Economic Stabilizer John R. Steelman, but no provisions were made immediately (or passing the increase along to CIO maritime workers. On March Today NMU bosses, consequently, de- ‘lared that more than 20,000 of their men in New York port alone would be marshalled for the great- est show of strength ever seen in 1 maritime labor dispute. More than 5,000 were expected to go on the march today. Joseph Curran, NMU president, said that tbe union “will intensity the swike all up and down the coast, leaving nothing but dead ships.” “We want a peaceful strike,” Cur- 'run told a mass meeting of union members, “but we will not allow our own members to get hurt when someone tries to cross a picket line.” Curran said the strike was effec- tive in every port of the nation and that Atlantic and Gulf seamen stood in “solid solidarity” with West Coast unions. “We tell the shipowners,” Cur- ran said, “don’t allow one drop of jour blood to be spilled on this wa- terfront.” TROUBLE IN PORTLAND PORTLAND, Ore,, Sept. 16—CIO |dian Affairs. The vessel has been|work there is still in the prepara-|Steel 72'i, Pound $4.03%. Mrs. [ORCRs FEn of yiinean, havy | eet of movie film; about two-thirds | By DREW PEARSON !storm-bound for six days. Itory stage. Investigations are being| Sales today were 1,480,000 shares, Peen Alaska Native Sf"‘”” teach- | BA]"".E MAY FEEl of the footage in color. e Ordinarily freight for Gambell is| madc by diamond drilling and pro-| Dow. Jones averages today are % 4t King Cove for the past wi RI5 Acad ikt Do 18 ves Al . | ightered ashore, but the storm has|gress is being made on the plant;«s follows: industrials 174.45, rails Y4 S- 2 to get back to Juneau—"It's the best WASHINGTON—Friends of Sec<:p$evenud native boats from oper- snd A sltegsA . ¥ Esm& utilities 35.80, The Penguin is carrying s.upph?sl CONGRESS pRoBErmwn in Alaska.” retary of State Byrnes have recelv-;“mg‘ =P BN \ ¢ nmi‘ personnel for the seal rookery WS ¢d word that he may have to resign, s PR AWVS MEETING WEDNESDAY | Stocks continued their adyance S4tion operated by the FAWL Ser- o\ S o _ shortly after the end of the P‘"‘s{ Members of the American Wo-|today on curtailed volume under V¢ oot i b G TR P BT s F&wt WAREHOUSE Bgace Conterence —for. veasons of DEAIH oF FORMER men's Voluntary Services, Juneau|the leadership of the top-ranking {which President Truma:succe\slul- health. Chapter, will hold their regular| industrial shares. lEG'o" Auxlll‘nv W s has come as a great! T = ily urged the defeat of Representa ¢fhe new! 2 { AlASKA“ Ru“ SEA monthly meeting at the Governor’s| Allied Chemical ran up 5‘1‘ |uve Robert Slaughter is in the IS FlAME GUITED= :Llf:e;o :e:e:xlfl:m;nfim‘yw;;r::ss . Home Wednesday afternoon, Sept. points and Du Pont gained 3%. wul FEATURE HA‘S Siews. AgAly. ‘Thé” Eouse éamp::lulx i There was a time last winter when ( AP'I'AI“ MYSTERY i st P 0clogs e U o e ey AT FRIDAY MEETING | xccncitures commiiee i boiting e inis week end gutied the the two men did not agree, but they | e o o & - @ =~ & e e Champion Paper, Merck, General ® . Bidloged mgeting thls HpVHID .“"d\“"h and Wildlife Service's ware- e vem oocpenshing SN ST RAMBGATE Bagiod, Sept, 18— » | Teaphos; wnd dowel o Jonna-| 10 SR Togin ASaRan B e i o o4 She_ oot of Sions. Way. <l R RA] 3 gland, Sept. 16.— : & will hold a novel session - | vestiga Ct {Lake Union, Seattle, it is reported. -f‘:;mes' doctors have told him|British authorities are probing cir- : \XJE?E};IEEERPUI;QI;:P . i?::é”i ':;;n‘g"2 and its preferred 4 fun and profit Friday ni};ht;irisxl(llent :rlt:ml:n(\"s é:vz:::;;wE:‘: Damage is estimated at approach- th"‘s e t,r:x e tb?Sl:l:]ee ;:fmfi‘&)iz:im::%gm;;;::is.of: rx(‘:o:‘;lt:mg “'}'im::.gl. ® Temperatures for 24-Hour Period e | Steel shares strengthened but ::;n[:nfld1:1::;;“;;;:;;;!?:[2 ‘:r::!sl’;:ghter it i ‘;i::;u’:wgggo' v:ll:l:blt:cc ;:';‘é;[:"":)i' ;ok elc::s zxdopenodic rests. How- | Curran of Seattle. : Fading e,:\o:'cn::x :h" Mornlug :iom:l?\l;?n:::fi;enx:;‘:g g]zry::;;::‘fig: help with the making of new, li:st‘;[ The thxr(llrr‘ndldn‘;“?] (2:‘ D:{l" Haven & ooouttth 15 TThe F&WL’ el e e, Comelt, Bl used,‘:n dt‘rans]- :cdll'cx rl:eln:;dro m here, [ ® minimum, 42, e troit plants for the third time n ) ... of any ¢ for remodeling. "chargé that Axtell and Slaughter {Ahe;\ - 185;\ d l:up: c!lld fiamnge to spend several months a year, e.;h ‘de ocw:s fo?md 2 ho‘ol“ after|® At Airport—Maximum, 61; e |two weeks. General Motors gained p. walkery Bl’s’?fiugges bx~xngin§ made excessive expenditures as his| Mpore ,y,l: g { iey Du plapishie, In 100, 9 (e} ¢ };hu crew abandoned the | ® minimum, 35. e|u fraction. Bethlehem at its high| 1 moc ribbons or flowers which |campaign opponents 1 I e e N Ffranded Amitioan’ TLiseity Cshln | @ o was up 1% points and U. §. Steel p00 o languishing in a trunk in| The House Committee also is cx- STEAME L s: iy 'has told inti- ::;lenna Modn;;rk? in the };:nglisg WEATHER FORECAST 1% points, [the attic or fn & box on the closet |pected to consider & request from MER MOVEME"“ D he forelgn|Channel. Authorities say the 7,000- | ® (Junsen And Vieinity) o | Railroad issues registered small gpq)f, {an unidentified person in Connecti- | | e il S e ship ran aground in stormy® e advances in a long list of issues.| rnere will be bridge or otherjcut for an inquiry into CIO politi-| Princess Louise scheduled to sail' S0 of the Finited Bhape oday weather Thursday night. The cap-|® Increasing cloudiness to- e|Union Pacific and Chesapeake & games for those not too absorbedin'cal action committee activities in|from Vancouver 9 p. m. Wednes- ls a constant, day-to-day Job. Ke' PTFC 48 hours on the deck of |® night and Tuesday withlight | Ohio, features, were up & DOIt!¢rmting new hats. Refreshments!Connecticut. However, Committee day. ias 1ok, heliers I Wi be 1 the stranded vessel while five at-|® rain by Tuesday afternoon. e each. will be served. Assisting Mrs. | Chairman J, Percy Priest says that! No sailings from Seattle to Alas-! B Ao e v 0 tempts to refloat her failed. ® Cooler Tuesday. e, A iong list of special issues rose walker on the committee will be if a PAC inquiry is made, it will ka account of strike. take a prolonged rest. e S Ve . ® 2 points or more, including Alls Mrs A, Zenger and Mrs, W. J. Man- be on the basis of specific com- Princess Norah scheduled to ar- For instence, immedistely after| ot ot RIVE PRECIPITATION Chalmers, Bendix, Coca-Cola, But-'ipy. plaints rather than a blanket study rive from Skagway at 7:30 o'clock thig Barls Conforence iy tg be the BY PLANE, CPR BOAT (Past 24 Hours) ler Brothers, Goodyear, Hart Schal-| = — eee of the organization. ilon:uxruw morning and_sails south' QWgembly of “the United ?atwns. il 0 e!fner & Marx, Kroger Grocery, Lig-! ARRAINGED i . e - at 9 o'clock. : ;;:’:P:?:dge:;;l gfi&f&“cfififif* Fresh vegetables and other per-|s In Juneau—0; since Sept. 1,gett & Myers B, and Beatrice Dick Johnsow, native, charged| MSC MEETS TONIGHT | tebeth scheduled 1o sl for] ence to be held in Rio de Janeiro, ishables arrived in Juneau over the|e .70; since July 1, 15.81 inches. e Foods. The last at its top of 54'% with assault with intent to commlt] s L2 S l:.fw"ly ah b ltong t J | also late. Following that comes the | Weekend both by Canadian boat|e At Alrport—0; since Sept. e|was up 4! points, | rape, has been arraigned before the| Members of the Home Service ota sche uled ‘lo sail I.xum Auk | ‘p American Conference, |2nd, by air. Among those who re-| e 1, .20; since July 1, 12.33 in- | The rally—third in the past four U, &. Commissioner here. His bond Committee, American Red c.-om,;fluy every Thursday at 9:15 a. m. gopular Bal m: cax s .| ceived shipments were George|® ches. ® | sessicns—was seen as an extension|is set at $1,000 but no time has; will meet tonight at 8 o'clock in'to connect with O'Harra Bus at sy nelios o e s ok “gslflmmcrs. Berts Cash Grocery ande . ln( the technical recovery which';-(»t been scheduled for preliminary the Red Cross rooms in the Shat-|Haines for Fairbanks, and Anchor-'. (Continued on Page Four) Twentieth Century Market, e e o 9 o9 v e 9 0 00 o started last Wednesday, hearing, tuck Building, |union workers refused today to (Continued on Page T1o) Iage. o

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