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C # o St ¥ «,c) “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE —=- i VOL. LXVII, NO. 10,376 J UNEAU, ALASKA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRHS PRICE TEN CENTS = — 1 AFL SAILOR STATE OFFICE IS HOPING TO SEE SPEECHES Undersecrefary ‘Assumes’ Wallace Will Clear His Next Talk (BY JOHN M. HIGHTOWER) WASHINGTON, Sept. 17—Under- secretary of State William L. Clay- ton said today he assumes that any | foreign policy speeches by govern- ment ofricials henceforth will be cleared with the State Department before delivery. Clayton made this statement at a news conference shortly after it ‘was announced at the White House that Henry A. Wallace, whose speech last week on Russia churned ap an uproar, will see President Truman tomorrow. Clayton talked with Mr, Truman yesterday. On the same day, Wal- lace declared his intention of mak- ing more speeches on foreign policy in the future. Clayton, in response to a ques- tion today as to whether speeches such as the one given by Wallace in New York last Thursday night will be cleared by the Department, said he assumes they will. Won’t Be Bound He emphasized, however, that he did not believe Wallace or any other official necessarily would be bound by any changes suggested. ¢ Clayton said he took it that Wal- lace has a right to make any kind of speech he wants to, but added that whether a speech might be Wise or prudent is another question. In response to a direct question, Clayton said he was assnming, thet “ithe speefif'kc’i‘:%duled%ffiiflnce in Providence, R. I, one week from today will be cleared by the De- partment. He was just assuming that, he, caid, because of the situation which arose as the result of the New York speech, in which Wallace criticized current American policy «toward Russia. GOT BIGGEST RESPONSE WASHINGTON, Sept. 17.—Com- merce Department public relations officers said today Secretary Wal- lace’s foreign policy speech last week resulted in “by far and away the biggest response” of any utter- ance by the Cabinet officer. An unofficial tally of telegrams, Ictters and postcards received by Wallace’s office since his Thursday night address calling ior a softer attitude toward Soviet Russia show- ed 82 favorable toward the Secre- tary and 77 opposed. - e JAVA EXPORIS BATAVIA — The first finished products exported rom Java since ithe war, a shipment of office furni- ture, left here recently for Malacca ‘in Malaya. : The Washington Merry - Go-Round By DREW PEARSON EVERYBODY ELSE | IS TRESPASSING | DECLARES COURT i-london Sql;giférs Given BULLETINS NUERNBERG — An extra week ill be taken by the Tribunal in the 22 the on | ;wnling its verdict against { Nazis tried as war criminals, | unnouncement made. The decis | was scheduled for next Monday. LONDON—TIt is officially stated that nine-year-old Simeon II, the | Days to Vacate-Labor Oppeses Gowl, |15 S Teoa e thrase o : Bulgaria, has left for exile in Egypt. 17—The British [ELI | government, ncnng in the raccv o(l‘ LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y.—Thirty- |threatened opposition by organized | seven year old Andrei Gromyko of | labor, ubtamed_an interim injunc-: gussia today inherited the Presi- [tion today against the invasion ofjency of the United Nations Secur- {government-vacated buildings in the| ¢y Council and the dubious honor !squatter movement. ol presiding over the defeat of his LONDON, Sept. The ~ government brought four'l orrovt to indict British-Greek policy | |cases testing the rights of thelj, tne Balkans. squatters, which would restrain i them from entering, remaining in A |or otherwise trespassing on prem-i HONOLULU—An Australian Na- lises occupied in a Communist- sponsored invasion last week | A writ was granted in the first of the proceedings, dealing with oc- ‘(‘upancy of the Duchess of Bedford scheduled to leave for Oakland, . Calif., today on the inaugural trip of a new Australia-to-Canada run. It made the trip here from Mel- | Apartments. The squatters were|bourne in 272 hours. |given three days to vacate the !prem' Colin Pearson, attorney BRISBANE — The “Squatter” |for the government, first had insist-| inovement, launched recently in ed they move within 48 hours. Commenting on the evacuation order, the court observed: “The defendants might well go quickly. They must have known; from the beginning that their act, |was illegal.” lernor Wilbert Snow, Wesleyan Uni- Voicing the opinion that “every-!yersity Engiish professor tody else concerned in his invas- {he Democratic gubernatorial nom- sion has committed trespass and|ination today after a first ballot continues to commit trespa the| test gave him the lead over four court added: { rivals, among them Chester Bowles “If ever there was a case i ywartime OPA chief. which the court should intervene at, Ithe carliest possible stage in an! LONDON--Briinb Ao Aok, Bel: action by granting an 3 2 % 2 ” iunoont tish heavyweight boxing champion, PRI the | knocked out Gus Lesnevich, world | |1ght heavyweight titleholder from 1 Cliffside, N, J., in the eighth round YuGoslAv puls qu a scheduled ten-round non-title UP HIS CASE IN = ! at Harringay Stadium here ! tonight. | EBrllam, spread to Australia today { when more than 100 families mov- ed into vacant military camps in | two Brisbane suburbs. HARTFORD, Conn.—Lieut. Gov- ! ; ] Wo j cock weighed 192 :pounds and Lesnevich 181%. { FRANKFURT, Germany—Ameri- }ums in the U. S. Army's European 'Iheatre were given permission to- iday to marry Hungarians, Bulgar- jans and Rumanians—but they still may not marry Germans. By JOSEPH DYNAN PARIS, Sept. 17. — Yugoslav spokesman Ales Bebler, accused the | western powers today of seeking to | cstablish a bridgehead in the free city of Trieste for future military: . action: against Yugoslavia. Opening the Slavic bloc’s attack BERLIN—Senator gimer Thom- (>-Okla) today denounced as “just politics and publicity” de- /mands made by certain U. S. Sen- upon the proposed boundaries of the ators for a Senatorial investigation free territory, Bebler told a peace!of the conduct of American occu- cenference commission the only | pation forces in Geymany. reas)n these were expanded beyond the Trieste city limits was to “al-1 | ANGELES—The U. 8. Coast 1w Bagex 1‘0: L ALD O(EC:unrd announces it has seized Tony Hemed. Torces. ! Cornero Stralla’s floating casino Bebler referred to the governur's;bux at orders of the Department vowers in the free state as en- of Justice and that the ship will visioned by western nations, and|pe interned by the Customs Ofiice. jtional Airways DC-4 Skyliner was! DAMPER CASTON \SHORT URGESiBiddingRival(onlendsO’Harra’ ' CRESCENT CITY'S ' GOLD STAMPEDE DEFENSE RING%NoI in Compliance with Surplus Already 700 New claims:AGAINST USSR Sales Law on Chilkoof Barracks Staked by 1,000 Tyro | 4 | Bonanza Seekers Congress Military Group, ot [ Will Ask Strengthened ’Epr-AIN CRESCENT CITY, Calif, Sept.| | o) R o i WASHINGTON, Sept. testimony by Kenneth of Alaska as to what use he intend to make of Chilkoot Barracks, a nearing on a protest against award | of the surplus property to him was ! 17.—After B. O'Harra s | | | 17.—Beardless prospectors still were fumkling through Crescent City in| -4 @ ~ = ~ (v~ =3 7 [3-3 b California’s latest so-called gold] 77777 | recessed today so he could employ ' rush today despite the warning HONOLULU, Sept. 17—Strength- | (legal counsel. voiced by old hands at the game|ening of all U. 8. bases in the Pac-| The Alaska Cooperative Company, that all is not gold that glitters, ific to meet further Russian ex-| Vashington, D. C. bid the same ( R I s I S‘.um unt as O'Harra, $105,000, for the ' historic barrac! property, and! | O'Harra was awarded it through Dem- | a drawing. The Alaska Cooperative 1g it is made up of veterans have the same priority as and this may be no “bonanza.” ' pansion will be urged by members| | State and Federal mining men of the House Military Affairs Com- 100ting about for evidence of a big|mittee who have toured the Far - !strike hinted that perhaps th "eKEnxt, Rept. Dewey Short rR-Mm_;‘ WASHINGTON, Sept. 17 ain’t no gold in them thar hills. |senior memter of the committee,| cratic Senators Hugh Mitchell and Thus far, they explained, the only said today. | Warren Magnuson of W;\shmgmni\ 0 'gold in evidence is a few small| Interviewed on arrival here, Shm‘l{smur have been vindicated—by the O'Harra contests the award pebbles displayed by Ernest Hay, said an American admiral told him|Cjvilian Production Administration,| Warner Gardner, Assistant Sec-' assayer of Crescent City. These!in Tokyo that “the way things are|snyway—in the diaper crisis | vetary of the Interior, ordered a re- shaping up, the Japanese will be/ |wearing American uniforms in the'iy cannot blame either Magnuson next war.” or Mitchell if you are unable to ob- “We might as well be frank about | fain three-cornered pants for your it — he meant war with Russia,”|nreedy offspring. Short added. He did not identify| pr. Thomas Leamon of the admiral. | vecently laid the blame Short specifically mvmxunodid:upu shortage samples were brought in from the | Rattlesnake Ridge low divide coun- try on Friday by an old prospector, Tom Cronin. Within a matter of hours the stampede was cn. As of a late hour vesterday, about 1,000 gold seekers had passed through Crescent City |toward Cronin’s stake, and some 1400 claims had been staked out or filed The CPA says that you definite-| sumption of the hearing Thursday | The matter was turned over to tne| Interior Department by the War Administration. O'Harra, president of the O'Harra Bus Lines, Inc., of Alaska, appear-. ed without counsel, saying he had on Magnuson and| just arrived here. He also said he Alaska, the Aleutian Chain, Guam,|Mitchell. He said in a letter that| had received no information as to| |Saipan, Iwo Jima, Okinawa and!cince Magnuson and Mitchell re- (he grounds for the Coop’s pro-| :Hawaii as places where the United | presented the people in government, | ot Seattle for the e . o oy e States military strength should be|iney were to a greater or lesser de- | Must Justify Charges { i increased. gree peronally responsible’ for the| ¥ | Fllghl A foss Iop Iat e n;,‘m ey LIDoRn attiation. \'IH\‘:-’“:: ielaiativa hll;\lc»v ()‘"!“lhl! able.” the vetetan Congressman g, o says thé ‘OPA, #'s ‘the|justity Thursday the charges they| continued. 1 think we should st i Y |change over from Wwar to peace had heen treated unfairly in dis-i cconomy that's responsible. | position oi the property, which they ! The production agency says that| id they wished to use for settle-} as a matter ol fact, diaper output| nent of war veterans in the Terri- now is equal to the average Ppro- i,y ducticn maintained since 1942.| ('Harra testified he had Inco | However, dcliveries of three-corner-| norated his company, entirely own-! Short said he was 100 percent 4 Pants are keing withheld due toj4q, by him, and now owned 300,000 behiid Secrefary of State Byrnes' Price suncertainty ‘on that auality)of 550000 shares of its stock, withy stand toward Russia adding “coming| ‘T cotton cloth. | par value of $1 a share. He said he’ build a defense ring around south- ern Kyushu (southernmost of the Japanese home islands.) “Two of the most dangerous spots on the earth today are Trieste and Eorea. It's the old story of Russian expansion—divide and destroy.” 0f World Is Again ~ Given Posiponment HONOLULU, Sept. 17.—The top- of-the-world flight of the super- Fortress Pacusan. Dreamboat to Caive, temzfln}@ ) set’ to ‘begin to- day, was postponed again last night by its commander, Col. C. 8. Iry- from a Republican that's signiti-| But the CPA says new price|intended to turn the barracks over ine, with the explanation that cant.” 1"_‘““‘*‘”“’ -4DUOULIDES recently by o the incorporated company which “we're not quite ready.” { Speaking of the Japanese, Short the OPA are expected 0. Dt lle would use 75 percent of the build- Weather reports from the Arctic said they feel that despite their | the production of diaper material. jngs and operate the water works, had been more favorable yesterday defeat ~America is their best | om IS o SR ey }.)owm' plant, barracks facilities, ho-» friend. tels and tourist houses. Other build- ! and the test plane’s navigator, Maj. N. ©. Hayes, had announced a 50- 50 chance for a takeofi early this moraing. | ings, he said, would be used for his | employees. i Counsel for the Cooperative “The Russians don't like this,” he ‘ manding a greater voice in the! | virtually no margin for headwinds. Even without adverse weather, there would be little reserve fuel at the end of the 10,300 mile non-stop flight. The big plane carries sufficient occupation.” H | charged that O'Harra would not be gasoline for 43 hours, but there is S Ty | complying with the law in doing ’ :tln: ying the law requires sur- rOLD DREDGING | plus facilities to be used by a vet- | 4] {cran for the beneflt of his com-| ! pany. He argued that O'Harra had: 17.—Major oper- 4 monopoly on bus travel in Alaska. by Greek troops and police Monopoly Impecsible ATHENS, Sept. IS COMING BACK - 3 MAN EAST COAST SHIPS C10 NOW TO PICKET ONLY OWN VESSELS Strike Stranglehold Is Con- tinuing Along Pacific Waterfront (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) The strike stranglehcld nped on America’s maritime fleets for 13 days was broken today by a vol- untary shortening of CIO seamen's picket lines so AFL sailors and Iomgshoremen could return to work. Within a few hours after Joseph Curran, President of the National Maritime Union (CIO, announced his decision to restrict pickets to CIO-contracted vesels, thousands of AFL longshoremen went to the docks and began working ships at Portland, Maine, Boston, Baltimore ‘and elsewhere, In Boston, six ships including argoes of raw sugar, wood pulp, eranite and goods Irom India were being unloaded. AFL waterfrcat rews went back to work at Balti- more . without interference from CIO pickets. Lougshoremen At Work In New York, about 500 long- shoremen were at work at six piers and hundreds more longshoremen ere expected back on the job lat- er today. At Portland, C10 pw}eu quit three AFL-manned Liberty ships, and workmen, who had refus- ed to pass the picket lines, re- sumed delayed repairs to two of the vessels at the former New England Shipbuilding Corp: east yard. =« AFL seamen began the strike Sept. 5, In protest against a wage Stabilization Board Decision limit- ing negotiated wage increases. By mid-merning, more than 32 «f the 175 vessels In New York narbor under contract to AFL un- fons were being loaded or unloaded. ‘The Seafarers International Un- fon (AFL) said that all of the 75 AFL vessels were in the process of being “crewed up” and that ap- proximately 3,000 men will have returned to work by tonight. Pacific Ceast Still Tied rran’s order releasing all ves- under contract with the SIU ior duty immediatc}’, however, 1id uot include ships under con- tract to the Sailors Union of the Pacific (AFL) and presumably did not affect the strike situation on the west coast. Although leaders of the individ- C luul AFL shipping unions have been defying the CIO strike, John Ow- , the Federation's maritime exe- » caid they could be explained only, by considerations of power polmcs.“ EW YORK—Striking members | “He can even call in foreign of tne Brotherhood of Teamsters troops,” said Bebler. “But against ynion (AFL) accepted a wage pro- whom? The object of their action posal today which brought a par- |15 never named but is always im-|tja] solution to a general trucking plied—Yugoslavia.” { strike in New York City which had Bebler spoke as statesmen lined'stifleo business and industry for 17 {up once again in the Italian poli-’days {tical and territorial commission on, opposing sides of the Trieste issue— | | this time in connection with the Rjver sockeye salmon run hit the frontiers of the projected free area.| Frascr River today and some, gil- Bebler urged the adoption of a | petters caught as many as 200 fish ! Yugeslav amendment which would jn a two-hour period. The salmon {push the boundaries back to the . sold at an average of $1 each. jcity proper, a proposal paralleled ! VANCOUVER, B. C.—The Adams against Leftist bands have been o'p denied this, erting a IRI. sbifted southward from Macedonia | monopcly was impossible in the '] e s . |to the rich plain of Thessaly, which!| pepitory. . lies athwart the main communica-| The barracks comprises 400 acres WASHINGTO‘\,[' Sept. 17—The ) yines between Athens and 88-|cf land and a large number of | Bureau of Mines regards as almost {aniks, | 4 # k. 9 'l4 e ensati hn ol builamgs making it a complete N."smwml the comeback of gold "y oyitative sources said today own, near Haines, Alaska, O'Harra dredging operations in western it o S * | cown, near Haines, ska. stream beds. the government was considering & . .iq he believes Haines would be- | KANSAS CITY, Sept. 17—A 26- year old married preacher awaited a Federal court sentence tcday on a convicticn of violating the Mann Act, after a 16-year-old girl des- cribed love making and scripture reading with him in a parked car. Only once did the composure of young Opal Mae Mugford break as she testified before a jury yester- day that she had been intimate with George Russell Payne on four ,occasions after reading aloud to him from the scriptures on their way home together from church | a White Russian’ amendment | MIAMI BEACH, Fla.—Sen. Claude meetings. declaration of martial law in the Where other metal recovery oper- froubled areas where the outlawed ations have been handicapped by bands were strongest, especially in lack of manpower, many dredges Macedonia and Thessaly, and that have picked up about where they it might be extended to the whole left off when the war production country if necessary. board closed gold mining cpora e tions during the war. “In some sections. the comeback of the dredges has been. sensaticn- al,” Arthur Merritt, chief statisti- cian of the Bureau’s Metal econ- | omic divisicn, told a reporter. R l A i He said about half the dredges in California have resumed in re- | cent months, that two or three are Y, | operating in Montana, Oregon, Ida- 17.—OPA | WASHINGTON, Sept. ho and Nevada and one or two in s " > gt €F come one of the “best little towns’ {cutive secretary, promised today in the Territory when uppnrtuml)flmul the AFL would respect pickets MENU PRICES i5 oftered people to come to the Territory. The Ccoperative contended O'Har- had offered to sell part of the acility to the Cooperative, O'Harra lenicd this. “L will be re to se Thursday” O'Harra epcrier today. He said he had re- ned Prew Savoy, Washington at- ney, as his counsel JAP ATROCT a present ROCITIES my told a| round vessels under contract to the | CIO. He said that if the govern- im(-nl seized those ships, the AFL unions would regard that as a lock- tout and stop work on all piers and ships. Trucking Strike Eased | Alcng with the break in the | national maritime strike tcday, i partial settlement of the eastern i trucking strike appears likely. More Detroit auto workers went back to { work and ending of the long Allis- { Chalmers strike seemed possible. | However, the National Federa- | by WASHINGTON—It will be VIgor-| . ,q contested by South African'pepper, D., Fla., has endorsed the ously denied, but it looks as if the and Australian amendments which stand of Secretary of Commerce ‘Truman powers-that-be were BOINg ;g extend the free state south Henrs Wallace on American For- in for Secretary Byrnes' bulld-up- ;n 1etria to include Pola and other |eign policy, and he joined Presi- !Gerinany policy so whole-hog that ri,y.;, coastal communities. {dent A. F. Whitney of the Broth- certain powerful Nazis will be right e G TN ferhood of Railway Trainmen in a back in the driver's seat again. InfouR FUERS DIE | stinging rebuke of President Tru-| Far East Spy Rin Trial Is Started SHANGHAI, Sept. 17.—Arrest in | Peiping of four more alleged mem- ‘other words, if we are not careful, tnan's handling of JebbE: history is going to repeat itself—, i Colorado. The hard rock mines, he said, are a little slower in resuming opera- tions. Big Homestake, in South Da- kota is operating at an even pace, but below its usual volume. |today ordered immediate restoration lof June 30 price ceilings on res-| taurant meals and individual menu |items in which meat is a major | ingredient. | Ceilings on these items have |been frozen since September 9 at| only worse. One ' highly significant, highly impertant Nazi outfit is under se- ‘eret study by John Snyder's Trea- N PLANE CRASH, | WASHINGTON—Lt. Col. Gregory (Pappy) Boyington, Marine aviator fore he was taken prisoner, will be retired soon for physical disability, an- bers of the Bureau Ehrhardt was iannounced by American Intelligence iwho bagged 28 Japanese planes be-y neeio0rs today as 23 Nazis accused jof operating the Far East spy net-| work went on trial here before a i R |ceiling prices in effect on August| | {31, which was prior to re-establish-| ! SIO(K 0“0[‘"0"& ment of meat ceilings. PP, | OPA called the action a “roll- NEW YORK, Sept. 17.—Closing back” but does not estimate the amount of reduction - tation of Alaska Juneau mine today is 57, American Can | ! sury Department right now. The| IDAHo AIR SHow definitely establish! outcome will de! ly ! Marine Corps ' headquarters i four-man American military com- 87'2. Anacenda 39%, Curtiss-Wright future policy, show whether we are going to re-Nazify or re-democrahl {ze Germany. It is the case of Arbed, famous Nazi steel cartel. Certain wire-pullers are lobbying| *to get its funds unirozen. It has a| tot of cash tied up in the USA, and the Treasury has been asked | to unfreeze them—without a thor- | | nounces. TWIN FALLS, Idaho, Sept. 17— | Four fliers died in the crash of an = Army Air Forces A-26 attack bomb-! SHANGHAI — Charges of em- er which was participating in an'bezzling two bathtubs full of gold lgir show at the Twin Falls Air-!bars valued at $20,000000 were | port. | brought today against two Chinese The speedy ship roared past the UNRRA officials. The officials were approximately 300 spectators, pulled wsccused of seizing the gold bars up in a tight loop, then turned on'while taking over the Japanesc its side and plunged to the ground Fishing Administration in Shang- mission. Court iules Smile Is ;Worlh $1500 BOSTON, Mass, Sept. 17. — A €%, International Harvester 80%, Kennecott 46, New York Central 17 Northern Pacific 20%, U. 8. steel 71%, Pound $4.03. Sales today were 1,390,000 shares. Dow, Jones averages today are as follows: industrials 173.66, rails 50.63, utilities 35.78. - Last minute selling turned stocks, SEATTLE, Sept. 17.—Operations irregularly lower today following a at the Fisher Flouring Mills Com- FISHER FLOURING MILLS OPERATING; ~ STRIKE IS SETTLED tion of Telephone Workers (Ind.) 5b2ga.| asking for higher wages as a i phone strike broke out in Rich- ARE REVEALED AT TRIAL IN MEXICO :25: :-2 TOKYG, =cpt. i7—The Japanese Easing of the truck strike devel- var cyimes trial continues to be a:9Ped at a mass meeting today in parade of macabre testimony, New York at which 15,000 members Touay, a British colonel, C. H, D, 01 Local 807 of the International Wild, who was a prisoner of theBrotherhood of Teamsters (AFL), | Japs for four years, testified that | called to consider a new wage offer the railroad constructed by the|made by 40 major truckers, voted Japs frem Siam to Burma was lit- | © g0 back to work at once for two | tered with. the unburied skeletons| ‘'ucking concerns: The Bohack of prisoner slave labor, | Ccmpany, a grocery chain and Wild said that thousands of Al- Daniels and Kennedy, newsprint lied POWs perished along the lme‘w because of lack of food and medical | and )gcauw they were driven (Continued on Page Tu;a) {Crash iandfi? and Wildite 1 Received Scraich The Fish and Wildlife vessel Teal SWEETWATER, Tex., Sept. 17.— iy by the Japanese troops at terrifici speed. was damaged by fire at Cordova, vesterday, the Service’s regional of- rngh de-Nazification first. Behind the scenes here is what| mile southwest of the airport. Officers said an investigation | bai. The gold had been buried in bathtubs in an air raid shelter. C0OKS. After the last war Woodrow Wil- son et al ordered Arbed to become a French and Belgian outfit. How- ever, the Germans, through secret stock purchases, by 1026, had re- hought control of these giant, far- (Continued on Page Four) would seek to determine the cause | of the mishap. Names of the four-' WASHINGTON—The Army has‘ man crew will be disclosed when announced that a Republic XP-84 inext of kin have been notified. Thunderjet plane has broken all| The Air Force unit on a nation- American air speed records. The wide demonstration tour, was from Thunderjet was timed unofficially the Memphis, Tenn., Army Air at 619 miles per hour and officially ) Base, at 611 miles per hour. Massachusetts jury had the difficult ‘problem today of deciding the price of a smile. Miss Marie Ottoviani had sued the Checker Cab Company for an accident which, she sai kept her from smiling for two weeks. The jury knitted its collective brows. Without a trace of a smile, it de- $1,500, rally under the lead of American pany and four other Seattle con- fice here disclosed today. Flames , ¢hectacular crash landing In a Telephone capital stock. |cerns resumed yesterday with set-|believed caused by a short cireult goronum field by a pilot of a crip- Telephone, which had recovered' tlement of strike demands by ware-| burned wiring throughout the ves- more than its early loss of more housemen which had shut down the than 2 points, closed with a loss of | establishments since Aug. 9. 1, point at 177%. Steels were mik-| The warehousemen were granted, d. Chrysler dropped 2 peints on's 12-cent hourly wage increase, re- | closing of its Dodge plant and Gen-|troactive to July 1, They had gone| Lat 55%, crease, sel and did some damage to deck structure and planking. With the Teal unable to proceed under her cwn power, it is planned that the vessel Crane, now at Ko- livered its verdict. A smile is worth | #ral Motors lost 1's points to close on strike for 18 cents an hour m-‘filflk shall tow the damaged Teal into either Juneau or Seattle, pled plane of the Pacific National Airlines was credited here early today with having saved the lives of 21 recently discharged soldier enroute to their homes from the Pacific Coast. None of the passengers or crew- men received a seratch,