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HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,385 JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1946 ___MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS ——— PRICE TEN CENTS ——— MAY AVERT NEW MARITIME STRIK MacARTHUR REPLIES ON PLANELOSS General Breaks Long Si- lence Regarding Dis- aster at Manila | BY RUSSEL BRINES TOKYO, Sept. 27.—General Mac- Arthur today broke his long silence regarding the loss aground of most U. S. airplanes in the Manila area on the very first day of the war with the statement: “Our air forces were hopelessly outnumbered and never had a chance of win- ning.” i “Our air forces in the Philippines CRITICISM OF Us. Embas;;Séys Release Not Authorized-By Dis- charged Employee WASHINGTON, - Sept. 27.—The State Department drafted a new inote to Yugoslavia today in an ef- |fort to restore the flow of Ameri- can information to that country. | The Tito regime yesterday or- idered the United States Embassy lin Belgrade to close down its in- formation service there. Although the contents of the iat- est American note remain tempor- containing many antiquated models, arily undisclosed, officials said it were hardly more than a tokencalls attention to the “fundamen force with insufficient equipment,jtal facts of democratic life,” and incompleted fields and inadequate |re-emphasizes this country’s stand maintenance,” he elaborated: “They |for mutual exchange of informa- were completely overwhelmed by the [tion between the people of the in of an Titw's enemy's superior forces.” 1wor]d. MacArthur was prodded into his| Yugoslavia’s action was ta long-awaited statement by charges Protest against distribution made by Lt. Gen. Lewis H. Brere-!article critical of Marshal ton, commander of the Philippine government. Air Force in 1941, in his book “The said that the article was repr Brereton Diaries” recently pub“sh_‘duced on the information service's ed. Accomnts received here said mMultigraph machine without au- Bfereton wrote that he had re-thorization by an unidentified ROV~ quested permission of Lt. Gen.|ernment employee who has since Richard K. Sutherland, then chief been discharged. of staff, to assault Formosa. It T N TR was from Formosa that the Japa- nese bombers flew to attack the; SIO(K ouo“‘"om Philippines. Brereton said the per- mission was withheld so long that| NEW YORK, Sept. 27.—Closing the available small force of B-17, quotation 'of * Alaska “Juneau mine bombers were destroyed oOn the stock toflay is 5%, American Can ground at Clark Field, 90 miles 86; Anacohda -38%, Curtiss-Wright north of Manila. 6%, International Harvester 78':, MacArthur replied that Ameri.“KennecmL 46, New York Central can fliers could not have attack-i16%, Northern Pacific 19%, U. S. ed Formosa before the Japanese Steel 707, Pound $4.03'%. planes wiped cut the Philippine- Sales today were 970,000 shares. based bombers on the first day of ~Dow, Jones averages today are the war. His statement was issued|as follows: industrials 174.09, rails to the press in reply to questions: 48.42, utilities 34.78. regarding Brereton's book. | B “General Brereton never recom-: STOCKS GULAR mended an attack on Formosa to| Stocks moved irregularly in the me and I know nothing of such|final session of the week today on a recommendation being made,” the smallest volume in a month. MacArthur stated flatly. “In the; None of the leading groups man- short interval of time involved, it'aged to register a definite trend, is doubtful that an attack could although the market as a whole have been set up and mounted be- near closing time was above the fere the enemy’s arrival.” lows of the day made in the morn- il ling dealings. The recent recovery whi ch added PEIPING — Gen. Tu Li-ming's (oo two™bitions to market values Kaiser special four-door sedan at meat had come up “in a general TITO DYNASTY NOT OFFICIAL The U. S. Embassy| ELEVEN KILLED, RENEWED RIOTS IN INDIA LAND BOMBAY, Sept. 27.—Eleven per- sons have been killed in renewed Hindu-Moslem rioting in Bomba, Calcutta, Dacca and the Taj Ma- | hal city of Agrra, in the last two | days. | Seven were killed and about 100 | were injured in Agra yesterday in a | | off by the stoning of a Hindu re- | ligious procession. Police fired on | the rioters and later imposed a 24- | hour curfe | quiet today. Three persons were killed and two | were wounded by knifings in Cal- cutta, scene in mid-August of the I bloodiest riots « in its tumultuous | history i > BULLETINS i | with | DETROIT — Charles E. Depew, ! told the judge today that he put lup with his wife throwing dishes, books and shoes at him. But when ! she ordered him to stand in a ny- lon line for her, that was too much. Mr. Depew was awarded a divorce. WASHINGTON—President John | L. Lewis of the United Mine Work- ers underwent ah emergency ap- | pendicitis operation today and af-| | terward his physician-son reported he “came through the operation all right.” HONOLULU—Takeofi of the B-29 | Pacusan “Dreamboat” on its Arctic fliggt to Cairo, was delayed today lat least another 24 hours by wea- ther. MOUNT VERNON, Wash. — The City Council formally declared the | position of Ccuncilman C. R. Car- ter, who has been absent three con- | secutive meetings, as vacant last i night. He is on an Alaska trip. WASHINGTON — The OPA an- nounced today that it soon will | grant price increases on meat dish- {es served by restaurants. OPA said the I will be based on June 30 ceilings {plus an increase factor. The exact |amount of the increase has not :been figured out yet, but will be anncunced next week, OPA said. | WASHINGTON—OPA today fixed 'the maximum price of the new 181,645. At the same time, the agen- icy fixed a maximum ceiling of $1,- 1795 on the four-door Frazer sedan. ‘( NEW YORK — The Columbia EB)'oadcasuug System today peti- | tioned the Federal Communications | Commission to adopt standards for jand authorize the commercial op- eration of color |in the ultra-high frequencies. The { petition also asks that the FCC conduct a hearing at which CBS and others may testify on these | proposals. clash reported to have been touched | new ceilings for meat dishes!' television stations | DEMO BOSSES|DISASTROUS Greek King BACK TRUMAN FLOOD HITS = Flying Out MEATS STAND} SANANTONIO From Exile {Hannegan Shfi)orts Presi-;SituationWBr?Hn Memory | George Il Hop§ From Lon- | ofLiving Man-Historic | don-Returning Home denf’s Statement on Is- | sue 100 Per Cent” | City Is Isolated to Mount Throne SAN ANTONIO, Sept. 27—Historic | WASHINGTON, Sept. 27.—4}’1:5(»‘ 27.—Aboard a The city was reported jmaster General Robert E. Hanne- San Antonio was virtually isolated private plane flying the Greek royal | first picketing in a strike of 3,200 Greece | gan tossed orders from Dcmocmtlcltodfly by |bigwigs in the waste basket today|which the San Antonio Light called and decided instead to go along “the most serious in the memory | with President Truman in the meat of living men.” controversy. Police report several bodies of The Executive Committee of the|twelve victims have already been Democratic National ~ Committee, | identified which Hannegan heads, had direct-| Almost every highway leading |ed him to discuss the meat short-|inte fhe Alamo city was impassable year-old, Danish-descended monarch |age with the price Decontrol Board. or dangerous. | tomorrow morning when he returns Truman, risking party discord.i The highway leading to Corpus!from the second exile of his reign, congressional elections near, Christi and South Texas was clos-|which began in 1922. late yesterday declared unequivocal- ed by flooded Salado Creek, which! Strict police fprecautions have ly that he won't seek removal nr“todn,\' was one mile wide. Usually | been arranged to guard him upon the meat controls which have be-lit is a slow trickle of water a few his return, coming amid fierce come an increasingly hot center of |feet wide. !fighting and civil strife in controvery. The President said| Beautifully landscaped San An-lern Greece whigh Permier there should be improvement in tonio River, which winds through stantin Tsaldaris said Wednesday meat supplies in the near future,/the heart of the downtown area, had reached the magnitude of war with the arrival of grass-fed cattle was out of its banks. In some! King George, summoned back to in the markets. He declared: places streets were six feet deep his throne by a better than two “Dire predictions of a meat fam-|with water. |to one margin in a Sept. 1 plebis- ine are without basis.” | Property damage is estimated at cite, was attired in a be-medalled President Truman told reporters millions of dollars and literally uniform of commander-in-chief that any increase in prices o(“lhousandfi of residents have been of the Greek army as he strode meats, or abandonment of controls!made homeless by the flood waters. across the flying field toward his {would in the long run add to the More than six inches of rain fell plane. !difficulties. He said the present during the night, and the rain, He shortage is due to heavy slaugh- continues to fall today. terings during non-control. At the height of the flood, trans- 'portation was halted in many por- tographers he embraced and kissed jtiofis. of San ‘Antonio. Hundreds his cousin, Marina, Duchess of automobiles were stalled while Kent, who wept. their occupants waded to fety| An official spokesman said the across streets where water was run- plane would land on Greek terri- ning with dangerous swiftness. | tory this evening, but he would not Police broadcast appeals for boats say exactly where. scareity with the Decontrol B‘mm!anzl outboard motors after army| Earlier, dispatches from Athens and other government agencies. 1. nities put a number of am- said the king was expected to ar- “As far as I am concerned, it's! Phibious vehicles and rafts into rive at an airport on the Pelopon- all over,” Hannegan said. service. nesus and continue his journey to He added that he had discussed' ©ne call came in telling of 50 Piraeus, Port of Athens, on a des- the matter with the President, and Persons clinging to rooftops in the troyer. that he stands by the chief execu-|suburban San Jose area. Another tive's statement “100 percent.” told of twenty persons marooned in Hannegan said he had discussed |another section. the matter with some members of The flood followed a storm late| The twice-exiled King, flying in the party executive commitiee and last night which forced many from England, landed 12 miles that they were in agreement wm,'theatregoers and others to sleep in| northwest . Athens, and left by him that the matter should be hotel . lobbies and corridors of motor car to board a Greek war- dropped. jdowntown buildings. ship in Salamis Bay. He presumab- | Secretary of War Patterson told, Reports of looting brought sharp ly planned to spend the night newsmen, after the White House orders to military police “not to aboard a destroyer and make his cabinet session, that the subject of deal gently” with offenders. formal entry into Athens Saturday Warnings were issued to residents morning. way.” He did not elaborate. along the San Antonio River south AP correspondent L. 8. Chakales ‘; Today's was the first cabinet Of the city to evacuate. Concern and a photographer who arrived meeting since early August. was expressed for the safety of at the heavily guarded airfield | B So (these living near Falls City and shortly before the King, were plac- !Kennedy. ed under detention for 80 minutes E KIllED BY Crest of the fiood i3 expected They were released about 40 min- 4 to reach Falls City tomorrow night.' utes after the King had left the - BLAST; CAUSE MAY | [] i The looting was reported to be airfield bad in San Antonio's west side, of-| The King stayed at the airfiel VICTORIA, B. C., Sept. 27.—Au-! thorities today pressed an investiga- | ficials. said, particularly in the ¢nly 10 minute Ition into the $50,000 blast that kill- cloudburst-created floods|colors, King George IT of left England this morning to re- sume the throne of the strife-torn land from which advancing Ger- man armies drove him five S ago The Greek government has made |elaborate plans to welcome the 56 laughed gaily as he shook hands with personal friends as- sembled to see him off. For pho- Following a cabinet meeting to- day “at which the meat situation was a topic, Hannegan told report- ers that after reading the Presi- dent’s statement of yesterday he had decided against discussing the ATHENS, Sept. 27.—King George | II returned to Greece tonight. d vicinity of Ruiz and Zarzamcra |strects where many homes have | been abandoned. | Four of the dead are unidentified military policemen. He was on Greek soil for the first time since 1941. Spectators quoted him as saying: “I am sorry I don’t recognize all of you but I extend my greetings.” A 101-gun salute was prepared North-| Con-! of! PARIS—A special peace confer- ence subcommittee on Trieste pre- pared today to admit total failure ed three persons and injured two others yesterday at the Canadian - R Industries, Ltd., explosive plant on James Island, 14 miles north of ls ExpE(IED IN | Victoria. | «or the Monarch’s triumphal return to Athens tcmcrrow, - Flight of Plane PICKETING 'WATERFRONT STARTS AT PEACE SEEN ~ PITISBURGH, NEARER NOW No SememeFin Sight on' | Wages of Light Com- . pany Employees 217. West Coast léepresenta- tives to Join in Wash- ington Negotiations | WASHINGTON, Sept. 27.-Gov- |ernment attempt to head off a new maritime strike threatened for next Monday gained momentum today with AFL union acceptance of invi- PITTSBURGH, Sept. Duquesne Light Company employees threatened further this eity's pow- er supply now dwindling near the danger point in the fourth day of | ations to attend negotiatin, la crippling work stoppage 1 alofis’ Hére i No settlement was in sight in the! “gaigier the app, Masters, Mate \wage reas P, 3 i & - pmdt inc X;)-\ .l‘ dispute. ; {and Pilots union, representing nulm resident ()-unu- Mueller | merchant marine licensed deck of- jagreed to resume stalemated N€go-:ficors and J, B, Bryan, President tiations with “anyone in authority the Pacifio-American Shipown | of {but fixed no time or place and no!ers Acsociation, had balked at com to Washington, conferences are scheduled. Meanwhile, pickets appeared The Labor Department said the various company plants after disso- |decision of Capt. C. F. May, the lution of an anti-strike injunction.{ AFL, union’s vice president and They halted delivery of coal At a!West Const spokesman, to attend main power station. They also per- 'was a good sign that Bryan also suaded bus drivers on 20 city routes | will accept ' Secretary Schwellen. | to leave their vehicles garaged (bach’s invitation to come here. ther than cross picket lines. Thel Meantime, Joseph Curran co- | bus lines are operated by the Pitts- ! chairma y | burgh Motor Clum-h (‘,nmymu' e AR o g pany |Committee for Maritime Unity, told P, o g e Inewsmen he was optimistic over | {chances to avold & new maritime <ARMY MEAT jstrike. Curran said successful con- | iclusion of the seamen's negotiations | here, and of stevedore contract i jtalks on the West Coast, would i u lmenn “we'll have peace the waterfronts until next,,su Teast Curran told reporters he was here | | WASHINGTON, Sept. 27.—The| |War Department ordered today as an observer because, he said, C1O ses- ing at unlicensed seamen would have to quit work, too, if licensed seamen !strik: Monday, Officials of the CIO Marine En- a gineers Beneficial Assoclation; a reduction of 3,000,000 pounds a week second seamen’s union threatening !in the Army's meat purchases be-ito strike over new contract de- ause of -the current shortage. imands, and Frank J, Taylor, rep- | Maj. Gen. T. B. Larkin, th ; 1 aj. Gen. ? arkin, —the resenting East and Gulf Coast oper- |quartermaster general, said in a’ators started negotiations here this 'statement that the army's priority morning, but the talks were sus- (demand this week for 15,000,000 pended pending arrival of the 'pounds weekly has been scaled|West Coast group, by Army plane. down to 12,000,000 pounds - e — a 12 percent cut in meat issues to ditional ration issues of fish, mac-; HELD IN ABEYANCE these alternatives are being consid-\ ANCHORAGE, Sept. 27.—A bulld- ments of the Army, Navy, Coast day, was being held in abeyance by for which the quartermaster pur-!from the Wage Adjustment Board 1. Authority to apply l"‘l’-‘-ffnl‘b" suggestion by Duncan Camp- ed meat* packing plants in addition | Department, that the Council file 2. Purchase of meat or meat pro- ' Position in event of an adverse de- ing Argentinn, Australia and Can-|Griffin, President of the Buildine A - — Griffin said the Council would ARRES]’S MADE [the strike “at a moment's notice if The union has asked the WAB to | increasgs which the operators have troops, and will be made up by ud-!' As further measures, Larkin said, | s Guard and other federal agencies Workers as they waited further word priority orders to all state inspect- | ell, Labor Advisor of the Interior ducts from other countries, includ- Cisicn was turned down by Felton theld to the original notice and call lN HollvwooD j reconsider its disapproval of wdge - o | J. 8. Thatcher, plant superinten-, NUERNBERG TR!A[ | 'dent, and other company officials expressed the opinion, however, that < i 'the cause of the explosion may| BERLIN, Scut. 27.—A public op-| "Turtle’ Delayed STUDIO RIOTS HOLLYWOOD, Sept dozen arrests for minor 27—Half a ‘The reduction, he said, will mean ANCHORAGE STRIKE aroni and cheese and dairy pro-| ered to meet “minimum” require+:ing trades strike, scheduled for to- chases: |in Washington, D. C. |to federal inspected plants a new strike notice to protect its ada | Council |it becomes necessary.” ingrm-d 0 pay I e EXpeded Seftlement | al a more than a point to a fraction iGooclyear off more than a point. iBriIish Official nd Public Service steady. Stand- rd Oil (N. J.) cut an early loss of ¥ | este. | nd other oils steadied. 1 ey e Store issues were off fractions to, SAN FRANCISCO—The Amer point. Tire stocks eased with an Legion is opening its 28th an- nual convention Sunday and the. biggest topic to come up will be! | bonuses. About /150,000 legionnairies |are expected to attend. BATAVIA, Java —Two thousand tons of rubber and other property, 1in its efiorts to draft a sstatute for never be known as all of the build- | inion survey conducted by the Am- ¢ | the proposed free territory of Tri-|ing’s occupants were killed. WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU) Temperatures for 24-Hour Period Ending 6:30 o'Clock This Morning e o o In Juneau—Maximum, 43; By Bad Weathe | erican Military Government indicat- | led today most Germans believe the @l 121 defendants at Nuernberg are PERTH, Australia, Sept. 27, — guilty of planning the war and al-' weather conditions today forced most half expect death sentences the U. S. Navy Neptune patrol : for the accused. _ Iplane “Turtle” to delay for 24 hours The trials are rving the in- jts takeoff for an attempted non- ¢ tended purpose of bringing to light |siop flight to Seattle. The pilot T ® | the story of war atrocities and in- p Duyyies, said that with weather : structing the German people of iy the central Pacific area improv- their leaders’ guilt,” AMG announc- ing it should be possible to take to a total value of $1,660,000, were Manchurian troops were reported|aii;acted selling from holders of today fighting in the suburbs of i,k who had been awaiting a re- Tolun, an important commercml‘wvery to unload, c_énter in northeastern Chahar pro-| nayget pews continued fairly fa- vince, while the Nauonahgt ad-! yorable, including a 26 to 30 per- yAnce on the Chahar capital ofcont rige in retail sales as compared Kalgan proceeded at a reduced‘wm1 a year ago; and several fa- pace. | vorable earnings reports, notably | Eversharp which reported net in- |come for the six months ended erry i Go = Round | August 31 at $2,547,197, against 1$602,491 in the corresponding per- - fiod of last year. The stock netted he Washington s : Fedne i | Steel issues were mixed with T ( Bethlehem up a point and U. S.| 2 ¥ B By DREW PEARSON | Steel off a fraction. Chrysler lost| SAN FRANCISCO — Troopship T eT more than a point in its depart- Seg Runnexj wnh_ 2,137 troops from WASHINGTON—With . the stock | =~ | Okinawa, will arrive tomorrow after market “acting up” more than at ¢ .|a delay of more than 48 hours any time in five Ye‘“'svm’“’t ?ove!g;i::e;hes r:;lfi;n.:tl:::;c bfi;flffik“tfcaused by. bad weather. fgs been. iriade by Presiden ™° | Western 2 while Union Pacific was man or Secretary of the Treasury o, "pore “than a point. Utilities gevdar foihring ?he Secufiflestnnd’were mixed with North American' g‘fm:h;mg:f;‘;nbym;m’xfl?nm. Consolidated Edison easier | to protect the public from Wall;: t, the SEC is still being cares ' fully kept out of Washington—and certain interests hope it remains in exile. Meanwhile, had Secretary Snyder consulted the SEC before making his ambiguous statement on the slump, he would have found a sig- nificant report regarding the entire stock market. Here are some of the inside facts shown in the SEC re- Is Shol 'o Dea“‘ port: | | destroyed in a fire Wednesday at 1. Several weeks before the mar-; the Borneo port of Bandjermasin, Kot nose dive, new issues of sir-| 'LONDON, Bept. 21—Reuters 1¢<|aceording o a message reaching| plane and auto stocks failed to|ported in a New Delhi dispatch w-"he,.e today. £ | arouse public buying, so that the‘day that Maj. John Stewart Donald, i underwriting houses, stuck with the | British political agent, kidnaped by| sy ES CITY, Mont.—A boy baby stocks, had to raise cash to pay|tribesmen June 21 and later re‘{burn to Mr. and Mrs. Victor Silver for them. This meant they had to|leased, had been found shot t0'pag peen named “Sterling.” 1 Unload Government bonds and death at Tank, in the Dera Ismail e A TR blue-chip stocks such as Du- Ponts Khan district of the northwest! and American Tel and Tel to gct"iflggie:dpmv‘;ncte- b F | lAS' woRD ash. This was the first selling| mald and two other members :::vec to sag the market. g10! the British agency staff were GOLDFIELD, Nev., Sept. 2'7._— 2. Simultaneously investment, held captive two u_zeeks by me'H_em'y Carlson came home from his houses got wind of a new fear psy- tribesmen before their release was, mine and llnformed his wife that he chology. The public was afraid Lhe‘ negotiated. had km_ed a large n_ulesnake, | long upward climb of the market! The dispatch gave no details of| She lfslened to hn.s_ story, then was at an end. They wanted to seulhls death. ‘spcfled it by announcing that she before the downward trend started. ———ee —— had stopped her car and killed - Palm oil 15 used in the production | four rattlers with rocks during a, of steel plates, 26-mile drive from Tonopah, Nev. j (Continued on Page Four) minimum, 38. At Airport—Maximum, 45; minimum, 37. ® ed p ® Of the persons interviewed, 57, ® percent indicated they first learned ® | about concentration camps through ® ihe trials, and 30 percent said they ® | first learned about annihilation of ®|the Jews. . WEATHER FORECAST (Juneau and Vicinity) Cloudy tonight and Satur- day but with some sunshine | ® Saturday. Cooler tonight. ® |Democratic national committeeman | ® from Texas, Mayron G. Blalock, is| | PRECIPITATION ® |said to have served notice on party | (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. toduy) @ |jeaders that Southern Democrats % ® will not yield much more to left- ® wing thinkers. ® The warning from the ® | Demoerats is unde! od to have, been veiced by Blalock at a lunch- ® con yesterday. Among those atlend-\ ® ing the luncheon was Democratic, >-ee — WASHINGTON, Sept. 27— In Juneau — 26 inches since Sept. 1, 7.60 inches; since July 1, 22.71 inches. At Airport — .22 inches; e since Sept. 1, 442 inches; e since July 1, 1665 inches. . LI A B B A N southern . j negan, off at sunset tomorrow. 243 Soldiers Are Convided, Mutiny Al SINGAPORE, Sept. 21—Lt. Gen.| ® Iree lance photographer Sir Montagu Stopford, Commander in Chief of Allied Land Forces in southeast Asia, announced today that 243 soldiers of the 13th Bri- tish parachute battalion had been convicted of . mutiny by a court martial and sentenced to two years imprisonment The men were accused of refus ing to parade May 14 at the Muar ® |National Chairman Robert E. Hart-!Camp as a protest against living|Chicago 7 (first game); conditions, marked the second day of the cur-| rent movie strike today as nearly al thousand pickets milled around the | gates of Hollywood's larger film! ¥ studios. { PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 27U, § Four men were arrested at Warn- | conciliators - were' hoplng -’ for- ‘& er Brothers, storm center of last|settlement today in the dispute year's violent strike. One of them,jWhich has had 5000 CIO loggers in \Don Q. Regan, 20, was booked (,,,‘Lhc Caolumbia River area on strike inciting a riot after a Burbank po- {siice- Monday. liceman fired two shots over his: Another employer-union negotiat- head. The officer ¢harged Regan INE Meeting was slated for this af- |threw a rock at one of 17 buses '€rnoon. A “good chance” of reach- |that carried 850 employees through iDg agreement was reported after line of some 300 pickets. The |Yesterday’s four-hour session. The | strike resulted from a union juris-|dispute revolves around contract dictional dispute ‘!('hangt‘s and a Deep River, Wash., At the same studio, a man was Walkout rrested for spreading tacks in the ! Sz rive ay and another for bslugumg}opA 5-(en| (up ,Of Coffee Just BASEBALL Isn’t, Porfer Finds ‘The following is the baseball dup\»’ — of games today received up to press' SANTA FE, N. M. Sept. 27— time: The OPA recently announced that National League—Chicago at St. the five-cent cup of coffee is here ‘Luula (night game) Brooklyn un- {o stay. h('dulgd ! But Price Administrator Paul American League—St. Louis 3, Porter couldn't find a five-cent cup Washing- in Santa Fe. The hotel where he stayed charges 15 cents a cup. InCi0 logger Sirike ia a d - - ton 4; Boston 5,