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b i ~ THE DAILY VOL. LXVIIL, NO. 10,479 ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1947 _ MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS - PRICE TEN CENTS —— ST T ARMY, NAVY “UNIFICATION” IS ENDORSED RUSSIA MAY SEEK LOAN FROM U. S. Would Be~AfiImos1 Like Bribe for Settlement of Reparations LONDON, Jan. 17.—British sourc s predicted today that Russia might seek a five billion dollar loan from the United States as the price for scaling down reparations claims| companies interested in®establishing| Ramadier, 59-year-old econom- 'the scene of the wreck, said two|town office building. _(by the Senate Commerce Commit- Cities. IT successful, a chartered| on Germany—one of the thorniest|paper mills in southeast Alaska;! ist and lawyer as French Pre- |more bodies had been found be-| :\ma-ll. who h_ua been fiovemm(‘,m boat would take 150 Portland b?m- issues facing the Deputy Foreign|repeal or revision of the Jones| mier. neath the wreckage of a car, bring- Ll’l the D;N foU yoats amrli Cl.“,lms‘ nessmen to Alaska this summer in Ministers drafting German and!Shipping Act to permit Canadian! ilng the total known dead to eight.|he is still lml- ‘a(x?lrs legn_ ‘le’“Lu'.’l QUEBEC—Rodrigue Cardinal Vil- @ follow-up t]]F, Ay Austrian peace treaties. |ships to bring American freight| PARIS, Jan. 17.—Sources close! Kern County General Hospital,|tive despllevlnl state Legislature'sion.,ve Aych-Bishop of Quebec, Rouse, chairman of the Club's The influential London econom- into Alaska; and establishment of | t0 France's new President, Vincent| where most of the injured were Daming of Talmadge, announced his| gioo i’ o Los Angeles hospital last | "W Alaskan trade committee, esti- ist, terming reparations “the crux|a southern branch, University of|Auriol, predicted today he would | being treated, of the whole matter,” said the “key to a German settlement” might lie in a U. S. loan to Russia. “The Russians have asked for $10,000,000,000 worth of reparations from Germany,” the paper said, “but the certainty of half that fi gure in dollars now would be of infinitely greater economic value. “Prime Minister Stalin has on two occasions recently referred to Russia's need for an American loan. The whole atmosphere of the coming Moscow conference might be changed if successful loan ne- gotiations had already been com- pletea in Washington.” Commenting on the heavy cost of occupation and asserting that unification of Germany cut these expeaditures, the economist added |Posed street improvements and sur-, eager to accept the Premiership.| that “Russian demands seem to | facing. KETCHIKAN MAPS NEW CABINET 0UTPROGRAMFOR | next Legistature, SEEKS BLUM | | KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Jan. l7.~i F R pREMIER { The Chamber of Commerce and| AFL and CIO labor groups wil!i { join in sponsoring a series of town !mee!ings next week to inform legis- tions to proposed legislation. | H | Use of Territorial fuel tax re-‘I TBSk 0' Seledmg Men | bors is one of the principal pro-| for |mDOT'afl' Posts | posals being backed by the Cham-| - Others include the continuance| BULLETIN—Paris, Jan. 17. of Alaska Development Board,| —President Vincent Auriol to- | iature members on residents’ reac- venue for building small boat har- ber crganization. | LEAD ALL—NEW ‘CABXNET | which is now working with the two, night nominated Socialist Paul | Alaska, with funds sufficient to}m“k” every effort to persuade his fb,mg Students here for a six|close friend and fellow-Socialist, { month study of fisheries. Leon Blum, to accept the Premier- | | ship of the new cabinet. | Auriol, elected to office by the ‘(lIY Cou"(ll wlll ‘[two Houses of Parliament yester- ! day, plunged into the task DECIDE IMPORTANT | ISSUES TONIGHT interim cabinet of Blum and upon what terms. The new President scheduled con- ferences with two leaders of the | Juneau City Council will meet! French Communist Party, Jacques this evening at 8 o'clock in the|Duclos and Maurice Thorez, both Council Chambers of the City Hall. Yeported willing to enter the Blum Two important matters of business, coalition cabinet if they get certain are slated to come up. | posts. Observers say the Commun- ! First is a decision on the ques-|ists will seek the Foreign Ministry tion of planning funds for the pro-; Blum, however, was reported not sounaing out the various parties as City Engineer McNamara He is 74 and his health is not Russians to be justified many times Wil have a report on estimated €00d. The last of France’s four over and it would indeed be a re- costs of the proposed work, and a| post-war President-Premiers, Blum French President Beginsl .| senger of | to whether they would accept the| 'EIGHT ARE DEAD - INTRAIN WRECK . IN CALIFORNIA | | {TALMADGE /Charles Rouse Coming (ONTROLS = To Juneau fe Solicit | Many Reported Injured in| CAPITOL Business for Portland Accident Caused by | ) i Charles L. Rouse, Vice President Broken Rail {Arnall Ousted Even from; B u L I. E "' l N S Ohutes I Rouse Ve Predent BAKERSFIELD, Calif., Jan. 17— DeSk In Roiunda-—ls- will fly to Juneau next week in an | | wasamvemon = e House | Eight persons are known to have| sue Up '0 cou”s attempt to gain more Alaskan busi- Y i Commerce Committee today ordered | been killed and many others injur-! less for Portland | |ed when a Southern Pacific pas- - Rouse said he planned to @ train struck a broken rail|{ Atlanta, Jan. 17—Herman Tal-ian jmmediate investigation into the for some 40 Portland b {12 miles northwest of here early madge seized complete control of{causes of airplane crashes and ways 0 Iy to Alaska in about s Georgla's capitol today and forced|of preventing them. A similar in- Ellis Arnall to move to a down-| | today. to present their products at a ser- iquiry already has been launched | Deputy Coroner John Wirts, at ies of banquets in major Alaskan | intention establish the Arnall |capitol downtown after a brief en- counter with Talmadge estimated them at to {70 to 100, including those less ser- mated Alaskan business at $150,- ’uighl. the Arch-Bishop’s Palace an- | handled +nounced toda; 000,000 a year, most !iously hurt a Heutme | ¥ | through Seattle. “If we could get i ead ircluded these, tenta-|ant at the State House. ! . |only 10 percent of the Alaskan ““:1;:;0 ,3‘.,,““(.(,“ The Talmadge lieutenant, Statel WQS"INGTON‘-MWN‘.‘;0"11':1- PP b through Se- | James Leroy Hall, Kansas City,/Rep. Jimmy Dykes, earlier had!al Ciutk announces the indictment| oo, 1o aid “it would be suf- | Mo. jselzed the desk in the capitol ro- U‘r Oarl Aldo ;Maxsant, “_“""“":xmu-m to warrant the trips.” Bessie Diles, Richmond, Calif. |tunda which Arnall occupied yes-|Sta's Department employee, on e . 2 | ter or i rom | charges of misrepresenting to the Pyi. Joseph Bernavich, 18, Rich-|terday after being excluded fromcha e P kbl Ithe executive chambers govenment that he had never been . Sheriff’s Deputy Jack Kiethley Arnall strods up to Rep. Dykes' E member of the Communist Party. Ex(lse axes estimated that 55 persons were be-|desk and said, “Jimmie, I'm govern-, A or. | HOLLYWOOD-Mrs. Doris Vidor, ing treated for injuries at the O 5r:,,,, ’ Dykes interrupted to say, “Ellis|wife of film director Charles Vidor 5 ] | PSP |Arnall, you remind me of a hog. and daughter of film executive o on'lnue You got your head in - the trough!Hairy M. Warner, gave birth to a 'JOE TINKER, SIXTY (EEs totes s vou ot e e S e T jmy office?” Biie ‘ WASHINGTON, Jan. 17—By a ST o s o] o . i R pI.AYER, I.OSES lEG‘hnw no more right to be governoripe considerably better in his sick- Proved legislation continuing indef- — |than I have.’ !room in Amaleinborg Castle. A initely the war-time tax rates on Tinker, former Chicago Cub short-| /. { temperature is said to be lower, °ther goods and services. stop. was recovering in a hospital hen,, tuming to, the press, and | Chairman Knutson (R-Minn) an- {fusing to let you sit here. YOUithe Tenth of Denmark is said to @nd Means committee today ap- R —_ ' 1 " i liquor, jewelry, furs, and many ORLANDO, Fla., Jan. 17. — Joe, , = o000 wwell let's see.” | 10N infection is decreasing and his |Spdaking into a radio microphom‘.f High Officers Give Approval, Proposed Plan 1Cooperafio;{,‘(ireater f- ficiency Promised Under One Cabinet Head WASHINGTON, Jan. 17— The Army and Navy High Command, agreed on a plan for “unification,™ today promised cooperation and greater efficiency under a single cabinet officer. One by one, Secretary of War Patterson, Secretary fo the Navy Forrestal, Adm. Chester W. Nimitz and Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower gave their wholehearted endorsemnt to the new plan. | They spoke to a crowded news conference in the White House movie theatre. Then they turned the meeting over to experts to go into de- |tails. But, for the most part, the plan, announced by President Tru- man last night, remained only a keneral proposition, with the chinks to be filled in later. Congress will have a big hand that. Plan Forward Step Admiral Nimitz said he considers the plan a “definite and substan- tial forward step and I shall sup- in s Port it to the.best of my ability.” He sald it will enable the services to get together on many essential matters and make progress. General Eisenhower, wearing a Florida tan, sald he always has deplored the differences between Army and. Navy officers over markable situation-if dollars-could Fécommendation as to the amount| formally resigned last night, short- | > g 4 i - _ nounced that another bill will be * be found ;or a deigaied)i‘:nezm‘ of planning funds that is would be|ly after returning from London, | 26T .todsy ok e AMPULAtion 1,y said: “To the people of| SPATTLE-Deck workers employ- introduced continuing the wartime MEY8er and row that they have Bt Dot Tor » devaktated ally ™ necessary to apply for from the wheie he had conferred with Bri-| Periormed (o balt an infection Gooryie g5 Governor of Georgia, 116d on Puget Sound ferry operations| WECHIE COREUMIRG, € MATHEE beey resolved he personally will ly. i 2ah p £ _| which started last October. 2 # he State | have accepted a compromise wage 5 h “support it with all I have" as a Australla apparently lost h |FWA. leaders on a future French have been denied access to t. {mailing charge from two to three Pparently lost her ap- enting | Bri f ¥ | Hospital attendants reported. . i ” iproposal, apparently averting a 4 . it “distinctive step forward.” The peal for active participation by the| Lt- ColL Simmons, representing|British alliance. b sttty * midnight that the CAPitol building . cents and boosted mailing costs in \ “Little Nations” in disoussing the ‘he Commanding General of Alas-| Auriol had hoped to nominatej 1oV after midnight that the “pyees shouted “Thavs a lie” | threatening strike. Acceptance of|con® T PORRC T ,United States, he said, will be the German and Austrian treaties, Feo- K8 has returned to Juneau, and the veteran Socialist leader in the|86-year-old member of the Tinker-{ wnay continued: * . . .today, de-|the agreement is announced by the dor T. Gousev, Forelgn Minister, Presumably will be present at to- insisted that the smaller nations nLghis mt‘et;ng' S" ':ake,fm?l B:; appear before tht Deputies Coun- TRRUCINERS . Lox DI I cil only when presenting their own |1eKe Juneau the leave center for treaty proposals {servicemen in Alaska. Three-Week-0ld e 'NORTH SEA ARRIVES ma'e;;a_s :;! 'HERE, SITKA BOUND VANCOUVER, B. C, Jan. 17— Tiny Dorothy Marie Molloy of Vancouver, British Columbia, 15,3 &Pt C. C. Graham, Purser C. equipped to cope with a steak, even | . eheles, agrived in Juneau i F i though doctors advise that she pe | this moring at 8:30 o'clock. She is kept on a formula. Dorothy wasf‘?::‘;gtsafln?rsiifika ;’i’i‘l‘; m‘g::%:‘ born with one tooth and with only |, nd éundxy % three weeks of life behind her she's: L A expecting two more. As her mother 1€ following passengers arrived et in Juneau from Seattle: Mr. and uts it, “Doroth; 1) S X }p)roudlor het:e’l f,%' cethalnly. seems |\, g g, Waldemar, Margaret Arriving here from Ketchikan The Washingto v were Mr. an rs. W. A. Grenier, MerrY- Go-Round'w G i Meioalf, 2ds| and Mrs. P. Esquire and Peter Es- iquire, Jr., Lillian Nelson, Charles By DREW PEARSON | Burdick, Mrs. Marshall Crutcher, |Mrs. Charlotte Halm, Joe Guy, C. WASHINGTON — Unlike many's, Cain, Mrs. Ruth DuBois, Wallis other resignations, the real mason‘(;em-ge and Phil Semour, for Eecretary of State Byrnes' re | From Wrangell: Mr. and Mrs. M. signation was just what the official O, Johnson and J. E. Woodford. ennouncement said — his health. |From Petersburg: Mrs. Cora Jack-! There was, however, backstage dra- |son, Porter Apple, Mrs. G. Igtanloe, ma Lehind the sudden announce-|Irving Igtanloe, Genevieve Igtanloe, ment January 6, instead of waiting | Myron Igtanloe, Frank R. Clayton, until January 10 as planned. {Miss M. Bogue, Mrs. C. O. Parks, Late in the afternoon of Janu-'Mrs. Ignor Nore and Albert E. ary 6, Byrnes got a call from a!Nickerson. newsman clearly indicating that| R P SR he knew the resignation was im-| S'I'HMER MOVEMEN'S minent. Hurrying over to the White | Norti Sea, from Seattle, in port (Mrs. R. Rufus, Frank McGill and |Joel Moss. House, the Secretary of State told | President Truman of the phone call jand sails for Sitka at midnight. and asked him how the story could| Aleutian scheduled to sail from have leaked. |Seattle at 4 p. m. today. “I didn’t tell a soul except Bill| Princess Norah scheduled to sail Northland Transportation Com-| pany’s North Sea, under command | Young, Alexander Barov, Dr. and| | next three days. the President is required to nom- |inate a Premier after consulting Farliament leaders. The Premier i\ then drafts a program which he ——Parliament’s Lower House. If the Assembly approves the | policies, he then sets about choos- {ing men for his cabinet posts. — e TAYLOR TO WASHINGTON Ike P. Taylor, Chief Engineer for | the Alaska Road Commission, left yesterday for Washington, D. C. Taylor expects to be back there | about two weeks attending com- mitteer hearings on appropriations for Territorial roads. Road Commission handles the mainienance of. 2,815 miles of road, including the two largest highways in the Territory, Richardson and Alaska Highway. > | submits to the National Assembly ! nominee’s H infield to-Evers-to-Chance com- Under the French' constitution, | Pination was “resting very quietly” ,iunga of the capitol and that his condition was good. Tinker's left leg was removed ‘yesmday Jjust above the knee. | PRICE OF SUGAR WASHINGTON, Jan. 17—OPA {today authorized an increase in | wholesale sugar price ceilings which it estimated will mean a boost of | about one-quarter cent a pound at | zetail stores. S { The increase, amounting to 18z The Alaska!cents per hundred pounds for raw coup d'etat.”* sugar and 20 cents for refined su- 1gar, is effective tomorrow but will I not reach retail levels until arrival jof tne first shipments under the | new wholesale scale. T0 BE ADVANCED nied access tp my office in the{Inland Boatmen's Union and the In order | Masters, Mates and Pilots Asso- not to discredit the people of Geor-!ciation. The raise averages $20 a !gia and to create disturbance, I'm|{month. o moving to 1407 Candler Building lm; downtown Atlanta) there to func-; tion as chief executive. igays that a rescue tug has thrown “I am sure ‘the courts will up-ilines aboard the crippled British hold me as legal governor and|tanker Fossularaca and is heading not the forces bent on violence.”|for St. John's, Newfoundland. Two He was interrupted repeatedly by|days ago the tanker broadcast an !cheers from the surrounding crowd.| SOS that she was helpless in the Speaking again over the din, he|stormtossed North Atlantic because continued: of a damaged rudder “Accordingly, I shall ask my sec-i retarial staff to meet me at 1407 RIO DE JANEIRO--Brazil will Candler Building to function untilihold its first election on Sunday the courts remove the pretenderiunder the terms of the recently who by force and storm troopers|ratified constitution. Ten-thousand has occupied the capitol in ajcandidates are seeking 3,000 offic- es in the state elections. Brazil's -oe jtwerty states and the federal dis- i trict will vote for governor, | senator and state legislators NEW YORK-—A Swastika and the a a COASTAL AIRLINES NEW YORK-—The Coast Glmrd. Under Republican domination for S*eAter gainer by a step of this na- [the first time in 16 years, the tax ‘' framing committtee followed Presi- laent Truman's recommendation , PUring the seminar, President |that the automatic rollback of ex- ’;"““_“““ met with his cabinet at cise taxes, scheduled for July 1, be © 'e‘ regular PFriday session in an- headed off so that the government ©ther part of the White House. | would get an estimated $1,130,000000 The :m'"flx was largely devoted ifrom this source in the next fiscal '© @ discussion of the Army-Navy Iyear. “‘unification” agreement. Although the committee took no , Secretary of Agriculture Anderson formal action on the postal rates, told rzpartfirs the President “seem- Knutson indicated that legislation ®0 Pleased” about the agreement, continuing the higher rates would 2" “that’s about as far as we got, get quick approval. This also was _When it came to details, ques- | recommended by Mr. Truman and tions at the new.? seminar brought |is_expected to yield an estimated U0 these points: $65,000,000 a year. Details | Knutson told reporters he expects' ppe plans make no specific pro- the House to pass the excise con-'yigion in themselves for a single !tinuation bill early next week. purchasing department for all — branches of the armed services. But | {the nature of the setup indicates WEAIHER BREAKS- ‘that this is contemplated. { ] The famous Marine Corps will § continue unchanged as the tradi- tional amphibious fighting group. Truman Meets Cabinet PAA CLIPPERS IN 1 Yi | The agency said the increases H'IB o" THURSDA { | were made necessary because of the o i ¢ = | terms under whlchrythe government ' The Alaskn Coastal Alriines car-] 2, B {0 8 (0 W0 SO0 i nl The weather broke for a time Anyone having information con-|buys sugar from Cuba, Under this|'ied 10 passengers outgoing I ,?h bly had been beaten Yesterday and PAA Clippers arrived ceruing the following person is|agreement the price paid the Cu-|JUneAN yesterday. There were fivei 20l 1o Probably had been BESWR o %oy g coiin bound flights. asked to communicate With the!bans for raw sugar is tied to in.|t° Sitka: J. J. Conway VinoetEE GE8HH Was ‘]": e ntans. Police! Coming from Seattle to Juneau Governor’s Office in Juneau: creases in retail food prices in this|Anderson, Helen Cully, John Cart-| FPE% ®Iav ' Wi PAlemas SOIERI oo thie following: August Grot. About 70 years old.| country. {er. 9k, SN M. O. Young; (hree 1h ,,mc,:m.;' Thu-,-”;"m b i :':',:,ed Laura Earl, Jery Earl, Laurel ke ¢ |Hoonah: T. Goodman, Harold|as Anthony Trabasso, 18 years old, cHbacil S Believed to be trapper or prospec -ee Jones and Al Seaffsted. and two,Of Poughkeepsie, He lived in a Earl Howard Loewen, Bob Murray, tor. Last known address—Sitka. b Pes“ M d Mrs. John|rooming house near where he was ¥red Wagner, Claude Reed. —————— ito. Pelican: r. an s. R (l_‘M PROBI_EM "KE" Bresseman. !found and attended’ Pratt Institute, Tom Leite, Herbert Olson, Har-' ¢ 1 b i Bertha UP BY GOVERNOR AT .. Jincac mrom sitka aar. and| R word “Nazi” were cut on the chest INFORMATION WANTED of ‘a young man who died toflay! s old Simmons, Phyllis Gaunt, McCrossan, Salisa Kaiser Howard Nelson, Helen Assistant Regional® Forester| But there probably will be greater cooperation, training and develop- ment for use of the Army, Navy and Marines together in such op- erations. There is no intention in this plan to decide which service will use which weapons for the purpose of doing its job. Research probably will continue along present lines, but with a strengthening and coordinatign un- der a joint research agency di- Charles G. Burdick returned to Ju-| neau on the North Sea from Ketch- | ikan. Burdick has been gone a week on routine business in that| section. i O oo i MEMORIAL CHURCH CHOIR WILL REHEARSE TONIGHT, The Memorial Church Choir will| meet for a short rehearsal tonight promptly at 7 o'clock. All members | are requested to attend. SCHoOL IS OUT; : HOW/, \vected by Dr. Vannevar Bush. Jacqueline Howe, Gary Howe, Har- Guided Missiles "™ MEET ON SATURDAY Hassett,” Truman replied, refer-|from Vancouver January 21. g s ring to one of his White House| Baranof scheduled to sail from| DR. RUFUS HERE | secretaries. Seattle January 24. e o “But Admiral weahy knew it,”| Denali scheduled to sail from Dr. and Mrs. H. C. Rufus of Ann corrected Byrnes, “because he men- |Seattle, February 1.. Arbor, Mich. arrived on the North tioned it to me.” | Alaska, from west, scheduled|Sea and are registered at the Bar- “Oh, yes,” admitted the Presi-|late Sunday night or early Monday dert, “Admiral Leahy knew.” morning. - I. was then decided to issue an| Palisana scheduled southboind on WOODFORD RETURNS | immediate press release in order|January 28. J. E Woodford, who has been at! to ‘“scoop” the newsman, and the e Wrangell on business for over al President called in Press Secre- MRS. HOUSTON LEAVING week, returned to Juneau on the tary Charlie Ross. Whereupon it developed that he had also told Charlie Ross about the impending Byrnes resignation. Thus, although the President ap-| parently didn't realize it, he had tola at least three people about Bymnes' plan to resign. And when (Continued on Page Four) Mrs. Warren Houston and her small daughter, Sheila, are leaving Monday for Seattle to spend a month visiting with Mrs. Houston’s 1 family. North Sea. | e e—— | KRUGNESS GOES SOUTH | John Krugness, of the B. M.| Behrends Grocery Depnnment,l RPN e g A went south’ on a PAA plane yes- SIMMONS FROM WESTWARD |terday on a vacation trip and Lt. Col. H. K. Simmons, from|friends say he is bound for Holly- Ford Richardson, arrived yesterday|wood and other places, just to look ‘and is registered at the Baranof.|eround. |night at 7:30 o'clock in the Scottish | {Rite Temple. /| Apple from Petersburg. MEETING, KETCHIKAN icci, “weica. ony sserman, %. 1. | Eliasau, Harvey and Mrs. Brown; IS"'I A“Y HEAI The Governor has returned from!from Pelican: K. R. Raatikainen, Supt. A. B. Philips dismissed Whitehorse to Juneau—Lt. John Ketchikan where he attended a Mrs. Karl Strow and Mrs. L. O. Ja- meeting of the Fisheries Experimen- | cobson; from Hoonah: Mrs. P. S. [ van Doornick, Thelma Van Door- both the Juneau High and Juneau‘mck Lt. Don Baldock, Audrey Bal- {Grade schools shortly before 11 § s g Y. B tal Commission. The meeting was/Ganty and A. R. Hudson. o'clock this forenoon. The heat-' 99¢k: John Oliver. called to deal with the clam prob- | e 'RED (ROSS EXE(UI'VE ing ‘plant went on the bum during| Ketchikan to Juneau — Willlam | riet McDonald, Thomas O'Brien, Mrs. Eva McDonald, Mildred Ho- warth. lem, the salg of Southeast Alask: clams having been forbidden by| {80 not to endanger the health of|Poré, Harold Hoffman, Jack Mc- is engaging in research to deter- mine ways of removing the toxicity: Felix Toner, Chairman, has call-|pupils or students, schools were Daniel, Richard F:-.u\r. Tom Mor- which is caused by “red tide.” ed for an executive committee |dismissed. ean, Joh.n H Lnklm.‘ . i g meeting of the Juneau Chapter of! It is expected the heating plant Aithur Berg, George Burch, Wayne Abbott, Louise Abbott, Dox- | othy Fontaine, Vida Conelly. John Krugness, Ike Taylor, Pen- |ny Blood, Amy Kay Frombholtz, | George Rogers, Kathleen Hayes, |the Ameriean Red Cross for tonight {will be functioning by tonight, so lat 8 o'clock. The session will be‘the gym will be comfortable for ‘held at the ARC headquarters inithe big basketball game. [the Shattuck Building. R The Rainbow Girls will meet for| RICHARDSON PORTRAIT SIO(K OIIOIMIONS William Spain,. Elizabeth Lydock, > 4 HANGS IN MUSEUM - * 4{Samuel Clemence, Gertrude Clem- a regular buginess session tomorrow | e NEW YORK, Jan. 17—Closing, ence, John Weise. The portrait of General Wilds P.|quotation of Alaska Juneau mine| Juneau to Whitehorse — Andrew Richardson, which was recently|stock today is 5', American Can Smith, Marion Conoway, Albert Ro- RAINBOW GIRLS T0 There will be no| :;"::;::g";o .ailndmembers Are TE iresented to the Territory by the! 94, Anaconda 38%. Curtiss-Wright chon, Isabelle Graff. B _.“ General's sister, Mrs. William 08-;5"5, International Harvester 72,' Juneau to Fairbanks—John Cass, | 1lvie of Ottawa, will be on display Kennecott 46';, New York Central “G'ST!“D_AT_ SNIRDAU |in the Museum for the next rewela'., Northern Pacific 187%, U. 8.| Registering at the Gastineau Ho-| days. The portrait will then be per- Steel 70%, Pound $4.03 1-16. tel are Charlie Raatikainen, and'mancntly hung in the Wickersham | Sales today were 850,000 shurvs.‘ Mrs. L. O. Jacobsen from Pelican; | Reading Room, adjoining the Mu-; Dow, Jones averages today are Mr and Mrs. Greunier, and L. P.|seum, Edward Keithahn today. Joe Grobinsky. HERE Ralph Nelson is stated as follows: industrials 17476, rails' Gustavas and is stopping at the in town from 48.6y, utilities 36.35, Baranof. She Food snd Brog Adminisiracion, | MEETING FOR loulfiflli;’;'re"fih‘m?;‘“a;“i st OB ieau o Seaitieriitcign Bintc| Whether guided missiles will be the special concern of one branch rather than another is not determ- ined in the merger arrangement. The experts say that if such weap- ons are needed for land operations they will be available, and if re- quired for sea operations, they will be’ on hand for that, too. These were points brought out by Vice Adm. Forrest P. Sherman, Deputy Chief of Naval Operations, and Maj. Gen. Laris Norstad, di- rector of plans and operations for the War Department General Staff | There has Leen no discussion yet of such things as uniforms, Sher- man said, adding: “My purely unilateral view is that I am opposed to any change.” The two planning officers like- wise made it apparent that on other lesser matters time will ke required to work out any formal agreements, if such are necessary. - DAVE GROSS IN TOWN Dave Gross, owner of the chain |of Coliseum theatres in Southeast | Alaska and the 20th Century in Juneau, arrived in town on the North Sea, coming north from ‘je- attle on a purely business trip