The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 6, 1947, Page 1

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- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” o==———— VOL. LXVIIL, NO. 10,520 JUNEAU. ALASKA, THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1947 * MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS e ———— LEWIS CONTEMPT CONVICTION UPHELD AN AT, l: R E E IR A D E ONEDOWNTODAY | |which sought to make the office of Territorial Commissioner of | |Mines elective instead of appoint- |ive but was amended to elimin-| fate this change, passed the House| this morning by a 23-1 vote. The! Rep. Frank Johnson’s H'B. 68, Has Faith in Reciprocal | Trade Act-Hits at High | bill as passed sets a definite term| N . of four years for the office and Ianfi ISOlaIlO“ raises the salary from $5000 a ¥ ar to $6600 a year. i The two Representatives John-| sons were the only ones who spoke | on the bill prior to the final vote.| WACO, Tex., March 6— President Truman, calling for a reduction of world trade barriers declared today the United States| “can lead the nations to economic| peace or we can plunge them into bill, said that he had introduced it at the request of “some people| in Ketchikan,” and that he was! cconomic wa o The President, enroute home from :‘]l:‘(:lpf;?irz::-edeli?{:ic“ T a three-day good-will visit to Mex-| " pe) “xrourice Johnson, of Fair-| ico, stopped here to receive an banks; ‘sald- that. he . HAs . never| honorary degree of Doctor of LaWs pearq” 5 single request from his! from ylor University. In an aC-ipjuigion which is largely devoted ceptance speech devoted entirely i, yining to have the office made | to the need for freed world trade, elective. He said that .he feels) he: the office should be appointive in 1-Reaffirmed his faith in the oqer to secure the best qualified reciprocal trade act which has been man for the position under attack by some Republicans Divisional OK Fails ““‘C“f‘*’"‘? at those who would | _Another self-government mea- 2—Struck out at those who Wouldi.,,." 1 5. 73, went 'down to de- return to high tariffs and “econ- omic isolation.” 3—Welcomed coniinuation of bi- partisan support for a foreign poli- |feat by an 11-13 vote in the House {It woull have required the ap- (pointing power to securc the ap- proval of a majority of the Sena- cy which calls for cooperation in'tors and Representatives from the| the economic as well as the politi- Dijyision from which an appmm-f cal field {ment is made before a name is! 4—Asserted that the alternative submitted to the Legislature for| to “regimentation” of international confirmation commerce is the world trade char-| Rep. Maurice Johnson started the discussion on this bill by say- ing that he had heard a good deal of opposition to it, opposition which he is unable to understand., “The Governor is against this| bill, and was against it when it was introduced in the House two, !years ago, at which time his power| ter to be considered by 18 nations at Geneva next month. The pro- posed international trade organi- zation, he said, would apply to commercial relationships “the same principle of fair dealing that the United Nations is applying to pol- itical affairs” T £ & in the House was overwhelming, “The negotiations at Geneva 'jonngon charged. “Whether that must not fail,” he said. power remains as overwhelming He termed the United States to- todov oo regards this bill, re-| day “the giant of the economic y..i. ¢ pa ceen.” ! world,” and added: The machinery set up by H. B. “Whether we like it or not, the 72, Johnson explained, would be as rela- future pattern of economic close to election by the people as! tions depends upon us. The world'youlq pe possible in an appomtwe‘ waiting and watching to see | i5 4 office, since it would require the what we shall do. The choice is/gpproval of the legislators elected' ours. We can lead the nations t0 gjrectly by the people before an! economic peace or we can plunge apnointment could be made. | them into economic war. Stuffed Shirts “There must be no question as “That is what I consider to be (Continued on Page Two) democratic government,” Johnson i i i R T said. “However, some people here idea stick Ihave the that democracy is poking a into some stuffed The w a Sh i n g 10n Ishirt to watch the sawdust run M’erry o5 GO ” Round loul;.;p, Steve McCutcheon pointed lout that Johnson was reversing his By DREW PLARSON previous stand on the question of; —— |electing the Commissioner of WASHINGTON—Some of the in- | Mi “The passage of this bill| ternational experts have been try-|Wwould allow the Legislature to ing to figure out the sigmhcanceiumrp the powers of the executive of President Truman’s mission lolbrum‘h of our government,” Mc- Cutcheon said. Mexico. They wonder whether it ™7 e 4 means a new spurt in the good- ‘If the Governor, the present| ‘one or any other, is sincere in neighbor policy, a new efiort to woo Latin friends against Argen- tina, or what. However, here is the inside story of how the trip ori- wishing for a good administration' in Alaska, he should and could| Ihave no objections to this bill,"] |Rep. Harry Newell told the mem-! ginated. i Several months ago the new|Ders: “Representatives and- Sena Itors are still in office even when} Mexican Ambassador, Harvard- e e 3 il i " |the Legislature is not in session trained Antonio Spinosa de los‘and could act on appointments Montercs, called at the White i during the 22 months of the bien-| House to present his credennals,‘mum Eisliaan - stislona il Newell| Truman was taken with the charm : | . went on to say that this would! of the Mexican diplomat, who is| % ibl £ Just ‘as: tamiliar B G DEA s | 0L SHEY | With posslble ALVAEE G with his native land. Ambassador!gm()::'s HERGRD AL PR AT Monteros told the Presidént how Reps. Carl Anderson, Nolan and be had spent a lot of time in New v,y vich have been named by York, had been educated at Har- (gooaker Gill as members of a vard, had a wide flcquainmm:eship'(:m,m.nmee on Conference, with| in Washington. !free conference powers, to meet “1 have never had a real oppOr-|yjth a like committee from the tunity to visit Mexico,” replied genate to reach an agreement on, Truman, by way of making conver- | B 21, which seeks to amend| sation, “and I would like to some the Jaw relating to bids on-service | day.” ___ |contracts. “Well, why don't you do it {au‘ly; 5 i g i soon?” said the new Ambassador. = | “All right, I will,” said Truman, ! STEAMER MovEMt"'S | who so frequently acts on the spur | Denali, from Seattle, scheduled of the moment. “How about ar- 'ty arrive Monday. Goes to Sitka, ranging it? I would like to go dur- returns to Juneau, then sails west- ing early March.” | ward. | Monteros assured Truman there; Square Sinnet scheduled to sail| would be no trouble at all, and|from Seattle March 7. | several weeks later the Ambassador | Princess Norah scheduled to sail! returned to the White House to from Vancouver March 7. inform the President that he hadl Northern Voyager scheduled to} set up a fancy ree-day official |sail from Seattlle March 12. i visit in the Capital of Mexico.| Aleutian scheduled southbound levening of March 10. | And that is the only political sig- - e | nificance behind the President’s’ WASHINGTON — Senat Demo-| trp. {cratic Leader Alben W. Barkley Note—Truman and Monteros be-|said today that he believes Pres-| came such good friends that (he‘lident Truman soon will ask Con-| lgress to authorize a Greek loan of | about $250,000,000. Truman was delighted. (Continued on Page Four) HOUSE HAS MORE THAN 100 BILLS, 33 MEMORIALS Blunt Charge MadebyU.S. | H | The House of galns uss'(his morning hit and overshot \the 100 mark on bills introduced e R S this session and brought its score Political Crisis in Hungary on memoriais wp to 55 Six new |bill, three memorials and one sub- Istitute bill were tossed into the {House hopper this morning, bring- Result of “Unjustified i Interference ing the total of bills to 102, THE A3 ks, House alsc passed one bill and WASHINGTON, March 6 ,\,p,lkllll'd another during its short The United States today charged forenoon session Soviet Russia with causing a poli-{ Substitute for tical crisis by an “unjustified in-;Joy by request H would authorize Rep. Frank Johnson, author of the terference in Hungarian ,,m.,-,m;“puymenl of $44631 to Tax Com-|—(P—Pessimistic Security Council | imissioner M affairs. P. Mullaney to cover A sharp note, deliveted to tia his expenses while on a trip ‘tol Russian, British and Hungarian Puget Sound auditing taxpayers' governments, and to the Soviet;records. The original bill did not Military Commander in Budapest,: Pecify the amount of the pay- said that the Soviet High Com- |ment and was returned to the author for revision mand by direct intervention has brought political difficulties in Hun- ! NeW bills introduced in the House gary to a cr «this morning are An official summary of the note',. BY Rep. Garnick, ito allow the handed Moscow as Secretary of T8X Commissioner to travel outs State Marshall traveled toward the Sid¢ Of Alaska for the purpose of : M€ quditing tax records. :f:,::(m:;":::”',lj““_,“1 :)}:’fd‘.w‘““" By Rep. McCutcheon, to change i e e e the hours of voting to end at ol AR et “'p. m. instead of 7T p. m. on puty Bela Kovacs, who was arrest- e (P E ed last week by Russian soldiers. | p. Rene i o 3 Kovacs until recently, was Becres qn?, [eps Hunlley, - Ost, Mo % v Cutcheon and Pollard, to incre: tary General of the Smallholders o' moximum benefits to depens Party, the moderate majority group gent children, Very similar to a in the Hungarian Parliament, which ' genate bill killed by the upper the Communists and other parties ponse this week have tried to oust. i Another Referendum By Rep. Maurice Johnson Newell, directing a referendum 0 A For- the mnext General Election eign Office spokesman said today 'whether to elect National Britain was studying the Hungar- mitteemen, etc a direct fan political gituation in the light of the people. of the United States chargeagainst: po pep Almquist, by request the Soviet Union of unjustified in-"po” an act to provide for the lie tfl;fitc];;:;k:n::lx?tsar::ux(;?nfu;“fl;xx.'u‘m:"g and supervision of board- ing homes, foster homes and in- and at on Com- vote BRITAIN STUDIES SITUATION LONDON, March 6. (@ clals also were studying reports'gtitutions caring for children and from their own diplomatic repre- authorizing the Board of Public sentatives in Budapest. He added, welfare to establish standards for however, that no British-American 'hejr operation, consultation preceded the dispatch; By Rep. Hoopes, to amend the of the U. S. protest tlaws relating to motor vehicle itaxes by including U-Drive cars tin the section on for hire vehicles 'and somewhat revising the sec- |tion on dealers’ license plates for BULLETINS el juse on demonstration cars. WASHINGTON — House and New Memorial Senate laktor law drafters saidi i i The three new memorials are: they would go on with bills design- By Rep. Pollard, asks the Fed- ed to curb industry-wide stri era) coymtnpiant b t A despite the Supreme Court's ac- time gcredit fund ro .sec] ug « lon(gl tion in upholding contempt fines al oF SAIOE, IBn: jand farm development in Alaska {in the nature of a revolving fund, jand that farm land be made {available by direct purchase *in- NEW DELHI, India — The A“-‘stefld of homesteading. India radio has announced that| a 24-hour curfew has been order- ed in Lahore, as a result of three against John L. Lewis and the United Mine Workers (AFL), directed to the Highway Engineer e 5 4 & .land Alaska Road Commission, D oltbursts of violence thiSlagys that the Dlamond Ridge road s 2 ;near Homer be completed. WASHINGTON — Rep Homer | By Rep. McCutcheon, asks Con- | Bress to increase the salary of Angell, R. Ore, called for ne |members of the Legislature to $35 Social Security legislation to cov- ¥ “ er all citizens over 60. He saidhor 99 AU present it is 815 a present laws excluded nearly half, "’ 40 of all civilian jobs from their pro-l CORPORATION FILES tection. { 4 WASHINGTON — A bill was in-| 4 led in th Y : troduced today to boost certainii. ' € Auditor's office during i th ast week. ' s postal rates in the hope of knock-| Brt;gg'; 2 stegmsm:hec:rz:anr)"lmaul; ing $170,000,000 off the Post Of-|}c( "canital at 100 shares without fice Department’s estimated deficit par value. Incorporators are Hovey In fiscal 1948. lc. clark, william H. Harrar, and | John J. Costello. Principle place of LONDON—Listeners have heard (30" ostel } the Moscow radio announce thatCusiness is listed as Wilmington, Russia has agreed to lend Poland | Delaware. nearly 29-million dollars in gold. IR o, 77 Moscow says Russo-Polish nego-! WASHINGTON — Chairman H. tiations have shown an agreement |KKnutson says his House Ways and in principle on German promems,;xg:*xiocnofl::;tr!fisw?:li b‘zfind:;: MOSCOW — —A proposal by if the joint conference committee United States Senator Richard[Oh the budget becomes deadlock- Russell of Georgia that the Brit-|€d- The conferees are expected to ish Isles become states within thelStart tomorrow their efforts to set- United States was printed w:delyi“e Senntetbliouse differences on the by the Soviet press today. ;b“dgfl ceiling. LONDON — Winter continues toj NEW DELHI — Official sources plague shivering Britain, apd a,;:‘;mbdled :{“dfly that 150 persons new fuel crisis now threatens Lhe| i een killed in Hindu-Moslem nation. Mountainous drifts again rllotlng in P“f‘!“b Province, where have tied up British transport, undi," oody L'Jflh"lefi were reported rag- have cut critically needed coalliDg at Lahore for the third straight ay. production. ld y GREENVILLE, O. —_— 1 Secretary of State Marshall has | arrived safely in Paris just 3 and a half hours after taking off{Jured. three critically, in an ex- from Washington. His plane land-|Plosion that demolished the Pro- ed at Orly airport two hours,d.ucers Creamery and Cold Storage ahead of schedule. He flew by:("" plant here today. way of Bermuda and the Azores.; 24 | DETROIT—Miss Margaret Tru- WASHINGTON — Murder was man will make her radio singing committed on an average of 36 debut with the Detroit symphony times a day last year as major! orchestra here Sunday after an crime in the U. S. reached an all- apparently satisfactory audition time high, FBI Director J. Edgar before Conductor Karl Krueger Hoover reported. "yesterday, Two men | Representatives B. 71, by Rep.| ©land Poland, were contrary to the By Reps. Huntley and Pollar(l.l One foreign corporation was fil- 91, were killed and six others were in-| GROMYKO ATTACKS ATOM PLAN ‘DeNcIares So(\)liét Frolr}liers AleNNRA"bN j B toUn- | e'}';r“eg Inps;r;d?onn - BD. HAS SENATE - ATTENTION TODAY CAA Officials Are Heard on Proposed Alaska "Stop Work™ M By LARRY HAUCK LAKE SU CESS, N. Y., March 6. | | delegates, groping for a solution to! {global control of atomic energy, pondered today a Russian asser . Ition that Soviet trontiers never| Aeronautics Act | woulld be thrown open to unlimited | ;:mfnf'”m.’;'ll ’_'??"‘f"‘m 'ml' S'Wd“:l. With one bill—Senate 17--al- actorles allowed to operate Under|,eqqy for conference action be- { United Nations control. { tween the ses, covering the Andrei A. Gromyko, Soviet ers Shie THE DU d B~ Poreisn Minister Kb !D?"‘xmm- matter, the Alaska Senate <puxs PICIEn R “T"e‘nns morning played around a bit 41?011(.? ‘l]“‘ dm f; fm?“l‘l‘" polcy:wm‘ Rep. Steve McCutcheon's H. ,speech, devoted principally to anjpg oo T icied it down, 5-11 outspoken attack on the American; p g oy would have put the control plan I 4 k % - Commissioner of Labor on the | QGromyko said the United States; goarq of sdministration in place proposals, already ,accepted by all| ¢\ | members of the 12-nation Atomic|g p < 17 we rough the Senate Energy Commission except Russia weRt Moug| it g designed to have the Labor Com- | ast Rhational Tk | missioner replace the Governor on [ eponcgpessnCinational e ithe Board, but the House amended iests Uft U‘llh?r‘";L.ng 'md h‘:"cf}l‘etflll into a duplicate of H. B. 50. oy the independence of OHET{The Senate rejected the House {The Russlan delegate insisted | Ty Gnents As soon as H. B. 50's title had been read to the Senators this morning, N. R. Walker unceremon- that he was in favor of strict and| effective international control, but not on the broad terms laid down 3 " 2 % i . ilously moved indefinite postpone- by the United States. While re-ipon; pyt nis motion lost, 6-11. peatedly assailing the American! | S 7 | 8enator Edward D, Coffey then e et “.' 8 78-minute spesch, | proposed to knock both the Gover- Gromyko did not_staw how fa“nor and, “the “Education his country”wns willing to go "o'f‘slonox' off the Board and put on ward “strict” control. the Labor Commissioner to make it The United States wants anian g ejective officer affair. That atomic development authority w"h‘muve lost, 7-9. full powers of inspection and con- Un-Administrative trol of atomic matters everywhere.{ g . SO S 0 then Delegates generally reserved im- | melide t dihe a sl {wanted to take off the Commis- mediate comment pending a SUAY | 55,00 of Education and leave off of the text, but it was apparent the Labor Commissioner also. He that many envisioned major d‘m'vclaimed the Labor: Commissioner's culty in clearing up the inspection-| qupieq” are not administrative in control problem in the face of Lhc‘uw 4108 ‘Maiieh: Ak ars the onores Russian stand. - 4 CoMing aimost on the eve of th |of others now on the Board; a g & Ay ! statement questioned by Senator Moscow conference, the speech was G | Gunnard M. Engebreth, viewed as specifically significanty | The bill was finally advanced - .- - % AIRLINES CARRIES 41 ON WEDNESDA has had a sample of what the La- {bor Commissioner would be sub- Jjected to if he were put on within a year—he'd get so many | Alaska Coastal Airlines report-!Wires,” the Fairbanks Senator ed flights yesterday touching at Opined. Petersburg, Wrangell, Ketchikan,| Senator Coffey also had a last and Sitka The following persons word: Some people “never want to {wcre carried: to Petersburg: Iry- see the Territory grow up,” he de- ing, Magnus and Jane Igtanloe, E.'clared. Referring to the Governor, Hungerford and C. Hills | he added: They want “that bird” ! To Wrangell, Ernie to to be chairman of every board. Roe; |Ketchikan, Orton Arness, Mr. and One other House measure was iMrs. Jess Ballard, Nix and B: voted down by the Senate this |Ballard; from Ketchikan to forenoon — Rep. Newell's bill to Petersburg, Henry Rostad ‘give hiring preference, in public From Wrangell to Juneau: Mr.| employment, to war veterans. H. B. |Leab, Mr. Stutte and A. E. Ow-'60 lost by a 6 to 9 count, with ens; from Petersburg, Mr. and Coffey absent. Mrs. H. E. Buzby, Richard, Carol Abate Bottle Clubs and Patty Buzby, Roy Peratrovich.| Bills that did get Senate appro- From Juneau to Sitka, Dal Sim- yal were Rep. L. E. Ost's H. B. (mons, Frank Cashel, Mr. and Mrs.!54 to abate “bottle clubs,” and Bruhn, Mrs. Upton, John Brill»!gep, Engstrom’s H. B. 6, to put of- hart, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Don-| ficial approval upon marriages per- (nelly and James M. Harjer; from|formed by ritual and to establish {Sitka to Juncau, D. B. LaBounty,i procequre for issuing substitute A. A. McMurchie, H. F. Wetmore, | pirtp certificates showing legiti- Mrs. Elsie Sherrod, Daw: gy, Sgt. Ed Johnson, Mrs. C. F. Coulson, Bishop Zlobin and C. b of wedlock and whose parents have later intermarried. The Coulson. measure supplements 4 {law,” Senator Cochran’s S. B. 41, | Which passed the upper chamber 10 PASSENGERS ARE vhn fl.own HERE BY PAA; Three .new bills and two new | joint memorials came into the ' Pan American Airways report-| Senate today. One of the memor- ed the following passengers who)lals, S. J. M. 20, by Green and were flown in and out of Juneau'Rogge, asks immediate commence- vesterday on regularly scheduled ment of negotiations with Canada flights: (for “exchange, sale, lease or trans- Seattle to fer of so much of the territory Flint, Paul lying in British Columbia and the Thomas, Joseph Thomas, Mrs.| Yukon Territory as may be neces- Hermia Darnell, Rod Darnell, | sary” to allow the entire length Leonard Smith, Maurige Ness. of the HainesC utoff to be brought Fairbanks to Juneau: Albert E.|under jurisdiction of the United Genthner, Emily Mullins States, in order to facilitate main- Juneau -to Seattle: Doris Hane- | tenance of that important com- bury, Don Hanebury, Milton Mun- mercial artery. ter, George Hooker, Herriott Hig-| Conference Group gins, Ray Higgins, Mrs. Elsie Sher-| In response to a House request, rod, Fred Tubb. Senate President Andrew Nerland Juneau to Fairbanks: | this morning named Senators Joe Juneau: William Thomas, Mrs. Bessie Thomas Ramsey, Bob. Brandt. Green, Coffey and Frank Peratro- B - vich as a Committee on Conference, Willlam h. Flint of Portland, " o : “with powers of free conterence, Oregon is in Juneau and is at the - Hotel Juneau & (Continued on Page Six) Protest "Inadivity” of Alaska Lawmakers Commissioner of Education.' Commis- | Butrovich ' the ' Board. “The man would go insane on Mug=imate birth for children born out | Engstrom | the “adoption | Decision I Handed Down By High Court Conviction o}AUNW Also Is Sustained But Fine Cut eelings ANCHORAGE, Alaska, March 6.} A Territory-wide series of} two-hour “stop work” meetings will be held this afternoon from 2 p.| m. to 4 p. m. (4-6 PST) to pro- test the Territorial Legislature’s fo $600 000 “inactivity”, Felton H. Griffin,' > President of the Territorial Fed-' R eration of Labor, said today ‘ WASHINGTON, March 6—(®— The meetings, which Griffin said| The Supreme Court upheld 7 to 2 would include numerous Alaska, today the contempt convictions of labor and civic groups, will include:John L. Lewis and his United Mlx\_e a demand by Superintendent of! workers for refusing to call off Schools €. C. Caldwell, of An-!their soft coal strike last Novem- ch e for teachers’ pay in-|ber. creases. Mrs. Marshall Hoppin..‘ In an extraordinary midweek rul- President of the Alaska Crippled'ing that caught the nation by sur- Children’s Association, will pm'.est' prise, the high court in effect gave the Senate Finance Committee's|the Truman administration a lopping off a $70,000 appropria-, smashing victory in its titanic tion for such children and “des- struggle with Lewis and his miners. troying the hope of starting an, There was no immediate reac- orthopedic hospital at Sitka.” ‘lmn from Lewis. A 825000 fund to carry on the; The High Tribunal ordered the fight for statehood will be de-{$3500,000 fine against the union manded by officers of the State-)cut to $700,000, but threatened to hood Association | raise it back to the higher figure Griffin said the mass meetings upless the miners show complete would be asked to endorse con-|compliance with the lower court’s tinuance of the Alaska Develop- no.strike order within five days. ment Board with an'$80,000 appro-| The $10,000 fine against Lewis priation, higher old age pensions,’ himself was affirmed without a wage collection law, aid to de-! hapge, pendent children and several other| mne Gourt's order means that social measures either tabled ol Lewis must withdraw the contract killed by the Legislatu: i . e 5 ' termination notice sent Secretary The Territorial House, he sald, o ypo Thterior J. A Krug last ,Would be asked to turn down & Noyemper. It was the government's Senate bill calling for a referen-i o nention that the contract runs dum on outlawing the closed "h"p’thmughout the period of govern- in.dinzicy. LI ! ment operation. This period must - s HERE end by law on June 30. MASS: MERTING l“"“. I Whén N sent the miners back Tomorrow night at 7:30 o'clock {5 work pending a Supreme Court a mass meeting of all Juneau mem- ' ruling, Lewis set April 1 as the bers of organized labor will be held ' anq of the work period. in the CIO Union Hall, First and Reason For Penalties Gold streets. e ! The penalties grew out of Lewis' Under the auspices of the Cen-'jpefusal to obey a court order to tral Labor Council, AF of L and the gend his miners back to work dur- Juneau Industrial Union Council, jng jast November's soft coal strike. CIO, there will be discussion of, ne supreme Court’s long-await- Senate Bill No. 77, which would g decision was announced as the call for a referendum vote of the'oourt met for a regular argument people of Alaska on the “Closed gogion. Shop.” ! Ordinarily, the Highest Tribunal All members of the Senate and gnnounces decisions only on Mon- House of the 18th Legislature have days. Today's action caught all begn invited to attend the m“-“-"‘punies by surprise. meeting. ! Chief Justice Vinson read the ik .-.':’-‘f‘:’“- # -'op‘iymc:;\ of ::e majority. 5 L Ao i ustice urphy and Rutledge ®* WEATHER REPORT ® \ote dissenting opinions. ® Temperaturés for 24-Hour ® jugice Prankfurter wrote a con- ® Period Ending 7:30 0'Clock ® ¢ yuring opinion. Jushices Black . This Morning. ®'and Douglas each wrote an opin- P ® ion in which they concurred in In Juneau—Maximum, 39, ® .1t and dissented in part. minimum, 32. ol Majority Ruling At Airport-Maximum, 37, @, The Court majority ruled that minimum, 33. : neither the Norris-LaGuardia Act : S A inor the War Labor Disputes Act “T:‘:‘:::'}nf?"::f‘fisT ::bun‘cd the government from ob- o taining the injunction which re- i ®isulted in the contempt proceed-" Mostly cloudy with light ® ings. rain showers and not much | 1y was this fjunction that Lewis change in temperature to- ®'gg the Miners Union were accus- night and Friday. South- ®ed of flouting. easterly winds 15-20 mph. e Alter the case had been appeal- ® 'ed directly to the Supreme Court, ® | Lewis suddenly ordered his miners ® back to work, on Dec 7. He said ®'he wanted the Supreme Court ®ifreed of any public hysteria in PREUIPITATION (Pust 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today) In Juneau — 160 inches; since March 1, 2,02 inches; e ¢ weighing the issues. | slrx:: .Ay‘lily l 69.1szch‘eh4v’ * Chief Justice Vinson in his op- R M:‘:g;"' Foant :::::‘:: :ilmon said that the trial court pro- 5 ¥ " | ceedings i 8 since July 1, 45.08 inches. H AT 10 - detencants. i ® ithe Lewis case guilty of both crim- : inal and civil contempt ..o-s.-_-_aol _____ STOCK MARKET UP BISHOP ZLOBIN HERE i R | NEW YORK, March 6. i#— | Bishop John Zlobin of the Rus-|Right after the Supreme Court sian Orthodox Church at Sitka!ruling was announced, the stock arrived in Juneau by air yesterday | market spurted up. Some stocks 'and is registered at the Baranof | Went up as much as a share. But Hotel, lin a short while, the market drop- | - - - I ped again to a slower pace, with TWO FROM KETCHIKAN :m““ gains reduced. | H P weu and A. E. Owens, o = | H. F. Wetmore an wens | from Ketchikan arrived yesterday | SIO(K 10 jand are registered at the Baranof | ouo"' us Hotel. ' NEW YORK, March 6.—Closing | quotation of Alaska Juneau mine j.\tock today is 5%, American Can Funeral services for Robert 97, Anaconda 411, Curtiss-Wright Mackey will be held tomorrow af- 9’s, International Harvester 83!y, ternoon at 2 o'clock in the chapel Kennecott 48, New York Central of the Charles W. Carter Mortuary, | 20's. Northern Pacific 20%, U. S, | -r>—— I MACKEY RITES FRIDAY {The Rev. Robert W. Webb will pre- | Steel 757, Pound $4.02% side, and interment will be in| Sales today were 1030000 shares. Evergreen Cemetery. Dow, Jones averages today are [ B ias follows: industrials 181.89, rails | . HERE FROM HAINES 5146, utilities 36.86. | | ALY SO | J. R. Brown and Thomas J.! WASHINGTON The United Knutsen of Haines are among the:SLuu-s today lent the Philippines out-of-towners registered at the $25,000,000 to help the new repub- Hotel Juneau lic get on its feet

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