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THE DAILY ALASKA “ALL THE NEWS ————. VOL. LXVIIL, NO. 10,526 Fishing Areas Th AIDPROPOSAL OneBrufal | MUCH TO BE DONE SITKA VISIT HicTk Whaens 6o ALL THE TIME” EMPIRE JUNEAU, ALASKA, THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1947 " MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS 'SEN. MAGNUSON SPECULATION rown Wide Open To Natives ONE SLIPPED Tribal Rights DETAILED FOR Murder Is SMOOTHBUT ‘enesciiuss. " Humescurorr ON FOREIGN OVER ON RUSS Recognized by POLICY TALK Is Opposedmny Trade of CONGRESSMEN VandenberaD;dares Sov- iet-American Relations Core of Problem By JACK BELL i WASHINGTON, March 134.!‘1»i Heads.of the State, Navy and War Departments discussed, with the Senate Foreign Relations Commit-) tee behind closed doors today, Pres- | ident Truman's appeal for $400,-| 000,000 cash and indirect military | help for Greece and Turkey. | Navy | War Secretary Patterson, Secretary Forrestal and Acting! State Secretary Acheson brought! along top aides to explain details | of the proposed moves which some | members of Congress openly de-| clared might lead eventually to war with Russia. To report on the military aspects of the President’s proposal to helpi train and sustain Greek and Turk-, ish troops, Forrestal had Vice Ad- | miral F. P. Sherman, Deputy Chief of Naval Operations, with him. | Vandenberg said the session wasi called “to .canvass the whole silua»l tion,” but that any action might be delayed for some time. “It is my understanding,” he said, “that the House will be asked to act first on this legislation.” He referred to measures to carry out! Mr. Truman's proposals. ; Actually, Vandenberg said, the| Senate group has not yet received ' any bills dealing with the subject.! “The plain truth is that Soviel—! American relationships are at thel core of this whole problem,” Van- denberg declared “Every effort; ‘hould be made to terminate these | controversies. This eifort must oc-! cur in plain understanding of basic | 77(?0‘1;17inuie;70ni Pa‘ye Three —_—————— | The WashifiQiom i Merry - Go-Round, By DREW PEARSON ! WASHINGTON—School teaciers have gone on strike in Buffalo, St.; Paul, and several other cities, with cther strikes brewing elsewhere | But for more than two months the new Congress has failed even toi consider the fact that janitors and | charwomen in many cities are paid | more than the teachers responsible for training the next generation for | an atomic age. | Several bills providing federal funds to increase teachers' salaries L:ave been introduced—perhaps the | best and simplest being that Of: Vermont’s outstanding GOP Sena- | tor George Aiken. Others have been | written by Democrats Green and McGrath of Rhode Island and Mc- | Carran of Nevada, and Republican | raft of Ohio. On the House side Democrat Pace of Georgia and Re- | publican Welch of California have | | was Cleared Up Husky Foundry Moulder | Confesses to One Kill- ! ing in Los Angeles i LOS ANGELES, March 13.—(® Inspector Norris Stensland of (ht‘;’ Sheriff's office announced today, the apparent solution of one of} {four brutal slayings of women in/Sitka, today reported that the en-| Los Angeles and vicinity in the; last two months | He said Myron Funk, 23, a husky, | foundry moulder of nearby Northjonly Gate, signed a statement admitting he killed Mrs. Mae Lorena Pres- | ton, 46, also known as Mae Lund, a friend of his and his father,| Frank Fund, 52, a cement con- tractor. i The father and son had been! held since Tuesday night on sus-! picion of murder but Frank Funk released early today. The] semi-nude, strangled body of Mrs. | Preston, who lived in Bellflower,| Calif., was found Tuesday alnng: the San Gabriel River near su- | bLurban Norwalk. | —————— ; NO SUSPECTS OR i CLUES IN BRUTAL |e KILLING OF GIRL i FRESNO, Calif., March 13 —®— Absence of definite clues pinned| police hopes on a checkup of su picuous persons today in their isearch for a sex maniac who brut- | ally killed Esther Lee Lewis, nine-| year-old Sanger girl, on her way to schocl Tuesday. “We have very uule in the way WISCONSIN'S AGED GOV.W.GOODLAND | DIES LAST NIGHT MADISON, Was., March 13.—m | —The state of Wisconsin will have a new governor this afternoon. Lieutenant Governor Oscar Ren- nebohm will be sworn in at p.m. (Central Time) to fill the post made vacant by the death last night of 84-year-old Governor Wal- ter Goodland. The Acting Governor declared that he would see Mrs. ! Goodland this afternoon to deter- mine her wishes concerning runerali arrangements for the late’ Republi- | entered bills, in addition to a drop- | - the-bucket bill by Representa- iive Sterling Cole of New York. But the GOP leadership appar- ently thinks that the labor situa- tion—even though we have no ma- jor strikes—is more an emergencyi than insuring the uninterrupted education of the nation’schildren. | In both the House and the Sen- ate, education and labor legisla- tion are handled by the same com- [ OLyMPIA, March 13.—(®—Thel mittees, and the two chairmen— goth Washington legislature neared| Taft of Ohio and Hartley of New|a close today with prospects good | Jersey—have not bestirred them-that it would adjourn sometime| selves about education, even though | today Taft does have his name on two| Ony acceptance by both Houses bills relating to the matter. of a free conference report on the It was not until last week that;ssg,ooo,oou supplemental appro- Taft appointed Aiken chairman of priations measure remained for| a subcommittee to handle educa- |legislative action. i tion. But because the full commit-' Both Houses, in rapid-fire or-; tee is heading into weeks of wrang- |der last night, whipped through a ling over labor laws, Aiken pro- free conference version of the con- hably can't schedule hearings be- troversial Social Security measures. can Governor. ————— ' WASHINGTON LEGISLATURE NEARS FINISH {neau to Hoonah; C. Bartholomew fore April. A subcommittee has been appointed on the House side, but no hearings are scheduled. i MISSISSIPPI VS. NEW YORK - | TEACHERS Never before has the Federal Government made a regular appro- | priation for educational expenses. However, Senator Aiken points out that 60 percent of all Americans today are living in states other than those in which they were edu- cated, proving that education is an interstate, or national problem. (Continued on Page Four) 167-24 vote to the $85,000,000 The Senate approved each with a 32-14 ballot and the House gave a old age pension measure and a 64-25! ballot to the $24,000,000 general assistance bill. e TWO FAIRBANKS WOMEN Ethel Gill znd Sarah Jordan,! both from Fairbanks, have arrived | in Juneau and are at the Gastin- eau Hotel. .- — SEWARD MAN HERE George V. Green of Seward is| registered at the Baranof Hotel af- ter arriving in Juneau by air. !Steel 72%, Pound $4.02%. TRIP ROUGH 'Senafe. HasB—acklog of 76 . Measures-House Fac- sy 1 Legislators Greatly Im- ing 59 for Action pressed by ANS School | win omy 12 vorking dags. at- . : {ter today, still between them and and Hospital Unifs ihe eha or the Eignteenth Session, both houses of the Alaskan Legis- Twenty-eight House and Senate lature had plenty of work cut out members, other officials and wives' for them when they sat down to who make the biennial m.<pomun|mclx' chores again today, visit to the Pioneers’ Home . at|their trip to Sitka. are 50 measures—Dbills resentative tire trip was eminently succes \ ful, with all scheduled activities|resolutions going off like clockwork. The|be acted upon, while the Senate drawback was poor weather|has a total of 76 measures in that encountered on the trip. | category. The Denali arrived at Sitka with| And, with next Monday, the the legislative party at 8:30 Fiftieth Day, the last day for to send its own mea- o'clock Wednesday morning. The! either bod after ] Somewhere in the House of Rep-| Land-Canada Should Make Overture WASHINGTON, March Senator Magnuson (D-Wash) 13 and memorials—still to ment had announced he would of- {fer legislation to effect a trade of the cutoff area Jand from Canada to the ‘I am opposed to such a trade, sea :Magnuson said, “because Canad |would be _trading us worthles {land that had no use until we for a strip of | siept until 8 o'clock this morni President Truman Rests af Key West - Receives Senator Magnuson (D-Ween) ton Favorable Telegrams by a member of the Canadian i 4 |parliament that Canada cede to| KEY WEST, Fla., March 13— the United States the section of|- President Truman loafed at this and containing the Haines cutoff!yaval submarine base today while lof the Alaska Highway. world capitals speculated on the The Senator told a reporter that implications of his foreign policy a member of the Canadian Parlia- address to Congress yesterday ets 6:30. Truman, who from usually 5:30 to My > up anywhere |an hour later than his Press Sec- retary, Charles G. Ross. | Ross said Mr. Truman has not ! talked with Secretary of State ®| George C. Marshall, at Moscow, .‘ int ! sures across to the other chamber s for : the Pioneers' Home was the first point sures o the other ch: |spent huge sums for building the g.. his speech calling upon the to a|without securing suspension of the land that is of visit There, according ) Alaska Highway, for United Sta e ; it ot ] » lited States to back “free peoples previously worked out plan, the|rules, the pressure will be all thejyauaple. In thelr rglibiiiiee o el rritor itutions - | way quring the remainder of| per rgume he | ln S (o un joint Territorial Institutions com-|Way on ¢ | “There is no argument to bel .. oo, ent in Greece, Turkey mittees of the House and Senate|this week. The House still has 43|gpyjcd, and it seems to me that| . " e touple cente - & : ; FEELe e own eAstEER” fo IO ; : ; ) and other trouble centers split into Joint committees | © I ) lafter we spent so much money on —yy .o .. i evnected to get in Which each combed allotted de- |while there are 46 Senate measures!ine Alaska Highway through Can-| i 8 PEEC 8 S0 0 partments of the Home. The Com yet to be acted upon by that bod‘ V.{ada the Dominiion at least could ”'w poksy: Execu!i\': :A“ he 1:1 mittees expect to have their report; In addition there are three bills maintain the Haines cutoff. Therej o o oo s o qoy e \‘1 ";“ e ready for presentation soon to the|that have passed both houses €X~lis 5o reason why the United| VTR0 BBIOR PUOTEY O WO respective bodies. lcept for amendments yet to be|giates and Canada cannot reach i x< sidentia ; ress .\u, stary 2 ‘agreed upon. They are now being !, amicable agreement about it 1arles G. Ross said about 20 tel- | After visiting the Home, many’ considered by conference commit- main- | €8rams, all favorable, were for- of the legislators were escorted | tces about the city of Sitka by the| THE HOU Sitka Chamber of Commerce. The : C-of-C had expressed a desire to Hofjpe Ls Total number introduced, 116. Passed by House for Senate ac tion, 53. { Killed, tabled or otherwise dis- \posed of, 27. Remaining | House, 36. ntertain the group, but lack of time prevented any ceremonies. At 3:30 p. m. Wednesday, boats; took the group out to Japsonski Island for a visit to the new Alaska Native Service vocational school and sanatorium facilities. Senator Don Carlos Brownell, the! for action by the Senate Bills chairman.-of the Senate cOmmmee!U;a&;g by Senate for Houss ac- on " Territorial Institutions, stated|" oo (; Yoy B 18D today that all members were de- gyt MO e g ¥or 4 " trans-! 3¢ 4R & e cidedly impressed by the trans iposed of by House, 5. formation of the former Navy base s Remaining Cti y e, structures and the completeness aining for action by House jof clues, and no suspects,” Under- 3 h 12. sheriff John Ford said early to-;“rT:::; ff:,r(.m;f,[,}dmgs the Navy left| House iNERIC e day. He sald some persons had 'hehind have been converted to be-| Total number introduced, 4 been questioned, but there had .ome a remarkably fine institution, Passed by House, 4 LN lieen no arpests. he_indicated. i House Joint Memorials MFS"‘&{- Vdflugzie‘v‘, of Mr. and qpe Jepislators, accompanied by, Total number introduced, 34. i l«; iliam Lewis, and a model couorg) townsfolk, visited not only| Passed by House for Senate ac- student in the fourth grade, Was ne cchool buildings on Japonski.!tion, 23 found dead yesterday by one ©of ;ng the tuberculosis sanatorium! Killed, 300 persons who had searched .4 orthopedic hospital on Alice| posed of,, T overnight. Her body was horribly 'ygandq, but were taken through pii e el . mutilated. ¥ emaining for action by House, the huge power plant, and to visit' 4, the village of 50 duplex cottages! which houses the staff workers. . House Joint Resolutions Total number introduced, 2. _Senator Brownell remarked Onj passed by House, 2. to the Mediterranean nations be viewing the tuberculosis patientsj Senate Joint Memorials made available to the public in bed in cheerful wards; recalled! pagseq by Senate for House ac- through open Congressional hear-| the sight of all the school pupilstion 20, going to dinner in the vast school; Passad by dining room. The gymnasium was: Remaining visited, to find a basketball game, Senate in progress. | Passed by The legislators returned from the o) o q House, 14. for House action, 6 Joint Resolutions Senate for House ac- Japonski Island visit at 6:30| pagsed by House, 1. o'clock in the evening to re-em-' Remaining for House action, 1 Lark on the Denali, which im-i All Measures mediately sailed back to Juneau,| mTgta] received by House, 234 docking here at noon today. ! Passed by House, 136. d Sessions were called for both the| Iineq Jor House and Senate at 2 o'clock|,e 39 otherwise disposed this afternoon. Remaining for action by the — ., House, 59. AlASKA COASIAI, b THE SENATE Senate Bilis Total number introduced, 114 Passed by Senate for House ac- tion, 56. Killed, tabled or otherwise !posed of by Senate, 16. Rémaining for Senate action, 42 House Bills AIRLINES CARRIES {1 WEDNESDAY, Alaska Coastal Airlines yesterday] dis- sent out two flights, one to Sitka| passed by House for Senate ac- and return, the other to Hoonah,|tjon, 53. Tenakee, Sisters Island and Gus-| Ppasced by Senate, 17. tavus. 3 3 Killed, tabled or otherwise dis Pa.ssengers to Sitka were as fol-'posed of by Senate, “12. lows: E. H. Rostad, E. B. Whit-|" Remaining for Senate action, 24 marsh, Mrs. M. Cushing and: Senate Joint Memorials Bishop John Zlobin; from Sitka Total number introduced, 25. to Juneau, Tom Morgan, Rolland Armstrong, R. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Johnson, Elizabeth James, Molly James, Bob Shannon and Syd Thompson. Earl Marvin was flown from Ju-, Passed by Senats for House ac- {tion, 20. Otherwise disposed of, 1. Remaining for Senate action, 4 Senate Joint Memorials Total number introduced, 2. | Passed by Senate for House ac- from Sisters Island to Gustavus,tion 2, I;Tx:lmrl;:;er!;\d‘a’l":.ln :nd R. Cox from| House Joint Memorials f el neau. | Passed by House for Senate ac- tion, 23. — .- STO(K ouo'A"o“s \ Passed by Senate, 12. | Otherwise disposed of by Sen- | late, 5. i Remaining for Senate action, 6| House Joint Memorials | Passed by House for Senate av:-‘[ tion, 2. | Passed by Senate, 2. | All Measures | NEW YORK, March 13.—Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine: stock today is 5%, American Can; 95, Anaconda 39';, Curtiss-Wright, 5%, International Harvester 797, Kennecott 44%, New York Central 18, Northern Pacific 19%, U. S.| Total measures received by Sen-| ate, 219. Number passed, 109. Number Kkilled, tabled or 0[hm‘-1 wise disposed of, 34. Remaining for Senate action, 76 Sales today were 650,000 shares. Averages today are as follows: industrials 174.36, rails 48.83, utili- ties 36.03. I |1t Canada can't afford to tain the cutoff, she could at leas! offer to let us do it.” - - 'CONGRESS ASKED - TO ACT IN FIGHT ON COMMUNISM By JACK BELL | WASHINGTON, March 13.—(®— Senator Vandenberg (R-Mich) call- |ed on Congress today to support | President Truman fully in combat- ting “Communistic aggression,” but first advocated public hearings on methods of aiding Greece and Turke; The chairman of the Senate For- eign Relations Committee held a news conference after a closed meeting with Secretaries Patterson Killed, tabled or otherwise dis- &nd Forrestal of the War and Nfl'v‘)',‘ | Departments and Undersecretary Acheson of the State Department. He said he is insisting that “ev- ery bit of information” concerning | the proposed extension of credits ings. “The President has coursgeously faced the problem of Communist gression and I would expect Congress to support him,” Vanden- berg said in commenting on Mr. | Truman’s appeal yesterday for $400,000,000 in cash aid and indi- rect military help to Greece and ESCAPED CONVICTS FROM TEXAS FARM HUNTED WITH DOGS HOUSTON, Tex., March 13.—(®— Twenty-one convicts, 12 of them Latin American, escaped from Har- lem State Prison Farm No. 2 near Sugarland, Tex., early today afterSurplus is greater than prudence gip.ers reiterated their intentions slashing one guard and threatening another with a gun. Fourteen of the convicts had been recaptured by 8 am. today, ac- cording to Captain W. W, Hall, As- sistant Manager of the farm. Three packs of dogs are being used in trailing some of the men, he said. Square Sinnet, from the south, due 8 a. m. Friday. Northern Voyager scheduled to sail from Seattls March 12. Princess Norah scheduled to sail from Vancouver March 18. Aleutian scheduled to sail fro Seattle March 20. Due in Juneau March 23. Going west will call at Cordova, Valdez, Port San Juan and Seward. Southbound calls at Valdez, Cordova, Juneau, Ketchi- kan. Sailor’s Splice scheduled to sail from Seatt¥> March 21. Denali scheduled from westward about March 20. ——————— SEATTLE GIRL HERE Miss Barbara Alvstad of Seattle, Hotel. ¢! warded to Mr. Truman at his long | | weekend retreat here last night They came from individuals The White House in Washington . reported the telegrams were | mounting into the hundreds by | midmorning. Eben Ayers, | Press Secretary, described “generally favorable.” assistant | (of any them | N |as STAGE IS SET FOR CLASH ON TAXTRIMMING iSnyder Declares Adminis- fration Flatly Against : Any Reduction | | WASHINGTON, March 13 | Secretary of the Treasury Snyder | rold the Republican-controlled Con- |gress today the Truman adminis- tration is flatly against any in-, come tax reduction this year . He said the administration .\]\(‘ci-[ fically opposes granting--now or J - ‘pu e' Sound 110,000 Indians in Southeast Alaska, 10,000 to 15,000 Aleuts and -Eski- BY MARSHALL Highest Court Denazification inAmerican!Runng Gives ‘Alaska In- - Ione Told-Forestalls dians Freedom fo Fish ‘ Soviet Attack Without Interference | WASHINGTON, March 13- By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER | Indians of Washington and Alaska MOSCOW, March (- Sec-|may fish in ancestral waters with- retary of State Marshall, speaking|out restrictions, the Indian Office on Denazification before the For-lsaid today. eign Ministers today, said that the| William Zimmerman, Jr., Assist- United States has “been disturbed ant Commissioner of Indian Af- by frequent reports in the Soviet|fairs, explained that the Supreme zone of Germany that former ac- Court last week upheld Indian tive Nazis may be cleared by joins rights to tidewater fishing grounds, ing the Socialist Unity (Commun-'just as last October it recognied ist) Party.” in an action by Oregon's Alcea |tribes, Indian rights to ancient Apparently speaking to forestall | hunting grounds an expected Soviet attack on Am-| The new Supreme Court decision erican zone Denazification, Mar-!was g refusal to review an appeal shall read a three page statement!of the State of Washington from a elating that 12,000,000 persons have | District Court judgment in favor been registered for investigation, of the Quileute Indians 200,000 tried and 370,000 removed| The Quileute Tribal Couneil, from office in the U. S. section through the government, had of Germany. |sued Washington state to test the The Secretary added that the right of Indians to fish in the American zone Denazification went |Quileute River without state regu- nd Allied control authority [lation, and won in October, 1946. airec » and asserted “there is/ The decision enjoined the Wash- nothing -6, cONBMEY |ington Fisheries and Game Di- (rectors from interfering with fish- pointed out Allied control|{ing by Quileute tribesmen “in the had not received full re-|Quileute River and tidal waters on Denazification in lhp‘(h"rwl. as it flows through, bord- (Soviet) zone of Germany ers upon, or touches the lands of the Quileute Indian River Reser- vation or in the tidal waters of |the Pacific Ocean as said ocean |borders upon or touches such reser- Marshalt said lack of uniformity |vation.” in Denazification procedure and| Zimmerman said the court's ac- practices led to distrust among the [tion “has finally determined In- occupying powers and recommend- dian tribal 1ights in ancestral fish- ed that thie Foreign Ministers direct | ing grounds’™ the Allied control council to adopt| Indian Office executives said the uvniform laws on Denazification. iruling gives all of the Indians from the Columbia River northward, who Foreign Minister Ernest BEth earn their living principally by told the council that the British|piching “the right to fish without had a list of 40 high Nx‘w.)s Wwho | ¢tate interference. are holding important positions in| gpokesmen for the National Oan- Germany's Soviet zone. Iners Association and other industry All the Ministers made state- | representatives, sked about the ments on Denazification and Dem- ruling, said they had not yet stud- ocratization. Molotov expressed dis- |ied it. They said such ruling satisfaction generally with the pro- could react severely against the gress of these programs in the Alaskan cannery enterprises, where western zones. He specifically den- ccmpanies fish in tidal waters off hall's reference to Nazis Indian reservations. al parties, saying he knew | The Quileute case, attorneys said, He council | ports | eastern rand added “my government oppo: Ithe use of Denazification in favor| political party.” m polit of no case where a Nazi had been extends Indian claims and pros- considerable and shallow in coastal claims over tide-flats river basins and Alaska, Socialist | Fective areas of - bays and Washington One Indian Office official said permitted the Unit Party. to join {moes, and perhaps 2,000 Indians in any other time—a proposed 20 per- | cent “across the board” tax cut on, iicomes up to $303,000 a year. ' | The Secretary was the first wit-! ness at hearings by the House Ways and Means Committee on a | pill by Rep. Knutson (R-Minn) to' provide the straight 20 percent cut.' Knutsen is chairman of the com-i mittee. | Snyder said he believes “sub- stantial” tax cuts can be made in the future, but he set the stage: ior a major clash between Con-; eress and the Executive with this statement in his prepared testi mony: “It will be time enough to enact! | tax reductions when and if there |is definite evidence that the 1948 | requires to be applied towards re-| | duction of the public debt.” | And if Congress is.determined to jcut taxes this year, he said, it | should give greater benefits to the | taxpayers with small incomes. | “The (20 percent) bill would give | too little reduction to lower in- |comes and relatively too much to} higher incomes,” Snyder said. | ](oasf Gu;;ti Imiuiry | ' nto Cause of Wreck | . 0f North Sea Ended SEATTLE, March 13—(P—The | Coast Guard has completed a pre- | liminary investigation into the! cause of the wreck of the steamer ! cross-sound North Sea, which grounded on a reef near Bella Bella, B. C, last month. A Coast Guard spokesman southbound | Says the findings will be reviewed yard and military personnel |and a formal hearing will be ord- |ered if any charges result. | The latest word from Bella Bella is that the North Sea is breakihg jand is registered at the Baranof up. Salvage experts have listed the|Saturday. 29 year old vessel as a total loss. Washington state may benefit by Ferry Strikels ~ 11+ REFUSE OKEH ON Sef, Midnight . ovenr o on Wage Talks Break Ofi-En- PIPELINE TO RUSS gineers of 22 Boats WASHINGTON, March 13—\~ Chairman Taber (R-NY) said to- |day the House appropriations com- Ready fo Walk Out SEATTLE, March 13.—®—Ces- sation of Puget Sound ferryboat operations at midnight appeared a | mittes has rejected a state De- partment request for authority to send $25,000,000 worth of oil re- | fining equipment to Russia The Senate Appropriations com- virtual certainty today as wage talks broke off completely and en- mltll('e turned down the request | earlier, to “walk off on schedule.” “We can't do such a thing; A scheduled meeting with fed- that's appeasement,” Taber told eral conciliators failed to material- "POteS, 2 ¢ ize yesterday when the = Puget| 1he chairman said the equip- Sound Navigation Company noti- ment, mostly pipelines, was ob- fied 'conciliators it had made its “final offer.” gineers' Beneficial Association, said | tained for shipment to Russia un- der lend-lease agreement, but had not hefin transported prior to last Capt. A. M. Peetody, company : president, said the offer provided |December 31 an average wage increase of 20 7 TS Y percent, ran for two years, with| IDAHO, MAN HERE wage review and reopening after CGeOrse Jasper, Jegiavared. from one year, and included a non Filer, Idaho, was at the Baranof yesterday. He was scheduled to fly strike-no lockout clause with com- : pulsory arbitration. | out with Alaska Coastal Airlines T. R. Rasmussen, secretary-' 098y treasurer of the CIO-Marine En-| B cigpl 3 TWO FROM TENAKEE licensed engineers were prepared| Richard Cox and Pete Martin, to “walk 6ff on schedule,” which Both arriving in Juneau with Al- would be at 12:01 a. m. Friday. aska Coastal Airlines from Ten- Raced with the tie-up of 22 fer- akee yesterday, registered at the Gastineau Hotel. ries and comiplete paralysis of transportation, the, o e 13th Naval District headquarters| MOYS AT GASTINEAU announced it would start emer- Mr. and Mrs Henry Moy from ‘gency LST ferry service for Nayy| Sitka arrived in Juneau by plane in from Hoonah und are at the Gas- ievent the walkout is not averted.|tineau Hotel. ; Two round trips daily will bej - e imade from Pier 91, Seattle, Mon-|' Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Sears, of day through Friday, with one trip| Seattle, employed with Pan Am- There will be no service erican Airways there, are at the Baranof Hotel. Sunday.