The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 31, 1947, Page 1

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o drawn / | | t 4 “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TI!II'" [ " ! VOL. LXVIIL, NO. 10,541 HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIR JU\H.U ALASKA, MONDAY, \1\[\LH 3! |947 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS \Juneau Votes Tuesday At Important Election MISSION LEADERS COME ON 3-WEEK SURVEY OF ALASK NEW YORK March 31 | Protestant mission leaders Iduring the weekend for Alaska to conduct a three-week survey of rehymh needs that territory The deputation, which is travel-| mb by train to cattle and from Makes Blunt Speech onUl-| timatum Delivered by [tha: vomnt by piane to Fairvanks consists of Dr. Mark A. Dawber Soviels 10 Ministers [eseeutive secretary o¢ the Home | S ! Missions Council of North Ame: By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER ;ca, 297 Fourth Ave; Dr. J. Earl MOSCOW, March 31—(A—U. S. Jackson, secretary of the Sunday Secretary of State Marshall, in his|School Missions of the Board 'Huntesl speech of the conference,|Natinal Missions of the Plv\b\lt' stories of some 800 wedding guests | denounced Soviet Russia today for'ian Church in the TS 156,in an effort to trace the | delivering “an ultimatum” to the Fifth Avenue; Dr. Earl R B“’“"-‘mvnl\ of Mis. R Foreign Ministers' Council {exceutive secretary of the Division 42, whose brutally ! “We can never reach real 'wrur-‘(" Home Missions :uvnl Chur(‘-h Ex- found early ment on the basis of ultimatum or |tension of tke Methodist Church, a street gutter, immovable positio Marshall de- 190 Fifth Avenue Inspector George Branton, of clared in commenting on the So-| According to Dr. Dawber, the|pomicide squad sald Mrs. Chm viet position that until Russia re-{9eputation hopes to lay the ground —the mother of three children— ceived reparations from current work for the establishment of an had attended the wedding Gerhian production, no’ ssffisment | Alaska Councll of Churches, whichition. He said she was last Rl be remched would serve the territory in much'ieaving the party with at 21-y: S ehike Sult atter the Bmugy|ia oamec minner Councils of {old man, who has been held e coriated. a Broposal by, Waba| Sl function in Jtiie [ESUONY, Hestominghe eign Secretary Bevin to the Coun-iThp mission leaders, he sald, ex- Mrs. Chmiel's beaten # cil for unirication of Germany h)"pm 0 teple Bid) £ wmmfmmw kods (wes [ogndepions o e ANk gruug‘m and minister Lx.s:,l)(mfmns reet near Van Dyke B IR S et be g | Y b lor Bltles. In. e ghgns 0, Cotilh county s YR ettedtive by aBolsntng ‘el rcs(rlc-"\“Omuh‘“ and promote interde- northeast of Detroit 7 # (ncminal cooperation among Al- was fractured, her :,:ims cn movement of goods be- ..pac protestant churches. onle &3 uhdea veen zones. d s e ribs were broken and This proposal is obviously 42 DEAD IN RIOIS LOSS ESTIMATED BATTERED BODY OF " BETWEEN MOSLEMS, M s1sooo 00 Black smuk« t’J\\QI\‘(I (hf‘rllm\l\(ls of ki T feet over Haifa today from oil fires Brutally, s Mutilated Body Found . 'MARSHALL DENOUNCES RUSSIANS Three left s Party to Meet Death in Horrible Manner 31— DETRC\T, March lice had one man under today as they pieced together t mutilated body was Sunday morning in the seen ar- for and bruised a dirt side in Ma- 1 Her skull jaw broken, out, several her entire was unac- | | WASHINGTON, Pa, March 31 iset by explosions last night while —(—Police launched a widespread ricting between Hindus and Mos- the British were rescuing 1,570Ulll_\lj:\l.!;fl!me_ tnfixx,\" 1:110 t:lr(‘um: lemns.- four persons .were burned JeWish reiugees m a rotten, >‘”6"\"Slumm:q'iln; the death of to death yesterday in a horse- | foundering schooner built 70 years :‘l'li -Ylt:xlr[-')}r)llgga whose scantily victoria carriage which ' a80. d;v\;‘npe;du::-,“.. l_‘(:(mbm\l\(d»\ was set ablaze. { Company technicians estimated "n_fl‘ e s d‘ l;-d The dead were among the 42;the damage at around $4,000000, . R AR s PR i \ “illed here and 14 others were but said the fires in the oil in- L“f‘-“‘ P‘“* ’;1:’}“* Hope of (;ml\g"; injured. Nine persons were killed! stallations along the Haifa water- d‘:fiwn“»qw ;a:’t"l]:;fi*““:m'lkl and 50 wounded in similar dis-:fronts might continue several days, 4 i Thursday to spe: e nig turbances in Calcutta and Cawn-|Earlier unofficial estimates were' ' daf)m_l;’d spend the night pore. i a girl that e damage mig approxi- X Ehe - dame BREE 0 clothing was torn A noon communique 3 Her R R B s weser daiaain (100 e, ot medioa) orities had conditions under con- earby buildings were damag ehs . HHa - Bot been % ers said trol although tension continued in'severely. The Shell Oil Company im“: sauled. the areas where Sunday utbreaksialone said its loss was $1,000,000. S occurred. Troops were placed alf’rhv underground Irgun Zvai Leumi £ d th gl b i 3 LI st cs ) e Former Commander SEAIILE STAR SOlD Of Litchfield Depot 'o SA(KEII GROUP WASH[NGTON March 31.—(®— sident resulted in fierce gang fights,' stabbings and arson, including the| Truman today deleted; name of Lt. Col. James firing of a cotton mill. l IKilian, former commander of — e IN FROM ANCHORAGE Litchfield replacement depot, an army promotion list Kilian’s name was included BOMBAY, March 31.—P—A communique said today that in late with and her crim- ear- - | Ruth Renner, from Anchorage, 1.\! in Juneau at the Gastineau Hotel. | She is employed with the annual Guide to Alaska. i ANCHORAGE COUPLE HERE SEATTLE Seattle Star was sold :Shk‘ldun F ackett, of Coos Bay, |Ore., heading a group known ithe Sackett Radios and Newspap- Mul'('h 31.—(P—The today to ori- colonels submitted to the Wh awaits will be Howard Promotion to the rank colonel. The President ‘Kilian’s name before list to ‘the Senate for action. Kilian was convicted by courl vmm-nal of permitting “cruel” pun- ishment of enlisted men denmcd ‘at Litchtield in England during! the war. The sentence was hand- of full Amanded and to pzn a fine of $500.; Book "Ihe Egg and| Mr. and Mrs. William Dirkes of The transfer of the paper i Anchorage have arrived in Juneaujcertain legal work which and are registered at the Gastineau | completed promptly and Hotel. W. Parish, present ‘publisher, will | remain as General Manager, a The statement said. No changes in (he, ashlngionlpresem staff are planned. | Sackett, who also recently ac- Merry GO Round | quired the Vancouver, Wash., Sun, announced that under his plans all By DREW PLARSON stock of the newspaper will be own- | ki ed exclusively by men active in WASHINGTON—For months op- | the conduct of the paper. The new eraters of race tracks, roller-coast- | masthead will carry additional ers and gambling casinos have been | wording: “The Peoples' Newspaper" letting veterans housing take a back!and the phrase “owned by the men | seat while they thumbed their nos-|who run it, and run by the men es at building controls. Today!who own it.” (March 31) #however, the famous e — Tanforan Race Track near Palo| Alto, Calif., is scheduled for a slap- | G M G down from forthright U. 8. Judge | erman l“ers o George B. Harris in San Francisco. 'k a D d Behind this is some highly inter- OII SI" e, emall 'g;;}fif’“3’;‘},3;0?5“8‘;;,5?{" have esting background showing how a| filed @ $100,000 liel suit agair little group of men, if suf[lclenth’ Made More Food Betty MacDonsld Seattle author, ruthless, can give the Government ! ] I shadinig) they Wetk' ‘exposd to hat the run-around, while the boys who lived in foxholes continue to pound | ESSEN, Germam March 31 —\M‘;:c‘l] tfi::&;‘:péor:::;‘:;lffi and, oblh the pavements looking for apart-, —About 2,000 German miners struck o L ORE0 B FoNE, ments. wdav at Dortmund to enforce de”bcok “The Egg and 1. The story begins back last Junelmands for increased food for their! thor's - hosband, -Donald. G, Maos1 2 and June 22 when this columnist | families, but 4,000 others returned Donald was named a co-defen-| of Civilian|to four pits that had been closed. + thorized 1 o 16-YEAR-OLD GIRL | 1 ( | Woman Leaves Wedding . COAL MINERS ARE CALLED OUT FOR | MEMORIAL WEEK D— 400,- | \ WASHINGTON, March 31 ‘ John L. Lewis has called on 000 coal miners to quit work from Tumdn\ April 1. to Sunday, April| 6 in memory of the 111 victims f the Cent Ill., disaster. He! said his nt contract au-| | period of mourn-| ia nn gove such a | ing ' Holy Po- i arrest | miners e\ is move- | from Margaret Chmiel,' until recep- | distance | designated ,ers entered ! the tound | ves-1 last' ! days | dead. examin- ! ( It 1 ! Pittsburgh, ginally in a list of 683 lieutenant' €ight blast furnace: House by the War Department for: removed | sending the| ed down August 29, 1946, and the contract lcase is now pending on appeal. | Telephone and Telegraph Company Kilian was sentenced to be repri- | and its 20,000 long lines emplOyeEm ls Cause of Libel Sull - S m‘ last night ended in a | both sides.” | characters and Moran said that despite best-sellmg;conu'acl termination tonight he ex- (to have gained complete The au- | heads tion A.|in the nation’s bituminous mines the! from | c0al at most industrial plants. { the the week is istian churches bituminous coal | memorial period Lewis noted that Week in C he told his that the appropriate He fixed the midnight Easter and mourning Mong March Sunday In a communication to the offi-| cers and members of his union, mailed out Washington, Lewis said “During duction will ceremonies, other exerci: to honor our God in His vide consolation families. He said it is acred coinci dence that the greater part of this period of mourning will ‘Holy Week'."” d that “criminal negligence” on the part of Sec- retary of Interior J. A. Krug, who the Coal Mines Administra- in charg the bituminous pits under federal operation, “is' responsible for the deaths of these brave men and the future impov- erishment of families.” time 31‘ lal al of coal pro- cease and memorial church services, and s should be conducted dead and to pray to infinite mercy to pro- for the bereaved this period “a be during Lewis repeat of G pl WASHINGTON, The nation's 400,000 soft coal m the pits for the time today before beginning a si day work stoppage in memory Centralia, Ill., mine e vietims—but industry generally ap- peared fo face the prospect of eur- | tailed fuel supplies with few qualms At regular month-end . meetings of AFL United Mine Workers un- ion locals, the coal diggers receiv- d orders passed down from UMW President John L. Lewis to stop work at midnight tonight for six to honor the 111 Centralia There were mo reports of dissents and large group call- ed for removal of Interior Secre- tary Krug as Mines Administrator. Krug said he would not enter in- the mine work stoppage. “My mpathy” for the bereaved fam- ilies,” he said, “is too profound to permit me to debate or to gloss over their misery by engaging in any press controversy over the| catastrophe or its causes The Interior Se ary stated he would make an early report to the | Senate on overall safety conditions ° of 'pln»lnlu da thi for one it cl [ er ol | to of There were ample stock piles of | ¥ T} At S. Steel Corp., in officials id might have to be shut down for lack of coke. - BIG WALKOUT Ipl LOOMS APR. 7 NEW YORK, March 31.—(® The. between the American U. however, iant & 00 la i re] we in want to know whether to for in 42 states (-xplres at mid tonight, and the union Pmsldent says, “it looks very much as maugh we'd walk out at 6 a.m. April 7, as planned.” | Union of (independent), merican ' Workers, Telephone said altc ru The AUTW is a key affiliate of the National Federation of Tele- | phone Workers, which has threat- 33 ened a nationwide walkout April 7 cis the pected no action by his unioh unt’l'a the Apnl 7 a'ute e r. eign R¢ amendme the Nations d withdraw orl following ural cil Nations; the purposes substantially incapable Navy American ali WOULD PUT GREEK AID UPTOU.N. Senator Va-nd(;nberg Pro- poses Veto Power Over Proposed U. S. Loan WASHINGTON !Senator Vandenberg (R-Mich) posed | Nation ed Americ ‘Turkey to n a At hearings b, tion d, to be gest und when ected His suggested 'The Presider ized herein “(1) nment reque: of Gree either 4@ I such 1 reque: in tk majc vote or eneral the F of ac “P I of s ishment under circumstances emb) March give the id to y the Sen ed er which and if him to amendmer o is or all ai any sted ece or by ‘Tur nation; sted by e Securit ity vote ly of resident i the act h complished atisfactory $400,000,000 writing directed any the 31 »- United | Veto power over propos-;19th century Greece and ate For \tions committee on legis-|of Councillors authorize L of in 1t reads to auth- the d of gov- | key rep- resenting a majority of the people|sentatives pr a proced-|ond Coun- in the United y nds that ave bA’l‘I\ or accom- | OIL PRICE TONAVY IS QUESTIONED WASHINGTO(: Senator Brewster y he wants to know whether will have nose for Arabian oil conee! ha e \ The paid ased ol ntracts ican and mpanies. Brewster, Navy for with chai ter which Ji !testified "he carried Arabian-American. , nment for hat offer was ‘Whether 0,000 or rgely in time nportant now,” porter. “The are going time to come. getting one-third of y from there have to pay the next 60 - PEIPING, March John J. Moran, President of the gispatches reported tod: on two gzed miles south capital of t forces . al triangular s of nghsien, in the is out f line $59,879.954 War Investigating stimated this the quotation in a 1941 contingent we ha $40,000,000 area Feihsien, 4, March 4R Me) to “pay next 6 bought ™ms s denied It t the California-Texas rman of t cc E to t ames refused e paid toc of war issue to pay te The its (Arabia), it through \’A‘RY\” - 31~ majof bat Paoan, of Tsinan, Shantung. 5o were southern is Brewster the country 31.- said Lu the h throug! vea through 0 he price has pur- under Arabian-Am-| cil he Sen- ymmittee, , is $33,460,603 abovei Moffett | his gov- out $30,~ much | not luld whether bo much | Navy is; oil and is pomgg nos: ) 50 CHINA GOVERNMENT FORCES SCORE WINS| ON 2 BATTLEFRONTS| P—Field,| ¢ that the w'mmenl troops had scored Vic-Tyith 165,000, was second and Wich- tlefronts, SEATTLE, Mar. 21—(®—Mr. and; meeting with company negotiators'capt uring Tajan in coastal Shan- stalemate on tung Province, and Communist thwest China. Taian is an important in the of rail town; Provin- | Nation- n,xwor[ed formed by (\\e i Szeshui and Shan- pro-| an| President | Truman would be required to halt|pe the United |0 __! Selective a, »up< 1 MAYOR, TICKET OF JAPANPASSES DO NOT FAVOR FROM EXISTENCE UTILITIES DEA FormaIIY D-i-ed Tonight A((omplish”nths of Ad- After Half Century of 4 ministation During Imperialism Approval Past Year Listed TOKYO, March .n —(P statement of | House Peers formally issue of muni- I night a half-centu utilitis was i toc approval of Ja Mayor ~ Waino perialism. Council candi- Adjournment of the 92nd regular his ticket. ldiet ~session—last under the old| City pur- stitution, ended the TiFoparties. ‘ot life of the House of Peers. Under offered, be- |the new constitution, effective May offered the! it will be replaced by a House judgment, in whose 300 members public,” stated school board director and magis- will be elected April 20. speaking for| ate are to be chosen and three The once-powerful privy council should the Proposals are to be voted upon last political adjunct of the im- For the municipal officials there al court, emerged briefly from| are two tickets: one, tle People’s urity to approve and make in- | ticket, headed by incumbent May- PF ) 4“, law revisions in election pro- or Hendrickson for re-election with «“umn The privy council also Burr Johnton, Joe Thibodeau and \“,” be abolished by the new con-| “ o T inistration du |Edward S. Nielsen (incumbent) for |stitution. It formerly served as . councilmen ’ | ; the past year which have ) the Empero! highest political he cther the Progressive . ly brought the utility question | japet i body, charged with final decisions ticket, is headed by Leo L. Laz- quarely before the voters, with et ¥ N vy o on matters of major policy . ti, for mayor, and Earl T. For- all the angles of the problem held he. = y Members of the House of Repre- sythe, J. Raymond Hope and Eu- up in the light for full scrutiny.)go.. 4 pared to return 10 .. pave done our best” the gene Lockridge for councilmen. constituencies for their : / 4 A. S. Glover is an independent Mayor st d.“to bring the matter election campaign in raseliln o an o Jeave Cndidate for the council < . 0! A i Dr. Joseph O e is the ; no place for guesswork when the oseph., O, Rude is .the.only 8eS8I0N, oy e ove cast. No matter what candidate for the three year term 1D | 4ireatinh: thie vtk s HaREkE i 8 jas School Board Director, and bills e Il contAE O Tba J0ak - as o r SR SCIKE G S 4 : e Just as onjy can e for istre sincerely devoted o carrying out|frers wrotwe for Bkl the expressed wishes of the people.|\ po yoon® BIFCe Propasals to be “The entire piatform of the .o llLlan:,'““‘Lhe b3 They are People’s Ticket rests upon results , purchase -of - the lalready accomplished during _the Alaska Electric Light and Power a Company : past year when we were in office,”| o+ ‘Nflmnmv,\;:::r “VX)‘::;’ Works the Mayor concluded. “We feel qpue are also three | we have served the people of Ju- ... Ly ' PXPressions Sir neaw well :andi . the people -can | presinnse DAY /RN ChE 4 both or no. One is whether be sure the People’s Ticket will p. continue to serve them well.” the ity ‘shall aoll ghe Oty Dok A;:hlevrmentx to the Northland Transportation ? | Company, S| Among the achievements Mayor' ;.. pr)ln(}',e n{ml‘l’::fir ox:“!h:hfilum:)le‘: Hendrickson listed as realized by > " Y of liquor establishments in the K']’:;[ sj“.““:"“"::“,“““"“ during the (jpy and the third is, if the city " See (9 buys the Electric Light Company Purchased A. B. Hall property, shall the city 3 y including gas station and store 'AHBSSP i B B building for- $15,000. City operates g _ A | channeled more than ten million!gun’ gac’ pump for City equip- Hile :l“' open tomorrow morn- ! mericans into the Armed FOTces!yiont and has remodelled store 5, at : o'clock and close tomor- since its inception six and a half \juaging into City Health Center, “{“ ms,tn at T o'clock. Polls iyears ago. Today the strength of | purchaced property ffom Mem- :e[ lfll he City Hall, Gastineau the Army is down to a little more| a1 Liprary Board for widening ‘L‘ and Juneau Dalries. 'than one million men. But re- pourn Street between Calhoun qu\_mfd establishments, ~ whole- cruiting is holding up pretty well|gnd Main: cost $2,500. Secured .- ]-‘" 5 retail, and lounges will and the Army says it 35 satisfiedgceq from Presbyterian Mission‘ss, Clo%ed during the election with the present rate of enlist-|poarq to 8-foot wide strip, 50 feet S ments. long for widening “E” street be- | Also going out the window t'tyeen West Seventh and West AI.EU“AN IAKES |mmmghl are a wide assortment pigneh: donated. lof other war powers held by the| aAgqonted and ! President, including his virtually i gyjiging Code Ordinance. gravelled GUY Prince, convicted of man- 4 slaughter in U. S. Distriet Court unlimited authority to ration ““di Gold Creek flood control main- rallocate scarce materials. | tenance under way. here recently on charges surround- ing the nylon ‘stocking slaying of HOUSE OF PEERS WILL ELECT L 6 OFFICIALS ON TUESDAY (Three Proposais Are Also to Be Decided hy Voters at Polls [ | | An position cipal veiced Hendrick dates running Japan’s died of nese unequivocal upon the purc of tday to- aris- im- of after by and on Sixteen hunarea and ninety-four Juneauites are eligible to cast their votes in the city elaction to- morrow, ‘which is one of the most important held in Juneau in years. A mayor, three city councilmen, “We cha the to opposed of the utility terms presently the deal now City is not, in our the interest of the Mayor Hendrickson, his ticket. “However, people of Juneau vote to purchase |the utilities, we are pledged to out their wishes to the very of our ability.” The Mayor reccunted Ty best steps tak- e ticket, s | sec- two , their st S0 years During the diet | past 46-day spent 40 days mainly political battles. In all, 94 were passed, including budget totalling 114,500,000,000 o 'DRAFT BDS. CLOSE - ATMIDNIGHT; WAR - POWERS ACT ENDS WASHINGTON, March 31.—(P- Draft boards acress the untry .are getting ready to close up ishop at midnight tonight, at the same time that the second War {Powers Act will expire. The vast Service machine had its a yen unotficial is | On the other hand, Congress many wuthority to ration sugar and fix/ |one new strect (Erwin Street, be- sugar prices through next Octo-| tween Harbor Way and Juneau his wife, left Juneau yesterday on culture taking over the program yjaquet, Began construction on A ;rrvm (l\u OPA. new Calhoth Avenue overhead Federal Penitentiary at McNeil Island, Wash Rebuilt concrete [ fa K “' en Ninth Street Hill. Constructed Money said this morning that pulkhead in Prince and ten other prisoners Rale Shows Drop fiont of Alaska Cosstal ’ ) : backfilled with rock. Rounded corn- Tl Jail to McNeil Island for dis position. Deputy Marshal Syd ond and Franklin, Front and Main, Frent and South Seward. |party to Ketchikan. Other guards CHICAGC, Marca p—1le include Deputy Marshals Christian- Naticnal Safety Council announced Built new City Float, using creo scted piling; cost $6.048. {from Ketchikan. »d in traffic accidents in the In addition to Prince, those con~ i and Feb- Dock, including north end ap- 3 e proach, using creosoted piling for BYOUP included: John Harris, Will- the first two months of 1946 and| 19 percent fewer than the same of which $2,000 for work completed Johnson, Norman C. Gannon, |year previous. ~Redrove piling in Dorsey T. Keene, and Donald F port a perfect record for the V eriod . was Norfolk, Va. with|l and 2, all south side and part|Completed the group. |expected to extend the Presiden Filled in and complete 'ber, with the Department of ASri-|ngirjes), Rebuilt Kennedy Street Loard the Aleutian enroute to the B b g pedestrian crossing stairway on U. 8. Marshal Willlam A. Ma- 100 feet of timber hangar, Were taken from the Juneau Fed- ers on Fourth and Franklin, Sec- ur'l‘ an e | Thompson is accompanying the d 2y [ ! Completed Dock son from Petersburg and Sampson today that 4510 persons were Kkill- Completed rebuilding of City victed of criminal offenses in the ruary, 17 percent fewer than in all except fenders; cost $11643.99,/1am Heitman, Harvey Hickman, Joe iod i gest city to re- PEUERLIBAL [ Torsst ol 8 Small Boat Harbor on floats Nos. Goralski. Three mental patients 1231,000 population. Salt Lake City, STEAMER M MOVEMENTS Sailor’s Spnt'e Princess Norah, from Vancouver, scheduled to arrive at 4 o'clock this afternoon and sails tor Skag- y at 11:30 tonight sighter Lucidor due o'clock tomorrow to load fish, Alaska, from Seattle, scheduled arrive tomorrow evening Square Sinnet scheduled to sail from Seattle 10 a. m, April 3. Northern Voyager scheduled to of north side of float No. 3, part of Master Float, using 63 creosot- ed piling; cost $8900. Completely overhauled the th- ing facilities in the Grade and| High Schools; cost approximately' $6,000, in addition to normal yearly maintenance and repalr program Constructed a total of 1586 feet W& of new stairways and elevated side- walk. In a cooperative program with! property owners, paid for installa- tion of 3259 feet of concrete side- walk, with a similar program plan- ned for 1947 |ita, Kansas, Klamath Falls, fect record. 154,000 was third Ore., had a per- in port - ‘Flaming House Takes Toll of Eight Lives CAMDEN, N. u., March 31—®— Eight persons died in the flam- ing wreckage of a Camden house at 8 l to | called the attention i dant. | yesterday. || “Production officials to the wide- Some 10000 persons including AT u S Alrl'ne Fares A'e ociated Press dispatches from! A 40-year-old woman, six of her| Installed over 1500 feet of con- Sail from Seattle, April | scale thwarting of building controls | 'ailWay and wagon factory “’°Pkm| FAMILY FROM TULSEQUAH ] said foreign observers'14 children, and a grandson per- crete sewer pipe, including deep - e by the Tanioran Race Track and|marched through the streets of i considered exaggerated ports | ished as rescuers vainly attempted water outlets from Harbor Way, S]’o(K ouoi‘i‘lons sugssiad that something be done |ESrefeld, on the west bank of the| Mr. and Mis. F. Dahl and ”“’" Advall(ed 10 pe“enl {rom government quarters that the|to gain entrance to the small wo beyond Columbia Lumber, and about it. hine, waving banners protesting|two small children arrived in | Communists were massing 60,000 story dwelling. from South Franklin Street, NEW YORK, March 31.—Closing Something was done—despite the | {food shortages. A similar demon-|neau from Tulsequah, B. C. on| WASF{NGTON, March 31— troops in preparation for an as-| Fire Marshall Bernard Gallagh- through Robeits' Row quotation of Alaska Juneau mine screams of anguish from the race- | Stration was planned later today in! Alaska Coastal Airlines Saturday| _a 19 percent increase in air- saull on that Shangtung port ald the death toll was the New Equipment istock today s 5':, American Can track boys, who mot only deniedthe coal center of Duisburg. A pro- and are ‘registered at the B‘“‘“W‘Hxne fares will go into effect at Government forces in !third highest from fire in the| New equipment purchased in-|93', Anaconda 39%, Curth Wright this column's allegations but'test cancelled at Cologne. r“"tel !midnight tonight, returning the Province, pushing out from Y(‘l\dnlcuyg history. cludes: Police patrol car, pile 5%, International Harvester 87, threatened a libel suit and all sorts| RS L P T i R0 AR |tariffs to the 1944 levels. The in- fallen red capital, announced the| He listed the dead as: Mrs./driv diescl-powered heavy duty Kennecott 47'., New York Central of other dire consequences. BADMINTON TONIGHT ! CALIFORNIAN HERE crease was approved by the Civil capture of Paoan, 42 miles north-| Gladys Johnson; her children, street grader, 2%-ton, heavy duty|17'i, Northern Pacific 19, U. S. Civilian Production officials Badminton will be played-tonight| Charles Hammerly from Del Aeronautics Board a week ago at west of Yenan. Paoan was the first Lawrence 8, Howard 9, Mary three dump truck, new engine for, old Steel 727, Pound $4.02'x. promptly issued an order stopping ™ the High School gym from. 7| Monte, California, arrived in Ju- the request of 16 airlines. The headquarters established by the!months, Pauline 5, Catherine 7./dump truck, new gears for = the| Merrill-Lynch averages today arve 10 o'clock and all players are neau over the weekend and is at lines agreed ‘mot to change the!Reds after their long march (o Susanna 18, and Susanna’s son | scoopmobile, blacksmith forge and'as follows: industrials 17721, rails (Continued on Page Four) asked to report. the Gastincau, rates again for 90 days. 3 ) shensi, Frederick, two months. | (Continued on tage Tight) 1 48.65, utilties 35.88.

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