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. l { J\ 7 3 » thumbs THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” [——— VOL. LXIV., NO. 10,575 JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1947 ' MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS =-"--) FISHING INDUSTRY NEGOTIATIONS FAIL Greek - Iurklsh - Aid Bill Rldes; " Along in Hous e' Gets Baptlsm sm of Fire Bul Supporters Claim Leg- | islation fo Pass | WASHINGTON, May 9—®— The administration’s Greek-Turk-! ish aid program emerged unscath-| ed today from its baptism of, fire on the House floor. { Its supporters are weary tut con- fident that they have ' the \otes to ward off continuing attacks up- , on the measure designed to bolster the two Mediterranean countri against Communistic pressures. Their confidence was due to be put to the test today on sev- eral major amendments. Wheth-" er a vote on final passage would, come before nightfall was in, doubt. But behind the bill was one attempt to kill it outright-—-a move which went down to defeat by u‘ standing vote of 127 to 37. + Rejected, also, were two prelim-' inary attempts to give the United ' Nations a say on Southeastern' Europe’s problems i Rep. Helen Gahagan Douglas (D-Calif) sought unsuccessfully to postpone any aid for Turkey for a year to give the U. N. a chance! to look into the situation. Rep, Javits (R-NY) tried in vain to have Congress instruct President Truman to lay the Greek-Turkish problem before the U. N. while carrying out the assistance contemplated in the bill.! turned Douglas’ The House similarly down on Mrs. demand that it write in the mea- sure a specific prohibition against: sending either Turkey or Greece atomic weapons or secrets. Op- ponents of that ban said existing: law already prohibits any such ac-! tion. The House was still arguing the merits of limiting the size of mili-| tary missions to be sent to the' two countries. Rep. Mundt (R-! SD), proposed a maximum of 100; | Rep. Judd (R-Minn), countered 4 with a proposed 200 ceiling. | PROPOSAL TURNED DOWN WASHINGTON, May 9.—®—: The House turned down by voice vote today a proposal to ban Am-: ericdn military assistance in a b} (Continued on Page Five) i ' The Washmgion' | Merry - Go-Round By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON — For about :u.( years, Raymond Patenotre, million- aire grandson of James Elverson, late owner of the Philadelphia In-! quirer, has been a voluntary exiln‘é from the United States. During a! + least half of that time the U. S. Government has been itching to get its hands on him in connection with an $8,000,000 tax fraud. Now, very quietly, Raymond Pa- | tenotre has come back to the USA. He slipped in by way of Latin Am- erica and has been trying to pry loose $3,000,000 of his money which | the Government has frozen in l.he vaults of J. P. Morgan. All this Las aroused one of the hettest bacikstage lobbying battles | ‘of recent years. Despite the “fac’ that the Pa-{ tenotre family is. charged with fraud, and Gespite the fact that the Treasury Department had recom-, mended Patenotre to the Jusucei Department for criminal prosecu- | tion, even while in exile, certain| big-shot lobbyists are now pulling wires to let the family. off. : Most interesting thing about the case is the lawyer-tax-lobbyists who | is going to bat for the Patenotres. He is Ellsworth Alvord, who work-; ed in the Treasury Department un- | der Andy Mellon, and has been successfully practicing tax law and: entertaining Senators ever since. | Government records show that' Alvord has been cited by the Trea-; sury lor preparing and swearing lo' a “false and fraudulent document”' in connection with the Patenotre! income tax. Ordinarily when an' attorney prerares a fraudulent doc- ument, he is prosecuted for fraud along with his client. However, for 1 | i 1 | (Continued on Page Four) 'full committee slood in recess. i Bulgaria, jonce again that Margaret wants; ion her own. ltono Mussolini’s admittedly lllegul%EMBlEM IS 'I'o “olD ARABS, JEWS MEET BEFORE | UNASSEMBLY| Victery Day Observed in [FIGHTOVER Russia with Slams Taken | LABORBILL N SENATE By EDDIE GILMORE ' H : Major Palesfine Groups| ATOMIC SHIPS ARE MOSCOW, My 91 -the one IRJUNCHiON Question Under ! hundred and ninety-three million | H Air Differences in Face- - STILL UNSAFE FOR 5 oot o i Debate-Stiff Amend- brated Victory Day today in thous- to-Face Debate ands. of proesions, _demonstra-| ments Added 'HUMAN o((upAN(Y:Lions and sporting events mark-| LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., May 9 ed by s, orders of the day WKQHINGFON May . 9.—(M=— —IM—The United Nations fl!'l‘“]‘gl\di —_— b and which bore a dis- Senator Ball (R-Minn) waged al to hear the clashing viewpoints of | | tinct internatio: flavor. ‘laFl ditch fight today to block Etesine hrabe e sews ate 0. | 1arget Vessels 10 Be ToW- | "“Tvo years atter victory.” said juriscictional strikes by private] day at a meeting of the Gen-' . {the New Times in a leading edi- employer injunctions, while Sena- eral Assembly 5-nation politi- | ed '0 VaflOUS PO['S |torial, “the mouthpieces of in- tor Taft (R-Ohio) threw his sup-! cal committee. i ternational reaction are raging port behind a milder measure. The arrangement provided the| fOI' Further S'Udy once more. The méngers of a new| The Senate, in its eleventh day | first face-to-face meeting of the| war, as Henry Wallace put it,'of debate on labor disputes legisla- 'two major Palestine groups herei WASHINGTON May 9 zeep the kettle of hostility tow: 'd.\lliun, agreed to start voting on IF"“" the extraordinary Palestine Ten months z\nex: R B:kml Sttt llu_\ Soviet Union at a boiling!the injunction issue this after- session. begain April 28. {bomb tests, the target ships still PO nan David Ben-Gurion, Chairman of {are unsafe for permanent occu-| , The imperialistic clrcles ‘of the| It called up for action first an the Executive Council of the Jew- pancy.’ % Anglo-Saxon countries are build-'amendment by Taft, which simply ish Agency for Palestine, arrived Th}- Navy so reported today in ing bigger plans for their expal would permit private employers to from Palestine today. v«nnu\u‘(’mu that mosEat Lhe’ big Siom, plans of economic and pol ue unions for damages resulting Henry Katan, Palestine attor-iyessels which survived the twin tical enslavement of foreign peo ‘h'om jurisdictional strikes or sec- ney, was nominated to speak for|plasts last year will be towed ples. ‘unda"_ boycotts. the Ara i without crews to Hawaii and the| Nikolai Bulganin, minister of the; Taft's pending proposal is the armed forces declared in an order last of four he set out to add to Ben-Gurion said that the Jewish west Coast this summer for study Agency’s aspirations could be sum-! oOfficials emphasized, however, ©f the day that Soviet armed|the big catch-all bill designed to med up as “a Jewish state plus atpat the heavy radioactive contam- forces had won the war and saved curb strikes and restrict union' Jewish-Arabic alliance.” lination will mot endanger the the Dpeoples of ~Europe—‘among practices. The Senate wrote in The Arab committee was rc"pflp\l]fllim\a of either Pearl Har- which are the German people’—!No. 3 yester voting 48 to 40 ported ready to renew the Arab'yo. San Francisco, or Bremer- from Fascist oppression. |to outlaw union-controlled health| fight for speedy termination of (on' Wash. where the studies will The Army newspaper, Red Star, and welfare funds. Britain’s 25-year-old League of Na- pe .(‘arrled pi: declared the Soviet army hy itself| Taft won, 60 to 28, on an earlier tions mandate over the H"ly| Thev ate p"\rt of the Navy's in- Dot only could have occupied all decision to prohibit union coercion Land. yensive resoarch program which Germany without the aid of thelof workers, but he lost, 44 to 43, Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver, speak- ,already h,‘; resulted in drastic Western Allies, tut liberated France on a move to curb industry-wide ing for the Jewish Agency at yes-|changes in ship design theories. jas well. bargaining. terday’s meeting, demanded an ‘m.ic A ;a;tlrz‘sl;p pa c;\f ser, two aub-‘ (The German surrender actually, The Senate rejected late today a | mediate end to immigration re- marines and two transports already was signed on May 7, 1945, at proposal by Senator Ball (R-Minn) strictions and creation Oof & Na- have made the long voyage in Reims, Frante, but official an-|to permit individual employers to: tional home. for Jews. ithe Central Pacitic Whére the tar- nouncement of V-E—Victory in, seek injunctions against jurisdic- Europe—Day was delayed until!tional strikes and secondary boy- Two sub-committees of the poli- get ghips have been anchored since tical committee worked closed doors this morning May 8, and Russia ¢hoose to ob- cotts. behind | jpst fall. as the| The announcement said the de- SCrve it May 9 | The vote was 62-28. i Ball amendment to “contamination study is one of the ! E: | Defeat of the ‘navy's most important projects fh R ' S‘ k ‘p(ndlm, labor legislation opened . Are Spreading ;preparing against atomic warfare. | the way for action on a substitute pEA(E IREAT'ES |" The heavy cruiser Salt Lake Dlnpasal by Senator Taft (R-Ohio). Ta! "H AI 0 S iCity and the destroyer Hughes will ft proposes that employees be !go to Bremerton. The heavy cruis- ‘aulhorlzed to sue for damages in .er Pensacola recently arrived at such cases but would not' permi pASS (oMM'IIEE ‘the Naval xhlpvard there. WASHIVGTON May 9.—(P— SPANISH SIEEl injunctions to be sought by pri; | vate individuals. | The Senate also voted to let em- | ployers sue unions for damages re- .sulting from jurisdictional strikes The Senate Foreign Relations com- | land secondary boycotts. The vote, mittee voted unanimous approval] STRIKE (RUSHED was 65 to 26. ltcday of peace treaties with Italy, | o Inflahon Plagued City Is i Hungary and Rumania.|{ President Truman has urgedf woRKERS REIUR" speedy Senate ratification, which| > See"‘g w"h Demons"a- ( “vl(IED KIllER requires two-thirds approval of | ! those voting, as a matter “vital’{ BILBAO, Spain. May 9-*‘5"—: “ons Of A” Kmds MADE SE(O“D IRIP to American tore:gn pohcy { Generalissimo Francisco Franco's e ! H overnment oppeared today to have SHANGHAIL May 9.—(P—Riots, crushed a general strike "~which demonstrations and strikes spread) [urtunlly immobilized the vital through inflation-plagued Shang-' Isteel industry in this area for eight hai tonight. ,days—the strongest demonstration: Employees of the government ra- Presulenl Wite Not Io Be In Daugh'er S ;by Spanish industrial workers since dio administration threatened to nho civil war. walk out if the Ministry of Com-,victed robber-killer, walked 15 feet| Louisiana’s portable elcu.uc conte" Audlen(e More workers returned to their 'munications rejected ‘demands for ' t0 : ! 110bs yesterday, penalized by loss,a 60 percent wage boost to meet Chail today for a second attempt, ‘of ‘seniority and wage reductions. skyrocketing prices. to carry out a death sentence WASHINGTON, May 9—%—!| Tnformants calculated that’30000 Two thousand bus and tram| e sat in the chair at 12:02 The President and Mrs. Truman|of an estimated 45000 workers in drivers in the former French con- M- Central Standard Time, ‘hmt' will not be in the audience when steel, heavy machinery, shipbuild- cession walked off their jokbs 'to {ly after he ate a final meal of {Margaret Truman opens her con-'ing, mines and construction work- stage a mammoth parade. ifried fish, potatoes, bread, pickles cert tour in Pittsburgh on May 20.|ers stayed away from their jobs. More than 15000 silk workers and @ bottle of pop. ~He was Miss® Truman's teacher, Mrs.!Mcnday and Tuesday. |demonstrated against the govern- Pronounced dead at 12:10 p. m. Margaret Strickler, said today that! The Bilbao workers first left ment's freezing of wages at the 1\ Was the second time that the point was definitely settled ]ung[lheu jobs on May Day for a one January level. 18-year-old negro had been ago. Mrs. Strickler emphaslzcdlday demonstration in observance! As dusk fell, extra police were Ped into the same chair. of the traditional European Labor called’ to form a cordon around AWaV from it May 3, 1946, when, to make good as a concert singer|Day. The government retaliated the administration building. An!?® faulty wire sent the lethal cur- iwith an order firing those who had estimated 8,000 students and work- Yént into the ground rather than demonstrated and requiring them ers packed the streets there. jthrough his body. ito apply to Civil Governor Ganaror More than a dozen rice rm!.:. Francis was convicted of the 1945, TO ELECTRIC CHAIR ST. MARYSVILLE, La, May 9.— (#—Young Willie Francis, a con-| 'Son of Mussolini May Remainin S.A.. BUENOS AIRES, May 9—P— Judge Cesar Romero Ibarra of the |day- Federal court has ruled that Vit- {Riestra for reinstatement within were reported. Nearly all shops I ight days, with loss of seniority barricaded their doors. "Ihumas here. nghts Mayor K. C. Wu asked the min- | e S In protest against this order the istry of food to allot 300,000 piculfi tworkers struck in force last Mon- of rice monthly to Shanghai to alleviate the food crisis. A" picul| is 133 1-3 pounds, The request was believed to be‘ ‘part of a new ration plan un- !der which 1,500,000 workers, tench—{‘ ers and students would receive 32 pounds of rice a month at thel official price of 168,000 Chinese | dollars a picul—half the prevail-| The Republican majority on the Plans for initiation of new mem- ing blackmarket rate. (At the Senate Finance committee blocked Lers were made by the Juneau Em- official rate, 12,000 Chinese dollars | two Democratic attempts today to blem Club at-their regular meet- equals $1; the blackmarket rate|postpone action on the $3,800,000,000 ing held last night. it 23,000-to-! sll ‘miome tax cut bill 'HOUSE BILL TO CUT INCOMF TAX GIVEN entry into Argentina on March 29 did not constitute a crime against ! the security of the state. l"’"‘IA‘Io" MAY 22 This means that the son of cm-)l FOHOWED BY Sotu late Italian Duce i§ virtually as: sured of fulfilling his announced desire to live and work in this country. WASHINGTON, May 9.—P— - - FUNERAL RITES FOR C. G. IRBY TOMORROwW The initiation will be held at —~— | House. ;!he next social meeting, May 22, | Both moves lost by identical| Funeral services for Claude Gor-'and husbands are invited to 1ha BRIN S I“ votes of 7 to 6 on a straight don Irby, who passed away at St.!social following the initiation. So- party division. {Ann's Hospital on Wednesday, will ‘cial committee members are Jo‘ HUGE SI’EELHEAD' All but about 1,100 of the na- be held tomorrow morning at 31Jen<en chairman, Pat Vance,| |tion's 48,000,000 taxpayers would | lo'clock in the Catholic Church of | Hattie Peterman, Mary Westfall| |get reductions of from 20 to 30 the Nativity. jand Opal Jensen. | Topping the take from Peterson| |percent under the House bill The Rev. Robert Whelan, S. J.1 ———— ICreek this season’ is the 36- inch| Those with net incomes (after HERE FROM STATES steelhead trout landed by Fred exemptions) of $1,000 or less would in Evergreen Cemetery. i Arriving by air yesterday were Wolf late yesterday. The big|get 30 pereent off; those between feee — Harry M. Stephey of Philadelphia,!fish was one of three steelhead! $1396 and $302,000 a cut of 20 per- The state flag of Mississippi xs‘Penn, Mrs. H. L. Munage of Dnllas,‘mken from Peterson Creek yester-|cent, and those over $302.000 only somewhat similar in design to the| Texas and Harry E. Cotrill of Min-' day. Wolf’s 36-incher was on dis- 105 percent. Confederate flag and is sometimes | neapolis, Minn. All are at the Bar- play here today at Darnells| The income tax cut mistaken for that flag. anof Hotel. 'Sports Center. v elfective as of July 1. will officiate, and interment will bel_ would be strap- | He walk- | holdup-slaying of druggist ‘Andrew! SENATE COM. VOTE voted by the| 'Veferans Who Attempt fo Homestead in Alaska Then Fail, May Get No Govi. Aid FOR ALASKA | i FIVE NEWSMEN AND S. F. CHRONICLE IN MISSOURI HONORS Hal Boy le, e, Associated Press Writer, Among Those Recognized | | COLUMBIA, Mo, May 9.—®—| The annual University of Missouri| Ihonor awards for distinguished ervice to journalism were present-| ed today to five individuals and to the San Francisco Chronicle The individual awards went to Hal Boyle, Associated Press writer and war correspondent; Joseph! Pulitzer, President of the Pulitzer| Publishing Company and publisher | |of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch; F. M. (Jack) Flynn, general manager of the New York Daily News; George Yates, photographic chief of the Des Moines Register-Tri- kune; William L. Lawrence, science editor of the New York Times. Paul C. Smith - accepted the| award as editor and general man-| ager of the Chronicle. Boyle's citation was “In recognition of his outstand- ing record as a war correspondent for the Associated Press; and his |ability to write both news and | features which will hold the at- ‘lemlon of newspapex' readers to (the last wmd LONG DISTANCE OPERATORS NOT | NEW YORK, May 9.—(M—Groups of long distance ployees returning to work follow- ling settlement of the long |phase of the nationwide strike re- {fused today to cross picket lines f uther unions still on strike. workers were members of lhe Amerlcan Union of Telephone ivwmken whese 20,000 members from | coast to coast were slated to begin returning to work at 6 a. m. in Lhe various time zones across the telephone em- (ountr}. but remained ‘“pledged’ (to honor the pickct lines of any affiliated union.” ‘Dun and Bradsireet - Make Report; Refail | Dollar Volume Rises NEW YORK, May 9.—(® Rclml dollar volume rose in the week ending May 7 and was from 6 to 10 percent above| (hm of the corresponding week! la year ago. Dun and Bradstreet said today that many sections of the country, reported warm weather, clearance | sales and scattered price reductions scontributed to increased consumer purchasing, although resistance to high prices and inferior quality |scods continued to increase. Re-| “laxl inventories generally were at |a high level. | Retail food sales increased no- i ticeably and were well above those lof a year ago. Demand for meat, !fish and poultry was heavy. Sup- |plies of canned. foods, fresh fruits and vegetables were ample. e — PAA COUPLE VISIT of Seattle flew to Juneau yesterday jand are staying at the Baranof | IHm,el on vacation. Mr. attle, in charge of the development | lof the Stratocruiser ifor passenger ‘servlce. -- MAYOR OF KETCHIKAN Mayor Bob Ellis of Ketchikan, | with Mrs. Ellis, arrived in Juneau yesterday by air and registered at the Baranof Hotel. R The ancients used cobalt, copper and manganese to color glass, BREAKING LINES lines | moderately | | Secrist is | with Pan American Airways at Se- | WASHINGTON, | Rep. Crawford (R-Mich) insisted that war veterans, if authorized to| homestead in Alaska, must not expect financial aid from the gov- ernment if the going is too rough Yesterday he told a Putlic Lands subcommittee considering home-| steading legislation: “I shall oppose the government helping the veterans get back to| May 9P AGREEMENTS NOTREACHED Unions .in Conference in Seattle-2 Controversies on Cook Inlet SEATTLE, May 9. (®—Concilia- tors reported today there were no agreements in sight in various Al- the United States if they fail, and chall oppose the government fi-| Inancing their venture in any way.| Unless they are ready to burn [their bridges behind them before | |they go they are no good as| | pioneers."” | Crawford's statement came after | Ray H. Brannaman, of Colorado, | | Vice Senior Commander-in-Chief | ‘ul Veterans of Foreign Wars, testi- itied he believed, after a three| ‘\h(‘ks trip to the Territory, that| “homesteading for veterans is prac- | ticable.” Brannaman argued that vvlelam should be settled in Alaska (ul national defense purposes. He add- ,ed that “we must be prepared to stop an invasion (through Alaska) | |by air because that is the way it! |will come. The chances are great' that any invasion of our country)| will come through the Polar re- 'FARMER-PREACHER i,a WEDS 14-YEAR-OLD | GIRL; IS ARRESTED WINCHESTER, Tl'n. May 9.:-(® —A 6l-year-old farmer-preacher sald today that his marriage to a | 14-year-old school girl was “God’s will" and “I love to do God's will | regardless of men.” R. S. Holt, who is being held in jail here under $6,000 bond on charges of abduction and violating the age of consent brought by the | girl's father, told reporters in the presence of Sheriff Jim Smith that his bride had turned against him. She has thwarted God's will,” he {cried, “and one of these days she’s wmm, to be sorry.” “Time and time again that wo- |man swore she would die by my side. Her mammy and daddy just | over-persuaded her.” | ‘ The girl, Alline Rolman, returned | to her parents after Holt was nr- {rested. He was bound over to the grand jury, which next meets in August at a preliminary hearing \(‘wllld(n' Natl. Headquarfers ' Of Communist Party , Is Closed in Brazil - RIO DE JANIERO May 9.—P— Police today closed the national headquarters of the Communist | |Party of Brazil, largest in the , western hemisphere, and sources iclose to the administration said! {new drastic measures were to be | taken against the Party | The police, acting on Wednes- jday’s decision of the Supreme { Electoral Tribunal declaring the Party illegal, also closed the Com- | munists’ metropolitan commmco | headquarters, as well as 445 | clubs. i linked with President | Eurico Gaspar Dutra’s administra- | tion said the government already | had drafted decree suspending lh:: party as a civilian or anization | | for 60 days. This would suppress it completely until the Supreme . |Court rules on an appeal ifrom ! | Tribunal D STOCK QUOTATIONS | NEW YORK, May 9. — Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine | |stock today is 4, Am N Can 974, | [ Anaconda 36, Curtiss-Wright 4%, \Imenmuunal Harvester 83, Kenne- | [cott 45, New York Central 14, | Northern Pacific 16, U. S. Steel 167' , Pound $4.02% | | Sales today were 720,000 shares. Merrill-Lynch averages today are as follows: industrials 171.54, rails | | L4465, utilities 3387, ‘and |aska fishing and cannery negotia- tions. Still unsettled are contract dis- putes involving the Deep Sea Fish- ermen’s Union, Alaska Salmon Cannery Machinists, Alaska Salmon Cannery workers' Union Local 7, Alaska Fishermen's Union and the United Fishermen of Cook Inlet Officials of Machinists Union Local 79, were to meet with Rep- resentatives of the Alaska Salmon | Industry today in the office of U S Conciliator Alkin L. Peterson. TROUBLE UN COOK INLET SEATTLE, May 9—(M—After un- 1ond1ng cargo in strike-bound Sel- dovia, the Alaska Steamship Com- pany's steamship Denali was on its way to Ketchikan today. The dock company will hold the cargo until a dispute involving salmon canneries and two unions is set- tled. Freighter Clove Hitch still was tied up at Seldovia where it has been held for several days by the oor dispute. Walter. .Fubrer, manager of | Alaska Salmon Industry, Inc. little progress has been made in negotiations at Seldovia. The king salmon fishing season is due to !start in Cook Inlet May 20. The Seldovia labor difficulties are of two kinds. One controversy is between the Alaska Salmon Industry and the Alaska Fishermen’s Union (CIO) over fish prices. The other is a jurisdictional dis- pute between the Fishermen's Union and the United Fishermen of Cook Inlet (AFL). The Alaska Salmon Industry says it has dealt with the Fishermen’s Union for years, but the United Fishermen consend it represents a majority of the employees and should be recognized. The National Labor Relations Board says it cannot call a vote to decide the issue because it does not have the money. RS A o e i 'CHILLY WEATHER IS PREVAILING IN MANY SECTIONS (By 14E ASNOCIATED PRESS) There was a white coat of frost over the verdant spots in most f ‘the Eastern and Central sec- tions of the country today as un- seasonably chilly weather lingered [to put some zing into spring. Temperatures in some parts of the midwest dipped to around the 15 above mark and snow flurries continued in New York State, Pennsylvania and Northern New England. The Federal weather bureau at Chicago reported two inches of snow at Syracuse, N. Y. The cool belt extended from anesum south into Tenn&»sec - QUEEN MOTHER OF EGYPT U. 5. BOUND LONDON, May 9.—(®—Travelling incognito, 70-year-old Queen Moth- er Mazli of Egypt will step aboard a plane tonight for the first time in her life to go to New York for medical attention, Pan American Mr. and Mrs. Russell M. Secrist | the 3-t0-2 decision of the Electoral | Ajrways said today. The Queen, mother of King Far- ouk, will be accompanied by her two daughters, Faikan, 20, and Fathia, 17, and an entourage of of three e — STEAMER MOVEMENTS Square Sinnet due Sunday. Palisana due May 10. Princess Louise is scheduled sail from Vancouver May 10. Aleutian, from west, scheduled tq arrive Saturday night at 9 o'clock sails south at I1:45 o'clock. to :fi‘