Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” == /OL. LXVIL., NO. 10,650 JUNEAU, ALASKA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1947 " MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS | P HARD TIMES SEEN AHEAD FOREUROPE Continent Faces Tight Squeeze Until Marshall Plans Goes Into Effect WASHINGTON, Aug. 7T—®—All evidence, including Prime Minister Attlee’s report to Commons, indi- cates today that Western Europe faces a tight squeeze between now and the time the Marshall plan can become effective. It is equally evident that no new American financial aid will be forthcoming—barring economic dis- aster abroad—until Congress can pass early next year on the Mar- shall Recovery Program. Attlee’s report yesterday evident- ly was well received here because of the way in which is emphasized Britain’s intention to survive the next few months on her own dwindling resources with a mini- mum of help from the United States. This was regarded as dovefail- ing with the Truman Administra-, tion's promise to Congress that there will be no further foreign financing on a piece-meal basis and that the only workable solu- tion is to try to promote European recovery as a whole. Officials here are sensitive to the iact that this country’s initial| The weather was reported good|Kai-shek and his personal pestwar economic policy for Eur- ¢ " cander and to Paris, his sec-(of staff, Gen. Yu Chi-shih, ope was based on a bad miscalcul- ation: that the multi-billion dollar up Paris, he plans to land at|Gen. credits authorized for the British, French and Itallans last year would! 1, message shortly after his|northwest part of China. 0DOM OFF ~ AGAINON ~ SOLOTRIP Will Attempt fo Beat Wiley Post’s Globe-Circling Record of 186 Hours CHICAGO, Aug. T7—®—William |P. Odom, 27 year old former Brit- "ish ferry command officer, took off at 12:53 midnight (CDT) (9:53 p. m. PST) today in his converted |twin-engine army bomber in an leffort to halve the late Wiley {Post’'s 1933 solo globe circling {time record. | While a handful of spectators at Douglas Airport shouted good | wishes, Odom, pilo nolds Bombshell,” i sandwiches and fresh oranges and tomatoes. The plane, with about a two- thifds load of gasoline, gained al- |titude swiftly, circled the field, and headed toward Gander, New- foundland, the first scheduled |stop, aided by a 30 mile an hour tailwind Odom, who set a round-the-world flight record, with a crew, of 78 {hours and 55': minutes in April, is shooting for a 90 to 94 hour solo recofd. Post's record, which still stands, |was 186 hours. Weather Good ag of chicken iond tentative stop. If he passes | Rome. 'takeoff, Odom said he had at- itained a 220 mile an hour speed ‘at 5000 feet and had observed a solid overcast over Lake Michi- \gan. “It feels much better up here in the clear, cool air,” he said. *“It will be a routine flight to Gand- jer. The takeoff was smooth and leasy. Tl be back Sunday.” { If Odom lands at Paris, his next LANE CARRIES FOUR TO FIERY EISENHOWER ‘CHINESEE TROOPS PLUNGE ON REDS,: Nwit| 1S AT NOME ' 1 }fom WITHDRAWAL !Government Makes Attack 1 on Enemy at Flood- | [ SwollenYellowRiver | | 7.—P—Air- 1 Town Turns Out Enmasse to Welcome Him—Re- ference to Russia BULLETIN BARROW, Alaska., Aug. T—® Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower to- day visited this top of the world settlement, far north of the Arctic Circle, and made a tour of the area in a weasel. He inspected the Navy's oil project briefly. The General will go from here to Adak. | NANKING, Aug. supported government troops in! western Shantung Province forced {units of Red Gen. Liu Po-cheng's| farmy back against the fluod-swol-; {len Yellow River today while gov- {ernment forces in eastern Shantung: increased pressure along the Tsing-!| ltao-Tsinan railway. 1 said govern-| {ment commanders had every op-! portunity to inflict a major de-| iwest because the Yellow River is Inow five miles wide and few boats ON HIS TOUR| il from Juneau, Hopes NewCharge " IsHurled by 0 H._Hughes TILTY WORKERS |HEATWAVE "L ok Staik; BREAKING, C0OL AIR | ¥ & g ) | eonard Evans, Conciliator fo Break Deadlock Thunder Showers Also;Quotes Committee: Atfor- . " ' Leanard_vams,_conciiacor cor COMbat 100 Degree Tem- ! ney as Saying We're the Territorial Commission of La-/ oo [boe Tt o e for- ancnorege| perature-Death Toll Up | Out fo Get Roosevelt |yesterday to attend, a session| | ity {held last night in that city between By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 7. — P— Mayor Francis Bowden, City Coun-| rnyndershowers and cooling | Howard Hughes quoted an attorney climen and striking telephone ““d\hreezen cut further into the mid-}for the Senate War Investigating electrical workers, according to |yest's worst heat wave of the year {Ccmmittee today as saying “We're |Henry Benson, Commissioner of{toqay after deaths from the four { out to get Elliott Roosevelt” through |Lator. {days of 100-degree temperaturesthe inquiry into Hughes' war-plane { After talking to Mayor Bowden | pa.q yisen to at least 69. contracts. - lof Anchorage by telephone, and| «pne heat wave is definitely \getting Bowden's report that noipyoken at Chicago and all points Hughes said this statemen:i was progress was being made in reach-|north and west and is being brok- THRN By SO L)) PUCIEREY: Aas ling a settlement of the Wage o eastward,” .the weather bur- sistant Committee Counsel, when Flanagan arrived at the Hughes i 1 ting the “Rey-| started off on|western Shantung from neighbor- ; \ Military observers | feat on the Communists in the| are available. Liu's army invaded NOME Alaska, Aug. 7—(P—Nome dispute, Benson agreed to send|eqy gaid after a shower at Chica-/ (urned out en masse late yester- Evans, in the hope of breakinglgo early today had tumbled the plant in March to examine expense {the twice-postponed flight with a| b ing Hopeh Province several weeks iago in an effort to reinforce the !Red's Shantung armies. ’ In eastern Shantung the gov- lernmenL assault troops moved in {to attack Kiaohsien, 45 miles northwest of Tsingtao, Dispatches sdid other government forces cap- tured Yitu, 90 miles northwest of Kiaohsien and were pushing inorthwest to attack Lintzu, 16 | miles away. The dispatches added that Com- lmunists in the Poshan coal mining region southwest of Yitu were showing signs of retreat. cay afternoon to greet General Eisenhower and his party as the Army's Chiet of Staff winged to the most westernmost point in his tour of Alaskan Military installa- tions. The General's big plane landed at the Nome air base at 4:23 pm, (10:23 pm. EST) almost within the shadow of the soil of Russia, to which he referred obliquely in a speech Tuesday night at Fair- banks. Addressing the Chamber of Com- merce there, he said: | “We have no objection to others A semi-official source in Nan- = king said Generalissimo Chiang‘“‘""g under dictatorships if that chief|i¢ Wwhat they want. But when flew Others of unlike philosophies an- to Yenan today to confer with nounce that our form of life is Hu Chung-nan on strength- antagonistic to their future, we s in the Must look to our own strength.” | Eisenhower was met at the Nome It was Chiang's first trip m!field by the Base Commander, Col. that part of China since Hu John E. Bodle, who accompanied Shungnan’s troops captured Yenan, the Gen. and his aides on an in- long the Red capital of China, last spection trip covering all installa- ispring. He was expected to re- tions here. turn tomorrow. | At a reception and dinner last - night Eisenhower was presented 1 | with the No. 1 honorary member- l [N ] ening. government defense; 1ship in the 'Pioneers of Alaska ! 1gloo, of which Gen. James Doo- little also is an honorary member. ‘The occasion also brought a. re- ‘the accounts ‘nvolving Rooseveit lin E deadlock.d " : i mercury from 81 to 72 within Bs vans was due arrive back | i Junl,,u today. % ifew fninties, Roosevelt was a witness earlier An Associated Press dispatch | Elsewhere, though, the forecast;|this week, testifying about some $5.- jer said continued high tempera-|goo listed in Hughes Aij 1t C from Anchorage received by the| n Hughes Aircraft Com- V | tures. could be expected today, Par-:pany's book havi b e Empire today quoted Mayor Bow- pany’s s as having been spent a > |ticularly from southeastern Illin- his entertai e iden as stating the ‘“city is defin- o entertainment—part of it at | h g y 7 ois and throughout the southernja time when h vist {itely broke,” and that the situa-|plaing states en he was advising the [tion “bofls down to not enough il S { War Department qp plane contracts | Rain - WirC Before mentioning Roosevelt, (money.” This was no reflection| AR on the present City Council or the Joliet, IIl, about 40 mueslfluihes said there were “ulterior | precious council, he said. At | accompanied by!the one he has repeatedly charged ! Councilmen suggested the possi-|strong winds which blew down{—that it was launched as part of |bility of dispensing with a con- many trees and disabled the clty'sl-n effort to “coerce”. him into agree- isiderable number of workers and!power service. Some houses and|ing to an airlines merger. lraising utility rates in an effort | automobiles were damaged by the to meet wage demands, but no ac-falling trees. tion was taken on this, the dis-| Fatalities as pateh said. (heat, including some The union agreed to continue op- iincluded: Chicago 25, St. Louis 11, erating switchboards on an emer-, Wisconsin 11, Ohio 8, Iowa, Ala- {gency basis at least until tonight,|bama and Arkansas three each, | terest. iag a result of a five-hour long, Louisville, Ky., two; and lndhmn,! “Yes, hut you're shooting with a ‘meeting held Tuesday night. Pennsylvania and Tennessee, one | scattergun and Mr. Hughes is goifig i !each. jto be hurt.” He quoted Deitrich as i A high lllr:tcili:gc‘::“lzl degrea;pmtuung' - OF GOVT. SPENDING ;duwnpour was i Hughes told the Senate War In- a result of m,_.!vesugaung Committee that Flana- drownings, | 88n made the remark about Roose- !velt to Noah Dietrich, Executive | Vice-President of the Hughes in- g““'::g e ":;’:ge -‘(‘;’:;-s 1911} “We want to shoot Roosevelt with n e e S, i o " «a cannon.’ | mercury chn-_nbed to 100 or more, Previously Hughes said the Sen- i 'Yl'lmflin ‘;‘”‘t' "’p"r‘e‘t the D8-i410r5 ought to look at their reputa- ‘tmns ghest temperatures yes-ijons when deciding whether he or terday, 113 degrees. Phoenix Injprewster is telling the truth in yesterday gave Chicago its hottest ! i | {their controversy over an airlines 'the same state had 112. WASHINGTON, Aug. 7—®—, 100 or |south of Chicago, a brief but heavy motives” for the inquiry other than | DEATH SHIP DROPS FROM FOG TO FURNACE Socially Prominent Occu- :pants Die in Red-Hot Waste-Gas Burner EVERETT, Mass, Aug. T—M—A small airplane plunged out of a fog-shrouded sky early today into o flaming waste-gas burner of a monster oil plant—carrying to fiery death the ships four socially prom- inent occupants as the pilot ap- parently thought he was shooting down into brightly-lit Boston air- port. The dead were: Thomas Mandell, 46 Treasurer of the Carrier—Mandell Air Con- ditioning Corporation of Boston and son of the late George S. Mandell, publisher of the old Bos- ton Transcript. Mandell's two ters—Anne, 22, both of Boston. Pilot Nelson Fyll, 32-year-old veteran flier and member of a so- cially prominent Long Island, N. Y., family. Flying tie Mandells back from !Momrenl. Pell is believed to have {become lost in the murky early | morning fog and to have mistaken | the lights flaring atop huge gaso- |line stills of the Beacon Oll Com- pany for those of an airport, fire officials said. Witnesses said that the small | Stinson aircrait—its motors silent | —dropped into the mouth of the | Chimney-like furnace “like a dead ( pigeon” after narrowly missing | several towering tanks containing | high explosive petroleum products. | The furnace—resembling a huge | brick silo—rises about 50 feet in the middle of the oil plant. The small plane was completely swal- {lowed up as it dropped into the | 20-foot wide “field burner.” An explosion rocked the area as the plane crashed. The body of Lone girl fell between the outer and f debutante daugh- and Harriot, 19, | DELEGATION ATJAMBOREE Boy Scoufs Arrive at Camp | Site for Two-Week En- campment Near Paris ‘ PARIS, Aug. —UP—More than| 1,100 Boy Scouts frcm the United States and Alaska are scheduled to arrive tonight at the wooded 1,500~ BUSINESS ! The plane, which had difficulty {with a maximum gasoline load iof 2460 gallons in a false start acre site of the International Scout Jamboree encampment 40 miles ! {take off Monday, -carried only\west of here. {1,500 gallons today. The original] The boys—first-class, Eagle and takeoff, scheduled for Sunday, was|Life Scouts—have spent four days fpostponed because of mechanicalion excursions through the Nether- | | | i | {to Adak in the Aleutians and Point, Disputing Republican economy | claims, President Truman announc- ed today that he has ordered “a detailed and exhaustive study of all facts” of government spending. “I do not intend to make any| hasty predictions on the amount| of so-called ‘savings' effected by, 'the Congress in the 1948 budget; juntil all the facts are in,” the; President said in a statement. | Mr. Truman said, however, that none of the predictions he has seen “have properly related con- gressional changes in appropria-| PHILANTHROPIST WM- GERS"-E DlES "v.ions" to estimated expeditures for| oF HEARI A"A( %ls:laé said that the American beople} iare more interested in how much| ithe government will actually spend union of the Army's Chief with George Goshaw, fox rancher of Shishmaref, who was a Sergeant under Eisenhower in World War I. The General and his party flew here from Fairbanks. Remaining: on Eisenhower’s itinerary are visits Barrow,, far to the North. Other points reporting more included: Fresno, Calif, and Advance, Mo., 106; Batesville, Ark. !y ¢ iharced and Brewster has de- and Paris, Tenn, 105; St. Louis,| it jovs inied that the Senator once offered Mo, shreveport, La. and E(fN8-11o cal off the Senate investigation ham, Ill, 104; Little Rg“_- r.h"KO’ Hughes' $40,000,000 wartime plane and Pelleston, Mich, 103; Nash- if he (Hughes) would i red-hot flaming interior and were " | contracts ville, Tenn,, 101; Grand Rapidsiggree to merge his Trans World | and Traverse City, | merger proposition. With both under oath, Hughes inner walls of the great twin- walled brick and steel cylinder. | The other three plunged into the burned beyond recognition within Mich., 100. pjrines with Pan American. | 3.5 AT T MAKING THREE SHIPS TAKE | §, (HING |LAST SAILING FOR SANIA ANA §22 MILLION FISH KUSKOKWIM PoI ~carcoT0seATTLE| IS HEAD OF g lone 7—M—Three | SEATTLE; = Aug. Ana Steamship Company's SEATTLE, Aug. freighter, the Coastal Rider, gets SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 7—/P— |during the current fiscal year than 'shps are homebound from Alaska | i i William L. Gerstle, 79, Philanthro- [they are in “shifts and changes,” today with cargoes that far out- shine in value the treasure of the jaway Saturday on her second and Ilast trip of the season to Alaska’s Kuskokwim River district. Capt. pist and civic leader, died suddenly yesterday of a heart attack. member of a pioneer San Francisco family, he had served as President Al in the appropriations structure. i | | Charley Carlson will take her out | ith a hefty load of general cargo | { WASHINGTON, Aug. 7. — (®— | President Truman today named Cy- | ¥ {rus S. Ching to head up the gov- | foF Goodnews Bay and Bethel. But it won't be like the old days | Klondike gold ships which ar- rived here half a century ago. Today’s vessels are carrying ap- difficulty. ———-———— of the Alaska Commercial Com- | pany, Alaska Salmon Packers Com- pany and Manhattan Gold Dredg- ing Company, and was until his ideath a director in the Wells- !lands and Belgium after disem- barking at Antwerp. They are among some 30,000 boys from 39 countries expected for the Jam- which will start officially MISS BLACKE " QUITS GOVT. POST; progimately, JR00RRE. eapes of £ {ernment’s new Independent Media- est quality red sockeye salmon,| ¥ |valued at more than 522,000,000“:2? Service under the Taft-Hartley ifrom the Bristol Bay District of Alaska. ‘They are the A]askn! The appointment of Ching, Pub- '3 LAUNDRIES AT boree, Fargo bank and Union Trust Com- ANCHORAGE FACE LABOR TROUBLES ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Aug. 7—® —Three city laundries were faced Saturday and last through Aug. 21. For the occasion, the Paris tele- phone system has created a tem- porary “jamboree” exchange, the French National Railways have opened a 17-track temporary sta- tion, a daily newspaper is being is- sued for the Scouts/and the French Post Office has put out a short- | pany. He was actively interested in art, and his own paintings fre- quently were exhibited at museums fand in private galleries. For his gifts, both to San Francisco and to France, he was made a member of the French Legion of Honor. i - ACT OF CONGRESS ! WASHINGTON, Aug. 7—P— |Miss Katherine C. Blackburn re-| signed today as acting director of |the office of Government Reports, part of the executive office of President Truman. i Miss Blackburn wrote the Pres- Steamship Company vessels Ed-“‘c Relations Adviser for the U. S. mond Mallet, which sailed from Naknek today; the Peter J. Mc- Guire, which left Tuesday, and{ the H. D. Whitehead, which sailed from the Bering Sea port yester-: day Y Each ship has 330,000 cases of 38 No. 1 tall tins of salmon in her hold. The price approximately | | His widow and daughter, Mrs.|ident that she was leaving with Mirian Gerstle Wornum, of Lon-|‘“great regret” due to ‘“recent ac- don, survive. |tion taken by the Congress.” S e | The agency suffered a heavy lcut in funds at the hands of AlR pASSE“GER | Congress, ~ which voted $230,000 |as compared with a $600,000 re- SEATTLE, Aug. 7.—(P—Nearl term five-franc postage stamp i bearing the word, “jamboree.” Each foreign troop is accompani- ed by a French translator Scout. Every boy sleeps in his own sleep- ing bag. Each group pitches its own tent and does its own cook- ing. ! Two kinds of food supplies are handed out at the commissary—an “Anglo-Saxon menu” and a “French menu.” In beverages, the “An- Iglo-Saxon” boys get milk, the oth- I I vl i ranged today from $2265 to $23) a case, and Seattle salmon brokers| said every case of the three cargoe.sl Iwas sold within four days recemlyi in eastern markets. ST s STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Aug. 7 — Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine |stock today is 4%, American Can! 90%, Anaconda 36%, Curtiss-Wright | International Harvester 44%, Rubber Company, was announced at a news conference at which the President also named: Raymond Foley of Michigan as Administrator of the Housing and Home Finance Agency under pro- visions of Reorganization Plan No, 3 approved last month by the | Senate. Franklin D. Richards of Utah, Commissioner of the Federal Hous- ing Administration. Dillon S. Myer of Ohio, Commis- sioner of the Public Housing Ad- ministration. e e o \TAXI OWNERS ARE FINED, ANCHORAGE |when the last ship out carried feverytmnx the Kuskokwim settlers | reeded through the winter, includ- ing Christmas supplies, said J. D. Reach, Santa Ana manager. | 'These days, airplanes keep the |area supplied with all the essential | goodies through the holiday months. The Coastal Rider connects with | up-river steamers of the Alaska Rivers Navigation Company to | serve all points along the river. TWO BIG AIRPORTS IN ALASKA EXPECTED 10 GET CONGRESS OK I i ANCHORAGE, Aiaska, Aug. T—® |-—Rep. Evan Howell, (R-Ill), who | authorized airport legislation for | Anchorage and Pairbanks during the recent Congressional session, be sufficient to get all of Europe has come forward with the Mar- Nou_s"op H-IGHI Istop will be Cairo, but if he goes} [} From there he plans to go to set down on Elmendorf Field yes- pack to Chicago. Odom will sleep Col. Allen W. Clark, command-: Dangerous Hop proximately 380 men and officers fjon; jast April, said the Calcutta SOUTH ON tle and Olympia, Wash. She ex- By DREWEARSON in showing. how Howard Hughes’ about. | after issuing a joint statement with big airplane companies—when that!tenance of a union shop. Roosevelt and stack it alongside|ynion, Local 333 (AFL) to have re- tainment look like chicken-feed. as noted in an official report of Ten thousand dollars is a lot to 92824. These he listed as “Laun- “que.st by Mr. Truman. Moreover, There was no comment from the ers wine. sl | laundry operators. At the rate the boys were swap- twice as many passengers flew Congress ruled that nobody in the agency ®hould receive more than $7,500 annually ‘in. salary. The President accepted Miss | Blackburn’s resignation with re- i" The agreement until Aug. 6, 1048, | ping their Scout kerchiefs, belts, :lnta Alaska as out of the Temw‘r.v ' it jduring July, Pan American World granted increases ranging from 10insignia and what not today, it Alwans obficiate aix 3 ‘today to 20 cents an hour. It provided |seemed there wouldn't be a nation- | They sad “‘e’f“"':l" e {that operators may hire anyone [al Scout uniform left by the time |, =, 0 "0 ,July A‘oared 96 per- | carrying a union work permit with|the Scouts stage their parade onj . .~ o the same month in 1946 the stipulation that such employees ' the last day of the Jamboree. ¢ with 4,393 passengers—equivalent & P Sl 5.8 A R must join the union after a 30 to three times the population of Nome—flying to the Territory. Airways - officials also said day probationary period. ——ll il STORY HOUR TOMORROW I SITKANS AT BARANOF ! Max Rogers, Deputy L. S. Mar- air ‘shal at Sitka, is registered at the|express last month was up 137 gret and praise for her work. - LCI SEA SHELL IS BROUGHT HERE; SOLD Cliff Richmond. of Hidden Falls; Logging Compeny, has purchased | the LCI Sea Shell from L. Brunz, who brought the craft to Juneau from Seattle. Richmond expected to use the small vessel, which has |14%, Northern Pacific 19%, U. S. o 0 ’ ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Aug. 6.— says he expects the measures to Kennecott 14%, New York Central! s mwree Anchorage taxicab own-!be approved at the next session of A ers were fined $50 each yesterday Congress. Steel 72%, Pound $4.02%. Iwhen convicted of a charge that| Howell arrived here with a par- Sales today were 660,000 shares. !iney ysed the city streets as taxity of seven Congressmen to inspect Averages today are as follows:|terminals in violation of a city the site of a proposed $8,000,000 Industrials 182.16, Ralls 49.13, Utili- ordinance. The attorney for the|airport. ties 35.71 {operators gave verbal notice of ap-| The party were to be guest¢ today T e ipeal to district court. FIRE DEPT. MEETS | ‘The monthly meeting of the Ju-' neau Volunteer Fire Department Meanwhile the cab owners sug- gested to the City Council that they be permitted to maintain ‘at a fishing trip between inspec- | tions. ——— { Mrs. Marie Loy of Petersburg is back on its feet. shall program of a continental ap !to Rome, his subsequent stop wm] TEXAS, ANCHORAGE !Calcutta, India, Shanghai, Tokyo, terday some 15 hours after taking ;¢ one or more of the stops. (On ing officer of the Seventh Bomb- | Milton Reynolds, Chicago peni will remain here from five w;to Shanghai hop was considered Mrs. Vic Power . left by PAA pects to be south about two weeks. WASHINGTON — Senator Brew- aide spent $5083 entertaining El- However, the public is also en-i{the union officials announcing entertainment was deducted from| = The new dispute was said by Mrs. what the taxpayer shelled out for|guiteq because “maority of union For instance, here is the expense the Civil Aeronautics Board: spend for meals alone in one year. dry. "t cesniy, dack ‘chiltrs, ciub|, The -ususl sory . hour. will be Since events have not turned out that way the American Government proach. |be Karachi, India. On either iroute Karachi is a scheduled stop. ANCHORAGE, Alaskaa, Aug. 7"‘:Anchorage. .Alaska, or Adak,} (P—Seventeen B-20 Superfortresses; pjeytians; Edmonton, Alverta, and off from Fort Worth, Texas, on s previous start he had planned a non-stop flight to Anchorage. ?to stop at Fairbanks.) ing Group, termed the flight &lmanyfacturer, whom Odom pilot-| routine training mission. The aP-leq on the round-the-world record | seven days, he said. 'the most dangerous because of the |Himalaya Hump. plane yesterday on a combined business and pleasure trip to Seat- The Washington ster's War Investigating Committee has performed a healthy service liott Roosevelt. This is something|tcday with the prospect of new the public is entitled to know labor difficulties less than 24 hours titled to know about all the lavish|gigning of a year's agreement pro- entertainment poured out by other|yiding for pay increases and main- the taxpayers' money. And if you|fycile Mooney, Secretary-Treasur- take the $5083 spent on Elliott)er of the Laundry and Dry Cleaners “entertainment” by Pan Americanimempers have not been allowed Airways, it makes Elliott’s enter-\,.0r on their jobs.” account of Pan American’s senior vict-president, Robert G. Thach, «“Meals for himself and others, $10,208.30 in 1938." And Mr. Thach had other expen- ses that year which totalled $49,- e e on Page Four) noon at the Public Library. Baranof Hotel. Another Gus Cozac. Juneau’ peréent, held at 10 o'clock tomorrow fore- visitor at the hotel from Sitka is parts comprising most of the in-'a 260 horse engine and a speed of with cannery m=zchinery crease. 15 knots, for hauling supplies. will be held tonight starting at 8 stands on side streets off Fourth spending & few days in Juneau, ar- o'clock in the club rooms in the Avenue. The proposal was tabled riving here yesterday by plane. She City Hall, without action. is a guest at the Baranof Hotel.