The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 19, 1948, Page 1

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"THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” —— VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,788 JUNEAU, ALASKA, MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 1948 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS PEACEFAST BY GANDHI IS ATEND Religious Leaders Make Solemn Pledge in Hope | of Harmony in India NEW DELHI, India, Jan. 19.—® —Mohandas K. Gandhi's hope of harmony in India lay today in the| solemn pledge by religious leaders| which ended his peace fast after 121 hours and 45 minutes. The Indian patriot spiritual leader drank sweet lime juice at 12:456 pm. (2:156 am, East- | ern Standard Time) yesterday. It was his first nourishment since 11| am. Tuesday, when he began thei fast, his fifteenth | Last night, five hours after break-| ing his fast, the 78-year-old Gandhlj‘ told a big prayer meeting he did sol on the “pledge and counsel” and Hindu| of « friends from Hindu-led India and BIG Appnommnou!soflm)off The WashingiOn‘PROBlEMOF 'FOR WILDLIFE IN Merry - G_o - Round‘ By DREW PEARSON ; Lk | e DARTITIQN teawed hosporsmen — INDICATED P . Request fo Tru- -, L“fi“”&?fl?tpjm:ffu British Expected to Inform ;]nan, ggfiesfméx ‘Sovief Union Expected fo UN Regarding Split- Be Sharply Against Bi- prospects for a Republican-approv- ed price-control program. COLUMBUS, O., Jan. 19.—M— A urging Congress to ap- ! resolution e only angwer 1 can give: ting Holy Land | seooluton urging Congiee. 0 a2~ - 70nal Setup, Germany replied Porter, "is & fourcletler - | tion of Alaska wildlife was sent to| i word, | LAKE SUCCESS, Jan. 19—~®— president Truman and Ohio Con-| BERLIN, Jan. i§—#—Russia is “We can’t print it w“mwk the {he United Nations expect to 16arn! gressmen today by the League of €xpected to soundoff sharply agains: newsman, “but I'd like to Know|in. pritich attitude on a series of| onio Sportsmen ‘the new British-American Bizonil what the word is, just to ratify | palogtine proslems this week andi Tne trustees of the organization OCCupation setup in Western Ger- my own curiosity. 5 | then will start laying detinite plans’ aqopted the resolution yesterday Mmany when the Allied Control Coun- -» i’ vord,” replied | g, fick | T won't the word, P, ifor cetting up the Holy Land, in-'anq declared that “the wildlife of Cil meets tomorrow, but officials of 't “1 11 T-A-F-T. { y. Porter. “T'll spell it . tormed fAllxirtf':‘s said today. § | Alaska belongs to all the people of the two western powers predicted | The Five-Nation Palestine Parti-| tno ynited States and not just to!an cutright break with the woviet 4 » i tion Commission met today to COM=| a)aepans alone.” Union would be averted. ENERATE WATOHDOGR {plete a draft of questions to thel apnother resolution called for| These officials and Germans President Truman, aiter firing|British Government covering im-| ossage of the Wherry Bill to make themselves wondered, however, if chairman Jim Landis of the Civil :nlgmll\““w .‘-""“';"»\m‘:"({ ;‘1’[’:':}‘““:;: surplus lands held by the War the Russian occupation commander, Aeronautics Board, has now got tion aspects c e situation. SIYf pepartment available for wild life. Marshal Vassily Sokolovsky, would himself in the near position Of,i‘“‘ ider Cadogan, British delegate, s G |demand that the U. S., Britain and having not a single, solitary top m:qlz;x’(unle‘i\(':Al.x:ljhx(;(pléa“s\;;:ixlls el |France pull out of Berlin, on the sible althoug S ass \ ground that the Bizonal setup nulli- administrator to regulate the vital|POf |would have to consult his Govern-| airlines of the nation { |ties four-power agreements for con- rment for some of the information.) “His other top airman, Ted Wright, | | An official close to the Commis- jmost noted air technician of thei o, o4 the group made significant resigned as head Moslem-led Pakistan They guaranteed, he sa “com-| world, has just | irogress in itsl AN NEOK oL o plete, unbroken friendship” among of the Civil Aeronautics Admmls-‘:un_ Hindus, Moslems and Sikhs. Gandhi' tration; while the third man,| g said fulfillment of this pledge woul(l" Charles Stanton, has taken a four- | double “my intense wish to live al year leave of absence to build up full span of life doing service to:the Brazilian airlines at twice the | humanity. . .At least 125 years, or as salary he gets from Uncle Sam. some say, 133 years.” | This leaves the airways of the| His reference was to a resolution i nation denuded of Government | signed a few hours before he eneded| ,gministrators. It also leaves lower | his ordeal, in which communal lead-| peyconnel of both the CAB and the ers pledged their lives as an €arn®st{caa with morale shattered and of peace. !ready to follow their chiefs into! They adopted his seven-point pro- o, jzate pusiness gram for social acceptance and safely, = geping all this, it seems fair to of lives and property of Moslems i o.q)) (hat cne Harry Truman has India. They set up a committes ol o4, (ome fine speeches at Prince- | (OL. TRANSFERRED KANSAS CITY, Jan. 19.—(#—Col. POTTERIS. TO ALASKA 6P NATIONAL - COMMITTEE IN ~ SESSION TODAY Two Generals Not Repr - sented af Meeting But Chances Discussed WASHINGTON, Jan. 19.— i Two generals who weren't there — i Dwight D. Eisenhower and Doug- las MacArthur figured prom- {inently in presidential speculation as the Republican National Com- | j i | | | | | | 130, of all religions, to meet nightly |, “Griversity and other places|William E. Potter, District AIMYj ... yet today to issue a formal iew of progress toward| oue the importance of young men Engineer at Kansas City since AUZ.' .y ro the party’s June nominat- ruaking a career of government. 22, 1945, announced today that he ing convention in Philadelphia TR Y i But when a man does adopt gov-|was being transferred to the post: "\l o " np A hin nor Elen- crnment service as a career, Harry ;71 fillbkfln DBLriACl E“E""‘?l' W) e Wi repx'esen‘ted eveli un- i Truman s s to ge of his | headquarters at Anchorage. | otti p program o' 'wa\:’ to fl:ceel?;m Fo SaRuRE | His suceessor will be Col. Paul Dv: ‘;rglttnfl]il. ‘Zflndi;afet:er l:fx:udlt}:;: Two days after his. Princeton Berrigan, now assistant to the San; ‘wm s m‘scumn B e e 5 { speech last June, for instance, he | Francisco Engineer, Potter said. 5 et el gt mens o Lowlhs 84 Wa | Ia(e Is {fired Ray Wakefield, a Republi- FPotter f’“f’ };1(- would \::xi»{{; B{Lfl“‘?l‘ arises between such announced as- iu:im, from the Federal Communi ;'3"’_‘:“;\‘;;:;:“1 i i e sl a | pirants as Gov. Thomas E. Dewey | cations Commission, ~despite his T program of flood control, Mis-| 0f New York, Senator Robert A. ilnng and meritorious career fi progré i A | Taft of Ohio and former Gov. Har- Oked by PCA CHICAGU, can. 19.—l@—A policy platform embracing many of the ex-! pressions on domestic and foreign' affairs by Henry A. Wallace in his campaign for the Presidency had approval today of delegates to the second annual convention of thel Progressive Citizens of America. The statement of policy and auth- ority to merge the organization into a third political party were approved yesterday by the approximately 500 delegates who had heard Wallace in; a Saturday speech denounce both; major parties and proclaim his own! program to combat inflation. In their policy platform, the PCA called for rejection of the Marshall| plan and substitution in its place of the “Wallace Plan For Peaceful World Reconstruction;” and the im-| mediate withdrawal of American | military personnel and military aid| from Greece and Turkey. { BOOM FOR WARRENIS SHOT OUT, DEL 1ONikE, Calif, Jan. 19.—® —california ~ Republicans, booming; Gov. Earl Warren for the Presiden- tial nomination, today offered his candidacy to GOP prospectors else- i i i i , salary governing the airlines of the ! safety technician. with the state of California, late: with the U. S. Government. On top of this he fired Landis as head of the Civil Aeronautics Board | despite the fact that Landis had| served faithfully as Chairman of | the Securities and Exchange Com- | missicn, spent grueling years a: wartime head of civilian defense, plus several years on a meagre nation l Then just as the Senate was rebuffing Truman’s plan to replace Landis with a military man, Maj. Gen. Laurence Kuter, Ted anm“ slammed in his resignation as head ,of the Civjl Aercnautics Adminis- tration This is just as great a loss as Landis. For while Landis, as head ol CAB, allocated airline routes and fixed general policy, Wright, as head of CAA, regulated airline safety. Every country in the world | recognized him as the top air-| o1 Wright gave as his reason f resigning not only low gover iment salary but the lack of np-:RODS'.‘VE]L in 1940 over the third, { portunity in government services.|lerm issue, {In other words, politicians were appointed to juicy plums over his| head. | President Truman will have to do | some tall persuading to get any- one else of high calibre to step into ' cne of these jobs. | | | MAYFLOWER VETERANS ADMINISTRATOR ‘ Carl Gray, new Veterans! 1948, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Gen. (Copyright | !struction totaling many millions ()1: {Howard McGrath told a reporter;| souri ver wi and military con-’ v e Work i 4 old E. Stassen of Minnesota. Several national committee mem- bers, representing the regular party organization, made it plain in in- formal discussions with their col- leagues that they want Eisenhow- er's views on national and world issues in detail before they would be willing to consider him as a { candidate. MRS. ROOSEVELT IS ASKED T0 CAMPAIGN RENT CONTROL IS FOR TRUMAN IN "48. OFF IN SIX WEEKS; wisnvaron o 10—o— (ONGRESS MAY ACT The Democratic High Command has asked Mrs. Franklin D. Roosewl} WASHINGTON, Jan, 19—(®— to campaign for President Truman's| pon control expires six weeks from election next November and has re-j 4, byt the nations landlords ceived assurances of her willingness to cooperate. Contirming has been carried out during, s 29 months here, The $12,-! 600,000 Kanopolis Reservoir near Salina, Kans., has been completed, | and the $41,000,000 Harlan County, Nebraska, Reservoir has been start-! ed dollars Pot -> > and tenants are unlikely to know 3. for ancther three weeks what kind ‘lof an extension to expect irom Congress. Senator Cain, R-Wosh, chairman of a banking subcommittee hold- % . !ing general hearings on the sub- i i Do e ngam!;uct, told reporters he looks for during the campaigu. 3 3 3 ‘ Farley already has made one::‘):l; hearings to run until month’s speech, in which he prophesied that Then, he said, be: hopés s i i to lay Henry Wallace's independent Presi-: ' 3 dential venture may end “as a one-| & compromise bill before the full man party.” | committee by February 5. Action BANG-BOOM ' this, Chairman he also expects James A. Farley,! who broke with the late President' i by that committee will be required | before the issue can be sent to the iS(’lmle floor for debate. Rent hearings have not started yet on the other side of the capitol, | but Cain said he and Chairman LOS ANGELES, Jan. 19—(P—iWolcott (R-Mich) of the House Six police squad cars and eight|Banking Committee will discuss {trol of Germany. | The Council has not met since the (London Conference of Foreign Min- isters broke up. Subsequently the U and Britain established their| new joint governmental setup in |Western Germany, giving Germans more power in the Government of the economically merged zones. | The establishment of Bizonal has Leen attacked bitterly by the Soviet Press, which suggested that the Western Allies would be asked to withdraw their forces from Berlin. Sokolovsky is reported just back from an extended visit to Moscow and there has baen considerable speculation as to whether he re- ceived new policy orders from . the Kremlin, -ee DIESEL-POWERED, STEAM CRAFT, IN “RACE, MISSISSIPPI MEMPHIS, Tenn, Jan. 19 —(®— Two tugboats, one a steamer and the other diesel-powered, were at 'about the half-way mark today in their race up the Mississippi river from New Orleans to St. Louis. The steamer Kokoda kept a 42- mile lead over the diesel-powered Helena last night while both boats encountered snow and ice. The Kokoda was reported in the vicinity of Lake Providence, La., and the Helena just above Vicks- burg, Miss. The tugs, owned by the Federal Barge Lines, left New Orleans Thursday to test the merits of steam and diesel power. The contest is the first major tughoat race on the Mississippi since 1870. e STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Jan. 19.—(®—Clos- ing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 3%, American Can 79, Anaconda 33, Curtiss- Wright 5, International Harvester 89'%, Kennecott 46's, New York Central 137%, Northern Pacific 19%, U. 8. Steel 74%, Pound $4.03%. Sales today were 1,050,000 shares. were as follow rails 50.10, uti Averages today industrials 175.96, ities 32.87. e IMPORTANT P-TA MEETING TONIGHT, "Mobilization” PALESTINE ataskaisurcep BY RUSSIA Senafors by Baruch; Includes "~ "Rollback’ 0 | | S TESTIMONY IN MEEKS’ TRIAL STARTS TODAY |, Government witnesses in the re- trial of George Harrison Meeks, ac-, cused of the murder of Clarence Camptell on December 9, 1945, were questioned in the U. S. District | Court today. Jugge George W. Folta | presiding | | First witness called was Andrew | Kenyon McLean, owner of the Mc- ;Lean Machine Shop. McLean dis-{ | covered the body of the murdered| |man on December 10, 1945, | Seatter Tract He described the circumstances of it,h(‘ discovery and the appearance| tof the victim. A sketch of the area| whic he had drawn for the previous jtrial in 1946 was presented by Dis- jtrict Attorney P. J, Gilmore as | plaintiff’s exhibit number one. ' William E. Dedelius, aiiorney, and | former special agent for the FBI | was the second witness. He also des- jcribed the condition of the body, ! which he examined both at the |scene of the crime and later 2t the ICharles W. Carter Mortuary. | Photographs taken by Degdelius | ‘wero offered as Government's ex- ) bibits. Upon cross-examination by , Defense Attorney William Paul, Jr., yhe testified that he had sent the dead man’s clothes to the Washing-/ | i in the| ton FBI office with a request that test of the blood stains on them be | made. | I Results ~f tha Yests were not dis-| | closed in court beyona vhe tact that} |the condition of the blood made | typing impossible. The whereatouts| |of the garments isn’t known. In ans-| | wer to a question by Paul, Dedelius} | said he supposed they had been des- i troyed, although Prosecuting At- torney Gilmore objected on the igrounds that the question required & | { speculative answer. | Judy Foss, age 9, was then intro- 'dured to testify to the finding of a ipair of gold rimmed glasses with a broken lens on a dirt pile near her home sometime “between winter and [spring of 1946.” The Foss residence | was under construction at the time lof the murder. The glasses were submitted as | plaintiff’s exhibit numter 6, with a jpromise that they would prove sig-| ! nificant later in the proce>dings. | Harold Stjern, construction sup- {erintendent at Hoonah testified that ihe had identified the body of thel ) deceased man on the day of discovery | ‘and employe2 with his company. i Court was recessed following his| .tesnmmny until 2 o'clock this after COLD STORAGES | " AND UNION SIGN AGREEMENT HERE After several days of negotiations,| | | ers Plan Given 25 DIE IN (OLD WAVE, nPricesof Food EAST AREAS wastinaton, san. 10 00! of Snow Falls in One Bernard M Bm’uchxl_l:loclmbe:):’r’t: 'I‘ennessee c“y_cu' in Heat, Gasoline Senators today an gram for “peace-waging” including | “rollback” in focd prices, no| wage ral: and no tax cut for —— two years. Baruch was a witness before the Senate Foreign Relations commit- tee on tne Marshall plan for multi- killicn dollar aid to Europe. He endorsed it, but told the Senators: “Dollars alone will not save Eu- rope, nor win the peace.” Baruch then proposed his do- mestic program, saying “the time has come to organize—to mabilize | —fcr peace. It cannot be put off safely any longer. The time for courage and decision is here.” These are the major things he proposed in that “mobilization”: 1. Reduce major food prices “in exchange for guaranteeing larm- an assured for BULLETIN—CHICAGO, Jan. 19.—~(M—The death toll this af- ternoon stands at 35 as the result of the cold wave which has made the nation shiver from the Mississippi to Maine and from the Atlartic sea- board to Minnesota. By The Assoclated Press: The worst cold wave of tho sea- son which caused at lerst 25 | deaths and cut sharply into fuel oil supplies had moderated con- siderably in the midwest today but |1t still held a firm grip on east- ern and southern states. price crops for the next three years. 2. Stabilize wages in return for this rollback 3. Restore the excess profits tax at 50 percent of wartime levels. 4. Continue rent control “with provision only for clearly justi- fiable increases.’” 5. Postpone tax reduction for two years and then cut gradually over a live-year period 8. Put off all less essential state and federal public works, giv- ing priority to “increasing produc- tion, housing, schools, hospitals and other essential needs.” 7 Set up a capital issues com- ion to review all public and ate projects “with a view to de- ferrine less essential project 8. Establish a congressional “digging committee” which would cut government costs. 9. Increase production, their | The Chicago weather bureau said |'subzero readings were somewhat | general in the New England States |and that the mercury again skid- ded to well below freezing as far i south as southern Florida. The | coldest spot on the early weather !map was 26 below at Phillipsburg, in Western Pennsylvania. | At Memphis, Tenn., where 12 |inches of snow fell Saturday, the | temperature stood at only three ! degreds above zero early today. As President Truman's order re- | stricting the use of heating and {motor fuels went into effect, 12 {central and southeastern states re- | ported 25 deaths attributed to the bitter cold. Pennsylvania, Tennes- |see and Kentucky reported four deaths each:; Illinsois 3; Minne- sota and Wisconsin, North Caro- |lina, Alabama, Georgia, Missouri !and Mississippi, one each. | President Truman's order directed ACounnued_on Page Four) e | fire trucks rushed to the 2300 where as a rich political strike from i | block on West Boulevard last night ! the Golden State. { Chairman Arthur Carlson of the the subject this week. SRR, 11" i An important meeting of the!was made today by Wallis George‘: Parent-Teacher Association will be|Of the Juneau Cold Storage. He said | held this evening at 8 o'clock in that the agreement covers all cold ® storage companies in Southeast Al-'® .- Barge of Alaska Express Reached Seward on Friday SEATTLE, Jan. 19.—(@— The, Alaska Freight Express Corporation said its steel barge 719 had com-| pleted its second northbound trip, ! docking at Seward Friday after-, noon, and that the next sailing| — | that federal build using oil for | iuel be iimited t6 68 degrees heat- ling, and that government cars be- | limited to 40 miles an hour to con- serve gasollne. Many areas cur- tailed use cf ofl and gas for in- (dustrial purposes in a move to stretch dwindling supplies for heat- ing purposes. Child Piano Prodigy Disappears; One Clue fe, b e v ls Given fo Police The 719 carried general cargo R and 100 tons of surplus war equip-, LOS ANGELES, Jan. 19.—(®— ment tor the Alaska Railroad, in- Police said they gave the sheriff cluding a 25-ton crane, a 16-ton | of Fresno, Calif, today the descrip- shovel, 13-ton scraper and other tion of a man wanted for ques- heavy equipment { tioning in connection with the The Corporation said its Seattle | mysterious disappearance of Jac- agent, Phil Truckey, spent the queline Horner, 14-year-old piano weekend in Portland conferring | prodigy. with shippers there who were in- Sergeant R. A. Houghton of the terested in Alaska business. | Juvenile Division, who is conduct- - l'ing an investigation, said the man ® o 0 . e ® o o » «|is believed to be in the Fresno ol area, and that the sheriff there * WEATHER REPORT e has been asked to detain him. o (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU e | Jacqueline has been missing @ (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today e | from her Hollywood home since last e In Juneau— Maximum, 43; e Tuesday when she reportedly ® minimum, 35 e quarreled with her mother. Yes- ® At Airport— Maximum, 43; e { terday the girl was believed traced ® minimum, 33 o to Modesto in the California cen. o tral valley, but there all signs fad- o |€d. : MEAT RATIONING WEATHER FORECAST (Juneau and Vicinity) Mostly cloudy tonight and Tuesday with light rain late tonight and Tuesday, Warm- ia contract was signed here yesterday| »» wnlzh}- ! afternoon between representatives of| PRECIPITATION o I.EG'S[A“O“ 'S cold storage companies in South | '@ (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today @ | east Alaska and the CIO Interna-| In Juneau— .15 inches; o] GIVEN (ONGRE {tional Longshoremen amd Ware-|® since Jan. 1, 1725 inches; o housemen’s Union | ® since July 1, 6897 inches. o) ! ‘Announcement of the settlement|® At Airport— .08 inches; ® (i cHINGTON, Jan. 19.—(P— since Jan. 1, 478 inches; e Two Republican Congress members | today introduced legislation auti- orizing the Truman Administration L | to set up meat rationing machinery, since July 1, 41.09 inches California Republican Assembly, un-: official but influential party organ- ization, proclaimed 1948 “The Gold-| en Year of Opportunity for the Re- publican Party.” Speaking at the concluding session | of the Assembly’s meeting here yes- terday, Carlson said the State Cen- tral Committee later this month would set up methods for selection | of California’s 54-vote National Can- vention Delegation. After a com-} mittee screening of prospective dele- gates, the final selection will be left i up to Warren, he said. The Assembly formally endorsed Warren for the nomination Satur- day. He announced his candidacy | last year but said he would not seek support in other states. { B — | NOTICE TO AWYVS All AWVS members are asked to please natify Mrs. Isabel Chester | !the High School Study Hall when | Territorial Commissioner of Edu- | cation Dr. James Ryan and Juneau iPublic School Superintendent Ed- |win Clark will explain the pur- JUNEAU CITY BAND IS TO PRACTICE AT 8 " . !in answer to an explosion report. | Sh'p Ad"" WhEH { Excited residents old police " . 'about the blast. One man said it I [' B k | “rlew me right out of my living | ow me 'o en J roem chair.” i = | Police and firemen searched the HAMBURG, Germany, Jan. 19.—| heighborhood and found: { IUESDAY EvEN'NG poses and tentative plans for pro-; (®—The 15,000-ton ship Sierra Cor-! 1. A shredded metal container. | | posed redistricting the school dis- doba broke adrift last night while: 2. A burned spot on the side-) trict. This is a subject that will i The Juneau City Band will ho)d‘lmelesz not only those in Juneau the weekly practice Tuesday night but also those residing along the tat 8 o'clock in the Grade School|highway, parents and auditorium. The change from alike. she was being towed to Britain for! walk. conversion into scrap, the British| 3. Information that several of Control Commission said today. [ the youngsters in the neighborhood Tugs were trying to get another|had received chemistry sets for line aboard. There was no indication| Christmas—and had . apparently | Thursday nights to Tuesday mghtal In addition to the school district of danger to the skeleton crew of | progressed beyond the instruction was decided on at last week's| discussion, musical selections will eight men. | book stage. i practice to avoid conflicting dalcs(be given by Mrs. Phyllis Langdon The Danish Admiralty had re-| ————————— and also to assurke a large at-|and Mrs. Jean Smith. Commission denied this. The shlp1 lent special selections which have| THELMA PETERSON RETURNS Registered at zne Baranof Ho-|ers to Juneau. They were C. Da e - Thelma, Peterson has returned to her position at Lucille’s Beauty Shop after an extended vacation in aboard tons of ammunition for Director Alfred Ventur has snap-Jbe served following the meeting. ] PAA made one flight yesterday|there will be put in rehearsal for dumping in the North Sea, but the py new marches and many excel- — eee - FROM ANCHORAGE | from Seattle tringing seven passeng-| coming events. taxpayers, | as to the number of people that tel yesierday were R. A. Cook,/Martin Hegrberg, Agens Hegrberg,) - will be present at the AWVS par-iDr. L. W. Hims, Louis Ness and|Jeanine Hegrberg, Ray Sifferman, ty Friday night, January 23. ilrma Purington, all of Anchorage. ceived a report that the vessel had! tendance of musicians. Refreshment in the Ec Room will formerly was German owned, | FlIGHI SUNDAY been received from publishers and{ FROM COLLEGE Eugene, Oregon, where she spent John L. Hedde ]Flancis Strebluck, William Stefunk. registered at the Baranof Hotel. lNarv.h Dakota. of College is | the holidays with her mother from aska. | Although the agrsement covers| pay scales and most other items, l(urther contracts must be accomp- llished between ILWU local unions| land the various companies before a| 'complete working contract can be | put into existence, | Negotiations for the present agree-| ment were begun last Wednesday. | | JUDGE HOLZHEIMER | FILES FOR SENATE Judge William A. Holzheimer, of| Juneau, filed with the Clerk of the !Court today for election to the Ter-} iritorial Senate in the 1948 Territor-| il elections. Judge Holzheimer, who| is a Democrat, is the present City| Magistrate in Juneau and is also engaged in private law practice. He came to Alaska in 1915 and was the former Federal Judge at Nome, Assistant U. 8. Attorney at Ketchi- kan and U, S. Attorney in Juneau,| resigning from the latter position. | Saturday when | miles in 5 hours and 43 minctes. B 55 . !including printing of ration books. SIMMER MovEMEHIS | The kill, sponsored by Senator - | Flanders (R-Vt) and Rep. Javits Denall, from Seati-:, scheduled| (m Ny provides up to 51,000,000 to arrive at 1 p. m. tomorrow. 000 to allow the Agriculture De- Alaska scheduled to sail ‘“"’"jputmem to make all necessary Sf‘at?le tomorrow. | preparations. Princess Norah scheduled to sail " ynder terms of the measure, from Vancouver January 23. | president Truman is authorized Coastal Rambler scheduled to sail | {5 supmit a detailed meat rationing from Beattle January 23 | program to Congress. It would go Sword Knot scheduled sall into effect automatically unless from Seattle January 23. | disapproved by both the Senate and Aleutian scheduled to sail (‘"“m:}{ouse within 30 days. Seattle January 24 - FROM ANGOON Fred E. Brandes, Jr., is register-| ed at the Gastineau Hotel. He is| pgeta Sigma Phi Sorority will from Angoon | meet at 7:30 o'clock Tuesday night 2 | in the Gold Room of the Baranof. SEATTLE A Northwest Alr-| gegular business meeting will be lines DC-4 set a new record flight| [ollowed by cultural program. Visit- between Anchorage and Sea!tle:mg Beta Sigma Phis are cordially it covered 1341 invited to attend. to e e | BETA SIGMA PHI TO MEET TUESDAY NIGHT D e

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