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VOL. LXVIIL, NO. 10,993 “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1948 MCMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS S — S PRICE TEN CENTS d Stevedores Load U.S. Transports Army Hire Truman Sfarting Campaign; Is Going fo Fight Hard, Also Give Them Hell, Announces | | unity and political moderation at |a time when the world is “beset | by fear.” (By The Associated Press) President Truman left Washing- ton today on a -16-day western| campaign tour with this pleadge: “I'm going to fight hard and I'm going to give them hell.” | eering drive must be free from the | prejudice of party, class or race. " To preserve the traditional “It's a victorious trip, the A his N American concept of the two- President | Moo e TRNE party system, he urged thrift and mate, Senator Alben W. Barkley| ~ of Kentucky, who was at the sta- competence in government after vhat he called 16 years of Demo- nt embark | % g‘:’nm;o s:ec:n;h:wf;:n:: what may | cratic “cure-alls, nostrums and ex- ., | bedients.” be the most strenuous campaign ;\;:'twaged RE S R House pocu- The third party Presidential b e _ | candidate, Henry Wallace, told .a The President will deliver mote| o .10y 'y " audience last night than 100 addresses in at least 18 Wallace Talking ot .the i ‘states' his’ special 17-var | thab both the Republicans and % Democrats are participating in a train will touch on a 9500-mile i ot ki) tour to the Pacific profit-seeking war program. Joms oy | The Democratic National Com- Coast and return. The President is due to return to Washington | . court fight over the decision of the October 2. [ n Jones For GOPers | Louisiana State Committee to | Mr. Tr from As Mr. Truman left on his cross- | e g s | lot. country swing, the Houston, Texas, | the Pacty Lalb | “Any action will have to be tak Chronicle, published by Jesse H'«en by the people within the state,” Jones, a Cabinet member in the | i 5 i ‘| william Primm, assistant to the late President 'Franklin D. Rw".ef’ National Chairman, told a reporter. velt’s administration, announced its Ih. Mt /Bruman's. isbead. - the support of the GOP ticket of DEWeY | ; ,qiang group placed on the bal- ot A o !lot the States Rights ticket head- The Chronicle in an editorial A % “,ed by Gov. J. Strom Thurmond said .it"believes in a two-party Y5106 South Carolina. tem. 1t called on Democrals of 'y giqtes Righters also won a the .south to abandon the feeling . o place yesterday on the North Da- THESH i SYOLE G- ORI TICKEE ™ kota general election ballot. Citing qualifications of Governors Dewey and Warren in adminis- | tering aifairs in New York . and. California, respectively, the Chron-! icle said Mr. Truman has not shown the leadership necessary for | the successful management of our, national and international affairs.; l m R WARYS ALL OVER, Mr. Truman will make ‘the first major speech of the extensive vote . tour at Dexter, Towa, tomorrow. | (By The Associated Press) Before the voters go to the polls, The 100-hour war in Hyderabad November 2, Mr. Truman likely will jended atruptly today in Indian, make three other rallroad trips and ' victory when the wealthy Moslem a plane visit to Florida to round Nizam of the princely state gave out a 15,000 to 20,000 mile stump- up. : ing campaign. { Karachi advices said swift In- Mr. Truman's first major cam- dian troops, who have been striking paign stop tomorrow, at the Na- from a dozen directions with tanks, tional Plowing Match, may find armored cars, cannon and planes him behind a plow. since dawn Monday, had Areached At least he told a Washington the outskirts near the capital city Rural Electrification meeting here of Hyderabad. last night: i 1 might try my hand and see if of the Indian general staff, said he I can still plow a straight fur- ordered a cease fird effective at row.” . 14:30 am. (P.D.T.) The United Na- |tions Security Council will Important Addresses con- Other important addresses during his first week's travel are at: Denver, Monday; Salt Lake City,'the current recess ends. | Tuesday night; San Francisco on| India invaded the south central Wednesday night, and Los Angeles state with the avowed aim of re- Thursday night. storing order. The Nizam had re- Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, his GOP |fused to join the Indian union, al- opponent for the Presidency, mean- though four out of five of his 16,- while stocked up more ammunition ;000,000 people are Hindus, like most far his opening campaign address of the Indians. He said India vio- Monday at Des Moines, Iowa. He lated the 1946 stand-still agreement will confer with farm paper edi- under which princely states not tors tomorrow on agricultural prob- ! wanting to accede to India were lems which are expected to figure inot to be invaded after India ob- | Warren said this year's election- | mittee indicated it will not start a| Madras reported the Nizam sur-| “If they're going to have a mule, rendered. New Delhi, headquarters | |closed that the United States is; THRILLING RESCUE ON ATLANTIC IThose Saved Kiss Deck of Coast Guard Vessel- Captain’s Report NEW YORK, Sept. 17.—(®—Sav- ed from a crippled schooner in the hurricane-swept North Atlantic, Portugese sailors threw themselves prone and kissed the deck of the famed Coast Guard rescue cutter Bibb. The Bibb—which accomplished one of two dramatic ship rescues i_yeslerday in which 79 men in all were saved—redioed early today the details of how she picked up 140 men from a Portugese fishing schooner, the Gaspar. About 390 miles away, two mer- chant ships rescued 39 men from the sinking British freighter Lei- cester. | Seven men from the two strick- |en ships were believed lost. = Capt. Donald G. Jacobs, skipper of the Bibk, radioed his rescue log ers here today, way!: “That is was something altogeth- |er different in aspect to the sur- }vivors. however, was apparent from ithe actions of several of them who, upon reaching the safety of the i Bitb, flung themselves down and | fervently kisscd the deck. | “Yes—as usual—a dog was among i those rescued.” Coast Guard and Navy planes ; participated, in the Gaspar rescue The Bibb, under another skipper, rescued all 69 persons aboard . the Berinuda . Sky' Queen when the rhuge flying boat was forced down on the stormy Atlantic more than 1800 miles east of- Newfoundland Ilast October 14. = - SCORED; LITTLE - | U. 5. WATCHIN + COMMUNISM IN ' SOUTHEAST ASIA | By The assoclatea Press) ‘The State Department has dis- pressing a sharp counter-attack against an increasing Communist drive for power in strategic south- close attention to the rapid in- crease in Communist activity among the peoples of Indonesia, Indo- china and Burma. Just what steps the United States plans to take to combat Commun- ist influences in that part of the world have not been disclosed. But diplomatic observers believe the western powers are attaching in- creased importance to Communist activities in South-East Asia. This fto Coast Guard area headquart-i and ended it this| RELIEF SHIP 10 BOTH SIDES IN NOME CONSDERED. ST STRIKES Alaska $.5. Co., Officials,‘UND\ER A]TA(K Cl0 Longshoremen % HaveTalks, Seaftle Semator Morse Declares: | SEATTLE, Sept. 17.—(P. Spokes- ' Arbitration Can Be Used men for the Alaska Stumshlp* m ]‘wo Dlspmes Company and the CIO longshore- | 17 {men’s union said today that in- conclusive conferences had been held on the proposal of sending a relief ship to Nome and Norton ASTORIA, Ore, Eenator Wayne Morse blamed both the unions and em- Sound before the winter freeze in fployers in failing to settle the West the north, {Const oil and longshore strikes, in A company spokesman said the ‘a speech here. problem still was in the conlmncei The former Pacific Coast labor istage and that the company had farbitrator devoted most of his ad- no further comment to make on liress to foreign affairs, but wound progress. up with a critical attack on both ! Willlam Clark, secretary of I. L.jthe strikers and employers in the iW. U, Local 19, said a stalemate'two major Pacific Coast disputes. was reached at conferences Tuesdny'g “I know something about the and Thursday and “our joint com- [longshoremen's contract,” Morse, mittee is seeking other channels” of {said. “There is no sounder provision jgetting supplies shipped to theifor arbitration in any labor con- Nome area. {tract’ than there is in this one. “There is a good prospect some-;Why don't they use this provision thing can be arranged,” Clark said. and end the strike?” “We would prefer.to deal with a| Morse sald there is no issue in| |company familiar with Alaska traf- either strike that cannot be settled fic,” but he added that the Steam- ty arbitration, if “political aspec’ ship company is sticking strictly jof the dispute are removed. The| to the waterfront employers' asso-|Senator did not explain his refer- |ciation program. lence to polities in the strikes. William Gettings, regional di- | . \rector of the striking International ,Longshoremen and Warehouse-;juMPING RUSSIAN men's Union (CIO) said 600 long-: ! shoremen were picketing the port«of | embarkation today. The Army hlsl S(Hool TEA(HER keen attempting to recruit dock* ' ' WILL BE QUIZZED Sept. 'workers “at the pier” rather than through the union hiring hall. Gettings said 250 longshoremen ‘were dispatched today to handle . cargoes not affected by the strike. | . . i e saia two basges were being l€sfimony Wanted in Con- ‘loaded for Alaska and two were, ‘being ed . i Renton. Get- 4 (tings said ofie_cargo of Satmon’ - 'was being handled. | Gettings said the two barges pe- | ing loaded for Alaska are for the| WASHINGTON, Sept. 17— Alaska, Railroad, which bought|rne House Un-American Activities barges of its owm as a .saieguard‘c ’: ! ¥ .| Committee said tcday Mrs. Oks- jagainst the strike. Gettings sald ,n, gtephanovna Kasenkina will 1 — - : | ’ Mrs. Kasenkina is the former i | Russian school teacher who jump-i % {last month. Her testimony is' f wanted in connection with the! ‘ FoR BlG Hops:espionage in this country. {all the cargoes being worked are|y. cuectioned at a public hearin ‘under Griffiths & Sprague comrac;.im gew York next wpednesday, 4 “ed from a window to escape from : | the Soviet consulate in New York committee’s investigation of Soviet! { Chairman J. Parnell Thomas (R. iN.J.) said a subcommittee would3 i | TOKYO, Sept. i1.~P—Six Far|Question Mrs. Kasenkina at Roose- on Scptember 13 last year, and a!gna js mistaken. | Eastern Air Force B-29s wprpl‘velt Hospital, where she is recov-| isider the princely state’s charges|east Asia., An official statement | ready in Japan and the Aleutians|ering from injuries suffered in her 'Many Alaskan districts have made| ‘of Indian aggression Monday, when|says the Ppepartment is giving|today for flights to the United|leap. | States tomorrow in Ait Force Day| “She has some material we be-! exercises. |lieve will be of interest to the: Four Superforts will take off i committee in its espionage inves- from Misawa in northern Honshu,|tigation,” Thomas said. i itwo going to Seattle and two to! Her leap from the consulate' i Minneapolis. Two bombers will ; created an international incident. | ily from Shemya in the Aleutians _AS a result, Jacob Lomakin, the( to Baltimore. The longest flight Soviet consul in New York, was will be from Misawa to Minneapo- | Fécalled by the Russian govern-' lis, 5,666 miles. | ment at request of the State De- Each plane will carry two Amer- | PArtment. President Truman sub-| ican correspondents in addition (o‘lsequenuy revoked Lomaki the crews. ‘papers, under which he was per mitted to serve as consul in this! e | (R-Ore.) | ling the crisis in Arizona, | iing hetween pickets and AFL main- nedl(?fl w“h Sovje' ;Aepend on ‘the qun)'lln available | ESplOflage mu S‘ ithere. One cargo -of 4,260,000 gal- | .are under way for two more." SalmonPack largely in the campaign cross- tained independence and dominion | area is a large storehouse of rub- fire. istatus. Ber, tin, oil and ‘other strategic Warren On Stump i The Indian commander called on|materials. the princely state to lay down its His running mate, Warren, launched his campaign last night in Salt Lake City with an appeal for national o oRad) the interests of humanity. arms in e interests of A speaking | Aapeists e - BOMB GOES OFF; The Washington 4 |NFANTRYMEN | Merry-Go-Round' kiiiD; 29 HURT By DREW PEARSON (Copyright, 1948, by The Bell Syndicate, | EGLIN FIELD, Fla, Sept. 17— infantrymen died DROPPER OF BOMB INDICTED, MINEOL MINEOLA, N. Y., Sept. 17.—®— (fall season ‘planned for about Sep-| JUNEAU SKI CLUB 10 SET RACE DATES The executive toard of the Ju- neau Ski Club will meet tonight at the boat harbor club rooms to set race dates’and outline a program for the first full meeting of the An ex-army flier who dropped a |tember 20. home-made bomb over United Na- tions headquarters today pleaded innocent in Nassau County Court. to an indictment charging two Ine.) (M—Four Army | today of injuries received when a felonies and three misdemeanors. i A | ASHINGTON— President Tru-|stick of 500-pound live bombs fell|No trlal date was set. {s v o8 e 8 8 3 oimia man’s old Senate Investigating from a B-29 during maneuvers herel The indictment against Stephen Ioodl Tw Fe ' " {5y % o4 Committee will unlimber a noisy |yesterday and exploded. J. Supina, of Ashford, Conn., was n apan Y l. WEATHER REPORT * expose right in his own lap. Twenty-nine others were injured.ll‘emmfid yesterday by a Nassau| - (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU) .| The Committee has evidence thatthree critically. Eglin field offi- | County grand jury. . @ Temperatures for 24-Hour Perlod. ° Maj. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan, hef-|cers, in announcing the accident,| Supina has said he dropped a 0' R aln Del es 0ne Areal- In Juneau— Maximum, 54; ty White House Military Aide, ex- [said the casualties were a white cap- dynamite stick from a plane hstl e minimum, 4. : erted personal pressure to obtainimn and 32 negro enlisted men. July to “wake up” the U. N. to ® At Airport - Maximum, 55; | valuable export licenses. Names of the dead were with-|the need for world peace. e minimum, 43‘. i Also involved in the case are a held pending notification of next The felon charges listed in the| TOKYO, Sept. 17.—\P—Between luged the city in a typhoon last|® FORECAST . Crescent Trading Company, Luis of kin. indictment are possession of a|ggo and 2,000 Japanese were killed, |night. Some 500 homes in Ichinose-| ® (Juneau and Vieinity) o Periera, Domingos Kailly, and a| The troops were taking part in ajbomb and possession of explosive|injured or missing in flooded Ichi- ki were washed away and 16003° Cloudy with light rain to- e| Col. Hubert Julian, an ex-Army|fire-power rehearsal when the ac-|with intent to use it to inflictinoseki City, 60 miles north of Sen-| Were flooded, the news agency ve-|® nisht and Saturday. ~Not o officer. They will appear as wit-|cident occujred, airforce officers|injury upon a human being. dai, Japanese and occupation au- ported. e much change in tempera- e, nesses when Senator Homer Fergu- reported. They were members of MRS he e AP thorities said today. Tokyo officials said five were|® ture. { e son, R. Mich, Chairman of the|the 505th Airborn Regiment and the M mvms ‘ dead or missing here and more(® PRECIPITATION o Committee, holds public hearings|758th Heavy Tank Battalion from A Kyodo news agency ~repo‘rlx than 4000 homes were flooded or|® (Past 24 hourmendius 7:30 am. todey @ “at an opportune moment” during Fort Bragg, N.C. —_— from a technician to his Pf-‘l‘fefl““‘_‘ partially flooded by the heavy rain|® In Juneau — 110 inches; e the Presidential campaign. A g g SR All American steamers tied upoffice at Morioka in Iwate perfec-|that preceded the storm e since Sept. 1, 1026, inches; o The sensation is being carefully | FROM TENAKEE by coastwide strike. . ture, place dthe number of dead at Eighth Army headquarters in'® since July 1, 2258 inches. e timed for the most potent politi- bor e | Princess Louise, from Vancouver, |2.000. Yokohama said three landslides|® At Airport — .55 inches; e 1 effect | Mrs. Dermott O'Toole of Tenakee |scheduled to arrive Saturday after-i Allied headquarters, however, said : were blocking the road to the Al-'e® since Sept. 1, 6.55 Inches; e g : it has been prob- arrived yesterday by Alaska Costal|noon or evening. 3 |repoits from Army units at Sendai lied rest hotels in Myanoshita nnd‘o since July 1, 14.90 inches. . The Commipe. L Princess Norah scheduled to sail listed 800 dead or missing. | Gora, where some 250 Americans ® . 5Mrllnes and is staying at the! Baranof Hotel. | «Continued on Png:‘l’t;uri from Vancouver Saturday. Kyodo said two feet of rain de-; ! country. Count Folke Bernadotte, U.N. Mediafor, Palesfine Aflairs, Is Assassinated GASOLINE FROM GULF PORTS I SENT, WEST COAST Recreafionél;—SO(ial Driv-| ing in Four States Must Stop Is Warning SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 17— The first tanker load of gasoline irom gulf ports was on its way to- ay to the West Coast, where the. prolonged ofl strike has depleted gascline supplies and attempts are being made to curtail preasure driv- ing. The oil 'industry’s allocation com- mittes, in a public statement, warn- | ed that all “recreational and so- cial” driving must stop. Oil co- ordinators from Washington, Ore- | gon, California and Arizona signed the statement. Gasolihe shipped in from Cklahoma and Texas is eas-| As the CIO oil workers' strike kept coastal refineries idle for the 14th day today, the Federal Con- ciliation Service plunged actively into the negotiations for the first| time, “in the public interest.” There has been no further vio- | lence since Tuesday's street fight- | tenance men at Richmond. The number of tanker cargoes; shipped from the Gulf, last night's/ tommittee announcement said, “will lons is on its way anfl negotiations | > Is Announced SEATTLE, Sept. 17—(P—Alaska's| salmon pack reached 3,913,041 cases | on September 11, the Federal Fish tand Wildlife Service reported to-|take a chance. day. | This compares with 4,253,875 cases total 1947 pack of 4,330,423 cases.| for this year. final reports . French Premier | Wins Major Testf, | "Save the Franc” PARIS, 8ept, 17—M— French S iPremier Henri Queuille won a maj- | their aides climbed back into the or test today on his “save the franc” | plan. " The National Assembly Finance| {a teJephoned message from Com- ! mander Seymour INDEPENDENT FIRM SIGNS WITH C10S Philip Mmay Makes Stalement-WEA Spokes- man Also Gives Views SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 17.—M —Stevedores hired by the army de- spite union pickets were loading two army transports today, but a private firm was considering taking Jover the military-cargo job with union labor in struck Pacific Coast { ports, The firm, Griffiths and Sprague in Seattle, sald it was willing to handle all”“army cargoes from Se- attle, but was undecided whether I'to tackle the job in San Franciso New York. He was 53. and Los Angeles. It saild the ar- the killing was reported to have|MY had asked it to bid on those occurred at 5 pm. Jerusalem time.JobS, too. Unlike members of the ik i Waterfront Employers Association, S | Griffiths and Sprague has signed Uniformed Men Killers ‘The mediator and French Cul.l:‘::mmm' A O Sexn:t “’l'l‘P kmnd' by i n‘n‘n in Jew- WEA members have refused to ish, Army uniforms,” said a tele-| o SECRCE KOS long an it :Lf:ip h:n"::M ge to the A""wm"d;mmm dealing with the CIO long- % 5 ishore union, whose chiefs have not signed non-Communist affidavits under the, Taft-Hartley law, Y —{®—The United Nations statf here announced tcday Count Folke Bern- adotte and a French colonel ware shot and killed on the Jewish side of Jerusalem today. Count Bernadotte, the United Na- tions’ mediator for Palestine, and the Fienchman “were killed in the Jewish sector this afternoon by men in Jewish army uniforms,” said at the sthool in Jerusalem. Fernadotte tyice succeeded bringing ahout a truce in the for Palestine between Jews Arabs, Bernadotte was head of the Swed- ish Red Cross and the husband of the former Estelle Manville of American in war and «John Joseph MacbDonald, the American consul at Jerusalem, re-i ported to Washington Bernadotte’s: 10 National President Phillip party was ambushed by four men,|Murray urged Army Secretary “presumably the Stern Gang,” "EW‘IRaynll in Washington yesterday to ish extremists, U. S. Ool. Prank use guch firms s Opiftiths and Begley, U. N. Security officer, Was gprague, rather than hire its own | reported slightly wounded in the gstevedores outside the union. Mur~ face when he grappled with oneiyay in a letter to the Secretary, of the men.) !also urged “appropriate measures” Had Recelved Threats !to ccmpel all steamship companies Bernadotte had arrived in Jeru-lt, observe their contracts to move salem by air from Damascus, Byrln‘l“my cargoes, He | at 11 a. m., Jerusalem time. Murray said army hiring outside flew in_despite anonymous threats unjon channels “precipitates the upon his life, declaring”he army’ into the dispute on the side .. to be" Frightenea. = =* * " lof the empioyers” Tn the past, He was killed at about 5 p. M. (he added, the army has used union a victim of the war he tried rm-}hh.,,,g halls. four months to end. i This reporter flew with him from! In Seattle. 2 WEA spokesman was Damascus to Kollandia Airport, | equally critical of the prospective just outside Jerusalem. Aboardlemployment of Griffiths and Spra- the special plane he passed me a gue (and union labor). Said he: radioed note which read: i “If this goes through, it is a com- “Urgent—Inform all aircraft plete backdown by the army. The against landing 'Kollandia airport.' army, fighting Communisin ‘' over- They will be fired upon.” {seas, now breaks down the united Not To Be Frightened [iront of waterfront employees “Do you want to jump now or|fighting Communism on the water- be fired upon with us?” he asked!front.” me with a wry smile. I said I'd; The dispute which precipitated the Sept. 2 strike was over a un- ion demand to boost the $1.67-an- hour wage scale to $1.82 and con- “This is an obvious attempt to frighten me,” he said. “If so, some-! 1 will not beltrol of union-operated hiring halls irightened.” which assigns dock workers to Sniper’s Bullet Jobs, An hour later, after he climbed| from the plane into his automobile | at the airport, a sniper's bullet| NEW MOVE IN BERLIN thudded into the left rear wheel| of his automobile. He got out to examine it and found & small- caliber bullet hole. “I don’t mind being shot at by regulars,” he said. *“But not by’ irregulars.” When the Count, Col. Serot, General Aage Lundstroem and; BERLIN, Sept, 17--#—The U. 8. Britain and France tightened their car, I wished Bernadotte luck.| “I'll need it,” he replied. ! | = e committee approved its stiff new! IMP GOES DOWN (taxes 22 to 13. Only the Commun- lists voted against the bill. The Imp, small fishing troller,; Tpe National Assemtly itself will |ran ashore dbout a mile south of begin debate tomorrow on the plan, | Point Retreat and sank ‘early which is aimed at raising 80,000,000,- | Tuesday morning, according to ad-|goo francs ($260,000,000) in new | vices received here. - revenue. ‘The owner, Glen Wise, only man & MO | aboard, was uninjured. t # FROM FORT RICHARDSON | Alberta S, Fisher of Fort Rich- ardson is a guest at the Baranof, Hotel. |day that the two-man crew of the FISH PACKER ON ROCK IN CHATHAM | STRAIT, REPORT| SEATTLE, Sept. 17.—®-- The Ceoust Guard received a report to- 90-foot fish packer Salvor was abandoning ship after it grounded counter-blockade of the Russian zone of Germany, shutting off the last flow of goods from west to east. Patrols were increased all along border zones. The ‘western blockade was started in late July after the Russians blocked the land approaches to Berlin nearly three months ago. It already has pinched sharply the economy of the Soviet zone. BERLIN. -~ German Communist leaders sang out their old refrain of 60 miles southwest of Wrangell, Alaska, The Salvor first called for aid, scorn at the leaders of Western |Germany who are writing a con- stitution for the part of Germany were stranded but in no danger. ® o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ¢ leaving the vessel. The message said the boat was on a rock in | Chatham Strait, at the mouth of | Gedney Harbor then messaged that the crew was controlled by .the Western Powers. The Communists saild the Western The Coast Guard at Ketchikan, | Alaska, ordered the cutter White! Holly to proceed to the scene. STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK. Sept. 17.—#—Clos- ing -quotation of laska Juneau mine stcck today is 3':, American Can 82, Anaconda 36, Curtmul Wright 10, International Harvestes | 28, Kemnecott 55%, New York| Central 16%, Northern Pacific 21's, U. S. Steel 79%,/® Pound $4.03%. Sales today were 680,000 shares.| Averages today are as follows: industrials 18007, rails 60.28, util- ities 34.60. Germans are disrupting the coun- try. American and British army units continued war games along the Rhine. Surveys have been made for imore airfields to increase the grow- ing air lift to Berlin. PEIFING.—Chinese Communists have captured Suichung in Man- churia. BATAVIA.—Shooting has broken out in the Communist-torn city of Soekarta, near the Indonesian re- putlican capital of Jogjakarta in Java, : - g FROM NAKNEK Here from Naknek are the Miss- es Emma and Elsa Johnson,