Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY A “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” ASKA EMPIRE VOL. LXVIIL, NO. 10,996 NEAU, ALASKA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1948 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS = i Southern Tip Of Florida Being Ripped Toda many. In Berlin the official pub- lication of the Soviet military ad- ministration declared that the Western Powers .are grooming Ger- mans as “mercenaries.” PARIS IS WATCHED BY WORLD Smouldering—iast - West Crisis May Get Some Solution at Meet (By The Associated Press) World hopes for some solution of the smouldering East-West crisis centered in Paris today. JACKSONVILLE, Fla, Sept. 21 Although the Berlinsituation was| —(#—The Navy disclosed today not on the agenda of the United|plans for turning this area into a Nations assembly convening today,imajor fleet airbase for the na- it was the principal thought in the|tion's largest carriers. minds of the assembled diplomats.{ ‘The shifting of strategic im- In Berlin, German Communist|portance from the Pacific to the (Norton Sound areas may receive newspapers said the United Nations|Atlantic has made imperative the|winter supplies before ice halts General Assembly had no authority | establishment of .such a base,” Vice | shipping. The ship is scheduled; Nome Ship Authorized By Strikers iAII UnionsA—gFee fo Load, | NAVY GIVES PLAN, | Man Vessel with Sup- | plies for Arctic Port MAJOR FLEET AR r Ar - BASEFOR FLORIDA .25 5%, 2 s s permit the loading of the vital Nome, Alaska, supply ship. The agreement foliowed a vote last night by five striking mari- time unions to load and man the Alaska ~ Steamship Company’s| Square Sinnet §o0 that Nome and MADIOEN, Java.—In the Com- munist-held Indinoesian city of Madioen, Java, Communist leader Musso broadcast a demand for a nation-wide revolution to overthrow |the present government of the In- donesian republic. to debate the Berlin crisis. Admiral John D. *Price, deputy|to arrive in Seattle from the north However, the American, Britishchief of Naval Operations for Air,|Friday and loading will begin as and French foreign ministers have|gaid, soon as possible. already conferred on the problem.| Price said in an address pre-| The agreement provides the ship Their ambassadors at MoscowW areipared for a Chamber of Com-|is to be loaded and manned on en route by plane to consult W“-h‘merce luncheon that the Navy ex-|pre-strike terms with the provision them. pects to set up two carrier air{[that any final wage increase in First headache of the assembly groups—about 135 planes each— | West Coast negotiations will ap- will be the problem of Palestine. |here by December. ply. The stealuship company said The world has had a chance to} the Waterfront Employers’ Asso- study the solution of Count Folke ;ciation and the Pacific American Bernadotte, who was killed in Jeru- All.JH BOMBER | Steamship Association also approv-, salem as he attemripted to establish 'ed the arrangement. i a peaceful settlement. His plan ‘ 3 called for recognition of the State| EmoDB' 'EST The unions mvolved are the In-| of lsrael and an imposed peace, ’ jternational Longshoremen’s and backed up by the United Nations.; pllo's KlllED;Wuehousemen's Union, Marine A Cairo newspaper said today the |Cooks' and Stewards' Union and| Arab states would reject Berna- |the Marine Engineers' dotte’s plan. { TULARE, Calif, Sept. 21—ip—|Association, all CIO, the Marine; {One of the nation’s first all-jet Firemens’ Union, independent, and! PARIS.. — Flower-filled planesinomgers lies in shattered wreckage the Marine Radiomens’ Union, AFL. carrying the bodies of Bernadotte/strewn over Central California| Earlier yesterday, an agreement | and his French aide, also assassi- farmiand today, the two civilian|Was announced. to allow:rail ship-{ nated at Jerusalem, arrived today in et pilots abdard it dead, ! ment east of strikebound salmon ' Paris, where simple services- “ #ar” explosion heard lor miles’ CAIGG Vaiicd from ter to”iwéive arranged. blew the North American B-45, million dollars. | four-jet, 500-mile-an-hour plane to It Was reached by the fish pack-! TEL AVIV.—The Israel govern-ipieces yesterday while it was flying |ers and the independent stevedor- ment today formally outlawed 'er‘}a,ooo to 10,000 feet over Alpaugh, ing firm of Griffiths and Sprague,! rorists groups. California, 20 miles south of here,,’which contracted with the Army ‘ | George W. Krebs, 30, Los An-|last week to handle essential car- LONDON.— Meanwhile, Britainigeles, project pilot at the controls,|g0- The union DEWEY GIVES|Instaliment Buying Is Now GOPPROGRAM| Limited; Federal Control Is OF 'NEWERA®| Taken, Many Commodities (By The Associated Press) Gov. Thomas E. Dewey's “Cam- paign to unite America” rolled to- day into the West—the region President Truman said faces GOP “sabotage.” Having unfolded the broad lines of his “New Era” Republican pro- gram in Des Moines last night, the GOP nominee headed for Denver. There he was expected to give some of his promised “honest ans-| wers” (o such questions as high¥ prices, housing, farm aids and other national problems. P The New York Governor says he does not “contend that all our diffi-} culties today have been brought about by the present national ad- ministration.” But he added that “gny fair-minded jrerson would agree” part of the diificulties “are merely the result of the adminis-| ftration’s lack of judgment, or of i faith in our people.” o Mr. Truman, however, told his Denver audience that Republican leaders “working against the in- terests of the people” have been “eager agents of big business.” GOP Undercover Sabotage He urged the people of the Western States to join him in fighting what he termed “Republi- west” and “slick political propa- ganda of the special interests” backed by “millions of dollars that Wall Street is pouring into the Treasury of the Republican party.” Mr. Truman today was headed ‘through . Utah of Salt Lake City for another main talking stop dn his 9,000 mile transcontinental tour. His running mate, Senator Alben Barkley, resumes his campaign tour today in Delaware. Beneficial ' %80 undercover sabotage of the| I ’ Warren In Oklahoma 41& the northernmost USSR PLANES VER ALASKA, NOME REPORT - | NOME, Alaska, Sept. 21.—(®—Au-| orities were investigating today report that Soviet planes have m seen over Alaska's Arctic | ast. | The Nome Nugget said yester-| y Lester Bronson, a Nome pilot,| reported that Eskimos of the Cape &penberg area, have told him they ve seen large planes similar to e B-29 bombers, with the letters “USSR" under the wings. The Cape is on the Arctic Circle tip of the Beward Peninsula, more than 150' miles from the nearest point of jthe Siberian Coast. 37 h i i {AIR FORCE CAPTAIN (DIES FROM INJURIES! ' plie | VAN NUYS, Calif, Sept. 21— 1—Air Force Capt. James P Fitz-| gerald, 28, one of the few men to t(k’. faster than the speed of sound, 15 dead. s o | Injuries suffered when his TF-80 idet plane crashed Sept. 9 near Van; Nuys airport on a flight from {Muroc, Calif,, air base caused his; {death yesterday at Birmingham | Veterans Hospital. He had been un- !conscious since the crash. NAVY SUBS ARE UNDER ARCTICICE WASHINGTON, Sept. 21.—M—, redert contro of matiment voy-| 10 Be Used fo Control l\’:)i‘\:)‘:‘: returned after a 1l-month | Guided Missiles_cAA Plans for Alaska . During that time the velume of time buying mounted to a record of nearly $7.50%4000,000. i Some auto dealers and finance, VANCOUVER, B. C., Sept KEY WEST . LASHED BY HURRICANE Torrential R;n—Falls Over i Wide Area-Disaster | Unifis Busy BULLETIN: MIAMA, Fla., Sept. 21.—(A, men predicted the generally stifferj—Arctic explorer Sir Hubert W“-sz—m—wmds of 125 miles sus- kins, said here that U. S. Navy sub- tests be- terms will put the skids under the préemium prices for used cars and put late models keyond the reach marines are undergoing neath Arctic Ocean ice. of many families. He made the statement in a In general, the Federal controls|SPeech to the _Norlhwml Aviation require a one-third down payment |Planning Council in cash on autos, ‘and a one-fifthj Wilkins predicted that in the event of a future war, submarines! hiding under Arctic Ice would bel used to control guided missiles. He down payment on the other items to which they apply, provided the selling price is over $50. Ii the balance due after the!Said radar would be unable to de-} down payment is over $1,000, it tect the sucs through the huge| ; onths, |thicknesses of ice | must be paid off in 18 months, 8 ) K { They would carry dio-control | {equipment, rocket bombs, and bor- with a $70 minimum monthly in- tained velocity and 140 miles in gusts smashed across Key West as a hurricane passed over the island city 175 miles south of Miami to- day. ‘The report of the storm's in- tensity was made by radio by the Navy, to the Weather Bureau here. Communications to Key West were out “Hurricune very intense” the Navy stated, “Instruments blown away. Estimated winds 140 miles per hour.” Tides were inundating some of the stallment. If less, it must be paid in 15 months. ing tubes to enable their crews to Other articles now under the 'ach the surface, Wilkins pre- idicted, Such subs,. he said, would| controls are: cook stoves, dishwash- 4 get 3000 miles closer to target in-| ers, ironers, vacuum cleaners, re- | &7 U/ ; frigerators, washing machines, or tl"\l:rtr:‘“' no matter which side ““"'i any combination = of these ap- 2 b | pliances; air conditioners, radios,| ... CO’;’ War" Bases A8, television sets, phonographs, sew Ikins said that in the new ver- sion of the “Cold War,” bases would! jalso be establisted on the surface ing machines, furniture and ru - ‘ ¢ jof ~the Arctic ice cap, which he| . said is strong enough to support| ROTARY CLUB HAS -~ CAA Plans in Alaska H He told of CAA plans for the con- !struction of 30 modern airports in' fAlaska at p cost of $8,249,000. VAR|EIY “ jer at yesterday's session, attended | by nearly 300 representatives of all| ! Delegates came from points as dis-| tant as London. Rotary mémbers hewra a talk on{Cigll peronautics Administrator, re-! Alaskan highways, planned to take;vie past progress in-facilitating Boards of Trade convention, agreed lined plans for future standardiza- their “treasury was getting thin” tion and expansion. “fattening program” at a meeting of the club this noon at the Bar- ‘The explorer was the main speak- | !Lranches of the aviation industry.: MEETING PROGRAM | In o tak waay, Dr, W. Rentzel, in the sessions of the As.wclntedl‘u, 8. and Canadian flying and out-' and balloted for suggestions for a anof Hotel. | W Florida keys, reported weather ob- server Ed. Lowe at Tavernier, an island about 100 miles north of Key ‘est. The overseas highway was closed. IA road block was set up at Mate- cumbe to halt traffic southward into the storm. Key West was isolated except for radio communications. } Winds of hurricane force were felt along the entire chain of islands which form the Florida Keys. MIAMI, Fla, Sept. 21.—#— Winds of 110 miles an hour lashed !Key West toeday as a big and grow- ing tropical hurricane brushed near or over the island eMy 175 miles All weather stations along the narrow stretch of Florida Keys— 1 Ilamous fishing grounds for thou- sands- reported hurricane force winds of 75 miles an hour or better, Torrential rains accompanied the winds, The hurricane was a short dis- took drastic steps to re-equip Nher fist man to fly a multiple jet! reported crews havel Gov. navy. The Admiralty suspende_dn.qmber; and Nicholas G. Pickard,'already been sent out. | work in the royal dockyards in;31, Manhattan Beach, Calif., test| — e ta bid for support of Democratic | order to - refit about 100 warshipspilot, were the two victims. . e Tt e o= 'DOC WALKER HERE i ivo',ers in the interest of “Ameri-' Lokon can unity.” i i o"(AMpA'GN'o“R‘ Henry Wallace, meanwhile, said | WASHINGTON George. B Earl Warren, the GOP | Vice-Presidential candidate, mean-| R {while pressed his cross-countyy [] idrive in Oklahoma, where he made | { | President Charles W. Carter an-{ ge saiq only 67 civil airports cur-’tanc . nounced that 41 faculty '“emb""“'rcntly are reported to have suitable!am & :g;-trh) o:n:ey,;,:{,:;t' Mm’g,':? {from the Juneau schools will be. racilities These include 21 CAA in-northeastward at about 10 miles an (guests of the Rotarians at their|termediate fields, 30 municipal air- Jhour. next Tuesday's meeting. iports, six commercial and private; | Donald MacDonald, long known'airports and nine seaplane bases. | Key West re) -an- as the father of the Alaska Hiflh-{ Rentzel mentioned congresslunnlnmurywmds at ;l;o;;ed.nllmnx:.dnz:;s way, told Rotarians that now is thelexpendllure of $12,500,000 for thelofficials at the island city where time to get things done on high- construction of a Class 5 airport President Truman has his “Little ways in Alaska, He is candidate!at Anchorage and a Class 4 at Fair-{ white House,” said no causalties for Highway Engineer. {banks as part of the planned ex-!had been reported. Shelters were i “Now, while money is available,pansion. icrowded. {and Alaska s coming into its own,{ He said the CAA plans to build 12| In Miami, sustained wind reached is the time to act on a coastal route (new airports in Alaska as a cost to 110 Miles An Hour This was the second phase of’ in New York that both the Repub- | “arle, former Democratic Govern- N. R. (Doc) Walker, candidate for Senator on the Democratic Britain's preparedness against my]'l'ree polkemen slowed down demotilization, 2;3;;;:::, Goubing preduction o et ' _licans and Democrats, through their | °F °f Pennsylvania, today came out tarted readying civil-{ I Ne Sh : ’ : ‘ . ::al:ln;:‘;ns:&sa { n ro oo I ticket has arrived in Juneau froml'bm“gh" us to a crisis that f’lmwfl CIOP “dargiiite: A ! |his Ketchnkan home and will star; 2ntastically dangerous to Ameri- World War III. Already she has; s Killed, 2 Wounded b s g i ke St i bi-partisan foreign (policy, have | 10F the election of Gov. Thomas E. i dent, his campaign for re-election at|°® 8nd the world” KANSAS CITY, Sept. 21.—(®— WASHINGTON.—Dipiomatic of-} Other political developments: ficials said the Turkish fleet may soon be strengthened by the addi- Five men were fatally shot and; two wounded last night in a gun- once. Juneau will be his head- quarters. Walker will campaign in Skag- Rhode Island Republicans, in their first direct primary election | SOUTH ORANGE, N. —Chnrles‘ H. Ingersoll, 79, co-founder of the dollar watch company that made | highway,” MacDonald said. the Government of $7,000,000 and} “We have a tremendous oppor-:w improve 18 airports with a fed-| tunity to develop our biggest re-ieral outlay of $1,161,000. He said| 60 miles an hour and vistbility was almost wiped out by the blowing rain. ‘The storm has enlarged and hur- tion of several modern Americanlfight growing out of a routine poli call. his name famous, died in Orange olice 5 destroyers. H Memorial Hospital today of auto injuries received Sunday. source, the tourist industry,” the!this program awaits the appropri-|ricane winds and strong gales now speaker said. “Opening of high-'ate modifications and Territorial|cover an area about 300 miles in ways to this area would cut the!legislation to permit Alaskan par-ldiameter, the weather bureau re- 1,000-mile detour that blocks the(ticipation in the Federal alrportlporged, automotive-minded Pacific Coast|plan. | The slow movement of the storm people from vacationing here.” Yesterday, Norman Allen, assist-|wij]) keep the center over South Rotary President Carter asked'nnc to the president of the Boe-|Plorida for a longer period and members to “remember the ad-ling Airplane Co., said the Ameri-idelay the arrival of the hurricane monition of the chair and to at-'can afrcraft industry must continue|winds somewhat, forecasters said. | way, Haines, Sitka and other places|!? RIstory. yesterday picked so- v, ; Three of the dead and two of |in the northern end of the Flrsq::l:l::e c::m; l:lerpsoent 'I:“”d " BERLIN.—The cold war had its!the wounded were policemen. {Division, then come back to Ju- Demo:r mnai . l”l““';l‘ rumblings in Russian occupied Ger- | The shooting occurred in a Ne- neau. He is scheduled for sev- Theodore Francis rGa e mbon CHICAGO — Fowler McCormick, g ——|gro partment house district after;eral radio talks during his stay! Mayor Albert R :en. 49, chairman of International Har- two patrolmen answered a rou-|here. " b R. Ruerat, of War- oo . Company, is seriously 1ll| SR iz ] - ltine disturbance call about a “loud § 1 Wick, was ndmed the party's can- with virus pneumonia, his physi- e as lng on arty” in an apartment buildi didate for Governor. da. ¢ . DarY. P ng. cian said today. McCormick has | - By DREW PEARSON' l | (Copyright, 1948, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Orient Arriving on ASHINGTON—Today the tod- ing session of the National Labor The “Princess Norah from Van- Preliminary arrangements for)couver, docked at 2:30 o'clock with procedure were made at the open-{20 .passengers disembarking here. dling United Nations tugs up i'.s! diapers and starts an uneasy ses- sion in Paris. The scene of the ' (oasl_lomom SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 21.—(® —The funeral ship Sgt. Morris Relations Board hearing on the Juneau Spruce Corporation dispute this morning. Melton Boyd, hear- sessions is jewel-like Ohaillot Pal-|Crain—the 1ith since repatriationiing officer, 18th Regional Office, oce overlooking the Eiffel Tower. [of the Pacific war dead began last{NIRB, Seattle, is conducting the{ham, Mrs.. Dorothy Hamilton, Miss Eight years ago, a jlig in Chaillot Palace after the Nazi army captured Paris. And if by some remote chance Hitler is alive today, he's probably do- ing another gleeful jig, because his former enemies have been split 's 3500 World War II dead from Ma- nila, Saipan and Honolulu. The number of dead returned with the Crain’s arrival. Adolf Hitler did |October—arrives tomorrow with/hearing, The CIO-ILWU dispute with the CIO-IWA has been over the load- ing of Juneau Spruce Corporation ifor burial will pass the 30,000 mark|barges by memters of the Wood- workers, who claim that all work at the Juneau sawmill is under its She sails for Skagway at 11 o'clock tonight. y Passengers are: Gilbert Autry, Mrs. Irene Clark, Robert Croken, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Cunning- Christine Hopkins, James E. Mur- ray, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel H. Noyes, Mrs. Grace L. Polkey, Keith Ram- seyer, Miss Lois C. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Saxon, Mr. and Mrs Daniel A. Ward and infant daugh- ter, Dr. Peter W. Jaron, Miss Helen {drew Carnegle, Scottish-born phil- ‘anthropist and steel maker, left a ,819,908,104 net estate before taxes, an estate tax appraisal disclosed . today. | Al s i LONDON Bruce Woodcock knocked out Lee Oma of Detroit tonight in the fourth round of i his heavyweight “comeback” bout after seventeen months in splints! land bandages. LOS ANGELES — Robert Mit- lchum, glowering screen hero, and | three co-defendants will plead ed chaliman of the Soap Box Derby Committee for 1949. Jim McNaugh- ton will serve as committee secre-j tary and Neil Fritchman as treas- urer. The program committee for next month was announced with Ed.! Clark as chairman, assisted by Rob-* ert Collin, Jerry McKinley and Vic . Power. PARIS, Sept. 21.—(®—Dr. Herbert Visitors and guests included L. V. Evatt of Australia was elected Oldroyd from the University of |President of the general assembly; Alaska, Victor Rivers, civil engi-|0f the United Nations today. neer from Anchorage, William Mur-| The Australian emerged victorious phy of Seattle, Robert Rowan of|after failing in the first ballot to Whitehorse, Ed. Chase of Haines(Win the necessary simple majority and Frank Shelton of Ketchikan, |of 29 votes. xd He polled 25 on the first ballot to DR.H. V. EVATTIS ELECTED HEAD OF GA OF UN IN PARIS Men'Y-GO-ROllndl INI-RB HEAR'"G IS {been in St. Luke's Hospital fOX &)eng meetings of the Trade Gonven-to fean heavily on military produc- P e IF“ne’aI Sh'p 'rom "oRAH l“ poRT = KRS tion.” {tlon to stay in business. The* stornt w rapidly in size i U"DERWAY HERE | NEW YORK— The widow of An-| Dr. William P. Blanton was nam- A lafter crossing Cuba, said chiet, forecaster~ Grady Norton. Winds of hurricane force—75 miles an hour and higher—will te- {wln to sweep Miami between 4 p.m. and nightfall, it was predicted. The Red Cross reported 840 per- sons spent last night in Miami's 59 shelters which were thrown open yesterday. Hurricane warning s fluttered along the East Coast as far north as Melbourne, and storm warnings extended to Daytona Beach. On the West Coast of the peninsula, hurricane flags flew to Fort Myers and storm warnings ‘to ‘Tarpon Springs. as of Saturday, is 4,522, John L. McCormick, Territorial Director of The hurricane, born in the Carib- bean almost due south of Grand urisdiction. Sat % Sept. 29 to narcotics charges. They B ) o A Lt ‘ : :lrill‘(!ie:tiv:;ir:‘:m? giie i s "522 REGI“[R Fon A The hearings are being conduct- "'s"f'_"‘ VNG S were arraigned today at a brief! 522 for Foreign Minister Juan A. D.‘_‘“{: :fi;:;:s ll'e';‘e“on.:l:: job' in B 3 ' “ ed in the Senaf hearing in Superior Court, and re- | {Bramuglia of Argentina, candidate 2 s s S B i SELECTIVE SERVIC Federal Bullding f&‘"ifi:“m?,im‘fl: © e o o e > e o ¢ main at liberty under $1,000 bond.| STOCK QUOTATIONS 5. Sieriean e fhe lowmr DiEiof SUERERE ‘xn i :omenq::r'hupa:ltre‘;:ey obeen ac-1. Total number’at men in M“u’W‘OH commenced at 10 o'clock|® 4 # i LA Buatt recetved 8106 She.ph anic amlmr:n:wr;rowud (Fort l:ll‘d‘::- sic | g i K, Sept. 21.-—(P—Clos- s he second ballot to ié to register for Selective Service, % . ER REPORT ° NEW YOR! P tions’ votes on the seg complished. World War III would and the afternoon session at 1:15.i \};E:&'I;l:"ll‘lm ll'imm . ‘, ES'OIIianS Readl Jils' Anation” or TAlsaka Jmmulm gy dale) counties .l It is hoped to conclude hearings by| ® noon Wednesday. . I Many representatives have arriv-|® finish off his hopes, and the fear of World War III' will be weigh- ing heavily on the shoulders of the young United Nations as it opens in Paris today. Temperatures for 24-Hour Period mine stock today is 3%, American| His election highlighted the open- Can 81'z, Anaconda 35';, Curtiss-|ing day of the U. N.'s first assem- Wright 10, International Harvesteribly session on the European Con- 28'%, Kennecott 55%, New York |tinent. Central 16', Northern Pacific 20'%, - > —— STEAMER MOVEMENTS In Juneau— Maximum, 48; minimum, 43. At Airport— Maximum, 46; minimum 43. ISeIecfive Service, announced to- Cayman Island, | day. | headed east and then slightly north before it swerv- ed toward land. It crossed the Isle of Pines, causing heavy damage to | U.S. Acr;oss Aflantic =d from the States to be present at|® . September 18 was the final|the meeting. |day for registration of men be-! Representing the Juneau Spruce{® ’ WILMINGTON, N. C. Sept. 21.— U. S. Steel 78%, Pound $4.03%. . . . . x o» oon tween the ages of 18 and 25- for;Corporation, complainer in the,® FORECAST ® | (A—Sixty-nine Estonians, victors in orange Vi = :.IlllAdl;chh m?‘E:osmrs:f.:l-‘; Ber- | services in the armed forces. hearing, are Jul:\es Rogers and;® (Juneau and Vicinity) ® |a battle against the Atlaritic ocean,| Averages today as as follows: e :r “K‘leo es but apparently no Jin crisis into the U, N, was made{ Total registrants in the Juneau|Norman Banfield. Henry Roden and| ® Mostly fair tonight and e jtoday hoped their luck would hold industrials 17861, rails 5920, util- i Trheli 18 ewitind | acsnm Weihn after the Western én'v.oys met in|8rea was 984, according to McCor-!william Paul, Jr., represent ILWU{® Wednesday, Colder tonight @igood against U. S. immigration ities 34.50. All Amencanlxleamern tied up Oubs, the clliker spparently phainig the Kremlin with Molotoy last|™ick: Local 16, defendant, and Al Har-(® With frost in local area. o llaws. g e e bypcf“"'i“’; “"_"hk""o Vancouver,|0me 30 wiles to the east of Thana. Tuesday. The Western powers had Figures for districts throughout|tung is attorney for the Interna-|® PRECIPITATION | The group, which includes 13 REBEK. rincess Norah, b m ; SHWUV '|" The fishing port of Batabana was Boped that a fingl talk with Stalin |Alaska are as follows: Anchorage, |tional Warehousemen, Local M-271,|® (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today @ |children, ended a 60-day crossing Perseverance Rebekah Lodge will{in port and sails for Skagway|, ,.i4 communications with the might break the Berlin deadlock. 1,700; Nome, 1364; Fairbanks, 307; |intervenor, e In Juneau — .14 inches; @ !of the Atlantic in a small boat hereihold its social meeting for the!ll tonight. 3 iport town of 7,000 were down and That deadlock centered on Mar- Kodiak, 184. | E. E. Lesher is official reponerl‘ since Sept. 1, 14.86 inches; © |yesterday. They were immediately| month Wednesday, Sep'teber 22, -at| Princess Louise .\ched'uled to sall {37 Los difficult to ot ve of shal Sokolovsky's flat refusal to o RN ifor the hearing. e since July 1, 27.18 incnes. ©|secluded by immigration officers|the regular time of 8 o'clock. Noblelrrom Vancouver Sept. 28. |dnmue there. 'm_'”‘s ¥ rmit Four-Power control over PAA MAN HERE Mr. Boyd, in the preliminary pro-|{® At Airport — .27 inches; Otwha refused to let them tel) their|Grand Mrs. B. E. Feero and Social | e > = l Havana Is Struck e 5 insisted that| E- A. Stiefelmaier, with the Pan|ceedings, called attention to the;® since Sept. 1, 10.04 inches; !story because of “security reasons.” Chairman Mrs. E. Dull, announce. RAWSON FROM WHITEHORSE | In Havana, about 20,000 persons Berlin currency. He American at San Francisco, is in|fact that the hearing officer has ® since July 1, 1839 inches. o! They came in a 79-foot auxiliary|a pleasant evening has been plan-{ R. J. Rawson has arrived | fimd reported to have left their Russia must rule Berlin's economies 'y ;o0 "and is registered at the no power to make rulings in the (Continued on Page Four) Baranof. case, , schooner, the “Prolific,” which was ned fo rall members. Roll call Juneau from Whitehorse and is taken under Coast Guard escort. (Continued on Pag, “Two) / Night will be held on Oct. 27. 96 2t registered at the Baranof. -