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SATURDAY 1P.M. Edition o THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1948 —_ PRICE TEN CENTS e E————-,es i) VOL. LXXIL, NO. 11,048 Dead{igg Near for Coast Strike Settlement COUNCIL VOTES e oo | 3 HUNDRED [P Rkt WINTER DEMOCRATS Hof Issues %FA(IIO_fiS NEW BOND ISSUE ;fiji;"?éx»"cfif?"'finfi;e"e:’355'"::;‘ On Line | | EVAUMTED wihss HITS3 | WILL AVERT | Ave Before DISAGREE paid semi-monthly, and that that FOR MORE PAVING - =" : I The new Chevrolet panel truck for 20.—(P—Philo- | i MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS day be the fifth and twentieth of LONDON, No | declared the Police Department is expected sopher Bertrand Russell ! . X H H i here atout December 1, aboard the today the West must either fight | Spe(|a| Mee"ng IS ca"ed'ANs vessel North Star; this ve-| FROM FlRE Russia before she has the atom [ ‘ ee |ng\ hicle can be used as an ambulance bomb or “lie down and let them! ! | November 26 On Ligh' iin case of emergency. 1govern us.” & | i Briti H i Russell said if the West waited The new scoopmobile aulhorlzed‘B“"Sh c°|umb|a 'ndlal'l s { The Juneau City Council Stranded Travelers Being;Truman's Plan An;plified?lefl-wing Councils May Res‘gfig‘mflt?"ge { by Sam Rayburn—Presi- | Get Punished - Con- 4 } dent'sVaficfiqtipn Ending vention at Borfland on Seftling Issues i KANSAS CITY, Nov. 20— - Plainsmen in three states today; KEY WEST, Fla, Nov. 20.—®- PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 20.—(f— oo were cutting through deep snow- President Truman let it be known One of the hottest issues before the ) mpjg II‘F‘I}‘:NSL‘?E((‘)(.“N:;.?%I ‘TX; CIO explodes into the open today— | ywost Coast Mkl'"im‘c Strike. And Employers and €10 Union Work Out Agreements 0 until Russia had the atom bomb, at the last meeting is enroute from | i i it would find the Kremhn *“much s Seattie aoura enariered varee. | uberculosis Hospital night voted to recommend to thejit H voters additional paving to the ex-iwill have its use before the first Goes UD in Blaze sall e’ QI it beneve: PRI St atomic weapons now because ex- for which the council authorized a|Nielsen presided in the absence of | contract two weeks ago. ! Mayor Hendrickson, Other council- | evacuated last night from the blaz drifts to rescue stranded travelers today through one of his closest fand livestock. Ju.wmmu-c that he Eelieves his ad-|the question of punishing lelt-wng {ypa ey day of resumed negotia- CIO councils that refuse to follow | tione And it finds two factions in imore diificult to argue with.” is hoped the street department tent of approximately 37,000 square|serious snowstorm. ! Edward S.. SARDIS, B. C, Nov. 20.—M—|perimental explosions would have e - - This project, if approved by Ju-{men are J. P. Christensen, George‘mg Coqualettza Indian tuberculosis | | hospital. The historic $500,000 land- Winter's first swoop across east- |ministration can avert ancther de- mark was destroyed. [ | The philosopher-mathematician ; yards—almost doukle the amount| Senior Councilman | Three hundred persons were safely|peen detected. neau citizens at a special bond elec- | Jorgenson, James Larsen, W. Burr tion, would mean hard-surfacing for |Johnson and Joe Thibodeau. | ern Colorado, uthwestern Ne- |pression. CIO policies. b R 3 all the major streets in the city. ) o Sl e Fire departments of nearby cen-| | braska and Western Kansas had| Representative Sam Rayburn, The CIO executive board meets to ll‘;.]fi‘m"{};ie;‘:‘?:::*’E;:D)'I': elnng:::)e_ The bond issue, estimated to be'DE ElopME“T BD Iridged the land with drifts from [speaker-to-be of the House, laid the act in the case of the greater New | jaion and the CIO l‘ml;s;‘;" i v i three to 20 feet deep. ains, | administration position on' the line | York industrial union council, ac-1j "\ ve decided to rewrite the lcused of thwarting CIO policy and {aid nz “enemies of labor.” busses and motor cars were stall-|here before flying back to Texas ©d, telephone and power lines were |and a speaking engagement at Dal- @own, and many communities iso- 1as tonight. A three-man committee which]| lated. It a major recession or (lrpx-m-:l\el:l a hearing in Washington last | Tg;:‘“?:v:c?rm‘:y;]‘:: :l:'::":‘:::! One death was reported. A 15- sion should come which I do notimonth was reported to be recom- | work ff chung"l‘g tghew rules year-old girl died at Hutchinson, ¢XPect—it will not be justified by imending that the Board revoke the|win no delay a return to work when in an amount approaching $260,000, will be authorized only if the low unit price quoted by the origmall contractors “for additional paving” can be obtained for such a large undertaking. ¥ |wor king rules in the new contract |and reduce them to what they call [ters helped battle the flames, along | |with nearly every able-bodied man | !in this town of 1,500 people, 70 miles . M 1 east of Vancouver. ! ¢ | ISPLANNED Those escaping included 180 pa-| tients, several of them babies who 1were carried out by nurses. Lack of water outlets and pres- SEEKS $65,000 FOR D. C. OFFICE “Now, we can get a city to be v 4 : . . Sl e : L i : o situation, but will b¢{New York City council’s charter really proud of,” commented Coun- g sure hindered the efforts of fire Kansas, of diabetes when drifts OUr economic situa y cil's charte ¥ T cllm:np.lames TATaE, dbabmenaE] A foll-time Alhsks office | iR inen, SEATTLE, Nov. 20.—(P—The ex-|blocked efforts to get her to a man-made Rayburn told a news| Meantime Walter Reuther, pr i::-u:freemm“ iasashe s T {56 Street, committee; dlacussing tne| Washington, D. C. to assist the; The cause was not immediately|pert who directed the $3,500,000) hospital. [conference after emerging fromlident of the United Auto Work ."Th',"' sounds 1ike an expectation Delegate and push such programs|estaklished, but fire officials were salvage job on the sunken freighter! Lack of severe cold lessened the tAlks with the President at the| (UAW), fired an early cannon infqe"o ear-future end of the strike. motion following the joint recom- mendation cf street and finance committees. ! what is expected to be a CIO cam-| paign for a fourth round of post-!| ol mlg:de‘:,m-::)e “RTtthp::; . war wage raises | deadline. R |which brought the resumed nego- as statehcood, road and airfield construction, effective shipping legislation, and development mat- hardships. Trains on the Santa Fe, Union| Paciiic, and Rock Island lines were [mmporary “White House” here. H This jibed with Mr. Truman'’s po-| sition in campaign talks in which investigating the possibility a short circuit may have touched off the blaze. Diamond Knot and its cargo of !canned salmon 14 months ago, lsi {going to Alaska on another major Others in the combined group} i sads, sostlar UBENY, They had| ters before Congress and the Fed-| The building was constructed in job. ,moving slowly as snowplows ram- h€ contended another depression; Yesterday Reuther told a group|piagions, both sides in the strike beld & sbecial meefing on - the aub-] S8l Administrative agencies ‘Was 1993 and was used as an Indian ' The yeteran San Francifco sal-|med the tracks clear. Some trains;°0uld be avoided only by a Demo-fof Portland businessmen, the. CIY|jove oty until Sunday midnight proposed this week by the Alaska!School until 1941 when it was con-|vage expert, Walter L. Martignoni, | were delayed as much as 20 hoursi"“"w victory because of his party's!Club, to get ready for a fourth & i % position that the GOP would look ‘round. {to settle the, issues. ject, and met early with the coun- cil last night to discuss it. They pointed out that, with virtu- ally complete surfacing of Juneau streets, there would be an increase Development Board here. |verted to a tuberculosis clinic for - The Board, in a unanimous de- British Columbia Indians. claration, points out that Alaska’s: ———p————— Delegate, “already probably the will be sent north to survey the;Friday 1l chances of saving a wrecked Alaska| National Guardsmen in Kansas,'8fter the rich and not all classes ot i Railroad barge and its $700,000 car- | using half-track vehicles, were’ € economy. !go. | hauling stranded motorists to! Mr. Truman’s He said the UAW is “alveady talk- {ing about a fourth round.” He said, | vacation drew to(“If you haven't heard it, you'll hear a close today. He set out for thelit nexi week.” in_property values, as well as a sub-| stantial reduction in street mainte-: ¢ | I K A= nance costs. (An estimated $20,000) tasks ahead in attempting to carry, government cargo for Alaska,!arate routes from Kansas City to | bath—bis daily routine since his|CIO convention which starts here iy 4. 'vear would be saved in upkeep!0Ut the legislative programs for grounded on rocks in Fern Harbor, Denver late yesterday, reported see- 211Vl two weeks ago Monday. | The struck French port of Dun- . « alone) . : I which the people of Alaska have ! Southeast Alaska, Nov. 8. i ing more than 200 motor cars stalled H¢ flies ack to Washington to- . B e kerque resumed shipping operX- “We would have a cleaner,}so decisively spoken. i | Repeated -efforts . have failed to: near the Kansas-Colorado border, MO'T0W for a hedvy schedule of | tions this morning after three healthier city,” is the way one Delegate E L. "Bob Bartlett free the barge. {'They saw 1o Qistress signals, how- conierences highlighted by ““‘IHGH"NG S"ll ! thousand Colonial troops _seized councilman put it. has - endorsed the = Development ! A. R. Sessions, Alaska Raiiroad{cver, meeting Monday with Secretary of | the harbor area. The FPrench .The motion was passed unum-‘Board proposal. ; representative in Seattle, sald Mar-| Farmers still were having diffi- 'State Marshall and roving ECA Am- | lu pR sm government appifed the same form=' ¢ mously, all six-members of the City| “No state has less than three! Itignoni was In charge of the un- yity reaching outlying flocks of “oosedor Hamiliap They will re-! | ‘wla 10 the dock sirike that. suc- view the threats- peace in- Eu- S mi teeded tn breaking the Commum- | Council in attendance. ! (Note: At the November 6 meet-| most overworked man in Washing- ton,” is faced with even greater FREIGHTE men | in Congress,” a Board state- ment ‘said. “Alaska; with so many ! DULUTH, Minn, Nov. 20.—®— The seagoing Large, loaded with, shelter. more than 2,000 tons of emergency! - Two airplane pilots, beach again for a swim and a sun-| flying sep- (usual salvage operation which re--sheep and herds of cattle. Sheep iclaimed most of the cargo of the ! josses were expected to be heavy.| (freighter Diamond Knot after iti The storm tapered off to light- rope, Chita and elsewhere. P BULLETINS By ‘“next week” he meant rhv‘ ist-led” walkouts in French coal | mines. Despite threats that they -CHINA SECTION ing, a contract amounting to ap-: bressing needs in the national cap-! | | | would fight, the strikers retreated roximately $173.270.50 was author-|!tal, has been expecting one man | The 11,900-ton Great Lakes freight-isank in the Strait of Juan De Fuca!er snowfall and r 4 A A xpmd 'tor.stgeet paving.) 'to do the whole job. No matter € Robert Hobson, carrying a crew ifollowing a collision with another| southeastward imlofl 1:“:;‘::Lmuvrd T';'SM?EDE‘I;T{ ul";::l'l“l;:lAAnl:Y NANKING. = Nov. 20.—M—Al-|from the barricades they erected SPECIAL COUNCIL MEETING | how able and devoted our Delegate |Of 33, was blown aground lastiyessel. ! B G ¥ bl il jthough government dispatches| four days ngo as the treops took: Members voted to hold a special, s, it would be impossible for Omlmght‘at the entry to the Duluth-! i R e e Y Octubt'r“‘]uim the battle of Suchow is con-!gyer, session next Friday evening at 8 man to accomplish all the lm,,gslsupenm' Harbor. R MARMS R charq; & Bl dusters sidered closed and a “complete| A o'clock to consider the report of|the Territory wants dene in Wash- A8 Coest GUABLASUGR U T14 8 day was senrenced in 'm‘;(nct“viclury”' for Nationalist forces, t| qy. hjer American delegate to | e is evident that fighting is still in C. J. Ehrendreich, accountant. Hejington.” was engaged by the council to in-i The Alaska Development Board vestigate statistical data and other|has included an item of $65,000 exhibits of the Alaska Electric Light; lor a Washington office in fits 1luth reported the iron ore carrier iwas whipped out of control at; |the height of a northeaster lash-: !ing Lake Superior. The wind was: HOT MEETING GRANGE ENDS éS'Tgl?ru VISITORS /Court to serve tour years at Mc- ogress. I Neil Tsland or some other institu-, " pe {tion to be designated by the Attor- FOR MEETINGS -~ o | Leng had waived prosecution by In fact the continuing on ! Northern Kiangsu bastion and the battle apparently is all flanks of the ;the U. N, Warren Austin, has ar- jrived at Walter Reed Hospital ir Washington amid reports that he i 'soon may resign. and Power Co., on which the com-jbudget request for the next bien -{blg‘:l““lii 2l 68 Il‘:u“e:d an hour. sign. ny based its recent request for a!nium. e Hobson, inbound, struck the g | i g o s 4 I decisive action may yet to be| i f:t'eyhea.ring g { - - { concrete breakwater, then went! PORTLAND, Me., Nov. 20—® | gitkn i pursting at the seams| ndictment, consenting to ProSeGU- so,gny, | PARIE=uA- onmmitiee. . of - U : { aground in shallows off sandy | The National G luded 8] i g . S{tion by intormationi. This was 035 g . ¥ ._ | United Nations voted today to con- The Light Company seeks to in-| | agl n s lows a sandy | e National range conclude S| with visitors, according to Juneau- fie S ) ' Gen. Ho Ying-chen, National De-| & . Ied Litth D % i beach. Seacocks were opened in{National Convention teday after!jpoc i {filed, charging him with burglary (¢, .o Ninister, reporting he | tiiue the Bo-called Little Asstpbil crease its rates, on the basis of in- ites returning early from che oriof the Al Hotel Ri o se Minister, reporting to the|, ther Thy te 1 i i !order to keep her firmly on the{withdrawing support of oleomar- Satalt 3 riof the Alaska Hotel Room 0ccU-|pyecytive Yuun tlegislature) QF RUAVIIEE" SR8l e veie creased capital investment and in- | ore ¥ y g SUpPe i{toth of this week's conferences | ' Ra cutive Yua cglslature), said; 4 ber Tw ; bottom. The 580-foot vessel part-|garine taxes and endorsing com- | jpied by Ray William and James| e fignting still is c ing i | 0GR S Conpiuithe NUIDSS S0 creased expenses. ) d X g | there. | Osborne. Long pleaded guilty. | ghting stll Is continulng M| 0oy pgeembly was 44 to six Third gnd final reading of Ordi-) ‘ly blocked the entry. pulsory arbitration of strikes that! Ninety delegates are among the | pesistin 8 ‘:’ i 4 \dnigne | he vicinity of Nienchuang, 33/ Ly T ‘Russtan bloe casting the nance No. 325 was followed by its A Coast Guard llgeboat went to|menace public welfare. {150 persons attending the Alaska |y, I:iallo:e'a“elL al ‘l dml,ng d!mnc.s east of Suchow, where a ma-|, . oo 5 o passage. i {the scene, but finding the vessel| The iarm organization's polfcy Native Brotherhood convention of the warnings. of s p;i‘m gnoved|jor Red force recently was set | . 3 H {in no great danger, permitted themolders voted after two hours de- t 2 H 4 | back. sai gover! TS DOCK LEASE REQUEST | | ger, pe i all of Southeast Alaska eXcePt:unq was shot in the leg while ,.‘,,,_[u‘_:m"m :‘l’m:‘; :‘l:’:llu"’”""‘(‘):mf;“j‘ Au explosion in the Big Inch bate last night to support mar- Haines and Skagway. Ciselliie ik Coft e High' NgEH 8 natural gas near Seymour, Indiana, last night. The flames could be seen for miles around Sixteen persons were injured and 14 cars and trucks were destroyed. Several small buildings also were demolish- 1 [ | ed. A { | | i " o ‘ning away. 1 . Z garine tax repeal “if and when ef-| “Twenty mayors and guests at- L'(gmg haer B b oot das. VRS ENGPRIBE MR BE v - - > | fective means are taken to pre-|tended Thursday's banquet. Rccon"‘n\g from 1981 £ : MONTEREY HUNTERS |crew to remain aboard. vent deception in its sale in imi-:mendations for ' constructive legis-| VNS BRING IN 15 DEER; i PSS T /AFL PLANNING TO | tation of butter.” !lation probably will come out of it.[ Pk ¢ i 3 sI , Alaska, . 20—(P—A | - 3 ioks: i 1 FORTY ANDEIGHT | HUNT PERIL STRAIT Bagging 15 dcm“m 15 days, along expected to return here today. clearance of all obligations under|of an unidentified woman were; CINCINNATI, Nov. 20— — ThelRlvERS OPPOSI:‘G ! > the present contract. jreported found yesterday at Kahz'American Federation of Labor cxec-: | .. . NO TRAILER CAMP i Bay, 40 miles north of here. utive councii planned today to set INIERIOR pos" (RED CROSS FIRST ASSUME DUTIES | The Council voted to decine _mel The troller was registered tojup a watch-dog committee of tupl | 1 ES offer of E. Glenn Wilder, executive: Tom Ronning of Juneau, well-{union leaders to press for passngel i AlD MEE"“G |S | - with full hunting bags of ducks director ‘of the Alaska Housing Au-!known fisherman. However, it was,of its legislative proposals in the FOR M. WAllGREN‘ { Annual installation meeting of the |@nd geese was enough to make a thority, tor the use of ‘80 large,jnot known whether he or others|81st Congress. | SH FoR Mo"D‘YjJuncau Voiture, Forty and Eight, good hunting party better for 17) Juneauites who returned this week! J. F, Church was present, asking; for 4 decision on his request to lease’ the dock used by the Alaska Trans- portation Company, which early this| month gave 90-day notice of lease) i reinforced. | WRECKED French requests that German in- dustrial power not be rebuf’t re- » portedly has run into rejections by the United States and Britain.' It is possible that the teén-weeks | were aboard the craft before it was; A super committee of representa- home-type - trailers. - Members pointed out that, while| their usz would be free to the city, the trailers would be f.o.b. Port- land;' that the City of Juneau never could get title; that the City would have to build permanent-type foun- dations “and - provide facilities, as| well'as build a laundry and recre- wrecked. tives of the 105 big national unions The find was made by a Fish|in the AFL will work out strategy | and Wildlife Service boat. A Fed-|and check the progress of favored eral Marshall and Commissioner jlegislation, according to the execu- were at the scene today investigat- i tive council plan. ing the case. Approval by the 15-man executive council, which shapes AFL policy, was a forerunner to adoption by Ronning has been = operating Ralph J. Rivers, Attorney Gen-| eral, has sent a letter to President; self against the rumored appoint- ment of Washington State’s Gov. Mon C. Wallgren as Secretary of the Interior. Rivers' letter tells the President he believes Wallgren too closefy identified with monopolistic inter- twas held Thuisday night in the Le- gion Dugout, when Grande Chef de;® All Red Cross first aid instruc- old government of Henri Queullle board the Monterey after a mp‘I Harry S. Truman, expressing him- | atipn’ room. ’ trom Pelican for sometime and has Although the city would be.reim-{not recently been in Juneau. No tursed (allowed a percentage of (he] other particulars regarding the rental) for the life of the trailer| wreck than those above have been the convention. The council, at a meeting last night, set Monday ! ests which are not for the bet- night as the new adjournment tar- | terment of Alaska. get for the 67th Annual Conven- tion. Gare, Alfred L. Zenger, Sr., received |to Peril Straits. The party, which went the boat owned by Mr. and Mrs. !Jack Westfall, hunted Appleton of Voiture |Cove, Hannus Bay and Ushk Bay, leaving here November 4 and re- itors are asked to attend a meeting | fat 8 o'clock Monday evening at the.the obligations of the officers who City Council Chambers. Twill se the organization during The purpose of this meeting is to'the ensuing year. organize first aid classes. All per- Retiring Chef de Gare Mrs. Don Abel, Mr. and Mrs, Carl Rusher, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Mill, Theima Pederson, Al Burnell. Os- icontemplated in the business ses-l sion of the group. Newly installed officers are: Bert out on| carhp, that period is limited to tive | received here. } Lykeck, Chef de Gare; Ted Smith, turu Nygard, Ray Mansfield, Jake' may fall as a result. | The United States is keeping | Task Force 38 in China waters in- | definitely because of the civil war. This is announced by Vice ns interested in taking first aid (1126, Joe Thibodeau, served refresh- § instruction or in helping to organ- ments to the group following in-|turning Wednesday. Aduiirn, Outinr Badsu“fiu:r:m::n ize a class ave asked to be present|stallation ceremonies, and an in-; In the hunting party were Mr.|0f the Western Fleet which IS bas- {at the meeting. {tensified program of activities wn,g‘aud Mrs. Shell Simmons, Mr. and|¢d at this North Chp";“ ))lort. H; rinceton and | says the carriers Tarawa have been ses off Japan. recalled from | ex |6M UPS PRICES. ism'cu KEEPING UP thought that it was inconsistent to; Westfall. | Queen years at the most. ! S s A RS LA S b Council members expressed the| AT BARANOF Chef de Train; Edward L. Kei-{Dickinson, Earl Forsythe, Hardy| In Southampton, - England, "a Augie Jaminez of Tenakee came sou'H-Dow“ "unSE o" (ADS BUI(KS‘ thahn, Conducteur; Harold Davies,: Trefzgar and Mr.' and Mrs, Jack | fourth u_r the crew of the liner encourage the building of trailer|j, on Alaska - Coastal yesterday Bo“"n Foa umfl (A i Aumonier; Leo Jewett, Correspon- Elaabeth walked. "alfo i camps, at the same meeting iN|ang is registered at the mmno,l | DETROIT, Nov. 20.—P— OFF AI.ASKA COASI dante; Garde de la Porte, James . i | vessel in »)I'mpnlmy with x:;rlkin: BERAAC Sofoulis; Lampiste, Steve Vukovich; | { American’ longshoremen. Cunax {PASSENGERS IN ON | officials said the liner's departure A(A FR]DAY H.IGH'S :‘ would be delayed at least 25 howrs. Arriving and departing on Alaska which a special bond issue was ap-| gote], proved to beautify the city. MORE STREET LIGHTS d The Council acted on a number i Price ’ FROM ““"H“ (boosts for 1949 Cadillac and Bulckl l’ |automobiles are announced by Gen-| CENTRALIA, Wash., Nov. 20.—(® With a south-down talk thatleral Motors Corporation. l—'rhe mother of the pilot of a e ' ] The w ashin ionfmukcr. one think of sycamore trees| Cadillacs will cost an average of imissing Alaska plane said yesterday £ g and Kentucky colonels, Miss Carrie[3.2 per cent more than the 1948|a paity of volunteers has entered Cheminot Lotalle, Fred Cameron and Joe Thibodeau; Commisaire Voyageur, Ray Bolton, Assisting in the installation ceremonies was in Communist newspapers the of requests for, additional street | lights, members suggesting others rr iM. Bell of Memphis, Tenn. told|listing and new Buicks will sell for [the search for the craft that van- Ernest Lincoln as Conducteur. Coastal Airlines Priday were thel Soviet sector of Berlin said today which were needed. The street sup- Me Y 3 Go ” Round this morning how-come she’s in Al- [from $50 to $100 more on various|ished Nov. 5., Regular meetings for the coming following ;. that “Berlin is without a govern- : From Tenakee: Mrs. Milnes, Au-lmenlv" Their statements ingicated aska. !models. GM disclosed the increases' The pilot of the missing Pacific{year are assured by the incoming erintendent was asked to see thatl such lights are installed. >3 ?l‘:mDEE‘v: l:'hEAn;RnS?Nm The southern-talking nurse, who|yesterday. {Alaska Air Express transport which|officers. gle Jaminez, A. Slagle | the Russians are ready to complete The Council authorized a change| 'COPYriEnt: 1046, 07 The yndicate, | oo me into Juneau yesterday aboard| In addition to increasing the basic |carried 17 persons, was Andrew R. From Sitka: A. J. Alter division of the city into two parts. in the keeping of records, to make —_— Pan American and who is staying at |prices of the new Buick models, GM |Kinnear of Renton. His mother, From Pelican: Mrs. John Bean — BPW NOON From Hoonah: James Williams. | The American Embassy in Nan- ASHINGTON— Here is an in-|the Baranof Hotel, is on her first|also disclosed that the automatic |Mrs. R. L. Kinnear, lives here. side glimpse of certain things that!trip to Alaska, and, she admits, with jdynaflow transmission, wind-shield] Mrs. Kinnear caid she was ad-, dismay, without an umbrella. She|washers and dual backup lights that!vised a group of Renton and Se Municipal Court actions more easily available, and to constitute a per- N. J. O'Bryan,|king said Chinese Communists in | Mukden had seized the radio com- From Petersburg: Mrs, Mildred Hermann will W’Ru(h Cimez manent and complete history of each |are happening in China. It's not $ arrest. a pretty picture. but before pour-iis a true daughter of the South,|were optional on the 1948 Rafldmns-]ame volunteers, including hlends‘,lhe speaker at the meeting of the! Prom Ketchikan—-R. R. Stvke. | munications set longing to the MAYOR DELAYED ing more U. S. dollars into China, |Southern California having been |ter series, will ke standard equipment jof the missing pilot, had joined in| Business and Professional Women's| From Wrangell: Kathryn Katra- | American consulate there. Mayor Waino Hendrickson Was|Americans should take a long, hard | her farthest terminus to tiie north{on the new Roadmaster. the search. !Club, in the Baranof Hotel Ter- hoff | - - I unable to be present, mechanicalljook at the facts. 1and west previous to this trip. These accessories cost $247.50 last| (Coast Guard - headquarters in | race, Monday noon To Pelican: Grace Rogers, PFred| REMLEY DIVORCE Her subject will be, “What Price Wetche The application of Elsie M. She will stay in Juneau over the|year and will be added to the $100 | Seattle reported the official search| + in the Roadmaster price, mak- is continuing as’ weather permits, Per Dollar?” To Petersburg Reseryaticns are to be made with Ted Reynolds Lucille Johnson, at 833 To Wrangell: trouble having delayed his return| Chiang's House of Cards—Chiang | from the Mayors' Conference at!prai chek is finished—even though Weekend before going to Bethel to;boos Sitka. In his absence, the Councilj - . i take over the directorship of nurses | ing the hike between $345 and $347 but that storms and clouds have approved his request for a vacation| (Continued on Page Four) at the Indian Hospiial there. jon this series. handicapped the aerial efforts). 4 ' Frank Clayton, | Remley for a divorce from Walt- jer G./Remley was granted yester- Otto Hellar, ‘ld“ in District Court