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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE | “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” ; S ey VOL. LXXII., NO. 11,049 JUNEAU, ALASKA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1948 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS , y [ ® | [ ] Clock Stopped In Negotiating Coast Strike TWO W°R”’:?5‘{,“?{’.{‘.5}‘5.&“,’;"‘é",'{'.‘;‘f,‘.{.ifl",.. Weiss Gefs | PRESIDENT, }Soulheasl Alaska Mayors 'CONFERENCE FLIERS ARE | MARSHALL = Adopt Six Resolufions for CONTINUING ouruneo, BARTLETT RosegowLnow Call Down | DOWN, (RASH|. =z e iy coememms v s ozl (ONFERRING) — Submiission to Legislature | FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Nov. 22—/ LOS ANGELES, Nov. 22—(®— fov. Democratic election victory, was|tative in the Rose Bowl New Year's;m John Wiese, Anchorage umonl FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Nov. 22— SITKA, Alaska, Nov. 4 i Deadline Is Reached-Sef- Problems Concerning 22, Mo Hearl Disease i off for Mrs. Richarda Morrow-| He told 200 persons at a party ic vote of the 10 conference mem-! president Truman's Cabinet, Busi= C . f | Tait and- her navigator, Michael| victory rally that statehood :\s‘LEI'a' faculty representatives, Was| e, Agent Oscar A:ndcrson said hlnar Berhn BIO(kade | mon n a ians urday with the selection of Ketchi- "emen' Formula Ap' Townsend, yesterday when they|soon as possible heads a five point |announced by Commiss.oner Vic-| today. H 1 | g E h b ' , kan for next year's convention ecity | . made a crash landing uninjured,| program 'tor O, Schmidt. The exact tallot] wicge, president of the CIO= Under ConSIderahon A and the adoption of six resolu- pI’OVed,ngh Uppefs 200 miles southeast of here. | He quoted President Truman as tabulation was not disclosed. Oregon | western Aluska Fisheries Couns s 0' Aleu"an Islaflds ttons: b oM . ‘The “trick is to follow a highway | saying last May: “I believe we also was & candidate for the nomi-! .jj was recently quoted as saying, (By The Associated Press) | Mayors and city clerks of Ju-| SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 22— (P i just in case there might be the should admit Alaska to statehood nation. that Wallgren had worked against’ President Truman and Secretary - | neau, Ketchikan, Petersburg, D”“‘.“;Negoz:urmnv, looking toward settle- | need oi an emergency landing. at the earliest possible date and, That will make the Jan. 1, 1949,| pjaqka statehood and other issues|Of State Marshall tackle today CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 22— | las, Wrangell and Hoonah at-Iment of the lengthy and costly | _The young British aviatrix hnd‘l urge Cox}‘sl‘css to enact the nw-,’“‘“‘"l_’ at P“S"_““f“?_ g ) | the Territory favors world full of problems, one of th Inhabitants of the Aleutian TIs-|tended the sessions. | West Coast maritime strike are be- 1 been experiencing engine trouble| essary legislation.” California versus Northwestern.i wiace spoke without authority.” foremost of which is China. {lands enjoy “almost complete free-| The resolutions urged the next|ing continued—despite the expira- j Independent dispatches indicated [dom” from heart diseases, a Har- | ‘T('rrilorinl legislature to pass the tion of a deadline. Chinese Communists are again|vard expedition to the North The other points on the devel- | The Wildcats were chosen unani- Pa- | following legislation The conferees were to meet aguin “We oppose such!} improved mously earlier today by the Blg we believe | Anderson said. | tor several days prior to her take- ja statement because | off yesterday from Anchorage on opment program cover another leg of her rouhd-the-world | air, road and rail transportatior ..Nine.b Wi ! Wallgren has supported the besb‘threatcnh\g the east flank of Su-|cific Islands disclosed today. | 1. Enabling municipalities to!today. flight. S | special consideration of Alaska's| California and Oregon “tied for|; .. ...c of labor.” :ehow, the guardian base for the The expedition, under the direc- ievy a sales tax * | A spokesman for shipowners and 80 she followed the Glenn High-!needs for housing, hospitals and the conference championship, both| AU AAT capital of Nanking. Chinese ob-|t'on of Harvard's Peabody Museum,| 2. Permitting municipalities t0|{CIO longshoremen said last night way, which heads northeast to a| community iacilities; solution m'nn‘mhing the league season unde- servers said the Government ap-|spent last summer in the sub-Arctic | levy property taxes on land :md“u was agreed to continue the talks, area studying the habits, history | improvements outside the municip- {and health ot the Aleuts, Mongoloid | parently did not follow up its su jcesses of last week. Martial law was {although yesterday was the last day al boundaries. ifor a setllement under the Roth- junetion with the Alaska Highway.|the complex question involving ab- feated. Oregon, however, lost "”C;SURVEYS SAlvAGE onference game—to Michigan,; Her plane crashed near the road | original rights, particularly in NOn-C i 30 miles southwest of Tok Junc-|Southeastern Alaska, and continued | 14-0—while Cal's Golden Bears wel'llj IlR 1 5 ;dem"Ed at Peiping for five northern inhabitants of the Larren maudsf 3. Amending the fuel tax law to|Murray formula; in 30-below zero weather. |encouragement of land settlement.ithrough their entire 10-game slate] provinces. stretching Letween North America | provide that monies collected be| That formula was approved by tion - withott Mlemmisk | | 3 Wi 2y e’ Pp! y without blemish, i Mrs. Chiang Kai-shek appealed!and As'a. | spent in approximately the same!Philip Murray, President of the The AT-7, a two-engined Beech-t Bartlett said he would reintro- . b2 % craft which was accompanying|duce several bills he offered to the| It Will be California’s fifth ap-| her on a planned hop to North-|80th Congress to implement the Pearance in the Rose Bowl, and the| way near the Canada-Alaska line,’ five-point program. |first time since the Bears knocked | iles | v a Crimson Tide, | flew to Tanacross, about 20 miles| The Delegate declared that he ?;i}; “m!"‘;gag:‘““-‘"d Crimson e northwest of Tok and reported the consurs in President Truman's be-| mishap. | Lief that of all his recommendations The Alaska Highway Patrol sent’the one for statehood is most im- | |ty iradio for immediate and definite | ! American aid, saying “if China talls, {all of Asia goes” The Commun'st| Captain Martin Guchee of lheii'fld’o told the U. S. to keep out and | & A 4 {Ocean Tow Co, was pessimistic that aiding Chiang would be “an act ftific study were anthropologists, | amount received to be returned to' | In previous years, the Bears de-|ioday about chances of salvaging!of hostility. crthodontists, cardiologists, ethn-|the town in which it was collect- | feated Ohio State 28-0, in 1?21. and| gither the cargo or the craft, fol- Before the Truman-Marshall con- folog sts, archeologiss and linguists.| ed, y ' the next year they were held to a| ine days of survey! sal- ference is a request trom Chiang! Dr, Fred Alexander, cardiologist, at 5 M ruck down the road, picked; portant. i dd s | lowing 10 days of surveying sa 4 _ H . , cardiologist, at | Requesting a review of the S the filers who had heen 'walk-| ' o Lied . iscoreless tie by Washington andiyage gpertions on the Alaska Rail-|that the United States in effect take Massachusetts General Hospital, ex- | mercantile tax law to improve col- hf“ Sroiind. the ‘Didns “and. took e all good will" added Bart-|Jefferson’s 60-minute eleven. INn!, .4 parge on the rocks near Cape OVer the running of the Chinese war amined 132 of the less than 1000 jection and enforcement. Wit tb’ Tanaéross, {lett, “T say 2 those Alaskans who 1929 the Bears lost to Georgia Tech,: g0 ooy, jagainst the Commu through natives. He said they were found to| g Requesting consideration of a|formula—escept that “the clock has | Weather permitting, the Beet‘h-!;:mi,r:?:n a:}:atnoilb rx:l i{:lzfif::fid'sc_;' cm e gam;xm“?e. famous bY{ Gaptain Guchee, representing the American military advisors andibe “alimosl completely frec frOM | tuy on tresh and frozen fish in thelceen stopped” That's procedure | céatt will take the couple BaCK 10] frar 1o mas Heyor faled eoaiai, oM Center Roy Riggels’ Wrong-Wayl operators of the tug, Christine|RrOUgh eniormously Increased Neip heart disease but that infectios|revise mercantile tax on the sameyused by legislauive bodies ‘to com- A 3 diseases, tuberculosis and venereal| j.gic as on canned or mild cured!tinue action on measures beyond The expeaition’s findings were areas and in the same proportion| announced in a report by the Pea-| as collected. tody Museum. | 4. Providing a payroll or income ‘Taking part in the unusual scien- | tax law witn 25 per cent of the CIO, and A. E. Roth, President of the 2an Francisco Employers' coyns * cil. It stipulated 10 days in which to seek agreement, with the ship- owners' wage offer’to be submitted to the rank and file membership of the union, if no other solution were found. * | The spokesman said the talks are continuing under the negotiation CHANCES ARE St} > @ The RR barge, with an estimat- certain to remain that way a long ly responsible for the | d $700,060 in cargo aboard, is time, since all mediation efforts have heart disease in the older Aleuts. {lodged between rocks some 75 feet failed. The “neutrzl” nations on thei Those findings, reported the ex- $ ' v 0 the Chinese armies. Anchorage today, or it may 80 10 ang that it cannot fail here” | : Ebes, phich was touing te IAtEn s 2 3 lier: & 3 BERLIN TROUBLE, TOO disease, were taking a great toll of | rig + sched; ! Fairbanks if the weather is fsvm-: He pleaded that Alaskans “work ! load of relief supplies bound for it fish he ulmjmaldjaurnmex‘x:.l;me. \ _Tait’ i ¢ , ! return to Seattle. .agenda. It is the hottest spot in Alexander said “there is a| NEAU Today is Mrs. Morrow-Tail's 35t 'sopse and tolerance. i the cold war in Europe and appears possibility that diet may he large- | 0 te irthd: Several days ago sh 1 ! ge- | birthday. Several days ago She| ge said Alaskans shoud ve! YJOTERS MEET AT } »| Mayor Waino Hendrickson chm‘-‘ to celebrate it. I'tion they again pointed the way l“"(HEoN 'I'UBDAY acterized the conference at which (o“ll"l“fi |“ E‘S W . : ! Berlin, of course. is high on 14 ) able in that direction, {this. oub rin’ hattoony with “"""'lflfi“f of WOMEN Whittier, is in Juneau enroute to £5 e cines i | “Stimulating and construction o NEGO“"IONS ARE . absence of o0g ] said she hoped to be in Montreal ,,uq that in their October elec- ¥ he represented Juneau. Witnésses sald the right, wing|:he nation would vote in November. ! {from a rugged, high-cliffed shore, U. N. Security Council began a new, pedition. leaders, haye led scientists | 5, . 4 g and landing ‘gear of the second-| TR 1 R AR The Juneats Provisional League Cabtahi Cuthee expluined. The ry for a compromise. “to wonder If fish and meat, the| Everyome had something to con-{ com “ Hand ‘Royal Air Force plane were| I “(I,omen Vatotk reAl - hisia gl'"s‘hi;)l water mark covers the two| President H. V. Evatt of the U./main foods. may be partially re- | ¥ibute, and we all felt that the damaged. ! O e o thly meeting at |forward hatches, and there hes N. Assembly msserted there are rea- fponsitle for the small amount of | SCOnS Voo very ‘worth - while."| A % IO 0 TR i i ¥ ) been every indication that these|sonable prospects for a Berlin set-'heart trouble found.” | Mayor Hendrickson and Mayor) (By The Assoclated Press) !luncheon Tuesday noon, Novem-) rtients. are floode 3 ree Wi 'n of-1 T ¢ {R. E:Ellis of Ketchlkan were! Negotiations In the 13-day-ol ] !ber 23, at the Baranof Hotel, with | compartments are flooded, he said. tlement in three weeks. Western of The dentist on the trip, Dr. Coen- | | gotiations In he ay-old i s i |Boxes from the cargo have floated ficials in Berlin felt otherwise. They yaad Moorrees of Forsyth Dental| CHOSCN a8 @ legislative committee East Coast longshoremen's strike AFL CONVENTION to act as observers at the coming held some hope today, but the top | Attorney General Ralph J. Rivers legislative session, and to present, Federal mediai r declared “I'm not as the principal speaker. |to the suriace from the pressure said the Berlin Blockade was im-|Intiimary, he found the Aleuts |of ground swells and sea gulls posed to drive the western powers “a very ric | Saturday evening at the Scottish h ilh'ld for dental re- | D'SCUSSB MOVES |Rite Temple, Juneau Assembly, Or-'b“’f_r', Sl ‘:m discuss Various! swarm over the area night and day. from the city and to stop western search.” the matters recommended by the, predicting anything.” jder of Rainbow for Girls, gave an|> 1% BCuCE 10X HAATE FRPM The forward hull of the barge plans for a western German state. | conference. ~ Also, they will keep| There wers reports in Washing- AGAI“S]’ RUSS' {impressive and colorful pledge serv-| 476 belng drufted in his office for, o) 04 oneo large rocks has been, The alrlift, which is costing the| Dr. Moorrees said examinations of | members. informed of legislative ton that the AFL longshore union |ice honoring girls who had attained | Présentation to e rritorial| o ing steadily, Guehee said. He U. S. Tremsury $100,000000 a year,|the teeth of early Aleuts “reveal developments 'had recelved a weliare plan offer !thelr twelfth birthdays and wished ] LeBislature when 1t convenes in, o % "0 0f four feet in the was harassed again by fog. that tooth decay did mot become| Mayor William G. Charterls of from employers in addition fo the ‘to pledgé. ; January. U. S. intelligence sources said ev.dent until the 18th century when Sitka, who had called the conven- 10-cent hourly wage increase pro- (By The Associated Press) ipast 10 days. The American Federation of La-' tion, was unanimously elected] posal jusc before the New York chairman of the conference, and, talks recessed Saturday. The Child Welfare Committee of the League will present its report,| Attempts have been made to do Konstantin ~ Rokossovsky, | Russian fur-traders brought in Maishal s western armies, has flour, sugar, and other starch foeds.” | Patricia Balog, Past Worthy Ad-| Lor adopted a declaration of foreign!Vvisor, presided for the ritual assist-! 3 4. i 3 _ chief of Russia . li l)l' al ilitary alliance |ed by the corps of officers. jalso, during the meeting. All wo-, Some Jelding on. (ECSERANA DUlk- | ved headquarters west from East! Joining with Peabody Museum in|City Clerk Frank Calvin, Sitka,' Demands Halved polcy. cu o gorra iliary i ¢! Pledge candidates were Mary Mar- | Men of the Juneau-Douglas area *head, he said, but suction from thei, |\ o " T oo pera in Meck- |the study were the Viking Fund and | secretary. The, union has halved its demand against Russia and Ereaking ofy ’ g i lare cordially invited to attend. swells has literally blown the weld-") ; ! he Office of Naval Research The 1949 vention will be in, ; y ;' trade relations with the Soviet until {garet Grisham, Ann Johnson, Vir-| e ing equipment out of the hands (\€n2urg province. The ® anti-com- the Office of Naval Research. he convention will be injfor a 50-cent hourly hike for its the Berlin blockade is ended. |ginia Whitehead, Margaret Mize,! e T o ‘ar the “Watkmes munist newspaper Montag’s Echo, Lefl?lzlx"s of the expedition u‘lcluded Kdetclhlynn. the date to be (h-u-rnnxh;fib.aoo WOrks whose present base : ; u i 2 i - . 2 9 s in Dr. William 8. Laughlin of the Mu-|ed later. : . The action came in routine ap-|Mary McDowell, Lynne Jobhn: ‘omip o .I.o SIAY OPE" Cliffs some 60 feet high rise mx(‘ m(? Rusa:an occupfll‘m? forces in it dlrecl:x' ¢ Qlodekl * e (rate is !.l 5. proval of a report by the 67th An- lelmmh;i J:l Lynchl, Jeanr:; S’;‘m] « Us of the rocky.. cove where the Germany have been mcrg;ased. bu‘;;Marsi\ e Uni\v’c n;‘ et 'r Meanwhile, shipping was tied up nual AFL Convention’s Committee | Mary Pinkley, Carlene Seaberg, Nat- | bar, = 8 g |western sources have scounted | L e 3 " . from Maine to Virginia. At South- 5 ge is grounded, according to . lvadu: . r G g i . elegates pushed business for prob- . 54 Directing salvage operations has HEREREN et klan et orEe. | omesm Sl i iad o g S atle adjournment tonight. mann, Barbara Judson, Lorene| CHRISTMAS MAILING |, Directing satvage operations has! syoRT CONFERENCE Alih G o Wenatanes DEPENDENCY BENEFITS | cueen mitzabetns crew struck S T S N | Smith, Carol Lawrence, Katherine s { rannih A3 ! Pagt o, Tacoms, | WASHINGTON, Nov. 22. (#— P 4 ; o ; | jin sympathy with the American {Ann Livie, Caroline Davis, Nancy| ne postoffice will remain open' who is aise. in sunesy enrouce (g Fresident Truman and Secretary of [Versity of Michigan; Dr. Alexander | AT ANNUAL MEETING : 1c:sshovemen, the crew members . Berggren, Alberta Tucker, Jo AnNe| th cugh the dinner hour and until! return to the West it |State Marshall conferred today |2nd Dr. Mourrees e jagrecd to retun to their ship. as'ern 'ar |Ves jBlythe, Virginia Neilsen, Nancyi, yegsonable hour in the evening ~. tug, | SNOBtY sRiter; Marshall, flay: here | i | Ref o dence rat.. The Cunard White Star Line i The Teton, Ocean Tow Co. tug Retentia the experience iLeege, Mina Lou Schultz, Pat Rich- . tUS:1iyom Paris. Communist pressure! € lon of the experlence rat-. ,romised that the Queen Eliza- ardson and Elaine Bland. Friday, so that Christmas mail can|enroute to Whittier with two| i in China and Europe made ffi'-‘ JUNEAU TROLLER | ing amendment of the Unemploy-| peih would noi sail until the long= Ba” Next Sa'urday Special music was under the di- :fgcl::il;f:gftr “llfiesi:rus;msmfx.'"’"'"‘ [m l!:w'WWfl.f dfzpa,tfhftdb'mll'uCh'mB policy decisions highly | dent compenaation law, sfid ex"“';ahcrcmen‘s strike s settled, and rection of Mary Lou Fagerson. e ,lgo (:1“: ;’ de z}? Wal“ after be- | possiple. ; 3 slaniof the act to include a dependen-. wouiq| nof go! to: Halifes: A Thanksgiving Ball will be giv-| Singing quartet music were Jo-1 iy want'to ‘give the best, ser- I"S f“,‘:fi 2' e 5;_"-’!:“(};‘%["% The President met Marshalls| MISS'"G' CRAFI cz benetit system, were xeco.rf:mendA Deamaslot: Biriks en mext Saturday night by the Ens!,- anne Williamson, D_onna Jewett, vice possible,” sald Mrs.. Orystal Fg)l &le E’t xdiuh'b he hristine ane in the rain at 10:10 a.m. ESY. | i’ by thg Board of Dm:f:l'm of lhel In New York, 3,500 AFL Team- ern Star. The event will be held in|Janu and Evangeline McConnell. Jenne today. “Mail going out Sat- ss is jl ng by. 3 "Then while the Secretary caught| FOUND WRE(KED mx];e{nplo,me;ll: Cm“p,cma"fm COm| sters struck against 350 trucking the Scottish Rite Temple and danc- | Accompaniments for the quartet|\ ... Wil Le the last that can s o ja brief rest, Mr. Truman got & J‘m"o" l“t ts annual meeting “’; mpanies. Local 282 of the Team- ing will start at 10 o'clock, continu- land for a duet by the McConnell possibly, reach the East before & Ifill-in on recovery efforts in Eu-| e eau last week. Tsters is insisting on a 22 cent ing until 1 am. Sunday. sisters were by Miss Lois LAWIeNce, | g jgimag unless the strike should Salvage Man (ommg 'rope. He spent 25 minutes with; SITKA, Alaska, Nov. 22—(P—| Techicaliies have neid up the|nowly wage increase. Employers Invitations to the social eventlat the organ. lbe settled and the sailings resum- i { Averell Harriman, the roving am-|One person was listed as dead and |¢XPerience rating provision, now be- | jeruse to pay more than 20 were placed in the mail last week.| Newly initiated pledges were bassador for the Economic Cooper- ianother missing Saturday as a re- for the Appellate Court in Suu},.,,,m,, in addition *» the present The Washington Merry - Go - Round ‘Bv DREW PEARSON {copyrisht, 1048, by The Bell Symdicate, nc. W\SHINGTON- Regardless of the GOP defeat, it looks as if the Hoover Commission on Reorganiza- tion of the Government was going to win out in the end. Created by the “second worst Congress,” and sponsored by Sen- ator Taft's spokesman, Congress- man Clarence Brown of Ohio, most Democrats figured the Hoover Commission’s work ' would now be junked. But it won't, and there are two good reasons why. One reason is Harry Truman. The other is Herbert Hoover. These two gentlemen have be- come quite ford of each other. De- spite the cracks he took at Hoov- er during the campaign (which came under the head of “campaign greeted by Mrs. Howard D. Stabler land Mrs. Ed Sweeney, with specjal remarks. L. Maurice Whittier also spoke on Rainbow Girls® future. Re- freshments followed the meeting. —— e 125 CLASSIFIED 1-A BY |~ SELECTIVE SERVICE | Cuassified 1-A by Selective Ser- vice Board No. 3 for military ser- vice are the following 25 men: Ernest H. John, Billy P. Brown, ! Ned Frank, Wallace I. DeBoff, Ar- jvid E. Norheim, Donald D. Christ- jansen, Johnny D. Abbott, Maurice | | Nelson, Harold O. Fossum, Stacy P. Torum, Howard J. Privett, Ro- ald Norheim, Henry G. Lynch, Wil- bur Lindoff, David Hanson, Ron- ald E. Carlson, Chris B. Jackson, Harry J. Johnasen, Richard E. Johnson, Wayne A. Hanson, Arthur A. Zantow, Edmund G. Preuschoff, Gordon E. Mason, Jack D. Leon, James K. Marr. et e 1 JOINS HUSBAND, CAA ! ENGINEER, JUNEAU Mrs. Edward Grimstad came in ed immediately. ’ “We also will keep the postoffice open on the eve of the December 6 sailing, but those sending Christ- INorth lor_R: R. Barge! SEATTLE, Nov. 22—P—Walter; mas mail cannot count on its;L. Martigneni, veteran San Fran-i reaching any designation beyond [cisco salvage expert who directed | Seattle.” {vecovery of the Diamond Knot Mrs. Jenne warns about care injcanned salmon cargo, left for Al- wrapping parcels. aska yesterday to survey chancesi “With the extra handling aboard]o( saving a wrecked Alaska Rail- the Vancouver-Seattle train, pack-)road barge and its $700,000 cargo. ages really have to be securely| The seagoing barge, laden with iwrapped,” she said. “We're glad_2.000 tons of emergenty government to keep open extra hours to facili-|cargo for Alaska, grounded on the' tate Christmas mailing, and wejrocks in Fern Harbor near Cape hope that no packages will have to|Spencer November 8. be refused because of improper! The Foss Launch and Tug Com- wrapping.” pany, towing contractor for the| Windows for stamps and parcel | emergency barge service, sent Mar- lposl will be kept open Friday eve-|tignoni north for the salvage sur-I ning. vey. R i P Martignoni was in" complete | COL. NOYES DELAYED charge of the unprecedented sal- | Col. John R. Noyes, director of the Alaska Road Commission, was expected back in Juneau Saturday,|sunken freighter Diamond Knot 14 but word was received here that|months ago off Port Angeles. he was stuck at Annette Island.' RS .02 He had not returned this morn- DISTRICT COURT ing. | Judge George W. Folta expect-, Col. Noyes went to Portland,'ed to go to. Anchorage this morn-| jOre., last week to speak at the|ing to preside at Third Division twentieth annual convention of the | Court. | vage operation that reclaimed most of the $3500,000 cargo from the; oratory’), Tiuman really likes this weekend from Anchorage to Hoover. And the feeling is reci-|Jcin her husband who is working ' Pacific Northwest Trade Associa- In District Court here, Saturday, procated. bere as a radio engineer for CAA.! tion. | Laura Woodbury was granted al Hoover ha¢ never set foot in'Mrs. Grimstad and her young son! e |divorce decree from George R.' (Continned on Page Four) the White House since the sad dayFreddy are staying at the Hotel! .. 'Juneap while looking for an apart- by 390 U. S. Weather Bureau sta- and Helmi ment, i are issued Woodbury, and the suit of Oscar! Niemi versus Sam S, and Amelia Kito was dismissed. Daily weather repor tions. i thad nothing to say regarding the |in company with Harriman, sult of an investigation by Federal (autherities of a wrecked troller 40 miles nerth of here. The body of an unidentified wom- | an was found tloating in the water | ucar the wreck scene at Kahz Bay. | However, officers said her dea | apparently had no connection with the boat mishap. They said the woman, about «V, had been in the water a long Wme. | The troller was registered to Tom Ronning, well known Juneau fish- erman. He was presumably lost !Ronning has been operating out of | Pelican during the past season. His boav was last seen a week| agc. The bottom of the vessel had | Leen torn out by rocks. | Further investigation of the mys- | Rear Adm" leahy ‘tery was turned over to the Coast | Guard. Dies Suddenly at | His Lowell Home STOCK QUOTATIONS | NEW YORK, Nov. 22—(P—Clos- | LOWELL, Mass, Nov. 22—®—!ing quotation of Alaska Juneau| Read Admiral George A. Leahy, Jr.,|mine stcck today is 2's, American | 47, once skipper of the late Presi Can 179', Anaconda 35's, Curtiss-| cent Franklin D. Roosevelt’s yacht, Wright International Harvest- the Potomac, died today at his er 27%, Kennecott 57%, New York home of a heart attack. Central 13%, Northern Pacific 18%, He was commander of the Po- U. 8. Steel 72, Pound $4.08'. tcmac when Roosevelt was taken Sales today w 890,000 shares. ior a rendezvous with the cruiser Averages toaay are as follows: Augusta to hold his historic con- industrials 176.33. rails 54.48, util- ference with Winston Churchill. ities 33.25, ation - Administration; Mr. Truman and Marshall open- ed their review of foreign policy with a 46-minute conference at the White House. Then they stroll- ed across the street to a Cabinel luncheon. Mr. Truman went back to the White House at 3 p.n. EST. He conference. Marshall also brushed aside all questions as he left Blair House “I saw the President and I talk- ed to him. That's about all I can say,” Marshall said - - - -~ - | mission’s benefit Francisco, but there Is no question | ccale of $5390 to $7140 for a 40- as to the constitutionality of the| hour week. amendment, according to R. E.! B Mfk - Sheldon, director ! As E. F. Jessen, Pairbanks nev\w-i paper publisher, President of the (AR[ AR"BERG Board, was unable to attend, only v two directors were present, with! Al p Sheldon: George Vaara, Anchorage| AS A IONEER, businessman and former mayor, and Anthony Zurich, of Ketchikan, well BUR"S [o DEA'H known cold storage man. Vaara was | / made chairman, Zurich, secretary! lof the sesstons. | Word has been received by U. 8. Recommendations to be submit-!Marshal William ‘T. Mahoney and ted to the 1949 legislature also were!from the Wrangell Sentinel, that considered. Carl Arnberg, elderly Alaska pio- It was pointed out that the Com- [neer, died Saturday night in a fire fund is in good,which completely destroyed his condition, totaling, according toleakin, one mile from Wrangell. Sheldon, more than $11,000,000. The cabin was completely turned - > Iwhen tiremen arrived. Cause of the U . fire is unknown. MENS (Honus MEH Arnberg arrived in Alaska in 1019, coming from Portland, Ore., or Io“lGHT, |0°F HAll Montana. He worked for the Sani- i tary Canning Company. then work- The Juneau Men's Chorus willied as boat cook and handy man in meet tonight at 7:00 o'clock at the and about Wrangell. He was about Odd Fellows Hall, All-singers are 0 years old. asked to be the practice on llmt'.‘ The cnly known close relative B I surviving him is a daughter in the TO INSPECT ROADS States. H. A. Stoddart and Chris Wyl-! - -oe - ler, PRA division and district en-/| MRS. ROCK VISITS gineers, respectively, went to Ket- Mrs. Ruth Rock, insurance . exe- chikan tcday to inspect roads in!cutive from Petersbng, was in that area, planning to return on' Juneau brletly last week, stopping Wednesday overnight at the Baranof Hotel.