The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 29, 1948, Page 1

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HE DAILY ALASKA EMPFIRE VOL. LXXIL, NO. 11,079 “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1948 S MCMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE~ TEN CENTS To Attack Alaskan Town in‘‘Mimic’’ Warfare SAILORS TO RESUME WAGE SCALE TALKS WITH SHIPOWNERS SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 29.—®— Federal mediator Omar Hoskins said AFL sailors and Pacific Coast shipowners would resume wage talks today. Hoskins said progress was made RENO AREA SHAKEN UP BY SHOCKS Power, Te@wne Lines Knocked Down-Slides Occur on Highways RENO, Nev., Dec. 29.—®—Power and telephone lines were knocked down and minor highway slides touched off by renewed earth temb- lors which shook Reno heavily early today. There is an indication that the The shocks, apparently cemermg‘Wage dispute between West Coast here, extended through the Sierra!Sshipowners and the AFL Sailors into Northern California as far|Union of the Pacific may be ironed west as San Francisco and as far (out. Union Chief Harry Lunde- south as Fresno, in the San Joa- |berg, said last night that shipown- quin Valley. ers had made what he termed a Three quakes, the first reported at |Pretty fair proposition during yes- about 4:55 a.m. were so severe as!terday’s negotiations in San Fran- to knock the seismograph of thecisco. Lundeberg didn’t disclose the details. The sailors have postponed a strike ballot for a week at Hos- kins’ request. The sailors are demanding wage boosts ranging from $20 to $60 a month for the many pay classifica- tions of deck hands. Shipowners offered $16 to $35. They were the latest in a series|Proposal. of shocks beginning Monday night, ! when Reno was shaken seven times{"ATIONAl GUARD The Bell Telephone Company re-' ported its lines down near the Cal«i ifornia state line about 15 mues west of here. break, company officials said heavy! DETROIT, Dec. 20.—®—A Michi- electrical charges ‘in the circuits:gan National Guard B-26 bomber indicated high-voltage power lines Plane, fighting rain and sleet, had fallen across them. Icrnshed and burned six miles from affected. !Air Force personnel and a Guard The highway department at Ssc-‘omcer. were killed. ramento, Calif., reported that mincr o T R TR DT rock slides occurred on U. 8. Hi i p ' E rofessor Einslein nia Sierras. . The highway remained opened, ! however, after Reno authorities re- | quested California highway crews Altert Einstein has entered a New . York hospital for wnat is said to be i “observation only.” Asked if the famous scientist is ( 'He's perfectly okay. He's smoking oF MISSI"G plA"E ,his pipe and doing his work in bed.” WITH 30 ABOARD Einstein will be 70 years old next on atomic energy. e e oo o airliner missing more than 24 hours | ‘;" on a flight from San Juan, Puerto ! on! " SIATERS Rico, to Miami, with 30 persons R s GOING TO HAWAII dawn to resume an intensive search over the 1,200-mile air route to San;Hawall and the New Year’s Day Juan and fanned out over the,football game in the Pineapple Florida peninsula and the eutemiflowl without their veteran first University of Nevada, mmplgtely details, but union negotiators are within a period of four and a half; BOMBER CRASHES; As emergency crews were rushed) Long distance circuits linking!its base last night. gh- way 40, main transcontinental high- to put mountain snowplows into ac- in serious condition, a hospital March. He’s best known for his! MIAMI, Fla., Dec. 29.—(P—Hope A fleet of 37 air force, navy and CORVALLIS, Ore., Dec. 29.—P— Gulf of Mexico. |string quarterback. in yesterday's session but gave no| At least four men, including three‘ re- The Beavers will play the Uni- Human "Guinea Pigs" fo Come To Alaska SEATTLE, Dec. 29.—(®—The ef- fects of Arctic cold on the human body and mind will be studied for two years in Alaska, the University of Washington reported today. (Chiang (alls Conference of Milifary Men Human “guinea pigs” will go to the Territory this winter to start the project. Dr. Loren D. Carlson of the University’s Department of Physiology and Biophysics said the contract for the study had been awarded by the Air Surgeon’s office of the Air Force. “Because Alaska is primarily an air base from a military stand- point, the Air Force is keenly in- terested in finding out the limits of body reactions under conditions of extreme cold,” Dr. Carlson said. Headquarters will be at Ladd{ Field, Fairbanks, and the expedi- tion will leave for the site Jan- Decide Future of China -Formosa Fortified (By The Associated Press) Chiang Kai-shek called his mili- tary leaders to an emergency ses- sion at Nanking today to decide whether to resign, surrender to the conquering Communists, or keep up the war. An hour of great decision, about the world, was at hand. Commun- ist underground agencies were re- iported hard at work within two miles of Nanking when the confer- ence was called. A hint that Chiang might fight jon was seen in the appointment ot Gen. Chen Cheng, former army chief of staff, as Governor of For- mosa. The big island of the main- land is fast teing turned into a Na- tionalist fortress. More rumors of a negotiated peace swept the tur- bulent country but high officials Air Force already havé moved some headquarters units to Formosa. B luary 15. :Gen. King Vlolated Wain- | wright Orders, Says lAl.l()w INDIANS T0 Army Hislorian | puN OWN AFFAIRS, SEATTLE, Dec. 29.—/P—An Army | historian reported here today that | REPORI pRoposB American troops on Bataan were | | surrendered in 1942 in violation of' specific orders from Gen. Jonnthan‘ “’ASHINGTON Dec. 29"““—*,_ M. Wainwright. |Hoover Commission “task force’ Louis Morton, chief of the pgclflcIDTOPOSed today that the govern- section of the Department of A,myalmem let the nation's® 400,000 In- Historical Division, described = his 'dians have a bigger share in run- report as the first official (‘Lsclos-lmng their affairs. ure of the Bataan surrender de-! As one step in lifting the In- tails. He said his reports were com-‘dian out of his status of a govern- piled from military files that were |ment “ward,” the group urged the formerly labeled “top secret.” Mor- |transfer of tribal property to In- ton spoke to a historical association 'd"m owned corporations. The meeting. guvernment now holds legal title { Morton also described confusion to tribal land, buildings and oth- |resulting from refusal of many com- ver installations. Imanders to accept Wainwright's! The report also proposed an in- !later surrender order in other Phil- | tensified program of education and ippines Islands until they were con- jtraining in better farming meth- vinckd that the lives of the Bataan ods, soil conservation and the their compliance. Even then, some ing and timberlands. {Americans and many Filipinos rled[ into the hill to become guerrillas. ;public - by the commission. Morton told this story of the Ba-!official, however, disclosed its sub- taan surrender against high com-wstance to reporters. mand orders: —————— | HAlT, INDONESIAN REPUBLIC, FRIDAY Bataan (orces under w;lnwrlght.. asked what he should do. Wain- wright, whose headquarters were onl Corregidor, was under orders from | Washington “not to surrender un-| i Emergen(yS_ession May! the future of China, and perhaps} denied the reports. The Navy and| iand Corregidor prisoners hung upon management of Indian-owned graz- i | The report itself was not made ! An | AIR FORCE (Contractlsletfo PROUD OF BIG RESCUE Twelve Ma?o;);ted Airmen| Snatched from lce Cap Within 38 Minutes WASHINGTON, Dec. 29.— TRUMAN IS BACK AGAIN, tower could not see it because of| The rescue came before the Air mist. Force's top Arctic Expert, Col. Bernt Balchen, had a chance to try hxs; hand at the job. Balchen flew a| glider-equipped C-54 from Lsfld\ \Field Fairbanks, Alaska, to Gi , for the task. \esterduya rescue was the second | major northland exploit for Beaud- | who won the Air Medal and, —t e ¢ COMMUNIST ACTS GET DERISION OF OFFICIAL OF U. S. AtomicPower Unit fo Be Used For Purpose of Transporlallon' BIG NAVAL MANEUVERS OFF AL ASHA rWorld's First PITTSBURGH, Dec. 29D The Westinghouse Electric Corpor- % e | ation tc undertook a govern- \Kodlak Isiand '0 Be A'- | ment commission to build the, tacked"-Fleet of 34 Ves- sels fo Be Engaged world's first atomic power unit rur‘ transportation purposes. | The assighment was handed the | i {®—The | . Sy " b i compeny by the Atomic Energy | s achievstusett toiay. Wb daring | Commission. | TERMINAL ISLAND NAVY resciie of 12 marooned airmen from Primary goal o1 project will | BASE, Calif., Dec. 20—®— The a bleak 7,800-foot Greenland ice be the development of a power biggest naval operations in Alaska cap. wishin plant for the propulsion of U. S. ;\'{lm s’lm‘;(llht;\l J:L\pnntsrm :‘e;e The hero of the new northland| WASHINGTON, Dec. 20.—®— Navy ships by means of a nuclear driven U‘m: '),. w >utians will take saga Is 32-year-old 1;11 Col. Emil|Broadly grinning, President Tr\ln\nIf’:;;"’g:;x;" q‘:l"l",‘:‘“'\“m’l'l'"'_““;‘('_ “f;":pf: .‘f;,‘??” salinrs AN LSRN SN audr nchester, N. H.{g ist- te simila ship's scon. e A 15 1 oo S g e oiame todny. and_told o |fiteboxes that consume coal or| Kodiak Island will be “attacked” C-47 transport on the wind-swept reading and sleeping through a oil. i 2 |in nuv:wl»\: amphibious invas- cap yesterday and in 38 minutes|tense landing-approach that knp” Although ShAl term 8 “"“‘“,; (i‘:\ ”“1-’,, Ass Ad was airborne again with a dozen | the capital on edge for more than contract between the company and | ¢ 1.1 011 ; vessels, R(:nr m, 1jutilant passengers. ihalf an hour. the Chicago office of the (.‘"'“"l‘.' T. DuBose announced yesterday, Long hours later however only the | “Oh! My goodness, no!” Mr. Tru- n‘nssion 3-pmuvm to be :lvlermlnnd, “Il'”v l];\x]m.l-ll ,“"f lessu'lllt v.mx t;m sketchiest details of the drnmauciman rr‘plied Thet'-akksd - Whether ‘Cl;clirlvs- H. “m»“"]).“rh‘ ‘dur Weat-“:v":ht KF:(-:'H: btfl;: Nnviv"ess:e(;:to-' |operations were known here. Hie' been “worried up there” while Enouse's new \,-lomu nunmulmm“. }“;rv e bem enti But before communications out °(:hls big plane was nmneuvermglf’owcr d,l\‘l.\lflil‘ v.m‘lr wor?( .‘.m.‘ the ;mu ;xx'lors }200‘) xim'i,::; gnd. 126- the frozen northland failed word carefully through soupy weather m‘ut?mxr mfu?x ‘\wud ,Im"t w tmnv(lnn_{m: S, i‘ ' n;{t S bl came through that the rescued men its return from a holiday flight to the next few months. r, s <t1 ‘l;c b '] were safe and apparently sound at Independende;. Mo, The rmnploupn date, however, | four jets, will take part. Bluie West Eight—an Air Force, 3 ik | was a matter of conjecture—"may. North J ;17 Ibase in southwest Greenland. Due in et 2:25 pm. (EST), the e (o years, or it might be fivi HOESh . DanuMy | Seven of the men had been Presidential DO-G piloted by Col.ior gix," said Weavoy. | The first units of the fleet will stranded since December 9, when |Francis (Frenchy) —Will'ams, d‘di “Construction of the nuclear re- leave San Diego January 17 for {their own C-47 was forced down. 1Ot touch the runway at National actor,” the Westinghouse official OPerations against Kodiak Island \Three previous rescue attempts re- |Alrport until 3:09. EV‘:" then A sald, “marks the beginning of the;Some time in February. ‘sulted only in adding five more CYOWd of cabinet members and oth- development of atomic energy ,“\ Defending the island will be {men to the encampment. jer officials waiting at the control| o v unspoitation field. Our ef- Army, Alr Force and Naval units forts, however, will be directed to- 'directed by Read Adm. A. E. Mont- ward putting the reactor in a ship, Eomery, commanding the Alaska We're trying to build a ship’sSea Frontier. power plant that will burn uran-| Not only clothing, but scores of fum instead of coal or ofl.” ‘other items—such as ofl. engines According to an official of of |and de-icing gear—as well as food {the Atomic Energy Commission in #nd personnel will be tested. Washington, the ship urovulslonl “This Is not a major naval prob- {project will not be the first non- 'lem,” Adm. DuBose told a press conference here yesterday. “It is ry, ' weapen development of atomic Distinguished Flying Cross in World power undertaken. an ‘exercise to-test men in cold,. ‘War IT as a bomber pilot over Eu-| WASHINGTON, Dec, 20— +A previously-announced pm,flt wet \fi(’uther and rotten eondi- rope. ! ¥ i 'at Schenectady, N. Y., he said, tions.” | On Dec. 26, 1947, Beaudry puam‘g{"‘;‘:);‘:g’t‘“;u‘;;;;“;e ‘:’r‘;i‘s‘t saz;lvolves the development of a re-| He said cold weather clothing, a plane to Dyke's Lake in Labra. IJoe)h Ohrdina! Mindszenty was a | 80t0F by General Electric for use u(mtlvnlly light and flexible to |dor, and‘ pi}gked up nine lsurv von] s:kénlng e Y Was & i the production of commercial 'Permit ‘:ls wearers to W‘"‘kr f:fl;d seven Air Force men and two civil- ! u>lrv.uu power. (move about easily, is one of e ians—whose B-17 had been forced! He also attacked s unthinkable | - a3 Ichief objectives. down in that barren land three days 'the label of war criminals placed ! earher by the Chinese Communists Ol]’ ,(xentrzll;blmo Chiang Kai-shek and ‘other Nationalist leaders. Lovett assailed Communist actigns ‘ |in Europe and the Far East at al news conference. He also reported that Madame Chlunv Kai-shek had called on' |him at the State Department Mon- | "dny to renew her requests for | {Breat new American assistance to {China’s anti-Communist forces. She has been in this country lor' several weeks to solicit additional ! LWRISI - SLASHING - OF MRS. ROOSEVELT NO LAW VIOLATION, POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., Dec. 29. | —I(P—The Dutchess county district 'attorney ended his investigation aid for her husband’s government, today of the wrist-slashing of Faye | On the other points Lovett said ‘Emerson Roosevelt, actress wife of ! H ” \that: Elliott Rooszvelt, declaring “there | 1. Negotiations with. - Oanads [ at. "y +has been no violation of the 1aw." |,y 1o Western European natio { | District Attorney W. Vincent g on a North Atlantic Security Pact Grady made the announcement af- | going along at a satisfactory {ter a conference with the late Pres- ke [ [ i Vessels In Maneuvers Vessels involved will range from ‘ths- big Essex-type carrier Boxer) Ithe cruiser Duluth, the command (ship Mt. McKinley and the sea- ‘|lu\n tender Curtis, " flagship for . SIIKA ROAD AREA the operation, down to a subma- rine, landing craft of various types' md a small LSMR rocket ship. Work is to start eariy next week | The entire force is due back in on a Public Roads Administration {San Francisco Bay about March survey in the Sitka area, it was|l, where another theoretical at- learned today from H. A. Stoddart, ‘tack is scheduled against forces PRA division engineer, { headed by Vice Adm. George D. A survey party of ten men is|Murray, commanding the Western being moved from construction ac- |Sea Frontier. tivities in the Anchorage region for Admiral DuBose said every bur- this project, which, it is estimated, leau in the Navy Department and will require about three months. |every Command has been offered The party will make a survey of lan opportunity to test materiel and existing road extending from Sitka |personnel problems under the icy PRA STARTS 1949 WITH SURVEY OF ident’s son. south to Sawmill Creek, in con- | conditions to be encountered dur- awry. taking some time to think over the hours. out to determine the extent of the! Reno and San Francisco, were not way- to the East over the Califor- NEW YORK, Dec, 29.—(A—Prof. tion to clear the pavement of deb-| Ispokesman said: “Certainly not. theory on relativity and his work faded rapidly today for a charter| coast guard planes went out at| Oregon Staters start today for The official passenger list, der any circumstances.” He told' 2. Press reports on Marshal Ti- |nection with the reconstruction of .ing the month-long manecuvers. He (By The Associated Press) leased at San Juan last night,|versity of Hawaii there. King to counter-attack. In a formal statement, Grady |y, ‘threap to switeh - Yugos Y ] y 3 g ' > gDslquinstlng roads and expansion of 'listed especially cold weather cloth- named 25 passengers and a crew of Mc"t“:‘he"": sl“"“" ;;P"’rdkmg King's opinion was that the Ba-| The Ne‘heflm;]d* il "“‘“ ';:y \5“{‘;-[ i & 1. [trade from the Communist bloc to |the Forest Highway System to serve |ing, icod, survival and oil end ens three as aboard the missing craft.;Mast, doomed unable o sk |taan position was hopeless. The next have overrun the Indonesian Re-; “Mr. Elliott Roosevelt has ¥ol-) wyegtern nations have been seen |the proposed future industrial de- |gine problems. Earlier Airborne Transport, Inc., of (SPOt, Was deemed unable to make | New York, which leased the, plane,the trip because of an attack of said two infants in arms also were|flu. That was the only bad news, iday he decided to surrender despite [Public, informed the Security Coun- lenwrlgms orders. He suflendgmd‘cfl the Dutch would halt hostilities {April 9. Morton said King reported lin Java at midnight Friday, and a untarily given me a complete state- iment as to his version of the in- rcident involving the cutting of the at the State Department. In this connection Lovett reaffirmed the American belief in the general de- velopment. Marines Coming This stretch of road is for a dis- | The first group of marines from aboard. however, on the State campus as 'he didn’t infor: ainwright of his few days later in Sumatra. The |wrist of his wife, Faye Emerson | ) il ey tance of approximately six and one- | he Pirst Marine Division, Camp Many of the passengers wno!the squad staged two workouts yes- ; i:zennonts u:om,‘xm ,migrrmmg“)uwh also said conditionally they Roosevelt, on Dec. 26. :L’:‘:‘my PL-Rabt-West feade 1t SNAERGH m"ff- L !chdletunm, Calif,, departs Jan. 20. boarded the plane at San Juan|terday. Wainwright and to avoid difficulties [Would release President Soekarno | “As I find that there has been |"'P0. | o » {Main units of the fleet including Monday were described as Puerto over orders.” and members of his cabinet who [no violation of the law, the investi- A5t the ‘arest of Oatdinal Mindes "'GHW v 1 AY !‘l\e cruiser Duluth: the carrier Ricans returning to the United S'I‘O(K ouonl'lous were arrested when the Dutch |gation is terminated and the mat- {zenty by Bungary's Communist A PAIRO;S s | Boxer, the Mt. McKinley, a com- States after holiday visits to rela- VORI D o : H :‘tarted their so- c};xu;d rdpoufiebatc}; |ter closed |government. The Cardinal was ar- 'IHANKS DO ". AGAIN' munéi sLX;x;) :lt? k:h;;;uys)::: an; tives. NEW —{P—Clos- ition.” The U. N. had ordered bo S e ! " er Curtis, whic 3 ing quotation of Alaskn Junenu!HlSS llBEl Su" actions. The cease fire had Feanla 4 e e s 000000 i““wd Mondsy :" gh:r;es ‘0‘ spy= 4 | flagship, will leave about Feb. 1. . mine stock today is 3, ordered five days ago. Since then,|s WEATHER REPORT | “i'o"l:i:s";l :“th?‘*"u‘;m:; ’“;:;“es o" HouDAY IRAFH( In charge of Alaska defenses will The WaShlngion Gan 81%, Anaconda. 33%, urtias: OFF I"DEH“"EI.Y the Dutch captured the last town |+ w.'s wheraEs sommAD) o | o0, S0 D0 0L Ot be Rear Adm. A. E. Montgomery, Wright 7%, International Harvest- of any size in Central Java. ‘o This data is for 24-hour per- e “:n of a long s'mh of actions by Members of the Alaska Highway | CO0 msw;flng lk:L :l\l.uknn Sea fib?)n; er 27, Kennecott 56, New York ® jod ending C am. PST. e o i Patrol are ¢ itier, hen the fleet returns abou Merry GO Roun !Centra] 12%, Northern Pacific 19,| BALTIMORE, Dec. 29.—(M—'rrhl| Ho le In Juneau— Maximum, 36; :)}:soflnl:n]ng:xui:;ngu:::jn:::;tr:fi;x::: i ul;::fll;lge ct(l,xr:l;mfl‘?:‘efi.Ma“h Fig oty g o ‘IL S. Steel 707, Pound $4.03%. |of the $75,000 libel suit of Alger Hiss GEN. (. H. DGES [o minimum, 26. O et danit ™ Tt Tk hedn going on |end Will repeat the fine highway | Lt mddt in the San Francisco Bay BRv DREW PEARSON Sales today were 1,380,000 shares. |against* Whittaker Chambers, cen- At Airport— Maximum, 36; | % R e and this is |trafilc record of Christmas week- | where defenses will be com- (Copyright, 1948, by The Bell Syndicate, | Averages today are as follows: |tral figures in a Communist spy GOING Io RE“RE © maximum, 26. 5 i i e {m Pt by Vice Admiral, George Inc.) * |industrials 177.58, rails 53.37, util- m:;, was postponed indefinitely . . o b “Gastineau Channel r:-.sulrxns?:““';"' (‘u‘mu\‘dndvr of the Western ities 33.19. 5 1 . . FORECAST - i > el sea Frontier. ASHINGTON— Antonio Ber- | Attorneys for Hiss, under indict-| Npw YORK, Dec. 20.—#—Gen.! o Uunt:: -nlcvm-un . l:‘;;nkw.t\m Mt'x):qn;!l;autxll:::edm“”f”fj' Admiral DuBose, as commander mudez, President Aleman’s‘ top ofll ment in New York on two charges courtney H. Hodges, 61-year-old|e Cloudy with snow tonight e ulysses S Gregory “They have become mare: careful, |0 the Pirst Task Flest, is setting adviser, has informed the State I"IER“ lGNAl of perjury growing out of the Com- |pirs; Army commander, will retire!® and Thursday. Slowly ris- ® and have learned not- $o drive|UP (he maneuvers but will be suc- Department that he will “publicly munist investigation, obtained. the(from the Army next month. He|e ing temperatures. Highest o|p A Se "l when they have celebrated too!cceded on January 8 by Viee Adm. deny” any news leaks regarding "Ews BREV"IES‘POSEPOMMEM from Federal Judges|will live in San Antonio, Tex. l'e temperature Thursday about e asses way, a e oy |G. F. Bogan, now commander of secret negotiations, now in progress, | William C. Coleman and W. Calvin| Hodges, who led the First Army|e 34 degrees. Southeastétn Sty We of the Highway Patrol ap- |Atlantic Fleet Airforce. for an oil agreement between the| (By The Associated Press) |Chesnut. Attorneys for Chambersiin jis sweep across France andie winds 15-25 miles per hour o! SEATTLE, Dec. 20.—(P—Ulysses|precite it, and hope for as fine| DuBcse said the maneuvers will United States and Mexico. French and British newspapers :tszsflétfl tfmgze‘ l:;'o‘tllor: for delaying Germany in the recent wa.:, becomesie Thursday. o \s. Gregory, 0, a m‘dm of Juneau,|a record over the New Years, |COmblement in a sense last year's However, it is nonetheless a fact {commented favorably over the Six~ :fl“’h deh Y‘ L l62 Jan. 5. He is required to re-|e o | Alaska, for 25 years, died yester-| “There wasn't an accident last|BYrd expeditions to the South that both the State Department|Power western agreement for con-} '“ ”ebe is :“' s C:": {tire before the last day of January.{e PRECIPITATION ®|day at the home of a niece, Mrs.| weekend, not a car in the ditch or |Pole, but will use many newer de- and private American oil interests|trol of Germany’s Ruhr industries. hla tci“‘m e 8 atements about| golder of Distinguished Service| e (Past 2¢ hours ending 7:30 a.m. today ® |F. W. Bergen, in Edmonds. averturnad?” | velopments in various fields. Among —chiefly the Texas Company and |The Germans denounced the pact |7 Feing a Communist were Un-lawards won In both World Wars|e In juneau — 36 inches; ®| Mr. Gregory left Alaska three| Added Patrolman Al Lubike,|!0¢ €quipment to be tested are Cities Service—have been trying |but did not seem likely to boycott|*Ue Hodges has been commanding gen- ¢ since Dec. 1, 670 inches; ® !months ago because of illness. He|‘There wasn't even an argument »iour jet fighters, North Amerionn for some time to persuade the Mex- |it. SRR Lo e ieral of the First A-6, with head-|e gince July 1, 73.30 inches. ® had been employed by Alaska Ju- I o4 |FJ-18, to be placed aboard the ican government to reopen Mex-{ Russia, which long has wanted a TRAFFIC NOTICE {quarters at Governors Island, sincele At Airport — .15 inches; ® |neau Mines. | Boxer. ican oil lands to American opera- {Voice in the Ruhr, although she has July. 1946. e since Dec. 1, 293 inches; o it e NS S | S]’EAMER MOVEMEHIS | The Admiral said at least one of tors. refused to give the West any say in| The street department will oper-; e e since July 1, 4880 inches, o | cach type of navy vessel will be The State Department contends | Eastern Germany or Eastern Eu-iate snow removal equipment on BRIGHT TO SEATTLE !eo @ o o006 000 0 o o NOSOROPTIMIST MEETING B included in the fleet to “ade~ that this would greatly benefit both |YOPe, was left out. Moscow said the |Calhoun Avenue from Main Street| After inspection visits here and PR B | — | Princess Norah scheduled to sail quately cover all of the desired countries, since Mexico is sorely in |Plan was a triumph for “American |to Twelfth Street from midnight at Kodiak, Ear] Bright, vessel op-l OCEAN GUEEN DOCKS | Members of the Soroptimist Club 'from Vancouver tomorrow at 9 technical phases.” need of American dollars for trad- 'reaction.” to 8 am. tomorrow, the Police De- |erations chief for the Pish and' The seine boat Ocean Queen will omit their regular meeting ! i -o e ing on world markets, while "l Czechoslovakia, one of the iron partment announced today. No Wildlife Service, planned to re- from Hoonah, skippered by Jimmy during this heliday week. There a scheduled to sail from FROM FAIRBANKS curtain countries, renewed press at-, traffic will be allowed on Calhoun turn to his headquarters in Seattle Martin, zamc into the Small Boat will be no luncheon session to- |Seattle Friday if present strike Adler Conn of Fairbanks is at (Continued on Page Four) tacks on Roman Catholic leaders. 'at that time. today. Harbor this morning. mortow as previously seheduled, i ended the Baranof Hotel. . .

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