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2 N THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” —_— ] PRICE TEN CENTS ACK VOL. LXXV., NO. 11,587 JUNEAU, ALASKA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1950 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS r " DECIDES. AGAINST |$ AR Y BE OUT FROM L ~ |Yanks Refake Lost Ground AGROUND IN 'Is Asked for DEMANDED BY | iahti " STOCKPILING Foop 1S AsKed for ' RAILROAD STRIKE In Heavy Fighting; North ‘ i | \ ’ B.C. WATERS Armyi | b The Juneau Council for Civii| ‘ 4 | v 'l L. perenee st b e s ot AAFTTY A NO["I WASHINGTON-— ih —More rail- Koreans Seem 0" Ba'a“(e | decided against laying in an emer- | | |Wny workers struck today, ignoring v R b ' E ELET R ' gency stock of food immediately, | b | S AP I?QNhiw House plea to stay on the‘ LD d ober ugene epor e R. E. Robertson, chairman of the | 3 i S i X ' ? g ( | organization, announced after the | A H | The new strikes are in Pittsburgh . . A (By Associated Press) | police action stops at the 38th Par- i Skigg Condition-on [ E);pandsi%n for Alaska Out- Majority, Armed Servnces.m,fkcmc:gu, LR Senate Gives President Si-| 0 e ac.|dhel. High command planning has He said the council did not be- Ot i dke those called yesterday in) 3 been based on stopping the action AGdoNDIOOK Island |1or e was an mmste ne ined-ConstructionPro- | Committee, Press for | wousevie, Gieveand ana Minnenp-| mulfaneous Across Board |tsckea at botn enas of he wesern (5C pping | essity for such a step at this time, 1 olis, St. Paul, these are 5-day token H "| One result of the Korean war will 5 SEATTLE, Aug. 22—®—A small| ypa¢ such action be taken when it| [ s to a wage-hour dispute that has| e . e wnmarentls off batance|Of 17 Army divisions, a Fleet in- " freighter, with a 100-ton cargo of | seqls “that precaution demands it."| WASHINGTON, Aug. 22—®—The| WASHINGTON, Aug. 22— (@ —jdragged on for 17 months. | WASHINGTON, Aug. 22— — | nrln L8 SR B o lheq | cluding 23 cairlers of yatious types general merchandise for Alaska, Was | popertson reported that organ- | AFMY plans to send more men to| Nine Senators who form more than | All the strikes are comparatively | Overwhelming Senate approval of |\ \)yingitn e minously polsed | operation and an. Alr Force of reported aground in sinking condi-' jzation of air raid wardens and fire | Alaska as it carries on its present|a majority of the Armed Services small, but they are in such key|a home front mobilization bill vir- ottaiibived nously POeClgy groups. This was. the outling tion on a British Columbia-coastal | patrols is progressing, and first atd expansion. ‘cummittee demanded today that |Points that union leaders have es-- tually assured President Truman to- | o R.e(:ls made thelr heaviest at- which emerged in testimony by de- island today. A crew of five Was!gations will be set up when or- And it wants Congress to appro- | Congress stay in session until it/ timated they will put 50,000 mcn}dfly the power to invoke wage-price- tack on the southern end of m”r(nse officials on the President’s aboard. | ganization of the patrols is com- | Priate $20.305640 for construction of | approves universal military training PUY APt | rationing controls and otherwise | Lot yrone Sy g antn piy. | FEQUest for funds to prosecute tite District Coast Guard headquarters | pjeted, facilities for them. | tegtstation An attempt to settle the dispute | gear the nation to a Wartime 00t~ | yon " infantrymen ‘there siammed| S8 War in the name of the said other vessels had received tWo = ool Jesse R. “Jack” Carr, wing| This Was revealed today in testi-| The Senators said one by one in|last night dragged on until after | ing. shut, tha “u:‘ E bre:k‘thm: (Y- N distress calls from the 100-foot ‘comm:\nder of the Civil Air Patrol,| mony made public by the House | brief statements that the safety of | midnight—but got nowhere. The Senate passed the emergency | ¢, o qrive on ';'usnn'mnln Unuged‘ Navy officlals said the program Robert Eugene. The vessel is owned | has assured the defense council | APPropriations Comumittee on a sup- | the nation can be secured only if | Nevertheless, President Truman's | measure last night by a WhOPPINg | Nations supply base. | The . dough-{ {0r. Navy, expansion _envisions in- by the M. B. Dahl and Sons, Inc.| that the patrol will cooperate in|Plemental request for $10,486,976,000 young men are trained in mass to | top labor negotiator, John R. Steel- [85 to 3 vote. It did so after Writing|p,ve retook every inch of ro:m; creasing compatant ships from 243 £ of Juneau. | defense work, he said. for the Armed Services for the year | bear arms. man, said he would call the unions |in some restrictions on the Presi-|gney naq lost in_bitter fi hgun | onder the present budget to 262, The Coast Guard said the vessel | subject to Governor Ernest Grue- | that began July 1. Their statements came as Secre- | 2nd railroads together again today dent’s authority which administra-| mno Reds attacked the UB s. ,g,'th and bringing the total number of Arthur H. picked up & message from | ning's approval for including out-| No figures were given on the size | tary of Defense Johnson told the for further talks. tion forces battled against in vain. | pegiment on the northern end of |°PErating ships to 911 The total iy the Robért Eugene at 7:46 @m. lying areas in the Juneau defense |of the force it was contemplated to committee that Western Europe| There still was no indication that| The Senate bill and an economic(the front. Nine Russian-made|DUmver of planes for Navy and (PST) that it had run ashore on|organization, the council has named | Put in the Territory. | Jacks sufficient military strength to|Mr. Truman planned to seize the |controls measure which the House|tanks jed a battalion of Communiste | MATinG squadrons., will ' rlse. from Addenbrooke Island, in Queen g L. Keithahn, captain of the “This is all part of the Alaskan |slow down an aggressor until Ameri- roads. I approved on Aug. 10 are vastly dif- |, the pre-dawn assault. When the 6,233 to 7,335. Charlotte Sound; that its batteries | Norway Point area; Martin Lavenik, Development Program for the de- | can help arrives. Steelman said he had specifically | ferent in some essential details, but | gmoke cleared, four o'l the. nide The Tuesday afternoon (Korea were nearly under water and it airport area; William R. Norton,|fense of this country from that He said the United States doesn't requested the unions to call off | both authorize Mr. Truman to im-|tanks were knocked out, bringing|time) WAF SUMIRFY of the U. N. would not be able to use its Tadio |Auke Bay area; Robert Druxman,|area” Brig. Gen. W. L. Barriger, | now have enough trained men to| thelr strikees, but that they had re- | pose wage-price curbs and other| the toll to 10 Red tanks in three | Commander, Gen. MacArthur, sald much longer. | Fritz Cove Road area; R. L. Thorne, | Chief of the Army’s Service Division, | “meet the threat of total war with- [ fused. | inflation controls. nlghts. No American tanks were|!2nd based liied planes - smashed Another ship had picked UP @ West Juneau area; and Oscar Pear- | told the committee. | in the time limits which present con- | Today’s strikes went off like clock- | So the bill which finally goes o pyt, again at the hinterland held by the message two hours earlier that the |son, Thane area. | “We do not have the facilities ditions impose.” work. !the White House—after a Senate| Behind the lines enemy infil- Reds. Destroying eight tanks, six ' Robert Eugene was in sin¥ing condi- | Robertson said each area cap-| there now to put the troops in that| Gen. Omar N. Bradley, Chairman| The Brotherhood of Railroad | House conference committee irons | trators raised Cain, covering roads | 2Uldings. threé Boxcars, two trucks, tion off Addenbrooke Light. tain will be required to submit to|should be in that area. lof the Joint Chiefs of Staff, also| Trainmen and Order of Railway |out differences between the tWo|with sniper fire. " One., roadbigok | 190 1§ S paitions And e stz bt Danl.owned ship, the the defense council the names of | “As a result of expansion of the| testified that universal military | Conductors called the =walkout versions—certainly will carry wages | two miles behind U, . lines and 10| 0'¢C, Car. Other equipment was Dorothea, was reported four hours six “loyal Americans,” residing in | Army we will get in that area and | training “is the only satisfactory against U. S, Steel Corporation's |price-rationing authority. miles from Taegu was wiped out damaged.. . B-30. bombers struck o tvom the Robert Eugene on & | his area to service in defense work. | we would like to have this (appro- | long range answer' to the need for a frallroad, the Elgin, oliet nat Enst. | Overriding vigorous administra- | atter it stalled allied supplies to the | “onday Dight at Red airfields. i outh, The Coast Guard said| Juneau area captains are: Joseph | priation) to take care of them. | reservoir of trained men to meet the | ¢rn At Chicago, and the Pittsburgh | tion opposition, the Senate voted |front for two hours. The Amer- B-20's hit Chongjin North Kor- it was proceeding to the scene. A. McLean, Curtis Shattuck, Letie New Secret Base | “many years of tension in interna- and Lake Erie Railroad, Pittsburgh. |50 to 36 to require the President | icans fought under a rain of heavy ea, with 100, tna of bombe. Bound For Juneau Geiger, George Danner Jr, Stanley | . The Army's request for Alaskan | tional affairs” he said probably lies —_— to invoke wage and price controls |artillery fire. A British Sunderland flying boat W. R, Kuppler, the owners’ agent | Grummett, Earle Hunter, John|construction is broken down this|ahead after the Korean situation is simultaneously and virtually across squadron patrolied the southwestern i Gentile, said the Robert Eugene Hermle, James Madsen, C. . Grad- | way: settled. NO PERSONMEL, POLICY |[tne board if he imposed them Allies Hold Firm (IS0ree. AN 1o Mipat me mavy- left Seattle Sunday. He said it op- ford, M. L. MacSpadden, Jake| Fort Richardson, $16325000. | RS e iy at all. The amendment was sponsor-| But allled forces held firm all| ment of supplies to the Reds whose erates under charter to Juneau | Cropley, K. G. Merritt, Walter G.| Ladd Air Force Base, $2,706,000. | (HAms mm As ed by Republican Senators Bricker along the battleline againss the|lsnd lines. Rave .besn: chewsd to merchants. It was carrying for them | Heisel, Trevor Davis, George Cleve- | Eijelson Air Force Base, ms,soo.zwmz HSH SUES Io (Ohio) and Wherry (Neb). combined welght of nine enemy |bits by &lr attae a cargo of such items as meats, gro- land, Henry Harmon, Henry Legge,| A communications station, util- ; WADE ]'AKB ovm ANS That directive killed a section of | divisions—90,000 - men—poised for ceries and hardware. | Felix Toner, Al Zenger Sr., Ed Pey- | ities, roads, walks, drainage, street STOP USE OF "AME the administration bill which would | °ffensives in any of three directions { He said it is a fully refrigerated ton, William Hughes, Robert Cowl- | lighting and other similar itemes, | have let Mr. Truman put wage and | —down the east coast, from the vessel that hds been on the Juneau- | ing, Rod Darnell, John Kennedly, | 39,205,940. i BY COMPE"“G FIRM Hugh Wade, new area director | Price controls into effect on a sel- north against Taegu, or along the Seattle route since 1947. |O. F. Benecke, Henry Green, Vern | The location of this was ngt of the Alaska Native Service, an- | ective basis it he cared to, in ad- south coast against Pusan. i eupnier sdld he had no ‘direct |Lee, Howard Simmons, Albert Ham- | mentioned, It was described as | SPOKANE, Aug. 22— 4P —The nounced today that no policy ot vance of any overall program. On /the:eastern-odastal seotor. &t word fromy the ,vessel. ] mer, Cleo Commers, John Murphy, | «classified project.” | Whiz Fish Products Company, Seat- personnel changes dre contemplated The House bill permits selective tsk;e 130-mile: Korgan tmthle line; the e daid the Robert Eugene's'skip- | Glenn Oakes, and Robert Akervick.| General Barriger told the com- i tle, went into court yesterday to |as a result of his taking over leader- controls. o xl"““ FiNon. Divisacs acpes per is Fred M. Dahl, oldest of m“ hAu Ao ‘captalns will meet with | mittee the funds sought would bring | stop a competitor from using Lhelship of the agency. : i p‘ont nine. miles north, of the ¢ D L sons of Juneau, Kuppler said |the ~defense council at its next|army installations in Alaska to 75| name Whiz Distributors, Wholesale| Wade, formerly assistant reglonal Rort of Pobang, under (e, covey. 68 D o e members were Don- | Ieeting Monday at 7:45 pan. in the | per cent of full Teadiness. Sea Foods. director of the Federal S RETAINING WALL BUILT SHALIRG by D ENu anka, dite) nd three | City Hall, Robertson said. A 4 Ny A e Pedersl' Securlty to the west of them, the south Kor- ald ‘Tanner of Juneau ai Lo i o i Col. G, E. Galloway, Chief of the| The Seattle firm said in its com- | Agency, pointed out that the ANS ean capital divisi from Seattle—Mate Garey Kirk-| USIERe WL op et I air- | Army Engineers construction opera- |plaint that it had registered the |is an operating agency whose po-| AS WORK ON EVERGREEN 5o cac: of xigyo. moved north| MONTREAL, Aug. 22—UP—More %3 land; C. Reed, Chief Engineer;i "0 =~% o clmets are requested | tions division, estimated that the | name with the U. S. Patent Office |icies are set by the Secretary of the | Ob the Naktne front southwest | AN 124000 railway workers walked Charles D. Gaeke, Seattle, the cook, | B - B b 5 T . clerk | jew facilities would be ready within | and had been using the designation | Interior and the Commissioner of BOWL RGAD PRWR“SES of Ta IR w,“, west|ott their jobs today in Canada’s and Harry Holloway. et e Oy, Bl INE 8 two years. | since 1026. 1t asked damages of $5,- | Indian Affairs. e, e R o "tos | tirst nationwide rail strike. Prime Kuppler said the Dorothea, which | O Y, Galloway said the request includes | 000 for alleged loss of business and | Don Foster, former head of the on troops dug in along thel ... ... pouis st Laurent announc- 4 is owned | B 1 5 > 2 | X A retaining wall has been built|east bank of the river where they was heading for the scene, is oW ,MAN ARRESIED no funds for new barracks. | injury to reputation and credit. ANS has been assigned to Minne- |y preparation for filling the bed (and Marines had wiped t a(©d after an emergency cabinet meet~ individually by the father, Martin | “They are under contruction or| The Spokane firm is operated by | apolis, Minn, to head the Indian|of H ’;w ity road 'nngver reen | threatenin é‘,mm nist brid, m:] 4.|ing in Ottawa that Parliament is B. Dahl. It is southbound with a on the way,” he said. | Richard Williams. | Service area there. Bo:l ) Mflyory waim: chdflzmn They k,p,,g close w‘:w; D:, :;D:::e; being summoned to meet at once canned salmon cargo. 0“ plulo“luM Rear Admiral J. F. Jelley, Chief of | Wade said his place as assistant | announced today. small Red bridgehead just north )0 deal with the crisis. —_— the Navy Bureau of Yards and, FROM KETCHIKAN | regional director for the Federal| mhe road is 'bemg driven into|of them.at Hyongpung, 14 miles The Prime Minister said the gov- FROM ASTORIA ‘I'HEFI' (HARGE Docks, asked the committee to ap-| Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Clark and | Security Agency will probably be the Bowl near the south end of the southwest of Taegu, = ernment must act to protect the T. F. Sandoz and, Paul Pankey of | prove a total of $1,548,000 for Navy | Mrs. Louise Miller are among Ket- | filled by a U. 8. Public Health Ser- | culn g 53 ridge over Gold| AP Correspondent William Shinn national ~ interest in what would {, Astoria, Ore, aie siaying at e 4 installations at Kodiak, Alaska. |chikan visitors stopping at the Bai- | vice official, Who has not yet heen | orach. Bxcopt at the Galhoun Streot | reported from a Korcan port that| Jtherwise develop quickly into a Baranof Hotel. ’ T Dz.N:ER‘, A:Agl, ZZ—A\A’,—AtgdyL;:mg, of chisx. 8835}000 would gnt !oward\anil:{utel. named. . {end, the roadway will follow Gold | South Korean Marines landed at “serious emergency.” \ b . 6 ! | . | ~'Mayor Hendrickson said the road |Port. yesterday. The landing was| on at once to ease the te-up cris- ne as lngton of some plutonium—a vital atom | District Headquarters. i N i will not be for the use of private|the third made in the area of the |18, ‘but . some areas faced. grave " bormb comiponent—from the Los Al-| The o‘ther $713,000 would be spent | ce uneau r'ver e u’ns | automobiles but as a way in.which | Yéllow Sea off the west coast in the | threats of food shortages. P Merry % Go _Round iu,mus Atomic Project in New Mex-~ ondrepfxr and tpla;emelnt of d(:t::ks | to get heavy equipmept into the past week. Other South Korear Parliament has been ’ In', recess, By TOM McNAMAEA and % 1109, and pler at the Naval operating| GAGHLZET 2 Bowl. Marines advanced on the extreme |but hqdwndnewberéqflhdsom y TQ! c! Sanford Lawrence , Simons, 28-|base in Kodiak. Up until now, equipment taken |Southern front from their penin-|in any case because of the intérna- FRED BLU,TN‘THA'; o ienr-old fa:hex;flo_( "threer c:ulld:_en. | i into the recreation area has had |Sular bridgehead on the Tongyong tional situation. The Prime Minister h 8ha. DY e vas aceuse official of violati | " e e Do Pose. |12 Aomic Energy "act ana was| STOCK QUOTATIONS B e R e "Bt the dwpesntativee of A the ; - 3 j ' ' m(":“' = o brief vacation, his ?:::l;:,:::‘t“:; d:rysw,ooo Hopd acer [ A small city street crew is carry-; With the Red momentum ap- .w’p:; ?:'Y act together in discharg- column will be written by mem- Rl B, Keomer. sgent in | NEW: YORK,' dug. 23 Olosing: | ing out the job, the Mayor said. The | parently halted on the fronts, ob- s“‘:n u:n responsibilities to meet the bers of his staff). charge of the FBI ofli’ce here, said quotations of Alaska Juneau mine work is expected to be completed | Servers in the Orgent looked upon Ooven;monc R, - that the stolen plutonium—a highly stock today is 2%, American Can | in about three weeks. Communist C‘l'llinns appeal to th: which . bea T el t;ret: WSHINGTON — Though mys- | sissionable and very valuable ma- 97%, Anaconda 34%, Curtis-Wright | Asked why the city had not ap- U. N. for a “peaceful settlement’ thils mornl.nng i u; Bylfl:’ terious subs have been Teported oy was recovered a few days ago | 10%, International Harvester 31,/ plied for matching Public Works |88 a possible attempt to save face | s s wll unon] lea ers. in Panamanian waters since the (g on e yiging Dlace under Simon’s|Kennecott 64%, New York Central | funds for the job, he said that the |and make the best of a worsening rg’ ¢ ;t 4 m: —"; settlement. Korean fighting, our vital Pal-{ro . v wosin a small glass vial. | 1%, Northern Pacific 17%, U. S. | Bowl does not belong to the city | sitution which might develop into !o-:’; 50“‘,‘ ‘e, :": ; pay and a ama Caral defenses have been| g, e gaid Simons admitted the | St€ 377 Pound 2.80%. | ibut is used with permission of the|a hard defensive war for the Kor-} wn" siad '*k “:: of the ,Pm:n‘ dangerously neglected. | theft. Sales today were 1,550,000 shares. | owner, the Alaska.Juneau Gold |€an Reds. Reports reaching Hong o IonE; l" - d"“‘“me:“ offer It is no secret in Panama, for |~ 4 "tne time of his arrest, Simons | AVerages today were: industyials Mining Company. Kong said the buildup of U. N.|'© pay scales under a 44-hour week ] le, that we dom't have al . ried 219.79; rails 63.00; utilities 39.56. | He said the city is now investigat- | strength in Korea caused Red|Were rejected. :fi:ep er'iimzer plane in the area 32" empéoyed s Lhthmvirslv,y o ing the possibility of having the | leaders to lose heart. E . 1 nver, doing research work on. an 4 . | g When ‘anj uhidentitied sub WaS| .y mcketgpmjecL G b o e e Y property deedzd to the city by "‘"ms‘:m -an(:"nu“zxevm;ht: pes A"(HORAGE PlUMBfl!S ' reported, lupking Loft the . GAn8l} T ygiamer said he did not know ex- mining company. Bluiad 1o the wOrCEE e ol Red zone . recedlly, the Navy! Was|, 1)y when the plutonium was stolen WEATHER REPORT Where Lgrorse they had syp:::: n:i AGRH To m m'“ caught without even g scout Plane |, "aiq Simons was at Lgs Alamos| e Temperatures for 34-Hour Period victorious advances, now they are| ANCHORAGE, Aug. 22— (R — and had to appeal to the AIl|, ".; enlisted man in the Armyle ending 6:20 o'clock this morning S'uMER MOVEMEMS bemoaning “violent resistance.” Plumbers union members (AFL) ac- Force for help. ;’“ “‘:_ '“‘; s"":fii from August, 1944, to. March of 1946 Today the Red radio’announced | cepted last night the terms of an could, et into 808 B < IR, % band from March. of 1846 Lo dulv-oflls PREOARITAT N ON Baranof due at 7 am. tomorrow | that allied bombings had killed or | Anchorage area strike settlement. lone 53'”-{ u:d‘cnm:f:: | 1946 was employed as @ civilian sci- | @ (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today ® | I from Seattle. | wounded 11,582 civilians and de-| Secretary of Defense Johnson re- 1 Wflc:frs :’:i;"a:y baces in Panama |entist at the At;:mlr;‘b esl'_,a:l;smerr; ® In Juneau—Maximum, 74; Princess Norah in port from Van- |stroyed 11 important industrial cently denounced the strike as a 1so supposed to be on war- Kramer quote e slight, ® minimum, 47. L3 couver and will sail for Skagway plants. hreat to national security. The ‘:"e “B 1°n.5 pYeL one month after | Selentist as saying that he took the|e At Airport—Maximum, 76; at 11:30 p.m, Against this changing background, | “greement to end it was reached g st ! felvate | RIMPBIND, 23 5 CoHPERFe) o est temperature tonight about’ ® | Princess Louise scheduled to sail | the Security Council was -called toj at a conference with Federal con- plane drifted in for an emergency el . from Vancouver tomorrow night meet again (2 p.m., EST) for what ciliators in Seattle a week ago. Tanding at Howard Field, a Key AT JUNEAU HOTEL . FORECAST . and due to arrive Saturday subject | appeared certain to be its ninth The plumbers were to return to base now run by the Army. The Although he is comfortably sit-|e (Junsau snd Visinity) .| to settlement of railroad strike. | no-progress session on Korea. Con- their jobs on civilian and military lot, Enrique Kochman of Pan- uated, back at the Juneau Hotel| e Variable cloudiness to- | Alaska due to arrive southbound | tinuation of the blockade on pro-{ Projects this afternoon and to- pilot, City, tinkered around with | Where he started, Russell Magill @ night and Wednesday. Low- o Friday. | cedure by Russia’s Jakob A. Malik, | morrow. ?;n . instry;mem, panel, then took again is looking for an apartment. est temeprature tonight about Chena due to leave Seaftle Thurs- | President for August, was expected,| The agreement calls for a basic e st tieio o gy BE had becn delighiod Wi 1ap one}e 50. Highest Wednesday near o day. | It We Go North ‘cale of $3.50 an hour. The old scale O molicing him, This happened |he found, but It Wat destropert Buns | 8 . | “Aleutian win sail from Seattle| If the United Nations decides to|Was §3. The new agreement also 1 on a Sunday, & favorite day for 98710 the Packard's Marina fire. o Gerald (Jerry) Taylor, 12, Junean's ace Soap Box Derby racer, is |Saturday and is due to arrive|push its police action in Korea be-|calls for one hour of straight time surprise attacks. | e City of Juneau — None; | shown grinning above after returning Thursday from the National | here Tuesday. |yond the 38th Parallel which div-travel to the local military base; time Though Kochman ' reported 4 . oyl since August 1—L14 inches; ¢ ' goap Box Derby championship at Akron, O., August 13. Jerry, first Chilcotin scheduled to arrive here | ides North and South Korea, more!and a half for the ninth hour of what he had done, another pri-| T%O stalf members > x-xl e extle since July 1—1107 inches. ® | Clocy B racer to represent this city in the national coasting classic, Thursday from Vancouver. funds than the $10500.000000 asked { work daily and for all Saturdsy vate pilot, Lawrence Breece, pulied | torial Department of Health are At Airport — None; 8 | e (hdatst e rocsived (4l (o Sunoss champb | by President Truman may be need- | work; double time Sunday. On re- T i "Sle e )+ | WoADE e Eets Tesieieued oL [0y o, ainop AMINEAMS Thctiee; (91, e fi the Juncss champlon- FROM PETERSBURG | ed. Secrctary of Defense Johnson!mote jobs, the ninth and tenth Juneau Hotel. They are Joyce e since July 1—7.80 inches. o ship. He was eliminated at the nationals after a photo-finish show- Marguerite Bidwell of Petersburg|has estimated that the fighting|hours Would be at time and a half (Contipued op Page Four) Pickett and William E, Baird, P e 00 e e PO OO ed he came out second best in heat 45. (Empire Photo) is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. lmi':hl end about February if the|during five-day weeks, TWIN RED OFFENSIVES THROWN illion TOTAL DRAFT FIFTY THOUSAND |UNIFORM