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£/ consider its dec CONC JRESSIONAL ABRARY VASHINGTON. D. C “ALL THE NEWS \ OL. LXXVIII .]L NE YANKS C Dedision in (ommie (ase Holds Supreme Court Refuses to Reconsider Decision Against 11 Leaders WASHINGTON, Oct. 8—(? Supreme Court today refused to re- ion against 11 top y s convicted over- Communist Pe of plotting to teach violent throw of the U. 8. government. Seven of the Reds are now serving their prison sentences. The other four are fugitives being sought by the FBI. Attorneys petition ur c-near the case and June. for the 11 in a 55-page .reverse it: decision, the petition said '1., be constructed by law- forcing authorities on every gov- ymental level to impose a ban of upon the Communist rty. The high tribunal also took no ion today on a request that it re- consider its refusal to hear an ap- peal by six attorneys for the Red leaders who were sentenced to pri- conduct in his court during the trial of the Red leaders. Paper Wam For Juneau | Is Discussed N The establishment of a new ])'m( plant at Thane new cussion stage according Heintzleman g forester for the U. 8. Forest Serviee, who return- cd from S ittle on Saturday. Work- s plans for the plant a ar !Iunl,u man & contacted companies mwusud the site With construction scheduled < Xt Nn'(‘) the Ket on ed the high tribunal to| A reservoir | \Prmcess FHlizabeth In (anada | Arrives at Montreal with Duke Hushand in Trans-Aflantic Plane | | | | Duke of Edinburgh, came to C in a tr their first visit orth Ameri- | to th couple stepped from E: , 16 mhiles shortly hefore were 19 minutes ahead noon. of They chedule. The Governor General, Viscount exander, was on hand to welcome 60-ton Americhin-built -cruiger “Camopus” rumbled ir overhead, thousands of | Canadi massed at Dorval airport cheered lustily. The Princess and her, husband | arely missed a drab, chill recep- tion. Threatening clouds lifted and the sun broke through only a -short time before the plane came into | &8 view. Throughout the night '\ml\ into the morning a cold rain had| fallen. he ace pilot of the British Ovt Airways Corporation, O. P. Jones, had been flying at 24‘000}' feet, reporting fine weather above the low-hang clouds. | The plane hed down ut] Gander, Nfld,, earlier for refuelling. the SlasSen Savs Slale Dept. . Hurt China WASHINGTON, Oct. 8—L gan, D.D., was forn Stassen contended today the | first bishop of the ecord makes it plain the State De-|[J au at impress partment played a part in under- | terday in the C mining the Chinese Mationalists,|tivity of the Blessed Virgin Mary. and contradicts denials by Secre-| Fresiding prelate was the Most tary. Ache and Ambassador Phil-|Rev. Thomas A. Connolly, DD, J.C.D,, Archbishop of Seattle and Metropolitan of the new Province Shown above in his potifical robes is D.D., who was installed yi round is the Mest Rev. Fra L postelie © cn October 3.2nd preac The Most Rev. Dermot ally installed as Diocese of | monies yes- | of the Na- ve ¢ before a Senate For- Hew Blshop ol Juneau Alaska, who consecrated Bishop O’Fianagan in Anchorage hed the sermon yesterday = e O'Flana- eign Relations subcommittee, Stas- t unde y immediate en said: regional foy- will ge! le in Seattle, held conf es with the of-| «Ehe denials by the State De- | of Seattle of which the Diocese of Juneau is a suffragan see. Archbishop Connolly was assisted by the Most Rev. Francis D. Glee- an of the Ketchikan Pulp d Company to draw up water partment of things which I know are true, the claims by the State | Department of things I know are son, 8. J, DD, Vicar Apostolic of Alaska, whose territory was divid- ed in the erection of the Diocese . in the trade organization. the announcement v‘lml hikan pulp plant is to be | Heintzleman stated compan: for the Inside F between Seattle Haines opover ports in B ish Col a and Southeast Al ‘While in Sl‘:\“]l‘ he was interview by a number of these com! stated that he had no official con- nection with any of the- cnmpann» ernor now considering . es lishment o ferry service. {v Heintzleman attended the Pacific| Jc Northwest Trade Conference, which | was held in Missoula, Mont. He is| regional vice president for Alaska | not true, leave me very uneasy and disturbed with regard to our country’s {uture policy.” The Senate group is considering Jessup’s nomination to be a dele- gate to the coming United Nations neral Assembly meeting in Pa. ferry post in which he represents this y on many special occasions. former Republican Gov- innesota and now presi- of the University of Pennsyl- ia,. testified last week on the F3 up nomination. Iie said then that tne late Sen- ator Arthur Vandenberg (R- Mich) told him that Acheson and | Jescup plugged at a secret White | House meeting in 1949 for a cut- TO ATTEND FUNERAL off of aid to Nationalist China. e et | As a follow-up to this testimony, BERVIOE (1N STATES | excerpts from Vandenberg’s diary Mrs. Crystal Jenne was to leave | were made public in New York last MRS. CRYSTAL JENNE | night. of Junecau. He preached the sermon Mos v. Joseph P. Dougherty, D. wl ecrated bishop of the Diccese of Yakima, the Right Rev. Raphael Heider, O.S/B., of St Martin’s Abbey, Olympia, and the Very Rev. Harold O. Small, S. J., Portland, Provincial of the Oregon Province of the Society of Jesus. Nine priests from various parts f Alaska were present: the Rev. figrley A. Baker and the Rev. Joseph T. Walsh of Anchorage, the Rev. G. Edgar Gallant and the Rev. Raj- mond W. Mosey of Skagway, the Rev. William T. McIntyre, S. J., of Holy Cross, the Rev. David A. Mel- bourne of Cordova, the Rev. Law: rence A. Nevue, S. J. of Sitka and the Rev. Robert L. Whelan, S.J., and the Rev. James U. Conwell, S. J., of Juneau. New Dincese con new ries present were the |« ACKT AU, ALASI&A MONDAY 0O( ALL‘ THE TIME” |0I ER 8, 1951 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE PRICE TEN CENTS (ease-fire Talks Will ; Be Resumed Change in Meeting Place Accepted by Ridgway TOKYO thew B. in princiy posal that begin & The said a si ity” of ths Oct. 8—M—Gen. Mat- way tonight accepted the Communist pro- | Korean cease-fire talks | w near Panmunjom. | eme Allied commander in the “immediate vicin- Red outpost, six miles | southeast of Kaesong, would meet| the “fundamental condition of | equality of movement and control.” | The Reds broke off the talks at| Kzesong 2. 28, Ridgway told the top Communist | commanders in Korea he was in-| structing his liaison officers to meet Red liaison officers at 10 am. | { Wednesday (5 p.m., Tuesday, PSTI, ' to hammer out details for re-open- | ing talk | Presumably the liaison meeting will be held in Panmunjom, as | were most of its predecessors. Ridg answered a Red note received Sunday. In it the Reds proposed: 1. The >anmur 2. The truce talks be shifted to m, Kaesong five-mile neutral | zone be extended to include Mun- | ence giie—in e s D TR P the Most Rev. Dermot O'Flanagan, s the Bishep of Juneau. In the is D. Gleeson, 8.J.,, D.D, Vicar Sourdoughs Me Swelfering Svn DIEGO, Calif., Oct. 8—P—| as the day Alaska sour- | hiere got together for 1 yarn swapping. what happened? The sun down and the thermometer | it up and up, until it reached | made it the hottest d yeat | Oppenheimer, 85, recalled at it was warm, comparatively, in | agway in January of 1898. “Wasn' ow,” he said. “But there was| the next April.” previous 1951 high here was 37, registered in July and again n September. n§ Eh'u\ r L st the Luther = 7 lndochina Fighting SAIGOX, Indochina, Oct. 8—(P—| ) 2 sources said today Red ina is stepping up the flow uI litary aid to Ho Chi Minh’s| ces in north Indochina, where ench and Viet Namese are h.\t!- g a new major- Communist-led ffensive, Fragmentary reports available to fficials here indicate that after a oin 'ed China Aldmg ‘ | <an, site of the UN, Command Ad- vanee Headquarters, about 15 miles away. 8. Both sides to assume respon- sibility “or eontrolling the confer- effect to establish ,omt arad con(ral ' Hewshoys Have e Real jReason for Belated Deliveries Saturday The Empire newsboys had a real | reason for making their paper de- late on Saturday. A total of 26 sellers, route car- riers and assistants were guests of the Capitol Theatre for a mat- ince Saturday afternoon. Before to the show, they were treated Empire to ice cream at Percy's. The celebration was in ob-| ervance of National Newsboys’ Day concluding National Newspap- er Week. Those boys entertained by the Empire were: Dale Hillerman, John Vavalis, Jr., Pat Moore, Peter Ar- etsinger, Bill Pegues, Eric Beach, David Argetsinger, John Holmquist, arlito Diaz, Jerry Rosenberger, yzer Polley, Ernie Kronquist, John cilsen, Casey Harris, Greg Baxter, iney Muir, Don Dapcevich, Dick Pegues, Frank Deland, Ken Merritt, | De Duncan Cady, Joe Poor, Rlchard; Boehl, Carl Beyer and Kirk 'rou:'-| liveries FROM SITKA L. Van Ermen and Charles wer, both, of Sitka, are staying the Baranof. AT BARANOF Frank Getman, of Sitka, is stay- |ing at the Baranof Hotel. Denali sails from Seattle Friday. 3aranof scheduled to arrive | craggy Heartbreak Ridge in eastern | Lockman, 1b 'Box Score ] Offficial box score of the (mulh: | game of, the 1951 World Series | & New York Bauer, rf | Rizzuto, ss | Berra, ¢ DiMaggio, cf Woodling, 1f McDougald, 2b-3b | Brown, 3b | Coleman, 2b Collins, 1b Reynolds, p Totals \A) om [CRopepTaepoel Infantrymen Baitle With-| in 200 Yards of Top of Heartbreak Ridge U. 8. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD- | New York (N) QUARTERS, Korea, Oct. 8—(P—A | Stanky, 2b thin line of dog-tired American In- | Dark, ss fantrymen today edged toward the | Thompson, rf top of the last Red-held peak on | Irvin, If Epworomoo~wmol @ - N CoOoRON = -~ Brrmo 9 Scarcurmwounce - T R SECHP O Korea. ‘Thnm\un 3b Last reports put them within 200 | Mays, cf vards of the summit, 'Communist| Westrum, ¢ grenades and machinegun [irr‘ Ma poured down from Red bunkers| a-Lohrke above as the troops of the U. 8.|Jones, p Second Division's 23rd Regiment | b-Rigney fought forward foot by foot and | Kennedy, p bunker by bunker. Totals 30 27 —Popped out for Maglie in 5th. —Struck cut for Jones in 8th. | cococccavnAwHNWS ®oococooconNoONOwWmT NooocococoocoooRNa" Cooccocommwoocomo® Across the Mundung valley to |y the west the Ninth Regiment of the Second Division fought fircely-resisting North Koreans for possession of Kim Il Sung ridge, named by the Reds for the | North Korean premier. A pooled dispatch from-the front said the Doughboys took several small hills. Their progress toward the ridge itself was slowed by Com- munist artillery and small arms fire. Between Kim and Heartbreak, In- | fantrymen of the 38th Regiment, Errors—Thomson, Stanky. RBI — | Irvin, Collins, Reynolds, DiMaggio 12, McDougald, Thomson. 2B-—Dark 4, Woodling, Brown. HR—DiMaxglo., DP—Rizzuto, McDougald and Col-; | lins; Reynolds, Rizzuto and Col- lins 2; Rizzuto, Coleman and Col- lins. Left—New York (A) 8; New York (N) 5. BB—Maglie 2 (Bauer, Collins); Jones 1 (Woodling); Rey- |nolds 4 (Thomson 2, Westrum, ‘Thomnson). SO—Maglie 3 (Rizzuto, DiMaggio, McDougald); Jones zi also of the Second Division, slashed | (Reynolds, Rizzuto); Kennedy 2 northward and captured a small| (DiMaggio, Woodling); Reynolds 7| | Yanks BEAT GIANTS 6-2 §Tired Army Edges Closer To Summit Communist Proposal for| Reynolds “Evens Big Series Pitches 8-Hitter; Two- run Homer Made by DiMaggio in Fifth Frame | Short Score Yanks Giants Composife Score (4 GAMES) . veud obal aum 12 3¢ 14 30 SCORE BY INNINGS YANKS Runs Hits Errors GIANTS Runs Wits Errors NEW YORK, Oct. 8— (® —Allie Reynolds evened the World Series at two games each today by pitch- ing the New York Yankees to eight-hit 6-2 victory over the N York Giants before 49,010 fars at the Polo Grounds. ‘While the sturdy Indian from Oklahoma City turned back the Giants, his mates ripped into Sal Maglie and Sheldon Jones for 12 hits including a two-run homer by Joe DeMaggio in the fifth. Rey- nolds had singled home the tie- breaking run in the fourth. Giants cCoOoW o~OoWw CO=OR ONMd cooWwm omBm® o~o® o~mo® o OoONNS O~O0O® o~mo® e PYRE TITE oMmE coom ~ooO® cwm® DiMagglo, ‘s‘lupplns % \mnmrfdmono of Maglie’s piteh inte- the upper left field seats some 350 feet away. It was DiMaggio's eighth home run in 10 series, leav- * ing him some distance behind Babe Ruth’s all-time high of 15. The Giants who pummeled Reynolds hard to win the open- ing game, 5-1, found Allie a dif- ferent - pitcher today. Blazing that fast ball and darting curve and slider past the hitters, the 33- year-old righthander had serious trouble with only one man. . .Al Dark. The Giant shortstop hit three straight doubles before he grounded into a double play in the eighth, In the ninth Reynolds wobbled hill. ‘Tanks attached to the regi- | (Lockman, Westrum 2, Maglie, Ir- ment moved into the valley and|vin, Stanky, Rigney). HO-—Maglie Other Allied tanks roared into|nedy 0 in 1. Winner — Reynolds; Satae east of Heartbr for the | Loser—Maglie. . U—Al Barlick (N) point-biank fire on the Reds but|base; Lee Ballanfant (NL) second roceived heavy artillery fire in re- base; Art Gore (NL) left field foul Across the war torn peninsula |line; John Stevens (AL) right field on the western front British and Receipts—$233,887.85, slewly forward on both sides of — the Upper Imjin river against pl AY BY -BY-PLAY There little but patrol action on the west-central front. | S YANKS — Maglie walked Bauer made behind ‘one of the heaviest| M * \rtilleFy ‘bartagea” of AHelwar. . A |°D JGUE- plienes, Rimyto . meik| i for Berra's sinking liner. DiMaggio, it d“:‘;;salj:::m;“‘:] s with a 3 and 1 count, hit a long A onarbianes| deck, about three feot outside’ the pounded Red road and rail facili- ties. in more than 60 places in western | and northwestern Korea. In pre- Fifth Air Force pilots said they spotted 1,800 Red vehicles and de- were attacked but results were not observed. Atomic Test Next Atomic Tests, pounded Red positions on Kim. 8 in 5 innings; Jones 4 in 3; Ken- | third strafght aay. ned SR L e LR base; Joe Paparella (AL) third turn. foul line. T—2:57. A—49,010 (paid). American Infantrymen ground bitterly resisting Reds. The Allied sdvance Sunday, was | TIRSY ENNING pooled dispatch ‘sald the UN’s big|GOWD SWInging. Mays came i fask US. Fifth | foul that hit the upper left field Fighter-bombers relentlessly U.N. pilols said they cut rail lines | dawn. attacks on the east coast, stroyed at least 125. Two trains Truman Won'f See WASHINGTON, Oct, 8 — (® — said today he knew of no plans for Nev. That was his response to ques-| tions about a published report tha! Mr. Truman might visit Las Vegas | | foul pole. DiMaggio, after fouling|and Manager Casey Stengel rush- |oft five consecutive pitches, looked |ed Bob Kuzava and Johnny Sain |at a sharp-breaking curve ball|into fast bullpen action. A walk to |for a third called strike. Hank Thompson and singles by No runs, no hits, no errors, one left on base, GIANTS — Stanky lined a 1 and Monte Irvin and Bobby Thomson gave the Giant a second run. With two men on base, Willie Presidential Secretary Joseph Short | President Truman to witness the| next atomic tests at Las Vegas, ¢ 1 pitch right directly into Rizzuto's Mays bounced into a game-ending love, double play. Dark rammed a double off the/ Backed up by a tight defense, left field wall sliding into second that tied a series record with four Jahead of Woodling's strong throw. | doukle plays, Reynolds evens mat- | Thompson rolled to McDougald and | ters with two wins each. They play was out at first on a close play, the fifth game at the Polo Grounds |Dark advancing to third. Irvin tomortow and then return to the | drilled a single between short and | Yankee Stadium Wednesday. If a | tnird into left field scoring Dark to | seventh game is needed it will be put the Giants in front, 1-0. It was | played Thursday at the stadium. | make a nice tag on the slidini | YANKS — Woodling blooped a| WASHINGTON, Oct. The Irvin's eighth hit of the series. ! runner. One run, two hits, no errors, one double behind third sliding in ahead of Trvin's late throw. Thom-| S€hate Appropriations Committee 11 vin was caught stealing, Rizzuto| ‘Fund Is Boosted by left on base, on went to his left and fumbled | 3PProved spending 15,000,000 to com: p!l]]m[., down Berra’s high throw to‘ ‘Senale Commitiee plete a $15,000,000 revolving fund Saturday aboard the Pan Amer 8 e 4 g-can plane for Seattle. She \ms\ At one point in the diary, Van-| In his sermon, Bishop Gleeson ] | denberg wrote that President Tru-|Dpointed out that the Holy Father, called south by the death of Mus.| D ) T. H. White, her mother-in-law.| man reported at a 1949 White House | Pope Pius XII, had erected the new Mrs. White who would have been eting that he had a recommenday 91 years old in November, had lived |tion from the National Security for a first-hand study. of troop | Mc Dougald’s grounder for an error, | for Alaska housing Saturday. The maneuvers in connection with the but Woodling was forced to hold up tests. |at second. Mays raced back and|fouse had approved $3500,000 for | the same purpose. Short, said he “never heard any- | made a spectacular back-to-the-| ™"~ fhing of that” but promised to plate catch of Brown's long liner mf",fd &"“;&C?mm;n:; also .:1-1 make further inquiries. to right-center. Mays slipped and $400, or building a j at Anchorage, Alaska. The House sharp decline in Chinese Communist | northbound at 2 a.m. Tuesday. to Ho which followed the out-| Freighter Ring Splice due north- k of the Korean war, the| bound sometime Thursday. inese have begun expanding fa-| Princess Louise sails from Van- ies for larger deliveries. \ ver, Oct. 10. st and South Central at Coupeville on Whidby Island for many years. 3 Post master Jenne expects to be | away for two weeks. fock Quofations NEW YORK, Oct. 8—(#—Closinz quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 3%, American Can 116% Anaconda 50%, Douglas Aircraft , American Tel. and Tel. 158%, | Council that U. S. aid to Nationalist | China, be stopped. za, and he emphasized the appr 0= eness of the Holy Father’s SLl- of Bishop O'Flanagan | ection | Bishop of Juneau, one who is not a TIDE TABLES | stranger to Alaska but who has ‘bcen laboring for eighteen ycals | as pastor of Holy Family Parish, - Anchorage. OCTORER 9 Following the installation cere- monies, the clergy were the guests | of the Sisters.of St. Ann at a lunch-( eon at St. Ann's Hospital. In the} evening Bishop O'Flanagan \Ns\ Low tide High tide Low tide 42 am., 18 ft. 34 a.m., 12.7 ft. 11 pm, 6.3 ft. hioi Down with Enen ne Trouble - Gels Advice from 1,350 Miles | Away, Makes Repairs, VALDOSTA, 'Ga., Oct. 5—M—An! Alr Force mechanic 1,350 miles Flies. Off niles trot from home with engine James D. Survey Teams End. | Summer's Work in Inferior Alaska Fairbanks on the Pan Americ To close down survey operations| psses for this season, Lyle Jones, acting|gward short hit McDougald on the | | regional chief of the Bureau of jeg for an automatic single as well| |Land Management left today for | fell on the wet grass after making ) the catch and Woodling raced to |third as McDougald held first.| ! Collins shot a line single into right | coring Woodling with the tying run | and sending McDougald to second.‘ flied to Irvin in left-| The runners held their| Bauer's vicious grounder | had denied any money for the jail for which $950,000 had been asked. A RE! T (. 8 Tmm‘immnv Temperatures for 24-Hour Period ending 6:20 o'clock this morning At Airport: Maximum, 56; Minimum, 45. | Reynolds center, Dark gets | The run| as an automatic out. 1| credited with the putout. FORECAST (Juneau and Vicinity) 2: 9: 2: 9: 64, General Electric 61%, General | High tide 13 p.m., 14.3 ft. jaway told a civilian pilot how to called Sgt. plane. Five survey parties have|yas earned. | ecoe 0000 Motors 52%, Goodyear 49%, Ken-| e 0 06 060 0 0 0 0 necott 8 Libby McNeill and Libby 87, Northern Pacific 58%, sStandard Oil of California 52 Twentieth Century Fox 23%, U. S.| Steel 43%, Pound $2.79 15/16, Ca-‘ nadian Exchange 94.81% s today were 1,860,000 shares. e & 0 o o o o o o DUCK '"HUNTING HOURS Octdber .9 ecoececs e honored -at a public reception in the Parish Hali FRQM SEWARD Cohan Goyne, of Seward, is a| iguesz at the Gastineau Hotel. RETUZNS TO JUNEAU zes today were as follows: mdustrials 275.18, rails 87.10, util- ities 46.3%. Starts . . . 6:50 a.m., “. Ends 5:10 p.m. e 0 00 0.0 0 0 0 | C R O'Cennell, has returned to| !Juneau after a summer’s job be- !tween Anchorage and Fairbanks, repair his plane and fly away from an emergency landing. ‘ech Sgt. Foy Gentry of Nampa, fdaho stationed at Moody Air Force base here, was working the 20-meter band on the station’s radio | when ,a voice interrupted. The voice said it belonged to Jack Connors of Eagle River, Ont., and that he was down on the prairie 90| Nichols of Van Nuys, Calif., to the nsmitter in response to Con- s plea for information. Nichols | Connors precisely how to check | engine. been working in the Fairbanks and | Anchorage areas this year. | | Field parties will survey the east- ern addition to Anchorage next |week and then the engineers in| One run, three hits, | two left on base. GIANTS — Lockman struck out, | ;winging. Thomson walked on 11 full count. Mays grounded into n‘ one error, | Connors finally radioed SALurdJy charge of the survey teams Wwill| qouple play, Rizzuto to McDouguld t he had located the trouble, made repairs and was taking off for Eagle River. The Air Force sergeants wished nim happy landings. | return to Junau for winter assign-| ments. Jones stated that a few | isolated "surveys would be made in| the Juneau vicinity before the sea- Ison ends in Southeast Alaska. to Collins. | "No runs, no hits, no errors, none | left on base. (Continued on | P;ae 6) Mostly cloudy with light rain showers tonight and Tuesday. Lowest temperature tonight mnear 39 degrees. Highest Tuesday about 48. e PRECIPITATION ® (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today At Airport — 152 inches; since July 1—10.78 inches. e 0o 00 000 00