The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 27, 1951, Page 1

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CONGRESSIONAL LIBRARY WASHINGTON, D. C. SATURDAY 1 P.M. Edition HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE [ “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LXXVIIL, NO. 11,949 Baffle Lines | DrawnenS$.F. Waterfront SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 27—®— The spectre of bloody waterfront strife stalked in the background today-as Harry Bridges’ longshorej men battled in court to keep rivai AFL workers off the docks. Bridges’ longshoremen were an- gered to fighting pitch by announce- ment that AFL stevedores are to be used in unloading three strikebound ships. Isthmian Steamship Co., center of the bitter dispute, disclosed yesterday that it has hired 53 members of the AFL International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) to work the three vessels. Bridges' International Longshore- men’s and Warehousemen’s Union (ILWU) immediately warned any such move would lead to “strife struggle and bloodshed on the San Francisco waterfront.” An ILWU spokesman condemned the hiring as “strikebreaking” and said the ILWU will stop work on all shipping here if Isthmian attempts to unload with AFL labor. “Scabs will not be permitted on the waterfront,” the spokesman asserted. Isthmian disclosed the hiring as its attorne; ught dismissal of a temporary court order prohibiting the company from using non-ILWU men on the docks. Bridges union must: answer Ifilh-{ mian’s arguments in court before 11| am., PST, today. Eridges, a bitter enemy for almost two decades of the AFL stevedores and their president, Joseph Ryan, obtained the court order -earlier this week when Isthmian withdrew from the Pacific Maritime Associ- ation (PMA). PMA, representing all major west coast shipowners, has a contract| with Bridges stipulating that all] longshore work in the San Fran-| cisco Bay area shall be done by the ILWU. VEW %Iesls ‘ Order fo Cancel | Alaska Non-Sched WASHINGTON, Oct, 27 — B — The Veterans of Foreign Wars said today it is dismayed by a proposal| to cancel the operating permit of Air Transport Associates of Seattle, Wash. The veterans organization filed its statement with the Civil Aero- nautics Bomrd. It asked the agency to reconsider its order that Air Transport Associates go out of busi- ness. The proposed revocation was based on findings that the company, licensed as an irregular carrier, had conducted regular operations be- tween Seattle and Anchorage, Alaska, over a long period. The *protest by VFW, filed by its attorney, John C. Williamson, said the airline was organized in 1948 by Pacific war veterans and had been employing young ex-Air Force men as pilots over a long period: VFW contended that the Veterans Administration and the War Assets Office, which had surplus war planes for sale, had encouraged World War Top Officials Dredict Gloomy Months Ahead HOT SPRINGS, Va. Oct. 27—® __A probable worsening of relations with Soviet Russia and heavier streins on the domestic economy were pictured by two top govern- ment officials today as the pros- pect for the months immediately ahead. Secretary of the Army Frank Pace and Secretary of Commerce Charles Sawyer delivered the double bar- reled warning at the second session of a three-day conference of Saw- yer’s 100-member business advisory council. Pace foresaw international ten- sion getting “closer to the boiling point” as Russia watches the growth of military strength in the United States and its North Atlantic Allies. The pressure will continue to mount, he predicted, until the build- up of military power in the frec world reaches such strength as to make any Communist aggression too ris to undertake. It would be impossible to say when that point will be reached, he added. Both Pace and Sawyer addressed the industrial leaders behind closed doors, but they gave reporters their vi informally later. Sawyer predicted a “substantial but not drastic” cutback in civilian goods manufacture in the three months starting January 1. Later in 1952, he said, the shortages will ease, at least in the steel-using sec- tor of the economy. Unscheduled Trip Lands Lady Here A lovable “young” lady with traces of lingering gold in her white hair walked aboard an Annette- bound Pan American Airways plane at Seattle Friday right into the hearts of the PAA crew and passen- | gers. She was Mrs. Marguerite Akinson returning to her home in Ketchian after three months visit with rela- tives in Raleigh, N.C. Her bright eyes sparkled happily to be going home but socked-in weather caused her plane to fly over Annette and land in Juneau. “Oh well,” she smiled, “I've al- ways wanted to see Juneau any- Mrs. Atkinson first went to Ket- chikan in 1906 with her husband who was a lumber mill foreman. She made her first trip outside in 1939 by boat but she gets seasick so she prefers to fly. flew from Ketchikan all the way to North Carolina in a little over 24 hours. For 26 years Mrs. Atkinson was a telephone operator in Ketchikan when the company had had about 100 subscribers and retired in 1943 when there were nearly 1500. Enroute back she stopped in Ta- coma to visit her daughter-in-law and three grandchildren. “If I ever go out again, I want to always be sure I get back to Alaska,” she said. Ever-young, Mrs. Atkinson's eyes and heart are attuned to beauty. She stores all the sights and ex- periences of her trips on what she calls her “memory shelf” to be enjoyed again at her leisure at home. “Never grow old,” she advised her PAA fellow seat mate as she told of her plans to build a home in This trip she| Melee Marks Paralyzing Dock Strike NEW YORK, Oct. 27—(P—Fist fighting broke out in the New York dock strike today when 200 non- striking longshoremen crashed into a wildeat picket line. | * Police quickly quelled the melee, outside Pier 92, where the Cunard Liner Britannic was due to dock later today. The violence came quickly af- ter the strikers rejected an appeal by President Truman to return to work in the interests of national defense. In another development as the paralyzing strike went into its 13 day, pickets appeared for the first time outside a U. S. Navy supply depot at Bayonne. N, J. Fifteen mounted and 15 foot po- lice cn duty outside Pier 92 said they Ihad expected the non-strikers would skirt the picket line of about 250 men to go to work. Instead, the non-strikers plunged directly at the line and forced their way through amid fighting, shoving and arguing while the police rushed in to restore order. The nontstrikers, members of the ! Local 824 of the AFL International Longshoremen’s Union, fought a similar battle with pickets Thurs- day morning. Joseph P. Ryan, ILA president, ‘ has opposed the strike. The strike { | | was initiated by some ILA factions dissatisfied with terms of a re- cent contract between the union and shipping owners. The union membership had ratified the agreement. The President stepped into the east coast port dispute last night | with an appeal that the wildeat walkout end “at once” in the inter- &t of national defense. It took the strike committee just 15 minutes to turn down the Pre- sident’s request. Mr. Truman now may invoke the Taft-Hartlev Act: He also can (call in the Wage | Board, which is consulted iz matters affecting defense. fdih I;erson Taken By FB! on Charges |0f Embezzling PITTSBURGH, Oct. 27—(®—FBI agents held the 14th person today on embezzlement charges which cover more than $3,030,000 in the past 13 months. The latest arrested is Paul J. Staitiff, 52-year-old cashier and di- rector of the First National Bank of Indiana (Pa). He is tharged by the FBI with embezzling $30,256 in bank funds. Special Agent Fred Hallford said the balding Straitiff admitted tak- ing the money. Straitiff said he knew he was misapplying the funds but said he had always intended to make the shortage good. Hallford said Straitiff is the se- cond employee of the First National Bank to be arrested since Sept. 25. Air Force Plane Overnighfs Herz Ketchikan and of her long conlinu-i An Air Force C-47 from Elmen- ing faith in the bright future of II fliers to get into aviation, but that CAB had been “hacking away at the enterprises of many veterans who entered the field with the en- couragement and assistance of the government.” The organization contended that . air links with Alaska constitute an important item of national defense. The original CAB order required Air Transport Associates to suspend Oct. 21. However, a 30-day exten- sion of operating authority was granted when the line asked recon- sideration. Small A-Weapon Test Run Again Delayed, Weather LAS VEGAS, Nev., Oct. 27—®— Stymied by weather conditions, the Atomic Energy Commission today delayed the rescheduling of a small A-weapon test run. Following yesterday’s postpone- ment of a slated atomic aerial sortie at the Nevada test site, AEC scientists decided to wait for strong 30 to 40-mile per hour northerly winds to sweep the area clean of clouds and fog. The AEC is expected to resume the test tomorrow or Monday, as weather dictates, her town. Yuoslavia May Receive Heavy Weapons from U. . WASHINGTON, Oct. 27—(®—The United States reportedly has agreed to send modern heavy weapons to Communist Yugoslavia, focal point of growing Balkan military tensions. Officials here said last night that weeks of secret negotiations have resulted in a military supply pact that will be signed formally in Bel- grade “within a few days.” Details of the agreement remain- ed undisclosed, but it was under- stood that by signing a formal mili- tary accord—providing for a Unit- ed State military mission in Yugo- slavia—Russia’s one-time ally will become eligible for heavy, modern arms including tanks and artillery. The reported agreement comes three years and four months after Marshal Tito, who as leader of Yu- goslavia’s Communist guerrillas was one of international Communism’s major World War IT military heroes, broke with the Kremlin over policy differences. FROM ELFIN COVE Ernest Swanson of Elfin Cove is staying at the Baranof Hotel, dorf Field at Anchorage overnighted in Juneau on Friday. The plane was on a reconnaissance flight to the ‘air fields at Annette Island and Gustavus. The plane was sched- uled to take off from Juneau today at 11 am. Members of the Army group re- gistered at the Baranof Hotel were: Col. Malcomb Harwell, Col. L. K. Tarrant, Lt. Col. Harry D. Easton, Jr., Maj. James Greene, Maj. Steve Donegan, Maj. James Reynolds, Capt. Bill Coombs, Capt. Charles Gault, Capt. W. E. Oberholtzer, Jr., Lt, Darrell E. Griffin, Sgt. William Henderson, R. E. Bates, and Ken- neth Hunt. JUNEAU VISITOR E. O. McCarthy of Seattle is a guest at the Baranof Hotel TIDE TABLES . . . OCTOBER 28 . » Ld e High tide 12:06 am., 53 ft. o e Low tide 6:03am., 20ft. e e High tide 12:15 pm., 175 ft. e e Low tide 6:37 pm, -01ft. e . ° . OCTOBER 29 ° ® High tide 12:48 am, 162 ft. e ® Low tide 6:39 am, 17ft. e ® High tide 12:47 p.m., 185 ft. e Low tide 7:14pm, -16ft. e ® 0 0 0 0 0 9 0 0 00 Stabilization | JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY, Sleepy Sailor Has His Waiting Bride SEATTLE, Oct. 27—(®—The arms of Morpheus outwrestled those of his bride-to-be, so a slumbering young sailor out of San Diego boot camp had to take the long way around—by way of Chicago—to get married in Ketchikan. Pan American World Airways told the story Friday. The sailor, Alfred Berry, 20, board- ed a United Air Lines plane in San Diego to start his l14-day leave. Then he went to sleep. When the plane got to Los Angeles, where he was to transfer to a northbound plane, Berry still slept. The plane was two hours along the way to Chicago before a stew- ardess awakened him for his ticket. He handed it to her. It was a Pan Am ticket to Ketchikan. So on he went to Chicago. Two hours after arriving there . United put him on a San Francisco-bound plane with a gratis ticket marked “involuntary rerouting due to pas- senger being over-carried.” He arrived in Seattle Friday mid- night and told the Seattle-Tacoma airport clerk about it. She sighed {“I've heard enough”—then got him free accommodations in a down- town hotel for the night. He caught a Pan Am plane at 8 o'clock (PST) Friday for Ketchi- kan. There he is to be married to his childhood sweetheart, Nancy Col- lins, 17, of Ketchikan. He'll be two days late but—he guaranteed— wide awake. Berry's troubles are not over. Due to fog at Annette yesterday he was overcarried to Juneau and is hoping to get to Annette and Ketchikan today — weather permitting. \Groundwork for 'Three-Way Mutual Aid Pact Planned Groundwork for a_three-cornered! mutual aid pact between Alaska, Canada and Washington in case of | lenemy attack will be discussed at a meeting of civilian defense direc- tors November 1 and 2 at Portland, | | Oregon, said Col. Earl Landreth,' territorial director of civilian de- fense. Expected to attend the meeting are the directors from British Co- | lumbia, Alberta, Yukon Territory, Alaska, Oregon, Washington, Cali-| fornia, Idaho and Montana. Lan-| dreth leaves Oct. 31 for the meet-| | ing. | Terms of the pact will generally! be that when “certain” Alaska| towns are hit, Canada and Wash- | ington will furnish personnel and equipment, Landreth stated. | “Alaska will do likewise in the| |event of an attack on Canadian| s cities,” he stated. “Payment for| services and supplies is to be made | by the territory receiving assist- ance.” | Evacuation of Alaska’s civilian population will be undertaken only/ if invasion becomes imminent Landreth said. | Meeting at the same time as/ the civilian defense directors is the Pacific Coast Board of Inter-| governmental Regulations with gov- | ernors from Oregon, Washington, | California, Idaho and Montana at- tending. Col. Landreth left Friday to at-| tend the first annual convention | of the League of Alaskan Cities| being held at Kodiak Oct. 28 to 30.| He is to deliver an address on the| territorial civilian defense program/ on Oct. 28. ‘Topics to be discussed at the con- vention are' civilian defense, old age and survivors' insurance plan and municipal revenues. | Pan American (arries 13 from Seattle | Pan American World Airw:: brought 13 passengers from Seattlc} yesterday and due to poor landi conditions at the Annette field, ten passengers destined 10! Ketchikan were brought to Juneu!| for the night. | Passengers from Seattle wert' | George Castle, D. Desmond, Jim| Madson, Alfred Ransome, M. Grin rud, D. W. Parsons, Evelyn Hopr William Johnson, Charles Voyl: Mr. and Mrs. Baldwin, Cliff Good-| man and W. M. Dwernichek. Ketchikan passengers spenc the night in Juneau were: Mr Atkinson, Wilfred Berry, Kay K nedy, Dick Lang, Mr. and Edward Mack, Warren Pellctt Katherine Packard, Gordon Taylo! Island Long Ride Home fo |Planned Within 1 i “‘P:onslder us very fortunate to | our fine structure. It was necessary | even though the pledged money was ‘Haines Cufoff | New " York City. |British Elections OCTOBER 2’ , 1951 Library Opening Nexi Two Weeks | It is probable that the dedication | of the new Memorial Library of | Juneau will be held in from 10 days to two weeks, according to Frank | Heintzleman, chairman of the lib- | rary board. It may be 60 days before the new | furniture for the building is received | Heintzleman said, and the dedicatory services will be held without wait- ing for the complete furnishing of the byilding. A few things still need to be finished inside the building, | then it will be turned over to the city by the Alaska Public Works Agency. Shelves are in, Heintzleman said, and books are being moved imo! their new home. Heintzleman said | the board had wanted to delay the opening until the city painted the | basement walls in readying that | part of the buillding for temporary | quarters for the mayor's and city | clerk's office. The city council okay- | ed this work at its last meeting. | “Because of the weather,” the chairman said, “we may have to hold the dedicatory services inside | the building instead of outside as we planned.” Heintzleman expects to make a quick trip to Seattle within the next few days and will appoint a committee to plan the opening ser- | vices before he leaves. The opening | will be held on his return. The library board chairman once again called attention to the need for from $3,000 to $4,000 to “meet the community’s obligation” on the new buildiz “We would like very much to pay 1§ off in full at the dedication,” Heintzleman said. “We appreciate the hundreds of firms and individ- uals who have already contributed, hut there are many who have not yet done so.” He also pointed out that many pledges have not been paid in full, and that interest on the unpaid bal- ance on the building will start as soon as the building is turned over ta city. have received federal assistance on for the board to apply when it did, not definitely in hand. W¢ simply had to take the chance at that time that pledges would be paid. I am confident that we would not have had further opportunity to receive federal grant to assist us in building the library.” Heintzleman said that a special | effort had been made to get a grant | from some foundation for gertain | types of new books, but that the| board has not yet been successful in getting such a contribution. Is Still Open; Ferry fo Run The Haines Cutoff is still in good shape and will be open until snows block the Canadian side even though there. has been an announced clos- ing date set at Nov. 1, according to Frank Metealf, territorial high- way engineer. Metcalf said that it was planned to run two more trips of the Haines ferry, and that motorists could probably chance the Cutoff for the next several days. He pointed out, however, that travel would be at the risk of the individual after Nov. 1, and that drivers should check high- way reports before attempting the Cutoff. At the present time, there is no snow on the summit of the pass, Metcalf said, and travel will not be stopped until snow blocks the road. SIMPKINS RETURN FROM STATESIDE TRIP Mr. and Mrs. George Simpkins returned on the Princess Louise from a six weeks trip in the states. Mr. Simpkins said that he at- ended one of the World Series ;ames and the the rest of them on television. The Simpkins visited their three daughters living in Bel- | lingham, Wash., Moscow, Idaho and But they are glad to be back as they claim that there are no friendlier people than in Alaska. Mean Little, Says Red News Agency ‘ - By the Associated Press Moscow has commented on the British elections. The Soviet News Agency Tass tells the Russian peo- ple that the replacement of the Socialist by a Tory government| means little or nothing. According }one helicopter to enemy groundfire. MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS Thunderous JetPlane Dogfight By NATE POLOWETZKY U. S. 8th ARMY HEADQUART- ERS, Korea, Oct. 27—(P—Eight Russian-made MIGs were damaged | today in a thunderous jet plane dog- | fight over northwest Korea as they i failed to stop an allied bomb strike on bridge and rail lines. It was the seventh straight day the Communist jets whooshed out of their Manchurian sanctu- ary to challenge the air might of the United Nations in the Korean war, On the ground, Communist night assaults in the east and west were repulsed in fierce fighting. In the center of the battle line allied in- fantrymen slogged forward and se- | cured a key hill mass southeast of Kumsong, battered onetime Com- munist stronghold. (The Red China Peiping radio said Saturday night Chinese and North Korean troop: have inflicted 170,000 easualties on U. S. forces | in the last 12 months. General headquarters sources in Tokyo called the report “fantastic.”) \ In the six previous days of air| fighting, six MIGs were destroyed, two listed as probables and 14 dam- aged, the Fifth Air Force said. These totals did not include the eight enemy planes damaged Saturday. The Fifth Air Force said it had lost two jets in the six days of air fights as well as five fighters and Eight Okinawa based B-20s es- corted by 112 allied jets were chal- lenged by more than 130 MIGs in the latest air scrap over Sinanju. The Fifth Air Force said all jet| planes returned to their bases. Far east headquarters in Tokyo an- nounced that one B-29 landed with battle damsage at a Korean air base. laynd,_k_,esg‘ryes To Be Examined | By Interior That a sweeping clean-up would' be made by the Interior Depart-| ment on the land withdrawal situa- | tion in Alaska with as many reser- | vations as possible being eliminat- ed was stated by Dale E. Doty as- sistant secretary of the Interior, who addressed the Anchorage Chamber of Commerce last week. Secretary Doty said, “It is a pol- icy of the Interior Department to discourage land withdrawals.” In! an effort to eliminate unneces- sary withdrawals, Doty said that the Department is going to make a com- plete inventory of every withdrawal in Alaska and will then initiate pro- ceedings to eliminate them. Doty said, “There is no reason for many of the withdrawals to continue. There is an area near Fairbanks that was withdrawn from settlement as a musk ox reserve, there haven’t been any musk ox near Fairbanks for more than ten year: Not long ago a rabbit reserve discovered in Kodiak, but nobody knew how long it had been since a rabbit had been on it.” Field Committee Meets Secretary Doty was in Anchorage to attend the quarterly meeting of the Alaska Field Committee. He in- troduced the new field committee chairman, George Rogers of Juneau to the committee members, who are directors of Interior agencies in Al- aska. Doty outlined plans for re- activating the committee's program designed to co-ordinate the activit- ies of the separate agencies. Speaking at the meeting on pro- grams of individual agencies were Joseph Morgan, Bureau of Reclam- ation; Clarence Rhode, Fish and Wildlife Service; Lowell Puckett, Bureau of Land Management; Hugh Wade, Alaska Native Service; An- drew Herdlik, U. 8. Bureau of Mines. Interior Tour Taken Secretary Doty, accompanied by George Rogers toured the Interior and Railbelt area so that Doty could become acquainted again with the| Territory. After attending the official open- ing of the Anchorage-Seward high- way at Girdwood, a party of Interior officials traveled over the Alaska Railroad in a gasmobile to Seward and inspected the port and rail fac ilities at both Anchorage and Sew- ard. From Seward the group flew to the lakes area of the Kenai Penin- sula, Agricultural lands that have | been classified and will soon be re- lased to homesteaders were visited by the Secretary, who was accom- panied by Lowell Puckett, Alaska director of the Bureau of Land Management. From Kenai the group flew in a to the agency, both Laborites and Conservatives in Britain are war- mongers, Fish and Wildlife plane to Palmer LIKES AMERICAN MEN Leslie French dancing sensation, is wild about bath the Hollywood career and the American husband she’s Caron (above), young gotten in less than a year. She's married to Georg's Hormel, young heir to the meat packing for- tune, and says she prefers Am- erican men because they“re much more considerate of their women. ® Wirephoto. Price Curb Tools No Good Says Truman WASHINGTON, Oct. 27 «— (P — President Truman said today that “the tools Congress has given us, to curb inflation are not good enough to do the job as it should be done.” But he pledged his administration to do “its best” with the tools at hand. Mr. Truman'’s latest attack on the price control law was in a speech prepared for the dedication of a small triangular parkway here to the memory of Samuel Gompers, pioneer American labor leader. “Scores of special interests have ganged up together for the purpose of securing special short-run ad- vantages for themselves at the ex- pense of all of us,” Mr. Truman said. He added: “These special iInterests have adopted the principle that price control is all right if it does not require them to absorb a penny more in costs, or forego a penny of profit, no matter how high their profits may be. This is the main Idea behind the terrible Capehart amendment, which I tried to have removed from the price control law.” This referred to a provision writ- ten into the law tovallow certain in- creases in ceiling prices in propor- tion to the production cost increases since the original price-freeze. Mr. Truman always refers to the provision as the Capehart amend- ment, although Senator Capehart (R-Ind) insists he was only one of several Senators sponsoring the measure. The administration failed in efforts to eliminate the provision before Congress adjourned last week. Richard Desmond of Long Beach, Calif,, is registered at the Barancf Hotel. the Department of Agriculture. Se- cretary Doty was with the General Land Office when the Mafanuska colony was founded and it had been ten years since his last visit to the farming community. George Collins of the U. S. Park Service was the Secretary's guide at Mount McKinley National Park The Park hotel will be operated agin this winter as an Air Force rest and recreation center. In Fairbanks, Secretary Doty met with the Board pf Regents of the University of Alaska to discuss In- terior co-operative research pro- grams in wildlife management, ag- riculture, and mining. Rogers To Washington Secretary Doty returned to Wash- ington, D. C., from Fairbanks. Rog- ers returned to Juneau on Thurs- day and will leave on Saturday to attend a meeting of all field com- mittee chairmen in Washington, D. where Doty interviewed Don Irwin, |head of the experimental farm of | C. He expects to be away for ten days, Churchill Takes Over In Brifain Appoints Himself De- fense Minister; Eden, Others Named to Cabinet LONDON, Oct. 27 — (# — Prime Minister Winston Churchill ap- pointed himself Britain’s Defense Minister today and assigned to dapper Anthony Eden the jobs of Foreign Secretary, Deputy Prime Minister and leader of the House of Commons, In so doing, Churchill restored the leadership which piloted Brit- ain through World War IL. The Defense Ministry will run the nation’s three-year $13,000,000,000 defense program and thus is of the utmost importance to Churc- hill, Ailing King George VI approved eight appointments by the new Prime Minister this morning at a special session of the Privy Coun- cil at Buckingham Palace. Maore appointments will be made later, probably early next week. Downing Street sources said Churchill named the men to his key posts only a few hours after taking over as Prime Minister because “of the critical foreign and economic situation.” The new government, elected by a minority vote, faces many critical situations, including the persistent failure of the nation to pay its way In the world trade by which it lives, the threat of Communism and the deflant tweaking of the British Lion's tall by segments of the declining empire. The sharp division which splits the nation as Churchill takes over was demonsirated by the fact | that although his Conservative nents n [ the Laborites, they did so on Jess of the popular vote. In other words, more 200.000, ~ voted Labor than Cor ) but not in the right In addition to handsome, 54- year-old Eden, today's appointments included three peers, two business- men and two lawyers. ‘The average age of the eight and Churchit js €0 1/9 years. Clement Attlee's Labor government cabinet averaged 59 717, 4 Other cabinet appointments in the new Conservative government: Lord Woolton, 68, Lord President of the Council with responsibility for Food and Agriculture. Richard Austen Butler, 48, Chan- cellor of the Exchequer. Oliver Lyttlston, 58, Colonial Sec- retary. Sivr Waller Monckton, 60 Minister of Lahor. Sir David Maxwell Fyfe, 51, Hoine Secretary and Minister for Welsh Affairs, Marguess (f Salisbury, 58, Lord Privy Se.! apd leader of the House of Lo-ds. Lord lsmay.. 68, Ser: Commenwealti ‘Relations. Son of Seward Man Wounded in Korea WASHINGTON, Oct, 27 — (B — Cpl. Ronald E. Carlson, son of George W. Carlson of Seward, Alaska, was listed by the Defense Department today among the Army's wounded in Korea. There were no details. Baranof scheduled to arrive southbound Sunday at 1 p.m. Princess Louise scheéduled to sail from Vancouver, Oct. 31. Denali scheduled to arrive north- bound Monday. Freighter Square Sinnet in port. e o o 0 0 0 0 0 tury for WEATHER REPORT (U. 8. WEATHER BUREAU At Airport: Maximum, 39; Minimum, 32. FORECAST (Juneau and Vicinity) Mostly cloudy with occasional light rain showers tonight and Sunday. Lowest tem- perature tonight near 3 de- grees, highest Sunday around 41 PRECIPITATION (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today At Airport — 0.01-inches; since July 1—12.64 inches. 0 0 0 0 0 0 00

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