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? . THE DAILY A VOL. LXV.; NO. 9970 Yanks Enter Ru OBSEQUIES TRUMANIN .FOR BISHOP ' HELD HERE Catholic Prelate Is Laid fo ' Rest Today at Shrine + of St. Terese ‘ ]i:neath the beamed vault of a BIG MOVE FOR PEACE Elwo Trusted Emissaries, - Hopkins, Davis, Now Enroute to Europe WASHINGTON, May 24.—Presi-| “ALL THE NEWS, Poland Threal? To Conference g | Value of Word Charter Be- ‘ ing Drawn at San Fran- | cisco Is in Balance | | By John M. Hightower JUNEAU, ALASKA, Deadlock Qver SOCIAL SECURITY 'PLUS’ ASKED FOR INNEW MEASURE Wagner-Dingell Propos Tossed fo Congress To- day Is Far-Reaching WASHINGTON, May 24 — A new, broad concept of Social Se- curity, including health insurance, was introduced in Congress today with a plea that the nation needs i) TFlames from Fires Visible | church he fostered and saw erected,|dent Truman sent two trusted emis- and surrounded by members of the | saries to London and Moscow today. Cletgy he had seen grow gray in\ Presumably they will open prelim- service, Bishop of Alaska, the Most inary negotiations looking to ulti- Reverend Joseph Raphael Crimont mate “Big Three” settlement of was paid final repects at Pomirical‘,gmve international issues involving Requigm High Mass Thuysday, the United Nations. morning in the Church of thP'Na-J Harry L. Hopkins, recently bed- tivity. ridden confidante of President| ' Tolthe imponderable, spaced toll-|Roosevelt, is en route on a new mis- ing df the church bell, officiating {sion to Moscow. Joseph E. Davies, Clergy ad pallbearers garbed in|former ambassador to Russia, is purple amd gold, and black and hcaded for London for conferences| white,; entered the chureh and tookl'with Prime Minister Churchill. their ces on either side of the| These developments, announced by altar. o o |the White House late yesterday, Flanked by six lighted tapers and | followed earlier disclosure that Mr. dressed, in his'robés of office, the Truman had decided to make a per- body of the irch prelate reposed sonal visit to San Francisco to ad-| in state at the altar rail, its fraucy‘dress the closing session of the Uni- | and slightness of build belyings fhe ted Nations Conference. rigorousylile of pioneering in a new, Following up yesterday’s talk at| raw couptry which Bishop Crimont the White House with Secretary of | led for more than half a century. |State Stettinius, two recent confer-| ! Eulogy Delivered |ences with former State Secretary "Bisho‘; Crimont was a man of Hull and mestings with diplomats of | 'most of the United Nations, they| added up to the conclusion that the | | Chief Executive is preparing to, (Co_%inued on Page Two) e (Associated Press Diplomatic News Editor) |it as a postwar bulwark.® LL THE TIME” ASKA EMPIRE RSDAY, MAY 24, 1945 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS = —— TOKYO SET ABLAZE BY 550 SUPERS for 200 Miles—Great | Single Air Blow | By Leif Erickson (Associated Press War Correspondent) Gestapo Chief Kills Himse!f: Takes Dose 0f Poison Is LONDON, May 24— Heinrich Himmler killed himself with poison last night three days after his cap- ture by the Allies, Exchange Tele- graph Agency reported today. Reu- ters also announced the suicide. | The Exchange Telegraph Agency, in a dispatch from Terence Duncan |with the Brilish Second Army, said bble-Strewn Okinawa Capital Himmler MARINES IN - NAHA;OTHER L _Re!)orlA Now GAINS MADE ,-nfii(‘{.,;'l"f’.?.‘;n‘i:‘t}"f e §i‘:2.? “ar|Veterans of Snowy Attu rimi s subject to trial, Grantin o B oikuse 5| Capture Hills South of Yonabaru the German accounts of Hitler's death, Himmler ranked with Her- GUAM, May 24 —American Tenth mann Goering at the top of the list. i | For years Himmler ruled the Reich | | as Hitler's right-hand terrorist. He, | kept mililons of Germans and the The Washington Merr'y -Go-Round By DREW PEARSON (Lt. Col. Robert S. Alien now om sotive ser witn the Army.' WASHINGTON — ()?fichfi' are keeping ve: mum akout it, but the entire duestion of using Ger- man prison labor to repuild Russia and Prance has been thrown into a controversy| by a secret opinion | rendered by Supreme Court Justice Robert Jactkson, who has taken ovetr U. S. |prosecution of war criminals. \ Justice Jackson wrote his opinion to U. 8. Reparations Chief Ed Pauley, stating that in his opinion compulsory German labor should not be used to rebuild France and Russia unless they have been con- victed of war crimes, “It is not my business what is to be done with reparations,” Jack- son wrete, “but this would largely destroy the mordl position of Am- erica in this war. . . . Compulsory labor,” he continued, “should be required only for convicted . war criminals.” Jackson went on to point out that German labor “drifting out of Russian concentration camps in the future would tell tales of horror” which, even if exaggerated, would “arouse sharp condemnation in the United States.” He urged, there- fore, that German labor not be used for reparations until they had been convicted of war crimes. He indicated that members of the Gestapo and the Elite Guard undoubtedly were war criminals as a class, but that every member of the Nazi Party might not be classified as a war, criminal. * % ED PAULEY HESITATES Following Justice Jackson's bomb- { shell, a hurried meeting was called in Secretary. Morgenthau's office, attended by Ed Psauley, Assistant Secretary of State Will Clayton, the Army, Navy, FEA, and other interested government agencies. Secretary Mergenthau vigorously protested this sew development. It was pointed out by some that the use of German prisoner labor had been agreed to at Yalta by Presi- dent Roosevelt himself and, there- fore, could not be changed. “If we have to wait for the con- vietion of all these war criminals before we can get German labor,” suggested Reparations Chief Pauley, “we may have to wait a year. Meanwhile, there may not be enough Germans to repair the damage in France and_ Russia.” Pauley also made the point that hé had been charged by the Presi- dent with the handling of repara- tions and, therefore, would have to make the final decision himself after his arrival in Europe. After further discussion, however, Pauley agreed to accept Justice Jackson's opinion in principle, namely, that only convicted war criminals could pe used as prisoner labor. This leaves the whole question pretty much up in the air. o e ) O (Continued on Page Four) ’Hm‘: Hopkins, in. his {orti-com+ it {move boldly into the international; scene. At last week's news conference,| |the President announced that he | hoped to arrange a meeting sooni with Premier Stalin and Mr. Churchill, | | This raised speculation teday " talks with Stalin, and Davies, conferences with Churchill, would be able io pave the way for an early “Big ree” get-together, possibly arranging a date, and, more difficult, a site. s GERMANY CEASES | TO EXIST NOW AS - NATIONAL ENTITY | PARIS, May 24 —Germany ceased | Ito exist as a national entity today now that . Allied authorities have wiped out the last vestiges of Grand | Admiral Karl Dcenitz's Flenshurg regime. Germany now has no boundaries except as defined by the Allies. She is subdivided into zones for the occu- pying armies and is without politi- {cal or economic life, exceépt as dic- |tated by the Allies. | 'Doenitz’s regime faded as that en- tire administration and the German High Command headed for prison camps. American and British mili- itary authorities had used the Ger- !man High Command to accomplish | the Allied end of disarming the Ger- man army. The High Command was wiped out with a single stroke iwhen it was of no further use to| the Allies. | Only two top-flight Nazis, Gestapo Chief Heinrich Himmler and Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop, continued to elude the Allies. CANADA T0 SEND SIXTY_SHIPS T0 . AIDPACIFICWAR MEXICO CITY, May 24—Cana- dian Ambassador Hugh Liewellyn ian Ambassador Hugh Llewellyn| Keenleyside told a Pan-American; Juncheon yesterday that Canada would send 60 ships to aid in the Pacific war.' “Part of these are warships,” he stated, “and the rest aré vessels of | the merchant marine converted into transports for® carrying troops, thei largest being of 10,000 ions register. Eventually, the number of merchant ships sent by Canada will be in- creased to 100.” | | - DROPS A STITCH OKLAHOMA CITY—Picked up on a vagrancy charge the man pro- SAN FRANCISCO, May 24—The! | United Nations sought by firm and’ friendly negotiation today to prove {that a foundation exists in the Senater Wagner, (D. N. Y., and |the biggest single air blow of the | ruins of postwar Europe for an effective United Nations organiza-| tion around the world. That is the real significance seen by delegates at the United Nations Conference in President Truman's' dispatch of Harry Hopkins to Premier Stalin’s Kremlin office. These international experts from évery quarter of the globe are em- phasizing anew that if the great victorious nations of the war against Germany move hesitantly now to settle the first issues of peace, the world charter being drawn up here may not be worth its paper. Topping all these issues in gravity at the moment is the question of providing a more demo- cratic government for Poland in accordance with the Yalta agree- ment. The prevailing belief here is that Hopkins’ main assignment is to find in direct conversation with ! Stalin some way out of the dead- lock between Russia and her western allies. Within the conference, technical | committees are making swift prog- ress on the basic Dumbarton Oaks plan. of world organization. One committee last. night approved pro- visions conferring on an 1l-nation security council “primary responsi- bility for the maintenance of in- ternational peace and securuy."‘ The committee unanimously adopt- ed a Canadian amendment which | would make it compulsory on the council. to make annual and special reports to the all-nation assembly,; NORTHLAND BRINGS | 29 PASSENGERS HERE The Northland arrived at 7:00 c'clock this morning from the Scuth with 29 Juneau-bound pas- sengers. These on Chief Purser Wilbur, ‘Thempson's list were: i From Seattle: Miss Arlene Withey, Mrs. Ruth E. Carver, Miss Gail Car-| ver, Miss Florence Kemp, George Harju, Mrs. Ellen Harju and Robert Wenger. From Ketchikan: Hal Fairhurst. | From Wrangell: Mrs. Ray G. Day, | W. Jenkins, Mrs. W, Jenkins, F. M. Kelly, T. R. Curtis, Mrs. H. G. Ingledue, L. J. Turner and P.| Thomas. From Petersburg: W. D, Prindle, Miss Rae C. Burke, Miss Esther Hor- ton, Miss Esther G. Evans, Mrs. Svea | Carlson, Master Jerry Carlson, Miss Lorraine Rude, Miss Margaret Mey-] er, Miss Esther Lindenmeyer, Miss Jean McDonald, J. S. Jeffery, George Ringstad and William A. Anderson, Jr. i STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, May 24 — Closing quotation of Alaska-Juneau Mine stock today .is 7%, American Can 9812, Anaconda 34%, Curtiss-Wright 6, International Harvester 85%, Kennecott 38%, New York Central | 26%, Northern Pacific 30%, U. S.! Steel 65%. Sales today were 960,000 shares. | Dow, Jones averages today: dre' as follows: Industrials, 164:41; rails, 55.97; utilities, 30.92. Army Retaillnd Men On Loan fo Industry WASHINGTON, May 24 — The Army today began the recall of all soldiers loaned to industry as the result of manpower shortages. The first group ordered back to active service included approxi- mately 400 highly skilled men, such as physicists and chemists, and 700 tested to detectives he “had a job as a weaver.” | Pressed for further explanation; he declared he “weaved in and out| of downtown stores picking \lp1 what articles were loose.” men under the age of 30 who had been working in copper mines. I The War Department said the men were being recalled to active duty because of the demobilization of 1,300,000 soldiers under the point rating system. The far-reaching measure, in-| GUAM, May 24 — Nine million| creasing costs to both employees, K pounds of fire bombs, dropped by and employers, was proposed by |miore than 550 Superfortresses in been arrested three days ago incog- nito, and was held captive in a housge in Lueneburg. Pacific war, spread fires in Tokyn[ ‘The .{\gvl)ey's report said Himmler {today which were visible for zm;touk his life by drinking the con- miles, smashed waterfront railroad |l€nts of a hidden vial. yards and aircraft | Reuters d the death was an- arts shops | BE.5 of it FrAheRAT palies PS | hounced officially tonight at British One B-20 pilot, Maj. Luther A. Second Army Headquarters. Jones, of Monroe, La. reporting Representative Dingell, (D., Mich.) Wagner, explaining the legisla- tion in detail in a speech prepared; for the Senate, listed these princi- pal proposals: 1—Contributions of employers and employees are to be increased the 44-year-old Gestapo chief had residents of occupied countries un- der the thumb of Nazism. It was Himmlér who ordered the Lidice massacre in Czechoslovakia. CONFIRMATION SUPREME HEADQUARTERS OF | ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY FORCE, May 24—Heinrich Himmler has been captured and has killed himself by poison. This is the official state- Reuters set the time of death at from one to four per cent each. !direct hits on yards which handle ment made tonight. 11:40 p. m. yesterday. 2—Every citizen would be ell-,qle»lhn'd of Japan’'s rail traffic, gible to health insurance similar sfid on his return from the pre-; to the voluntary hospital insurance {dawn strike: | plans now in effect. Nonesof the| {"I'm afraid they're going to do! GRA E NTBASESTO current plans would be affected,'®& hell of a lot of walking.” | they could continue in business. A Dbrilliant moon and a ring of By Russell Brines MANILA, May 24-—Military bases 3—The government would embark oil fires set by lead planes illumi- | on a 10-year plan, with an apm-'itod the target area, the Shina- priation of $950,000,000 to helpighwa industrial section, which is| states build and improve hospitals|gopulated by 750,000 of Tokyo's ' and health centers, especially in millions and crowded with highly; rural areas. An additional $5,000,~ %:lamnmb]c shops making preci- | 1 000 would be provided to help the states make the necessary surveys. 4—The U. S. Employment Ser-| Huge Fires Spread vice would be established permnn-' Pilots saw their incendiaries ently. After the war it would take spread huge fires. Flashes indicated [JUly 4, 1946, President Serglo Os- over the War Manpower Commis-|the flames had spread to stores of |Mena said today. sion and other related services explosive materials, | At his first press conference within the Social Security Board The Shinagawa sector is second Since his return to the Islands set-up. {only to Nippon's principal aircraft |Osmena said he thought August 5—Social Security coverage would eenter at much-bombed Nagoya in|13 of this year would be “too soon” be extended to an additional 15,- | ifs numbers of small producers of for independence. The Philippines 000,000 persons, including farm precision instruments and aircrafy|President had proposed that date workers,-- those -in-non« "pavts. . last PFebruary .in .accepting civil profit institutions and. the inde-] A Japanese communique ignored |Administration of the islands from pendent farmer, professional person 'industrial damage but charged that | Gen. Douglas MacArthur. and small businessman. {an arbor in the Imperial Palace| I am ready to go to the people” 6—Increases are provided for un- garden, three miles north of the oD the question of military bases, employment compensation and old designated target area, was at-|the President said, “but I don't age benefits; the jobless insurance tacked and “an establishment with- [think that will be necessary. The would be nationalized, rather than in the compounds of the Akasaka Filipino people recognize the ne- operate on a state by state'basis. | Palace” was burned. |cessity of American protection and Wagner said labor organizations The Tokyo broadcast made the 2 endorsed the bill. unconfirmed claim that 27 of the He emphasized that the health raiders were shot down and ‘“some insurance plan would allow the 30" others damaged. individual to choose his own physi- | RhaRE cian and hespital; would permit the physician and hospital to pick their own patients, too. | ree. {people” when the Philippines be- welcome you people here. BOAT ACCIDENT um oz, DROWNS CORDOVA' SAN FRANCISCO, May 24-"About | radio reported in an unconfirmed | ! broadcast today. { CORDOVA, Alaska, May 24 — The report, heard by the Federnl\wunam Means, 16-year-old son of Communications Commission, said[M,-A and Mrs. G. Earl Means, Cor- |the carrier aircraft striking in mid- |dova pioneers, was drowned here afternoon (Japanese time) inflicted;apout 8 o'clock Saturday night E“’m (a“ed o" ‘relatively light damage.” {about 200 yards off the city dock. A | Another Japanese radio report| Together with Gilbert Gage, also WASHINGTON, May 24 — House said 23 American Liberatorslls_ the Means boy was trying out leaders called a halt today to pro- hombed Singapore yesterday after-| his speedboat, and while at the posed overseas inspection jaunts of noon but caused ‘“practically no tiller, stood up to take off his several congressmen. damage.” | shirt. As the boat sped through The crackdown was reported by i T S = ithe water the untended tiller members of a group scheduled to | kicked around, hitting him in the leave this week for Europe. Some |hip and knocking him into the had made all preparations, including FRE"(H STAR."NG {wg‘er, | R jizisetion ‘ghiots. B | “I can’t swim,” Means shouted, y jas Gage, -a good swimmer, struck They told a reporter Speaker Ray- for him when the boat burn D-Texas) had asked them ot mFFERENT AREAS?swamped. But Means sank almost | immediately and, despite efforts “Politely; but firmly,” to call off their tour “while important business ?or the U. S. Naval diving and is before the House.” PARIS, May 24—Political prob-|dragging crews, the body was not “Ew pRBIDENI lems are plaguing the de Gaulle|yet been’ recovered. Government in France. } TH Gage, almost exhausted, clung to = e - has been - bloodahed mlthe partly-submerged boat until| M“Rmm (HUR(H Syria, Lebanon, and Algeria. Both|p " oo nickeq up by a soldier who' Syria and Lebannon formerly were| . . gsning nearby. | S French mandates, but after British| “.py . qrowning makes a total of SALT LAKE CITY, May 2¢ — nd Free French troops drove Out|, ee geaths in this city durmgl; George Albert Smith, President of the Vichy officials during the w”’lzhe past week, the others being| the Council of Twelve Apostles, has they were declared independent na- been appointed President of the Lat- tions. Now they are seeking to ter-Day Saints (Mormon) Church, make their independence a fact, which numbers nearly a million and are protesting against the ar-/ members in all parts of the world. rival of French reinforcements. 1 President Smith, who was 75 April Algeria is in a different situn-’pRI(E (ONTRol i FIGHT LOOMING sre 180" American carrier planes raided | | Japanese air bases on Kyushu,! southernmost Nippon Island, Tokyo | Inspection Jaunis George F. McDonald, drugstore owner, and Albert Ohman, pioneer. ———————r L i 4, succeeds Heber J. Grant, who tion. In that colony, Berber natives died May 14, at the age of 83 after there have been attacking- French second-longest term—26 years—as villages: and outlying farms, and | ¢ leader of the Mormon faith. there have been mary casualties. 1 George F. Richards, second mem- This is in protest to French govern ber of the Council in point of senior- ment. ity, was’ elevated to Council Presi- dent. A new Apostle to fill the va-, cancy caused: by ‘President Smith's, advancement will be chosen pro- bably at the next general church conference in October. NIEMI HERE WASHINGTON, May 24—A bitter| |tight is brewing in Congress over the ' BRSO R |future of price control. moD EARI“ The end of the war in Europe has i pointed up this question: When and NEW YORK—The New York port how are price controls to be relaxed? | of embarkation, preparing for the genatur Taft, (R-Ohio), leader of return from Europe of 250,000 sol- |one group, holds that a start must be diers monthly, overlooks nothing to | made soon on easing, price restric- | make the boys happy. tions, else the nation’s economy will| Wayne Niemi, of Seattle, has ar- Officials provided a box of earth pe strangled. | rived in Juneau and is a guest at B the shape of a map of the U. S.| The Administration contends that the Hotel Juneau. —which happy, homesick service- |present controls must be kept intact ———————— men may Kkiss. because inflation dangers still are McLEAN IN JUNEAU Py great. 5 3 s Ly EAST HERE | The Senate Banking Committee is M. J. McLean, of Seattle, has ar- John D. East, Pan American considering legislation to extend the| rived in Juneau and is a guest at Alfways employee of Seattle, is alpresent act one year beyond its June the Baranof Hotel. /guest at the ‘Baranof Hotel. 30 expiration. n instruments for Nippon's air|Will be granted the United Smtesi | with “full support of the Fiiipino | 'SALMON GEAR LIMITS LOCAL AREAS. LIFTED ‘Waters Near Juneau Now Opened fo All Commer- | \come independent sometime berorel‘ (ial Sa|m0n HShing |Army troops fighting mud as tena- |cious as the dug-in Japanese, turn- {ed the southern Okinawa front at |both flanks today. | Rubble-strewn Naha, Okinawa's capital, was entered in force yes- ;lerduy by a regiment of Sixth Divis- |lon Marines under cover of war- |ship guns and artillery. | With tanks and other mechanized (equipment mired behind the front lines, the Leathernecks hacked out ‘bltterly contested gains on the West Coast. 1 The entrance to the northeastern \side of Naha was accomplished by |the tough veterans of the Fourth | Marine Regiment of the Sixth Divis- |lon, made up of former Paratroops |and Marine Raiders. With Naha entered in force, both !o! Okinawa’s main cities and term- ‘ylnals of the Naha-Shuri-Yonabaru ‘derense line have been penetrated. Yonabaru, on the east, with its nearby airstrip, fell to the 9th In- !fantry Tuesday while the Seventh imade a quick encircling movement | by nightfall, isolating it from possi- ble Japanese rginforcement. jtaking is concerned, those gear re-| | On the east copst, . Gen. - Amendment made last week t0!inald vV, Arnold’s &::;{h m,,:,;:h_ fishery regulations has opened 0| yaterans of snowy Attu and steam- commercial salmon fiching '-m‘lnx uyte-clpwred positions ‘and waters immediately about Juneau, nilg 1200 yards south of Yonabary including Gastineau Channel, Auk|enigrging the aréa the Divislon doln-' Bay and Favorite Channel north 0 jnates on i the mouth of Eagle River, it was dis- 113 RN MR- ARG weat. closed here today by J..Steele Cul-: bertson, Fisheries Management Sup- Rflmi OF ervisor for the Fish and Wildlife Service: i | Mr. Culbertson explained that the (ABI“I G I‘ area covered by the amendment has QR T for several years been closed to the taking of salmon commercially ex- tept by trolling. As far as Salmon WASHINGTON, May 24—Presi- nxldent Truman stood pat today on & ‘_r"lour-wny Cabinet reshuffle that gave the west added prestige and subtragted age. There were indications that no | further shifts in the 10-member Presidential family are imminent. Political observers viewed the se- lections as retaining a somewhat 14 FROM SE‘\mE,..,M 1 tinge” to th Yesterday, ‘Pan American World, Noting the geographical back- strictions are now lifted, he said. It was pointed out, however, that the area is still closed to the Seinil of herring, except for bait, or he ing to be taken by gill net. PAN AMERICAN HAS Airways incoming clippers brought ground of the four new Cabinet 15 passengers to Juneau, of which 14 members—all from . west, of the were from Seattle. | Mississippi—Senator. Johnson, (D., Wilma Rhodes, Emma Cramer, Joan ‘“The government is moving off Rhodes, Phyllis Cameron, Hugh the Hudson River—it's been there J. Wade, Rudolph Heller, Carl Mar-'a long time.” Waglum Roger, Margaret Flesher, terday's appointmeuts was unifor- Wayne Niemi, Charles Lane and Ro- mally favorable. Dorothy Green flew to Juneau to be confirmed by the Senate. through Fairbanks. { tock the following ten passengers:‘“‘a“on's Mo.oris“ Lt. Wm. D. Lee, Harry Beerman, { Henry Ebert, Mrs. Seagram, Mrs. Green, Walter Spencer, Matthew | From Fairbanks: Harry Gabriel-, WASHINGTON, May 24—Uncle son, Mrs. Gabrielson, Emery Baum- Sam gave the signal today for Lhi torists. Relieved of the task of pouring L] H ” o(a"ons or | European battlefronts, the govern: ment announced a 50 per cent in- | June 22, pr i s e d pa( N w | This means that motorists thus om | b e e 'o( three gallons a week rather than SEATTLE, May 24—Harold A.|'"" 12th Regional War Labor Board em- ll (ol ( E Albre‘h' bracing Washington, Oregon and . " s b try after the war. He made no predictions, however, Im In Ah k as to the future labor situation in e‘ s a back Sunday and haven't had time! ANCHORAGHE, Alaska, May 24.— to study the picture here.” | The Territorial Health Board today .o acceded to its request that Lt. Col. KC. Earl Albrecht be released from the Army to become Alaska's first TOPEKA, Kas—Recalling warn- has been commanding Fort Richard- ings about balloon bombs, Topekans son Hospital. He came to Alaska in were a bit alarmed by a strange 1935 as Superintendent of the Alaska dangling a bit of insulated wire. l physician for the Matanuska Valley Experts gingerly dismantled the colonization project. He quit the contrivance and found it to be Matauska Hospital in 1941 to enter Those from Seattle to Juneau were Colo.) observed to newsmen: tin, Zeke Phillips, Denzil Moen,| Congressional comment on yes- ger Woglum. i All of the appointments have yet An outgoing clipper to Seattle Beatrice Beerman, Willlam Leise,' .I.o Re“"e More Gas Rogers and Henry Farrow. T garder and Dwight Hull. . more gasoline for the nation’s mo- thousands of barrels daily to Indus'ry A"er War !crease in basic rations, effective will be able to obtain an average Seering, new Vice Chairman of the Alaska, said last night he looked) for “serious dislocations” in indus- | Io Be (ommksioner this area, explaining he “just got announced the War Department had BOMBSHELL full-time Health Commissioner. He object wrapped with tape and Raliroad Hospital and later became just what it appeared—a baseball. the Army service as a Captain,