The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 13, 1945, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL, THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LXV.,NO. 10,012 JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1945 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS UNOPPOSEDAIR BLO TRUMANT0 MAKE REPORT 10 CONGRESS Immediately on Return from Big Three Meet He Will Tell All ABOARD CRUISER AUGUSTA WITH PRESIDENT TRUMAN, 13.—Associates said today sident Truman will report to Congress immediately upon his re- turn from his conference with Marshal Stalin and Prime Minister Churchill where he hopes to devel- op the groundwork for a perman- ent Eurppean peace. Mr. Truman is understood to have made a firm resolve against any secret commitments at his first Three meeting opening next week at Potsdam, Germany. 'FEDERAL WAGE DIFFERENTIAL IS ~ UP FOR STUDY ;War - Navy—Departmenis May Back Up on Elim- ination Order | Some further light concerning| the red hot issue of Federal pay differentials for Alaska service—at | | least as far as the War and Navy departments and their graded civ- {ilian employees are concerned—was (received here today. A wire to Gov. Ernest Gruening, from William H. Kushnick, Direc- tor of Civilian Personnel and train- |ing, Office of the Secretary of War, stated: “Your protest to the Army and| Navy agreement on application of differentials has been received | through the Commanding General of the Alaskan Department. | “No_discrimination was intended. |Our view is supported by World Peace/s Charter Gets (em. Approval WASHINGTON, July 13.—The Eenate Foreign Relations Committee today voted 20 to, 0 to recommend Senate ratification of the United Nations charter. SAVED FROM DEATH IN ICY BERING WATERS Heroic Action of Crew- men, Prevents Tragedy By Olen Clements (Associated Press War Correspondent) Skilled Seamanship and| (NICOBAR ISLANDS SHELLED British Fleet Units Bom- bard Strategic Section | Third Fleet Is Lashed b 138-Mile-an-Hour Wind: 21Battle Craft ngaged - LOADED AIRLINER; Acting immediately after closing ADAK, Aleutians, July 13.—The -Airfields Attacked off the cruiser Pittsburgh and dam- aged at least 20 other warships, Adm. five days of hearings, the commit- ckilled seamanship of a Navy patrol tee gave the unanimous approval of craft skipper and the heroism of all of the members present to the 50- two comrades were credited today nation agreement signed in San with saving a fellow crewman from Francisco last month. !the frigid waters of the Bering Sea Senators present said the rolls a few minutes before he would have would te held open for others who peristed. were not there to record their views., Fireman William E. Johnson of The committee numbers 23 members. | Pondleton, Oregon, was swept into Leaders have made arrangements the icy water while his ship was to bring the charter before the Sen- battling rough weather at 20 knots. ate July 23. The propeller wake kicked him Before the hearings were wound under but the lookout in the crow’s (up, John Foster Dulles, Chief Ad- nest spotted him. Lieut. F. L. Mat- viscr to the American Delegation at|heson of Miami, Fla., the Skipper, | | units have bombarded the strategic Nicobar Islands while carrier planes attacked airfields in northwest Su- matra, Southeast Asia Command Headquarters annoynced tonight in a special communique, ritish minesweepers swept the approaches to Malacca Strait, which { lies between Sumatra and the great 5 to 10 without sighting a Japanese ivessel. While fleet units attacked the CALCUTTA, July 13.—British fleet 1 ! Jchester W. Nimitz announced today !after virtually every damaged ship was back in action. At least four of the damaged ships —the battleships Massachusetts and | Indiana, the carrier San Jacinto, and . ‘lhe destroyer John Rodgers—partic- | Emefgen(y I_andmg {ipated in last Tuesday's 1,000 plane il tcarrier strike at Tokyo. | The typhoon damaged more ships lashed Adm, William F. (Bull) Hal- seys’ Third Fleet with 138-mile an Pilot of Transport, with 19 | hour winds last June §, tore the bow | Aboard, Makes Safe ithc passengers prayed, the pilot of}able to do In action in any single a crippled Eastern Alrlines Trans- | battle. But Nimitz made no men- ip(;rt, brought the ship to an emer- tion of anyone being killed or ser- PRICE TEN CENTS SSTRUCKONJAPAN BOMBERS OF ALL CLASSES IN ATTACKS Enemy Homeland Faclor- ies, Railroads Wrecked, Ships Sent Down GUAM, July. 13.~Virtuyally upon- posed air blows by around ] B-20s, heavy and medium bombers, fighters and long range search planes across a 770 mile arc of Japan, extending north and south of Tas kyo, were announced today. Prompt- ly a U. S. Air General on Okinaws daclared. ““The Japs, in my opinion, haval base of Singapore, from July? COLUMBIA, S. C,, July 13—While than the Japanese Navy has been don't intend to engage us in the air.” As ¢nemy homeland factorigs and 1ailronds were wrecked and evén the smellest hipping sunk offghore, the | San Francisco, told the committee brought his ship about sharply and{ Nicobars, planes also laid their ex- |7ency landing in a Carolina corn-,fously injured. He sald no ships Brig, Gon. David P. Hutchisen of the charter is “the only practical €ased the craft alongside Johnson.! plosives on the islands. The Nicobars | tield yesterday after it collided with |were sunk. the Far East Air Force told m"’,. alternative” to the same kind of Ensign R. W. Kohanki of Lovemfltl,1 lie 280 miles northwest of Sumatra, fan army plane 3,000 feet up, killing Back In Aotion ¢d’ Press Cortespondent Rie postwar disagreements among the O.. tossed him a life preserver, but rich Dutch oil produeing isiand, and |two Army fliers and & two-year-old| He listed 20 damaged ships as re- Cushing at Okinawa that Japan b \paired and back in action, including viously was hoarding planes to weg in The atmosphere aboard this war-| Comptroller General's decision, in ship took on a more businesslike that the differential was originally note today as it edged nearer Eurc- | intended as a recruitment incen- X g J : ; Y 8 | . v ’ 2d Johnson's arms were so numbed by ! s pean waters enroute to Antwerp,|tive for people to leave the 4g MaJor powers which he said causxd ¥ | about 900 miles off Singapore. They | boy. 7 e s ey 4 b g .. the Treaty of Versailles to fail. the 42 degree water he could not: are 400 miles west of the Kra pen-, The child was one of 17 passen- three fast new battleships and two suitide tactics when Yank Infanthy- Bl e e e oncis matio 1o g oro| Dulles, President William Green of hold iL. Crewmen tried to lower al insula of Malaya, linking Singapore | zers aboard the Boston-Miami air- |Essex class carriers. men storm Nippon's lnvmon"b'u:ft';- Yt Tor' Mlone ShoiE Monday ied by the Budget Bureau and will ‘¢ American Federation of Labor; small boat, but the high seas de-} to th» mainland of Asia. liner, which went down 80 miles| The cruiser Pittsburgh, which mir- es. dam for ‘BESKans. GRISIN e S S ki Sl Norman Thomas, former Socialist feated the effort. Rear Adm. Z. R. Patterson com- |east of here. Four others, includ- aculously stayed afloat, is being Rear Adm. D. C. Ramsey,. nes % eeday, . Imost | Gecition The asteement b g & candidate for President, and Philip Seaman John Connolly of Rochest-| manded the attacking warships—the ing the boy's mother, Mrs. A. E. refitted for action. ' Presumably Ofjef. of SWIL of the Fifth, Mésl, It was reflected in the amost decon. The agreement ls 2 M Murray, President of the CIO, all ¢, N. Y. went into action. Don-| Fiftn Cruiser Squadron—which in-| Williams, of Miami, Fla., were re- some additional ships, not identitied, ¢stimated Japan might hey ) contintious: paileys It 48 Bapal, DOTRER piesgie VR Ie LAl o (fidoring the crbriAGHAR ning a life ves, he leaped over the! cluded the cruiser Nigeria, the car- | ported seriously injured, and sev-|were damaged and have not return- plagas dvailable and probably\cag dent held with James F. Byes, :1, ion 1](1\!2 135 depliion be "“"‘d"‘ Green, first on the stand, told the side into the cold water where he| riers Ameer and Emperor, the de- |cral were shaken up. | ed to sea. 4 §hifli‘ about 4,000 in the battle o\l Secretary of State, and Admiral to pay all Government employees, | nmiitee members the Charter will| numbzd quickly, but managed o] stroyer Roebuck and the Sixth Mine-| Gne of the passengers, Mrs. Annie Nimitz said definitely no ane was Jppan, ., . i . ¢ i William H. Leah:\', his personal regardless of their source of re- ighter o ' 'not lash the rope around his mate. | - e gB u I- l E T I N S Sepman A, G, Howard of Mont-1 | | gomery, Ala., jumped overboard and « I Klolleu tne rope around the ‘weary ARE R S(uED | Johnson, who was pulled to the deck. ' 5 i make possible “collective bargaining” reach the struggling Johnson and| Sweeping Flotilla. |Tine Moore Walker, 26, of Columbia, lost from the Pittsburgh. Nor was ¢ Only weak f ppasition Chief of Staff. | cruitment, then the War and Navy y.iween the nations that ought to go Pull him to the ship’s side. Crew-| Japanese broadcasts, first to tell credited Captain G. D. Davis, of man on her seriously injured. efifiountered pver Tokyp Hayian R departments will restore money 105t g jony way toward preventing war. {men lowered ropes to hoist them | gf the attacks on the Nicobars, spec- | Miami, the pilot, with saving their ‘Lhe Pittsbuigh returned to Guam (jiy)ta the e PF( HE[GESE" 'S il ot i jaboard but the icy waters made, ulated thata landing attempt would lives. i Cennolly’s hands so numb he could pe made. Captain Davis and Capt. N. L. vepairs and is now being refitted .“ iibton ”’ Y leE" PROMOHON [UmLE: REEMEY 3 e apemant, | Martingale, Co-pilot, said the collis- another port for return to action. térs kefare M&, L4 in Alaska, is extremely low.” Western Pacific Area 15 2 . :v.\ o Gov. Gruening today pointac out losing altitude ~ preparatory , to ° The Nimitz announcement did not FVM '.“ ool s !landing at Columbia. - Davis said spcify where the typhoon struck the NIH:.&.:M g?,;fi;‘f;;oc‘f’g;’f‘gf*;;;fi: Alaska, Navy have already taken on differ- | ineitbor he, the .co-polot nor any Third Fleet for the second time in MANILA, duly 10=Gien.: has recenly been promoted to the Tec 5 Helgesen is a member of the Medical Detachment serving this station. -eo | |under her own power for temporary duum| 3,000 | “We understand that the actual! iion occurred as the transport was FORT RICHARDSON, Alaska — y0¢ cuch action, as the Arm; and . grade of Technician Fifth Grade. Tec 5 Helgesen is a graduate of the Juneau High School and enterec the service at the completion of his High School course. ST0CK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, July 13. — Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 7', American Can 9614, Anaconda 34’4, Curtiss Wright 7', International Harvester 86, Kennecott 38', New York Central 28%, Nortnern Pacific 32%, U. S. Steel 70'%, Pound $4.03%. Sales today were 960,000 shares. Dow, Jones averages today are as follows: industrials 166.67, rails 60.40, utilities 33.43. The Washington Merry - Go-Round By DREW PEARSON Lt. Col. Robert S. Allen now on active service with the Army.) WASHINGTON—There is more than meets the eye behind the ap- pointment of Carl Moran, ex-Con- gressman from Maine, as new As- ristant Seeretary of Labor. It prob- ably means a gradual movement away from left-wing labor groups and no more “clearing it with Sid- ney." Moran is one of the early New Dealers, a forthright, hard-hitting liberal: one of the few Democrats ever elected to Congress from the entials, whether intended as dis- crimination or not, actually is “in- tolerakle” discrimination and it is vital that Alaska make it known that conditions in tropical areas, where standards of living are low o and where the order to eliminate differentials originated, do not ap- ply in this territory. | | The Governor also stated that he this.morning telephoned Alas- Delegate E. L. Bartlett, who | confirmed reports concerning the status of the wage differential is- sue. Butf, it is importent for Alas- | kans to realize that the decision |not yet final, Gov. Gruening said.i had | ka | Flying Forlress Rises 43,499 Feet Info Afmosphere ‘ | SEATTLE, July 13. — Chmblnr:: “like a homesick angel” — in the words of ‘the co-pilot—a B-17 Flying | Fortress rose 43,499 feet into the i sky Wednesday and the Boeing Air- !crart Company claimed today the mark was a new altitude record for | planes in the United States. i | Another type,of plane reached 56,- | 046 feet over Italy in 1938 but Boe- | { this week was a world record for | four-engined aircraft. ! “We could almost forecast weather |by eye up there,” Co-pilot Scott i Osler said. |GEN. LUCIUS CLAY - HEADQUARTERSIS | WASHINGTON—The Senate un- Connolly ard Howard were hoisted six months but presumably it was animously confirmed today the nom- gahoard a nioment later. ination of General Omar N. Bradley =~ Johnson was in the water fully to be Administrator of Veterans’ Af- eight- minutes and medics said he fairs. He succeeds Brig. Gen. Frank wculd have perished had there been Hines, resigned. It also confirmed delay, as 12 minutes is regarded as Reymond M. Foley of Michigan as the limit which a human can with- Federal Housing Administrator, suc- 'stand the Bering Sea waters ceeding Abner H. Ferguson, resigned. | ———————— - WASHINGTON — Congress dis- patched a $769,364,850 War Agencles DESERIED "'ppo“s Appropriation Bill to the White. SUI(IDE l" M s House today after six weeks of con- ! troversy revolving ‘about funds for OWI and FEPC. HEADQUARTERS, ARMY FORC- LOS ANGELES—Alia Nazimova, ES OF PACIFIC, P. I, July 13.— 66-year-old Russian-born actress, Helpless, terror-stricken and vir- died today in Good Samaritan Hos- | tually deserted by their own army, pital. The famous dramatic actress, Japanese civilians in interior Min- once the toast of world capitals for ' danao Island are resorting to mass her performances in Ibsen and'suicides to avoid capture, reports O'Neil plays, has been fn Hollywood | here disclosed. BY NOME BASE CREW WHEN PLANE DOW NOME, Alaska, July 13.—An Arc- | tic airplane rescue brought seven passenzers and twe crew members of an Alaskan Airlines' passenger| TEoth engines of the Afrliner were Struck the Third Fleet between the had Kenney ag 'his of the passengers saw the twin- imotored army plane until just be- in the Western Pacific area between fore the crash. |Okinawa and the Philippines. The Army fliers killed were listed This area is known as the Wes- as Cpl. Robert B. Clapp and Cpl. tern Pacific “Typhcon Cradle,” | Raleigh B. Allbaugh, Jr., both of Ok- where unpredictable stoims zig zag |lahcma City, Okla. A third occu- in a general northerly or northeast- pant of the Army plane parachuted erly typhoon path. | to safety. | Last Deccmber 18 another typhoon Qeorge. O. Kenncy was handed the Army Alr Forees’ tap tactical command against Japan today amd promptly that his Far' Eqstern, Alr - Foroes with advanced headquarters' now on Ckinawa wi bomb the enemy hcmeland 24 hours a day at-all alti- tudes from 10 to/40,009: feet.. . Gen. Douglas Mac. ur, who has right-band man plane, forced down 300. miles from knocked out, its left wing partially Fhilippines and the Marianas and for air sinch, the early days here, bnck ‘safely to civilization. Within five hours after the plane sent distress signals last Saturday, Capt. James Millerick, Sonoma, Calif., commanding the search and rescue squadron of the air trans- port command's Nome base, locat- ed and dropped supplies to the grounded party. A ground search party brought them to a takeoff spot, and they were flown to Mc- Grath. torn off and the fuselage aft of the three destroyers capsized and were cockpit was cut. ‘One of the trans- lost in the violent seas. ! port’s engines landed a few feet frem’ 100 Foot Seas ithe plane and the other fell a mile Many of the ships were badly hurt away. by tewering 100 foot high seas. None was more heavily hit than the cruis- er Pittsburgh, which was caught | ncar the center of the storm off the Ryukyu islands. A thundergus sea ripped off 104 ifect of her prom ‘“and tossed it aside as though it were a match box to wallow in the storm off the ship’s e - Seledive rvicev the past few years. WASHINGTON—The motor mine sweeper YMS-39 has been lost in the Borneo area as a result of enemy ‘actlon. the Navy announced today. | Casualties among her wartime com- | plement of 35 officers and men totaled five, including three killed, cne wounded and one missing. NEW YORK-—Luisz Rainer, act- | !less civilians are living on the | slopes of Mt. Apo, commanding Davao Gulf on southern Mindano. | Reports to officers of the 24th Div- {ision have renewed the belief that | thcusards of them, all evacuated from their Davao city homes when the Japanese army fled before the Americans, may resort to a mass i suicide and murder program. | One prisoner taken by the 24th, ing said the flight of “The Shadow" '€ Who won the Academy Award|iold of 40 Japanese women and An estimated 13,000 of the help-. It was the Nome air base rescue party's thirty-first successful mis- sion in 17 months. - Fair Investigation of S‘port cide,” reported Assoclated Press Ci . Makes Changes in Draft Regulati ’a egu a Ion crrespondent Robbin Coons. AR Capt. John E. Gingrich ordercd WASHINGTON, July 13.—Men 26 the engines reversed and swung the or over who do not meet the Army’s gg5 foot, ship precarfously around in regular physical standards are free g circle to escape a collision with her today to change jobs without draft own how. She came.out in the. desd board permission. |calm of tke storm’s center. Bealed bulkhocads kept the. Pitts- mugh afleat and the Cruiser, nor- mally capable of 33 knots, lumbered tack to” Guam at .nfne knots’ for + mperary vépalis. The bow Subservive Elements Isfo Get Underway | At the request of the Army, Selec- tive Service has relaxed its regula- iions to exclude thesé men from the e ssidlity of induction as job-jump- ers. ®8 ing-squad in the Utah pr WASHINGTON, July 13.—A “fear- | twice, and Robert Knittel, publisher, | children found in fhe Tamozan ! were married yesterday at the P | Church of the Ascension. Miss Rainer and Playwright Cliffort Odets were divorced in 1940. ' MARYSYVILLE, Calif. — A court | martial has convicted Maj. Harry E. Roy. 57, a voteran of 30 years’ Army service, on 16 of 24 counts that he sold liquor at Camp Beale. He was sentenced to forfeit $200 a onth of his pay for 20° months. |sector wifh- their throats slit. —_————— ' AUSSIES PACED BY FLAME THROWERS - INBORNEO BATTLE taken in tgwn a tug and brought to ‘Lowering ‘seas crushed 25 feet. off the carrier Hornet’s flight deck and 'badly damaged several destroyers, iother carrespondents reported. >t - Heretofore these registrants who switched employment without ap- proval of their board could he draft- ed for limited Army service. ‘The job jumper penalties, invok- ed six months ago to nip a trend away from war work, remain in ef-, fect for all physically fit men, as! |less but fair” inyestigation of any subversive elements was promised tcday by the new chairman of the |{House committee on Un-American | Activities, 02 | Rep. John S, Wood (D-Ga), elect-l ed to the post yesterday to succeed R2p, Edward J. Hart (D-NJ), pledg- | red that policy as he called his col- leagles to an organization meeting, “In my bock all Americans are good ones until they are proved Iwell as for registrants under 26 who |lnll shy of regular requirements, | Men in the latter group who fail| | to clear job changes will continue to Alaska Highwa Discussion Takes rock-ribbed Republican State of | Maine. He joined with GOP Sen-/| ; MANILA, July 13.—Aussie Sev- Ibe inducted under relaxed physical| otherwis2,” Wood said. | standards. the defensive In Al Guainea, announced the. Aw ‘of the Seventh Alr h 2 C'ntral Pacific] Had béep transferred ‘w Kenney's' mand. . All Army ur_cperations” from 'Okinawa now are under MacAvthur's, over-all comy mand as chief 6f Army Forees in the R llc,_ 4, ia and N To no"pcsbfi:g, Then: Faces Firing Squal SALT LAKE CITY, July. 13.-A few minutes ' arer calmly 4 chorry pie to-raporters, James Joseph Roedl, 27, sharp-ficed, partly bald young murderer of a woman &chogy teacker, died'before & five man fie= ison yard st daybreak today, e = ' '33 mdnths ago he and. .a felk biteh-hiker beat to.death.with' @ hemm:t middle-aged Abigail Aguss Williams of Ban Leandro, Calif." % | Mrs. Willlams was killed .in- autemedile “near the .Ute.:Infian |reservation in ‘Eastern Ulah after she {had picked up Roedl, and LeRoy | kdward Ritchey, 26. Ritchey was !scntenced to life imprisonment far tho killing. . i 54 %% In the prison chapel Roedl; tall ing and laughing, cut slices of NEW YORK—Film Actress Mar- | enth Division troops, paced by ator Owen Brewster, when the lat-| ter was Governor, to fight the In- sull power interests, and he, him-|States section of the Allied Control | with souvenirs acquired behind the | self, came within a close margin of being elected a Democratic Gover- nor of Maine. After two terms in Congress, Moran was-appointed to the: Mar- itime Commiission, got fed up With the dictatorial methods of Admiral Land, ;and 'went back to Maine to run his father’s insurance company. Moran is pro-labor, will fight for labor when it is right, but will also fight against labor when it is wrong. No one could have had a more pro-Roosevelt record when in Congress; but, on the other hand, Moran is one of the closest friends of labor-enemy Ed Burke, counsel for the coal operators. The two got to know each other BERLIN, July 13. — The United | Commission for Germany has moved | | its forward headquarters to Berlin | from Frankfurt on the Main, it was | | announced officially tonight. | The British section will move here | shortly. } Gen. Eisenhower’s deputy on thb} Conirol Commission, Lt. Gen. Lucius. Clay, will have his permanent office |in Berlin. Frankfurt will continue | to be headquarters for United States | Army Forces in the European the- atre. American and British occupation zones will start receiving food from wastern Germany next week. | The Soviet responsibility for feed- ing more than 1,500,000 civilians in the part of Berlinv transferred to| western Allied rule will cease Mon- ' lene Dietrich returns from Paris fighting lines in Europe. WASRINGTON — Partial lifting | of pric2 controls on commodities soon by the OPA. X WASHINGTON -_ About 45000 workers .are idle in over 20 cities today as a result of labor disputes. ' Those affected by strikes include | thousands of war plant employees, newspaper printers in five cities, cigar workers in Florida and coal miners in Illinois and Pennsylvania. —_— e MR, MRS. LIPPENT HERE Mr. and Mrs. W. A, Lippent, 0!' 'flame throwers and tanks, have knifed deep. into Japanese defenses | of smashéd Stene Ridgé north of captured . Balikpapan on . southeast Borneo ‘in eavy n;m_mg. & At the same timé, headquarters 1 no longer scarce will be announced ; #éported today, ‘Duteh. units joined | the " Australians *in* a ‘left flank march up Kariango Peninsula to execute a brilliant encircling man- euver against the entrenched Jap- anese who are pocketed some six miles north of Balikpapan town. SPILLED MILK ROCKFORD, Ill—Alex Conratti |believes he has a legitimate reason to cry over spilled milk. { | | Older men freed of clearance re-‘ <ponsibility are those classified in| 4-F, 2-A (P), 2-A (L), 2-B (F) and| 'BRITISH EMPIRE WAR CASUALTIES ARE ANNOUNCED " o NYMAN IS PROMOTED | e et Sy s FROM PRCTO TECH § casualties among members of the | armed forces and civillans from the, FORT RICHARDSON, Alaska — beginning of the war until June 1, pfc. Robert M. Nyman, husband of 1945, according to the ministry of Mys. Lillian E. Nyman, of Junesu, information, | Alaska, has recently been promoted Of this total 532,233 are listed as to Technician Fifth Grade. Tec 5 killed or believed dead. Empire los- Nyman is a member of the Medical ses in the last war were 1,089,919 Detachment serving this station. dead and 2,400,988 wounded. Tec 5 Nyman is a graduate of the Civilian casualties in the United 2-B (L). |~ All of these are classes for men {Who do not meet regular "physical 5. e | | | 'Place__.i_n Vidoria SEATTLE, July 13. — Premier | Johi Hart of British Columbia will night, alternating his piecing receive members of the Alaska Highway' Subcommittee of thé Ad- visory Committee, Washington State Department of Conservation and Development at Victoria today. Howard Oostigan, executive sec- retary. of the committee, sald an Informal discussion would be held on proposed construction cf a north-south highway in British Columbia 'inking Alaska with the Pacific northwest. » i o MEATLESS FRIDAY ‘TULSA, Okla.—Lots of things are when Burke was in the House and| later in the Senate from Nebraska.| 9aY: And John L. Lewis would have had| fits the other night if he had’leok- ed in on &' private party whare the - eee —— BADER IN TOWN P. Bader has arrived in Juneau' Sitka, are guests at the Gastineau Hotel, his car when he made a turn, and ORI . 1 ST jthe cork popped out. Conratti FVERETT MEN HERE * Earle"M. Mackey and J. C. Lewis, crashed into a- parked car, caromed A one-gallon jug of milk upset in tried to right the jug but his car | Aberdeen High BSchool, Aberdeen,' % Kingdom due to enemy action in- Washington, and completed two left in‘post’offices these busy days, cluded 146,760 killed and 60,585, be- ycars of pre-dental work at Grays|but Postmaster George Watkins be- lieved killed. | Harbor Junior College. Prigr to en-'lieves the Red . Point for absent- (It was announced yesterday in ,teiing the scrvice Tec 5 Nvman was: mindedness goes to the person who .and handed these. out .with cups’of |coffc2 to ‘newspagermen. , Guards said he had eaten intermittently wit with puifing on cigays. 33 R “ Twenty Thousand Already Tried As Collaboratoniss PARIS, July 13—More than 20,- 000 people have. stood-trial in the nine months' purge .of.Prench eol- laberationists, . but 30,000 ' more re- main to face juggment, Ministry of colrts have passed 994 death verdicts, 600 sentences of hard la- bér for life, 4,638 other hard labor !sentences, 1,083 of ‘imprisonment for five years .or .more, and. 9,876 for | Justiee The | from Ketchikan and is a guest at of Everett, are guests at the Hotellacrass the street and hit a fire hy- Washington that American casual-|cngaged in commercial halibut fish-| Walker off leaving a good-sized slab shorter joil. terms. There were the Gastineau Hotel., Juneau, drant, tics now total 1,049,104). cf salt pork on a writing table. 3,315 acquitted. f (Continued on Page Four) 'ing.

Other pages from this issue: