The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 14, 1945, Page 1

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o "THE DAILY “ALI, THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” ALASKA EMPIRE VOL. LXV.,NO. 10,065 . JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1945 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS 8 PRICE TEN CENTS - ———— SHORT OCCUPATION OF JAPAN PREDICTED PEARL HARBOR INVESTIGATION | GROUP CHOSEN Barkley Heads Senate Quintet Picked fo ° Alaska Indian L Case Reope Now En an U. 5. TROOPS IN CHINA GIVING AID ned: Ickes INREOCCUPATION | BULLETINS route fo Europe ’Speed in Dufies Will De- PHILADELPHI, Fritz Kuhn, one-time head of the German-Am- erican Bund, is being deporfed to- merrow, the Tmmigration and Nat- uralization Service reported today. WASHINGTON President Tru- man asked Congress today to cut Wainwright Lays Bare True Charader of Japs; Scars as Mute Evidence NIP WASH-UP 'WITHIN YEAR 1S FORECAST Probe Disaster WASHINGTON, Sept. 14—Senate Majority Leader Barkley (D-Ky.), today headed a group of five Sen- ators named to a joint Congres- sional Committee which will in- vestigate the Pearl Harbor disaster. In addition to Barkley, Presiding Officer McKellar (D-Tenn.), named Senators George (D-Ga.), Lucas (D-T11.), Brewster R-Maine). and Ferguson, R-Mich.) Speaker Rayburn appointed the | WASHINGTON, Sept. 14.—Under- ‘AI.E“"AN H_EEI | secretary of the Interior Abe For- | | tas today reopened a case in which | Indian villages in Southeast lEGIO" OF MER“‘ Indians and the white man own-| jers of salmon canneries, fisheries —h and logging concerns in the area had | protested against the original rul- ing by Secretary Harold L. Ickes, Vice Adm. Fleicher Recog- : B . who is enroute to Europe. | nizes Those Who Plast- | rors imviied new evidence 1n ol ¢ writing within 15 ays. - eredKurile Islands | ~.o 4 Natives of the villages—Hydraburg, following H“"fe SO ! |Klawock and Kake—wanted ~the Representatives Cooper (D-| ice government to declare their full OMINATO, Japan, Sept. 14—Vice & 8 Tenn), Clark (D-N. C., Murphy | o g np ‘,‘;(,k Fletcher today OWrership of 5350000 acres of land, (D-La.), Keefe (R-Wis.), and Gear- hart (R-Calif.). All are lawyers. Barkley was author of the reso- lution creating the investigation. | o g, 10 GIVE FACTS OF ATROCITIES T0 JAPANESE Nippon Newspapers Agree " to Publish Cruelty | Stories, Evidence | | 14 — Gen. YOKOHAMA, Sept. MacArthur directed today that the stark facts of Japanese atrocitied, | committed all the way from the Philippines to New Guinea — and | back again — be told in full to the Japanese people. Representatives of Japanese news- | papers agreed, at the suggestion of the Supreme Allied Commander, | to publish a summary of the at-| rocity reports as the start of a program to “educate the Japanese | people in the acts of their mili-/ tary.” The beheadings of American | fliers, the death march from Ba-| taan, cannibalism in New Guinea, beatings and mistreatment of pris- oners of war—all will be included in evidence to be presented to the| Japanese people. . { “It’s purely educational” said| Rrie. Gen. Bonner F. Fellers of | MacArthur’'s staff. The initial survey in the Japanese press wm1 be followed by detailed document- ary evidence, he said. “The Japanese people didn't know about. these atrocities, and; we want to tell them,” Fellers| added. He said that MacArthur had | tidewaters and ocean ar in the Alexander Achipelago. awarded the Legion of Merit to three high-ranking Naval officers who fought in the Aleutians and plaster- | the villages. He denied their claims | términe Homecoming of American Forces CHUNGKING, Sept. 14—U. 8. | {‘273,(‘00 acres of hunting and fish-] p OFFICERS le[“ |ing lands were awarded to three troops now remaining in the China|islation authorizing the construction | Alaska.|theatre have been assigned the | of naval vessels.” mission of facilitating Chinese re- occupation of areas formerly held by Japanese and of securing the Chinese hold in those regions. Lt. Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer, U. S. China Commander, outlining this mission in general‘terms to a press conference, said the speed with which it'is completed will govern the re- turn of the troops to the United States. He added that a goodly proportion of the troops would be heme for the Christmas holidays. He said the transfer of authority Ickes divided 273,000 acres among from the Japanese to the Chinese‘i was proceeding smoothly and he the Navy's spending authority by | nearly $17.000,000,000. He also rec- Ecmmended that Congress consider “g complete review of existing leg- | WANCOUVER, B. C. — The five- | [story building, in the heart of this | city’s industrial center, occupied by the Pioneer Envelope Company | plant, was destroyed by fire today. |One fireman is dead, three others | are missing. Origin is undetermined WASHINGTON-—Paul V. McNutt | has been confirmed as U. S. High| | Cemmissioner to the Philippines, a | post he held before the war. NEW YORK—The Duk2 of Wind- | sor, who sails today for France MacArthuthr&mises "No Y ! NEW YORK, Sept. 14-—Japanese r [ Character today lay stripped bare |by a man who knows it well—Gen. | . " . "o demanded neithes - sart oc-| Kid Gloves™ for Nips- cupation nor a soft peace.” : PO|_|(Y IS | P the sapanese can oe subeerviens;| DOMe] Suspended they can be pleasant and cooperative last nigt at a dinner given in his tion of Japan “may be washed up” honor after a wiid reception in New within a year, Lt. Gen. Robert L. v | York streets. Eichelbefger predicted today, while lon Bataan and Corregidor,” he said would be no "kid glove” enforce- “have seen the Japanese ('llilrfl('l(‘r‘lng“[ of surrender teyms and or- o 5 in the raw. dered complete suspension of all nant with Liberal Treat- scldiers do when they are on top,' Agency. ment of Japanese By FRED HAMPSON Jonathan M. Wainwright. jif it suits their purpose,” he said| TOKYO, Sept. L | “But the men who were captured Gen. MacArthur promised there Liberees, Civilians Indig- “They have seen what Japanese gperations of the Domei News (AP Correspondent) | and I think all of us who livod_ Eichelberger expressed his views ‘lh‘l'flllfih tortured days are deter-|gt a press conference in his Bighth !mined they shall never be on top Army Headquarters, where he ob- |again, |served that “when an insular 14—The occupa-' ed the Kuriles repeatedly with shell fire from their force of three old crui: S. In a ceremony in his quarters on {board his flagship Fletcher gave Rear Arm. John H. Brown, Jr., of Middletown, Dela., a gold star in lieu of a second Legion of Merit; and pinned medals on Capts. Cyril A. Rumble, Washington, D. C., and Leonard S. Mewhinney, Cameron, Brown commanded the cruiser task force that included the 23-year-old four-stackers ~Richmond, Concord and Trenton, and one squadron of destroyers. Month after month this small force battered the Kuriles north of Japan, and swept the Sea of Okhotsk for Japanese shipping, | inflicting heavy damage and losing w"h Sh “ F l — not a single bluejacket to enemy ac- l e ragmen SI LONDON, Sept. 14—Foreign Min- | | isters tion in the last year, i Mewhinney is Brown's Chief of Staff, and Rumble is Captain of the Concord. - e SARATOGA REACHES SAN FRANCISCO A END OF FAST VOYAGE Grand Old Lady of Flattops Brings 3,710 fo Main- land from Front SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 14—The U. S. Saratoga, grand old lady of| the flattops, rested her' mighty engines today after bringing home 3,710 Nayy officers and men on a| speedy run from Honolulu to the| Mainland. | to 3,000,000 acres. He reserved de- foresaw no difficulties on any large’ apoard the steamship Argentina,| | cision on 2,000,000 additional acres scale. (told a press conference today that| MANILA, Sept. 14—Allied liberees in dispute among the natives them- | he intended to visit England. -q‘llunm»lnm through Manila enroute selves. | will visit England and T look for-|home are variously baifled, dis- | The Alaska Canned Salmon indus- MANY IMPOR]‘AN" | ward to ng my mother,” | try protested that site of their fish - > - “It is unimportant now what hap- country loses is land, sea and air pered to me . . . " said the drawn, | power and is without raw materials tired General, who spent 39 months a1 has big countries sitting on its in a Japanese prison camp after the fa,es it can’t be much of a hopeless days of Bataan and Corre=| oo’ fl"f”"- ; | “If the Japs continue acting as But I think it is very important|they are now,” he said in answer | mr‘uppmmvd and indignant over what | Duke said. “It has been nearly nine | they describe as “kid glove” trap lead lines and canneries were treat- Japanese. jeopardized by the decision and subject to “confiscation.” Fisheries contended their occupation of sites over many decades established a priority over any rights of Natives. > - Youthful Infernees Peppered Jap Guards INGLEWOOD, Calif, Sept. 14— If they're old enough to hold slingshot, they're old enough 1o ;o of the greater part of the | will assist round-the-world commer- fight, reports Mrs. Mildred Sherk, recently returned to the U. S. after liberation from the Japanese prison camp at Santo Tomas in the Philippines. Youthful American internees at ISSUES CONFRONT BIG 5 CONFERENCE |Better Atmosphere Is Cre- | ated as Result of Rus- so-Rumanian Pact of the five leading Allied Nations resumed -drafting of a treaty for Ttaly today as dispatched notes asking | peace Egypt adjoining Italian Colony of Cire- naica. The Balkans continued as the | main point of tension. |, A slightly better atmosphere was created with the disclosure that iyears since T have seen my mother.” | ment of the | &2 | In 10 days 1 hi | MIAMI, Fla.—Winds estimated at|of them on ships, docks, repl | 150 miles per hour wer=> reported t0|ment centers, hospitals and office (have struck Turk’s Island in thelquarters. Some openly are critical British West Indies today as a great| of early occupation policies, par- hurricane whirled toward the Flor-| ticularly the enlisted men and |1da coast. | civilians. Officers are more cau- | NS | tious, But all warn that many | WASHINGTON — The War Re-| japanese do not realize that they |fugee Board has been officially dis- | are defeated and view the peace ;Snlvxd Ay President I‘l'umR‘n, who|ao o temporary recess ordered by credits the agency with saving the | Emperor. |lives of many thousand victims of |~y ¥ | Nazi persecution. | 7HOKYe-One of the last links in the international system of weather reporting, which in the peacetime era | torture, | is understandable that these,| jof all people, should resent soft treatment of .the suddenly pacific Japanese. They were sick, starved and beaten. Negligence, brutality, humiliation and hunger | have been cial aviation, was forged today as the | thelr lot. They saw | friends killed or die by inches. | Americans took over Japanese | " a7 weather installatior | They don’t think the Japanese are and personnel. : 5, | getting what's coming to them. NEW YORK—Metropolitan Oper:\! One enlisted man at a replace- |tenor Lauritz Melchior, left La|yent depot grudgingly read a the camp used slingshots to pepper |, ‘“'p cion Rumanian agreement | Guardia Airport today for Denmark. | pomej dispatch and growled “What captors with anti-aircraft shell fragments during air raids, she said, and the Japs were too busy or terrified to notice that the course of the jagged bits of metal was horizontal rather than vertical. - e Self-Government For India Within Six Months, Claim POONA, inuw, Sept. 14 — Asaf their not issued any formal order for, The big, grey carrier, her many | : | ” Ali, member of the All-India Con- such publication, but that Japa- war wounds patched, was the first Working Comumittee, nese newspapers had agreed to pub- |of the Navy's fighting craft to lish the evidence as he directed. reach this country as a peace-time Jap civilians have approached |temporary troop transport. Associated Press correspondents in- quiring about reports of Japanese cruelty. They said they were al- The Bluejackets who jammed the hangar deck and storerooms com-; gress Party said today he expected the next six months would find India well along the road toward self-govern- ment. Any British offer which falls | prised the largest group of service- o4 o sir Stafford Cripps’ 1942 | paring down Romanian reparations was negotiated with knowledge of ithe Allied Contrcl Commission in Bucharest. Concern had been ex- | pressed that Russia had acted alone. King Peter of Yugoslavia was i reported encouraged by his talk | with Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, in which he urged the United States to help broaden the Yugoslav Government and assure democratic elections. Another Balkan monarch in Exile, George II of Greece, hustled back from a vacation in | confer with the Archbishop Damaskinos. The ! gent talked to Byrnes yesterday. A heavy working day was before | the ministers of the United States, Russia, Great Britain, France and China. A heavy volume of diplo- matic communications flowed to and from them in their labors to re- Scotland to | Greek Regent, | | King Christian has invited him t0 e hel's going on up i Tokyo? sing at the King's 75th birthday |who won this war, anyway?” celebration on September 26 in COP~| ' yiperees of camps from Singa- b i | pore to Mukden were worried about | hundreds of thousands of Japanese LOS ANGELES — The northern | soldiers who never personally felt semi-finals in the Pacific Coast the might of the Allied war ma- Baseball League playoffs will begin ' chine, They had three years of in Portland instead of Seattle, as | yictory capped by 4 surrender order previolsly announced. League Fmsl-‘flaung that the emperor had gra- dent Clarence Rowland says the|cjously decided to end the war. Portland games are scheduled for| 3k 3 September 25, 26 and 27. Remain- | ing games of the northern semi-! | finals will be played in Seattle. | FlRE M RY | | | | | WASHINGTON—The Army plans | to release at least 30,000 doctors,| FORT SMITH, Ark., Sept. 14.—0f- as “I have seen the Japanese ve visited 2,300 that the American people understand | to a question, “within a year this _the nature of this people we have thing should be washed up.” + beaten back to their poor earth. | Estimates Occupation Forces | He estimated the occupation they are—with the veneer stripped would necessitate the use of about off. years all my life, and I could not forget them if I would. 1 shall bear the scars of those| 400000 American troops, but dis- closed that orders for some units, notably railroad troops and engin- “I have come to know the cunning | eering shore parties, already had with which they conceal their true been cancelled when it was dis- nature, and how quickly it 1eaps| . ereq that Japanese installations forth when there is no immediate chance of retadiation . . . “The Japanese are not sorry for what they have done to countless thousands in the populations of countries they have overrun. - ° “They are not sorry for the tor- ture they have inflicted on American scldiers. It simply would not occur to them to be sorry, because they done nothing which is at var- fance with their accepted philosophy.| “Before Japan is allowed to.take Fer place among other respected na- tions, she must be made to realize that her medieval ways have no place in our modern world.” The acclaim of New York’s millions | was showered on Gen. Wainwright yeterday in a heart-warming wel- come which the hero of Corregidor said he found “hard to take.” The General, resting today at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel, has not an- nounced when he will leave New| York. PR S S PRESIDENT OFF, WEEKEND VISIT WASHINGTON, Sept. 14—Presi- 10000 dentists and 40,000 nurses by | gicials still are without an explan- dent Truman took off from the next July 1. This is announced by | aiion of a series of about 30 myster- National Airport at 1:37 p. m., the War Department. As a resull,'jous fires on a Sebastian county EWT, today on a flight to Missouri about seventy percent of the peak |y this week, but Fire Chief Mau- for a weekend with his home folks strength of the Medical Corps Will yice Brun is certain it's the “work of The President and Mrs. Truman return to civilian life. la firebug.” boarded the big Presidential C-54, — | were in better shape than expected. At present, the Eighth Army has between 90,000 and 100,000 men in Japan and more- are enroute, Eichelberger said, Continued study of specialized ., he added, may result in additional cancellations before all scheduled occupation forces arrive. Eichelberger said Maj. Gen. Oscar W. Griswold would establish occu- pation headquarters for the Four- teenth Corps at Senaid today and that a full division would follow him by train tomorrow. The Twenty-Seventh Division, he said, would occupy Nagato, in northern Honshu, within a few days. MacArthur Hits Back MacArthur, in his statement re- plying to critics of occupation poli- vies thus far pursued, noted the impatience displayed at the so- called “soft” policy. He termed it necessary, however, and added: “It is extraordinarily difficult for ne at times to ‘exercise that degree »f patience which is unquestion- ably demanded if the long-time solicies which have been decreed are to be successfully accomplished without repercussions which would se detrimental to the well-being of he world, but I am restraining myself to the best of my ability ind I am generally satisfied with the progress being made.” Cites “Natural Impulse” The Supreme Commander ob- State, county and city authorities the “Sacred Cow” with Senate Ma- armed because in the Japanese- men to arrive on the West Coast hat 4 di 1 b Russian War, Japanese treatment|since the war ended. Most were p_r?posnl that the Indlan e, Se risol had bee 00d, d | Seab d thi half of given an opportunity to attain self- bkl n good, and)Seabees, and more than hall Obgoyernment after the war, Ali said, | conclude peace treaties. e PARIS-General Eisenhower had|paye peen unable to determine the ap 3 b hri 2 jority Leader Barkley, who planned something to say about Christmas cuuge of the intermittent blazes to ride with them as far as Pa- shopping today—he advised Amer-|ynich have occurred only at the gyucah, Ky., where he will disem- they were now much disturbed by‘ the stories. ————— WASHINGTON — Priorities for travel by ship from the United States to all foreign ports will end tomorrow. The Washingion Merry - Go- Round By DRFW PEARSON WASHINGTON-This column has not always agreed with good old Senator Tom Connally of Texas, but here's something on the other side of the ledger. More than a year ago the Navy decided to erect a Naval Hospital in Connally’s home town of Marlin, Texas, noted for its curative springs. Residents of Marlin were ready to purchase whatever site the Navy thought best for the hos- pital, and give it to the Navy. Best site in town is a 160-acre plot belonging to Ben Connally, the Senator’s son who gave up his Houston law practice to enter the Army, where he still is. Marlin residents were certain this site was {the men are eligible for discharge. | i i Senator Makes His | Policing Proposal; | CINCINNATI, Sept. 14—Senator| Edwin C. Johnson (D-Colo), propos- | ‘ed that the job of policing Germany | and Japan be left to Europeans, Chi-| nese and Russians. | He said in a radio talk that he would like to see 10,000 American observers statioped in the Axis coun-| tries “to keep us fully posted on what | goes on” but “other than that we ought to keep out of Germany and Japan.” | e | STOCK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK, Sept. 14 — Closing quotation of Alaska-Juneau Mine | stock today was 67, American Can 1104, Anaconda 34%, Curtiss- | Wright 6%, International Harvester | 90, Kennecott 39', New York Cen- tral 263%, Northern Pacific 28%, U. S. Steel 73%, Pound $4.02%. Total sales today were 1,020,000 shares. | Dow, Jones averages today were | ican families not to send ChnmmasI 'packages to their service men in| | Europe if it appears that the men will be home for the holidays. | 1d “fall like an atom bomb.” i 4 woud " ke 3 gtom 2o Film Aclor Denny | | . . Oxford University Is Plane Invento . | SEATTLE--Alaska Airlines con- To (on'er Degrees BOUEXWOOD; BARG ll‘.*hR"‘gl'}templntes using Boeillg Stratocruis- Zsld Denny, flim actor, s the in- | ers from Seattle to Anchorage if the I b ir ventor of a pilotless, radio-cn-| gy peronautics Board grants the n any e e r Ieslcrolled plane used to train aerial| yjaqpan carrier an extension of its |and anti-aircraft gunners, he says.|, .o into Seattle, Ted Law, Presi- LONDON, Sept. 14—Oxford Uni-| His plant at van Nuys, he said,' qeng of Alaska Afrlines, told Boeing| |was turning out 40 of the craft a| ny officials today. versity will confer honorary Docwr,day s s oL b6 war. He sald] Aircraft Company o y. of Law degrees October 25 on Gen. N the. thrabh Eisenhower, Gen. Mark W. Clark, U,ihe sl asmaiaien. mACe Re V) S. Ambassador John G. Winant, test for the Army in 5. Harry Hopkins, British Field Mar-“ ——————— sahls Sir Bernard L. ‘Montgomery "I M “ and Sir Alan Brooke, and Air Mar-| ea e ay Se shal Sir Arthur Tedder, it is an-| LOS ANGELES—Dr. Anthony J. | Salle, Assistant Professor of Bac- | teriology at the University of Cali-| | fornia at Los Angeles, says he has| | discovered that a bacillus extract |known as subtilin will kill tuber- R d' S r KPE culosis bacilli. adio Stafion | i) nounced today. LONDON—The United States Em- SEATTLE, Sept. 14—Fire Chief|bassy in London says that Secretary | William Fitzgerald said the city of of the Interior Ickes was due to 5] KetchikanEnfers ; |Seattle was undecided whether to arrive in London today, but owing Air Ro“'e Figh' |recpen its ship-to-shore radio sta-|to weather conditions, his plane has | tion, KPE, or sell it to a privately been delayed over the North At-| |owned company. Before the Wal’\ lantic. Ickes and his staff of experts KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Sept. 14.— KPE handled commercial messages will talk with the British concerning | The city of Ketchikan was drafting between local shippers and vessels oil. a telegram today to the chairman (at sea, mainly in Alaskan waters. of the Civil Aeronautics Board, ask- The chief said the station had in- WILLITS, Calif.—A raging forest ing the right to intervene in a!curred an annual loss approximating | fire that has destroyed the 10-build- special CAB hearing October 4 in $6,000. | ing Riverdale resort, a lumber mill, and heme of Mrs. Annie Bryan, Near pk for a home state speech, Midland. Upcn arrival at Kansas City Curtains, wallpaper, clothing and gpou¢ 6:25 p. m, CWT, the Presi- other items have burst into flames gant and Mrs. Truman will drive apparently without cause. Baffled ¢, thejr gld white frame residence, neighbors have begun keeping watch o qozen miles away for more. ,-.' A barn was destroyed Wednesday.‘ Nine strange blazes were found yes- SA[MO" FISH'“G terday afternoon. The first fire - SOUTHEAST AREA brcke out in a table drawer Sunday night. | Al commercial salmon fishing in Southeast Alaska, excepting only : Native Woman Fa|a“y Bu’ned' tlu-‘Yakmm district, will close at Kelchikan Blaze :. " oo sy Frank W. Hynes, Fish and Wildlife KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Sept. 14.—A Regional Director for Alaska. Native woman was burned fatally] In the Yakutat district, commer- and her husband hospitalized with cial salmon fishing, except trolling burns after a fire gutted their small, will be prohibited east of Dan- home Thursday night. Authorities gerous River after Sept. 15; the were holding another Native couple entire district will be closed after | for questioning, saying there had Sept. 30. been a party at the house. The general regulation closing AR D St e eacn ¢ | Southeast Alaska applies to all |types of gear, Mr. Hynes stressed COlD (ASH | Trollers will be Oct. 20. permitted to resume - served that, in view of the “at- rocities committed by the enemy,” mpatience on the part of th Allied peoples to have the surren- ler terms rapidly carried out was but a natural impulse. Fulfillment of that desire can be iccomplished only through careful orocedure, he asserted, but oromised : “The surrepder terms aren't soft ind they gon't be applied ‘in kid slove fashion.” Another Hara Kiri Meanwhile, the Japanese Gov- srnment reported to Eighth Army Headquarters that most of the ormer Nipponese leaders on the ‘wanted” list of Gen. MacArthur were in custody. Another former government of- ricial, Lt. Gen. Chikahiko Koizumi, Welfare Minister in the Japanese ‘Pearl Harbor Cabinet,” took his life by the traditional hara Kiri method. His former premier, Gen. Hideki Tojo, continued to improve in a U. 8. Army hospital from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Koizumi was on the list of more than 40 former war leaders, Black Oragon members and brutal prison ommanders and guards whom the Japanese undertook to round up. — e Mrs. Lisle Hebert and daughter, Yvonne, left yesterday via PAA plane for Fairbanks to join Mr. what the Navy would want, since it was the only high land over- looking the town, yet near the town. Another site, less desirable (Continued on Page Four) 57.17; utilities, 33.78. ! o T g AR | Chamber of Commerce President HEIDE HER! {W. C. Stump told the meeting the H. E. Heide, of Nome, is a guest Chamber felt a route from Seattle at the Gastineau Hotel, would benefit Southeast Alaska, |the Orient. as follows: Industrials, 177.74; rails,' connection with the air route to| —_—————— five homes, five automobiles DETROIT—The Ford Motor Com- | burned over 10,000 acres was out of pany said today that because of |control early this ‘mornnig along a| strikes against “many of our sup- 10-mile front 50 miles north of Wil- pliers” it is laying off 50,000 men lits, State Forester Charles Camp- indefinitely, bell reported, CHARLOTTE, N. C A cafe| owner discovered his place had been broken into and $40.50 stolen. The '{hief found the money in an ice Eberhard, of Anchorage, are guests at the cream freezer, Hebert. The three will motor back to the coast, visiting Anchorage and other points on the highway 'nroute, and returning to Juneau in about two weeks. ANCHORAGE MEN HERE Abner Anderson and Oscar H. Baranof Hotel,

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