The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 9, 1945, Page 1

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1 Tt LionARY OF CONGRESS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE -~ “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” L VOL. LXV., NO. 10,086 JUNEAU, ALASKA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER ?: MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS — PRICE TEN CENTS =—1 HIDDEN TREASURE OF JAPANNOW SEIZED ADM. NIMITZLAVAL CASE Pointed TalklsMadeby ~ OHLSONOUT, TheGeneral Dances RESERVES OF IS CHEERED BY MAY GO 10 TrumanRegardingMany JOHNSON IN, ' NIPPONS ARE ~ TAKEN OVER . NEW YORKERS JURY TODAY Domestic; Foreign Issues ALASKAR.R. Fleet Commander Receives Former Premier, Still in u S SENATEWBEI“ND' Gold Medal of Honor Dungeon, Refuses fo pymi ‘: BYRNES REGARDING oo e e une | Shift in General Manager- of President Truman himself that the secret of the atomic bomb will not be shared with other nations. at Big Doings NEW YORK, Oct. 9.—Cheered by millions, Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz rode through wind-whipped paper storms on Broadway today and then told an Hall that never United S weakness invites. Chief Police Inspector John J. O'Connell estimated that 4,000,000 ons acelaimed the Pacific hero on a triumphal motor ride from La Guardia Airport to City Hall, where he received th2 city’s gold Medal of Honor and was made honorary citizen of New York. It was the first official reception extended by the city to a naval hero since Admiral George Dewey took lew York by storm in 1899. - Alaska Sealskins Bring $90 Each at gain should the semblage at City | k the threat which | Give Testimony BULLETIN—PARIS, Oct. 9.— Pierre Laval was condemned to death tonight for intelligence with the enemy and attacking the sccurity of France. Laval was stripped of all citizenship hits and his property was con- fiscated. | It teok the jury only 62 min- | utes to decide the trial which | the white-tied i | called a | (Associated Press Correspondent) { PARIS, Oct. 9—Pierre Laval con- | tinued his strange sit-down strike | today against his own treason trial, lwhvrv testimony was completéd abruptly and the prosecution | started summing up its demand for | death. Laval remained in a dungeon be- neath the Palace of Justice. He has called the trial a farce and de- i clared he would not be a party to The President set the record pEA(E CONFERE“(E straight at an unprecedented press conference in the heart of the| — Reelfoot Lake hunting and fishing S { M k R ' preserve in which he also ecrerary Makes Keporion ™ wude ic clear that neither F 2. M' 'i Russia nor any othe ly had oreign inisters asked for the engineering know- Meef ifl london how that led to the perfection of the bomb. — | 2—Designated James F. Byrnes, By JACK BELL Secretary of State, to initiate dis- (Associated Press Corresponcent) cussions with Great Britain and WASHINGTON, Oct. 9—Secretary Canada, partners in the fateful dis- of State Byrnes has the comfortable, covery, looking to the outlawing of if unofficial, backing of the Senate jts use. n Relations Committee to 3_gScoffed at reports the London ng on the uncharted peace meeting of the Fore Ministe of United States, China, Russia, s left no doubt, as they Great Britain and France was a ion with gaijure. Memb reviewed a three-hour s |the Secretary yesterday, that B¥rmes 4 __peclared that there never has {had earned their approval in his pecy; g clash of American and Rus- | first major test in directing Ameri- ), interests and expressed the can foreign policy at the London j.pe there never would be. Foreign Ministers conferance. Expressed concern that ‘Rus- ‘The affable Byrnes, right at home g, a5 peen badly misrepresented in the committee room, filled in the ;. 4o country as we have been in ship of 500-Mile Line on December 31 WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.—Appoint- ment of Col. John P. Johnson of the Army Transportation Corps as general manager of the government- owned Alaska railroad was announ- ted today by Secretary of Interior| Harcld L. Ickes Johnson will succeed Col. Otto F. who will retire Dec. 31, after ing the railroad since August 1, Col. Johngon, a 1@sident of Tu-‘ peka, Kar began his railroad career in 1917 as an engineering prentice on the Atchison, Top and Santa Re Railroad { In the army he served on both the | Iraq and the Iran State railroads,| and r organized an Army ns- | portation program in India Re- cently he headed railroad operations for Gen. MacArthur in the Philip- pines, Col. Johnson was assigned in 1944 to set up a program for rehabilita- | tion of construction equipment in blank places of his Friday night g Uy 8 T K der. | Alaska. He will return there in a ¥ | pared to d Financial Rgundup Made- U. S. Soldiers Stand | Guard Over Wealth | TOKYO, Oct, 9-American sol- | diers stood guard today over un- | covered Japanese gold, silver and :plmnmm reserves of more than | $250,000,000, and Allied headquar- | ters id that the Imperial Army ‘ | and Navy, which had held part of the treasure, hadn't accounted for | a penny since 1937, “Responsible” Japanese officials Iled the way to the treasure, Gen. | MacArthur's Headquarters related, on this first day in office of Pre- | mier Kijuro Shidehara's already- reshuffled new government. The |aged but energetic premier told | correspondents he was “not pre- uss” whether Japan | was guilty of starting the war, and issued an eight-point program pledging personal freedom and a ‘(igm, against famine, New Navy Minister Admiral To- g yoda’s portfolio was lifted even before he could be sworn in, and | Admiral Misumasa Yonai — who | once dared oppose Warlord Hideki | few weeks. | | The Alaska railroad has 500 miles | o frank o et Py b of track from Seward and Whittier| R the frankest, most detailed descrip ST. LOUIS, Oct. 9—In its first ‘:‘“‘l“ Y;“’v’;‘f*-“’lm" of /i tion of what went on behind the “O% i asatl otk ah a8 through Anchorage to Fairbanks. aucticn in four years, the Fouke|Sented themselves in favor of po-| .o = "p a0 ot they had 6 — Expressed confidenc 1 Col. 'Ohlson, & rallroader for 50 | Fur Company yesterday sold a 60—‘::_‘“'“" S 5% l""""“'f" ever received of any conference. AnABCment ]"“fl’ ‘)““’”’: :“(;1 l‘“‘»“ years, was to retire two years ago, ain 1ot of Al calskins for $90 from Boredom—was expected t0 Te- | uino genatorial lauguage, Byrnes difficulties which have led to re- }u¢ yemained' cn the job by re- standing to differences in lan- guages and difficulties in transla- 3"!‘())0 replaced him in the new | cabinet, Toyoda, said Japanese | sources, might be considered a war | criminal suspect, The impounded: treaswry Included l‘n-:.erves in the Bank of Japan and 12°members-of’ the Tesistatice Members said he gave them about | each or double the price possible un- (‘v}l\:‘u;c_ .Cafi;(' gy tin‘nli“h‘LMl | vas reported to have got duwn to um,g,.]nm,.,,:.u-;;m:um l_.~(dx-xkra~'—~fl{fl.‘l-‘ quest during the war. He is a na- | belonging to the Bank of Thai- der war ceiling limitations. b (u:“d*“t’;‘) Ao D lmlfllf"é brass tacks of what he said to Rus- Culties whic o : d-lu l;;t_d:‘)“:‘%‘nvo of Sweden | Licut. Gen. James H. Boolittle of Tokyo raid fame and who com- |land (Siam), Bank of Indo-China, With receipts; totalling more«tany s "*‘M slie ‘fi'l‘;‘ G‘“ “d ‘g‘_fl‘l‘l{v |sian Foreign Commissar Molotov and /Measure “; B ““j‘ “l‘j 2 i wp“‘ . s e 3t = | manded the Fighth Air Force in Europe against the Germans, dances | Federal ReServé Bank of China, bt "'"‘3'“’0 Tarig |”‘" “”‘“t Botss, U‘":;‘ HE T ot ot TWREE IOy TR "‘\"“‘i“’““]’ ‘":”’l:’hm““\L RO SIS ‘lABOR DISPUTES | with shew girl Virginia Barrett, in the aisie of the Shubert Theatre |Bank of /Italy "and 'Baok of wuction was on its way to a rec The Senators liked the report. And ; | in Chicago. The east comes dewn into (he audience and asks for | Chosen (Korea). All impounded It included 23,408 Alaska sealskins, the government would interfere. t | part of the 1943 catch in the Pribilof| The ministers were reported in|¢no the confere Islands, 4367 sealskins from the|afternoon newspapers to be uneasy |ward failure be Cape of Good Hope, to be sold for over ction to the trial in France . ;gree to exclude France and China Attlee told Commons today the . on its disposal. the Government of South Africa, and abroad. from discussions of e ' British Government “will of course T 8 sions proposed Europ- | The seizur and about 300 blue and white Alas- >+ San” treaties be happy” to discuss with the L bt made quietly and : ttae e fhe Tubie: b bl | without interference, was to make ates e E C | sure that the reserves did not dis- ka fox furs. | [ Committee members came away United % i e e ot governms-nL]Rudolph HeSS Ba(k |from the meeting with the impression Power. (By The Associated Press) FOR HElp. plEAS |appear, and at the same time to ? icross the country v .y liked Byrnes’ action in permit- metals and coin will be held until " A dancing partuers. The general danced after o bit of nudging from nece to end in out- BRITISH STATEMENT SwEEp A(ROSS Allied Headquarters recelve {DON. Oct. 9—Prime ster | Mirs. Doolitile. (AP Wirephoto) | poRiven © e use he would not LONDON, Oct. 8—Prime Minister pou i s structions from Allied Governments 20 per cent of the sales pro- that the next move is up to Russia — " e 4 H 2 ne e Labor disput | obtain Army and Navy records eds from Alaska skins to the Can-| H « |and that Byrnes remains hopeful of SENATORS JITTERY Kept about 425,000 workers away ! which mi . L g adiah’ government | n e'man 'n e o . S eanion night show the disposition adian gove i | y | later agreement. WASHINGTON, Oct. 97.”‘“ OrS, | from their jobs today, compared to of loot from . conquered territories, ] 3 Rl R | . e-eae jittery over the future of atomic yecord 1945 high of 550,000 last week | Allied Headquarters reported. | H { wnh Former (hums SAN FRANCISCAN research, heard a scientist contend | nain disputes: ———t g, oTRs rgen e ape’ O. T. McShane, of San Francisco, today that “it is selfish, and per-| COAL—177,000 coal miners out of EN H | e R f e g |is a Monday plane arrival from the haps dangerous, to conceal knowl-|more than 675 pits in six States in U S Ambassador S(Ol'fl- "RE DB'NYS GAS | Is (Iosedl Even | FRANKFURT, Oct. 9.—Rudolf|gtates stayiug at the Baranof Ho- cdge or obstruct its use.” 19th day of shutdowns! additional s ‘ y [Hess was among his former Nazi|te), | Referring specifically to “the!sieel mills c etary Schwell- fu"y REJE(IS Request 3 | BOA"‘ '"“S ‘ M 'N . ‘u?hf_nff “{da&' for the first time in PSS 70 3 current situation with respect to|enbach spel brighter” as » & i ! i 3 resses CNAINeQ | o e bue they were unaware HERE FOR OPA atomic encrgy,” Dr. Hatlow Shap- | managemeni-labor conferences con- for Compassion Secrefary-General Chinese. ~ SMALL BOATHARBOR BUENOS AIRES, Oc:, 9—The Ar- s 4 WA Virginia L. Starr, of the OPA of- ley of Harvard said he believes it tinue. X z Satiing Toliary oNIRATE hag‘NF}f"‘"_“Um Britain by plane t0 fice " juneau, arrived from the “unwise to withhold for any ap-| SHIPPING—New York port, the| ... ST Communist Par'y MYS- ST classd the jSocialist newhpater Van-| uernberg, he was whisked t0 @|westward yesterday aboard the preciable time essential knowledge | world's busiest, jammed with un-| ABROZE, Besnd. Ot § ¥ ' % | An unexplained explosion aboard a | s St thiatons 18 Giesben ‘g,]uvu‘m_\ cell in the jail which houses| gonmer yukon and is registered at that can be of value to the whole moved freight and ships in ninth day throng of tearful Gern s """””“I‘”“ ? 'enously Kllled gasboat, owned by Al Routsala caus- s i A nrsi.dc_‘Re.M{mn : ‘A] He_rma.nn (10(’!‘1?1':" the Baranof Hotel, world.” X lof dock strike; place embargo on all €4 th .4u|r,‘mr.,.mh- of U ) o Ambass- led a spectacular fife which resulted AE R S o |(Srmerdonetan Bituister, Joashin vor e e | An astronomer and director of |freight shipments for export ador Arthur Bliss Lane today in this - lin the sinking of th> boat, about ails 8 ng ._DO 4 Ribbentrop and other Nazi leaders! L b S d the Harvard College Observatory,| MOTION PICTURES — Striking former German Silesian city of Hin-' cHUNGKING, Oct. 9-An ;||H(-”"“vg minutes after being towed pupils of La Plata University. It swaiting trial as war criminals. None | SEATTLEITES HERE & i ¢ i 4 Ry Xt : denburg, crying t the Poles W hauffe s ay ¢ | away from th k and other boat; . S ( o stuale fu S s . Shapley prepared his testimony in movie workers, after second outbreak chauffeur was sought today for |away from the dock and other g . [» gie had Garried.the IERECE R A= {of the oiher prisoners. saw. the: pr-| , Becttly aizivals S peaitle, rex : nding bills to create|of violence in which scores were forcing them to speak Polish, starv- guestioning in the puzzling assas-|in the Small Boat Harbor preme court decision setting free and | rival of the one-time Deputy-Fueh- |gistered at the Baranof Hotel in- SuPPort of pending bills fto create o ¢ ot disics byt 11 rehbrCig. Thath th bk’ e " 2zling assas- | L . TEatire Tridle henal SRGHE S b e Dep lude: E, E. Clayton, B, Martinsen, & Dational research agency to keep | hurt, summoned back to picket lines ng a PoLS " sination of his master, Li Shao-| The 5-3 call, which sounded at B aovieay il 4 | rer. They probably will not kndw of |clude: E. E. Clayton, B. Martinsen, ., =5 0 0 T o= o of (as tension mounts in eight-month- | Reich ~'shih, Secretary-Gene of the!10:05 o'clock this morning; brought he government had removed after | his arrival until some of them get|Ted Snyder and Mr. and Mrs. Ro- 'L ° | 2 isdictions . A middle-aged woman who sald cyiic o Tiiat Parb o |out=both the J re Depart- 8 /he liberated: feilaral nElaanare 3 gl : it 4 i scientific progre: i old AFL jurisdictional dispute. | 4 ' Chinese Communist Party’s Chung- |out “both the Juneau Fire Depart Bt s R |a flimpse of him in the exercise yard. |bert L. W““’b‘;”v | e AUTOMOTIVE—No major work She lived in the [U":"""_ "';“:'-‘v ':3 King headguattans; {ment and the Firs Patrol boat of the H S Wi N S TR, T A ! ages Yetroi s ago grasped Lanes arm a sillade o o Transport Service, and city firemen | e stoppages in Detroit for first time ¥ | arm and © s gygiade of slugs killed Li late | P ) y firemen 2 i [ N FROM ANACORTES |in six weeks but CIO Auto Workers |Plcaded for help. She declared that oo 6ay ripping through the back |Were agreed that only the fast and lng On, n an l e ara ysls’ William T. Williamson, of Ana- | Union, seeking 30 per cent wage ,-‘m\‘ll'ln was Germany and she did not . . as he rode through ,he\em-cuve work of the Fire. Patrol y L M . | cortes, Washington, i8 registered at |increases in auto industry, has filed | Want to leave hor home ., quict Bhapingpa University section |boat’s crew, prevented the fire from Merry = GO -Round } Epldemlt Repone*ln ! the Baranof Hotel. [ - HE MIS‘I’REA“ED NLRB strike votes in “Big Three”| “Dont pul ' ““";" € of suburban Chungking ¢ | <preading to other boats in the har- D - ! —Ford, General Motors, Chrysler. | the ambassador warnec 5 187 The murder -vear-old | POr. Even before the arrival of the T I * o . FROM ANCHORAGE ! ¥ o | LUMBER- Striking AFL lumber Poland. : . st Secretary-General. fol- |12 department the fire had reached By DFFW PEARSON | onfana; Quaranfine| sevcr: arnvass nere trom an- SHOT PRISONERS :ion srescs 1o presa stoppages ae, | Wi the Germans stoed in o unist Secretary-General (ol |G, oroportions 1t was. impossible WASHINGTON—There 1 iot chorage yesterday are registered at | 61,000 remain out third week; three |Peating rain storm, Lane told them: o 0n b B0 G0l o, | to save the boat, and had it not s o e!e, o e % the Baranof Hotel: Glenna Gordon, ' large CIO-manned plants closed. “E have been at the embassy in oo - N:u'u;.;h%x and Communists | P€€n for the Fire Patrol boat with | more than mects the eye beyond| BILLINGS, Mont.,, Oct. 9.—A vir- Nadeane E. Collins, Helen M. Os-| LUENEBURG, Germany, Oct. 9.— Sy | Warsaw two months. What I have Nes¢ N 268 ‘and - Conunun its hose-pumper turned on nearby the ouster of pistol-packing Gen.|tual quarantine was imposed on| ' o % Ve S0 T o T o Joseph Kramer, testifying for him- ‘sr(-n there—where you Germans Would be announced in a com-| o 0 "0 Ty o blazing boat was George S. Patton, Jr., as Governor |more than 40,00 persons in the Bill- | vt B(,Slfm;v self and these who served under him STO(K OUOTMlONS | went from house to house dynamit- Munique tomorrow; but there Was| .50 0'ng towed out, many of the of Bavaria. Actually, members of |ings area today as the result of an| Gy 2 Y AN at two Nazi concentration Camps,| NEW YORK, Oct. 9 — Closing|iN€ burning and destroying the 10 indication that the assassina-| ... wafe in the harbor might also Gen. Eisenhower's staff knew for.infantile paralysis epidemic which | | f14 N 4 4 36 ¥ J ‘ > whole city—it i rime against ciy- ton was linked with this long- # 5 o ¢ v g | has tak . PORTLANDER |flatly denied today that he mis-| . tation of Alaska Juneau Mine | WDole city—it is a crime against civ- 7 Ao stiiams have burned. M:ks g’:‘ hek ;vast .d‘STE(i:ldl;ng' ’“;jl']‘j‘ne: :;ngu‘:lfw‘;‘i%im “‘1’95;(1 4l H. C. Meegar, of Portland, Ore treated prisoners and asserted that|goo today is 7', American c'm;‘”'”'“”“' feeny ERipndad that a0y Gl ST e First-degree burns over the entire ity rities closed all; e i d Y i G o O “ . X 4 1y 7 Jerms y ask ) & 2 orders, but winl e‘ at it untl . fl)i[plnces 5 ublyic S gicth“ {tv|gon, is registered here at the Bar—‘b]""de Irma Grese, ()“&nffllled the’ 111%, Anaconda 38%, Curtiss- of you Germans can ask compas Pt sl L |face and hands were suffered by e S T b S ana Dr B, M |anof Hotel worst of the SS women” took her| wpignt i, International Har- |y oo iy Rty Routsala, according to Dr. J. O. exposed Patton's flagrant coal;:era- ;m Yeucy“f;lgrrlt:fly m:d l?rvufi-ol\;l» s o e duties very seriously and “discharged | Lo 915 Kennecott 44';, New| ¢ drove away. Poles in the street ‘fnilw»r(mv Oct. 9—A panel guge’ tre attending physician, tion with top Nazis and his keep-|FaIr, county Hea. 7 > pi = | them very well : &3 P " | cheered. Germans sulked and Of Dhysicians and witnesses was = et e o . ing of U. S. troops in tents while | ficer, followed last night with an| _IN FROM ‘X INLET |"o0 '/ e Buitish mililary. oousy] Yo7k Gentral 20%, Northern Pa- o, ummened today to an autopsy to U. 5. officers ‘were .entertained i |order pl_acmp, the entire county un-| First Sgt. Roy B. ‘Hend\ Jr., in'4 ving him and 4 other camp guards\;,mc d29.4 ;J:’med States Steel 78, B determine the type of gun used in MAJOR BE'SI[I“E Juxurious Nazi homes, For instance, |der a similar quarantine. e Strogn ;:x?ms:_m;i Inlet, 5 5ng officials, the Belsen and Oswie- | © sy ousr were 1640000 shares. | e i s yesterd puzziing assassination at a meeting .of Allied military VPM‘““S of children under. 18 were| staying at the Baranoi okel, | ¢cim commandant said the statements | Dy J(n‘v i il A i "“AUDIN HERE of Li »-shih, Secretary-General governors called. by Gen.'s Eisen- |Subject to fines if picked up away T P ey |of prosecution witnesses that he beat | kSPDER RYSINEY Socay . WOFe { s of the Communist Party's Chung- hower and_Clay at Supreme. Head- from home. Eighteen parents were | STEAMER MOVEMENTS and kicked Russian prisoners and|®> follows: Industrials, 185.43; rails Art E. Beaudin, former Juneal king headquarters—a man who re-| quarters from Aug. 27 to 29, Patten | 1a88ed by police for violations. There ‘ Ishot and killed two Hungarians were | 2988; utilities, 35.05. |resident now in business at An- portedly had no enemie | BIG BA vigorously and" openly objected to has been 43 cases of infantile paraly-| Steamer Columbia of the Alaska fq)ca > chorage is visiting his old haunt Two American doctors were in- Clay's orders on de-Nazification. i Tcpo‘rled. in the Billings area Sbeams}pp Company is sche(luludl “During all my service with con- N rw v ' H and friends )3:‘“- again. He is stop- yited to participate, and Chung- - Clay had demanded that no Nazis . SIX Weeks. to amive from the westward, centration camps and with troops,” 0 ay 0 erS III ping at the Baranof Hotel king sources pointed out that such| KELLY FIELD, Texas.—Maj. Earl % be used under American occupa- | . e I e g Seattle-bound, at 4 o'clock this ne said, “I never shot at people, in- P extreme attention to witnessing re- |H. Beistline of Juneau recently has tion forces. | NAVY MEN IN TOWN afternoon. tentionally or otherwise.” | 2 i - " Heavy SWIng le“ ODOM SRCE moval of the bullets grew from the been assigned to the San Antonio L. M. Odom, Anchorage business- fear of both Communists and | Air Technical Service Command, the e man who ity purchased the Chungking Government authorities world’s largest aircraft supply and former Alaska Trading C “Hell's bells,” exploded Patton, | Freighter Margaret Shafer, of, Counsel for the 21-year-old Irma | «when a fellow goes into a town | ?erscxxlxel off the three Navy|the Northland Trampor(auqn.Gpesc asked him about stories that — | minesweepers moored at the Gov-|Company, is scheduled to arrive in'she “shot prisoners and treated them | LONDON, Oct. 9. Pany that one side or the other might maintenance station, after service of 4 without a burgemeister who is, in-| | variably a Nazi, he will be up the €'iment Dock here today took &d-|port tomorrow. | with savage cruelty.” nounced here today by the Nor propertics here, has refurned to term the slaying a political crime, ! four years in Alaska and the Aleut- creek without a paddle.” vantage of the occasion to see some| Princess Louise of the Canadian| “That is untrue,” Kramer replied. 141 Information office indicated that | Juneau and is registered at the - — lans Gen. Clay bristled and l_(,p“‘,d.luf Jl_meau. Crew members register- | Pacific, scheduled to sail from Van-,; —————— 4 | Norway's voters had swung heavily Baranof Hotel. 1 : “ Maj. Peistline wears the Bronz “We're not here to run Germany!iN€ in at the Baranof Hotel in-|couver Thursday, Oct. 11, is due/ NEW YORKERS HERE toward the left in their first general -oe NOONAN HERE Star-Aleutian Medal, He is ' tha efficiently. We're here to get the|cuded! J. G. Jempel, E. W. Kob- | here Sunday, Oct. 14. ! Elizabeth C. Tanner, New York ¢lection in nine years. FROM McGRATI! e con 6f Mr. and Mrs. Ralph H. Beist- ler, C. W. Knight, all off the USS-| Steamer North Sea, of the City newspaperwoman, was an ar-| COnServatives 128,743 votes, Agrar-| Charles E. Samsa, of rath,’ Dan Noonan, veteran merchan-line of Juneau. Northland Transportation Com- rival from the States yesterduy‘“"‘s 104,205, Christian Popular party, ka, is a recemt arrival in town, dise broker, is stopping off in Prior to entering the Army, Maj. wnof Juneau at the Baranof Hotel on | Beistline was an mining engineer, one of his regular trips through the emplojed by the Fairbanks Explora- rrived from Seward tion Co., Fairbanks, Alaska, and ex- oard the Steamer | pects to return to this field of work, Nazis out.” Despite this, however, Patton| YMS 333; BM 2/c Joseph W. An- | thony, Rdm. 3/c Robert D. Morri- | pany, is scheduled to sail from'aboard the steamer Denali. She 00,930, Liberals 146,739, Labor 394,- registered at the went his own sweet way ip.noung‘ | It should be said for him, 5°™ SM 2/c B. J. Cohon, MoMM |Seattle Saturday morning, Oct. 13.'plans to remain in Juneau for or, that others did the same.fzi‘c M. E. Labesque, EM 3/c P. J.| Steamer Aleutian of the Alaska some time. Stopping here with her . nd £ | Gerling, BM 2/c S. M. IPeterson, all Steamship Compan$, scheduled to at the Baranof Hotel is Jessie > (Continued on Page Four) IOII the USS-YMS 328. I sail from Seattle Saturday, Oct, 13.‘(}r0$n1ckle, also a New Yorker. 210, 'Communist 93,336. Labor and Hotel. Cemmunist gains were made at the D Territory. Hi expense of Conservatives, Liberals| py 1850 most of the U. S. toll roads vesterday g and Agrarians, Ipad become free highways Yuken.

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