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“ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE VOL. LXVI, NO. 10,115 v : JUNEAU, ALASKA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1945 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS WAR CLOUDS ARE THICKENING IN CHINA "Soeralggja Battle Rage s With Unabated Fury ARNOLD ADVISES | HOT ISSUES ’lfifimsfl*gfi WomanTells Governor Asks ALL-OUT WAR THOUSANDS ~ NEWSMEN IN OFNEW WARFARE I Britsh Confinue Air Attacks Ch "KILLED AT JUNEAU ON NAVALBASE ALASKATOUR amber of Commerce, Gives Visitors Royal as Soviet Interven- BY ATOMIC BOMB Will Be W@ for Imer-‘E (APIIOL H“_l% Bow Heads in Silent Pray-‘ stellar Space Ships- Must Counterattack WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 — Gen. COMING UP, Atomic Energ'y Universal Training Are Toss Ups - UNKNOWN SOLDIER | er then Lay Wreaths in Memory of Dead ! WASHINGTON, Nov 12-No word Taleof Jap Rates Profest PUT DIRECTLY Blood Lust From Alaskans UP T0 CHIANG Witness at Manila Trial Gruening 'As,sails Hasty’[Generalissi}nwausl Cancel Screams “Bloodhound” Hearing fo Boost ' “Bandit Suppression™ | Hap Arnold advises that atomic fal was spoken as the leaders of three H 24 s . | fion Sought Wel(Ome bomb warfare waged from inter- on D&(ISIOHS | great nations bowed their heads at Yamashna Sh'pplng Charges .Says Communls's —_— ’ stellar space ships is “within the e in silent prayer Sunday at the tomb — —_— N G | e r i foreseeable future.” {of the Unknown Soldier in Arling- By DEAN SCHEDLER Gov. Ernegl lening (oday call-| By SPENCER MOOSA ‘ By LEIF ERICKSON Members of the Juneau Onaber| (ormees s ¢ 4 hist of Army| WASHINGTON, Nov. 13.~—Atomiafvonicemetery ed upon the people of Alaska to| CHUNGKING, Nov. 12—Chinese 12.—For+ of Commerce gave a royal welcome energy and universal training—two | MANILA, Nov. 12—A bayonet- join him in protest of projected Communists said today that they BATAVIA, Java, Nov. % B Ganorad ‘ais & ip a iz s e P 18 rican e cign Minister Sosbardjo pleaded to- 115t NiElt to a group of journaliels) okt forces EAve I his o ies of the hottest issues on Capitol Hill| A drizing xan and darkencd scarred, black-dressed Filipino wo- | reight rate increases to Aluska|and Chaing Kai-stek's Central Gov- | day for Soviet intervention on ePrescnting the Hagjor nEWSp"t'; ;q,m, 4 ‘;,“Ul. 4 States should —have the House Military Commit- | S¥168 formed a backdrop for the|man sobbed out at the war crimes|shipping. In particular, the Gov-|ernment have agreed to allow the behalf of his unrecognized Indones-iand lnm{ss x‘nu;.;avl.mvs 3r the er:“; bol v.'thl\. txlg ;:;tch,‘ ates should tee split In two u]usely-bkth\lwed!cer“‘“‘\"v and over it ;\1.] hung | trial of Lt. Gen. Tomoyuki Yl\mfl'}vnmr sailed what he terms “un-| proposed consultative council to ian Republic as heavfly-stmmrledE]S,m,l;s “:O ;n:‘fd x;va‘?lf?:%-f;s: raipbelleson T D R T 1“‘5‘_,;1““”‘ shadow of war's most|shita today a story of the fatal|warranted and unjustified haste” in settle “all outstanding issues” of . British Indian infantry renewed the |I¥ after dark on a Naval Akt Wrbnsr | War may desteldl MPOR M8 V) questions, both of which may|fertbI® INSITUmERt — the atomic stabbing and burning of her four|caling rate hearing at this time,|China's undeclared civil war—and house-to-house assault ;lhlch dfo‘lf"g)fiw Ly “:,‘f tin N'\\'y’ on a tour of q;?:f;:‘mi q‘mfsg ou,.lsh;".(,l‘ms __'be answered at a committee session | mr';:’, s St atiunite. s ir“““fl:'“ and her mother by blood- | withbout sufticient notice to the peo- [that the council will be called into ' Indonesian Nationalists from almost e 5 4 i g s w lomorrow, are g WU G RUBRM azed Japanese. | ple of the Territory and its repre sion about Nov. 20 | JPUE of Boetahala Naval Base, ovel'{“‘_’:)l::gk“:“\‘:i"xl l;zfi::d‘rom T un::: :;P :‘:.Lv(a, ;:m;x)\:[ t‘l;ea\). be 1. Whether to reconsider a l,,]]inl")d'\ i (_'X ”‘_" |ll)))llCilllOl.\§ the The prosecution stated for the sestative groups to allow time for| The final issue of peace of all-out s the weekend. | Under the direction of Charles W. :‘ g :} “o orirce of Bt- Creating & federsl commission “with bomb holds for the future—for |, .., that 1500/ Pilipinos in her counter action on the vital question.| war, however, rests with the Gen- “It is apparent now that Britain | o ¥ 8 -1 veady to surlie @y, \l6 s0umgs .05 gin CICALLE N |those three control its secrets and |\ oionyghood were thus “brutally| The Governor's statement, which | eralissimo, a Communist spokesman Carter, the Chamber held a cocktail | is paving the way for the reimpos tack with a strategic air force de vast control over use and develop- |{must change its future mistrated and massacred” within a he dispatched by wire to all princi- asserted, adding: . f . | party for the visitors and then treat- | livering “one or two atomic bombs" ment of atomic energy. The three , Preside: Tr A | tion of Dutch rule in Indonesia” P® 8 SFisnree. 8 Fraploent TTuman, |, al citics : Territory, reads “ 4 cancels his v | Sotbardio said in o radio appeai|°d them to dinner in the Baranof | which should suffice for the job. | 2. Whether to shelve until NeXt|prime Minister Alilee of Britain month. g ., {0hdalties of Sy Tervlbn, feans »m..[,;x??t,:}fiu-:‘;’:,f:-h l‘,:;l,',‘"‘:fi': !l‘: addressed to Soviet Foreign Com- |Hotel's Gold Room where they heard | That method of bomb delivery is year proposals calling for eVery|and —Prime Minister Mackenzie The witness, Cliceria Malvecino, .on gaturday morning I'received |oeace ' : mms“. G Governor of Alaska Ernest Gruen-|gor today’s style of war; tomorro American youth to take one year "r‘Kimz o Ohridn, T Al tha concluded her testimony with a telsgram from Delegate Bartlett ! o : ecisi £ R IR Al 2 2 ing welcome them to Alaska, and|pe said. will be like this: military training i oy e U1 kalf-scream : hat he had been advised informally | 16 Qecleice. Jen. GHNENAT, ‘CIGHI The Indonesian leader asked that | s 3 !he said, wi e : afterncon to attempt to determine| =, that he had been advised informally {4665 to the new council was reach- % PR (¥ i were entertained with songs and) «we should be ready with a' In each e ., the outcome ap- g ’ " o e | Yamashita, see what you have } .+ ay the request of the War Ship- |,y o 5 the Russians aid in winning “justice | . s Stsot by Lt. Corhdr. War-| e shou e ready ) i £ |what can be done to harness the Aok do. my family1h hat at the request of the War Ship- {o4 44 4 Sunday peace talk arranged from the world” for the Indones- |PIano selections by Lt. Comdr. Wal- | weapon of the German V-2 rocket, Pears to be a toss-up | new and awful energy and fashion : ¥ ping Administration, an Alaska rate v (he increasingly influential Lib- 18, He promised that the Indones- {0, C8ro, the Governor's navallpaying greatly improved range and' Chairman May (D-Ky) told {455 an instrument of enduring scribing the scene near Santo hearing would be started in Seattle | oo} Ghinese Democratic League — \ans. would assist Allied forces in|2id%: and Phyllis Meyers, Bubble|precision, and great distances. V-2 newsmen he has the votes to stand|peqe, Batangas Province, she safd lat this month and that there was' wyiie war elouds thickened as @ Te- 4, disarming and evacuating Java- | Room entertainer. 3 is ideally suited to deliver atomic back mwu‘m vfl“’mm eusEgy .bl.”,:sw Salate - 1s. Dired we were tied in groups of a strong belief that rates would be |1t o two other developments: pased Japanese forces. | On the schedule for today was & explosives, because effective defense it YL‘\ \nmve‘n .uu'l”Lf.y Hn}(mm m.lv‘-! A 2l-gun salute greeted the | five and led }x)tr) a nearby field. A |in 1 from 80 to 100 percent pp, government called China’s 5 : _ | press conference at 11 a. m, \\‘}lh against it would prove extremely mg..; on the universal training mea- seven-car cavalcade as it drew “D‘J:I[)xvnwst’ officer told the S()ldiflrs;abuve prewar charges. Several hours National Assembly to meet May 5— By the very principle of llngim |Gov. Gruening, and sightseeing| difficuit. N"(;, ttee Republican leaders, |10 the amphitheatre in Arlington to line up behind us, and gave the later I received a further telegram |y ng word of whether Commun- Beidence -we do. ok /1INE Sgln irips. . The group \ Will legvs WPE|* e must have idBfEnges which ' - (f:‘:? :‘“mm p:\hnxlr.u:m‘ 'ml‘w: The President and his distinguished | Oder for them to start stabbing | from him saying that the Maritime | i1 would be given representation troops on Indonesian soil, Soe»;ueatuc tomorrow morning, delaym_gican cope with such a 3,000-mile- LO"! ". k;l i gt 0t I:‘f‘ hfl visitgs placed wreaths of chrys. uS: | ccmmission had entered an °"der«‘lhey demanded;. and: i:fop: Nation~ bardjo told the chi;t Cot:mlssar.ld'!parturo one day to get their|per hour projectile, We must be ]1 plans blocked, at least tempor- | ol TH T L e tomb of the| She was bafoneted 12 times, and |for the hearing to start in Seattle!y)ict general forecest n major gov- He added, however, that “the pres- | “ground legs.” The 14 newsmen and | yeady to launch such projectiles 'Y ) _ fefgned death t f ther cn Nov r 27 with the hope of in= . & 1 3 E 5 2 v dies feigne eath to escape further I P 1a “ve ence of British troops is tolerable lone woman, have traveled some ncnrzr the target, to giv:» them a Hearings on the universal training U’l{(f.-}fingf‘l}h‘:‘wm Jaid on the | wounds, creasing , fares and charges for ::)g:?f’nldg::‘rteeIntc(;r:\cl:nclcx‘:l):"::mm:{ rtaf iles air s , ¥ p bill began last Tuesday but were in- R e = " : 3 o 5 Mg 5 b bty ng babkia: ToetBodias yPa cor ki United St e itic| horter time of flghb Bpd make .l he Fep, Bhort (R Wyo) | Fonument ‘ erected by Canada in| T could hear my chlldren around [6Hla Alasks: agrvios. |troops massed to block it. 5 gt w“heunabated o el sl ted States Lttle | them narder to detect and destroz. orRtee e o et | RO 0f those Americans who lost e crying ‘mother, mother, and| “This being cn Saturday afternoon| Sunday's three-party peace talk ‘31“\1':5 4 6f THehttha 4 whlyh Aol et v L\ é‘ f‘;? e OEL { We must be ready to launch them _ o "= vote was delayed until this | their lives fighting for Canada in | Screaming to me” before they died, when government offices are closcu ' placed the question of calling an im- £ R O I T R S [T A e KRR SR N e L from wisigected: SRR, i d i 9 |the First World War. A third floral | she said. Later, furniture was piled |and Monday being likewise a holiday, mediate halt to hostilities at the e SRRt il S el 21“5’;“" e Dow With! “This can be done from the | i tribute was placed on the simple | on the bodies, soaked with gasoline It is not possible accurately to cite |top of the political council’s agen- upon Indonesain forces. Indgesian- |the Navy- Lee formerly flew with|g,,.0 ghips, capable of operating | harkia slab - that inarka’the tem. Land. set afire the dat ailable on just how such/da, the Communist spokesman sald. manned Japanese tanks reportedly |Pan. American Airw: in Alaska. fired 30 shells into the Fifth Indian |Lt. Robert Knowles co-pilot and Division ranks. S 1-c Helen Miravale is flight order- Both Indonesian and British |ly. outside the earth’s atmosphere. The design of such a ship is all but practicable today; research will un- KRUPP MAY | porary resting place of Field Mar- | shal Sir John Dill Sir John died {last year while on duty in Wash- “We prayed, saying our last words an increase would affect Alaska. But| He disclosed that wires have be:n to God, knowing that we soon I desive to state that our Territory|sent urgently summoning to Chung- would be killed,” testified another might justas well fold up as a pros- king Tung Pou, Communist mem- pectively thriving and g indi | ¥ o | questionably bring it into being | ington as the British representative | Witness, Soledad Lacson. developing ber of the Chinese delegation to the B e mdlcatidfixrhialHldc_mesiafl‘ Those making the trip include:| ywithin the foreseeable future.” + {on the combined ,‘mp[: of staff, She said that 20 in her group!part of the United States if 100 Df‘!'-fSim Francisco conference, now in I (Continued on Page Five) \M NQ;VTM: OI. pNewRveo 54 .?a:'. R N w E ! Another 21-gun salute boomed !of Filipinos were taken to a ceme-|CCnt passenger and freight increases New York. i e . . and the Presidential varty wenttery and siabbed, after Japanese ! upon us. Indeed #ny| Tung Pou would be one of the [ ,’;’.'ed RN, of :):e Slgig YDrk’SOVIeI (QHSOIShlp back to Navy Secretary James For-|had made a “personal search” of s whatsoever would be ser-| Communit's seven delegates on (he imes; B. M. Talbot, Jr. of theI restall's yacht, the Sequoia. There the women (evidently stripping crippling council, the spokesman said ~-T,he Washington | New York Journal-American; Rich- |ard G. West of the New York Herald- | Is Now Reduced fo WAR TRIAL { they resumed the conference which | | President Truman has said he them) to steal Philippines currency. Rates Already Excessive | As she left the stand, she shouted “The steamship rates long have| COMMUN ey ! | Tribune; Gerald Ritson of the & oy tesieni ks : I hopes will lead to the renunciation &t Yamashita been and are already iy d | | Newark Evening Times; A. R. McTee H AURIE i i . L are already excessive an | eIty 0- houn s e I 1Ty Mere Formamy o lof the atomic bomb as a weapon Bloodhound! [nigher than for any other equiva- | ] " Paul Wollstadt of the National Gel’mfln MUI‘II'IOHS ManU' e The witnesses were not Cross- jent service. They should be drasti- By DRFW PEARSON Petroleum News; Gene Sherman of | MOSCOW, Nov. 12.—Soviet ceh- 47 R fgtoniied cally- reduped. My tecollection s} o1t & > that the annual freight and passen- WASHINGTON — At an appro- priate time during Prime Minister the Los Angeles Times; Robert Ma- haffey of the Eeattle Times; Jack Foisie of the San Francisco Chroni- | sorship of outgoing news dispatchces, recently protssted by American nnd British correspondents in Moscow, facturer Suffers Par- alytic Stroke ger bill-of Alaska is about $8,000,000. | “The proposal to double this, to| IN NIPPON Clement Attlee's visit, a secretiqo. s peck of the Oakland Tribune; | appears to have been reduced to a 5o 1 add another $8,000,000 which would agreement between the United A. Lahey, Chicago Daily News: | mere formality % TRET ) i or ur er o !x |be borne largely by the Alaska con- 4 States and England may be diplo- e NUERNBERG, Nov. 12—A six-; 1 FOR EGYPI IS | sumers, would drive the cost of liv-| matically called to his attention. This is an agreement initialed by | Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt at Quebec on Sept.; 15, 1944, regarding the partitioning | of Germany. At that time—just a little over a; Bob Elliott of the San Francisco News; George Connery of the Wash- ingfon Post, and Carl Bigelow, pool the Oakand Tribune. Lt. Comdr. Walker J. McFarlan, former Associated Press man, now with the Office of the Director of There has been no official an- nouncement of a change in Russian policy and foreign correspondents i photographer for the trip, also ofjstill are submitting their dispatches i for stamping by the censors. But for almost a week all Associated Press dispatches have been passed without any deletions—an experi- year ago—the American Armies pyplic Information in Washington,! ence shared by other correspondents. man medical commission announced today that the condition of Gustav Kiupp, German facturer, is so critical that he prob- ably will die if moved frem Salzburg to Nuernberg to stand trial as a war criminal with 21 other defend- ants on November 20, The War Crimes Tribunal will act munitions manu- Americfianv Aviators BRUCHEAL, Ger ny, Nov. 12— | Five German civilians, protesting they had done nothing wrong,| were hanged in the gloomy rain- drenched yard of Bruchsal Prison FORMAL DEMAND CAIRO, Nov. 12.—Prime Minis shi Pasha formally opened the ptian Parliament today with a h in which he demanded com- (ing to such tronomical heights | that it would be difficult for people | to maintain themselves here. “It would cause such an incre: | prices that corresponding in wages and salaries would be antly demanded and failure to se- » them would cause a general ex- e in | increases ! |su ‘odus from the Territory. MécArthur Says Diplomacy Has Shattered Nation's Milifarist System had broken through the German p ¢, is accompanying the newsmen | > — 3 e 8 i i 4 4 e S i ) . C., Is Wednesday on a defense motion to | for the murder of six American | plete der ‘ndence for Egyot, in- ™7 ety L‘:: :f de{e’;s:fl;" N‘:mé'::y'uh:;d on the trip. Also with the group is| postpone Krupp's trial. Krupp re- |fliers who parachuted from a dis- | ciuding withdrawal of Bnmn‘mnc(‘x‘:‘t’““,‘f‘ g‘;{?fi;)‘:’]“l;‘r‘ ""l’lc‘;;“‘”n‘q" By HAMILTON W. FARON pt pas ) an i - Lt. Carol Citron and Lt. (j.g) Mar-! ently suf : § abled plane near Ruesselsheim Aug. | troops. e : YRS E " " 4 shall had returned from the Euro-|vin G. Miles, staff members of the | O I SR AR e, 100 "The Prim» Minister accused Zion- | Ment agencles in Alaska, whose bud- | A.m‘:z(l)fi.flz:\u'mi;?:fi?l-ux::.. pean theater with an optimistic|public Information office of Naval OUT IN ARMIS“(E Tha condemned men were Joxepis | 16t of attempiing t Yrob" the Arabe |88t 86 prepated a year in advance| AYEME 8 ACSFEONER NEE SR report that the war could be over in a few weeks. h Therefore, Roosevelt and Chur-| chill, meeting in Quebec, discussed the question of occupying western Germany. The Red Army at that/ time was stalled, and it looked as| if the American Army, plus Field! PROTESTS PATTON ACTING AS CHIEF - DAY BROADCAST NEW YORK, Nov. 12.—Mayor La- cast said the United States should profit by the mistakes it made af- Guardia in an Armistice Day broad- | ‘Turns Down Invite To Annual Dinner, National Press Club Hargen, Fredrich Wust, Johann|fo Palestine but asserted that the | Seipel, Johann Opper and Philip| Pan-Arab League would protect the | Gulich. Wearing German p,-150,,‘country. The current Pan-Arab clothes and white skull caps, they League meeting here is giving pri- were permitted to make last state- | mary consideration to the Palestine | ments as they stood on the gal-|question and wjll be a powerful in- lows. | strument to enforce Arab demands Even as he and make representations to the protested his innc- (and which coud scarcely accommo- |date themseives to so drastic a l‘rlmngn' without corresponding ac- tion by the Bureau of the Budget| ‘and the Congres n itself a tre- | mendous undertaking i Staggering Burden On Alaska “In past years I have proposed to of beaten Japan, and reported that diplomacy and directives have shat- tered the nation’s war-minded spir- itual and econcomic control systems as completely as Allied bombs des- troyed its cities and factories. This combined effect must for- ever serve as a warning that feud- ; | Mnrshgl‘Montgomerys much sm\a\l-i FOR EISE"HOWER ter Worla War I. As he put IS WASHINGTON. Nov. 12 — Hagel | C€1Ce—one of them, Joseph Hargen | major powers, he sald. the Territorial Legislature certain alism and aggression cannot suc- o+ ler British Army, wnuld. have thet “After the first world war we learn-'goop Wearo ‘et ‘kvms cancelled | —did 80 With the explanation that “The Zionists are trying to de-|changes in our tax system to raise | eeed,” a headquarters statement add- job of taking over most of Ger-| A ed that stock ticker tape wasn't'pe. 'schedul,‘dp anist, has cancelied he fired pistol bullets into one of 50y an Arab nation” in their de- | more revenue by trying to reach the ed ey A | FRANKFURT. Germany, Nov. 12. | spaghetti and you couldn’t eat it aynua) dinner of 'v.)l;:c National Press | the injured and helpless fliers be- | mands that Palestine be converted | considerable numbers of businesses,| Even as MacArthur took public At Quebec, therefore, Roosevelt| s, aige of Gen. George S. Pat-| And with that in mind, said La-| b tomorrow. night, following o | 2S¢ the American stuck hispi?t0 @ Jewish national homeland, | groups and individuals now virtually |note of the people’s new-given fr o leaned toward the idea that the|i,, ;y sajd any comment hargly |Guardia, Congress should pass the ;o= =0 kodicl Precs. Glub| tongue out at him. Nokrashi declared. untaxed by the Territory of which |dom, Japan's Communist party bold- United States occupy the Ruhr and | o, ¢ likely on the criticism of Sen. |full employment bill without delay. }I:E"]» y the Negro Press Club| 0 5 b ihacia . the steamship companies incidentally |ly announced it will sponsor a na- much of industrialized western Germany. This brought immediate Brewster (R.-Maine) who protested | because Patton was acting as Am- If it is held up, he added, there will be widespread unemployment. The dinner is to be in honor of President Truman. Stalin to Be Back Another Secret are outstanding examples since they | pay no Territgrial tax whatscever.| The result of such tax measures, if | tionwide campaign to investigate the Japanese war criminals — begining Dec. 8, the anniversary of Pearl opposition from Churchill. erican Commander in Germany dur- | LaGuardia also expressed the opin- | 5 o Actually, the late President did|ing Gen. Eisenhower's trip to the|ion that revision of the minimum | S Scott. the wife of Rep.| weapon D“"os“ : adopted, would have been to supply | Harbor, Kyodo News agency sald. not trust the British to dismantle ypited States. | wage law is necessary. ‘Po'.aoll (D-N.Y.) was »rf-cemly‘ A' SOVi I Helm in the itory with funds for roads, New Orders Issued Soon German industry in this vital iron-| Under Army procedure, Patton P UL LR barred from a Constitution Hall| e By U_ S. Navy arports, schools, hospitals and for| The headquarters statement, sum- jconcert by the Daughters of the project ind services enerally marizing changes which have freed } and-steel area without which Ger-| many cannot make war. He recalled that after the last war the British had opposed France and her policy | took over Eisenhower’s duties tem- | porarily because he is the senior | ranking general. Brewster criticized Patton’s eleva- | American Revolution, owners of the thall. In a message to the National Governors of West ToHold Conference & wicsncer e oo ™ss: jdents which hinder me from . p'esenl week, (Iaim WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 — The |Navy has disclosed another secret LONDON, Nov. 12—A dispatch | weapon used in World War Two.. beneficial to Alaska which in turn would have built up its economy. But no taxes ever proposed would have added up to anything approaching ' Japan's common people from regi- mentation and from domination by their old ruling clique, reported that new orders soon to be issued “will ¢ toward German industry in the|tion because of “difficulties which i ol : : Pty o e Ruhr.. And had it not been for|developed, as we understand, durina | 3 | pearing” at Tuesday’s affair: from Moscow says Stalin will take This one is called the Hedgehog. |, gt,opering a total as this prospec- |remove many of the shackles which British loans to Germany, plus the | his administration” in Bavaria. CHEYENNE, Wyo., Nov. 12—First| “1—The fact that the National the wheel of the Soviet helm about IUs a shotgun device, mounted Cn|yjye jeyy which would be handed now hold farmers and their families support of the British Foreign | e ———— postwar meeting of the Western' Press Club excludes Negro journal- | the middle of this month. the bow of submarine chasers. To |, (hyree Seattle steamship compan- in & condition approximating slav- Office, Germany might not have| | Governors’ Conference will be held ists even though they are mem- A high Soviet official, said, con- glve an idea of its cffectiveness— :o5 4ng none of the benefits of ery. Free marketing in a state of staged its comeback. FROM ANCHORAGE {in Cheyenne Nov. 19 and 20. Goy. bers of the American Newspaper | cerning Stalin’s absence from the the hedgehog can five 24 bombs In|ypich would be left in the Territory. | freedom will follow.” il by Lester C. Hunt of Wyoming, chair-Guild, whose membership consists Hed Square parade on the twenty- a little more than one second. |gyery cent of this increase—amount- | The freedom Allies have brought 5 ROOSEVELT Registering at the Baranof from|man, said discussions are scheduled [of both white and Negro corre-| eighth anniversary of the revoju- ~The bombs form a patterniing annually to three times our Ter- will teach the people what Ameri- )" CHALLENGED CHURCHILL Anchorage over the week-end were |on aviation, public lands, agriculture, | spondents. tion, that it was considered unwise around the sub much more effec- |yitorial budget—will go to absentee|can democracy means, but “There is i Roosevelt, who could be both|the following: Thomas F. Walker, |wildlife conservation, state and fed-| “2—As you know, the Negro jour- for Stalin to stand out in Moscow’s tive than the old method of drop- | pusiness enterprises and nonresident nothing easy or soft about the life friendly and blunt with Churchill,| Garry Poncia, James Wise, Ken-|eral relations and western expansion. | nalists have been excluded from cold for several hours since he had ping depth k;omb:; in ‘K\H' :)“"‘u employees. It is the stockholders of ' the Japanese must lead before they ] a submarine has een | —— — | - PN s _ (Continued on Page Four) ! neth K. Hillman, Mrs. Bessie Maran and Isobel MacLauman, The organization embraces 11 west-|press galleries of the House and Senate.” jern States and Alaska, just returned from the sunny south ! where of Russia, sighted (Continued ofi Puge Eight) g yC:;y;:chd an‘ Pabt :I'u.‘o)