The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 10, 1945, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” m— . 10,138 \"OL. LXVL, EAL ALASKA MONDAY, DECEMBER 10, MEMB R ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS 'MURDER IS SEEN IN BODY FOUND HERE JAPAN WAS URGED|N. W. MINING ASSO(IMION TAKES RAP AT ICKES, ALSO BUREAUCRATIC CONTROL OVER U. 5. PUBLICLANDS| ..., oo o comse INTO WAR EARLIER THANPEARL HARBOR Secret Gerin;fi Coramand Introduced at Crimes Trial-Hit Englind By WES GALLAGHER NUERNBERG, Dec. 10.—German military leaders were urging Japan| to get into the war in the spring of 1941 but had not idea the Japanese might strike an opening blow at Pearl Harbor, according to a hith- erto secret German command order disclosed today at the Nuernberg SPOKANE Northwest ended its here Wash,, Mining 51st annual saturday after adopting a “declaration of policy” resolution declaring that gold mine operators should reimbursed “for capital losses and unreimbursed mainten- ance costs” resulting from the wartime closure of mines The association urged that Federal Government grant quate loans to rehabilitate properties The declaration at Dec. 10—The| Association convention be the ade- mine also contended t war crimes trial | Indian reservations should be American prosecutors laid before!created only by Congress, and the the four-power tribunal a directive law conferring such authority on signed March 5, 1941, by Field the Secretary of Interior should be shal Wilhelm Keitel, chief of the|repealed High Command, proposing a Japa-| A highway should Be constructed nese attack on Singapore as a|to Alaska west of the Rocky Moun- means of “forcing England to the tains connecting Pacific Northwest ground quickly and thereby kee] highw with usable portions of the United States out of the war. That Keitel was reluctant at that time to fight America was seen | his warning that Japanese attacks be extended to ba “of AMmerican naval power only if entry of the United States into the war cannot be prevented.” German Aggression In a court session marked by the plea of innocence by Ernst Kalt- enbrunner, once-feared No. 2 man in the Gestapo, American prosecu- tors turned to evidence of collabora- tion between Japan and Germany in spreading aggression throughout the world Kaltenbrunner, recovering from a cranial hemorrhage which sent him to the hospital just before the his- toric trial opened three week ago, was brought before the four-power tribunal and declared: “I do not be- lieve I have made myself guilty.” The tall, scar-faced Gestapo man joined his co-defendants as the Hit- lerite leaders heard themselves ac- cused in their own words of launch- ing the invasion of Soviet Russia in 1941 with the coldly calculated de- termination to starve the Russian people so that the Germans them- selves might eat. the Alcan }’lth‘n MacARTHUR ORDERS (OMPLETE CHAMNGE, JAP LAND SYSTEM Roundup of War Criminal Suspects Continues— More Arrests TOKYO, A warning from influential farmers that rice riots are inevitable without stronger government agrarian policies coin- cided today with Gen. MacArthur's second blunt demand that Japan's feudal land system be altered im- mediately. Fifteen farmer representatives | from Akita Province in northeast- 'ern Japan declared muddled gov- ernment policies have produced |such lack of confidence that the rich Tohoku district may sell only 60 per cent of its rice crop to the | government. i Meanwhile, continuing his round- up of war criminal suspects, Mac- Arthur directed the arr of 57 Japanese accused of committing Dec. L tcunlmued on Paye S!I} Fires Falal Bullet Info Brain as He Kneels in Chucrh NEW YORK, Dec. 10 — A young Marine, Pvt. Harold R. Dunster, of Auburn, N. Y, knelt in the first pew of historic St. Paul's Episcopal Chapel yesterday _ afternoon ““d‘ntmcmos against United Nations o 1Y nationals held in the ill-famed, there, alone in the peace and quiet| cgpgnginan Prison Camp in the ;’;t(;lfm“nxgh' fired a fatal bullet| pyyjipnines, in prisons, camps and PO]IL'.E wofi sinable: $a s Iharsl a hpspitals in Japan proper, and on reason for Dunste k. > the prisoner of war ship Oryoku ‘ Maru during the vessel's night- marish voyage from the Philip-| | pines to Japan. Also ordered arrested were “‘HPP Japanese naval officers, including a repatriate from Wake Island. Two! of the trio are being court mar- tialed by the Japanf‘s' The Washmgion Merry - Go - Round By DRF‘W PEARSON WASHINGTON — Shortly he left Washington, Australia’s as- tute Foreign Minister, Dr. Herbert Evatt, held a press conference at the State Department to announce that the 10 members of the Far| Eastern Advisory Committee had| reached complete agreement on the| : control of Japan—though Russia| SEATTLE, Dec. 10—Management SBA" stil) “absentiny. of Seattle’s three Strike-bound As he was about to open the D€Wspapers expressed the belief to- conference, Evatt looked alound‘d‘" that a settlement would result and asked for Laurence Todd, cor- when publishers and other execu- e Sealtle Ne Newspaper Strike Conference Is Scheduled Tomorrow respondent of the Russian Tass|tives meet at 2 p. m., tomorrow news agency. Just at that moment with the printers’ strike commit- Todd entered the room. g . The union has before it' man- “Mr. Todd, you will be mtelested to note,” Evatt said, “that we had agement’s invitation to submit the 10 nations sitting here on the Far|dispute to arbitration. In a letter Eastern Advisory Committee and! 0 the union Dec. 5 the news- we all got along well, although the | Papers said wage offers rejected by| Soviet Union was not represented. the union were “wholly with-| It takes 11 men to play football| 4ra¥n" Do yeu think your people will join The strike started Nov. 18 r_:m"r the team?” the papers had refused the union’s Todd laughed but made noleplv demand for a wage increase of (No*te—Despite Russia’s dbsence‘szss a day, and the union re- all 10 members of the anmxtzee‘“‘"“"d the papers’ counter-offer of agreed on a considerably tougher$1:65 a day plus retroactive pay. directive for Japan’s control Lh,m‘Laur the union refused an offer that originally worked out by the making the proposed $1.65 increase State Department and Gén. Mac- 'retroactive to last May 1, totaling Arthur). | $240 for day workers and $275 for | night workers. D FROM ANNETTE ISLAND Visitors from Annette Island * x % “RED” DEAN ACHESON Under Secretary of State Dean| Acheson made a speech on lrlend-1 ship with Russia at a recent mass | registering at the Baranof this —— ' weekend were Ensign James P. Gwynn and Hugh M. Kellor. (Continued on Page Four) FISENHOWER 'GREAT MILITARY LEADER'; PATTON MOST FEARED, IS ESTIMATE OF AMERICANS BY GERMAN INTELLIGENCE Chrisimas Mail 'For Aleutian Isle Goes Down, Sea |ing Christmas mail for the 4000 or Am-! American troops on Shemya Island ariff policies must erican preduction of ore if we are|in the Aleutians sank in a storm| not to become dependent upon|November 10, the Seattle Port of foreign sources for essential metals Embarkation was notified today. | for national defen: | The Army took steps today to Financigg of primary ventures|see that the soldiers would still must not be subject to the whim|have a happy Christmas. Major S. and caprice of governmental agen-!'A, McLennan, post postal officer, cies but must be freely permitted|announced that new Christmas | with' checks only to prevent fraud.”| packages addressed to Shemya or | The declaration said the mining|to APO 729, would be accepted| industry “does not seek political!until Dec. 23. An effort will be; favors or demand bonuses or sub-|made to fly the packages north so| sidies,” but “does ask that the|that they can arrive at Shemya| importance of the industry to the, before Christmas, he said safety and economy of our people TR be recognized.” The association opposes, the dec p0|SON GAS USED laration said, ‘“any expansion of | the government lending system to AGAI“ST cover public lands valuable for BY ]APS their metal content, to exact roy- | alties and to extend the bureau- AMERI(A“ IRoops cratic control of the General Land Office over the free enterprise prospectors and locators.” of lated by Brig. Gen. Loucks-China Too By llA\llLl"()\' FARON TOKYO, Dec. 10 — Brig. Gen. Charles E. Loucks declared today | that the Japanese had used poison | By GEORGE TU( KER gas against American troops “in a (Copyright 1945 by The AP) few isolated instances™ notably in| NUERNBERG, Dec. 10.—German intelligence officers n‘;z:n‘(i(-(li New Guinea late in the war The Chemical Warfare officer on ar Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower as a!Gen. MacArthur's staff said the great milital der,” above even|mogt recent instance March 5, German ger because of his| 1945 when a Japanese patrol set skiliful military planning and his' off vomiting gas candies in a Signal ability to “over-ride feelings and ob-!corps area at Biak, New Guine; jections on political grounds in the| said several Americans| interest of achieving the one thing made severely ill but none that was important—the suc ful | accomplishment of ‘miItayy opera-| junaiese official has talked denied knowledge of tions.” to, he added _— 1he author of that statement IS this or other reported isolated use Maj. Gen. Erwin Lahousen, star of gas but they conceded they were h | individual it ecution witness and Ge intelligence chief who evalu-| var- say whether field commanders had used Loucks asserted that the Japa- nese @ had tossed gas grenad at American concentrations at Bia and had used gas against the Chi- unable to p army ated the fighting qualities of jous Allied armies from the German viewpoint in an exclusive interview with the Associated Press. General George S. Patton, Jr., nesg in Chnm was looked upon as the best and most feared of the American h(‘l(l en said The German army “underestimat- ed” the American army at the start of the war, looking upon American soldiers as “well-fed foothall play- the German general said, but learned its error. He said ithat thére was at the end of the war o San little difference, from a oerman\f;:‘l'gmf"g‘n‘::r Je 5 Sy “*“}23{';4}“ at,f::i;megai""\;afi;’“fl:‘Dmn Acheson with wrecking the war the Russians were better at|POUCY approved by the late Presi- m;p:citing break-throughs and umore dent Roosevelt for fighting foreign| daring in leadership compared -Wllll monopolies, particularly. British, in the British-American combination. Iran and the Middle East. | Hurley, former ambassador to R | China, returned to the witness| INDEPENDENT AIR FORCE PROPOSED BY LEGISLATION WASHINGTON, vec. 10—Creation an independent air force was pro- posed today in legislation introduc-| cd in the House by the chairmen of | the military and naval committees. In an explanaticn of their mea- sure, introduced jointly, Chairman Vinson (D-Go) of the Natal and May (D-Ky) of the Military com- mittees, said: “This is our answer to the unifi- cation proposals.” he con WASHINGTON, Dec. 10 today < | tions Committee immediately after }Acneson had told a meeting in his office in which participants almost came to blows over a charge made | by Hurley that a young assistant of Acheson had not had mxhldx\ | service and should be in the Alm) | Acheson denied an earlier asser-| tion by Hurley that he ha wrecked American policy in Iran.| Acheson said he had disagreed with some . recommendations by Hurley of meeting was held in his office. When Hurley returned to witness stand today he said that it was true that the meeting was held but that of it was incorrect. “We believe that. unification of | letters from Former Secretary of the army and navy is not the|State Stettinius and one from the answer to the problem of national|iate President Roosevelt to prove, defense under modern methods of| he said, that his proposals had warfare.” they added. been approved and were in fact| . B e R o) American policy for Iran and the | Middle East. For this, he argued; STEAMER MOVEMENTS | that Acheson nad wrecked the| i])olir\ North Sea, in port from Seattle, | bound for Sitka. Princess Norah, scheduled to sail from Vancouver Thursday night. " American Hero Is (Wedded, Throne Room Yukon, scheduled to sail from Seaitle Friday. 0f Korean Governor Alaska, scheduled to sail fro Seattle Saturday. | sEouL, Korea, Dec. 10.—There's Baranof, from the west, due! an American army hero who now sometime tomorrow, bound for|enjoys the distinction of having been Seattle. | married in the first military wedding | Tongass, from Seattle, due Thurs- | ever held in the throne room of the | ‘lda)' afternoon. From Juneau will| Korean governor's capitol. sail for Skagway, Haines, Hoonah,, He's Col. John Milton (Mickey) | Pelican and Sitka. |Finn of Astoria, Oregon, hero of Columbia, left Juneau south-,Attu, Leyte and Okinawa (.()l‘ hound, early this morning. ‘P‘hm was married Saturday to an| Denali, in port last night. Sailed|army nurse, Capt. Kathleen Cob-" west early this morning. lery of Elkins, West Virginia. ‘ | i \ | One Specific Instance Re-‘ iDEPI., NEW TARGET (OF HURLEY CHARGES Maj. | Secretary of State pag passed a restful night, sléeping | I stand of the Senate Foreign Rela-| and it was for that reason that the | the | the Acheson version | He then read into the record two GEN. PATTON PARMYZED‘ Truck Crashes Into Army Man's Auto-Nerve Spec- | ialists Summoned By JAMES F. KING BULLETIN — MANNHEIM, Germany, Dee. 10.—~The con tion of Gen. Geerge S. Patton, partly paralyzed from a fractured vertebra in the neck, was of- ficially described as eritical to- diy by Army medical officers. An official bulletin released at Fraukfurt, recording Patton's cendition as of 3:30 p.m,, (6:30 a. m, PST), used the word “critical” for the first time. The general’s cendition previously had been termed serious. Patton, Commander of the U. S. 15th Army, is a patient at a Meidelberg hospital as a result of the injuries suffered yesterday in an automobile accident near here. . The official announcement also indicated that Patten still was conscious. Brig. Hugh Carnes, neuro sur- gical consultant to the British Army, arrived here and was in consultation with Lt. Col. Gilbert Phiilips, commanding the sur- gical division treating head in- juries at British military hos- pitals. Mrs. Patton and a neuro-sur- gery specialist, Col. R. G. Spurl- ing of Louisville, Ky., were hur- rying to the general's side by transatlantic plane. | MANNEHEIM, Dec. 10 Gecrge 8. Patton lay partially lyzed today in Heidelberg Hukyuml Gm! as prominent nerve specialists were | summoned from England and the | United States to treat spinal injur- ies which he received in an automo-! Ibile accident yesterday. An army medical bulletin said that Patton’s general condition was satisfactory, that he was completely rational and had spent a comfort- able night but declined to forecast The Only German Sabotage PARTIALLY Mission Sent fo U. . Was SLIT THROAT 'MARSHALL GIVES MORE EVIDENCE Auhorized Reconngissance | Flight-Tells of Warn- | ings on Affack G WASHINGTON, Dee. 10—Gen. C. Marshall testified today he ithorized an army air reconnais- Japanese mandated 1041, Isance flight over \Mamdw in November, | the !it as an overt act. Marshall detalled to a Senate- ! House inquiry committee how ar- rangements had been made to send two planes out to get vitally needed information, but waded that as he could remember, never left Hawaii Genercl Marshall upheld the ac- curacy cf the forecasts the intelligence division made re rding in the critical pre-war December 7, 1941 Marshall said that Pearl Harbor attack was “a slash but not posed invasion at all.” Earlier the five-star former chief of staff had held the opinion in No- vember, 1941, that a movement by the Japanese in Thailand and the Gulf of Siam area would involve the | United States and Great Briftain in war days before No Warning, Pearl Harbor Gen. Geqpge C. Marshall testified Saturday he didn’t telephone a war warning to Pearl Harbor Dec. 7, 1941 because even the telephone conver- sations of President Roosevelt and | Winston Churchill had been tapped |and it wasn't safe. ! Marshall told the Congressional i Pear]l Harbor investigating commit- lt,nv that the final warning to Hawaii 3\xhpn it was certain “something was |the probable course of a paralysis(going to happen” at 1 p. m. (Wash- of the lower limbs resulting fr a4 ington time) sent by regular simple fracture of the third cervical | communications for security rea- vertebrae. s0ns, Hurrying to his side by trans- Atlantic plane were his wife and a neuro-surgery specialist, Col: R. G. | epurling of Louisville, Ky. An official army bulletin issued it the hospital said the fiery general five hours The accident occurred when an army truck reportedly turned off a isice road into the autobahn (super- {highway) and crashed into Patton’s sedan. Patton and his Chief of Stafi, |Maj. Gen. Hobart G. Gay, had left U. 8. 15th Army Headquarters at Bad Nauheim yesterday morning to igo pheasant hunting near Mann- {heim, Gay and the driver, Pic. Hor jace Woodring, were unhurt i - \Commander of Jap ' Sub Is to Tesfify in | | BULLETI WASHINGTON, Dec. 10.—Comdr. Tke Hashimoto, * Captain of the Japanese sub- marine I-58, reported to have sunk the U. 8. S. Indianapolis last July 30, arrived today to testify at the courtmartial of Captain Charles B. McVay, III. McVay, who ccmmanded the Indianapelis, is accused of neg- ligence in failing to order his ship to maintain a zigzag course through waters known to be dangerous from submarine at- tack. Hashimoto is expected to tes- il before the court martial when it resumes tomorrow. - .- - FROM BR! OL BAY Frank Schneider, a resident of Bristol Bay, is a guest at the Baranof Hotel. - D NOME VISITORS HERE Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Seiden-| berg are guests at the Baranof Hotel. R Cuba, with an area of 44,164 | square miles, is larger than all the ‘other West Indian islands com- bined. McVay Court Martial i Senator Ferguson (R-Mich) want- ed to know why the telephone was [not used. Feared Bombings Marshall’s third days of testimony also brought out: 1. The U. S. high command fear- ed the Japanese would try to bomb iaircraft factories on the West Coast lin 1941—and hoped for tome to pre- pare {pr war.” He mentioned plants in Seattle and San Diego. 2. He felt that he shared any re- 'sponsibility for the War Department ailure to send additional warnings |to Hawaii ter being advised the garrison there was on only a sabo- t before the Japanese struck. 3. Army and Navy commanders {at Pearl Harbor were exgperienced .and — in his opinion — knew the “capacity of the Japanese. 4. Although the U. 8. ga rit- ain the secret of reading intercepted Japanese messages early in 1941, the war was well along before the Brit- ish divulged their methods of get- (ting information. Marshall said use of the telephone to Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7—the day. the Japanese struck—would have en- | tailed a definite warning that Japan his l\hm going to war. That, in {opinion, had to be kept a tight st ret and he said this was why: “The Japs would have grabbed at {almost any straw to prove to such portion of our people who doubted our integrity of action that they were being forced into war.” That would have been, Marshall declared, the “overt act” the Japs were lmkm;, for. ,,—— ‘Nobel Peare Prizes Presented by Proxy OSLO, Norway, Dec. 10 — Nobel peace prizes for 1944 and 1945 were presented by proxy today to the International Red Cross and to former U. S. Secretary of State I Cordell Hull, who was lauded the “Father of the United Nations organization.” Because Hull was unable to at- tend, the $30,000 prize and diploma for 1945 were accepted for him by U. 8. Ambassador Lithgow Os- borne, in simple ceremonies ot the Nobel Institute. | [ ONPEARL HARBOR desp! ite | k the Japanese might seize onjin an exclusive interv | | | Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, NUERNBERG, prosecution witness at berg trial, Maj. Gen. Erwin Lahou- sen, has filled in some important| details about the landing of Ger-| man sabotage agents in the United | States back in 1942, Lahousen formerly was chief of the sabotage | section in German Army Intelli-| gence. And he calls that attempted | sabotage mission the greatest fail-| ure in the history of German in- telligence, and proof that Ameri- Dec. 10--The st u\ the Nuery can Counter-Intelligence was good. ! In fact, Lahousen says he always suspected that one of the agents,] by the name of Dasch, was planted by the Americans. ! Sabotage Story Lahousen is under heavy guard! at Nuernberg, and he told his story with the it all sald when he and| Press. He in 1942, Associated began early as far, the planes up s Guard Japan's major military attack plans the mission a pro- jose eight good Nazis.” i the head | of all German Intelligence, were! summoned to Adolf Hitler's head- | quarters. Hitler told them to step the activity in the United States. And just a short time after- ward, a member of Hitler's Elite| informed them that eight! Nazis were available for| All of them had lived _in America, and one was said to be {an American citizen. Admiral Can- aris only remarked: “Well, we will fanatical | Real Objectives Lahousen told the Associated | Press that the real objectives of the saboteurs were some aluminum factories, He said it apparently was CORPSE WITH Failure; Defails Are Tald‘INVESTIGA]‘ED | Gruesome Dlscovery Made in Seatter Tract at Noon Today Up to press Iime today, no identification had been made of the believed murder victim found in the Seatter Tract. A search of the dead man's pockets disclosed no further knowledge as to his identity. Medical examination this afternon brought frem the ex- amining physiclan only a state- ment ¢f opinion that death had occurred several hours previous- ly. Definite statement as to cause of death is withheld until after mcre complete examination. No time has yet been set for a coroner’s inquest upon the body. | Murder is believed the only likely answer to the finding here today ot the slashed body of a man that ap- parently had been thrown from a car to the spot where found. The body was not immediately recog- nized by authorities as that of a lo- cal resident. Prior to report of the medical ex- aminer, it was assumed that death resulted from deep gashes across the throat, at least four of which were ‘apparent, in addition to a cut across the right temple. Head blows were indicated also, by bruise-splotched area around the right eye and else- where on the head, for propaganda reasons that, after| nw capture of the agents, it was aid that they were aiming at a railroad bridge in New York and a power house at Niagara Falls. It was in June, 1942, that Ger-| man submarines put four men| ashore at Am: sett Beach, Long Island, and four others near Jx\ck—l sonville, Fla. They were quickly! rounded up, and six were put l.o' death, The other two, because lhey[ helped in the conviction, were given prison terms—one for life, the other; for 30 years. Hitler Yells ise Jews" The failure of the mission threw | Hitler into a rage-—and then came| one of the strangest results of all.! Lahousen told the A. P. that he! and Admiral Cana went to Hit- ler's headquarters, and Canaris| pointed out that the men had not! been trained agents, but had bcen‘ furnished by the Nazi Party. And at that, Hitler shouted, “well, why didn’t you take Jews?” Canaris went back to Berlin, and according to Lahousen—for more than a year Jews were used .in the intelligence service, and in that way were saved| from the Nazi Storm Troops and Jew bait Hitler finally ordered! the practice stopped. Lahousen said that so far as he, knew, there were no sabotage mis-| sions against the United States ex-/ cept the one that failed in 1942 | body. | No wedpon was in. evidence neir | the body. | | Body In Ditch The body, lying uncovered on its left side in the ditch alongside the road adjacent to the new residence being construeted for H. B. Foss at ithe top of Evergreen avenue, in the Seatter Tract, was first sighted just about noon today by men working on the Foss residence. It was they who notified the City Police, who, in turn, called U. 8. Marshal's and FBI incestigators to the scene. Blood Splatters The victim, estimated at about 35 |years old, white, was dressed in a striped grey suit that appeared well kept, a light welght brown top- coat, brown hose, tan oxford style |shoes, grey shirt and bright wool scarf. ~ There was no hat near the The topcoat was splatteded ‘with blood, especially across the and Federal ‘law officlals | believed it unlikely that the body could have been dumped where it was found before Saturday night, or as it was lying In the open—it would almost certainly have been seen by workmen on Saturday. How- ever, workers on the Foss residence report a large section of cardboard 'moved from where it had been stor- ed nearer the house, which opened the possibility that the body might at first have been covered up by the cardboard which later was blown - NEW YORKER HERE HELEN is Albert Chippenfield has arrived from Petersburg and is a guest at Hotel Juneat. ..o FROM KETCHIKAN Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Watkins of Ketchikan are registered at Hotel Juneau -e- GLEN HUBBARD HERE Glen Hubbard arrived here over the past weekend from Ketchikan. | He is a guest at the Baranof. - - SGT. WAHL HERE | T-Sgt. and Mrs. Robert Wahl| have arrived with their two chil-| dren, Rolly and Christine, for a| 10-day stay in Juneau. Sgt. Wahl! is commandeer at the Chilkoot | Barracks at Haines. The visitors have taken an apartment at the| Baranof Hotel for their stay. - EXCURSION INLET VISITORS | Carl Eileutson, R. M. Goebel and L. J. Howard, from Excursion Inlet, arrived in Juneau this weekend They are stopping at the Baranof. at ofl. \ Suppositions Officials judged the victim to have been of medium height and 'bunld welghing approximately 1556 .pounda One possibility held was that he had been a passenger aboard luno of the ships in port here over |the week end. Investigators, after checking the |ground for footprints and photo« igmphmg the corpse as it was found, seemed agreed in the view that death occurred elsewhere and the |boedy later transported to the spot along the curving blind roadway :Mmm;; by the Foss residence. -~ Cuba has a larger (melgn trade | per capita than any other Latin American country except Argentina Edwin D. Gessner of New York‘ City has arrived in Juneau. He is registered at the Baranof. - SANDS HERE Helen Sands, Anchorage, guest at Hotel Juneau. - CHIPPENFIELD HERE LET'S GET A MOVE ON BEFORE THOSE DUCK HUNTERS SPOT US-WEVE ONLY GOT ua SHOPPING DAYS LEFT BEFORE CHRISTMAS ]

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