The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 15, 1945, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LXVI, NO. 10,143 JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY., DECEMBER 15, 194 ATE N CENTS 5 TED PRESS. SUSPECTS ARE QUIZZED IN MURDER CASE MARSHALL OFF TODAY FOR CHINA 'fieneraIVGB‘es to New Diplomatic Post on Important Mission By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON, Dec. 15 Gen George C. Marshall left the capital at 9:08 a. m. today by plane for his new diplomatic post in Chi Accompanying the general to the Orient was a military attache, Col. Henry A. Byroade, and a State Department aide, Jaihes R. Sheple; The general is expected to rea Chungking about the next week Marshall ed with him to Chungking directive on U. S. policy on China. He tackles there a job that has stumped others—the unification of China The outline of this U. S. polic ‘given him by President Truman, will be released for publication to- mOrrow. To Seek Harmony Diplomats said there was no doubt Marshall's major job was to bring about harmony between the Communist elements of North China and the National Govern- ment forces led by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek. Maj. Gen. Patrick on Page Six) - Bodies of Two Pilols Who Died in Crash Taken fo / A_nchorage ANCHORAGE, Dec. 15.—A rescue crew which had battled weather and snow has returned with the bodies “of two pilots who were killed Wed- nesday in the collision of their P-38 planes. Eleventh Air Force head- quarters not yet released the names of the men An army plane transported a dog team and the rescue party to within six miles of the site of the crash Sgt. L. D. Huff, in charge of the rescue party, said the dogs flound- ered in deep snow, making it nec- essary for the men to tramp out trail on snow shoes. | >'l’he'Wa;EI’lihgmn Merry - Go-Round By DRFW PEARSON h [ WASHINGTON-On July 10, 1938, this column sent out scribing newspapers a isclosure that craft Company has recently sold its latest Flying Fortr Japan, together with certain blue- prints whereby Japan .can dupli- cate the plane. Carrying four motors, this is one of the finest bombers ever constructed.” This column also pointed out that this sale was being made despite Secretary of State Hull's “appeal to American airplane fmanufacturers to cease planes to Japan.” But during the time which elapsed between the date the column was distributed to new. toits sub- sensational papers and the date of publication, | Donald Douglas, head of Douglas Aircraft, made an emphatic denial, and, on advice of attorneys, the story was killed. Since then, like so many other ,denials, it has become a matter of official record that Douglas did sell the DC-4, plus blueprints, to Japan. Since then, also, a war has been fought with Japan, during which thousands of American lives were| lost and during which the DC-4 built by the Japs on the basis of blueprints sold them by Douglas, played a part in the loss of those lives. Since then, finally, Jap files in the USA have been seized and it is now possible to give more de- tails of the cooperation between Douglas Aircraft and Japan during the years before Pearl Harbor. * % ¥ ULTRA SECRECY WANTED This writer now has before him the original bill of sale, the cable- grams between Tokyo, New York , and Los Angeles, and other corre- ) _——— (Continued on Page Four) c middle of 3 a “the Douglas Air-/ , the DC-4, to; selling | KNIFE SLAYER IN TWO CASES 'BEING HUNTED Oniin London CHARGE MADE oooite sue onrers who [N N.WY. Dec wes T night For the sec- police searched today after of the stabbed and battered bc of Lawrence Lange year old secretary | manufacturing executive as Kelly said that he possibility of a b Lange's slaying and the brutal stabbing-gun killing |of Miss Frances Br 33-year-old stencgrapher and former WAVE. He | explained, however, that no clues had bkeen uncovered -definitely to link the two murders | The “lipstick killer” of Miss Brown attacked her in her hotel room on nday morning, leaving after writing a message in lipstick that he ywould strike again. | - - ADM. NIMITZ - ON NEW JOB 5 —Fleet W. Nimitz today ief of Naval Opera- vord state- CH 30 ond time this for a knife findir t 15 K connection s Admiral took over as Ct tions and voiced in a 16 ment to do his utmost The former Pacific fleet comman- der relieved Fleet Admi; Ernest J. King, who is retiring after holding the Navy's top job since Nov. 18, 19 Nimitz, who led the flecet to vic- tory after the Japanese blasted it at Pear]l Harbor, told fellow officers at the Navy Department upon assum- |ing his new duties: i “I have just taken on a great re- | sponsibility. T will do my utmost {to meet it.” In a farewell message, King gave thanks to the men of the navy and the army, and to the Allies, for their efforts in defeating the Axis. - - Nine Are Initiated By Moose Lodge at Meetingfilast Night The Moose Lodge initiated nine | candidates for membership into their | organization at last night’s meeting, ikunl following the ceremonies a s0- icial evening was enjoyed by one of [the larg groups of Moose assem- |bled for some time. i The newly inducted members are | Ernest Parsons, M. P. Mullaney, C |E. Lane, J. Wayne Johnson, Wm weeney, G. R. Churchill, Charles | Phillips, Arthur Kobbivick and [ Kjarsten Kobbivick. RIPPING INCIDENT LITCHFIELD, -Mihn. — Farmer Homer Curtis walked into home sans ‘clcthmg except for a cap, shoes and jcvershoes — not the type dress an ‘;(,ulduor man wears in Minnesota | winters. | His explanation: His corn picker {had picked him clean. b Curtis said his clothes caught in| the power shaft. After 45 minutes he freed himself, except for his clothing which were left in shreds in the machine. | : TN & - SURPRISE | | TOPEKA, Kas., Dec. | .—Leaving ithe front door key “in the same old place accounted for a surprise | breakfast reunion yesterday morning iat the Paul Edgar home. Returning home from the service,| Thomas Richard Edgar didn’t want to awaken his parents at 2 a. m. and | found the door key in its old familiar iplace. He tiptoed through the house, went to bed-and appeared |at breakfast. | He was most surprised of all lwh(‘n he found at the table his three | brothers, also in the service, who | had preceded him home. -+ FROM CALIFORNIA ~ | Marian Davis of Los Angeles,| | calif,, is a guest at the Baranof. - - - i ARRIVES FROM SEATTLE | { H. B. Hauser of Seattle is reg-| |istered at the Baranof Hotel, | - Quebec is the largest province of Canada. | | i the | toi to a an \gram. The play, starring Walter E. OKYO RAIDERS IN PEACE MEETING IN FLORIDA SETTING Man Huntfor KIDNAP CASET TenThousand NOW MURDER; i Survived Great Feat Swap Stories BEACH, en who LONDON, Dec. 15.—An “army” of tary and civilion police early concluded an unprecedented wide manhunt in an effort to chend 10,000 American, British nadian army deserters and h a recdrd crime wave. Striking denly at 8 p. m., 2,000 London Policemen aided by military police of three nations, estimated by one newspaper at about 6,000, seal- ed metropolitan London in a gigan- tic drag: and combed the city with the precision of a military in- vasion The check continued until day- break, when police stations were jamined with hundreds of persons unable to satisfy officials as to their entity. king the arre: that from 500 to 800 pe been brought in during five hours of the roundup. sachers blocked —principal ery streets and bridges, then swoop- d down on Londor theatres, res- taurants, bars, night clubs, hotels, railway stations and other night gathering spots -+ M De mother s 15—A weep- | Mrs: Rose ; arraigned today on & r in connection with| MIAMI her six-months-old | Fifty-fou found | Japanese en after | with the first | that aggressor CHELSA ing Carla w charge of murd the death Fl Dec. rocked the on April 18, 1942, bombs to explode on nation assembled in ! peace t and swapped stories of glory and death E Central figure at this first ren- dezvous the takeoff from “Shangri-La* for Tokyo was Lt Gen. James H. Doolittle. He led them from the deck of the Carrier Hornet on that fateful flight “We've been renewing old ac- quaintances,” Col. Stanford Chester The has a great deal There's tim for fun Gen. the rest 15 of 3 in her home, 16 days,d she had reported him kidnaped Mrs. Carlan did not plead to the charge, but said weepingly, “It's not true,” when Clerk of Court Stephen | White read th: charge in Chelsa Jistrict Court District Court Judge John W. Mec- Leod continued the case to Dec. 24, and ordered the woman committed to a psychopathic hospital for.ten days observation since said = bunch BODY IS FOUND CHELSA, Mass., Dect. 15.—Discov- ery of the body of tiny Ronald Car-| a chest drawers in me ended a 16-day hunt for supposedly kidnaped child ind resulted today in the year- 1d mother teing held on a charge of “suspicion of murder.” The infa was found yesterday | when a special officer, making what ; pelice described as a last search of 4 combination dining and bedroom, detected a piece of blue cloth after RDI |re had opensd wide the bottom drawer of a dresser. The body was |bundied in a biue bunting suit. OF GUII.]'Y IN | Police Chief Charles Finn quoted to er on.” immy” reported ons had the first himself filled in of the ‘bunch’ on Capt George Bg one of the raiders rescued from a Jap prison camp, three months ago who was being flown here from the Shick Gen- eral Hospital, Clintog, Towa, to join reunion festivities Doolittle stopped in to see Barr Thu y and Barr lay his hospital bed, the general promoted him in rank. Not only that, but Doolittle cited him for the Dis tinguished Service Cross, the pre: entation to be made during a form- 1 dinner here tonight. A lot more talking sightseeing and swimming were on he pre m. Tonight there will b cocktails, the form: dinner, dig- nitarie 1 attendance—and mo- ment silerice. Sunuay the “bunch’ sea. fishigg, then par break up. But there will be a new feeling among them for, together, they wili have paid homage to two jcomrades who died in crash land- ings in China immediately after the raid, three who were put to death by Japanese, and others who succumbed from treatment in enemy prisop camps. .o BiG 3 FOREIGN MINISTERS 10 MEET, MOSCOW By EDDIE GILMORE MOSCOW, Dec. 15.—Preparations | were completed for the opening of the "Big Three-Foreign Ministers’” lan beneath of the famil as on the mother, Mrs. James J. Carlan, wife of a Navy machinist mate, as saying that six months old baby, ported missing N actually 4 while she ttend- in her m id a bit of a it a MURDER CASE. - vill go d Mrs. Carlan she invented the she was “afraid say I neglected the| chi said that > SAN FRANCISGO, Dec. 15—A de- | maintair i mand tha Ars. Annie Irene Mar feldt be found guilty of first degree murder for the slaying of nurse Va- da Martin made late yesterday by Prosecutor Norman Elkington in his opening summation to the jury of six men and six women, who are ted to receive the ¢ time next Tuesday. silles oW At no time did Elkington ask for|* Carlan, 28, who returned from the death penalty his station on the West Coast tol The osecutor depicted to San|assist in the hunt for the child he! Francisco socisly matron as “an pad never seen, embraced his wife angered wife who made a policeman |and told he would “stick by! of herself and then constituted : you” before he left police headquart- herself judge, jury and executioner.’ iers in a state of collapse. He wi | - |placed in the care of a physician. CHRISTMAS SEAL ¢pv e SALE pLAY T0 5p SAYS UNCLE SAM f British Foreign Secretary Ernest +Bevin | There was no word on whether e fons PR . 2 % n would attempt to make the :::’"bi\alll}’\n:lkl?—:;:}v:;zlt:;,,?n:i::;; LOS ANGELES, Dec. 15—Mater-|flight {rom Betlin today, but British starting at 8:18 -otelock on ially, Uncle Sam .sl'fln(l‘» mtln ('hflll(‘(’é(.flll\u.\ said that in view of the the Tarilar Community GeRter pro-|of Te8IEIDE mych from ar with | experiences of U. S. Secretary of .y apan, thinks Edwin W. Pauley, just State James F. Byrnes in the storm an aerial survey trip to!yesterday, it was doubtful of Bevin |the Orient | would take any chances. He says that against an estimated | This would mean that the British child.” The kidnap report and subsequent mands for ransom touched off a search that led from the tenement district of Chelsa to several Boston some- [taverns and even to Springfield, 90 5 e Housted, is in promotion of the an- | C2CK from nual Christmas seal sale. cor - >+ CITY COURT s e D, :‘;;’:r‘;‘ym‘;ft R 15100,000,000.000 war cost, this coun- | Forcign Secictary might not aitive turns on the seal ::ule from afl 0\'Cr‘”‘v will be lucky to get $1,000,000,000 | until Sunday or later if the blizzard the Territory are >Excepti0nallv fine |2 Nipponese assets. fcontinued and it would consequent) i var, erois Y | The Chief of the United States re- |mean a postponement of tho s year. states that unusual' FEE o] alference, Up to this morning, how interest is being taken in the Ketch- Por2to% m'f‘hm o ‘J".p"" lf‘ LA fer ,“”‘; g ol hean - fkan sale and 'that, even at this press mntewnf:e before leaving by |ever, there hac been No ! E air for Washington to report to statement as to when the meeting early date, the Juneau proceeds “”"rPrmid('nL Truman. would start. far in excess of last year's receipts. | it : , | v NG St et Wi inal. saloRan bert: artiborsd He believes the hp;t guarantee | g Sponsored yhay gapan never again starts al this season by the Beta Sigma Phil® P W|NIER SPREADS sorority. {war cvf_ agguession would be early I 'mdustnal development of other Far| I Eastern nations. | OVER wlDE AREA COASTAL AIRLINES k o AIDIIN ‘ ! AlASKA AIR[INES (By The Associated Press) fROM SOUTH "0'“"1 | cla Man Winter, m'erl‘:'-l.xcnw r 1 | before his official cue a week hense, —_— | HAS 22 FROM WEST returned to a wide section of the On yesterday’s flight from Ketch- | — country today, chilled the populace ikan, Alaska Coastal Airlines flew| Starliner Fairbanks with Captain and threatended to linger for a few the following passengers to Juneau: Wilfred Lund, First Officer Cort-|days longer. E. N. Dougthy, Walter W. Butler, R.|mache, Hostess Stevens arrived from| Blustering intd the autumn scene, L. Tyrone and George A. Dale. }Amlunmac yesterday with E\dlen !the king of the elements dished out On this morning’s incoming flight ' Peterson, Jane Felton, Carl Rassu-|a hodge-podge of weather and most from Skagway were: Naomi Krater, messon, Lula Rassumesson, A. H.'of it was bad. Tom Jensen, Mrs. Ken Lamereau Brown, F. J. Waite, Clarence Dill A blanket of snow covered the and Walter Saikko. | Betty Sward, J. S. Mackinnon, A. M. northern tier of states to an average To Ketchikan—Richard Borrows, | Miil, Ray Blado, C. A. Stobaugh, An- ' depth of from 2 to 4 inches and the Charles Bergold, John Boland, Joe 1 akasoff, D. W. Schamp, R. Bur- | sub-zero blasts from Central Canada Apostolon, A. O. Cooprider and R. Maxine Branham, Irma Will- | tightened their grip on the northern M. Watts. { Hans Hansen, J. W. Schaetfer, | plains states. {Don Ertz; from Cordova, William | From Wyoming and Montana east- IN 1!Lnlfu)' rom Gustavas, E. L. Grif-|ward to Illinois and Indiana, tem- | fin. peratures of below zero were report- Four more $25 per each fines| Returning to Anchorage this ed by federal forec have been levied in City Police' morning were Lt. John Neal, Mrs. Custer, Mont., reported the r Court here by Magistrate William Veronica = Butler, Vivian Sherin,'low mark today, an icy 30 below, and A.: Holzheimer. Pleading to drunk Micheal Sherin, Dr. Lawler Seeley,|in Big Piney, Wyo., the reading was and disorderly charges were Siguart Claude Denhof, Evan Jones, Tasca 20 below. Johnason and Martin Johnson. Joe!Jones, Vance Stewart, Lt. Walter Generally, below zero temperatures Brady and Elsie Watson received Backer and Lt. Ernest Doughty. were reported throughout Minnesota, their fines on drunk charges. A o the Dakotas, Iowa, Nebrask®, most drunk and disorderly count brought FROM ANCHORAGE of Wyoming, Colorado and Montana, a 10-day jail sentence for Mary Helen C. Patterson of Anchorage and in some cities in Illinois and In- Jacobs. is a guest at the Baranof. diana, official | X-CONVICT MAY | e ~c | BE LINKED WITH Investigation -MASS FORCES mysteay cases OF Campbell ‘E&?A Four Deatlis in Which Vic-| Dea'hSIowed | tims Cremated May Be Explained Now DALLAS, Tex INDONESIANS E Japs Charged with Prison Field of Inquiry Reported Brutalities Face Court vl as, Dec. 1 Chief of Dallas Detectives Will Fritz said | here today he would seek extradi- bt Narrowed fo Group ecemoer “of Li ‘nnn of Alfred L. Cline from Cali- Of l'kely teads Thé Associated Press) | fornia if a Dallas Grand Jury in-' | & y Developments t 01 Massing of Indonesian forces for| dicts Cline on a charge of murder (.]_n_(,lm,' '("";: m"]’,‘ “2:"&"‘2‘:"0”‘ a stand against «the British in|in the death of a woman here I P e S e s L : spicious by their absence today. All 1 5 g8 Ins ) & S¢ AT parshal's Office, FBI and Hizhway dication of the of the ‘force rest at San Francisco Dec. 3, pre- puiyol—are devoting almost their en= gathering at Tjikampek, 70 miles| cipitated an investigation of the iy agtention to solution of the east of Batavia—capital of the big (lv.f_mx of four elderly women "‘:ulm.\tly crime that was revealed here Dutch island—but the news agenc, ‘\A\H'HIN parts of the nation, was t Monday, but all today admitted Aneta said considerable quantities| charged with murder here yester-|jjla yecent progress 1 of arms were transported there |day in one of the deaths. He has' M Sporadic fighting continued else-|been held at San Francideo a where on the island. The British{charge of suspicion of forgery {one likely suspect has boen turned announced, however, that the chief| The charge against Cline, filed Up—suspects who have been unable of the uniformed Indonesian Peace) by Fritz in the court of W. L. to explain circumstances tending to Preservation Corps had recom- | Sterrett, justice of the peace, read: coanect them with the slaying and mended “full milita action,” if| “Murder is filed against Alfred Whose storles have failed to hold yainst Indonesian ex-' L. line in conneetion with the water. Repeated questioning has, forces in Java. | death of a person whose true name however, failed to bring grounds for War Crimes Trials | to the affiant is unknown but who arrest Tokyo and Manila, prepara- was known Mrs. Alice W. Car-! Leads have been referred to FBI tions for war crimes trials con- penter, by administering poison, the headquarters in Washington, D. C, tinued. Dec. 18 was set for thetype of ich is unknown.” |and to other cities for checking, trial at Yokohgma of the first of| Four Deaths Cited which has somewhat slowed the pace ccme 300 Japanese underlings Francisco District Attorney Of the investigation here. However, charged with prison brutalities. |Edmund Brown said in all four Authorities were still confident Additional charges were lodged deaths under investigation the wo- that among their narrowing field of ainst Japanese Lt. Gen. Masa-|men died shortly after being regis-, Suspects t he knife wielding murder- haru Homma, whose trial is tered in hotels and that arrange- ©F 0f Campbell will be found pected to begin in Manila early in! for their cremations were' Autherities disclaim khowledze of January. The “Death March” com-| by a man who identified @ current rumor that a local clean- mander waw accused of refusing| either ag their husband or & establishment has reported quarter to Allied forces when Gen agent. The district at- traces of bloodstains in clothing (By Cline, size It was revealed that more than on In San ments made himself business torney a Japanese - SNOW DOPE No regular organized skiing activ- ity is designed for this Sunday by the Juneau Ski Club, Prexy Tom Stewart reported today—due to re= cent rains which have firmly beat- en down the white stuff over the Douglas ski area. However, he re- ports plenty of snow, though no new snow, still on the meadows and ski- ing on the Slalom hill not at all bad. HOLLYWOOD, Deec. 15.—A few more changes in flexible Hollywood Divortes—Eddie Cantor's daughter d composer James McHugh, 'Jr., char ruelt actress Helen Walker sued attorney Robert Blu- nore, alleging mental cruelty Separatic Actress Marie Donald and actor's agent Vic Os- satti (shell retain him as her| agent) ; Frances Rafferty and- Maj. Mc- | t HEY ! GET ME OUTOF THIS! WILL YOU ? I'VE ONLY GOT SHOPPING DAYS LEFT UNTIL cHRISTMAS f Mrs. Bertha McLaughlin, a native of Alsace-Lorraine, France, and a regident of this country for many| years, passed away last night at St.} Any Hospital, the age of 66 ve S al The deceased, who was a widow,| had no known relatives in this country. The remains are at the Charles W. Carter Mortufiry, pend- ing funeral arrangements. Jonathan Wainwright offered to outlined the cases as fol- léft for cleaning--clothing that had surrender in May, 1942. He will be been previously washed, apparently Documents Missing Nov. 8, 1943, and was cremated as SI8ns. The marshal’s officé’sald the Joseph B. Keenan, who will Elizabeth Hannah Klein. Brown Only report recelved there in that prosccute ex-Premier Hideki Tojo! believes her real name was Mrs, connection concerncd bloodstained 1id in Tokyo the assignment will| Calif., widow who has disap- Investigation, however, proved that be difficult becs documents | peared | the shirts had been left with the which might guilt were! Macon, Ga.—~A woman died Feb, laundry some days previous to the Keenan ‘plans to send a staff| Alma Willa Carter of San Fran- Owner from any possible implica- member to Germany to obtain any' cisco. B n thinks she was Mrs, tion in the crime. evidence used in war crimes trials| Alice W. Carpenter of Bloomington, Investigation by ecity police trials. | Dallas, Tex—A weman died Oct. seemingly run into a dead-end. At- > 117, 1944, and was cremated as Mrs. tempts to detect the robber from y A W the meagre description given by | she was Mrs: Krebs a s o‘n | Portland, Ore—A woman died in bave proved [utile. Both Johnson | a Portland hotel Nov. 29, 1044, and and officers are on the lookout, however. lieves she was Mrs. Tsabel Van 3 [4d of the four women left property exceeding $300,000 in value {to Cline, Frank Ward, a Colum- bus, Ohio attorney said .o Don Horton (no reason given, but | e plans a divorce) ) ST 3 ski Club work party is to get in MASONI( Riumon ls A A bright future for the town|some licks this weekend at prepara- (I.OSING HERE l’omGH]’ Sgt. Bob Wahl, custodian in charge cn the Second Meadow. The Middle of Chilkoot Barracks, when asked to {Cauin is now in shape, with the nev R ok of Lite [ OUMER arl ecent riaws from Dele- | ficor laid this week by the Forest Rig i + the Temple will: bike | tonence of thel Haines Road. | Warning is given that the down “]" l?;o‘i;l‘ o '“, ”;:Lp, (‘;'“‘ 3;“’\ Haij and the Chilkat Valley trail is not in skiable condition be- ge';‘m “‘,n“l :X"C‘:)‘l‘]‘t"fl;‘m el ‘m,m‘,snoum experience very rapid de-|low the First Meadow P e “wahl. “With dock repairs now in Nl[‘l“»flrl;[z f"‘fdk,:‘l ff’“‘““‘“‘f-“'“")“(_"‘1”;1«-,;-1-.).%, the establishment of a U uso DA"(E IO"'GH]’ ‘mff_'“ a candidates, six of WhOm | g~ ¢y 510ms Offtice a strong probab- ! < The work will start at 7:30 o'elock | e/ \r o™ the Drosoerity of the fOR H‘G" S(HOO!.ER. and will be followed by refr i settle the e prosperity o e g . o) city seefns assured.” | o ments at 10:30 p. m. 1" Wah! was editor of the Sitka Sen-| Students of the Juneau and Doug- ;‘l{,:]l;')ll Kdd“?‘,‘ . w',“‘l""fil I Sitka Chamber of Commerce before | 81 the USO tonight for a dancing ul Ullyl un{ he ‘L 58 with 1. L.linduction into the army in October, party to which all servicemen, local Faulkner as Commander in charge. | 0.1 Mo came to Juneau on Dec,|and visitors are asked to attend Chilkoot Barracks to surplus proper- Ity agencles of the Department of | ROUND TRIP' SEAI“'E Interior. He expects to return to| Pan American Airways yesterday | unday night flew the following passengers to and o S To Seattle—Donald Nelson, Mar S jorie Holzheimer, Lyle Lufkin, Mar MR . B. McLAUGHLIN Calnan, Roy Moeller, Gordon John- and Ken Ferris e From Seattle*-Veronica Butler, Lawler Seeley, Michael Sherin, Viv- Jones, Evan Jones, Naomi Krater, Vance Stewart, Charles Goldstein, | Ellen Hogan, Michael Hogan, John william Bland, Marion Davis, Don- ald Mowat, Arthur Vienola, and Car- olyn Vienola arraigned next Wednesday. acksonville, Fla.—A womap died N an attempt to remove tell-tale 1 other Japanese war leaders, Elizabe Hunt Lewis of Oakland; shirts reported by a local laundry. “destroyed, altered or secreted.” 21, 1944, and was cremated as Mrs, murder date—thus eliminating their there which might bear on the|Tnd Thursday evening's $8 holdup has | Alice Carpenter. Brown thinks the holdup victim, Frank Johnson, ! as cremated as Mrs. Krebs, Brown Mrs. Krebs left her entire -estafe ALASKA VETERAN > !ef Haines was foreseen today by T-|tions for setting up the small tow Scottish Rit Masonic Reunion now | platlve’ o JRa MBI PoRger by thp dfeechiorof John Parghati tlopaient cnext . gugimarc!c s ;s from Wrangell and Petersburg |ility, and many veterans planning to! Last evening the 30th I)muu-m“ . in 1940 and secretary of the!l2s High schcols will ke the guests pA" AMERI(’AE MA'KE in connection with the disposal of | Dancing will begin at 9 o'clock S skagway on the Princess from Seattle and Whitehorse. son, Lydia. Starm, Hilja. Nieminen, DIES AT AGE OF 66 ian Sherin, Claude Denhof, Tosca Weise, William Bland, Elda Bland From Whitehorse Kim Clark

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