The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 28, 1945, Page 1

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I8 ’ b THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” - VOL. LXVI, NO. 10,153 ~ MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1945 pama 'MAJOR PROBLEMS DECIDED AT MOSCOW » . . . A » te ‘e v GERMANY RECOVERS SLOWLY French Blamed for Pre- venting Economic Come- | back-McNarney Reports | By JAMES F. KING { FRANKFURT, Dec. 28 Gen. Joseph T. McNarney, chief of the U. S. Occupation Forces in Ger- many, expressed belief today that it would be virtually impossible to restore a minimum sustaining economy for Germany so long as | the French hold out against treat- ing the country as a single eco- | nomic unit. McNarney's view was set forth in his first monthly report as U. S. Military Governor, which reflected | an attitude of tempered confidence. Further progress has been made | in de-Nazification, breaking up of | German cartels, and laying the' machinery for reparations, and there are no immediate threats of epidemics or revolt, he said. But, in the basic matter of es- tablishing administrative agencies for Germany, McNarney conceded, ! allied control authority is dead-: locked. | Restoration Difficult | “Restoration = of 'a minimum sustaining economy is most diffi- cult if not impossible as long as;| artificial zonal boundaries restrict, legitimate movement and trade”| he asserted. While elections in the U. S. occupation zone are only & month off, McNarney said, “it is apparent | that German masses still remain aloof from formal political life.” A more stabilized situation is de- | veloping in the maintenance of law | and order, he said, especially in| the orderliness of displaced persons, ' who have been blamed for most ol the crimes. Hos ies Reflected Incidents reflecting hostility ward cccupation forces on the part | to-; i educators and publi | city ; cabinet. EMPEROR STRIPPED - OFPOWER | turad by Japanese guards who held . , i Proposed Contifutional| ™ e x Revisions Submitted to Government TOKYO, Dec. 28—Proposed con- stitutional revisions, taking away ! from the emperor of all political | {power and limiting his activities | to ‘“ceremonial functions of the state” were submitted to the go ernment today by a private group The move followed by a few hours a statement by Gen Arthur's press relations officer that Japan's all-powerful emperor sys- {ly 100 families have been evacuated ! tem “is being destroyed—wiped out of existence” and that it is up to the Nipponese to found a demo- cratic government Tokyo newspapers displayed the experts’ recommendations, formulated by, ts. Their pro- prominently posals are far more extensive thar any made heretofore on limitation of imperial prerogatives. | The revisions would transfer the prerogatives to the diet and spe- | that final responsibility for | state administration rests with the Diet approval would hu‘ necessary for the emperor’s ascen- ' sion to the throne or appointment of a regency emperor. The diet ! could be dissolved only by decision ' of a plebiscite. Premiers would be | recommended by the speaker of the | house of representatives and the president of the house of peers. >+ SEARCHISMADE | FOR 2 MISSING FIGHTER PLANES SEATTLE, Dec. 28—The search for two fighter planes of the Navy l YOKOHAMA, Dec. 28—At a Mac- | layed with receipt here last Japs Burned Prisoners With Punks war criminal trial here, one witness tes- |tified that Allied prisoners at the | Fukucka prison camp here were tor- {burning punks against the prisoners’ E. Churchill of To- iledc, Ohio, told the court that he had examined 13 liberated men at the camp last September and found |that they had been burned on the (stomach, ears, neck and elbows. | - Floodsin !nl‘ Japanese constitutional experts i a l ornla | | SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 28.—Near- by boat from the resort district of Guerneville, 55 miles north of San Francisco, where tributaries of the R an River spilled out of their banks after a week of almost inces- | fornia. | Farther up the river, farms in {inundated Patrols kept vigil over levees of the Sacramento River, which is ris- ing toward a dangerous level > o MISSING JACK 'SEXTON HOME IN ANCHORAGE Jack P. Sexton, listed as missing here after he dropped from sight mere than a week ago, now has turned up, safe and sound in his home town, Anchorage Fears regarding the fate of the pposedly missing man were al- night Airlines by the Pacific Northern cffice of a request that Mr. Sex- ton's luggage, left in a Baranof Hotel room here, be flown on to Anchorage. Mr. Sexton had ap- peared, in person, at the Anchorage 'HUBBY BREAKS IN - ONWIFE'SPARTY; SHOTS ARE FIRED Army Officer Taken fo Hos- pital-Signal Corps Man Arrested YORK, 217, the a | NEW | Euge Dec. 28 Capt. of Enid, Okla., Bataan Death Japanese prisoner was seriously morning, police said of Mr: Fay attractive ex- Dale, i sur of | Ma and | for three wounded th: in the apartment Hancock Miller, 24, Powers maodel Capt. Archie i Bellevue, Te: B. Miller, s, an Army Signal | corps officer and Mrs. Miller's husband, was. arrested on charges of felonious assault and violation of | the Sullivan “Act Police said Dale, who is in the | Army Air Force, was struck in the head, chest and abdomen by three of six shots allegedly fired from a ! souvenir gun by Miller. Dale was 'taken to Roosevelt Hospital in 25, of six-point |$ant rain throughout northern Cali-! eritical condition Miller and Miss her sister, with 1 Police said Mrs. | Frances Hancock, , [the Ukiah and Cloverdale areas are Dale and Arthur Gormley, of Col- llege Point, N. Y. a member of i the Merchant Marine, returned last | night from a Christmas visit to | Jonesboro, N. C., Mrs. Miller’s home town, and were talking in the I apartment when Capt. Miller broke |in on them about 12:45 o'clock this | | morning. The were married ago, had Millers, 25 who in Florida months ! discussed plans for a separation | police said, following the officer’s | return from the European theater | last month. | 'PRESIDENT BACK "IN WASHINGTON WASHINGTON, Dec. 28. —Presi- !dent Truman has returned from his {holiday trip to Missouri. The big 'lr nsport plane carrying the chief &cxevuliw- took off from icy runw (in Kansas City this morning and nearly five hours for the Santa Caused Regular Riot At Kotzebue Dec. 28—San- a commun- this town far Circle nearly (ity observance at north of the Arctic {broke up the party | His resemblance to | “Little Hiding Men’ an Eskimo |superstition of beings believed re- sponsible for many evil deeds — sent the children into a near panic. Some lclimbed over the seats and jam- med the door trying to get out; oth- tore the wings off ' tableau and broke shepherds’ 3 the | Santa unmasked and revealed {bimsclf as one of the communit parents. Things quieted down -+ 'FIRE FIGHTING ~ CREWS BATILE ~ ALONGINMINE Rescue Parties Toil fo Ex- haustion to Reach Men Trapped by ExploSion BULLETIN — PINEVILLE, Ky., Dec. 28—Rescue workerss have succeeded in saving nine of the coal miners. The nine were brought up out of the mine alive at 2 p. m. today, Central Time. There was ‘no immediate in- dication about {heir physical condition, but officials said dectors and ‘‘a whole string of ambulances” were on their way to the scene from nearby Pine- ville, Middlesboro and other towns. The call for two doctors and an ambulance had come up from the rescue workers a few moments before, but there was no indication then whether the trapped men had been found or whether members of the rescue crews needed medical attention. The call for doctors came shortly afler volunteer fire- fighters had quenched a fire which had been burning in the UNCONDITIONAL TRUCE IN CHINA IS CONSIDERED |Chiang Takfngfommunisis Proposition Under Ad- visement Is Report y SPENCER MOOSA | CHUNGKING, Dec. 28 — Gen- eralissimo Chiang Kai-shek is con- sidering Chinese Communists’ pro- posal for an unconditional truce [and an official reply probably will be issued at a formal meeting of Government and Communist rep- resentatives tomorrow, a Govern- | ment spokesman announced today. The spokesman, however, was critical of the offer. He complained that any plan freezing both sides {in present positions, would leave untouched “two very important matters,” the restoration of com- im\miru(inns and disarmament and ! repatriation of Japanese forces. | These were the jobs which Chinese Government troops were moved ! north to do. “really a second vreply” to the | government’s Nov. 31 suggestion | that hostilities cease and Com- | munists withdraw six miles from |all railroads. Communists rejected that proposal The Reds since have changed their attitude because of “crushing defeats” they have suffered, the spokesman contended, citing the fact that they have not taken the Inner Mongolian cities of Paotow, | Kweisui and Lincheng. (Commun- !ists said they lifted the siege of | three Inner Mongolian cities volun- ' tarily, to demonstrate the sincerity foi their peace bid.) { “This is very hopeful” ae | spokesman said; “they thought they | could ‘crush us, but now they rea- {hze they cannot.” Government delegates to the f(nrmcnmmg peace cun!vronge par- | ticipated last night in “dn im- { portant meeting” of the Supreme National Defense Council, the Chi- nese press reported today. It gave ino details, however. e, | The Communist offer was termed | JAPANESE 3 MiNisTERS SURPRISED, - DISMAYED BiG 1SSUES %BiglhreeD.ecri;ion onGov-|,, . b | ernment of Nippons AtomicPower Wil Be Used L | "Only for Peaceful” rouses Suspicion " Purposes” IsPlan 'GOVERNMENT FOR JAPAN 'ALSO KOREA IS SET FORTH By RUSSELL BRINES TOKYO, Dec. 28--Japanese view- led with surprise and dismay the “Big Three" d ion for establish- ment of four-power occupation { council for Japan, which most ob- | servers regarded as a Russian vic- | tory in international bargaining, | Gen. MacArthur studied inter- | {estedly the joint communique out- lining the creation of an 1l-nation | Authority on Nippons- Far Eastern policy making com- Ma(Aflth IS Chief mission and an Allled Control | — Council—but he had no comment| .wASHINGTON, Dec. 28 — The im;r;gd::tfily' By ]mdilox\g-uwnned results of the “Big been advised officially of the Ax«!’,\r,,zlfif,wp(,’,r:fi" s:i’,“mf,::dfinr:fimt lied decision and, thercfore, the | with gimultaneous issuance of the government foreign office had Mot | longthy communique in Washing- formally informed Emperor Hiro- | ton London and Moscow. 2 hito of the development which | Major problems covere;l include imay have an important bearing as ' agreements on the governing of to his future status. Japan dnd Korea and the United Undercurrent Apparent | Nations control of atomic energy. Government officials declined | " The Forelgn Ministers proposed, comment, but an undercurrent of | i effect, a United Nations Se- {concern was apparent. Typical curity Couneil to determine that { Japanese comment seemed to be:| giomie power is to be used “only “Aren't things going all right g, peaceful purposes.” now? What is the need for an| Atomic (!onirol | occupation council?” 1 o It was noted with interest that m,::‘.f)] ;,feoxl\for;: 3::“ u’(rnn;(:l‘:an:(: MacArthur would continue 10 i55Ue rosommended last November by orders and remain r"(hc sole exe- | he three countries which share cutive authority” for the fou power council of the United States, | &:‘msfhml oL, Jetinine, mane Russia, Britain and China. A resollition obfefing ‘atomilc don- The *principal immediate Japa- o) proposals’ will be made st the nese reaction was the expressed ! gy meeting of the United Nations | bellef that Russia had won con-General Assembly in London next cessions for” the international coun- | p.oney cil in bargaining for settlement of | Ching and France have been Korean and Manchurian problems. gepod to sponsor this resolution. |Some observers said they con-! Far Eastern Policy sidered it a Russlan victory to the! qne comminique also says the {delrimvnt of the other allics. !foreign ministérs agreed that afternoon, | AGREEUPON Four Powers fo Exercise * | required gt $ha.Qefanan. popilige tete S0 | % | PNA office to make the request. T ed atlst moeRIRg | mittee and thus the Soyiet Union on .p > . f tinued, “as is to be expected, McNarney said. “However, such in- | cidents and activities were still lo-; calized and largely unorganized and | did not yet constitute a serious and present danger,” he added. The German people are reported ! eating fairly well, but McNarney emphasized that food imports from the United States provided the|] only way a 1,500 daily caloric diet could be maintained, as crops in 1945 were lower than the six-year average for 1939-44. Industrially, Germany was ported making slow recovery. re- The VW;s*l;ington | Merry - Go- Roundl By DRFW PEARSON $ WASHINGTON — Congressman Albert Engel of Muskegon, Mich,, once was described by Gen. Mar- | shall as the “gadfly” of the War! Department. Never did he justify 1 that name. Never did he justify on a recent trip to India when he caught the Army,in the act of burning flying gloves, parachutes and flying jackets, chopping up flying instruments with an axe, and flying empty coca-cola bottles over the hump, the most dangerous air route in the world. Congressmap Engel had a rough time getting this and other infor- mation over the head of Gen. George Richards, the War Depart- ment budget officer who accom- panied the congressional committee on its tour. Richards did everything in his| power to prevent Engel from taik-| ing with officers who knew about irregularities and were itching to spill what they knew. The general even went to the length of threat- ening to leave Engel behind at: Karachi, India. Richards had laid out a care- fully planned schedule of stops| that amounted to a Cook’s Tour | of officers’ clubs, so the investi- gating congressmen would hear only what the War Department wanted. But he didn’t reckon with | the two-fisted congressman from | planes was announced, there were | {reports that a plane had crashed {that’” he was going to parachute ! {Ferry Command, missing ! flight from the Seattle Naval Air Station to Portland, is centered in southwest Washington. Shortly be- near Cougar and that a pilot was| seen parachuting near Mount Saint | Helens. According to Mr. Sexton's ac- count, he had never stepped off the Princess Norah at Juneau, being | fore the disappearance of the, two | 00 ill to leave the ship. H()wpv”.'EPl'esldenUal yacht for | by error, his baggage was taken ashore and placed in a room at the Baranof Hotel, reservation for which he had arranged by wire. When the Norah sailed north to i flight. After taking care of some matters at his White House desk this after- noon, Mr. Truman plans to board the a five-day | cruise down the Potomac to work on {his radio address to the nation gnd |his State of the Union message to i Congress. The radio speech will be {next Thursday night and his message A third. planc crash-landed at | Skagway later that day—Dec. 16— " congress is scheduled for some Beavertop, Ore., and a fourth land- | ed safely at Portland. A second flight alsé made the trip, landing} safely. { ONE KNOWN SURVIVOR SEATTLE, Dec. 28—Marine First Lt. F. P. Walling, one of two fliers | who disappeared yesterday on a flight south to Portland, Ore., in| bad weather, walked into the small | town of Yale in the Mount St.; Helens area this forenoon, the 13th Naval District announced. He apparently was uninjured and | telephoned his base at the Sand Point, Wash., Naval Air Station 0(( Ms safety. He radioed near noon yesterday the weather was “very soupy” and from his plane. | Yale, about 50 miles east of | Kalama, is also’ near the town of Cougar, where a plane was re- ported to have crashed about that time yesterday. He will be taken to the Portland Army Air Base, a spokesman here said. A second plane of the four on| the flight south was still missing | today. One of the other two made a crash landing at Beaverton, Ore. SHIP IN PERIL; BOMS BURSTING NEW YORK, Dec. 28.—The Lib- erty ship Henry D. Thoreau is in trouble south of the Azores, with a cargo of bombs breaking loose be- tween decks. A radio message from | the ship declared “If they give way entirely, nothing can save us.” The Thoreau is not a troopship!as follows |and has a normal crew of about!6291; forty men. Navy spokesmen in Washington isaid that the bombs, which are be- ! was Mr. Sexton was still on board Sexton did not disclose how he traveled from Skagway to An- chorage, but it is presumed that ‘he rode the White Pass Route to | Whitehorse, Y. T., from where he flew to Anchorage, by way of Fairbanks. At any rate, he says he never ashore in Juneau on the trip—although he ran up an 11-day hotel bill here. 'PLANE GOES OFF AIRPORTRUNWAY, NO ONE IS HURT A passenger plane, while making a landing at the Juneau Airport yesterday, suffered minor damage when it went off the end of the field after landing. No passenger was hurt. The plane, a DC-3, operated by Pan American Airways, by a gust of wind, spectators said, | just as it was making a landing.on! the icy field. The brakes could not | be used due to danger of skidding.!' | STOCK QUOTATIONS | NEW YORK, Dec. 28 — Closing | quotation of Alaska Juneau Mine ! | stock today was 8%, American Can 1100, Anaconda 44%, Curtiss-Wright | | 7%, International Harvester 95h‘} Kennecott,49%, New York Central 34%, Northern Pacific 35%, U. S.| Steel 81'2, Pound $4.03%. i Sales today were 1,080,000 shares. : Industrials, 192.43; rails, | utilities, 38.15. i - \ COAST GUARDERS THROUGH ! Two men of |time after January 14. State Secretary James F. Byrnes iis due to return tomorrow from «Moscow and he’'ll probably join the | President aboard the yacht to report lon the results of the Big Three foreign ministers meeting. 'SCHOOL TEACHER " SHOT:; WAS WITH | ANOTHER'S MATE SAN BERNARDINO, Cal., Dec. 28. —A 24-year-old schoolteacher was dead today and Sheriff Emmett L. Shay said a 31-year-old mother of two children had confessed the slay- {ing because her husband “left me and our two children to care for ourselves.” The victim, killed as she sat in a icar with the other woman’s hushand, PINEVILLE, Ky., Dec. 28.—Rescue crews trying to reach more than 30 coal miners trapped early Wednes- day by an underground explosion! today said on emerging from the pit that they had faced their big- gest fire yet el thus far. The rescue squads said they were at least 1500 feet from the actual scene of the blast but they may be- gin to find some bodies at any time. As the search for the miners, en- tombed in the Number One mine of the Kentucky Straight Creek Coal Cempany, entered its third day, new fire fighting crews were being call- ed from the surrounding counties to relieve the exhausted toilers. Efforts to reach tMe trapped men have been hampered by great ac- {cumulation of fallen rock. Blaze af (ordova | CORDOVA, Alaska, Dec. 28.—Fire !of undetermined origin last -night destroyed the 14-stall roundhouse, !the car and machine shops and sev- countered. They re-; ported 22 fires had been put out: was hit | !was Mrs. Ruby Clark, physical edu-|eral smaller structures of the Copperi {cation teacher at the private girls' River and Northwestern Railroad.: {«chool in Glendora. |1t was the line which carried nearly | Curb On | Petrillo I{rgposed congressiongl action on legislation designed to curb the powers of James K. Petrillo, head of the { American Federation of Musicians { was urged today by Chairman Lea | (D-Cal) of the House Interstate | committee | The Californian said he will call sion immediately after Congress i reconvenes Jan. 14, to vote on a bill titled “To prevent control of broadcasting by coercive practices.” { This development followed closely !a new demand by Petrillo that broadcasting of foreign musical programs in this country—except those originating in Canada — stop {after Dec. 31. Petrillo also. is de- manding that local radio stations employ more musicians. SANITY TRIAL OF MRS. MANSFELDT would serve with the United States, !China and Great Britain on the WASHINGTON, Dec. 28 — Early | | his committee into closed-door ses- | i Sl Russia should Join in the 11- AGREEMENT ‘member Far Eastern Policy Com- i t Control Council, i . b Gen. Douglas MacArthur will be | chairman of the council and “sole* | X | executive authority’ for the Allled | Powers in Japan,” | i A democratic government is pro- i | pesed for Korea as well as a four- P > power, five-year trusteeship with !the ultimate objective to establish By JOHN A. HARRIS | Korea as an independent state. LONDON, Dee. 28—Diplomatic| Troops To Quit China circles today acclaimed the MoscOW| The announcement said Secre- ; conference a revival of COOPera-~ tary of State James F. Byrnes, | tion and trust among the big powers | Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin 0" (which promised to open the way for Britain, and Foreign Commissar settlement of many vital problems v a Molotoy were in “complete still standing on the road to world g4.cord as to the desirabllity of the peace. | withdrawal of Soviet and American While recognizing the importance| forces from China at the earliest of the matters agreed upon at Mos- ' practicable moment consistent with cow, these circles were quick to point| the discharge of their obligations out that the conference left other|and responsibilities.” {equally important issues unsemed.‘ Democratie China 1and that their solution depended Up- It added they were “in agree- on the maintenance of trust and con- | ment as to the need for a unified fidence. and democratic China under the { This point was stressed by both|National Government, for broad U. 8. Secretary of State James national government and for ces- Byrnes and British Foreign Secre- sation of clvil strife.” ’tary Ernest Bevin at the conclusion;, The communique announced the ‘ol their 11-day meeting with Soviet'ccnditions—including a government Foreign Commissar Vyacheslay Mo- reorganization and free elections— lotov. | upon which the United States and | Britain would recognize Rumania d‘m]‘“"d the - conditions governing United States and British recog- Cordial Relations Byrnes, referring to the *“core Booked on suspicion of murder was Mrs. Gwendolyn Wallis. Her hus- band, Don, 33, was unhurt, although | one of two bullets struck his belt- Ibuckle and dropped into his watch lis -ivilic guard Interier Department, which acquir-| AR Sievten susd B the | cent Hallinan, testified he believed | pocket. at an army quartermaster depot near here. HERE FROM NOME Axel Werner of Nome was a guest stopping last night at the| Baranof Hotel. | IDAHOAN HITS TOWN Mrs. Myrtle Karn, the Baranof, KETCHIKAN MAN HERE ! James T. Morrison of Ketchikan cne billion dollars worth of copper in the heyday of the Kennecott mines and began dying a slow death with their closure in 1938. It had been leased by the Federal ed the property as a gift, to the War Department. All equipment had been dismantled and removed. Fireman pumped from a small stream to save 15 or 20 small homes and a warehouse and store building nearby. et PALMER PEOPLE HERE Registered here at the Baranof Dow, Jones averages today were | 104, is among guests registered at|dersdn and Mrs. Dorothy Sheely Awmderson. D FAIRBANKS FAMILY HERE Lucille Rock of Fairbanks and he U. S. Coast|is among guests registered at the | three small children, were Baranof | IS NEARING END sanity trial of Mrs. Annie Irene Mansfeldt neared a close today af- ter her friend and attorney: Vin- ! her husband left a loaded pistol ac- cessible to her so she would commit suicide. A Euperior Judge Edward P, Murphy {announced that if the speed of this second trial continued, he would in- |stryct the jury tomorrow morning. ( The same jury last week convict- jed the sociglly prominent widow of Pinehurst, | Hotel, from Palmer, are James An- |manslaughter in the gun death of Vada Martin, a nurse whom rs. Mansfeldt suspected of an af- | fair with the late Dr. John Mans- | ferdt. i .o GUESTS FROM ANQTI(()R;\GE | Visitors to Juneau registering last | Mrs. | M i irelations” of the three foreign min-| isters, said “There is great hope for| the settlement of other problems in the same friendly spirit.” Bevin said that the “importart nition of the Bulgarian Govern- ment. New Government For Kcrea The statement said representa- | SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 28—The| things” in building world peace were 'ives of the United States com- “patience, tolerance and understand- Mand in southern Korea and the ing, and above all, confidepce in Soviet command in northern Korea leach others integrity.” would confer, within two weeks and “I do not believe in creating in that a joint commission made up the public mind,” he added, “the of representatives of the two com- lidea that holding a conference such Mands would assist in the estab- is one has solved all problems, lshment of a “provisional Korean {1t is but one stage on the way, and democratic government.” . [T think this conference marks an| The announcement recommended important step. If the recisions that 'hat the General Assembly of the were made are all carried out with United Nations at its January |understanding, that will lead to the Mmeeting adopt a resolution estab- |next step and the solution of more lishing a commission to control i problems.” atomic energy. The commission p ’ | would consist of representatives of Questions Unsettlec the countries making up the Se- | 1Issues which were discussed at curity Coumcil and Canada when {the conference but which were 12ft canadga is not a member of the junsettled included the Iranian .ounei) | question and problems of future pol- | ppance, China and Canada et las thi 'icy in Germany. Moscow dispateh- | jnyited to co-sponsor the resolution. through Juneau | Baranof Hotel. | night at the Baranof from Anchor- 'es said the conferees did not dis- New Commission 3 >o Guard, in tx'ax'\s.itt from the Westward, stopped here | Hotel guests last night. {ing brought back from Italy, must D e Michigan. The sub-committee stopped at Karachi for lunch and were told l (Continued on Page Four) (have been neutralized before they; were stowed aboard the vessel. But the shock was great enough. (i last night as guests at the Baranof 1 Robert L. Burgeson,- Scaulp.l one officer said they might burst if | Flotel. They were Hugh M. Powell, stopped over in Juneau last night. Calif., Earl L. Stendahl, ' of Jasper, Fla., and Robert F. Gray. He was registered at the Baranof. night at the Baranof. Hollywood, | age included: Arthur G. Woodley, 'cuss matters pertaining to the Dar- registered as a guest last Mrs. Cella Cole, Mrs, Harold Sogn danelles, Greece br the problem of ___ and Mrs, B. A. Wennerstrom. trusteeship, except for Korea (Continued on Page Five) The Moscow agreement pmvu.l ~

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