The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 8, 1946, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

'KIDNAPED CHILD M SEnia MAF (" o OO ——— T s THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,162 JUNEAU, ALASKA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1946 ~ MEMBER ASSOCIATED P RESS ) CENTS PRICE TEN NEW YORK CITY IS CUT OFF BY SUDDEN STRIKE (By The Associated Press) Business transactions all aver the world were impeded today when 7,000 Western Union employees went on strike in New York City at 4:10 a. m. (PST) virtually isolating that city (ampaign Starfed fo Secure TB Sanaforium For Southeast Alaska A total of 70 persons, representing 48 governmental, civic, church and fraternal organizations on Gastineau | | | | | | 'ORGANIC ACTBILL " WILL BE HELD UP BY DEL. BARTLETT No Action 11; [;Taken Until After Expression on Statehood (leveland Takes Over As First National President Today; Mc(lain Retiring Re-alignment elrcles was in local banking announced today, fea- turing a move by G. E. Cleveland, Channel area Gastineau S five months, years and 15 years EXTRA NEW SLASHING RDERED BY MANIAC TINY BODY 15 HACKED T0 PIECES ey HERE REOPENS Dismember&i?arls Found, 'DEMOBILIZATION SLOWDOWN GETS from outside communication. Telegraph communication in the international business capital was| broken off and union members in| eight international and radio mes-| sage firms refused to accept traffic, emanating from Western Union. The walkout came four hours ahead of schedule, a spokesman for | the striking CIO American Com- munications Association said, be- Channel, voted last night at an open 1forum meeting in the City Hall to | write Jetters to Federal Government officials recommending a perman- ent natorium in Southeast Alaska for the cure of tuberculosis. OFFICIAL NOTICE Demonstrations in Pacific, uncan channei sieatth Gounci, was Eumpe Tflken nght |presided over by Dr. C. Earl Al- cause the company was “shipping in| Iluctl\l, Territorial Commissioner of . Health, who explained in detail the four carloads of strike-breakers.” | fo WaShlflgion [office of Tndian Affairs’ propossd A company spokesman, hm\ever,; PR {plan for combatting the present high said, “there was nothing to” reports; wWASHINGTON, Jan. 8 — Global (rate of tuberculosis in Alaska. that Western Union was bringing in| G.I. crews of "SNAFU” over d Stating that every community in strike breakers. | mobilization got capitol hill worked Southeast Alaska should immediately and eight months of which he has : i WASHINGTON, Jan. 8—Delegate | Vice-President of the B. M. Beh- | poen. awoclated with the Fitet in Sewers — Hunt for | Bartitt of Alaska will wi‘llhho.l‘fl B | gencs Bank, to became President | Ntional Bank here. Prior {0 his| | Slaver Ui ' proposed bill to revise the' Terri-, of the First National Ban oining the local bank, he was with | | tory's Organic Act until after the! That Mr. Cleveland had taken ;‘n,. Treadwell mine s | Yer n erway | o e T people vote next fall'upon whether [ over the helm of the First Na- AR ’ t ! % L i k Ithey want statehood Hlional, succeeding Eiweod Meclain, || Before. coming 1o the channel.| owland Kelso Treated for| , BULLETIN-CHICAGO. Jan. He made this announcement to- | Vice-President and - retiring il e ooty Bl R o [, feOononer, Suids Istle Wow [day in o letter ‘to the Alaska|cutive Director, was announced by | 85kd Railroad and for two years| Thraaf WOUfldS‘Camp' 0 Sl B : S was with the Merchants and | ©0ld Suzanne Degnan apparently Miners' Association which had | John Reck, President of the Board | \i® MR (he MCEERONIS And . | . T . criticized his proposed bill. of Directors of the First National | Miners Bunk at Ketehikan, He had | hal| Syepact Questioned Avmern Wit & buiohes “If the people of Alaska want|Bank, immediately following Lhe‘g’e‘“}’"‘s banking ' skpefiange. i SR ."" coroner declares that X % y g | Seattle examination of the dicmem- statehood and so decide at the|board’s annual meeting, held this | >° . | referendum next fall then we|morning at 9 o'clock | Electea to the revised Board of | - [“‘l”fan{‘:‘y":;‘v“l‘::':“:.oe“:‘{m ::‘f‘*d "“d!t ;mnmm that the ought to press vigorously in Wash- | Lucas Succeeds Cleveland | Directors of the First National pueit g o, Dampbel], Wils .'r':‘e hegind ;wurk o an o ington for statehood,” Bartlett said.| Harry I Lucas, former Mayor of | Bank are: Mr. Reck, President; |¢80 o 008 CHIPOC, Was pert carver. Brodie adds that Wallis S. George, Joseph A. Wil- 1o custody is a r\mom.1 the slayer evidently used some “If the people vote otherwise, then Juneau, succeeds Mr. Cleveland in | by officers in connection with the J g 7 . gy e ) " instrument such as a hunti The headquarters office Was Sur-| yy' oday. |set itself to the task of writing hun- | it is probable the issue of state-|the vice-president's post at the mfi;{mc;;::(;l f::lx:xkfillxxA'cr{ x:g throat-slashing of Howland. Kelso, | knife and hacked the body |,.':: Jounded by 1200 pickets, its POWST} A5 doughfoots demonstrated in|dieds of letters to government offi- hood WI}_I be dead for some yvarslBtllexn!a Bank etiving| M. Cleveland is the only new|%ho Was found on Juneau strects| pieces at the Joints without tubes, carriers of messages, Were| . pacific, Europe and right out-|clals urging support and endorse- at least ; Pl Sup U, TeUribg R : this morning in a Gazed condition | damaging the bones. shut off. and a number of brgnch|ge the capital at Andrews Field,|ment of the proposed sanatorium, Dr.| Bartlett said if the statehood |from active banking duties, is to ) with a gashed throat | A total of $11,000 in rewards offices, including some in New Jer sey, were closed. Oth | the slowdown in the Army's de-|Albrecht asked that no campaign be mobilization program brought these imade for a specific location until the referendum fails he intends to in- 1 B Capital Increased | continue on as Vice-President of questioned Ernest Weaver, President of the| Association of Communications | Equipment Workers, said he expect-, ed to know by 3 p. m. (EST) wheth- | er 6,000 Western Electric installa-| tion workers would quit work to-! morrow in support of the six-day-old | Western Electric strike Such walkout would affect the nation's telephone system. President Truman said at his press conference some increase in the price of steel would be granted but added he would not say whether it would head off a strike of 8,000 CIO steel workers scheduled for Jan. 14. Since discussions still are under- way, the President said, he was. not in a position to talk about the possible boost in steel prices. AP Keeps Going The Associated Press, using leased wires, suffered a brief interruption of service on several regional cir- cuits after Western Union said some- one pulled a plug in its power room. ‘The four major radio networks said (Continued on Page Eight) The Washi ngion Merry - Go-Round| By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON — Secretary of Commerce Henry Wallace isn't taking any chances on being left holding the political bag Truman administration begins to lose out with the public. He continues on excellent terms with Truman, but has also em- barked on a speech-making cam- paign which, while supporting most of Truman's enunciated program, makes it plain that the ex-Vice President still has a very forth- right political mind of his own. It didn’t get much attention, but‘ Wallace made a significant speech at a Negro fraternity meeting in Washington the other night which drew wide acclaim in the Negro| press—a segment of the public that Bob Hannegan has been worried about ever since Mps. ‘Truman tossed aside. the question of the DAR and Hazel Scott, wife of the Negro Congressman, who barred from singing in Constitu- tion Hail. Wallace’s next talk will be at a 10-state farm meeting in St. Paul on Jan. 11. This will be Wallace’s | first farm speech in almost two years and has more significance ; than meets the naked eye. After January, - Wallace will make three or four speeches a month all over the country, renewing his contacts with the hundreds of delegates who voted for him at the last’ Democratic Convention, at same time checking his political fences around the nation. Wallace doesn’t plan to resign from the Cabinet before June, and when he does he will go out with Truman’s blessing in order to cam- | s May Join | congressional repercussions |plan has been approved. 1—Demands for a congressional | investigation of the entire program as requested by 12,000 American soldiers in a resolution adopted yesterday at Manila 2—The possibility of a rush of signatures, when Congresss n-mnvi Endcrse Institute First “Once the proposed institute is en- dorsed then we can decide what com- |munity would be most advantageous jot pelieve “your views are truly for its location,” said Albrecht . permanent and centralized sanator- ium in Southeast Alaska, whether it =f | During the meeting it was if the| was | the | [ venes next week, to a House peti-'y. i1 getchikan, Wrangell, Juneau | tion that would force unmommclm some other ciy, is a vital first | action on demobilization legislation |step in an overall program of T. B. There was a strong possibility | oepitalization in the Territory,” he | that the House Military Committee | qaclared. would order an investigation, or at| -ppe plan calls for the establish- } least an informal inqui ““’“‘“-@‘,mem of two more permanent sana- | Chairman May (D-Ky) was said {topjums when funds are available— | by colleagues to feel that the Army (one jn Anchorage and one for the | is doing the best it can. May is in/arctic area, perhaps at Fairbanks. Florida. | Dr. Albrecht suggests that letters Letters, telegrams and petitions ps gqdressed to: OIA Commission- | demanding action have started pil-|er William Brophy, Delegate Bart- | ing up in the committee’s quarters.ijait, Secretary Ickes, Gov. Gruen- ,And one member commented pri-jing in care of the Department of ; vately that because this is a con-jnterior, Washington, D. C., and Ed- { gressional election year, “they are|win G. Arnold, Director of Terri- | likely to receive some attention.” |tories and Island Possessions, —_ | Direct Benefits stress- ed that figures show only per cent of the people can afford the 1$2,000-a-year cost of hospitalizing a tuberculcsis case. With the estab- lishment of a sanatorium having from 200 to 300 beds in Southeast lAlaska, another of similar size in |the Arctic and 500-bed hospital ac- commodations in the Anchorage area, Alaskans, whkether white or native, would be assured of specialized treat- ment, the Commissioner pointed out. ‘The proposed sanatorium in South- east Alaska, which would be of per- manent construction, whereas the precent sanatorium at Skagway is only temporary, will be available, under a contractual agreement, for the care of medically indigent and other white patients suffering from tuberculosis. ACTION IN MANILA MANILA, Jan. s—Milling thous- ands of G.I's flooded commercial { communications offices today, re- {laying to Congress their pleas for a quick homecoming while they | awaited the arrival of Secretary of le Patterson and congre: nal ‘ committeemen to whom they hope | to protest in person. i It was not known how many of { the protestants were eligible for| | discharge. Harbor authorities said only 3,000 are eligible to sail this| month but that 10 transports with a capacity of 40,000 to 50,000 are due. A. U. S. Senate sub-committee | investigating post-war bases and { surpluses is expected here Satur- | day, and Gen. MacArthur's press | headquarters in Tokyo said that Adequate Hospital 'Secretm-_v Patterson plans to visit! Under an adequate hospitalization | Manila “the middle of next week.” program, for which the sanatorium { - |could be the spearhead, active tuber- » culosis cases could be isolated and wAR (RIMES (ASE throw off and resist advancement e of the disease by themselves if NUERNBERG, Germany, Jan. 8—' An Amerjcan prosecutor told the| International Military Tribunal to- {day that Hermann Goering was “more, dangerous in some -respects” than his master, Adolf Hitler. | The former Reichmarshal sat de- fiantly in the prisoners’ box as iRalph H. Albrecht, international lawyer from New York, started: | buiding up the case to show his in-j dividual responsibility for the Nazi| war crimes. Goering is the lead-| . e ing defendant abong the 22 on trial. | the obstacles delaying American | Albrecht opened a new phase of:flnd British recognition of the (litation and sanitation in homes of arrested cases. Among the present approximately 4,000 cases of tuber- leulosis in Alaska, 'there are many lin which patients might be able to (Continued on Page Three) > 4 Recognition of Gov. in Rumania Is Smoothing Ou i the trial with Nazi documents, many!R“mflmfin government was ehmx- Ior them written by Goering himself, nated u?day by action broadening {showing the part the former air|the cabinet to comply with the force chief played in German 35.:Moscow Foreign Ministers’ agree- gression. | ment. : Goering, orally chastised by his| ‘The appointment of two new jtreated, with follow-ups in rehabi~ oy Gegrees centigrade,” Dr. Armat-| 1. troduce a bill for a new organic|the First National and is still a| Also voted by the First Nmmm\l}i“K("(];:’“f‘jl’;‘"‘ "“';!t}l""[:‘ abal has been offered for evidence act prominent stock holder in that Bank's Board at its meeting this| o wl:|t~h 1)1‘“ ‘b‘\lfle:l lolfnlml,( !| bringing about the arrest and Bartlett told the association heinstitution. Mr. .Reck expressed MOMing was authorization for ap-|cH6 WHEE S AETEC m‘,::mt"“]' cenvietion of the kidnap-slayer. did not believe it had authority to|deep regret at the retirement of Plication to the U. S. ' Treasury mnfim Heiae n‘)’m_t;‘“' m‘-"w:i‘ The latest offer, for $5,000, speak for the people of the in-!Mr. McClain, which is forced by Department for increase of the g = S exn{'ml Y "n;{ from Mayor Edward terior of Alaska and added he did | failing eyesight. Mr. McClain plans institution's capitalization from T P8 8, WE CHR 0 .| Kelly, who sald that if neces- to leave Juneau about Feb. 1 to $50,000 to $100,000. Upon approval, Meeks is being held in the City| sary he would personally guar- representative of any substantial | go to Seattle where he owns a 310:1 gwr clt-n' stuclz di\;k(lfud l.; to| 784 I ‘ antee it. r iners.” home now being occupied by his be taken from undivided profits, 1 S i mmihoo . duughlvr-m-li\i&' mi son, at each stockowner’s holding to be| 4 throat f‘f‘*'“f‘fl renewal, bear- | CHICAGO, Jan. 8.—A maniac !present still in the armed forces doubled. ing many earmarks of the Oamp-, kidnap-siavery Who Stole seyests RUSSIA"S HAVE overseas, is expected to join them! Mr. Cleveland terminated his L’fdv f““jl‘l'{"'r[;‘f’lzpl’:_ up l;‘ Juneau ;old ,sum""e Degnan from her bed in Seattle in April. Mr, McClain duties with the B. M. Behrends 1:1Ad(y‘f‘“d : 11n l(‘l‘“Knl'a man, m.LLe early morning hours Monday \ contemplates no further business Bank at the close of business on dn‘r‘" gl on: and Kelso, wan- | for $20,000 ransom and then hacked NEw AIOM BOMB agtivities and will go under a Dec. 31, 1945. His association with dering the streets with serious her tiny body to pieces and dumped | physiclan’s care immediately after the First National Bank com- ;)u:.»’.\boxil. }:x “1“‘()‘“ Kelso wnsithcm into sewers, was hunted today IS REPOR]‘ NOW'“““’“‘ T Seattle manced t morning. Although | PeIg treated this afternoon at |by an infuriated force of police offi- | e il Waave | very appreciative of the great|!V€ Juneau Medical Clinic. | cers. Mr. McClain has r services rendered the Institution ihe finding of Kelso was fol- | ded in the oy by Mr. McClain, Board President , Reck declared’ that the First Na- NEw Au'l'o HRM tional Bank heads consider it very to have been LONDON, Jan. 8.—Sources close to the British government today ex- pressed skepticism of reports that Russia had developed a new atom | fortunate able to bomb which makes the western pow- ! secure S0 able a successor as Mr. The report was made last night and wide associations in local by Dr. Raphael E. G. Armattoe, the | ON WAGE S(AI-E banking circles should prove in- director of Lomeshie Reséarch Cen- | valuable. ter for Anthropology and Human | 25 Years At Behrends Biclogy at Londonderry, Northern| | Mr. Cleveland’s move to the First Ireland. Armattoe declined to dis- National ends a 25-year connection close the source of his information U n p rece d en f ed Bonus with the B. M. Behrends Bank, for more than a decade of which he had held the pest of vice-president. Previous to entering the Behrends Bank, he was connected succe aside from saying that members of | the Center’s staff were affiliated with Russian scientific societies. | Usually well informed British sources said they had not seen Dr.! Armattoe’s statement, but they| pETROIT, Jan. 8--The CIO doubtdd it very much. ! United Automobile Workers today If the Russians have developed an nheld a unigue and unprecedent2d atom bomb, they said, they thought|ponus wage contract witn Kaiser- “only a small circle of people in-|pragzer Corp., newcomers to the auto side Russia would know about it."!industry, which they will offer as They were undble to understand 3 model for settling disputes with how Dr. Armattoe would have enough the industry’s long-established firms Contract Follows 7- Hour Conference Mining Company and with the Treadwell gold mine. Born in the eastern part of the United States, he came to Alaska from Seattle to become a permanent Juneau resi- dent. Bank Staff As now aligned, the staff of the knowledge of the western powers'! ynion leaders hailed the coutiact, First National Bank atom bomb to know whether theiannounced by hoth sides late last Mr. Cleveland, President; Mr purported Russian weapon renders it { night, as “unquestionably the best McClain, Vice-President; Earle obsolete. (ever reached with an automotive Hunter, Cashi Thomas Cashen, Dr. Armattoe said “The Russian|company.” Assistant Cashier; Chester Zim- atom bomb” already had been test-| In a whirlwind finish to a highly- merman, Assistant Cashier; Etta ed and was found to have a )wrl-"xgcmt‘ seven-hour negotiating = Bringdale, Teller; Emma Nielsen, zontal pulverization range of 53 sion, Henry J. Kais chairmun, Head bookkeeper; Christine Keat- miles and a vertical lift of 6.2 miles. and Joseph W. Frazer, President, an- ing and Suzie Helgesen, Book- | , “The temperature generated was nounced at a press conference that keepers; Sylvia Alexander, Stenog- in the neighborhood of several mil-!ihe new firm would: rapher Base wage scales on prevailing toe. asserted, adding that the pur-|rates at the Ford Motor Co, Rouge ported bomb could be mnnufflct'"‘t‘dlmam, said <0 be the highest in ‘on & “mass production scale.” |the industry. iR 2. Meet any increases granted by S'[O(K ouo“."o"s iGeneral Motors as a result of the |current GM strike. { i 3 NEW YORK, Jan. 8 — Alaska LUCAS BACK WITil BEHRENDS J. F. Mullen, President of the B. M. Behrends Bank, today an- nounced the appointment, effective succeed G. E. Cleveland as the bank’s vice president. Mr. Lucas is a former member of the Behrends Bank staff, com- sively with the Alaska Juneau Gold | Jan. 1, 1946, of Harry I. Lucas to: lowed shortly by investigation of Lis room at tlie Gastineau Hotel City police and FBI agents, fol- lowing the new lead, early this afternoon tracked a suspect to a rooming house on Second Street between Franklin and Gold Streets, where they closed in and made the arrest, The handcuffed suspect, who was repeatedly questioned in connee- tion with the Clarence Campbell slaying several weeks ago, was taken fo City Jafl for questioning by law enforcement officers, who had no statement to release this afternoon feveral persons are reported to have seen Kelso walking down Franklin Strect this morning with a bleod-soaked towel wrapped around his throat Russia Nof - Prosecufing Japan (ases TOKYO, Jan. 8—~Indications that Russia will not participate in war {crimes trials grew at Supreme Al- lied headquarters today as the dead- iline neared for appointment of an international tribunal to try men Llamed for plunging Nippon into the | Pacific war: The trials will not get under way juntil about March 1. ! for selection of the tribunal is Jan- |uary 15, | General MacArthur’s headquarters The deadline | L ed parts of the blond, blue-eyed girl, came after one of tha biggest man- hunts in the ecity's police history got underway. The head, torso and legs were ifound in four different catch basins in the vicinity of the Degnan home at 5943 Kenmore Avenue, in the Edgewater Beach district on the North Side. Two Arms Missing Only the two arms of the little jvietim were missing as nearly 100 policemen and crews from the city cwer department continued their |all-night search. | Meanwhile, scores of the Depart- iment’s top ranking detectives ran {down every possible clue in efforts }lo apprehend the kidnap-killer. Several men were taken into cus- ‘tody for questioning. ‘There was no disclosure immediately by police llr any were regarded as suspects of {the brutal murder. I Parents Told Tragic News | The tragic news of Suzanne's death told to her grief-stricken par- | . James E. and Helen Degnan, by their parish priest last night shortly after the finding of the evered head of the little girl in a |catch basin near an apartment building about a half block from the Degnan home, About five hours later. the left leg, severed at the thigh with a | wa len | (Continued on Page Eight) | - KidnapsBab { t up a pool by laying nsxde‘ 185 for each Kalser, the company’s | Juneau Mine stock today closed at |1OWeIpiced car, ‘and Fraser, L 8'%, Mmerican Can 99%, American Power and Light 13%, Anaconda 45%, Curtiss-Wright 8, Interna- tional Harvester 937, Kennecott 50%, New York Central 33%, Nor- | thern Pacitic 35, U. 8! Steel 84%%, | Pound $4.03%. A | Sales today Dow, Jones were 2,160,000 share: averages today were BUCHAREST, Jan. 8 — One of |as follows: Industrials, 191.64; rails, | ' medium-priced car, produced during the year at the big Willow Run bomber plant, leased from the gov- ernment for auto production. The poel would be divided among Kalseér- | Frazer production workers at the end |nf each year. The company has estimated its producticn rate will reach 300,000 cars annually, so the pool will be, | about $1,500,000. | mencing his banking experience |indicated that Russia has failed to with that institution in 1912. He respond to an invitation to suggest rejoined the bank's staff some names for the court and prosecution months ago after several years’'to him. This would mean that en- absence, during which he served as tire conduct of the trials would be a bank examiner, and for several|left to the United States, China, Aus- | terms was mayor of this city. He|tralla, New Zealand and the Philip has been a prominent member of | pines. | the Assembly Company here. R - At Anchorage Infant LaterF;lmd—Man Is Arrested, Confesses- In Federal Hands ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Jan. 8.— Henry Jensen is held here in charges S eee To prevent wildcat strikes it was - Six Hundred Families 64.46; utilities, 38.93. o tipulated that any worker par-. Iticipating in a work stoppage | | authorized by the UAW-CIO Inter- ‘SKIERS MISSING: " SEARCH IS MADE RED BLUFF, Calif, Jan. 8 of kidnaping the three-month-old | daughter of Mrs. Evelyn Dulak early | Sunday. i Tke baby was left in care of a 110~ old boy while the mother R e L A STEAMER MOVEMENTS | | national Executive Board would lose | Steamer North Sea, from Sea!le.|ponug benefits for the period of par- ‘Are Homeless; Floods | Sitka bound, scheduled to arrive at 3 R SWK ' k ]Rcscm’ parties struggled through a | was away. When she returned she blinding snowstorm and sub-zero found the baby gone. The boy said | temperatures foday, searching for a man came to the house and said [ three young skiers—one a 12-year- g Ly ministers, announced last night b paign for liberal congressmen who |American chief jailer, Col. _Bu"""‘K. Ainal will et e - = will support the Truman program !C. Andrus, for cursing a prosecution | King 13. W}: ;V: WIO ;PPOSl * | wi s g v s !tion parties—the National Peasant This is. the type of umpnigningf““"es’ yesterday, nearly upset the P ler permitting. | Princess Norah scheduled to sail | from Vancouver tonight. Union shop, checkoff of dues and,' 7 : ¢ wanted him to take the baby to in the opinion of both company and HARLAN, Ky, Jan. 8—Raging old boy—missing in the winter- her. Later the man returned for |Union, the “most favorable” vet- mountain stseams, fed by hours of bound mountains of Lassen Vol-|a nipple o keep the youngster quiet. where 'fruman is weakest and Wal- lace strongest, so there will be no break with the Truman adminis- tration—unless. The “unless” hinges on plans to get Wallace to testify before Con- gress regarding Truman's recom- mended labor legislation and the much-debated cooling-off period. Wallace is opposed to this, and if called before Congress will be e (Continued on Page Four) !court room at the opening of the'and the Liberal—representation in | morning session by writing a notc‘lh(’ Communist-dominated govern- | which convulsed Rudolf Hess, while ment of Pr_emier Petru Groza. |a British assistant prosecutor was; The appointments followed a se- ! — e — i HERE FROM NOME i | Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Roust and| Lbaby arrived here from Nome yes- manian government officials and imembers of a three-power com- mission headed by W. Averill Har- riman, U. 8. Ambassador to Moscow; Sir Archibald Clark Kerr, fterday and are stopping at the|British Ambassador to Moscow; | Baranof. He is a former Territorial | and Soviet Vice Commissar of for- Representative, i eign Affairs Andrei Vishinsky. | reading from Hitler’s Mein Kampf.|ries of conferences between Ru-| |heavy rainfall, left at least 600 fam- lilies homeless la: ~astern Kentucky's worst flood since 11929, claimed at least one life, and | Steamer Alaska, scheduled to sail erang' clause ever drawn up. from Seattle Jan. 10; due here on| Tl 2 January 13 or 14; then goes to Sitka, not to Westward. Baranof, scheduled to sail from' Seattle January 11. | | Yukon, scheduled southboupd from |the west, next Monday or Tuesday.| - e ANS WANT GLACIER BAY MONUMENT OPEN FOR FUR TRAPPING including Manchester and Pineville, —— Streams throughout the southeast- In cooperation with the Indian | Office, the ANB is secking to have | HOONAH VISITORS fGlacler Bay National Monument Mrs. George Hagel and John M. opened to fur trapping by the Olson, Hoonah residents, are in Hoonah people as a recognition of town, guests at the PBaranof. part of their aboriginal claims. rise at the rate for more than a foot arations were being madt_- to activate Kentucky militiamen ‘for service, } according to reports. 'completely isolated several towns, ern part of the state continued to an hour at some places, and prep-| canic National Park. No trace of | night in South-| the lost skiers has been found thus ' clsed that the baby was taken to far. The three set off on a skiing expedition at 8 a. m. Sunday. They failed to meet their older brother at a prearranged rendezvous Sun- day night. HERE FROM SEATTLE | Frank Malloy has arrived here {from Seattle. He is registered at the Gastineav. A quiet checkup of cab drivers dis- |the neighberhood of 12th and East. Th2 police searched that area and bars. A man answering the boy's description was found in a bar and {he confessed taking the. baby to | 14th and East where the infant was |left with a man named Harry. The | baby was found at the address given, cold and unattended. Bail for Jensen was fixed at $1,000, Tho'case is in Faderal hands.

Other pages from this issue: