The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 1, 1946, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” THE LIBRARY 0F SERIAL RECORD MAR2 7 1946 GO e - ,’# i, Y e VOL. LXVI, NO. 10,183 JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS — " PRICE TEN CENTS 'TWO POWERS CLASH AT LONDON MEET MEEKS DENIES KNIFE MURDER OF CAMPBELL Accused Pleads Not Guilty | fo Two Charges - Eight | Cases Set for Trial | George Harrison Meeks this morn- ing pleaded “not guilty” in Dis- trict Court here to the slash-murder| of Clarence J. Campbell, also to & charge of assault with a dangerous weapon upon Kelso B. Hartness. | Meeks, last of 13 defendants to be called up for pleading today, spoke his denial of both indictments against him in a quiet, firm voice; promptly the charges had been read to him by Presiding Judge J. W. Kehoe. Of the several defendants called to answer, only four elected to ad- mit guilt: Charles W. Thompson, Ernest W. McKinney, Charlie Chuck and J. W. Thomas. | Others besides Meeks entering not | guilty pleas are: James Franklin Willis, negro accused of killing a Navy shipmate at Wrangell and in- dicted for murder in the second de- | gree; Thomas Sumstad, charge: with forging and uttering a forged check at Ketchikan; Louis J.| Sdlauk, accused of larceny by check at Juneau, on eight counts involv- ing checks in amounts from $4.30 to $100; Joseph W. Johnson, indicted for escaping the custody of a Federal officer; Carroll Hambrick, Jr., ac- cused of the crime of contributing to the delinquency of a minor; and G. G. Brown, Juneau businessman facing a misdemeanor charge of sell- ing liquor without an appropriate Territorial license. Jack D. Jadoff and Frank M. Kardanoff, former bar operators here indicted on four charges of evasion of U. S. Internal Revenue, | | Evening Gowns With Exposed Bosoms Coming HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 1-—One of CULBERTSON GETS NEW JOB; NAMED ASST. MGR., A.S.. | Hollywcod's foremost designers, the| {comely, curvacious Renie, predicts |that American women are going to| {wear evening gowns with exposed Arnold Expresses Fears of| NIPPONS OF ATTACK ON PEARL HARBOR Code Wor&TNere Used, Also Known to Armed |men, “that women in the days of Culber bosoms. | The young, auburn-tressed RKO designer admits that she may be a few years ahead of her time, but— “Just remember,” she told news-! Traps Reduced son, employed in Alaska by the Roman empire wore a tmnspar-‘the Fish and Wildlife Service since ent material known as coan silk 1932, except for World War II ser- across their bosom, and in Persian|vice, today was named assistant enamelware we see women with one manager of the Alaska Salmon In- breast exposed — so there is a his- | dustry, Inc., effective Feb. 23. Since torical precedent for the type of I1ast spring he has been fishery man- gown I think will be worn in the|agement supervisor for the Fish and not too-distant future.” | wildlife Service with headquarters Extremely feminine clothes are the &t Juneau. style trend, says Renie, and she| W. C. Arnold, manager of the looks for emphasis on curves. | Alaska Salmon industry, Inc., today - B e |expressed fear that the industry [l |would be crippled if regulations (HIANG S RE'G“ | proposing reduction to 10 the num- |ber of fish traps any one individual p |or corporation may own. (OMING Io E“D' | He said several concerns operate {as many as 60 and 25 per cent of the Now INTIMATE packers operate more than 20 each. | Arnold said packers would appear —_— !at the hearings starting at Wash- !ington Feb. 21 on this and other China’s Millions Emerge from Civil Strife Into | Day of Freedom ' coUNCIL FACES - e o s T SEVERAL HEAVY ergence of China’s millions Iroml civil strife into a day of full free- dom for all political parties was | viewed today by Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek as possibly fore-{ With Sh;:"w':; :“:::sew;:: ;":;"T&Fe“nlrndy slated to give City Council- - S |man. a b this evening, the has continued for 18 years said5$fi:m ot %gm.s flrst‘nfegulflr frankly that from now on the February Common Council session heavy task of rebuilding the nation .. now been increased by indica- rested not alone on the Kuomin- 4, that Douglas Mayor Marcus tang (Nationalist Party) “much 1ess| jengen will be on deck to present on me as an individual. |his city’s point of view regarding mercial fisheries regulations. e public utilities discussion Industry with Fish | SEATTLE, Feb. 1—Capt. J. slnele‘ | proposed amendments to the com- Forces, Testimony BULLETIN — Washington, Feb. 1.—Naval Capt. L. F. Saf- ford testified today he was or- dered by superior officers in the week after Pearl Harbor to destroy written notes he had made of circumstances con- cerning the interception and delivery of Japanese messages. Safford, who contended in a prepared statement that a Jap- anese war tip-cff message had been intercepted and translat- ed here Dec. 4, 1941—three days before the Pearl Harbor attack —said the order was given to him and other staff officers at a conference in the Navy Department. He told a Senate-House in- quiry committee he could not remember whether Adm. [ zigh Noyes or Admiral Redmond presided at the conference and gave the order. F. Safford asserted today that in the week before Pearl Harbor, the Navy intercepted a “winds” code message which “meant war—and we (knew it meant war.” ‘WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.—Cap.. L. TIP - OFF GIVEN BY ,(RASH PLANE WRECKAGE IS BEING SOUGHT Scores of Se;rzflers Baffled by Snow-21 Persons Aboard Craft BULLETIN — Elk Mountiain, Wyo. Feb. 1. — A screaming blizzard on the perilous sides of 11,125-fot Elk Mountain today prevented new efforts to scale the peak into which a United Air Lines transport apparently crashed yesterday with 21 per- sons. P. R. Gallagher of Cheyenne, member of an eight-man search party that fought to within 300 feet of the summit last night, said the climbers were forced back by a 75-mile-an-hour gale and 40-below-zero celd. They saw no signs of wreck- age but were headed directly for the spot where a deep, quarter-mile ‘furrow in the snow convinced aerial searchers yesterday that the plane had smashed directly into the meuntain top about 3 am. (Mountain Standard Time). ELK MOUNTAIN, Wyo., Feb. 1.— |Several score of searchers, includ- American Legion Demands Investigation Be Made of . 5 RUSSIA PRESSING CHARGES AGAINST BRITISH IN GREECE Velerans Adminisiration |Puts Issue Squarely Before ISSUES TONIGHT Safford, 1941 head of the Navy ing 50 military policemen, girded | Department of Communication In- themselves today for an attempted: telligence unit, said he believed the ascent up the snow-covered slopes nl; message was intercepted Dec. 4. ill,lzs-foot Elk Mountain upon | in ‘page form on yellow teletype New York United Air Lines transport paper, with the translation writicn jlane is believed to have crashed bélow,” he said in a statement given'yesterday morning with 21 persond the Senate-House committee inves- aboard. tigating Japan's Dec. 7, 1841, attack.| A blizzard last night which forced | “I immediatey forwarded this a search party to turn back within! {message to my commanding officer 300 feet of the mountain top had | (Rear Adm. Leigh Noyes) thus deepened the five feet or more of ADVOCATED FOR SALMON CANNERS Union Seeks 30 Per Cent Wage Increase for 4,000 Workers SEATTLE, Feb. 1.—Wage nego- tiations affecting 4,000 workers in |the salmon canning industry are under way tetween the Alaska Sal- mon Industry, Inc, and the Can- Inery Workers’ and Farm Laborers’ Union, Local 7, which seeks a 30 per cent wage increase, C. N. Brion- es, union business agent, said today. Negotiators mety for the fifth time | yesterday. An employers’ spokesman said Inegotiations may be delayed some- what by a Washington, D. C., hear- ling Feb. 21, called to consider limit- iing the use of fish traps in Alaskan | waters. | A War Labor Board order can- {celing the seven per cent war risk payment given cannery workers during the war has increased the need for increased wages, Briones said. The union also asks that the workers to Seattle. BULLET!INS WASHINGTON—The Senate has HIGHER WAGES t UNO Security Council- Pulls No Punches WASHINGTON, Feb. 1. — The American Legion called on Con- | gress today for an immediate in- vestigation of a “tragic breakdown” |in the Veterans' Administration un- |der Gen. Omar N. Bradley, who | \ (DY JOHN M. HIGHTOWER) BULLETIN—London, Feb, 1. —Foreign Secretary Bevin told the United Nations Securiiy Council today that “Moscow and Communist Party propa- ganda” endangered world peace. This, he said, was “the real danger” to peace. Bevin made this statement in blasting back at Russian charg- es that Britain imperiled world security by maintaining trocps which the Soviet said, support- ed Fascist and pro-monarch- ist elements in Greece. Bevin demanded a straight yes or no verdict from the Council on the Russian charge. took over as Chief less than six| months ago. John Stelle, the Legion's Na- tional Commander, made the “de- mand” for action in letters to all members of Congress and said the‘ lawmakers should see that their “mandates are no longer ignored by the Veterans’ Administration.” VA officials reserved comment on the letter, but Stelle’s aides said its release was preceded by an acrimonious telephone battle be- tween Stelle and Bradley over ma- jor VA policies. Stelle’s letter to Congress claim- ed an inquiry was warranted be-! cause: 1 1. Between 300,000 and 500,000 | LONDON, Feb. 1.—A dispute be- disability cases cannot receive pro-|tween Russia and Great Britain per compensation without undergo- |over British army activities in Greece ng physical examinations because presented the United Nations Secur- of VA's failure to secure adequate ity Council today the second major medical records from the Army and test of its ability to handle in open Navy. |debate critical issues involving the 2. The hospitalization applica- big powers. tions of more than 7,000 needy| Despite Wednesday's compromise veterans await processing. lof the first test, the Russian-Iran- 3. Thousands of Army hospital ian case, there were no preliminary beds are not being utilized at a indications that Andrei Vishinsky, time VA hospitals are badly con- Soviet vice commissar of foreign gested. affairs, intended pulling any punich 4. Unprocessed applications for es in his government’s “I saw the winds message typed whose rough summit a Seattle-to-}industry pay transportation costs of education and training under the charges before the council. GI Bill of Rights total 102839, in' The Russian case already had addition to 20,411 pending claims been set forth briefly in a m for insurance premium waivers, and the council, charging that 1 287,000 unanswered letters fromforces in war-wrecked Greece were veterans seeking information on.threatening ‘“the maintenance of various topics. Ipeace and security” through inter- 5. VA’s “apparent failure” to pro- |ference in Greek internal affairs. cure enough competent personnel,i British Foreign Secretary Ernest and the continued use of incom- Bevin, having expressly welcomed {fully discharging my responsibility snow covering the mountain, with'confirmed the nomination of Pat- were called upon to plead but were ~ Whether in the government Or | o Jocation of an Alaska Na- granted a stay to the call of the U. 8. Attorney when it was indi- cated by defense attorney Simon Hellenthal that “an arrangement is in progress.” Charles Thompson, charged four counts, two of forgery and two of uttering forged instruments, con- fessed to the set of counts involving a $40 check forged in the name of the Walker Spruce Company, of Ketchikan. Thompson pleaded not guilty to ckarges of forging and ut- tering a forged check for $150 drawn in the name of Carl Engstrand, whereupon Vgovernment attorney Robert L. Jernberg moved for dis- missal of that pair of counts. The dismissal was ordered by Judge Ke- hoe. Confesses Forgery 3 McKinney confessed to forging and uttering a $10 check in the name of Charles Parker, cashed at the Gastineau Hotel here. Chuck’s guil- on out of it,” he told last nl‘ght's _91_05' tive Service Tuberculosis Sanator- ing session of the historic political i, on Gastineau Channel. consultation conference, he would 4y, inserted in the pile of items sincerely work for peace and solid- stacked up for the Council tonight arity. 'is the Chamber of Commerce’s pro- He pledged that all the far-!poe) for fyll-time, full-paid May- reaching decisions of the unity or and upped Councilmanic re- conference would be carried out. p...eration, 'I:hf‘se included: free and open ac- | powever, no report has yet been tivities by all political parties, na- received from utility appraisers tionalization of the army; nation- g v anq Veatch, Mayor Ernest wide compulsory education; and | porgons disclosed this afternoon, seononle recc)‘nsuiuctlon. _, | s0 deliberations on the utility pur- Chou En-lai, No. 2 Communist p.ge jsoue is not likely to go far who, helged | reach. the Wik €OD- peyond revelation of the price tags ference accord, today expressed (u]l‘Set by the Nelson Water Company ! confidence that there will be n0 ..4 alaska Electric Light and Pow- more civil strife in China. He snld‘er Co. on their properties. that apart from minor clashes in Discussion of & long-range public |Bhanting and the East River dis-| oo yq brogram and appointment of paiet, of Kwantung. near Cantom, |, noq City Assessor-Inspector are lt)eace prevails throughout the coun- |other important matters before the Iy. ‘He affirmed that the Communist o vening in the City Hall at 8! party is prepared to carry out fully olladk: i in the matter “Magic” Sent Out Safford added it was his recollec- ‘tion that he knew at the time that {Noyes telephoned the substance of |the message to the War Department, Ithe late President Roosevelt’s Naval jaide, and Navy officials authorized to receive the “magic” (intercepted |Japanese) messages. In any event, he said, written copies were soon prepared for all |those on the list to receive “magic.” Safford was the first witness be- fore the committee who has said there was a ‘“winds execute” mes- sage. Several witnesses have con- tended there Was none. The committes previously receiv- ed evidence that Tokyo arranged in \mid-November a series of weather | { |12-foot drifts in places. jrick J. Gilmore, to be U. S. Attor- An investigation will be conducted | ney for Division No. 1 of Alaska, by Civil Air Administration offi- with headquarters at Juneau. ‘cials at the scene if reports of-the crash are substantiated. R Tajima Will ~ Dig, uallows | i WASHINGTON—The Senate Ter- i S $ !ritories Committee yesterday ap- Japanese Found Gu’"y of proved a bill authorizing Alaska I " Bayonetting, Behead- | mipetch S ees sy ' ingU.S. Navy Fliers | WASHINGTON—President Tru- !man has declined to comment on a ! suggestion by Interior Secretary {Ickes that Alaska be opened to im- | migration. Qoestioned about an iarticle Ickes wrote on the subject, (the President replied that he had not read it. works. RIO DE JANEIRO — Pledging a petent and inexperienced ployees. BIG DREDGE WILL BE OPERATED ON SEWARD PENINSU SEATTLE, Feb. 1—Waldo Coff- man, President of a Houston, Texas, Lumber Company, said today he and C. A. Sherman, of Fairbanks, a mining engineer, had bought the “biggest dredge” on the Seward Peninsult in Alaska and would re- sume gold dredging operations there. The machinery, known as the Fox- Bar Dredge, and now on the Kous ! garok River, 125 miles northeast of | I i em- |an investigation' of the Russian charges because he was so “tired" of hearing them in private, was thoroughly briefed by the foreign office to make whatever reply was required by Vishinsky’s arguments, officials said, The British also were counting on strong Greek government support to develop the line that British troops are in QGreece because the Athen government wants them there. POLITICOS GET UNDER WIRE IN !Council for this evening's session, ! {code signals which it proposed to| |broadeast, in event other commun- MANILA, Feb. l—Japanese Lt. ications failed. These were to ad- ‘Gen. Hikotaro Tajima was sentenc- FINAL MINUTES Last-day candiaates filing in the new constitution and a democratic regime, Gen. Eurico Gaspar Dutra, Nome, was bOughk fE Sl e, of Spokane, for $81,500, he told news- 60-year-old professipnal soldier, has men. race for Territorial office include vise agents and officials overseas of €d by a U. 8. military court com- been inaugurated as President of ty plea was to a charge of larceny ull agreements reached at the con- in a boat, early this month at Craig. ference. ‘ Thomas admitted guilt on two! counts of larceny by check, both in- (Continued on Page Siz) e : ;(rusa;lfilg Edifor ‘ Alaskans fo Up fo Magee Passes Away Vote on Statehood OKLAHOMA CITY, Feb. 1— endangered relations with the United States, Britain or Russia. Code Was Used The code words applying to the United States were “East wind rain”; \to Britain, “West wind clear”, and to IRusslu “North wind, cloudy.” The committee has been trying since its investigation started to de- 'mission today to hang and 13 other | Nipponese officers drew lesser sen- |tences for the execution of three |U. 8. Navy fliers in November, 1914,] on’ Batan Island off Northern Lu- |zon. The American fliers, whose names | were withheld, were bayoneted and | beheaded. | e - Brazil. He was elected Dec. 2. BELGRADE — Yugoslavia's new constitution proclaiming the war- torn nation a Republic, was ap- proved unanimously tonight and Marshal Tito was named Prime Minister. “I've never been in the gold min- ing business before, that country last year and got in- terested,” he said. “It took $125,000 in gold out of the ground before the war and we should do all right after we've spent about $15,000 or $20,000 to put it into operation again.” He said he was president of the Gulf Lumber Co., Houston. but I visited! K. C. Johnson and John W. Smith. Johnson, an Anchorage resident, today wired to Auditor Frank Boyle his candidacy for the job of Com- missioner of Labor, on the Demo~ cratic ticket. Also filing as a Democrat, Smith, a pioneer fisherman of Metlakatla, has filed at Ketchikan for a First | Division seat in the Alaska House of The Washington Death last night ended the turbu- lent career of Carl C. Magee, 73, crusading newspaper editor who termine whether the code was used | prior to the Pearl Harbor attack. ( Safford declared that from his; MANILA — The United States i Army has taken over operation of | Reprosazisiiyes. 4 Additional filings are expected fo- AR S PR i, Before (@ress Ads; Negro vouth Pays ATA ELECT OFFICERS {the port following the strike of day before the books close at 5 Merry - Go- Round | By DRFW PEARSON WASHINGTON, Feb. 1—A House| | Territories subcommittee recommen- {dation that no Congressional ac-| played a prominent part in expos- |recollection and from -circumstan- ing the Teapot Dome oil scandal. Magee — former editor, school tial evidence a winds message was Ipart of a news Broadcast from sta- Penalfy for Murder 12,000 Filipino dock workers for higher wages and shorter hours, Three-thousand soldiers have been o'clock p. m., as there are incum- FOR 1946-1947 TERM teacher, lawyer, inventor and busi-luan JAP (Tokyo) at 8:30 a. m., js|tion be taken on the question of WASHINGTON—Phil Murray his own best witness against Phil Murray's opposition to a cooling- off period before calling strikes. Real fact is that Murray volun- tarily staged a protracted cooling- off period of his own before he Jcalled the steel strike, with the re- sult that the public understands the issues and he has reaped a narvest of favorable public opin- jon. Murray began official negotia- tions for a wage increase late last summer, and followed this by what amounted to a cooling-off period of four months before he finally called a strike. Since then, some unexpected re- actions have taken place in the steel areas. At Clairton, Pa. just outside of Pittsburgh, the City Council voted $50,000 to help sup- port strikers’ famililes—despite the fact that two-thirds of the proper- ty in Clairton is owned by Car- negie Steel. .S Merchants all through the Penn- sylvania, Ohio, West Virginia steel areas seem to be overwhelmingly sympathetic to labor. They realize that after Judge Elbert Gary broke the last steel strike and kept wag- b 1 s i ot v il (Continued on Page Four) nessman—died of heart disease af- [statehood f0r . AlAgke il Stier l"wr a short illness with influenza. i Washington time, December 4. assigned to unload essential cargoes MONTGOMERY, Ala., Feb. l-“‘(rum Army vessels at ten Manila The annual meeting of the Alaska Tuberculosis Association was held bents, as well as dark horses, still not entered for the April Primaries. Late this afternoon, the Clerk of the Court here received the. filing When he first saw it, Safford add- | Nineteen-year-old Richard Brown piers. {referendum vote in t he Territory is reported by a member of Congress. | Alaskans are to vote mnext~fall on whether the Territory should apply for statehood. Its tentative report was consider-‘ led by the House Territories commit- tee which set no time, however, for making the recommendations pub- lic. A congressman who asked that he not be identified said the subcom- mittee also recommended the gov-| ernment act to improve Toads The man who in later years in-|ed, it already had been translated)gjeq in the electric chair at Kilby vited the parking meter was a|by Lt. Comdr. Alwin Kramer inlpnrigon early today for the slaying stormy petrel of political journal-|charge of the cnnslatlon,secuon‘lm February of Jack T. Walton, ism in New Mexico where he once |of _the communications intelligence | cattle raiser and plantation operator was tried on manslaughter charges. |unit. |of Hale County, Alabama. Friday night in the City Hall, all persons having donated the sum of $1 to the seal sale being eligible as members, At the meeting the three out-going members of the executive board, Mrs. Frances Paul, H. R. Vander- Leest and James McNaughton, were DETROIT — Negotiations in the General Motors strike were sus- pended this afternoon for the weekend and Federal Mediator James F. Dewey, arranged to leave tonight for Washington to consult - He quoted Kramer as saying, “This, prown was one of two negroes Is 1t," as he handed it to him. lconvicted of the slaying of the 63- Safford’s statement continued: |year.old cattleman. Ernest'Johnson, LONDON, Feb. 1.—According to an American network correspond- ent, Russian scientists are “dream- ing” of the day when a tunnel un- “This was the feather in our cap. This was the tip-off which would prevent the U. 8. Pacific fleet be- {ing surprised at Pearl Harbor the way the Russians had been sur- 17, the other, paid with his life in |the electric chair a week ago. i i throughout the Territory and in- crease air and water transportation to Alaska and within its boundaries. — .- 24-Hour Strike of der the Bering Straits will connect Russia with Alaska. the Soviet engineers hope the day will not be too far off when chains of automobiles go whizzing back Roberf Magidoff (of N-B-C) snys' Lookout Wermuth; - Josephine Coming prised at Port Arthur. —— e - LINGOS GO WEST Arabs on Saturday | JERUSALEM, Feb. 1.—The Arab and forth under the Bering Straits. - et SAMUEL W. BEEL ARRIVES Samuel W. Beel, a resident of higher. ‘committee today called a'santtle, has arrived in town. He 24-hour strike for Saturday for all is a guest at the Baranof, Arabs throughout Palestine in pro- | —_——————— test against the British decision to LILA JONES ARRIVES admit 1,500 Jews a month until completion of the inquiry by the| Miss Lila Jones of Haines is joint British-American Commission |staying at the Baranof during her on Palestine, ) visit here, Mr. and Mrs. George Lingo, re- turning to their heme in Anchorage 1by plane from California where they have spent the past several weeks, stopped briefly between planes yesterday at the Juneau Air- port. Making direct connections with the plane to Anchorage they had no opportunity to visit with triends in town. Lingo is once again a civilian, after serving as Lt. Commander in the Navy during the war, and will MANILA, Feb. i.—Olivia Joseph- {ine Oswald intends to go to the United States to see Maj. Arthur| ‘Wermuth, hero of Bataan. She says they were married; he says they weren't. “I intended ‘to go to America,” she told interviewers today “may- |be if he sees me in person he will know who I am—his wife!” «Her annulment suit, now pending in the Manila courts, states that they were married in Manila the with Secretary of Labor Schwellen- bach. Dewey said the negotiations will resume Monday. WASHINGTON — Reconversion Director John W. Snyder today told Henry Ford, 2nd, that aban- donment of price control now would retard industrial develop- ment “for years to come.” Ford, head of the Ford Motorf Company had proposed removal of price con- trols on automakers. — e - FROM CRESCENT CITY, CALIF. re-elected to membership. An elec- tion of officers of the executive board followed and the following were made officers: Paul, re-elected president; Mrs. Mildred Hermann, first vice-presi- Mrs. Frances) of Irvin H. Hill, of Juneau, as a candidate in the Democratic Pri- mary for the House of Representa- tives. All Unions Asked To Get Under Banner of AFL MIAMI, Fla, Feb. 1.—The AFL dent; Dr. J. O. Rude, second vice- Executive Council, spurred by the president; James McNaughton, re- Teturn of John L. Lewis' United elected treasurer, Other members' Mine Workers ended its mid-win- of the board are James C. Ryan, H. | ter sessions with plans today for L. Faulkner, J. B. Burford, H. R.[2 new Washington headquarters VanderLeest and Curtis Shattuck. end’ displaying a big welcome sign Following the election of officers, the board voted to re-elect Bess Winn as executive secretary. Mrs, |away. or unions which had wandered The council named a commitiee, It was announced that Miss Lois,significantly including Lewis, to Marie Soper, a resident of Cres- Jund, health educator sponsored by pick the Washington site for the cent City, California, is registered National Tuberculosis Assoclation,'federation, now housed in an an- at the Baranof. ———ee BURLEIGH PUTNAM HERE will arrive in Juneau about the|clent structure away from the cap- middle of February. Miss Jund will}ital's center. cooperate with the Alaska Associa- President Willlam Green issued tion and the Department of Health|“a general appeal” to all unions Burleigh Putnam of the CAA of- in promoting a program designed to'which had broken away from the again resume his former duties with the Land Office in Anchorage. tack. is*a guest at the Baranof, night before the Pearl Harbor at-|fice in Anchorage is in town. He ald in tuberculosis control in the federation, including the CIO, to , Territory. “come back to the parent body.”

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