The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 9, 1946, Page 1

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THE Ligrady OF CUMIRENR SERIAL RECORD MAR2 7 1946 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME 9 VOL. LXVI, NO. 10,190 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS — PRICE TEN CENTS JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, SALVAGE C REPUBLICANS OF WEST ARE T0 MAP PLANS Representatives of 11 States, Alaska, Hawaii GAME GROUP TURNS ]UNO Assembly)llfiHT ON POSTWAR Adjournment wiiouire errects Active interest by sportsmen'’s ! | i | ‘ jgroups and a strong spirit of de- sire to coperate toward the preser- { \"u'l(;x'x of ‘A.l::.su‘;lrfm::: c:::\(i‘l‘nfl}:. {Many Problems Unseffled ‘v recen:”snumt meeting of —First Rate Fight on ‘he recent annual meeting of the Alaska Game Commission, held this year at Fairbanks, it is. reported by Commission Chairman Earl N Meet This Month Headquarters COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho, Feb. 9. (BY JOHN M. HIGHTOWER) —Campaign plans aimed at the, [LONDON, Fcb. 9.—Adjournment election of Republican Senators and of the United Nations General As- Representatives will be outlined|sembly, informally scheduled for Feb. 22 and 23 at Salt Lake City|this weekend, was delayed today by at a meeting of party leaders of /3 pumber of unsettled | | | M Ohmer, of Petersburg, and by offi- cials of the Fish and Wildlife Ser-| vice who attended the seven-day | Fairbanks session. Mr. Ohmer arrived here from Fairbanks earlier this week and was to fly today to his Petersburg | home. Others here from the con-; 11 western states, Alaska , and Hawaii. Ezra R. Whitla, vice chairman of the Republican National Com- mittee, who issued the meeting call, paid Governor Earl Warren of California, had been invited to make the principal address. problem | topped off by a first-rate fight over | | the sclection of a home for the UNO. | Leaders had .indicated over a ference are: W. E. Crouch, chief!| of the division of game manage- | ment, Fish and Wildlife Service; Frank W. Hynes, Regional F & WL week ago that they expected to|Director, and Frank Williams of pack up and go home by today,|St: Michael, Commission member but when time arrived they found from the Second Division. Jack {they still had on the agenda about O'Connor, F & WL Game Man- POWDER BUILDING EXPLODES; SHAKES GLASS MILES AWAY PEN GROVE, N. J,, Feb. 9.— An ex sion in a smokeless powder building of the nearby Carney's oint plant of E. I. du Pont de Neu- mours and Company startled vesi- dents as far away as Philadelphia and shattered windows for a ten- mile radius early this morning. A company spokesman said there was 1o injuries at the plant and that the building was empty at the time of the blast. He estimated damage at apprc nately $30,000. The spokesman said cause ot ihe »xplosion had not been determined. | reported - eee TRIAL ENDS FOR HOMMA TRUCE TEAM i ) | i {was rendered “impossible” by gov- | i | | 1946 IS WORKING CHINA AREA Hostilities ExT)eded fo Be Brought to End With- in Few Days (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) Complications in bringing hostil- ities in China to a full stop were today by a Communist spokesman in Chungking, but he i predicted solution of the problems within a few days. The spokesman asserted that the work of a truce team in Kwantung ernment refusal to recognize the status of Communist guerrillas in that north China area He said also that Communists "SECRET WEAPON" OF JAPANESE WAS TREMENDOUS FLOP Balloons Se—nn\gainst Uus. to Avenge Raid of Doolitile WASHINGTON, Feb. 9~—Japan’s “secret weapon” proved a tremen- dous flop. A joint Army-Navy report dis- closed that the Japanese launched 19,000 bomb-carrying ballcons again- | | | | WASHINGTON, Feb. 9. Johnson (D-Okla) said erday Col. J. P. Johnson, General Man- ager of the Alaska Railroad, has been questioned by a House Appro-, -Rep. Jed REWS SENT T0 YUKON WRECK Ickes Placed Friends on Alaska Railroad Payrell Charged; Cites Ruth Gruber 'VALUABLE MAIL TO BE SOUGHT Small Craft Are Searching Choppy Waters for 10 priations subcommittee concerning work performed by certain Persons Still Missing - ployees of the railroad | Johnson told a reporter the sub- | ENTOMIEAN, - Alpne committee has under investigation o specifically reports that Sf‘crcturylabomd the grounded, deserted half of Interlor Ickes has placed someh® Vessel that once was the proud Feb. 9. The Army today sent salvage crews x g X Winer Yukon, attempting to recover In.mds on the railroad's payroll. la valuable mail cargo while small eraft searched the choppy waters and bleak shore of Johnstone Bay for 10 persons still missing. The Coast Guard said an Army !dispatch established the number of {survivors of the Sunday night ship- wreck as 485 and the total aboard the Yukon when it left Seward on e will investigate every phase of it," id the Representative, who as chalrman handling Interior Department funds has had frequent clashes with Ickes. Johnson said the general manager had been questioned closely about Dr. Ruth Gruber, a writer, whom of the subcommittee | Whitla said about 450 delegates|paj; of the issues which were be- |agement ‘Supervisor for Alaska, lsi would attend, including national'gore tnem when they started out ! expected to retimn to Juneau this S SAR0L "WREIC (RIORS: i 496. MANILA, Feb. 9 Tne War |surrounding Tian, on the Tient- g tphe United States during the the Representative said had been committeemen and women, state chairmen and vice chairmen, dele- gates and alternates to the last naticnal convention and Republicans elected to state offices. Bodie?wi]lfilfiils Tied Behind Backs Found! @va (anal' BATAVIA, Java, Feb. 9.—A state- ment by the Dutch Navy said to- day that 26 bodies of European, Adults, including a baby, were found in Antjol Canal between Batavia and Tanjong Priok, their hands tied behind their backs. The vietims, Dutch sources said, had been dead less than a week. e - lIour weeks ago. weekend. | UNO officials, with the constant Cnanges Proposed |urging of U. S. 'delegation chief Although stressing that action Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., are taken by the Game Commissioners | shooting now at adjournment by at their meeting is subject to red| | Tuesday or Wednesday of next View and approval by the Secre-i week. [tary of the Interior before becom- | The site controversy has reached N2 effective, Ohmer indicated that | a point where some delegates re- the Commission has proposed | ported privately that a movement changes in the fish and game re- was underway not to let UNO gulations which will recognize Al- headquarters be established in the aska’s increased population. Some United States at all but to keep bdoundary and season changes were it in London for a few years. proposed together with some bag| Some European leaders have fa-’ limit reductions for both Alasansi vored a European setting all along. @nd nen-resident hunters. Other factions within the Assem- In ull their actions, the Com-! bly’s site committee are working Missioners looked to the effect of for New York and San Francisco Postwar conditions on the Terri-| as temporary headquarters. tory. A definite postwar plan out- The group of nations, cpposed to,lined is the planting of new bodies | lthe site inspection committee's Of Water to game fish and the re-' choice of the Connecticut-New York Stocking of depleted ,waters. This| {area as a permanent site, was said | Program has long been under con- | iby informed quarters to be gaining |Sideration but could not be under- ) |strength in their efforts to post-|taken during the war. Now, how- | none a’ decision until next Septem- ever, the Commission desires to | ber or later. push it to the full limit of funds; | Meanwhile, the Security Council available. The program would be ‘which already had disposed of the Territory-wide. ; jIranian and Greek controversies, Army’s Range | seemed to be at least as well up ' Much heat was displayed by In-: ion its slate as the Assembly, and | terior sportsmen, Ohmer said, re-: {the members were working to settle garding the Army's project to ex- {the Indonesian dispute today. (The tend its bombing practice range in Council was scheduled to meet at the upper Tanana Valley. The! \n(,,m EST.) |Commission is on record against 1 e any such extension and is sym- | pathic APPLICATIONS FOR & &, i 2 | sportsmen that, not only should“ the range not be extended to en-; Burgess, imes Trial of Lt. Gen. Masaharu [sin-Pukow Railroad, would With- |war but only 900 of them ever fomma ended today in its fifth|draw if puppet troops there were yegched North America. week with the Japanese defendant, |disarmed. The spokesman proposed erstwhile conqueror of Manila, Ba- | that Communist and Central Gov-|qertaking, the report noted, for each taan and Corregidor, in tears. The pro ution he gen , accused of ordering the It was a slightly expensive un- jernment forces team up to disarm paper balloon cost about 10,000 demanded that | them General Marshall, special U 8| Iyen or $2,300 each. Japanese Army officers, interro- Bataan death march, be given the ! envoy to China who helped nego- gated after V-J Day, said the bal- same sentence as his military con- temporary, Lt. Gen. Tomoyuki Yamasnita—death on the jallows. What fate the U. S. Military Com- mission has in store for him likely wil be made known Monday at 3 p. m. (2 a. m. Monday, Eastern Standard Time). In civilian attire, the zeneral who once barked surrender orders tc Gen. Jonathan Wainwright, wept openly as Maj. John Skeen, of Bal- timore, chief defense counsel, said: “Should “hig life be taken, the werld would lose a man devoted to! peace.” =S SETEENA U Norah Here From South Steamer Prin Norah arrived in Juneau yesterday afternoon with 24 passengers from the Southward: and sailed this morning at 1 o'clock with 21 for Skagway. Arriving here from the Southward | morning flew the following eig Peter J. Bond, Joseph D.|passengers to Ketchikan Burgess, Freda gt were: Marie | i | { reelection tiate the truce in her civil strife, conferred meanwhile with govern- ment and Communist generals re- garding restoration of communi- cations. In Seoul, Korean detectives were credited by a U. S. Military Gov- sarnment official with smashing a olot tc assassinate Wun Seihun, Democratic party leader, and two aides. Twelve suspects were arrest- ed and a large cache of weapons selzed. 1. Japah, the government an- nounced that 281 of the 466 mem- bers of the last House of Represen- tatives would be disqualified for by General MacArthur's political purge directive. The Japanese government also i added 120 organizations to the 27 key groups which MacArthur order ed. abolished as ultra-Nationalisti COASTAL AIRLINES ON FLIGHT TO KETCHIKA Alaska this ht Coastal Airlines Harold P. Betty, Lawrence R compass the bison grazing area, but | the present range should be moved ito one of the many Alaska areas | where it would not be a threat to { Capstick, Donald O. Captick, phy]AfZane. Joe Crosson, Karl Katz, John | \lis Eneberg, Donna Eneberg, Ina|Stewaft, Fred E. Brandies, Bob! Jernberg and Rhea Black. | loon weapon was developed with ithe idea of avenging the Doolittle {raid on Tokyo. Storm, Flood ‘Rage Through ~ British Isles | ! LONDON, Feb, 9.—Steadily rising Iflood waters, lashed by Britain's ,worst weather in 40 years, forced thousands of persons from their ,homes today in sections through- jcut the British Isles. Broad areas of countryside and 'hundreds of towns and villages were |flooded as torréntial, gale-whipped rains caused rivers to overflow. Highway and rail traffic were ser- 'iously tangled. | Several towns reported water as deep as eight feet in the streets, iand utility plants in a number of Ilocalities were out of operation. Semarae o . g vooned DEVELOPMENT OF placed on the Alaska railroad pay- roll at $6,000 a year. He said she had made only one or two trips a year to the Territory, and that he was told she now is in Europe and had been on the railroad payroll for several years. Rep. Johnson said that neither Col. Johnson nor his predecessor could tell the committee what Dr. Gruber did for the railroad. The Oklahoman added she had been dropped from the payroll after he announced in December that he would investigate her status. The committes will inquiré, John- con said, whether she had any part in formulating Ickes' recent plan to bring selected immigrants from Europe to settle in Alaska, KETCHIKAN MAKES BID FOR ALASKA KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Feb. 9. Mayor R. C. Pederscn and civic leaders have started a campaign to have the Navy assign the new supercruiser Alaska to Ketchikan, to be used as a floating museum and war memorial, Recalling thai Alaska school children and citizens raised $7,000 to buy a silver service for . the cruiser, Mayor Pederson said all | One body haa been recovered but its identity was not yet disclosed. Ten persons are unaccounted for. The total of 11 included six sol- Aiers, three civilians and two crew- men No word has been received as to whether the stern of the Yukon, which broke from the vessel in Monday night's pounding seas, still was wallowing in the bay or had gcne down. Meanwhile the Alaska, sister ship of tne Yukon, plowed southward from Seward with many of the sur- vivors. Some remained in the Kenal Peninsula town to recover from the thock of the experience and some Alaskans returned home for new clothing and rest. Leslie 'W."Baker of Seattle, Alas-. ka shipping company executive, said the rescue of the 485 was “miraculous” and should be re- ccrded as “one of the most magni- ficent achievements in maritime history.” MISSING PERSONNEL KEVCHIKAN, Alaska, Feb. 9.— Coast Guard Headquarters an- nounced names of military persen- nel still missing from Yukon, no nome addresses given: Lester March, Tom Mildfelt, George Mc- Donald. Charles Trice, Benjamin Fandrey, Sergeant Phillips. B R Jackson Is John Livie, Vernon M. Metcalfe,{ Flying to and from Juneau on: AI.ASKA ou-I-u“ED George E. Randolph, Pearl M. Ran- dolph, Lu W. Smith, Mrs. Lu ACA planes were: to Tenakee, Ole Anson, Mrs, Ole Anson; to Cobalt, |Smith, Ida M. Stevens, Emma B.'lLawrence Bolyn; to Chichagof, Olei |Sutton, John W. Thomas, & Lexie [B. Tweidt. | VanderLeest, Jack H. Whitey Wilme | {White, John Winther, Loly Hyde, {William A Ross, Bessie Ross. Embarking from this citv f-r]| £kagway were: Sister Mary Ethel- berg, Sister Mary Alfreda, Dorothy | Halverson, Harold A. Stolpe, Mrs given the matter before a decision. Wolf Poisoning Mr. Ohmer related wolf-poisoning experiments carried an in the| | southern part of Southeast Alaska | during the past year by Wildlife :Kem Hosga Barber of PetersburgA(A' Erickson, Mrs. J. R. Maurstad.; The experiments have proved e(-| 4 % | fective he said, and there - is no.M”" Irene C. Green, Wilfred L. & | Grreen, Ellsworth Green, Darrell |known or repgrted instance of Green, Wiliam F. Heflin, D. H | other wildlife falling victims to the Thom‘ W ™ Wnunmé F';ank. poison when placed according 10 g, o o B Green, W. Wilson, John | i the procedure used experimentally. A C:;rvé! .Rov H‘ slewarz VD c {1t is felt by a majority of trappers L;ngdon fion Bl isud H‘amf M and sportsmen in the southern part | Forde. 2 i % of . this Division, thet he polson-! The Princess Norah will return to jug _should _be pontinysa. - theve, Juneau Sunday morning at 8 o’clock {However, it is lkely, Mr. Ohmer} p; gy sa91 gt 10 . m. for the | said, that a different technique will Sonthwied P |have to be worked out before wolf i |poisoning can be attempted in, |areas where fox also are found. ; Mr. Ohmer advised here yester- \day that Secretary of the Interior; | Harold Ickes has given definite in- structions to the National Park {wolf incubator. Crouch said that the recently revealed program by’ {the Park Service to kill but 15 of | |an estimated 60 wolves in the Park] {has' now been over-ruled by the | Secretary, who has directed much BRINGING BACK BODIES OF WAR - DEAD OPPOSED BOSTON, Feb. 9—Twelve clergy- men in the Department of Social| ; Service of the Protestant Episcopal) more extensive elimination. { Diocese ‘of Massachusetts informed | Mr. Crouch expects to remain at|President Truman today that it was ithe regional F&WL office here for}“sgmngly against” bringing Amer- | four or five more days before re-|jca's World War IT dead back to this | ! turning to his Chicago headquarters. | country. i | The San Francisco Chronicle said WASHINGTON, Feb. 9.—Dr. W.| yesterday that the Army had -com- | H. Sebrell of the National Institute | pleted plans to bring them home of Health predicted today that|beginning this spring, if Congress- people with normgl stomachs would ! jonal authcrization was granted. | have no trouble digesting the “dark; Declaring that overempahsis of white” bread p:cposed by President | the body stems not from Judaism or Truman. Christianity, but only from a; I For Sunday's Election From Sitka: Tony Amandsen, M. | T. Stockwell, J. H. Store, Frayces ! Nelson, Rhea Black, Maxine Troutle, Jack Gucker, Lawrence Zane, John J. Stewart and Daniel P. Rhodes. - > Moscow Is Decorated MOSCOW, Feb. 9.—Moscow was brightly decorated today for the general election in which the So- viet electorate will choose local officers and members of the Su- preme Court. Hundreds of polling places were draped in red bunting and banners :arrying huge portraits of General- issimo Stalin and other candidates. The polls open at € am. tomorrow and close at midnight. (Only one party, the Communist, participates in elections in the So- viet: Union, ‘but some non-Com-! munists are elected.) - STEAMER MOVEMENTS North Sea, from Seattle, sched- | uled to arrive at 6 o'clock Sunday | morning. | Baranof, from Seattle, scheduled | to arrive sometime Sunday i Taku scheduled to sail from Se-| attle today. Alaska, southbound, with Yukon wreck survivors aboard, scheduled | to arrive at 8 o'clock Sunday morn- | ing. i BY STEFANSSON PORTLAND. Ore., Feb. 9.—North America’s Arctic regions could be developed in any one of three w: Dr. Vilhjalmur Stefansson, famed explorer says, but added that all of them are unacceptable to this , country. The methods and the reasons he gave in an interview for believing they would not be favored: First, large concessions to great { corporations for long terms. (Mon- opolistic) . A Second, cooperatives of the Scan- dinavien type. |gress to be Socialism.) Third, government ownership and operation. (Soclalism) This country can get a new fron- tier any time it wants to accept one of these methods of develop- ing Alaska, he said, but continued “we insist on small scgle develop- ment by individuals or small com- panies.” - Stefansson 'added that the three North American towns north of the Arctic Circle, one in Canada and two in Alaska, have fewer than 300 residents each, but Russia within the past 10 years has developed three Arctic cities with the small- est having a population of 20,000. : g Who's Your Dentist CHERRYVALE, Kans. When Farmer N. H. Sheppard took one {of his pigs to a cold storage lock- er to be slaughtered the butcher discovered & gold erown on one of the animals jaw teeth. How the metal happened to be Transferred Alaskans and tourists would appre- ciate having the veteran of the at-! tacks on Kyushu and Tokyo Bly[ tied up at the Ketchikan watér- frent, Her jnuster rcoms$ could be used for conventions and her game rooms for recreation, the Mayor sald. The Navy has reported it had decided to declare the 800-foot ves-' sel obsolete for modern war. Hoover Is Backing President’s Plan, Avert Starvation NEW YORK, Feb. 9.—President ,Truman’s national food conserva- |tion program and his appeal for #id to avert mass starvation in oth- er countries had the support of Herbert Hoover. who said he believ- ed it possible “to meet this need of increased food exports without com- pulsory rationing.” ! The former president was food administrator during the first world war. SEPARATE AIR FORCE PROTES WASHINGTON, Feb., 9—~The War | Department jolted Congress by ceming out against creation of a <eparate air force. Legiglation to set up an inde- pendent air arm, Army leaders told Congress, won't work. Their views were expressed in a letter to Chairman Manasco (D- Ala.) of ‘the House Expenditures (Believed by Con- . SEATTLE, Feb, 9. — Charles A. | Jackson, Jr., chief of the engineer- ing division, Seattle District U. 8. ‘Army Engineers, to the Mobile Ala., district {s announced from the local office. Jackson will be resident engineer |at Mubile for construction of the Altoona flood control dam, a $20,- 000,000 project. i He came to the Seattle district in !1940 for work on Alaskan Army construction and later supervised the - building of the $12,000,000 Moses Lake Army Air Base. In No- vember, 1943, he was named head of civil works, including river and harbor improvement and flood con- 'HITLER PROPOSED POLISH PEOPLE AS PERMANENT SLAVES NUERNBERG, Germany, Feb. 9. —Hitherto secret notes of Martin Bormann revealed today that' Adolf Hitler abandoned plans for the | complete extermination of the Pol- |ish peoplz n 1940, in order to maks the Poles permanent slaves of his Nazi “master race.” The notes, submitted to the in- ternational war crimes tribunal by Soviet prosecutors, were of a con- ference between Hitler and Bor- mann on Oct. 2, 1940, at which 'Hitler was represented as saying that “There should be one master for the Poles — the Germans . . . | Therefore, all representatives of Committee by acting War Secre- the Polish intelligensia are to be tary Kenneth C. Royall, who sald exterminated.” the opinions he voiced were shared| Rudolf Hess, who was removed Princess Norah, from Skagway, |there is anybody’s guess. One theory scheduled to arrive at 8 o'clock .is that the swine rootéd up a nug- Sunday morning and sails south get, clamped down on it and fit- By DRFW PEARSON WASHINGTON—Dozens of G.I. cince the shooting war stopped to help win another war. This is a ness, which recognized no national ooundaries, which used countries products, and which at one time aided Hitler, Mussolini and Hiro- | pERMITS ALASKA and England, . ] ‘What :the G:I.'investigators have 4 to Nazi thoroughness and to the District U, S. Army Engineers to- ' The Commission listened to argu- | gullibility of American big business. 6 day announced receipt of the fol- ments for opening the beaver plan by which Germany expanded ! Pacific American Fisheries Inc., but felt that more study should be its industrial capacity for war 'Seattle, to construct wharf addition industrial capacity of this country feet by 40 feet in XKasaan Bay, and other potential enemies. east coast of Prince of Wales Is- who have been dickering with; Andcrson Dock Co., Seldovia, Al- Truman over steel—Ben Fairless, aska, two additions to the main up in European files as &' part of {0y 300 feet, one 45 feet by 143 feet; the cartel which unwittingly play- | March 2. ir a story which the leaders of the |cannery structures in Monti Bay, steel industry would like to forget. at Yakutat, Alaska; March 8. forgotten it. |ikan, Alaska, extension of time on American participation in the|permit for float and dolphins at Jate as 1937—when there was no(March 9. longer any doubt regarding Hitler's; Nels Ludwigsen, extension of time he had already invaded the Rhine- [and float in Tongass Narrows, land, showed. his ‘hand by sending | Ketchikan; March 9. ly in speech after speech that Gev;-" rary mad g 2uve, ..FARMERS' SCHOOL IS The steel cartel files, “seized in|#1 Luxembourg, reveal that 8. M. Bash Mundle of U, S. Steel took the] initiative in binding their com- 1 PALMER, Alaska, Feb. 9. = The later an agreement to divide up University of Alaska will conduct rid markets was reached, g in this “capital” of the Matanuska ANTITRUST ACT | Valley Feb. 20-22 on such practical about the Sherman Antitrust Act,|tax, preparation of food for the however, and the minutes of the freezer-locker, cold climate plants, written agreement regarding U. S. trol and soil conservation. markets was concluded. ! Speakers will include Dr. Basil Furopean steel men came to the | experiments at the University; United States. | Stanley Balloun, head of the Mat- embourg files showed, “obtained a | Rice, assistant to extension direc-| Regular white flour contains 72| “secular paganism that clutches the very clear declaration of respon- ) tor Oldroyd: Robert N- Ressler, ex- |percent of the wheat kernel. The ' transitory,” the 12 clergymen who s. Eugene Grace of, Bethlehem | Matanuska Valley and Anchorage, Messrs. Bugene Grace % 27 "™ and Mrs. Lydia FohnHansen, home (Continued on Page Fourl_ Merry - Go-Round investigators have been working war against international big busi- only as market divisions for its hito just as much as it did France | uncovered in Germany is a tribute| SEATTLE, Feb. 9.—The Seattle any form of wildlife. | For what it. amounts to is a world |'owing applications: trapping season around Bristol Bay, while simultaneously curbing the /36 feet by 120 feet and float 12 And the names of the same men Jand, Alaska, March 1. Fugene Grace, et al—have turned{wharf in Seldovia Bay, one 98 feet ed into the hands of the Nazis. It| Libby, McNeill & Libby, Seattle, But the Justice Department hasn’t| Dr. George E. Dickinson, Ketch- steel cartel was decided upon aSIWard Cove, north of Ketchikan; warlike (intentions, By that time|on permit for marine way, wharf arms to-France; and. boasted open- - ope. of Bethlehem Steel and A. G, S(HEDU[ED pAlMER 3 panies to the cartel. Four months la farmers’ extension service school The steel barons were caretul‘subjects as the farmers’ income June 1937 meeting reveal that npflhe new insecticides and pest con- In Pebruary 1938, a delegation of | Bensin, in charge of plant study “Our representatives,” the Lux-|anuska experiment station; Harold sibility for fhe agreements from’ tension agricultural agent for the | President wants millers to use 80 signed the letter as members of the ' demonstration leader, percent so that the wheat supply |department asked the President to may be stretched and more sent to use “all your prestige and aulhortly"‘ the hungry population of Europe. to stop the project, i two hours later. Denali, from westward, scheduled | to airive southbound Tuesday ted himself with a gold crown. The pigs head, gold and all, has been frozen and placed on display. by General Dwight D. Eisenhower |from the courtroom yesterday suf- and Gen. H. H. Arnold, war-time head of the Army air forces. fering from abdominal cramps, re- turned to court today.

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