The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 13, 1946, Page 1

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“ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE —— VOL. LXVL, NO. 10,217 JUNEAU, ALASKA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1946 MEMB ER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS |is a protection to minorities from | excesses of the majority. Majority Opinion | Opponents of the amendment | pased their stand on statements | | | | 1 Sen- | i 1 woRK o" VEI ek s e g reion ot | UNDER FlRE | i i imnjority opinion; that representa- | tion of the basis of population is | { “ I B l‘a fundamental of our republican i £ ’ i Lyng stated that, if the proposed ‘ ¢ —— | amendment were changed to pro- | com mi”ee Subsfim‘svvm for confirmation by the Sen-;c"y W“fleSS FIndS Stand i Vote on the amendment showed |k_ 1 { Senators Brownell, Gordon, Lyng;! Shaky Under Fau | McCutcheon and Nerland on the any Amendments e | After decision on that issue, Convening this morning at 11 ator Brownell took the floor to of—vm;‘“ ‘;nngzg(fiiE%oxfi;‘::\{: at[é;:r(xt:fl aclock, the Alaska Senate observed fer a general amendment Which p,ung yis inning in the pitcher's| the memory of the wife of one ciilerence to the manner of raising}he!d before the Olty Council on its members, Mrs. Joe Green, then revenue to finance the Vewrans}AEL&P rates, had City Utilities neer r T. Stuart swinging Bill where it was dropped by the ed by McCutcheon. Lyng then ex-!f,;fi‘l;cglt r{);ll':‘cx hiLS:,’m:_‘_ ]s:m:] Committee of the Whole yesterday. bressed his sympathy with the pur-| " p, . vner opened cross-examina- | Senate Bill 9, re-referred to the Pose but suggested that the amend- |y, of he chief witness for tac| Veterans Affairs Committee yester- ment was prematyre; whereupon it | i by probing the Utilitiss En- | day afternoon, was reported out by was withdrawn for the time. |gineer’s qualifications to testify asi a morning with amendments sug-| Next vote was taken on the mat- | iineq down Stuart as to the ex- gested by witnesses before the;ter of salary of the Veterans LOAN ,cq extent of his knowledge of the Whole Committee incorporated. All| Commissioner. Senator Leo Rogge red to the substitute except Sena- | the top of $8,000 provided in the tor Steve McCutcheon who did not bill to $5,600, to make it conform concur to amended provisions re- With salaries of other Territorial tee’s substitute bill was unanimous- Jection that the Commissioner will Iy accepted by the Senate, where- | have administration of & vast fund, upon the body plunged into second and that anyway, the Commissioner h e | sembly gives a better expression of | | | ‘rorm of government. | | ate only, he would go along with it. | Measure Incorporating T ner Questioning | negative side. a 30-minute silence in tribute to, would strike from the bill all I8 |, % last night at the hearing being picked up the Walker Veterans Aid ! Fund. The amendment was second- | | that group in substitute form this| Commissioner’s Salary rate expert. The attorney also membiers of the committee concur- | proposed an amendment to change garding the sales tax. The commit- | Officials. It was pointed out in ob- reading of the measure. of Health now draws more than | $8,000. The amendment was defeat- Legislature Confirmation i Pirst change noticeable in the ed just before recess to 1:30 o'clock bill followed the expressed opinion this afternoon. of several of the witnesses, thati One other committee report was confirmation of appointees to the | heard this morning. The Finance Veterans Board of the Legislature Committee gave a “do pass with be required before they begin to, amendment” to S.B. 3. The recom- Feceral Power Commission law and procedures which the Engineer bad | cited freely during his direct testi- mony. Admissions developed from Stuart by Faulkner's questions were: | | | 1. Stuart is not registered as an! engineer under the Territorial act; of 1939; though he stated he is eli- gible. 2. Denied any attempt to give impression that a Seward rate case had been decided upon his testi-| mony. In the proceedings of that casz, Faulkner cited that the Court had stated it would be very little interested in what Stuart had to | 1 ( Intobubble, SOVIETS TAKING TIME IN GETTING INCOME BILL IS PASSED BY HOUSE; GOES T0 SENATE The Territorial House today saw| CHUNGKING, March 13.—Russia speedy passage of H.B. 26, the cru- has not yet informed China wheii elal income tax bill by Reps. Almeri the withdrawal of Soviet forces J. Peterson and Oscar S. Gill, which' from Manchuria will be completed, i vice minister of foreign affairs Liu North Sea From South The steamer North Sca, Capt. M.| L. Jordan, Master and A. N. Moen, Purser of the Northland Trans- pertation Cempany arrived in Ju- | neau at 1:30 o'clock this afterncon ROW is headed Senate-wards. from Seattle with the following The measure was rushed to the|Chieh said today passengers from Seattle: Thomas|top of today's calendar to insure! He told a press conference the Ryan, Capt. Edwin Hildre, Mrs. Ed-:its arrival in the Senate before that | Chinese government had received ! win Hildre, R. D. Peter 1, Mrs. [body adopts an alternate means of no information that the Soviet R. D. Peterman, J. W. Male, Helen | fund raising. The upper house now | evacuation of Mukden denoted the carmody, Jean Feoth, Mrs. Ce-phas before it SB. 9, the veterans’ | start of a general withdrawal from cil Casler, Susan Jane 1 bill, which would appropriate funds Manchuria L. Sk Mrs. L. Sk 1ky means of the sales .tax, and a Chinese dispatches reported gov-| Ethel Milner, Raymond Maxson,|recommendation from Gov. Ernest!ernment troops were streaming in- Mrs. Raymond Maxscn, Floyd Og-|Gruening to raise money by bond-|to Mukden and said the Russians t of | had withdrawn from points eas den, Mrs. Floyd Ogden, Rotert Mc-|ing the Territc Knight, Judy McKnight Offered as a substitute for either‘\lthe railroad town of Tiehling, about Mrs. A. M. Berg, Raymond Rob-|the sales tax or the bond, H.B. 26 50 miles north. ertson, E. A. Smith, Mrs. Mary weuld collect one-half of one per- These dispatches gave the im- pression that part of Mukden was | Allen, Eloise Al , Louis Jones. cent of all gross income of individ- | From Petersburg: John McInnis.iyals and corporations and one-!in Communist hands but chronicled | H. Lovlie, Herman Pederson, Mrs.|tenth of one percent of all gross|no large-scale fighting. Ten govern-| Wm. Sourson, Margaret Waldeniar,|jneome of banking institutions, | ment policemen were reported killed Mrs. K. Margie Allen, Chin Soon, Stenslid. | | panies. An attempt to put through late yesterday afternoon was blocked when Gill urged “earn- est lengthy consideration of this most important measure.” It was passed today, 16 to 7 New matter in the trust companies and insurance com- and more than 70 others taken pr y !soner in a clash with the Com- the bil munists in the northern suburbs.| | (Associated Press Correspondent | ‘Spencer Davis, from northeast China Command Headquarters at| Chinchow, 150 miles southwest Gf | Mukden, reported the Russian with- drawal from Mukden was complete | except for rear echelons and that i Chinese government forces were, "taking over in orderly fashion. (Telephone conversations with Day, Mrs. From Wrangell: Lew Williams, M. O. Johnson, M. O. Johnson, Leon Ar Mrs. C. A. Bardon, A. O. Erickson, Mrs. A. O. Erickson, David Dalton, Earli Mrs. Earl Intobubble,! and E. M. Campfelt. From Ketchikan: Mable Reed, V | morning was: C. Bingham and Sam Wicks. | HB. 43, by the Education com- Throught passengers from Seattie | mittee, to provide minimum salar- to Sitka include: Roter( nnon, | ies for school teachers and salary' Mrs. Ray House this FROM MANCHURIA RCES MOVING INTO IRAN RUSSIANS | STARTING CONQUEST Combat Forces Are Moving RELATIONS ~ BECOMING STRAINED Move Prom-;;ls—U, S. to Ask Close fo Borders of Tur- | Russians What They key, Oil-Rich Iraq Are Up to, Why x (BY JOMN M. HIGHTOWER) TEHRAN, Iran, March 13.—Rus- | wASHINGTON, March tl,;‘ —Re- sian _combat troops in full cam- ports of large Red Army reinforce- paigns kit were declared by British |pene moving into Iran put a new and other official sources today tO(gerain on Russian-Americen rela- :}:"“’ closed within 20 miles of this|ijons today and threatensd a eriti- capital and to be moving southwest ' .a) test of UNO's powers to preserve acrcss northern Iran close to the|nagee s gk borders of and oil-rich | " he yeports have yst to be form- "_ar‘i-. WEUEER i ally confirmed or officially denied, _The reports caused Secretary ofjput this government has sent a note State James F. Byrnes to announce |, Moscow asking what the Russians in Washington last night the dis-!are yp to and why 5 patch of another note to Moscow ! Algo the reports have sufficient den{mndh\g an explanation. weight to have prompted an official This correspondent flew overigtate’ Department announcement Karaj, 20 miles from Tehran and thay they have Leen received. counted 14 Sherman tanks, a SCOre! <pne Department's statement last of other vehicles and saw half a|niche said its information was to sfife:‘ gflf “Xt‘,“‘"" planes at Kaz-[the effect that “during the last we'k P-O pica NOr . i Additional Soviet armed forces and remier Qavam es Saltaneh, JUstipaayy military combat equipment returned from inconclusive negotia- i have been moving southward from tions in Moscow over the continued |the direction of the Russl;;n border presence of Russian troops in ITan,|toward the Iranian capital of Teh- Turkey S — ithe Manchurian metropolis, said declared today that no agreements {ran and toward that country’'s R. A. Wilson, E. E. Dennis, Mrs.:ranges within which refunds to . E. Dennis, Jerry -Dennis, Mrh-facnool districts will be made; and Velma Mosher. ! declaring an emergency; referred Oscar Isaacson, Mrs. Oscar Isaac- back to the committee whence it son, L. Wagner, Frank Valt:\nta,icame J. Peachocke, Mr. and Mrs. Koroch, | Davis, offered no confirmation of ‘reports of street clashes between | Chinese Communists and govern- ment troops there or of large fires ireperted in the Chinese press. House Joint mewiorial 2, by Mc-| | Barbara Koroch, Dawson v i IREARIEA 5 <X P |close to the southern end of Lake were reached. | Reports reaching this troubled | capital told of Russian combat! trocps entering the towns of Mia- neh, Maragheh and Miyandnubi western border. The western border divides Iran from Turkey and oil-rich Iraq. Frankly Puzsled Officials here are frankly puzzied as to the Russian objective in send- MUugeY: | oytcheon and Warren, to inciude! Usima near the Purkish and Irag ing more troops into a country from serve. However, Senator Frank mended amendment would decrease Whaley proposed an amendment al- | the appropriation to pay expenses Say. Stuart replied that was onlyi |half of what the Court had said,| tering confirmation from both | of land registration to $20,000. houses of the Legislature in joint Committee cof the Whoig session to confirmation by each of Thres witnesses, two of them the chambers separately. |World War II veterans, were heard It was that amendment that was as the Senate concluded its Com- the focus of most discussion before mittee of the Whole bhearings on the body this morning before it was |the Walker Veterans Bill yesterday finally adopted by a 10 to 5 vote. |afternoon—hearings that have prov- {that reference was made. to bringing | vValdez circumstatices” into the pro-| i cceding. i 3. That, | while devoutly probing! | AEL&P expenditures and capital { | outlays during the years from 1896 l I ! to 1914, Stuart had paid mnsi(\exu[ t Jess attention to company Mrs. E. E. Greenhalgh. residents of Cook Inlet and sur-| The North Sea sails for Sitka | : IGM STRIKE e ! rounding areas within at 5 a. m. tomorrow but passan-le . goping vights in previous Alas- | gers may go aboard at 10 rt'r.ock‘.'m legislation; to Judiciary. | DETROIT, March 13.—An agree- provisions tonigy, House Memorial 1, commemorat- | ing the passing of the late Rep.: Joseph Diamond, Anchorage, The| memorial was passed unanimously upon suspension of rules and copias'mem for an 18 1-2 cents an hour - borders. ! Iwhich it was supposed by interna- Russians on Move :tional agreement to have withdrawn Russian troops were obligated by |all its forces by Mareh 2. internaticnal agreement to have| Speculation on what the Russians withdrawn by March 2. - Instead, 'may be up to covers three poesibil- there were reports of large Red!jties, Diplomats belléve (1) tkey Army reinforcements moving into may be trying to force a pro-Soviet Iran, {government on Iran, or (2) to A British foreign office spokes-i sufficient threats of force it bring ordered sent to Diamond's family.| (165 percent) wage rate increa: e! man in London said that Govern- against Turkey to win territorial - Speaking in defense of the ed amocng the most constructive in'ably mendment were Senators Andrew legislative annals. { jearnings and is not in a position erland, John Butrovich, O. D. Practically without exception, the Cochran and N. R. Walker; though returned servicemen who appeared when it came to roll call, Nerland to testify regarding the proposed ted against it. | bill, sought not to fling mud at it Oppose Amendment ‘or tear it to minute sheds. Instead, Opposing the amendment, were the apparent aim of all was to de- nators Frank Gordon, Howard| Velop the bill before the body into g and Don Carlos Brownell. ose in favor pointed out that in int session the Senate is over- helmed by the larger membership | of the House and its own vote is “* often lost. Cochran supported But- | ich’s contention that - separate | nate confirmation gives more; ual divisional representation in, control of appointments. Cochran added that confirmation is a just| and prover function of the Senate, as is demonstrated in the Congress} of the United States. i Senator Walker was eloguent th his avowal that action by the Sen- | ate, with its “equal ‘representation, | ‘Lhe best possible bill that has yet been arrived at anywhere with Alas- ka's peculiar problems cared for. First witness yesterday afternoon to say whether the company made & profit or loss during that 18 year period except that 25 dividends were paid. 4. That Stuart had seen evi- dence indicating that it is a general rule that utility companies in small | cities have lost money during the! first few years of operation. H Water Rigii Vaiuation Pitching directly at the $i00 va.l-, ACTIS FIRST 10 BE PASSED ‘Rep. Bess Cross asked that the |and the creation of an “equaliz House resolve itself into a Commit- |tion” fund brought an end today tee of the Whole to hear from Al-ito the 113-day old General Motors' aska’s doctors, here for the Medi-!strike. cal Convention which closed yester- Accepting the 18 1 cents an day, on H.B. 39, which regulates hour offer of the management, the the practice of healing in the Ter-!CIO United Auto Worl said In ritory. Mrs. Cross' request was a statement that the “equaliza-| | granted. tion” fund meets the Union's 19 1-2 ment has received reports of “con-; siderable” Russian concessfons and rights in the Dar- troop move- darelles, or (3) that they may ments toward Tehran and the have some designs on the Mosul cil Iraq frontier. The British express-|field of Irag. ed concern over the continued: If any of these or a combination presence of Russian troop concen- | trations in Iran and said the new! troop movements were noted as! early as March 4. is the answer, it seems certain that Russian aims will be in sharper jconflict with British interests and with American pronouncements than Qualifying for the premier posi- tion as Chapter One of the Extra- ordinary Session Laws of Alaska, The House adjourned until 2 p‘m.}cenls an hour demand, which was; today. Ithe amount recommended by Presi-| i 'dent Truman’s fact-finding com- The British foreign office spokes- man was quoted in London dis- patches as saying the Russian troop movements had increased the grav- at any time since war's end. ‘Top officials here. firmly cxpect that unless the Russians change {course s E. K. Guerin, local photo- yation Stuart had placed, for rate: grapher vet, speaking for himself purposes, upon the AEL&P's Gold| as a veteran and business man. He creek water right, Faulkner asked developed ten principal points from for exact explanation as to how his review of the bill: {that figure had been reached.; Piancapue roints {Stuart’s reply was that the amount | 1. That members of the Beard was arbitrary, since the right had should ke confirmed before (aking been mainly located, not purchas- over their office. ed, and the $100 includes survey 2. The rate of interest on the costs as well as expenditure for | loans should be set out in the bill posting location notice. The basis, not left to administrative discre-|he again contended, is what was tion. ‘actunlly paid, not present market 3. Loans limits must, valuc. to prove| lany real help, remain as liberal as| |set out in the bill as introduced. i 4. Bonus provision is only fair ror! ithose not needing loans and should | iremain in the bill. 5. The witness has no speclncl objection to the one percent gross‘ sales tax; an income tax, though likely more fair, would not be any igood immediately. Loan Applications i 6. There should be time and number limits on loan applications; | it is unnecessary to provide a means for a veteran to borrow repeatedly| —a veteran is not entitled to that! privilege. What he is entitled to; lis a chance to get to where he Emizm well have been had he not been called upon to give three or| |four years of his life to his coun-! |try’s service. H‘he Washington Merry - Go- Round By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON — Atomic sclen- tists pay tribute to the Navy as: compared with the Army when it comes to atomic-bomb cooperation. | ‘They say Adm. William Blandy and naval officers’are working out a fairly good test of the A-bomb. At first the Navy had some rath- er amateurish ideas on how to test e bomb's effect on warships, but scientists say that Admiral landy has been glad to accept | i jcil might have almost all their suggestions—except e. £ This is the scientists’ proposal fhat the coming mid-Pacific atom test be postponed a few weeks. They are worried for fear they will} not be able to complete certain! achinery in time to test atomic reactions. Unfortunately they were given very short notice regarding the date of the test and it takes time to prepare delicate atomic 7. The $250,000 initial appropria- tion provided is not sufficient; fif- teen days after the bill is effec- tive will likely see applications to-| taling in excess of that. On this point, Guerin gave Sen- otor Allen Shattuck his own opin-; ion that 90 percent of all loans made to veterans uncer the bill will be called for within the first two years after the measure go2s into effect. That contention brought Federal ! Power Commission accounting rules; into the picture. On that point, | Faulkner said he believed the Coun- | become confused by Stuart’s frequent FPC references. Stuart had replied that he had not allowed costs of a subsequent law- | suit in the water right valuation because it was not original cost as! provided for by FPC accounting practices and he assumed the law- suit expenditures had been repaid | the company out of operating ex- penses. Those FPC Rules What bearing do FPC rules have here? Faulkner asked. From a series of questions and answers was derived Stuart’s con- tention—which he called upon City Attorney Howard D. Stabler to support—that Alaska cities are au- | thorized by &tatute to set utility rates and that they may adopt any rules they wish to arrive at a rate base. { To Faulkner's question as to' whether the City of Juneau has adopted any such set of rules, Stuart replied that he could not say so, but that he had worked up| his data under instructions of the City Council to proceed along lines of “original cost less depreciation”. 1946 is Senate Bill 8; the Act to ap- propriate $250,000 for the control of | tuberculosis. | That measure yesterday became the first bill to pass both chambers ' of the Alaska Legislature during its| current special session. A primary reason for calling the ! special session, S.B. 8 was smedm“the Nt?vy. The Pre&ld(’l\‘l acted at through both houses and this morn- | Pauley’s request. He said Pauley’s ing was reported as “properly en- | defense. of his i “good name” has rolled” by the Senate Engrosamg‘;bee" “valiant and conclusive. Committee. i President of the Senate Edward v D. Coffey signed the bill this morn- | 2% quoted tonight by the Moscow, ing and 8l now lacking is the sig- | 134i0 @8 declaring that Winston nature of the Speaker of the House, ' CDUrchill and his friends in Bri-| Jesse D. Lander, before it is ready itain and the United States “remind, for transmittal for the approval of jone of Hitler and his friends.” ‘He]‘ Governor' Ernest Gruening. The|charged Churchill was “inflaming measure secured unanimous votes; M€ causes of war.” | in both houses. s e e 5. E. ALASKA FAIR CASE IS SET OVER The case of U. 8. vs. Southeast! WASHINGTON — Secretary of | Alaska Fair Association was sct| War Robert P, Patterson advocated | over until 10 o'clock March 25 by|extention of the draft law today at Judge J. W. Kehoe in Federalla closed meeting of the House Mil- Court this morning. The jury|itary Committee. The Selective Ser- was excused until that time. | vice Act expires May 15 unless re- The case involves approximately|newed by Congress. e WASHINGTON— President Tru- nian today withdrew the nomina- tion of Edwin W. Pauley, California oil man, to be Under Secretary of LONDON—Generalissimo Stalin CHUNGKING—The last units of | the Russian garrison at Mukden | left Tuesday ‘night with their com- | mander, Maj. Gen. Kovtoun Stan- | keviteh, the Chinese Central News | Agency reported tonight. | mission. “ Settlement of the strik? means an {early return to work of 175,000 GM Iproduction workers in 92 plants ‘throughout the country 'DEVIN REELECTED " MAYOR IN SEATTLE | SEATTLE, March 13—Victor A. !Meyers still is lieutenant governor of Washington today — a position | i | | i and greatly modify their ity of a tenses situation. |reported activities the whole issue Both Iraq and Iran are rich in again will be thrown into the oil. Iran is th2 world's fourthiUnited Nations Security Council, largest producer. lecheduled to open its next mcot- Leftist Agitation ing in New York, March 25. 3 Leftist agitation has been evi- —— cent in Iran and some political ob- | b § 2 ( servers expressed belief that the‘wIlD uFE MovIE‘ Russian moves near the capitall FEAIURE AT E {monthly raise for firemen and po-| btcen especially active in Tehran the past week. he has held for 13 years — after an unsuccessful attempt yesterday to defeat William F. Devin for Russian interest .in Turkey has mayor of Seattle. Dovin, the in- boen expressed in at least two rhases. Russia has demandad that Turkey cede to Russia the Black Ses provinces of Kars and Arda- han, The Russians also ars re- yorted to have demanded bases in tre Dardanelles. LEGISLATORS 10 BE (C LUNCHEON GUESTS cumbent, won by a vote of 70,542 to 54,249 on the basis of complete unofficial returns from the city’s 656 precincts. Incumbent councilmen were re- ected. A new city charter, a 10-milijon dollar school bond issue, a 830, el licemen and a 48-hour week for" NEW YORK, March 13.—Closing Legislature will be guests of the cuotaticn of Alaska Juneau mine Chamber of Commerce at the noon I stock today is 9, Alleghany Corpor- luncheon meeting tomorrow in thel ation 6%, American Can 90%, An- Baranof Hotel's Gold Room. might be planned to create “unrest | A 'kedachroms movie short, and rebellion” in Tehran, as in {“Realm of the Wilds" produced by the northern Province of Azerbal- jan. The Leftist Tudeh party has| the U. 8. Forest Service, was shown this noon as a special feature at {the regular luncheon-meeting of {the National Federation of Federal {Employees in the Baranéf Gold ! Room. The film, brought to the meet- ing by Harry Sperling, Administra- tive officer of Forest Service, show- led national forest scenes through- lout the U. S. and a muguudg of amazing wildlife shots. Rare shots of animals feeding, During the business session, John H. Carter, Jr., of the Federal Hous- ing Administration was introduced as a nmew member. Gecrge Rogers of the Office of Price Administra- {tion was clected to fill out an un- i { i half an acre of land in Juneau in which the Government and the, WASHINGTON—Herbert H. Leh- owners are appealing against com-|man is resigning, because of hisi ” o ¥ Northe ific 282, United Cor- missioner’s finding of $24000 as| health, from the post of UNRRA!SCEliCH red 2 e Pu;cglse Kprkilce- o Director General which he has held | poy o sq0g. 4 udge Kehoe set 1: tomorrow since the relief agency’s birth in S g afternoon for entering the plea in' g2, g:‘:‘ m:i’ :\lr:;:g‘e':l&?i?y ";‘l:"?: the case of U. S. vs. Richard Mc-| 3 Roberts on draft evasion charges.| {follows: industrlals 19036, rail 61.39, utilities 39.30. - e | "CRUSADE” FOR CHRIST™ | NUERNBERG—War crimes trial !has its place in the news today. The Ministef of War in the first| 3—A crowd — e BUDAPEST, Marca aconda 45%, Curtiss-Wright 9%., Introduced by R. E. Robertsan, | expired three-year term = on the | International Harvester 89; Kenne- |the speakers will include Senatoy|BOArd of Trustees. The vacancy cott 51%, New York Central 26%, O. D. Cochran, teldng of “Politi-|Was left by the resignation of Mrs. |cal Activities in the Second Divis-|Helen G. Johnsap. jon;” Senator Frank Whaley, whul The decision of the Executive will speak of “Crack-ups of Bush:Board that NFFE not participate Pilots”; and Reps. Almer J. Pot-|in the move to secure recreational erson and Maurice G. Johnson with |facilities for the Juneau Teen-Age comments on thé “Future of the group was read. The statement as- Republican Party in Alaska.” certed that such action by the or- O A !ganization was “beyond its sphere STEAMER MOYEMENTS lof activity.” ! B Hitler Cabinet, Field Marshal Wer-iof 8,000 hysterical Hungarians saw Ferenc Szalasi, Prime Minister of | BURLEY TO SITKA machinery. Some of this will not beg Residence Requirement (corhpleted in time. p | 8. The residence requirement for|Stuart stated that the right of the; . Reason the Navy won't p“"'p"“eieligtbimy in the bill needs revision!council to fix rates has been up- the test a few weeks is the weather. ung clarification; as it stands, aliald by Circuit Court of Appeal It runs into the typhoon season la- youin who went to the States to|decislon—which contention Lawyer fer, and the admirals say that if ljearn to fly, and later, perhaps Faulkner denied. i | ! ner von Blomberg, died today in a hospital where he was waiting to| Hungary during the German occu- SERVICES CONTINUING | be summoned as a witness at the|pation, executed by strangulation Thz Rev. W. A. Cox will speak”flEl' He died of a heart attack. |yesterday in company with three on the subject “God Suffered” at| }othvr pro-Nazi leaders. the Crusade for Christ Service iofl SEATTLE—Col. Fred P. Andrewsi While the screaming mob watch- North Sea, from Seattle, in port.' \Sails for Sitka at 5 u'clock tomor-iC. R. Burley, mining course in- \row morning, but passengers may | Structor for the University of Alas- {go aboard at 10 tonight. !kn. is in Juneau on his way to Sit% Aleutian, from Seattle, schedul- ka where he will conduct classes cd to arrive at 8 o'clock tonight. 'there for the next several wesks. the test is postponed even for a few |joined the RAF, would be barred. |Guerin had no exact remedy tc suggest. 9. Louns should be kept as free as possible of red tape. 10. Veterans would rise in wrath against any provision to subsidize weeks it would have to go over until next year. Last thing the Navy wants is nother year's delay; for its ap- ropriations from Congress plus the 'whole question of whether there is ) oy T RIS J (Continued on Page Four) 0 ' i rCofitinded on P;zge E;'ght/ | City Attorney Stabler interpoiated, |ris assurance that statutory au-: thorization is provided for Alaska| | cities to fix upon a fair rate base. | High Court Decision After bringing out that a FPC, license to an electric utility car- (Ca;t'tinuved on Pape_f;)o} Alaska scheduled to sail from | the Methodist Church this evening.' Commanding Officer of the Alaska|ed the contortions of the four con- | It it the W.S.CS. re!m;‘muty“CflmmunEBuflns System since April ! demned men, 4,000 others who could night, with the Women’s trio sing- | 1941, retired from the Army yester- | not get into Marko jail smashed ing, and Warren G. Harding is day and will continue his residence | their way through two doors in an singing the solo, “Into The Woods | here. He was relieved of his com- . effort to see the execution. They My Master Went” Mrs. Floyd mand by Col. Terrence Tully of the were finally checked after Hun- Phelps, W.S.C.S. President, will lead' Army Signal Corps Headguarters,' garian police fired rifles into the the service. Washington, D. C air. IE eatlle Saturday. ALTHEA RANDS SI'I:KA-BOUND Princess Norah scheduled to sail! Miss Althea Rands, daughter of from Vancouver March 19. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Rands of Baranof, from the west, scheduled 'Sitka, and former Juneau residents, [southbound Friday. is a passenger on the steamer | Columbia, from west, scheduled North Sea, enroute home from southbound Saturday. Ketchikan.

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