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HE DAILY ALASKA “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” EMPIRE VOL. LXVI, NO. 10,228 e e T USSIA L0 BRANCHOF U.A. IN §. E. ALASKA GIVEN APPROVAL Ketchikan Veteran Newell Makes Strong Talk in | \ | i T0JO READY Loss of Notebooks May Re- I tard Memory - Net | Feigning Amnesia TO TESTIFY JUNEAU, ALASKA, TUESDAY, MA — RCH 26, 1946 * MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS _ PRICE TEN CENTS | B. C. 15 NOT T0 HELP| Senale Turns 'PROPOSED HIGHWAY Thumbs Down 1o aaska, RepORT on N()minees1 Sen. Magnuson Says Dom- | inion Government Can't ( i { Juvenile Delinquency in Alaska A War Booln Says Beally IRAN UNDER INSPECTION BY BRITISH | | | firibuied to M: 1 26—The war unwelcome boom WASHINGTON, Parliamenf Members to EIGHT VOTE ONHEARING RIGHT NOW ES FIGHT ON IRANIAN ISSUE: Soviet Reb;eiseniative 3 Makes Strong Plea fo Delay Discussion BULLETIN—New York, Mar. 26.—The United Nations Secur- | brought one {Mullaney, Mrs. Miller Re-. Aid Specific Province fused Confirmation- ik School Bill Passes Mrs. Louise Weaver Miller Ketchikan and Mathew P. Mul- to connect the Pacific 'SECOND TICKET, FILED THIS P. M Favor-Action Taken | TOKYO, March 26—Former Pre- An ecloguent plea for education mier Hideki Tojo used to depend now — termed more important than on no less than eight notebooks to| loans or bonuses—today won World refresh his memory, and conse- War II veteran Harry Newell, Jr., quently may have a little trouble| of Ketchikan, a spontaneous and remembering dotails at his forth- flattering burst of applause in the coming war crithes trial, his prin- to Alaska—in juvenile delinquency.! The House appropriations commit- tee hag recommended an additional | . : ;slsn.uo?) to provide facilities forl Are Wlfhdrawmg 150 more children in the Ekultna| — w school at Fort Raymond, near Sew-' LONDON, March 26.—Two mem- | are, Alaska |bers of Britain's Parliament under- | p Verify Reports Russians |govirnment is not likely to sharel {in the expense of constructing a, of bighway through British Columbia Northwest Territorial House and, more impor- tant, passage of House BIll 63, which appropriates $1,000,000 fo southern branch of the Univer: of Alaska. Newell, a lifelong Alaska resident 'the attorney, told the Associated| and a member of the Veterans of Press, commenting on a report Tojo| Foreign Wars, said the progosed branch could be ready for students within three months and could be built and operated on $150,000 until the next legislature. He explained that while $150,000 was the lowest at which the extension could be opened and kept op2n he did not believe the $1,000,000 called for in H B. 63 was necessary for the south- eastern branch at this time. Although he did not go on record as favoring a Ketchikan location— stating several times that Juneau, Petersburg, Wrangell or other Southeast Alaska sites might prove equally feasible—he said he knows personally that his home city can house all married veterans and their families, single veterans and prospective women students. He read a letter from a Ketchikan civic group offering the city’s form- er USO building, valued at between $20,000 and $25000 and surplus Coast Guard barracks for housing. Aid To Students Of 27 business concerns, contact- ed in a hurry-up survey immed- iately after he had been summoned to testify before the legislature, 25 agreed to give veteran students full or part-time employment, Newell said. Stressing the urgency of South- east Alaska facilities, Newell offer- ed the following arguments: (1» The overcrowded U. S. uni- vesities will not admit Alaskan veterans. He read a letter from an Alaskan veteran who had applied the job. Victory has not been won. | to 15 U. S. schools, getting “no” from 13 and a very indefinite “may-'need for Red Cross work. Letting "y o don, Gundersen, McCutcheon, Ner- be ldter” from the other two. The down now would be as unpatriotic jand anf Coffey. 'cipal defense attorney predicted to- day. The notebooks were destra |probably when the War Ministry was firebombed, Dr. Ichirc Kiyouse, was losing his memory. Kiyouse insisted Tojo “has noth- ing to hide and he is going to tell! it all.” | He said he was certain Tojo was; not feigning amnesia: “When a man depends cn notebooks as To- jo did, he is lost without them.” .- ROTARIANS EXTbl - WORK OF ARC IN - COMMUNITY LIFE | An impromptu discussion onmer- its of Red Cross work both inter- nationally and locally was fea- itured today at the noon luncheon- | meeting of the Juneau Rotary Club. ! In reminding Rotarians that only & week remained in the preserit iRed Cross Drive with slightly less than one-fourth of the quota at- tained, President Herb Hillerman said the drive was rapidly reach- ing a critical stage. “Too many Americans are no |longer giving freely as they did | Quring the war,” he said. They feel !victory has heen won and they !can now rest on their past record of generosity. Actually we on the | home front did a great job in do- nating toward the war effort, but we must stand prepared to finish There is still a definite and vital , |sioner it continue to act as|with the Alaska Military (Alean) Authority Commis- highway. and Tax Commissioner re-| The Senator made the statement spectively, will do so without the during a contercnce with Canadian | approval of the Alaska Senate. [Sen. Gerald McGeer and Pres. A third nommation, Antonio Po-|Staniey S. McKeen of the Pacific| let of Nome as a member of the | Northwest Trade Association, buth' {Alaska Development Board, barely,©f Vancouver, B. C. i ’ o He said he was given the infor- squeaked through to confirmation| : ? 'by a 9 to 7. majority in the upper|mation by the Rt. Hon. J. L. Tisley, ! house. |Canadian Minister of Finance, PR when he and Gov. Ernest R. Gruen- : The three rem:nfnnu nominations o or Alaska visited Ottawa Feb. |submitted by Governor Ernest,); 't represent the United Statés) 3(}nm\ning to this special session of‘m joint highway discussions i tie Logx;laturo were all confirmed| .\ye were told,” said Magnuson, by unanimous vote of the Senat2.: | “that if the Federal government of |They are: To the Alaska HOUSING ¢unaga helped the Province of Authority—Harold Byrd of Fair-ipiyicn columbia in the proposed banks and Edward V. Davis of An- ;a0 “iom prince George, 1t (chorage; as Commissioner of Agri-: .4 pe importuned to assist other Ili:‘ul"‘.ll.er;(gnl. Qenrge W. Gasser m.prnvin(:s to the same degl‘c‘n." : Mullaney, former Alaska Rural' He quoted the minister a8 saying 'Rehabilitation Corporation account- gamt. was appointed by the Governor to succeer Tax Commissioner O. S.; Sullivan, who resigned February 1 of this year. Mrs. Miller was once jconfirmed by the Legislature as {an original member of the Housing | Authority and today was up for ‘confirmation to succeed herself. ‘The House of Representatives has, Iso far, taken no action in confirm- lation or rejection of any of the {six nominations. The Senate’s pro- et from which such an allocation could be made. “It is 3,000 from Van- couver to Ottawa,” McGeer told Magnuson, “but it is 25000 miles from Ottawa to Vancouver,” adding the report from Ottawa was typical of the Dominion government’s atti- tude toward the meeds of the west. Magnuson said also it appeared “We will have no highway to Alaska whatever after April the date the Alaska military highway miles uofdie: R morning Was in ac- ;.o pe ransferred to Canada. He jcordance with its recently adopted ., pjqincq he understood the route policy ot actiug alu‘ne om all eon- wonld be closed to civilian travel. firmations not specified by law o st <3 ibe voted in point session. : i Miller Vote . Vote on Mrs. Miller was 6 to 9 ' |against confirmation; the “yeas” be-' 'ing Senators Brownell, Butrovich,| ¢ e o § \ SEATTLE—Lines of school child- K,Gordcn, Gundersen, McCutcheon}rm and adults seeking immuniza- (ond Netlank, Lyng wasl absent. o ooainst smallpox formed out- | | _Voting to confirm Mullaney Were ;. (he City Health Department Scnators Brownell, Butrovich, Gor- here today. Lyng, arriving | The-' Eecond ticket tc be announced |for the city election to be held next Of 30) Tuesday has been filed with the City Clerk, with the following can- didates ) For Mayor, (incumbent) Ernest. Parsons; 1 For Councilmen: Vi Frank Hermann and G gensen, The ticket has been Progressive Ticket. NEW PHILPPINE LODGE CHAPTER 10 START HERE In Juneau this weck to organize Power, e Jor- or named the Canada had no Federal road bud- g joea] chapter of the Washington Ying to conditions among the Aleuts, } secret fraternal organization, the Grand Order Eyes of the Philip- pines, Inc., Joseph V. Jainga, Grand Master, and Augustin F. Jimenez, Grand Marshal, both of £:attle, an- nounced today that 16 Juneau re: idents have signed up for member- sh rganizational meetings have Lkeen held for the past two nights in the IOOF Hall. The two representatives expect to return to Seattle Friday when all arrangements for the new com- munity chapter are completed. The Order st s among its major pur- poses fellowship between American and Philippine factions. The chap- ter will be the first The school now has an enrollment | tock today a trip by plane to the dependent and delinquent | Middle East to make an unofficial children |inspection of Iran and to verify Willard W. Beatty, Director of|reports from Moscow and Tehran the Bureau of Indian Affairs, told |that Red Army troops were with- the - appropriations committee, h\]drawmg from that country. tes'imony published today, that: | The two—Brigadier A. H. Head, “The present serious situation|Conservative, and Michael Foot,| 0ose out of the tremendous munbm"l.n\mr party members and writer of single white males sent in from for the Daily Herald—will be gone the states either to engage in labor for two or three week: work or who have come in with| Foreign Undersec the army, and there has been a McNeil said “necessary anga- | tremendous amount of debauchery.” ments” had been made for the | He estimated about 5,000 sh\glclvisu and added that he did not| men arrived from the United States believe any “unreasonable barriers”; in 1941, {would be encountered. | Beatty added: ¢ Prime Minister Stalin asserfed to- “There has been an enormous day that so far as the Soviet Union ! amount of immorality and in many is concerned, the question of the| cases the children have been aban- withdrawal of Red Army troops| doned . il has already becn solved” by an, Beatty s agreement between Russia and lrxm.“ .- | ary Hector | that he was refer- adding: “We "hnve mviopwd the use & | > NEARS $1900 MARK; AUTO PLUNGE A §500 YET 10 60 $6500 YET 10 60 { —mlAK Kllts 2; With but four days remaming to ;complete the annual Red Cross 5 ARE INJURED'Campm;n for funds, K Juneau's to-| | tal contributtons up to neen today - - were nearing, but had not yet KODIAK, Alaska, March 26— |reached, the $1900 mark, accord- Two naval officers were killed and'ing to an estimate made by com- four officers and a civilian. taxi;mittee members. driver seriously hurt early yester- ' y¢ has peen pointed out that this day when a taxicab ran off a 25- campaign is the annual drive, and| . | | i in Alaska, and foot high bluff and crashed to the ! js the only one to be conducted by % ity Council has dofeated a Sova jet move to blcek Iran’s ap- peal t¢ the Ceuncil. The Coun- cil refused, by a vote cf 8 to 2, to take the Iranian case off its agenda. The eight which favored a hearing for Iran, on the gen- erally expressed theory that the Security Council ought to find cut what is geing on there, and what sort of Russo-Iran- ian agreement has been made. were: The United States, Britain, France, Egypt, Mexico, Nether- lands, Australia and Brazil China abstained from veting, her delegate, Dr. Quo Tai-chi, being the Council Chairman. Immediately after these votes, Gromyko said he wanted tocall the Council's aitention to the fact that he had asked for a delay in the Iranian case until April - 10, and that he still wanted it, STUBBORN 'FIGHT NEW YORK, March 26.—Soviet Russia fought. stubbornly today against British and United States sttemipts to place the Iranian is- sue cn the agenda cf the United Nations Security Council. In the midgt of the argument Soviet Am- bassador Andrei Gromyko accused the United Btates and British dai- cgations of being more Iranian than the Iranians. Gromyko centended that the pri- ate agreement between Rissla and will mark the initial step in the beach below at the naval base here. | {he Red Cross during the ORI ol . oF Seit Order’s membership expansion pro- e NEW STEAMER O The Navy withheld the officers’ gome confusion has resulted from names until next of kin could be rior g ettt Aol an (G s HiFe | the fact that prior to the war the ! quiry was start-) ygj)call drive had for many years ed by Provost Marshal Lt. COL'jeen held in the fall, but was Henry Massie. The®taxi driver was ! changed to March during the war. | identified as John Kellogg, but the | ppe quota for the city eni extent of his injuries 5 - | is extent of his injuries was not dis | Douglas is $8,400, and judging by closed by the Naval dispensary. troops from Iran closes the case, consequently there is no need for the UNO Council to consider the . matter. s 7 State Secrefary James Byrnes declared that the UNO should have been informed of the details of the various states admit applicants t0 a5 it would have been a year ago.![ate, requested that his vote be! their universities on a priority ba-|Let's not allow Juneau to come in- |recorded for confirmation, but was' sis, with residents high on the list 't this category.” !denied though his vote would have | ' { : left only an even split, not enough | Mayor Ernie Parsons added his’m confirm, Lyng’s request Was ! support to President Hillerman'’s | | comments by saying that locally‘em”ea e Hournal i past records there is no reason {0 apreement, that Tran has not with- berga ruled today that a _primat The Navy said the driver, enter- | facie case has been made against - e ing the guard gate with his Das- | s o N tped t g dawn her complaint, and. thites Fred Rose, Communist member of | SEATTLX, March 26. — One of sengers, obtained permission to de- | ¢ pm‘tl by leaving his contribu- fore the Council should go into the the Canadian Parliament. Rose is four new vessels assigned by the tour via en airplane runway bes' o with any of the people Hsted - Pute: Byrnes promptly got the charged with giving official secrets, War Shipping Administration o cause of a snowdrift across the re- . s 4 o support of the British representa- :to Russia. This means that he will serve in Alaska waters will weigh gular route. The bluff is at the end ' ::e:,b:;icijrn gfigvesl-:xl:l;mmu’ngr P.l"(‘){ bk A it o705 " (Centinucd on Page Eight) The Washington i Merry - Go- Roundi By DREW PEARSON | WASHINGTON — Today, the| greatest idea -springing from the late war—that nations can solve their differences without resort to| bloodshed—receives its greatest test.; The outcome of this test will de-| cide whether 12,000,000 men who, fought for.a warless world shall| have fought in vain. This reporter, who has occupied | a ringside seat at some of thel great diplomatic battles of our/ time, remembers vividly the other | great tests of recent history—and | how the people who had most to| lose were let down. * Those defeats have been lke ercsion. One tiny rivulet in the flood-gates against war opens a small hole. Then another defeat opens another hole, and soon a torrent of battle has flooded the world. Eighteen years ago, this reporter sailed to Paris with Frank B. Kel- logg to witness the signing of g pact which expressed the hopes and dreams of people all over the world for a warless world. Editor- jals everywhere hailed the event as marking a new era of peace. And Henry L. Stimson, who suc- ceeded Kellogg, honestly tried to make it so. He used the Kellogg Pact as a real instrument of Am- erican policy—a substitute for this country’s earlier failure to partici- pate in the League of Nations. But on the very day the Kellogg Pact finally was ratified and the diplomats of 40 countries crowded into the White House to commem- orate the occasion, Soviet Russia threatened war with China over the Chinese Eastern Rallroad in Northern Manchuria. The Red Army was massed on Chinese bor- ders. It looked as if the Kellogg ———— 4 (Continued on Page Four) ' i | - On Polet the. B Croes i3 dalug as. mare The nine members of the Senate good in the community sthan many{ . carrying ~confirmation of Polet people realize. He asked that mem- |, 0. gutroyich, Cochran, Gordon, bers of Rotary back the presem]Gundetsen, Lyng, McCutcheon, Ner- drive “until we have reached by ong scoty and Whaley—all Second a comfortable margin this all-im-'pn igioners going for their towns- portant goal for our first post-war ..., Red Cross campaign.” 5 It is not generally known, said|qq tne attention of the Senate and of persons stranded in Juneau are ing. Passed, paid each year fiy the Amerlcan.eme‘-gency cause, was HB. Red C_ross chapter here, “The Red yhich enlarges permitted areas of Cross just pays them and no com- |jndependent school districts from 50 plimentary publicity is given—or 'to 250 miles and guarantees them expected,” he said. jthe same Territorial refunds of The main program of the day 'tuition as are made to municipal was composed of brief summaries [schools. No amendments were made on the work of Rotary given by |to the bill by the Senate, so all five Rotarians. Speaking on the {that's now needed to make it law specific functions of the commit- js the Governor's signature. tees of which they are chairman | School Refunds were- the following: Dr. W. M.: Alsp considered, at the Third | Whitehead, International Cooper-|Reading stage, was H.B. 45, increas- {'ation and Service Committee; E. L.|ing by five percent Territorial re- Keithahn, Club Service; Hnrold‘runds to city schools. Ryan ex- fiFoss, Community Service; Mike plained that it'is a companion Haas, Vocational Service. measure to H.B. 43 which raises Don Skuse, former - Rotarian |minimum and maximum salary | President, told of his personal ex-|scales for teachers. The purpose perience as a member of Rotary of H.B. 45, he said, is to take care unanimously with {be held for trial. {anchor Friday and head out on its ! maiden voyage to the far north. | WASHINGTON — John L. Lewis| The vessel is the Clove Hitch, a today notified bituminous coal op- 5000 ton diesel-powered ship as- lerators he will end their presentisigned by WSA to the Alaska Icontract this Sunday at midnight'Steamship Company. A second ves- and 400,000 miners will “stay ‘home sel, the Diamond Knot, has been well as other nations. | That's how matters stocd when the Security Council tock a recess before resuming the discussion la- ter this afternocn. 2 | - e cf the runway. | -ee ' JAPS LAKDED FROM fession Women’s Club, . A call on the Rotary Club lunch- eon today netted the sum of $56.50 and a check from Standard Oil Company added another $100 to the fund. —ee ! making it clear he will insist on | {Jack Fletcher, that many h""el;’explanation by Commissioner of a new contract. { | bills and transportation expenses gqucation James Ryan this morn- WASHINGTON—The Senate Mil- to hold two weeks of public hear-| ings before taking a final vote oni the question of extending the ,drau! law. 1 ATLANTIC CITY, N. J—Over; Russian opposition the United; States won UNRRA's approval to-| day of a mandate to prevent Oc—i cupying armies from living off the land they have conquered. ’ i FRANKFURT, Germany Lty { Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, the { United States’ new Ambassador to| i Russia now en route to Moscow,; Itold reporters here today he would | | tell Prime Minister Stalfn that the | American peoplé wanted a reas- | \ | Two education measures receiv-|with their families” next week. ordered to the same service The veteran steamship Victoria, familiar in most ports of Alaska, will return to its northern run Thursday. The Victoria has been .o Salmon Packers On Puget Sound io Go "On Individual Basis BELLINGHAM, Wash., March 26. 46, ' itary Committee decided late today idle stnee last fall SUB IN 1943, NEAR?' ; FRISCO, i_S _REVEAl_EDip“A ANNOUNCES Califorpia coast and were tukenl priscners by a maneuvering army, Daily flights to Anchorage and unit in Noveinber, 1943, Kennethconnections with Pan American Hammaker, former Western States Airways at Juneau has been an- Director of the Office of Civilian|nounced by A. G. Woodley, Presi- Defense said last night. dent of Pacific Northern Afrlines. Hammaker said that some ele-| Daily service to Anchorage will ments of the Western Defense Com- | commence April 1 and will connect mand were on maneuvers in Mar-iwm: additional flights of Pan in county, about 15 miles north of |American Airways which will be put ZTOCKTON, cCalif, March 26—' Extween 12 and 15 Japanese landed ' from a submarine on the morthern Salmon canning on Puget Sound San Francisco, and that laldieu!lnw service effective the same date will revert to an individual basis saw the Japanese come ashore|to provide more available seats for in 1946 "after several years of co- about midnight. passengers wishing to travel from operafive operations, the Herald The soldiers, he said, took the;Seattle to westward Alaska. learned today. Japanese prisoners without resis-| The new frequency of service, As many-as nine canneries will tance. Hammaker said he did nut!Mr, Woodley said, has been made pack salmon this season, employing know what army unit made the cap- |pessible by the Increase of pas- directly more than 500 persons. (ture. Isenger traffic between the United Included on the list arc the Alas- States and Alaska since the first and extolled the fellowship and | community spirit that may be |such an organization. | meeing, Skuse announced the nom- inating committee’s suggested list of members for the Board of Di- rectors to be elected at the April} 9 meeting. They were: O. E. Ben- ecke, Dr. William Blanton, Rich: ard Byrns, Charles W. Carter, Hank Harmon, E. L. Keithahn, James McNaughton, Howard Stabler, and, Dr. W. M. Whitehead. Additional names may be nominated from the floor at next week's meeting. Mr. Benecke and Bob Cowling were officially welcomed back from their recent trip to the States. Among the guests were: Joe Shof- ner, newly-arrived band leader for Juneau High; Frank Parsons, son of Mayor Parsons; Dan Moller, Andrew Hope, Ed Coffey and Al- mer Peterson. In the business session of the; lof the additional burden on cities| qyurance of the Soviet Union's mo- should the higher pay rates be put tives. into effect. Smaller cities, espec- pE ially, are now finding it a great! WASHINGTON — The House 'burden to meet present school|uickly approved today a $253.727.- costs, he stated. 1000 emergency fund to provide tem- ka Packers Association at Semiah- moo, with three lines and 150 em- ployees; Astoria Puget Sound Can- ning Company at Friday Harbor, Far West Fishermen’s Packing, Se- | bastian-Stuart and Anacortes Can- of the year, which has been al- {most 'triple in volume over the same | period in 1945, | .- i Avalanches Bury Snoqualmie Pass SPY CASE WITNESS WON'T TALK; GETS. . SENTENCE TO JAIL MONTREAL, March 26.—Gordon Lunan, former Canadian army cap- tain accused of supplying Russia with war-time secrets, was cited for contempt and sentenced to jail late yesterday upon his refusal to testify at a preliminary hearing for Frod Rose, Communist member of the Canadian Parliament. Summoned as a witness for the crown in the case of Rose, also cbarged with communicating secret information to the U.S.S.R., Lunan testified he knew Roce and denied knowing Lt. Col. Rogov, an assis- tant Soviet military attache in Ottawa, or “Jan”, Rogov's code name. Then he refused to answer any other questions, although assured by the court that any information sup- plied could not be used against him. “I feel that I cannot answer questions that have a bearing on Alaska schools are now getting most of their applications from iteachers wanting to come north just for the trip or who have inferior qualifications, Dr. Ryan added. "Turnover in Alaska teachers is now averaging 45 percent. The reason, he said, is that Alaska pay rates \for teachers do not make up the |difference in living costs above {those in the States. Alaska teach- Jers, he added, often are not paid as well as policemen, garbage col- porary homes for war veterans and ’meir families. The roll call was 355 to 1. The dissenting vote was cast by Rep. Jessie Sumner (R-IIlL) ! SAN FRANCISCO — No - hestile Japanese forces ever landed on the west. coast of the United Statoa,| Sixth Army Headquarters here an-| nounced officially today, denying' a previous report. : MOSCOW-—The newspaper 'I‘rud,l i i i |SIMMONS AND BENECKE my own case,” Lunan said. S e e ning Companies at Anacortes, Whiz SEATTLE, March 26—A quart- BACK WITH NEW PLANE . STOCK QUOTATIONS Fish Products at Laconnor, Keller ¢r of a mile of the Sr')oqualmle‘ FOR ALASKA COASTAL - NEW YORK, Marca 26.—Clcsing Packing at Deer Harbor and Beach paes highway just west of ‘the sum- Packing Company at Bellingham. mit was buried today under 18 feet | P RN RS R of snow from Monday avalanches' SIHMER MovEMEN‘s x:;czna;:’w;gg:gm & Snowplow | gpen gimmons and Ben Benecke quotation of Alaska Juneau mine * B v s brias s o IGHRD vemcl“iof the Alaska Coastal Airlines re- stock today is 9%, Alleghany Cor- Eakta. trom 116, bound floundered 'theough’ the suow’ to turned Monday from New York City ' poraticn 67, American Can 98%, aaib In the amphibious Grumman which Anaconda 47%, Curtiss-Wright 8%, they purchased during their five-|International Harvester 90%, Ken- weeks business trip to the States. vecott 54';, New York Central 28, The newly-acquired ship, com- | Northern Pacific 30, United Cor- i ‘ | St to Margaret Schafer, from Seattle, had they gotten in the clear when organ of the Soviet trade uniol 'has criticized the continued pre-; sence of United States troops in |lectors or typists. He estimated the cost to the | Territory, if the higher pay brack- ets and increaged refunds to cities are put into effect would be $181,000 o b BN e R e il (Continued .on Page Eight) tion - is in violation of promises i made by the late President Roose- | Yelt. due sometime Thursday. North Sea scheduled to sail from Seattle today. from Seattle Friday. Aleutian scheduled to sail from Seattle Saturday. another avalanche completely cover- | ed the plow and the car. ‘Three giant snowplows and 20 w.es!. scheduled at T gafety after their machines were o'clock tonight. partly buried by one slide. Hardly pletely overhauled and reconverted, | is painted with the company colors | Iceland. It declares that such ac-. Princes§ Norah, scheduled to sail men are attacking the slide mday,"“‘" carries the ACA emblem and RN s R =z | Alaska flag. It will be used on re-| Philadelpbia has more than 200 theaters and motion picture houses. neau. poration 5%, Pound $4.03%. Sales today were 1,440,000 Dcw, Jones averages today U. S. Steel 84% Lti1e €4.58, ut'lities 4161, gularly scheduled flights out of Ju- as follows: industrials® 20938, rfl,& 4