The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 15, 1946, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE VOL. LXVI,, NO. 10,245 “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, MONDAY, APRIL 15, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS = | PRICE TEN CENTS FORCE TO ANSWER AGGRESS NEW ANGLE IN BRITISH LOAN IS UP Proposal that UK Turn Over Bases Leased fo U. . Sourdoughls (TEACHERS FOR Shot, Dispute SCHOOL YEAR Over Claims ARE ELECTED {George Po}f_er-KiHed in|Board Is R:(;ganized at | Mayo Hotel-Peter Nord | Meeting-Four Vacan- in Destroyer Deal Taken Into Custody cies Yet fo Be Filled At a school board meeting held By Jack Bell | DAWSON, Y. T, April 15.—The! WASHINGTON, April 16—A de- |fatal siocting of an old sourdough |in the office of the Superintendent mand that Britain yield up Atlantic |in a dispute over claims where gold |of Schools Friday night, April 12, bases in exchange for financial had been discovered is being in-|the reorganization of the board was ELECTICN TROUBLE IS THREATENED IN PHILIPPINES NOW |Claim Made Armed Bands May Prevent Free Bal- - loting at Polls MANILA, April 15. — President | Osmena announced today that he had ordered an investigation of a | complaint hy Presidential candid- ate Manuel Roxas that “terroristic | practices” of armed bands in cen- {tral Luzon prevent free balloting |there in the April 23 elections. JAM PACKED WEEK FACED * BY CONGRESS Plan to Rush Business Through Day and Night for Easter Holiday WASHINGTON, April 15.—House | | packed week of day and night ses- slons to shove through pending | offieials prepared today for a jam- | help developed support todny‘ vestigated by Royal Canadian among backers as well as critics of ' Mounted Police. the proposed $3,750,000,000 British ' loan. |dough of the Dawson and Mayo Senator Bankhead (D-Ala.), who | Districts, was shot and killed while joined a Banking Committee ma-|he lay in bed in his hotel room at jority last week in recommending Mayo. Police took Peter Nord into (accomplished for the coming year.| R. E. Robertson was again select- | George Potter, a veteran sour-|ed as President, Dr. J. O. Rude was' though a candidate for reelection, re-elected as clerk and Mrs. Pope- | |joy was re-clected as Treasurer. | Superintendent A. B. Phillips gave | |a resume of the Debate trip to| |Ketchikan and stated that in his| Osmena, who steadfastly has de- clined to campaign publicly al- expressed concern over Roxas’ | charges, which were brought to his attention by U. S. Commissioner | Paul V. McNutt. { Alfredo Montelibano, Secretary of Senate passage of the loan, a proposal to require the United | Kingdom to turn over bases leased | Whitehorse detachment of the R. C.|tural advantages offered in High to the United States for 99 years, M. P. was flown to Mayo to probe,School training. | in the destroyer deal made by Pres- the case which has all the bizarre | | details of a dime-magazine story of son, Mrs. Carl Weidman, Mrs. Her- | ident Roosevelt. i “I think it is greedy and hoggish tb of Great Britain to ask for this, an- | custody for questioning in connec- nounced that he intends to support | tion with the shooting. opinion it should be encouraged|the Interior, told the President that Inspector H. H. Cronkhite of the |again next year as one of the cul-!unrest in the central Luzon area 'wt\s caused by poor living condi-| tions rather than politics. | -, The resignation of Dalma Han»‘ | ne colorful northland. |bert Arlowe and Clarence L. Ander- | Mayor is near the geographical son were accepted. Miss Hanson is| business before an Easter holiday. “We'll meet from 10 am., to 10 p.m,, if necessary, to get the neces- sary legislation passed,” House Democratic whip John told a reporter. Democratic leader John McCor- mick of Massachusetts said that present plans call for the Easter recess to start Thursday night and continue until Monday, April 29. Before the holiday begins, how- ever, the House must adopt and| send to the Senate at least two ma- | jor administration bills, he added. - One is the draft extension act, Sparkman | WANT IRAN ISSUE OFF . UN AGENDA i | | e | Subject Placed Squarely in | Lap of Security Coun- | cil by Firouz ; BULLETIN—New York, April 15. an officially withdrew its complaint against Soviet Russia befere the United Nations Se- curity Council today. | Dr. Quo Tai-chi, Chairman | of the Council, informed the delegates shortly after the | Council met at 3:08 p.m. ES.T. that he had received a letter | frem the Iranian Ambassador Hussein Ala, LONGSHORE STRIKE STILL STALEMATED; VESSEL PICKETTED ILWU Refuses fo Load Can- nery Supplies on Cor- dova at Seattle SEATTLE, April 15.—Members of | the Alaska local of the Interna- tional Longshoremen and Ware- housemen’s Union threw a picket! Alaska line around the Cordova, steamship Company vessel berthed at Pler 56, this forenoon. The Cordova, according to L. W. Baker, General Manager of the Alaska Line, was scheduled to load cannery supplies today for depar- ture Thursday. “The vessel was scheduled to head for cannery ports which are not af- fected by the Longshoremen’s strike in Alaska,” Baker sald. “She financial assistance and be willing center of the Yukon Territory, east the first teacher in Juneau to actu- to give nothing in return,” the' of Dawson and north of White- jally retire from active service un- Alabama Senator told a reporter.' horse, and is about 1,100 air miles der the new Teachers Retirement Martial Law “I think she ought to turn over those bases to us.” Under the warume lease, the bas- es cannot be used by the United ! northwest of Vancouver. | Police said Nord attempted to ,taFe his own life before he was taken into custody. Only meager details about the {Act. f Grade School The following teachers werz elected for the coming term: ! Marian Kniffen, Kindergarten. A' (h @! The other priority legislation pro- | anganun; | g § | witn {on which only a final vote is need- | | ed today. vides for continuation of numerous controversial amendments pending, debate on this is expected to consume nearly all the time. OPA. withdrawing the case, Russia, with the agree- |Was to carry only cannery supplies| ment of Iran, formally demand- |And workers.” | ed tcday that the United N Steve Glumaz, Pacific Northwest | tions Security Council drep the representative of the ILWU, a Russian-Iranian case. Congress of Industrial Organiza- The United States immediate- |tions affillate, said Seatttle long- | ly opposed the Soviet proj 1, |shoremen will observe the picket ! S i line and refuse to load the Cor- By Joseph C. Goodwin {dova, | TEHRAN, April 15—Iran placed CHUmaz said all attempts to end! squarely in the lap of the Umted;‘hc 13-day-old Alaska strike, which ! | Nations ‘Security Council today the |28 tled up ships and halted move-, | question of whether the Soviet- Ment of freight and passengers, Iranian dispute should be removed ‘have bean . unsuccessful. | from the Council's agenda. 1 ——— { | Prince Mozaftar Firouz, Propa- [ON THREAT TRUMAN. PUTS FINGER UPON WAR'S ROOTS fPresidenI Calls on Pan- America fo Eradicate Poverty, Despair | WASHINGTON, April 15-—Presi- dent Truman called upon the American Republics today to help eradicate “the poverty and despair” which breeds wars. Speaking at a Pan American Day |observance, Mr. Truman urged con- {tinued hemispheric solidarity and |resistance to the “forces of reac- dangerous adventure.” “That (atomic) age, he told the governing board of the Pan-Ameri- can Unioh, “will either be one of complete devastation, or one in which new sources of power will lighten the labors of mankind and increase standards of living all over the world.” Force Against Aggression The President declared in a‘pre- pared speech that willingness to use force, if necessary, to prevent even the threat of aggression, “will not of itself eliminate the deep causes of unrest such &s those re- sponsible for two wars.” Nazi madness (THaS 10 conRiBie « prrced Katherine Gray, First Grade. Ruth Cronkite, First Garde. Esther Lindenmeyer, First Grade. Rose Olive King, 2nd Grade. Ethel Murphy, 2nd Grace. Betty Harvard, 3rd Grade. i Mrs. Leonard Berlin, 3rd Grade.| Senator McFarland (D-Ariz,), Shooting are available in Dawson. mittee approval of the base ex- A change proposal, said he would re- fore the Senate, probably t.omormw.: fllES MA"Y o N I McEarland vaked, SEalueh fhe Qow- | Marian ‘Witiamson, 4th' Grade. | sure to the Senate | Helen Webster, 4th Grade. ul 4 | Elma Olson, 6th Grade. Arriving with Alaska‘ Airlines| Margaret Maland, 6th Grade. who sought and was denied com-| AR S new it when the loan bill comes be- | mittee’s action in sending the mea- WEEKE"D FI_IGHIS e | Alberta Murphy, 5th Grade. Saturday were the following pas-, Dorothy McLeod, Tth Grade. ‘Iensiqn_ls High Other pending bills of which ac- | tiont is desired will be sandwiched |in during consideration of the OPA Russians Are Withdrawing ™55 cuo major bits get smageca from Manchurian (ap- " Pohinsea. i Seucons e ital-Communists Fight &=~ === CHUNGKINE;:!I 15.—Chan8-:IHREE SE(IIO"S chun, Manchuria’s capital, was re-| ported under martial law todsy ' Iganda Director, said the question | |was a matter of “procedure which | the Council itself must decide.” | Firouz also disclosed that Iran i would inform the Council that the | Tehran government “has no doubt” | that - the recent Soviet-Iranian agreement will be “loyally and hon- | | | | ‘ orably carried out.” | | He said that new instructions had i been telegraphed to Hussein Ala,| {Iranian Ambassador to the United | | States, “to the effect that he would | “Underneath the "were the material distress and spir- ;ltual starvation born of povery and St | despair,” he said. TOKYO—For the first time in| “The danger of war will never history the Jewish: Passover will be |©¢ completely wiped out until these throughout Japan and Korea to- TO0LS ©f war are themselves elimin- at, 2 to. (Ated. To do that,s :'.gf?c. ,m:;fm_n J.L Welss ‘“_"‘,'f'_'hhe kind or i ¥ "lana spiritual—to which the NUERNBERG — Hermann Goer- D; m:: world are ndeuz:u?ilm ing returned to the prisoners’ box © Jec l:: "d mus % e at the International War Crimes ® ‘., An > Small—pox DeathToll - cngers from Anchorage: Robert! Audrie Katherine Elle, 7th Grade. Elva Rice, 8th Grade. John! Ralph Wright, 8th Grade. | |Erickson, .B. C. 1 A' sea"le Is "Ow 1 ‘Ntciml?o]n, e JS’S:Z?S’L", with tension increasing as Russian i troops evacuated the Communist- surrounded city. P smallpox death toll now stands at 10. The latest victims were both elderly men one 72 and the other 81. Health authorities say that both victims suffered other ailments aleng with smallpox. Twenty two active cases and one suspected case remain in the King County hospital. Seven patients Delozier, Dorothy Mills, W. ael J. Haas. On the return flights, the fol- lowing were flown to the West- ward City: Mrs. Roy Downing, Joan Downing, O. Johnson, Maxine Ben- adon, Barbara Boussum, Frank Kuz- |na, Sharon Kuzna, C. A. Rowland, Walter Beyeler, Marcus Goodman, John Goodman, Mrs. Ethel Solvin,; Jack Westfall, J. R. Hayes, J. L.| L SEATTLE, April 15—This city's Hufford, H. L. Stevens and Mich-| Mary Monagle, Nurse. i J. T. Shofner, Instrumental Mu- !sic. High School Mary Brooks, History. R. T. Byrns, English. Emily Dean, English. | Helyn Hoskins, Commercial. Myrtle Phillips, Languages. Marjoriz Tillotson, Mathematics. Arlene Walker, Mathematics. T. F. Dryden, Principal. | A government Central News | Agency dispatch said the govern-| |ment garrison commander inside ! | the citv had laid down strict rules, including a prohibition against pub- ! e gaonerings, The dispatch also charged that ; Communist troops attacked Chang- jchun’s airfield for ten hours yes- Robert Des Marias, Mirst Officer ian attempt to have the case re- terday as the Soviet rear guard Frank Mullen and Stewarcoss Paul- | Moved from the agenda). | FLOWN WEEKEND BY PNA AIRLINE Pacific Northern Airlines flew |three sections during the weekend | on the Junéau Anchorage run. The planes carried a total of 53 pas- !sengers to and from these cities,| and to Naknek. Saturday's section with Captain {inform the Security Council that! iria] today, after having recovered | |on the conclusions of the Soviet-! |Iramian Persian agreement it was from a cold which caused him to' remain in his cell for three days. 1flgreed that Soviet troops would Joachim von Ribbentrop was ab- |evacuate all Persia by May 6. |gent today, suffering from what (The Council is scheduled to con- medical officers diagnosed as “fa- isider the TIranian question at a tigue, with nervousness and head- | | meeting at 3 pm. (EST) in New aches.” | York today. British and American ! ! bodied . in the word “democracy” which “is the rallying ery today for free men eéverywhere in their struggle for a hetter human life.,” Asserting “democracy” carries “different meaning in different languages,' he added: “It is fortunate that we of ihc sources in New York indicated that NEW YORK-—Rexford Guy Tug- ,was withdrawing from the city. It jn. Knight flew to following pas- | their countries would oppose a Rus- | e, governor of Puerto Rico, said before leaving by airplane for Chi- cago that he expected to accept a position on the staff of the Univer- | Firouz said that Ala also was Pan American nations do have cer- tain common, fundamental under- standings of what the word ‘de- mocracy’ means. “Despite our differances in have been discharged as cured. |nejgon, H. Berger, W. W. Atkinson,: A. N. Eide, Sciences. { estimates that 30,000 Communist sengers to Juneau: Jackie Joseph’:"lnstructed to inform the Council sity of Chicago. “Naturally, If T 80, janguage and cultures, we do have tion” In the atomic era’s “great and * | celebrated on @ community scale jeconomic ills which constitute the . | troops had surrounded the cil\. |Fred Bartlet, Arthur Hedges, Vir-|Of the facts in the case, and of the | Government troops number far ginia Carter, Verna Flasheund, M.| fact that we do not doubt that less, for the bulk of the American- snyder, Jerry Noonan, Bill m(.lnsreemem will be carried out.” W. F. Jones and D. R. Ostland. | Phyllis Grant, Heme Ec and Girls ‘To Cordova: Fred Forrest, Joe;P. E. he said, he would resign his post , gesire to improve the well-beiug | 85 governor. {of our citizens.” Forrest, Homer Dokken, Chester; Henry Harmon, Shop and Prin- Moore, J. Stanley, Hagen Anderson; ! cipal. |Tom Oswald, John Myron, sr,,l Gertrude MecSpedden, John Myron, Jr., William Forrest,|and Commercial. {James Jones, George Jones, Floyd| A. B. Phillips, Superintencent. |Hamby, Vernon Wold, Joe Stan-| Mrs. Leonard Berlin is a former ‘dre, and A. Wegdable. {teacher of Juneau, and now teach- WASHINGTON The British| Arriving yesterday were the fol-ing in Fairbanks. She will return The Washington Merry - Go-Round By DREW PEARSON Secretary Foreign Office has sent some se-|loWing passengers from Anchorage: ito Juneau for the Third Grade. Mrs. B. Jensen, W. H. Cameron, | Miss Esther Lindenmeyer, elected cret and significant cables to Lord |equipped First Army is some 100 hcim, Nera Olson, Ed Gilkey, E. E. | miles away, being resisted in its Stander, Joseph Riccio, Edward {advance by Communist troops in Kirsch, Raymond L. Rauch, Doro- i the vicinity of Szepingkai. |thy Whitney, A. D. Painter, Bert R Zimmerly, Elmer A. Langstra. On Sunday’s flight to Naknek ;lABoR ADvISo |were W. Olson, Ray Gulsetch, Vern | |Sorsline, Stan Oloriely, ~Mareus |Kelly, Ed Macke, Alec Vochtel, M. | Wilson, Ray Putmen, Ray Thomp- ' “The Persian government can- | not fix a course to be taken by the | Council, which must itself, under 1its regulations, make the necessary | decigion,” he added. | The agreement, besides establish- line the May 6 deadline for the Russian withdrawal, provides for SINGAPORE—A world rice short age of 3,000,000 tons is reported in a statistical release from the of- fice of Lord Killearn, Special Com- missioner in southeast Asia investi- rating the food situation. PEARL HARBOR—The Pacific the creation of a Russian-Iranian | . RKemst Reaction | Declaring that the American Re- publics have repeatedly reaffirm- ed theif devotion to Democracy’s ideals “in the face of constant ,propaganda for Nazi and Fascist doctrines,” the President express- ed confidence they will continue the “hold stand” with which “they Cadogan and other British diplo- mats in the United States giving| them instructions on the ticklish | Spanish quastion. They indicate that the United States and Great| Britain have worked out a partner- ship policy regarding Franco, with the Vatican in consultation. One cable advises that the Unit- ed States and the United Kingdom are to “postpone or complicate” procedure at the United Nations until Franco has worked out a compromise in Spain. This is ex- actly what Lord Cadogan has done. The cabled instructions, para- phrased to prevent code break- downs, follow: 5 “U. 8. and U. K. are against Mrs. W. H. Cameron, Larry Flahart, Sam Silver, H. F. Beck, Helen Cass, Mrs. Louise Miller, Capt. Ben Peters, Gordon Buckman, and D. Hanks. On the return flight, the follow- /ing were flown to Anchorage: Roy |Rutherford, Ralph Mize, Edward Poynton, John Helfrich, Mrs. Mar- gie Stevens, H. L. Stevens, John |Folta, C. Beard, Eva Via, John Bush, V. Denson, and Clyde Keyte. ——.t—— IMAINTENANCE JOBS AVAILABLE, ALASKA;: jto teach in the first grade for next year, has been teaching in Peters- burg for the last four years and is a sister "of Fred Lindenmeyer, former coach of Juneau High. { ‘Teachers still to be elected are as follows: [ High School— Boys’' coach. Grade School—Fifth Grade teach-| jer and girls P. E, Vocal Music and Art. — e | STOCK QUOTATIONS i quotation of Alaska Juneau mine; ‘,swck today is 8%, Alleghany Cor-| {poration 7%, American Can 97, NEW YORK, April 15—Closing spoke at the Lions’ meeting today, EXPLAINS VETS HELP 10 LIONS Large Parfi)f Today’si Luncheon Meeting Is 1J Devofed fo Rafs | Walter Lee, Senior Field Repre-| sentative of the U. 8. Department of Labor, Apprentice Division,| at noon, and expl the set-up; for veterans under the GI bill of| rights, especially in regards to/ Ison, M. Fiskness, J. Hertlein, A. R. Drizzolari, Andy Nimeich, Ralph Kraydhuck, Car] Bertelson, Howard Tibbles. Leaving for Anchorage yesterday with Captain Joe Morris, First Officer Ed Bowman, Stewardess June Rees, were: T. Brown, Carl ohnson, Joe Thempson, John Do- vine, Mrs. R. Gonimell and child, L. C. Peters, Sig Sanvick, Mrs. 8. Sanvick, Earl Cambert, A. Anner- man, Maury Keating, Don Peter- son, Jack Tyson, Mrs. A. Ander- (son; to Cordova: L. Freeman, Mark | Jensen, J. Stout. e WYLLERS GO SOUTH; !oil company and specifies that the problem of dealing with an auton- |omous government established in! Fleet’s destroyer and mmnarine‘h,,,e resisted the forces of reaction commands will be moved to San | from aboard during the last decade. Diego, the former about May 1. | “Certain political rights,” he said, =it ‘“are fundamental to freedorh—free |Iran’s Azerbaijan Province is an | TEHRAN — Planting of opium | “internal” cne tor Iran to handle. | | beering poppies in Iran was for-| speech, a free press, the right of le assembly, freedom of con- COASTAL ARRLINES LY EGHT T0DAY Alaska Coastal Alrfires flew the following passengers today: to Tul-| sequah, Sydney Preston, George| Trimble, H. E. Gregorson; to Ketchikan. Louise ‘Miller; to Skag-| way, Capt. B. Pelerls, L. Dotson, Carl Bloomquist; to Haines, Harry Williams. “idden in a proclamation issued bvlscience and the right of the peopie Premier Ahmed Qavam. The Pre-to choose their fofm of govern- mior said in a radio speech recent- |ment, ly that “80 percent of the populn-l tion is addicted to opium.” Goal Of Nations “It is obvious that these goals require first of all the efforts of TOKYO—Prince Morimasa Nash- |each nation within itself. But if imoto, only member of the Imper-|we have learned anything in the ial family jailed as a suspected war last decade it is that no nation criminal, has been freed from Su-|can stand . Only through a gamo prison for lack of evidence. |genuine co-operative effort can these goals be achieved in the BUENOS AIRES—Col. Juan D.;world at large. Peron probably will be lnnugurated' “They require international co- | for his six-year term as Argentina’s operation toward expanding pro- i , Commi 1 d | serving ticesnip in the skilled | - t;‘::l?:r‘ixa :-?:4 cwmw:l:l::l :;,!‘:::des- lertn L | wn-l. SEE BRomER Gov!k"on Dui i 29th President between June 4 and duction, increasing world trade, and ! June 20, the National Congress will | developing natural resources so that International Harvester 95, Kenne-| James Stones, of the Territorial| On a combined government and | cott 57, |Department of Health, explained personal business trip, Chris F.| BACK TUESDAY | mect in the later part of May. |all efforts to improve living stan- 4 | BN S jdards may rest upon a solid ba- Gov. Erncst Gruening, expected New York OCentral 27%,, some of the features of the rat‘wy""_ Engineer in charge of me; ss.” | Northern Pacific 30%, United Cor-| iporation 5%, U. S. Steel 83%, control program now under way In pyublic Roads Administration of-| \ opening Franco case at U. N. xor’How Io GET IHEM the momen'. Believe that if diplo- matic weight is continued to be SFATTLE, April 15.—Applications put on gradually, Franco will effect | for A'askan engineering and con- compromise acceptable to most fac- | struction jobs will be accepted in tions, though not acceptable to re- the Armv Engineers’ Seattle per- vengeful, professional, traditional!sonnel office, 600 Textile Tower, Pound $4.03%. Sales today were 1,170,000 shares. back at his headquarters here this Juneau, and said that rat harbor-|fice here, left today by plane for i |age, garbage disposal and coordi-|the States. He is accompaniedl by week end, after addressing the AFL | CURTIS SHATTUCK BACK | The American tradition, Mr. Tru- man’ said, rests on the belief that Spanish clique. | Col. Conrad P. Hardy, Seattle Dis- “This clique (Spanish Gommun-| trict Engineer, announces. ! ists) would not accept envisaged, The Seattle office will serve as| Republicans set up anyhow. Negrin |employment agent for the Aluskan] (former premier) sits most uneas-| Department. Personnel is needed ily among the Republicans. Del| for maintenance work at Attu, Vayo (former Republican Minister|Adak, Shemya, Amchitka, Fort| of Foreign Affairs) trying to effect| Randall, Fort Glenn on Umnak Is- compromise in Republican party.|land, Fort Richardson at Anchor- Del Vayo one of few Negrin spon- age, Ladd Field at Fairbanks and sors left. Nome. “On the other hand, a large el i part of the Republicans are ac- CHICAGOANS HERE | Harvester 95, Kennecott 567%, New | ceptable to U. K. and U. S. inas-| Mr. and Mrs. Larry Mills, of | York Central 27%, Northern Paci- much as they are against Com-|Chicago, are guests at Hotel Ju- fic 30%, United Corporation 5%, munists: { neau. U. S. Steel 82%, Pound $4.03%. Sales Saturday were 610,000 E. A. VINCENT HERE shares. E. A. Vincent, of Ketchikan, has{ Dow, Jones averages Saturday arrived in Juneau. He is registered were as follows: industrials 206.0Z, at the Baranof. rails 6343, utilities 42.54. sy | Dow, Jones averages today are; as follows: industrials 206.01, rails 63.58, utilities 42.58. SALES SATURDAY Closing quoiaiion of Alaska Ju-| neau mine stock last Saturday was 8%, Alleghany Corporation 7%, { American Can 97%, Anaconda 46%, | Commonwealth and Southern 4%, | Curtiss-Wright 7%, Internntlonal! ——o— ROOSEVELT'S MISTAKE “Russia, in winning this section — 4 (Continued on Page Four) |showing simple methods of control,| nation with the annual spring!wmrs. wWyller. vclean up” in Juneau would re-!' Mr ‘Wyller will go first to the ceive special attention. Several | regional office of his agency, at Lions were requested to assist inlportland, Oregon to confer with the program. (officials there. Following that, he A colored sound motion picture wij continue south to San Fran- of “Rats on the Farm” was shown.;cm on annual leave. At San Francisco, Mr. Wyller will and likely places of rat harbor-|join g brother who has racently age.y arrived in this country from Nor- Lion Doctor Rude, Chairman of way Mr and Mrs. Wyller expect the Boys' and Girls' Committee, (o he gone from Juncau about two said that each Lion is to show up|yweeks, with either a boy or a girl of| Scouting age for the program that| is planned for next week. B. Donaldson, of Seattle, a Ki-| Mr. and Mrs. Harold Perry be- wanian, Emery A. Vincent, of{came the parents of a girl at 1:46 Ketchikan, Felix Huuter, and Lion|am. Sunday in St. Ann’s Hospital. Warren of Fairbanks, were guests| 'The baby weighed 6 pounds 8 of the Club today. ounces at birth, — GIRL FOR PERRYS {convention at Anchorage, has | FROM (AMP‘IG" IRIP “the state exists for the benefit of changed his plans and flew in~| man,” and the American repub- shond to Fairbanks, bis offlce here| Gy Shattuck, candidate for lics have overwhelmingly rejected ;’t]p‘:r:(d ":::y"’ GO‘:‘ G"f"mg‘st !S|the’ Alaska Senate from the First “the false doctrine that man ex- motrou’ ved to return here 0~/ yygcial Division, today was back ists for the benefit of the state.” { {in town after campaigning in Skag-| He paid tribute to the part the ,way and Haines. Curtis is a member of the Terri- Secretary of State Cordell Hull |torial House at pfesent. iplayed in building the inter-Ameri- G o e lcan “good neighbor policy” which H ARRY pA"ERSo" Is ibe said laid the foundation for the bodeau for this evening’s weekly Fou"D DE‘D o" Bo"‘ American Legion get-together. — | United Nations. The U. N, he de- clared, “will succeed. It must suc- - Up for discussion tonight will be; Harry Patterson, wellknown old-J{ J. A. EDWARDS RETURNS the subject of preference for vet-|timer, was found dead this after- —— erans in purchasing surplus prop-|noon on his boat, the Murelet, in! J. A. Edwards has returned to erty. The sale of hoats concerned the Small Boat Harbor, The body Juneau after & six months business was first slated for April 23, but was taken to the Charles W. Cart- and vacation trip to the States. He has been postponed to a later date. er Mortuary. is at Hotel Juneau. —— .- AMERICAN LEGION | TO INITIATE TONIGHT Tnitiation and changed meeting, calendar were announced today by Juneau Post Commander Joe Thi-| ‘late President Roosevelt and former °

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