The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 23, 1946, Page 4

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Daily Alaska Empi Published every evening except Sunday b)’plhu EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY | Second and Main Streets, Juneau, Alaska HELEN TROY MONSEN LOROTHY TROY LINGO WILLIAM R. CARTER ELMER A. FRIEND i a consequence, dent Vice-President Editor and Manager Managing Editor - - Governor !will expand as the output of industry mounts and the Terror in America Ellis Arnall of Georgia is not one of | those narrow defenders of States’ rights who maintain THE DAILY ALASKA EMP 4 pres: B | — | ire on prices declines. = | — Wiy | 1 | (New York Times) | BBy B ALFRED ZENGER - - - - Business Manager . AUGUST 23 o e Seen G saiier, that o “outsider” has any business to intervene when & oo w. McNaughton e Entered in the Post Office in Juneau as Second Class Matter. {orror and Stiob Ee sH n: CIRTR S B SRR £e8 Sealn B B LR T terror and violence swept their communitiés. Gavernor | & 7. Bitvkea . Delivered by carrier in Jltvlr:naum:nd Douglas ;nz:ol.m‘) per month; Arnall has telegraphed President Truman his warm | % Gleiin A wards > six months, $8.00; one year, $15. apprecia ‘the y o Federa 4 badi B N appreciation of “the full cooperation of the Federal | J Clifton ¥, Broen 5 One vear, n‘u advance, $15.00; six months, in advance, $7.50; Government. the Departmentt of Justice and the Fed- | ¥ Timothy Hillerman . sne month, in fdvance, $1.50 % sstigatic PNy o @ Subseribers will confer a favor if they will promptly notity CFl Burcau of Investigation in assisting State .and |, Mrs. B. R. Glass . <he Business Office of any failure or irregularity in the delivery local authorities to apprehend the desperadoes who % Thomas E. Hall s f their papers nohe legroe 7 36 ool i Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374. l)n(h(fi" four Negroes in Walton County, Ga., on ¥ Ruben Ramberg 'S R tom o i - |July 25" We believe he and other Governors, North | ¢ 0 "0 SRS, O MEMBER CIA’ 9 e g Sty . Mrs. Tom (Pat) Dyer The Assottated Pross i €xOlusively eHEt6d to ‘the \se for and South, should also welcome the action of the & % rapublication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice| & o 0 0§ 0 ¢ o o o o o vise credited in this paper and also the local news published Lerein. = It is not ea Federal authority NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES - Alaska Newspapers, 1411 fourth Avenue Bldg., Seattle, Wash tion. But if we for better race where. But this hope a FULL EMPLOYMENT Ay after the ending of hostilities the 60 million jobs that Secretary Wallace set as a goal to be striven for have been excceded. Census Bureau reports for July put civilian employment at slightly more than Including 2,600,000 in the armed services, the total This amazing record, testifying to the rapid absorption into the labor market of returning veterans. It looks even | better compared with the figures of a year ago. For, /| during the period, three million women have withdrawn voluntarily from paid positions | or been dropped, while the number of men employed 58 million comes to nearly 61 million. is an| -8 is the nickel intervening nearly has risen 6.6 million. For a long time to come it looks as if the problem | in investigating the activities of the Ku Klux Klan.* of a State line is not often a case for Federal action But a lynching is not merely a murder. the breakdown of orderly processes of law in a com- A Federal anti-lynching law may not be the solu- | crescendo of a chronic denial of civil rights the case ‘We may hope in for Federal legislation may be stronger. relations—better Georgia as well as in Michigan, if small vigorous problem will have to be made by the Federal Gov- ernment and the States alike. | The Nickel Is Back again D MAJOR WAGNER IS TRANSFERRED; to draw the line between State and A murder not involving the crossing It may mean munity. In Walton County it has obviously meant the terrorization of innocent persons, both Negro and white. Major W. E. Spence of the Georgia State lEAVES TODAY Bureau of Investigation Indirectly testifies as much when he posts handbills giving assurance that the S~ identity of those giving information will “be kept | y confidential.” And this situation is not solely a| After having spent the past use of ccncern to the law-ablding majority in |Dours in “samouflage” due to ant Geotiih * 16 hRLS Il 5P, climatic conditions following a gala farewell party Thursday night, and last-minute cancellation of Friday's plane accommodations, Maj. Chester Wagner, Commander of the Juneau Subport, this morning left by Pan American Airways for attle Port of Embarkation Although sorry to leave Juneau where he has been in command of the Subport for the past 19 months, Major Wagner is relieved to make true his goodbyes to Juneau, which think of lynchng as the tragic human relations California and el minorities def attack on | | | | | at | the vicious concerted and and he declares he ‘has been saying (Cincinnati Enquirer) |sinca April 15 when the Subport Amid all the portents of inflation, we were in-|operation was turned over to the trigued by the announcement of the diretcor of the | Army Engineers mint, Mrs. Nelli® Tayloe Ross, that the nickel| Shipped ahead of him on an | Army tugboat were 19 large cases of The anomaly is explained by the fact that in|Army records concerning Juneau| wartime both nickel and copper became too precious |Subport and its forr personnel for war uses to waste on an unnecessary thing like a [ These will be reviewed at the coin, and so, for the duration, the nickel contained |Seattle headquarters, and a state- no nickel and less than the usual amount of copper.|ment of inactivation for the Sub- The wartime “ersatz” nickel contained 35 per cent |port as an Army station, issued. All silver, 56 per cent copper, and 9 per cent maganese. |records were recently audited and Although it sounds like a better bargain than the pre- |approved by Col. Prentice Wise and | war nickel of 25 per cent nickel and 75 per cent copper, | his assistant. H of unemployment would be largely of academic interest | Indeed, the prospect of labor shortages is the im- mediate concern of the industries that are struggling | to meet the demands of unsatisfied consumers. Since shortening of the working week and reduction of overtime have been factors in increasing the demand for labor, it is obvious that a return to longer working | hours will afford some relief to hard-pressed employers. | However, overtime work has the disgdvantage of | adding to production costs. Some extra labor can also | be obtained by persuading women who have returned | to their homes to reenter employment. But the surest way to increase production without stepping up pro- duction costs is to increase labor’s efficiency. been a gro The tight labor situation emphasizes the import- ance of increased efficiency in the utilization of labor, not only to employers but to employees, whose real earnings (expressed in terms of goods and services) for all we care | it did not serve as well in circulation, one disadvantage being that it took on a yellowish oxidation of the silver, nowhere near as pronounced as the wartime penny, which looked like a dime, and, despite the calculations of coinage experts, kept on looking like a badly beaten- up dime instead of turning the expected black At any rate, the old vintage of 25 per cent nickel nickels is back with us again. reccnverted, if no one else ha t deal more concerned about the purchasing power of the nickel than we have been with if to acquire a faintly yellowish tinge. usually able to hold onto one of the coins to tell much about what color it is. The thing of first importance, if we dare make a suggestion to a branch of the government, is to make To heck with the color. The Subport will now be used sole- tinge caused by |ly by the Army Engineers, Alaskan Its failure in this regard was |Department. Lumber piles and all lother property thers was transferr- ed to the Engineers several months ago Thursday night Major Wagner was guest of honor at a farewell dinner at Mike's, at which approxi- mately 20 of his friends gathered to offer toasts and best wishes. The dinner was followed by a return to Juneau's Bubble Room where the Major was honored with an played and O'Reillys, and wishod| by numerous Juneau| The U. S. mint has But, frankly, we have | s tendency In fact, we aren’t 1y coins— pecially-dedicated song sung by the voyasg i | | Gaston cabled the Treasury De- partment from London asking per- mission to file a dissent from the The Washingfon Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page One) estine into Arab-Jewish zones. But the British have access to all cables leaving London. So they held the postwar nickel buy as much as the prewar nickel. |residents It can be a flaming purple, | He was also complimented with a | ismall private party by Lew Will- jams at his apartment on Gold| Grady-Morrison plan to divide Pal- | | Sudetenland as far as he was con-{spent the rest of the time trying to| sis over the Czech Sudetenland, g Avenue | Lord Runciman spent weeks in| yegierday Major Wagner was still Czechoslovakia passing out secret ..o word that Hitler could have the| Afier attending a quict movie, he cerned. So by the time the Big gay out of sight. Four met in Munich, the surrender 3 Imen’s events IRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA i CAMPBELL RIVER /ANDREWMAYIS | AREA STRUCK BY | IMPROVING BUT 700-ACRE BLAZE STILL SICK MAN ' TONSBURG, Kj S | i in' PRE Aug. 23.— Forest Fires Follow in w35 S Gt o the| ) H % House Military Committee, is “im-; ifi Dr. John Archer, one of his phy-| Pacific Northwest. oo suporioa vades i | Dr. Archer said May still was con- | (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) {fined to his hed a this home here| Pacitic Northwest fire fighters and that “as far as I know he has| waiting watchfully today for a not yet sat up.” The physician,! ew outbreak of fires in the tim- who with his brother—Dr. George! -dry forest regions of Oregon, Archer—has keen treating the Con-| said he had been seeing ! 1shington and British Columbia. grefsman: i umerous bls broke out yes- May “almost every day | erday in widely scattered areas in Dr. Archer declined to estimate| e wake of lightning storms. One how long it would be kefore May | re in Oregon's Mount Hood for- would be completely recoveyed from reported to have been what the physician termed previous- man-set ly a “gercral collapse.” Despite the dangerous condition The Congressman is suffering C. Otto Linch, Regional Fire Chie from complications from a hea cported “an exceptionally favor- ailment and was stricken in Wask ible forest fire season” in Wash- ington last month Hez returned ington and Oregon national forests to his home- August 1. with only 240 minor fires - 2 Only in British Columbia were ! the flames continuing unchecked AN y ! mnd there 300 men backfired a | large area and were reported last' FOR WH“""ER night to be hopeful of controlling' | a 700 acre blaze in the Campbell - | River area on Vancouver Island.| In & recent meeting of Anchor-| Some 2,000.000 board feet of felled 8¢ businessmen with directors (vl‘ and bucked timber already was de- the Chamber of Commerce, it was| stroyed and another 5,000,000 board decided that it would L of Whittier to be op- feet threaterfed. for the p ) op-/ The largest fire reported in ened immed to civilian nul-" Washington yesterday was a 160- fi¢ el acre blaze neai Satsop in Grays' An:emphatic statement was re-| Harbor County. Two Western Lane lcased anncuncing this sentiment| fires in Oregon blackened &fter a vote of 21 to 0 passed a | es. .motion requesting the action. Those | - A present at the meeting held that 'tke opening of Whittier would move most of the conditions which | "agze waterfront seem desirable. i After a lengthy discussion on the | question of Whether or mot the| people wanted the waterfront open- OSLO, Norway, Aug. land’s athletes dominated ed, the following motion was pre-| ening program of the sented and passed: “We \n'gf’nflv: request that the port of Whittier! be opened immediately for civilian | traffic, otherwise that ocean trans- portation be permitted to use the 23—Fin- the op- European track and field champicnships yes- port facilities at Anchorage.” terday, taking three of the first - > o { {four events in the four-day meet and placing second in two of them. A capacity crowd of 30,000 turn- ed out at Bislet Stadium as King Haakon personally opened the first renewal of the Quadrennial Games since 1938 Gilbert fo Head M1, | McKinley Airfreight s 'LE, Auz. 23.—Jack N. Gil- bert today announced his appoint- athletes Finnish placed first in the 4l-kilometer marathon, the ment as manager of the new Mount 10,000-mete run and the hop, McKinley Air Freight Co. Inc., and step and jump. the opening of headquarters here N. Hitanen of Finland captured The company, which carries freight the marathon in 2 hours, 24 min- and passengers between here and utes and 55 seconds. Alaska points, is headed by Ja Russia, whose athletes are com- venius. Gilbert has had 35 |peting in the meet for the first experience in Alaska busin ti since 1923, dominated the wo- merly with the salmon industry, and headed a shipbuilding plant in lEGION AUXILMRY ‘ Bellingham during the war. ’ DELEGATES ELEcTED Correspondents Wed; - — — R R S St ol A | re-| ) i orning, 3 backward | playing our cards straight across UP Gaston's message to Washing-| of the Sudetenland was a foregone 1011:\";\|mf]:xr|111ci?m:\ :\‘:\'Al:*rixw"x)l\u"ux:-‘} the United Nations board, with ab-|ton while they scurried round to, conclusion—agreed to in advance|,...c but a definite Hlhise of e SR solutely no big power alliance that the American Embass lodged a by British appeasers. ‘livi the Major tock off for American Legion Auxiliary dele- we can maintain the world lead- | Protest against Gaston’s activities| Historians already are """""“““"sm'mp_ gates and alternates to the De- ership which is ours for the ask-|and persuaded Ambassador Averell the probability that if we had | R S | partmental convention to be held ing. Ever since Britain and Russia combined to stop Napoleon in 1815, their armies and navies have been looking down the muzzles of each others guns. For 100 years they have been the two most powerful, most suspicious, most opposite ri- vals in all Europe. And today Eng- lang, weak, old, and fighting for survival, figures that her only sal- vation is playing off the against the USSR. ' USA | | first step toward war .1! it knows | (COPYRIGHT, BELL SYNDICATE, INC. 1946) {4th to 32nd degre: calf and Mrs. Hugh Antrim. it will have to suffer a major re- ATLANTIC CHARTER FLOUTED | -~ - .- - ROBERT F. MORGAN HERE taliatory war. It was pointed out never would have | STEAMER MOVEME Honeymoonin France PARIS, Aug. 23.—Daniel DeLuce,! Harriman to cable a critical report | checked the Spanish Fascist, if wvci in Ketchikan Sept. 12, 13, 14 and aggociated Press correspondent, and on Gaston to the State Depar had stopped Hitler in the Ruhr, 1I‘MASON DEGREE 15, have been elected and an- app Stringer, former United Press ment. Thus Harriman’s protest ar- we had prevented his carving up | [nounced as follow war co ;prmdvm. left today for rived before Gaston's cable and Czechoslovakia, or even if we had | 'I’EAM RE‘I‘URNS‘ Delegates at large—Agnes Keefer, 3 honeymoon in the south of helped to nullify it. | blocked any one of these moves, the | | Elsie Sofoulis, Ida negie, Dor- France. e | terrible tragedy of World War 1 | . othy Manthey, Esther Gullufson,' The couple married here ester-| BRITISH UNDERCUT USA ‘anuld not have happened. The sznsh Rite Dogree team,!Marie Hayes, Edith Walker, Anita day. DeLuce, 35, was born in Yu- In an earlier column, this writer | And if we are going to prevent |Walter B. Heisel, H. D. Stabler, J.| Garnick, Helen Jewett, Selma Vu- ma, Ariz, and won the Pulitzer proposed that the United States World War III, the gentlemen of |J. Fargher and H. G. Nordling ar-|govich, Hazel Petrich; alternates— prize for reporting in 1944. Mrs. adopt a definite, categoric policy the British Foreign Office, with rived frnm ‘F‘au'bnnks yesterday by|(mMarian Hendrickson, Silva Zenger, DeLuce, 27, was born in Eastland, {of not appeasing Ru It was | their silk-glove policy of appease- |Alaska Airlines. |Amy Rude, Olga Hall, Mildred Texas. | argued that no country takes the lment, may prove our most danger-; Classes of at Fairbanks andi Martin, Margaret Skinner, Mabel — et | |ous, though charming allies, 18 at Anchorage received from the|pypeck. Lee Laughlin, Ruth Met- | MISSES BROOKS, MOORE T0 MAKE VACATION TRIP Misses Ruth Brooks and Edith Moore are planning to leave for that she has just about euchred We are to demand that she work the USA into being the No. 1 en-|through the United Nations; if we emy of the USSR. ., |are to crack down on the first bel- One trouble with the British is|ligerent move she makes that our bond of sympathy with|the United Nations, then them is so close that they know Britain, judging by past perform- they can take advantage of us. ances, is our worst ally. Like an old man with a weakness‘ In 1932, Secretary ot State Henry for geing on benders, the BritishiL_ Stimsen, realizing that Japan snow that when they get into|had started on major Asiatic con- trouble, their indulgent son will al- | quest, did his best to enlist Br ways bail them out. ‘tish cooperation in stopping the Palestine is a case in point. The | warlords before they got started. crganization which mandated Pal- To this end he thought he had a Thus at a time when the Allies;that Hitler =1 ye 1,850,000 - v i | . 175 J A 850, motor vehicles in Robert F. Morgan has arrived | were pledged to the principles of | vaded Austria and the Ruhr if he p .. j;; 1938 have been reduced 'here from Hoonah. He is a guest MENTS | the Atlantic Charter and world co- hadn't shrewdly banked on Anglo- |y "y oo than 50 percent at the Baranof Hotel | ¥ ! operation, Britain has gone back | French dissension and appease-| 1 i . 1 e ah, from Vancouver, to the outmoded, trouble-breeding | ment. i K e omvlull:r tomorrow. : game of power politics. And she| If we are to follow a mnon-ap-| C P l A[T[T] | Princess Louise, scheduled to sail has played her cards so skmmuyipeasemem policy toward Russia; if | rossword UZZ e P| RlY| | from Vancouver Wednesday, Aug- ¥ ! | ust 28. outside | Great | estine to the British—the Lcague}Brlesh promise to deliver a strong | of Nations—is now nonexistent. The | identic note of protest to Japan. British have absolutely no legal! But U. S. Ambassador Cameron rights in Palestine other than the| Forbes discoverec inav after he de- power of armed force. And if they livered the American protest note, had any regard whatsoever for the British Ambassador paid two American friendship, which they s0 calls at the Jap Foreign Office. badly need, long ago they would One was to deliver the formal note have turned Palestine back to the of protest. The other was to tell United Nations—where it belongs. |formally that Great Britain BRITISH TRICKERY Instead they have used the most brazen trickery to outsmart Presi- dent Truman. For instance, the President recently received a re- port on how two secret cables which he sent to Judge Joseph C. Hutcheson, Chairman of the Anglo- American Palestine Commission, were opened and read by the Bri- tish Consul in Geneva before being delivered to Judge Hutcheson. Truman also has a report from Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, Ed Foley, on how the British tried to double-cross Herbert Gaston, former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, who has been in London working on the Palestine question. promised the United States to de- |liver a note, but nevertheless the ! British understood and sympathized with the Japanese position in Man- | churia. Again, in 1936, when Hitler walk- ed into the Ruhr, it was the Bri- tish who hung back, told the French that if they resisted Hitler, they would have to fight alone. Again, during the Spanish Civil |War, it was the British Foreign Office which secretly played ball with Franco and sabotaged the Loyalist Government, despite the fact that the world knew Hitler 'and Mussolini were staging a cu: | tain-raiser to world war | Again, prior to the Munich cx'i<‘ (the Japanese Foreign Minister in- | had | ACROSS . Late . Extra parts . Incarnation . Roof of the mouth . Shrewish fll- tempered Small nsh . Book of psalms . Aiternative . Glacial snow field Coterie L prefix point §7. Card gx 1. Anat . Fruit stone . Thongs . Plunder Indigo plant Second smallest state: abbr, 7. Jewish month Ixclamation omical T Srunhild 56. Old musical note LEREE rri Alaska, from Westward, due about | August 28, southbound. Aleutian, scheduled to sail from | Seattle August 29. Due here ap- proximately September 1. North Sea, in port, scheduled to | sail for Sitka at 10:30 o'clock to- night. : Tongass, from Seattle, due some- time this afternoon. Freighter Square £ R A T O [ Al B S H A > -m - > rmolio> v Sinnet sched- moc/>E0molcloz> | LIE[C i G S[E[R[E uled _to sail from Seattle today. Freighter Sword Knot scheduled Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle |to sail from Seattle today. Estebeth scheduled to sail for 50. Live L. Hindu queens | Haines and Skagway at 10 o'clock Tea sampler | Monday evening. FORMER ALASKAN, MRS. GEORGE BEDNER, DIES News of the death of Mrs. George Day's march Horses Ancient Tro Splashea ) Prince Rupert on the S. S. Prin- c Norah on the first lap of an extensive vacation trip, ; | After visiting in Prince Rupert, they plan to travel to Jasper Na-! tional Park. According to present plans, they will next visit the fam-! ily and friends of Miss Moore in| Lincoln, Nebraska. The last part| of their trip will take them to, Oak Park, Illinois, where they will| visit, the Home of. Miss Brooks. The 'scheduled trip is expected, to last Isix weeks., : Miss Moore possesses an outstand- | iing collection of kodachrome slides | "which will be shown by the travel- lers when they make several schedu- led illustrated talks on Alaska. While in Juneau, Miss Moore is {employed in the. Fish and wildlife |office. Miss Brooks is the social worker for the Methodist church. - SELECTIVE SERVICE MEN OFF TO NOME| John McCormick Selective Service Director and Maj. William Hall- man, Procurement Officer, left to- 20 YEARS AGO AUGUST 23, 1926 from THE EMPIRE Joe Meherin arrived from the westward aboard the Admiral Watson. Lawrence Ritchie, assistant to Secr Hoover, in Alaska to n U. 8. ry of Commerce Herbert C. Commissioner of Fisheries, arrived aboard the Brant. Efforts were being made tn make Col. William Mitchell President of the National Aeronautical Association The first shipment of elk to Alaska, under the Territorial game- § stocking program, was ready to leave Seattle. The steamship Admiral Evans of the Pacific arrived in Juneau on its Mst trip to the westward y Steamship Compan For Rent: Houses and furnished apartments. (Call Twenty Years g0.) Weather report: High, 57; low, e 3 Daily Lessons in E i1 b nglish . 1. corbon | e a study of the fisheries, and Henry O'Malley, FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1946 PR i e WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “My work is (-omplelely; finished.” Omit COMPLETELY. To finish means to complete. OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Qualm. Pronounce kwam, A as in AH, | with the L silent . OFTEN MISSPELLED: Martyrdom. Observe the TYR. SYNONYMS: Harsh, strident, discordant, raucous, rough. WORD STUDY se a word three times and it is yours.” Let us ¥ INSATIABLE; not to be satisfied. syllable as SAY, accent second syllable). the insatiable avarice of man.” (Pronounce in-sa-shi-a-b'l, second “These enormous riches show (e e e MODERN ETIQUETTE by ROBERTA LEE Q. When a young man takes a girl out to dinner, and she knows he deesn't earn much money, should she be very modest in what she orders? A. Yes, but she shouldn't overdo it. invited her if he didn’t have the mone: sandwich and coffee, he might resent it. Q. When one is to have a small wedding in the minister’'s home, is it all right to send wedding aunouncements? A X Q. Is it rude to begin a telephone conversation by saying, “Who is this?” A. Yes. It is the place of the person who calls to identify himself The young man would not have , and if she ordered merely a | quickly. F e L 100K and LEARN ¥ ¢ corbon ——— D e e 1 a na What large island of 840,000 square miles, with the execption of w coastal strip, is covered with a coat of ice? 2. Are there as mar licides as there are murders in the United States? 3. Does a horse push or pull in his harness? 4. What are anchovies? 5. What game is frequently referred to as “barnyard golf”? ANSWERS: 1. Greenland. 2. There are on an average 50 per cent more suicides. 3. He pushes. 4. Diminutive fish abounding in the Mediterranean, and esteemed for their rich and peculiar flavor. 5. Horseshoe pitching. Your Deposits ARE SAFE BUY AND HOLD UNITED STATES SAVING BONDS o DEPOSITS IN THIS BANK ARE INSURED First National Bank of JUNEAU, ALASKA MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION There IsNo Sfii)stilute for Newspaper Advertising! FRED WOLFE as a paid-up subscriber to THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE is invited to be our guest THIS EVENING. Present this coupon to the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE and receive TWO TICKETS to see: ALONG CAME JONES” Federal Tax—12¢ per Persop PHONE 14—THE BOYAL BLUE CAB CO0. ‘and an insured cab WILL CALL FOR YOU and Bedner, who for many years liv- N ed at Tee Harbor with her hus- day for Nome, Anchorage and Fair- band and three children, has been |banks on an official trip for Selec- received here. Mrs. Bedner's death)tive Service. They will confer with Guided cccurred Tuesday, August 20, in|officials in those cities and will re- Porch Ashland, Oregon. turn in approximately two weeks. Incigent o | The Bedner family left Alaska TR e Litorary frag- |last fall in the hopes that Mrs.| HAIDA BRINGS OFFICIALS Gampascl Bedner's health wouid improve in| The Governor of Alaska arrived Wakefal a different climate here early this morning aboard Horeain Immediate family survivors are|the CGC Haida from Ketchikan ac- . Source of her husband and children, Jeffie,| companied by Delegate E. L. Bart- _ appatural Indlgo | Georgia. and Julia. letj, Don Foster and Dr. C. E. Al- Click beetles No details of funeral and burial | brecht. Chinese pagoda |arrangements were available. ———e——— iz s e SV e S SENTENCE DELAYED Lialian poet MRS. CLAUDE RHODES HERE | The sentencing of John Huff was Mrs. Claude Rhodes, a resident|set over by Judge J.,W. Kehoe in Jor vrefiX | of Sitka, is a guest at the Baranof |the U. S. District Court here until admiral "7 " Hotel. f Monday morning at 10 o'clock. RETURN YOU to your home with our.compliments. WATCH THIS SPACE—Your Name May Appear! S N 4 i advisable | increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: i 3 H i 4 i § i { »p '\ P ~-

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