The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 30, 1946, Page 1

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE man and a waiter in a cafe a short [4 “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” i . e ] . i . g — VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,362 v JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS \ ] “ ’ [ L] —_— f b l H [ [ . " ULTIMATUM Sen.Magnuson Gen. Bradley Big Bendix orld War il in Sight; ‘TFRROR REIGN M a | ada | A | | I t \a o Make Move, Officiallyin TrophyRace ommon View Expressed PAVESWAYTO ) T ‘ ‘ | , . | ' | ‘ I . | v 4 | ] BY SEAMEN New Highway JuneauToday Is Underway | eclares Nofed Writer GREEK VOTING i i . } 3 ; | WASHINGTON, Aug. 30—Sen- . ini CLEVELAND, Aug. 30.—Thomas \pJ§ H H | itor's Note: The following | L GE e AFL Sailors Will Go Out on |, Asmeron, aue o0-seo Veferans' AAMIniSator scvion ana sou sanis, voin of Wil Be Mainfained as story 1 mot a preaicion of war, | Accusing Finger Pointed af e day that he is requesting the State | 3 . Burbank, Calif., and both piloting ! { but merely a picture and samp- ' . y Both Coasts Unless | Department to ask Canada by direct | Ends Brief Vacation | P-1 Mustangs, were the first con-| Eastern Anchor, World- ‘ { ling of opinion and atmosphere British Troops and ' inote to approve construction of a H H | testants across the finish line in H 2 H sdrrounding the Paris Peace l ¢ 4 i RU""Q Chflflged road to connect the Northwest with | in This Area {the $25000 Bendix Trophy race | Wide American Line Conference. It is written by American Shms — |the Alaska Highway. | o trom Van Nuys, Calif., today, rlash-' e Relman Morin, veteran corres- | WASHINGTON, Aug. 30.—AFL| The road would run from the |ing past the stands about a min-| TOKYO, Aug. 30.—Although the| pondent and chief of the AP's | PARIS, A F = i ** maritime unions told the Wage|vicinity of Prince George, B. C., Loi ;mc apart, at 3:35 p.m. (EST). | military phase of the occupation is | Paris bureau, who in recent Ilhu Unl‘ll‘(l :;‘ ke —Russia accused ¥l Stabilization Board today they will|the Alaska Highway built by Army| | The race winner cannot be de-| medily completed, American forc- | menths has traveled widely in |, o006 SUES angd Great Bifv= call out their seamen on both Engineers. | | termined until all or at least most'es may remain indefinitely in Ja- western Europe, | sinng g r&"ff'f""‘""‘ o nex coasts unless the Board modities its| « “If Canada will agree on con- | of the fliers are in, since the take-|pan to hold what is regarded here s ed ”'“»‘ m’J B( x““{m and charg- decision limiting AFL sailors to CIO struction of this link the prelimin- | ‘uf(s were staggered to separate the as the eastern anchor of a world- ——— By RELMAN MORIN }p;,, ing the (;/uyarlf;:n'l:‘:m-n{yr wm; wage increase levels. |ary work and surveys could be made | | | fliers in the air. wide American line against the : PARIS, Aug. 30.—The peace con-{ayiio. . oadlebice G R The notices were sent to WSB next spring and' the work started| | Mantz was the apparent leader, | Soviet Union and Communism. SOVIe' Sponsored German ference appears now to be |u-,mm|'§_lxl||:d ”:{I::_r:"?r“ H owithe ) chairman W. Willard Wirtz by John|on the road,” Magnuson said. “T| | however, since his takeoff time was| This is evident on the eve of the| u d I M I for failure and people in Paris,! «we know "B_" 9 i Hawk, vice president of the Sea- |believe that Canada will be found| |10:54 a.m., EST, while Mayson got| first anniversary of the signing of anaesting MOVe IS |uom foreigners and French, both |ihere and. Ame ritish_ troops ate . farers International Union, and by [to be more favorable to the project || | off ten minutes earlier. | Japan's surrender. N U thed those who know and those WHO!on (heir wayr Ru ‘;’“‘”mp’ hrind Hary Lundeberg, secretary-treas- now.” Mantzs elapsed time was an-| It is no secret that the conflict ow unearine only feel, are more profoundly de- |Minister V. o1, My tog o ,e urer of the Sailors Union of the| % B {nounced as four hours 42 minutes between Russian and western ideol- —_—— pressed today than at any Hmn-’p,.m,, wnf“".i,“(‘e du‘:x 0v. So8 10 Pacific. i | and ten seconds, while Mayson used | ogies will be one of the dominant| FRANKFURT, Germany, Aug. 30.)since the last gun fired in Europe.|gion of g pLdta i 1‘0"5“’"" Lundeberg's message said he is IND | up five hours and 48 seconds. 'aspects of the second year of the|—Intelligence officers of the U. S. They feel World War III alreudy"dlsmxw oty polling his union for a strike next Mantz's time was only 33 mln-ioecupmon. forces in Europe sald today a Sov-|is in sight. | i GIVE GRERRS CHAN Wednesday, Sept. 4. Hawk said his | utes more than the four hours, nine! Visible Soviet activities are lim-|iet-sponsored German clandestine) They feel it may not come this! Malotov - aibetiell” 1t T union has reaffirmed its intention LI | | minutes flight over the same route|ited at present to extensive and movement was believed operating|year or next year but there is little | time we put a stop” to wh High w to strike and is ready to walk out.| - | by Col. Leon Gray of Casa Grande, ! increasing propaganda and probab-|on a large scale in the three west-|doubt any longer among people In called outside hl!cr!e‘:ence nwdafj x“ Both AFL unions objected to Wir- | (N} : {Ariz, in an Army Air Forces P-80 ly_ ccnsiderable shrewd advice tojern zones of Germany. Paris that it will come, That viewthe Greek people a chanc :‘ 5]“ g tz that the WSB ruling cut down | | jet provelled plane Japanese Communists. i The officers made this report infis common to people in all quar-|their own form of fll,‘ e to sslect the terms of agreement reached| i Mantz average was announced as| But it is generally felt here that|connection with the espionage ar-|ters, {He contended that "ll!x):vcmmem' with shipowners through collective {4356 miles an hour, 38 miles an| the Soviets would move in immed-|rects at Stuttgart of 15 Germans A few days ago I spoke with theiform of government in “Grg“"““‘ bargaining. Lundeberg contended | OMAR N. BRADLEY hour slower than Gray. Mayson's lately upon any complete American|with Soviet sympathies. An an-|Foreign Minister of one country.ivery unpopular among th °§° ’: 8 ++ the CIO wage terms approved by | | average was 408.6 miles an hour. |military withdrawal, ready to fill|nouncement said the ringleader had | He has now gone home. He describ- | people.” Greece is thego ‘eB f:’ # the Board had been established by o Gen. Omar N. Bradley, Veterans | ————— the void between incomplete de- confessed to furnishing the Russ-|ed himself as “a discouraged opti-|country not strongly AL g i “government fiat.” St E Effort to!Aadministrator, leaves Juneau to-| mooracy and the deflated regimen- |lans with information of American mist, worn out and hopeless.” Not'fluence i i sl raining ry ! [ 4 fluence of Russia. 5 | morrow after a three-day combined | | tation of “the country’s autocratic troop movements. leng afterward I overheard a con- | Despite’ iiha Meet Ravenous Public | business and pieasure wip in this| | past, | “The officers said the Free Ger-|versation between a French police- g it i, u-mlg]!:rb&zpt:fi:m:“z: g TRUMAN ENDS HIS VACATION IN BERMUDA WITH PRESIDENT TRUMAN | AT SEA, Aug. 30.—President Tru- man today concluded an eight-day | vacation in Bermuda and sailed for| Washinggon aboard the Presidential yacht Williamsburg. The Williamsburg is due to dock in the capital at 5 p.m. on Mon-| day, 18 days after leaving on a' cruise that took the Chief Execu- tive to New England waters and! thence to Bermuda. ., PASADENA, Calif. — An earth-| quake of moderate intensity "pro-3 bably 200 miles away” was recorded | on the California Institute of Tech- nology seismograph at 3:17 am. today. | | WASHINGTON — A government fact-finding board has recommend- ed a wage increase of 16% cents an hour for telegraph workers and 10 cents an hour for messengers employed by the Western Union ‘Telegraph Co. The Washington, Merry - Go- Round, area. | Arriving here on an official visit | to the Veterans Administration Rc-f gional Office, the general's party includes: Brig. Gen H. B. Lewis,| Demand for Goods WASHINGTON, Aug. 30. — The| country’s basic industries, straining SEATTLE — Umwon-management disagreement has blocked the first sailing of the 540-t §'motorship to catch up with ravenous public| Special Advisor to Gen. Bradley on | | Garland, scheduled to start a new matters of administrative reorgan- demand for goods, have nearly reached the limit of their capacity. The Civilian Production Admin- istration in reportng this last night said that having attaired “continu-| ous, hgh level” output, steel, coal,| rails and the power industry can-| o H not push much higher in the near anfi“;rifi.“adclgi‘n “lfel:iscol:ttfl\ai?:::-'{ future. 14 | 5 |ington D. C. last Monday, flew to s f;‘..,_:;Amg",fIm::‘}zdu?_' Minneapolis, Minn,, to confer with i mant of full produc.|DPRULY Administrator B. R. Benke finis ¢ fisllaba gooas 1t inastribh L Volersne Rifais TSifie 10 b i’ several North Central states under ! peace continues.” h s m; v . Ry .. | his supervision. From there the VA | B“"T"g‘“" b R sfl::eli_s‘whead flew to Seattle where Mr.| ;‘:“:'hugw:r“;"”r‘eq:;’r‘eé g‘:mer ©|shute and Mr. Wells joined his| fort.” Total new construction nc_‘;’purty for;the fiight o Alsska, [ 4 Brief Vacation oot y | fvll‘x/l‘;’yo:::r?]‘:xs:: ::x‘fimhot]l::;mcm:?! Following conferences with local, Sheuotiarvik (ipiatx. percent Veterans Administration officials, | Automobile manufacture jumpedbqe“' Blradle}.' ?huse Juasan. a5 thel 56 percent over June, trucks sfl“w for a “brief vacation’ be(ore‘ perclzm sewing machl}nex 30 .per— | returning to the States for continu- & iy |ance of his official survey of four | i;n: B"rd refrlk[:'eramrs 501)‘?{“;[\;62;"01 the 13 branch offices covering, ar: e:c::‘fl‘l\g Otzzve}:;gh 12“ pro- the United States and possessions.| o VET te brhdrs sull lagr Doimedlately-atter aprivlug: here 4 the General's party retired to a| by from 30 to 50 percent. ! 2 ”enekars ¥ 2 Y sttt (Continued on Page Two) RS iy CANADIAN SEES ' BRADLEY ARRIVES NEW THREAT 10 | IN'WAR VETERAN' PACIFIC FISHING PLANE, 'MARY Q" VANCOUVER, B. C., Aug. 30— Major J. A. Motherwell, retiring | ization; Donald M. Shute, Deputy | Administrator for the Northwest | area and Alaska; Lt. Col. C. B. Hanson, Special Assistant to the general; and William Wells, As- sistant to Mr. Shute. Scattle-Alaska freight service. The Garland, ex-Army cargo craft, is at present the sole ship owned by the newly-formed Berger Transport Co. Company officials planned to use the Garland on hauls to Cook Inlet ports. ASTORIA, Ore.—Increased pil- chard catches were reported here today following yesterday's land-' ings of 125 tons by the seiner Windward of Monterey, Calif., argest of the season. Albacore tuna catches continue light. | CHICAGO—Three prominent psy- b chiatrists have found that Willlam wAR BR'DES NOT Heirens, 17-year-old triple slayer, is legally sane. SAN FRANCISCO—The Kaiser Company, defeated in its plan to centinue operations at its Rich-| mond shipyard No. 3, announces, it is considering moving its vast| industrial activites “to other areas.” | Meantime, both sides are playing many group was, according to best |a cat and mouse game ‘here and available information, operating in in Korea, watching each other|the American and British zones and clcsely behind the surface niceties|recently had become active in the of diplomatic custom, Their differ-| French zone of occupation. ences frequently erupt into such| open clashes as the military inci-|at least one of the defendants had dents in Korea or the only slightly formerly worked for the American restrained debates of Tokyo's four-|military government. power council. | The name of only one defendant At the outset the Soviets showed |—Walter Kazmarek of Stuttgart little interest in the occupation, but|Was given. He was quoted as say- now they have the largest foreigh!in8: mission in Tokyo. Many travel fre-| ‘It is clear we support the Sov-) | quently throughout Japan and to let policy to the limit. A few of us/| Russia. |in a small circle are more to them There is no doubt they are here| ithan a few divisions. When the East to stay—and occupation authori- | 8ttacks, ‘{mnmers will disappear ln‘ ties indicate clearly they will con-|® BUrry: tinue their attempt to block Soviet| USFET said Kazmarek first was activity at every turn. (employed by the American military | R GRS |government in December, 1945, and {that his political activities attracted| ithe surveillance of the coun |intelligence corps. He and his as- sociates were picked up when they |sought to make contact with Rus- n officers in the Russian z The announcement added that HOMESICK; JUNEAU =" x| | With a bit of old England stm!AIRplANE FARES ON in their talk and mannerisms, two| distance from Luxembourg palace. “Keep the moths out of your uni- form, old boy. You are going to need it.” The records of a French fact- 1conference voted 12 to 7 after four hours of blistering debate to dis- cuss the Greek-Albanian border at its next meeting. The Greeks in- (sist that a part of Northern Epirus | Slavic |eign Minister- V. M.. Molotov and ' Greek-Albanian . | outspoken | tralians ph . (Southern Albania) now occupied finding organization, which at-'pg apa, tempts to test public opinign, show'tgry_ RS AR (Ll AR that the question being openly dis- "' cussed now is: “If war breaks out! between Russia and the United States, etc?” i The situation has deteriorated’ greatly since the peace conference' opened and more particularly with- in the last week. GIVE RIGHT TO BE HEARD Secretary of State Byrnes dur- ;ing the debate declared: “It seems incredible to me that we would deny one of the 21 gov- ernments that furnished troops to aid us in victory the opportunity t Vot There no longer is any doubt here ;(::"pr\?::: l:; c:::h, reclln‘rdless B;-hm about the totally irreconcilable {04 States has no :m’,' ti ‘ policies of Russia and the bloc of |y} forriionial d,zpu“,mvbm”"t:: nations which stand With, gpjieq states would give the right her on the one hand and those u(lm every member to be heard.” the west on the other, | Molotov replied that Russia was The clashes between Soviet For-|,ot oonosing a discussion of the “ £ border by the : | Secrctary of State James F.{council of Foreign Ministers of the Byrnes along with the completely |ynjteq States, Russia, Great Brit- :)mlrmen.l.s of the Aus-'gin and France. He said the ~the startling indict- wprench delegate had been right” ment of “British dominated Greece” |in ingisting that the matter did not by_!l‘le Ukraine have removed all{come under the five draft treaties question. T 1prepared for peace conference con- ok sideration. On the vote, France sid- -ed with the Slav nations. Belgium ] YAKIMA, Wash.—Sen. Hugh B. Lewis and Mrs. F. B. Shepard, ex-| Mitchell, (D-Wash), today blasted Pressed their acceptance of Ameri- | the new OPA law as a contributory ¢ans and the American way of life| factor to inflation. Mitchell, who in their talks before the BPWC this | is touring central Washington, said noon. | that the law is fostering inflation| Each gave a brief account of con-| rather than controlling it. |ditions in England during the war SYDNEY.—The Sydney Sun says situation now. “Ratlons are very, that Vancouver, B, C. rather than SCarcé—one person’s week allotment San Francisco, wauld be the east- Would fit in an overcoat pocket.”| ern terminal of the British Com- The most important item to an| charming warbrides, Mrs. Max SE A'"'lE_AN(HoRAGE ROUTE ARE SLASHED SEATTLE, Aug. 30.—New, lower airplane fares to Anchorage, Alas- jand the critical food and clothing ka, were announced today by J. D.' Fessio, Alaska Region Traffic Man- ager for Pan American World Air- ways. One way will cost passengers $126 and round trip $226. The trip Exchangesfo s . ? UOTATIONS - Take Holiday, ... vous v 5 c... quotation of Alaska Juneau mine steck today is 6%, American Can NEW YORK, Aug. 30.—Principal| 7%, Anaconda 41%, Curtiss-Wright security and commodity markets|gy, International Harvester 87% in the United States and Canada'Kennecott 49'%, New York Central will close at the end of business to-(20%, Northern Pacific 24, U. S. day for a three day holiday that!Steel 83, Pound $4.08%. s s | ral Chief visor of Fish-| Gen. Omar N. Bradley, the first| monwealth Adrlines trans-Pacific Englishman, tea, is rationed one-| formerly cost $200 one way and will carry through next Monday,| sales today were 1,1 3 By DREW PEARSON |§:;:: b Brms;:pecmumm" said | four-star General to visit Alaska in| service scheduled to be opened|half pound a week. 1$279 round trip. Labor Day. | Dow, Jon:’s avcr:ée?'m:;m:: g (Ed. Note—While Drew Pear- |here that “a certain country with |Many years, flew here in-the Wal‘-ESept. 15 by an imterim operator,| MIS. Lev.u.s lllived outside Bridge-| pessio also announced that 35 The Chicago Board of Trade and{gs follows: industrials-189.19, rails - Ix; on » brief vacation, his |8 club in its hand” in the future|¥orR but"sull strong and reliable|the Australian National Airways. WAter, a smal town in Southeast|gqditional round trips a month to Scattered livestock markets will{5729 utilities 39.04. @ an o itton by sev. |may invade the fisheries off the|“Mary Q. England. “I met by husband at|ang from Seattle would be added function tomorrow, Saturday as us- W‘“"‘"fl'{:“ :i:hul ::my %ol |North American Pacitic coast. The C-47, named for the Gener-' SAN DIEGO, Calif.—The 113-foot A0 Officers’ club in Salisbury, and| peginning September 15, Pan Am- Ual. Other trading centers will ad-| Stocks dropped 1 to 4 points in | m:u b—‘::n R 1 Speaking rt a dinner given in his|8!% wife, carried the General| Canadian fisheries patrol vessel We Were married May 23 of last erjcan flights .to Anchorage con- here to the summer schedule that!ihe early trading today and later & Jpn ol L of the |honor, Major Motherwell said “we through all his European cam-|Laurier was in port today for re-|Ydl-" Mrs. Shepard, who is from | yect with Pacific Northern at Ju- Das kept most of them darkened|regained a portion of the loss. H > RPorter, administrate): o e o 1o stop the Japanese be- |PAisNS, and bore him triumphantly | fueling and minor repairs enroute NOTRIch,', JEagS mawsiad. January: .1, (nggy ,through June, July, August and for|Trading ran around yesterday’s to- 3 Office of Price Adminisf on.) Tore tHe wat Whn thoy St imoli"w Berlin. Its motors have been|from Halifax, N. S, to vmcouver.\m“' e S many will continue until the end of | tal, 1 B By PAUL ‘A, PORTER Bristol Bay on the Pacific coast, |TéPlaced three times, but the Gen-ip, C, where she will be readied | ednf}::msmef "f“';. A}m“t;em“:g' HENDRI(KSE“S ARE September. Market operators moved cautious- i but T don't see how we're going to|C13L and his pilots, Major Alvin E.| for patrolling 700 miles of the Bri- mote of Englang. than the | Monday will bring a complete! )y 1 yiew of the impending mar- WASHINGTON—I want to use Robinson and Herbert M. Barnum |States, and that the friendship shutdown of everything both at!yet noliday this space to write about one of| the greatest living Americans He| is not now a candidate for office 80 what I say can do him no harm. I am the administrator of a tem-| porary agency that has oniy one S14p theds: people.’ | (both of whom were with him dur- Major Motherwell did not namewmg the war) think the “Mary Q" the country he referred to, Ul T gnoaq of many newer and said he understood it had “w""yishinler ships. k. ?pp";‘:"eg xix“mrector of Fisheries| ™' /ing her approximately 135, | orthe TRcign 000 airmiles, the “Mary Q" has| tish Columbia coast. LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y. — The United Nations Security Council de- clined today to invite representa- tives of the Soviet Ukraine and |and hospitality here makes home- FouND. ARE SAF !sickness a rare ailment. | [ In telling of England’s home- front war fought against the Luft-| FAIRBANKS, Aug. 30.—After as waffe, both said their towns were many as 16 planes had fruitlessly home and in Canada. ‘ o oo Steel, motor, chemical and rail- road issues made fair-sized come- DEAI pE"Al"I {backs from their lows. Steels re- {duced losses that ranged to nearly on the German list of resort and searched thousands of square miles 2 points in Bethlehem to fractions. pRo"ou"(ED FOR U. S. Steel regained nearly all of . “You can't tell me they'll fish % | Greece to sit at the Council table | £ year to go, so I cannot justly be - carried probably every allied gen-|uhie the delega heth. | CAthedral towns which were ob-of the Yukon wilderness for the | : , charged with attempting to curry|OnlY off their own shores,” he said, o) yn World War I, according 0| er to hear e rges Jectives for the raids. Ty coumle, 5 B Banoaist {a drop of 1% points. Chrysler made his favor. ‘And the further fact that no words of mine could add to his stature or diminish the luster of his distinguished career leaves me the justification that he is a| fellow Kentuckian and my Senator| and I want to say what I think; about him. v It is my firm belief that when historians are able to appraise ob-| Jectively the developments of this| era, those with perception will con- adding: ‘Theyre going after the| S R .. Iy Brad- fish where they are—and the fish @, o e iss Tt ley her General-cargo has included | are on the British Columbia and' o ng others, Eisenhower, Patton | Alaskan coasts.” | ? {and Montgomery. 3 Numerous important conferences| Man Is Drowned; Relatives Sought FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Aug. 30.— ihave been held within the plane. It has literally “covered” the war, in Holland, Italy, Germany, Yugo-| slavia, France, etc. During the war! it carried a jeep to and from many battle stations. As the General's party flew over JKlux Klan and the underground | ooyjar pusiness meeting of | The club accepted the Mayor's request that the group be hosvess-l es at the dance on September 7 for| !the 700 men and 60 officers of the against Greece at this time. WASHINGTON — Gov. Ellis Ar- nall of Georgia has demanded of | f | v 9" |canadian training cruiser Uganda,'their small plane from their gold Menahem Alcalay, the last of 23 | President Truman an mvestiguuon‘wmch will be in port. | 8 of possible links between the KU "Neyy Friday’s luncheon will be a| German-American learned. Bund, it is gyup, PRl G, IR | TO JOIN HUSBAND § SEATTLE — Argentine crewmen | Fflirb&nksl discovered H. C. Hendricksen and his wife safe on a Yukon River bar yesterday. The couple had been missing six days since taking off in mine at Eagle. Ex-Bostonian Charles Clement, ‘h°;tradlng post ®perator at Stevens Haifa railway yards last June was| iVfllflze, reported Hendricksen told sentenced to death by a military the canoeist: “I need gas and oil, and I can take off.” - — NEW EMPLOYEE FOR SS 23RD SA 1a new low at 103 and then regain- Bol[unled more than 2 points of the 3% {point loss. General Motors came |back to the previous close from a 1% point dip. | Rails made recoveries ranging to ‘a point from the lows but most retained losses. Southern Pacific and Atlantic Coast Line made new court in Jerusalem today. | lows. American Telephone recovered | The sentence is subject to con-'}'s Points of a 3% point decline, firmation by the British command- DU Pont rose 2 from its low of 194 JERUSALEM, Aug. 30.— Jacob members of the so-called Stern gang charged with sabotaging the Clude that Senator Alben W. Bark-|Authorities here are trying to lo-|Me. Juncau and Mt. Roberts, the NaYe holsted thelr counirys bluc-| Leaving Juneau for er in Palestine, who last night an-|¥hich was off 4 points net. 4 ley of Kentucky, as much or move cate relatives of Verne Boggie, 37, |General recalled that the “Mary white flag over the S-S Bellingham | yesterday via PAA was Mrs. Nor-| Miss Pat Becker has recently nounced that he had commuted to Of?‘;"d“;““o” d‘NI-J»;“ "’l‘:cmld "l’ an rmed from that level. than any single individual preserv- ed the functions and integrity of | representative ‘government during a period of great change. As ma- (Continued on Page Four) a war veteran who fell from a log boem and drowned in the muddy Chena River. They said Boggie, who was stationed in Alaska dur- ing the war and returned after his discharge from the Army, Q" has also soared over the Swiss and Bavarian Alps. “But Alaskan mountains are more impressive, and the scenery much more beautiful,” the General is re- ported as having said. Victory, one of eight ships being rine Kunz who plans to join her, been added to the staff of the Se- life imprisonment the death sen- bought by the Compagnia Argen-|husband in that city. Grove Kunz tina De Navagaeio Dodero, of Buenos is an employée of the Alaska Road Aires. Two other northwest chtor)’l‘commlmon, They plan to make ships, Bozeman and Kodiak wm‘melr permanent home 4in Fair- 2go, Miss Becker plans to make her two weeks ago were sentenced to be taken over shortly. banks, lective Service as a clerk-typist here. Arriving from Portersville, Calif., approximately two weeks heme in Douglas. Montgomery Ward came back all the way from 1% point loss. Am- erican Can recovered 1% points to a 2% point decline. Many others made similar recoveries. tences previously pronounced upon 18 other members of the same group. Four girls tried with the 18 Jlife impriso: at.

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