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oy SATURDAY 1 P.M. Edition THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” SATURDAY 1 P.M. Edition VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,363 JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS ——— GREE(E VOTE ‘IGEN. BRADLEY Flood Hifs | EXPECTED TO ATTENTIVE TO! | , Communists, said today the “great- . s | —_— jest flood in the past century” has Re(s’ci?eaEg;fri]df—rgririlfibl 'Velerans Administrafor inndaied sisnt counies n.com- 'munist-dominated northern Kiang- Troops Confined China Area Puts More Questions ™ e 50000 restdents were re- | ihan Answers ported affected by heavy overflow {from the Su rivers and its tritu-| GEN. BRADLEY'S | - PARTY HONORED | DINNER GUESTS, | Gen. Omar Bradley was honcred | last night by Alaska’s Governor and | | Mrs. Ernest Gruening with a dinner | party for 35 persons at the Gov- | ernor’s Home. | Tables were covered with white i‘lm- and the main dining room and | |sun porch were dGecorated with bou- quets of assorted summer flowers. Place cards were laid for the fol- | ATHENS, Aug. 31.—Brtish troops, _ taries, and a swift rise in the|lowirg: the guest of honor, the host assigned to Greece were confined to| Juneauw’s four-star visitor, Gen. Grand Cahal, whose dams and locks|and hostess, Lt. Col. C. B. Hanson, | their barracks tonight on the eve/Omar Bradley, at a press confer-|have been damaged by bombings. |Brig. Gen. H. B. Lewis, Donald | of the plebiscite generally expected ence here yesterday afternoon, said Shute, Col. R. Murry, Major Alvin | E. Robinson, Commander and Mrs. to return King George II from his he likes to fish, “whether he catch- English exile. |es anything or not.” And, on his Reports of sporadic fighting in-lLrief vacation here he did catch volving “Communist bands” brought fish PNA BRINGS 19 FROM ANCHORAGE Edward Chester, Capt. Herbert M. | Barnum, Ruth Torkelson, E. E. Lin- | coln, June Gabrielson, Lew Wil-| RIORIOTING '""Back Up and Starf Over!” PROTEST OF Sen. Pepper Urges Bia 3, HIGH PRICES One Slain, Neérly Hundred Hurt as Mobs Bater Businesses RIO DE JANEIRO, Augz. 31— Rioting which stemmed from Bra-! zil's nomic crisis killed one per- son and injured nearly 100 as mobs| moved through downtown streets| smgshing store windows last nizht Sporadic attempts to renew the to 28 the number of persons killed! Combined with this area's scenic liams , Mrs. Geoffrey Goss, Joe demonstrations today were foiled in two days. Attackers set afire the wonders, that made his trip herzj Sy | Thibodeau, Bv‘ny Tanner, Mr. and whc_xv. mm'cluu!r.s, after ovening police station at Platycambo, Thes- enjoyable. The fishing, he indi-| Pacific Northern Airlines arrived | Mrs. B. D. Stewart, Mrs. Robert their shops briefly, slammed steel saly. One soldier, one policeman cated, was hoped for but incidental.|here yesterday with Captain Joe | Killewich, Etolin Coulter, Mr. and|shuiters across the store fronts and a civilian were killed. {His schedule was planned to bring:Morris, First Officer Jack Dean, | Mrs (“:"1%‘ Smith, Mr. m.ld Mrs. |Police at the same time were busy Troops rushed to the spot and him officially into Juneau on Fri-|and Stewardéss June Rees and the Hunt Gruening, Mr. and Mrs. Har- dispersing crowds | clashed with the alleged Cemmun-|day, with two days allowed for bad. following passengers: old Mayo, Dr. and Mrs. Ira Gabriel- | Plate glass from store fronts was ists. weather. When good weather caus-] From Anchorage, J. G. Ellson, 0% Mary Lee Council, Mrs. Betly |scattered throughout the business Political meetings were banned ed no travel delays, his party went|Henry Clausen, Blanche Collins, M"C“""?W_k- Mr.‘ and. Mrs. Robert seeticn of the Brazilian capital throughout Greece today. Confine- under cover and out for fishing. |Henry Carrick, John Bagoy, Frank Boochever, Lt. Comdr. O. D. Weed, | The mobs, protesting against high ment of the British troops to their, The Veterans Administrator ex-. Koeteeuw, Harry Coffey, Lucille| felen Van Tuyl living costs, attacked movies. gro varracks until 6 a.m. Monday fol- pressed realization of difficulties| Strickler, Bernard King, Lloyd Tyo,| 11€ Bradley party took off from cery stores, music shops and even lowed the pattern used in the earl- posed by high living costs to|Arthur Holtz, George Henke, Ro- "a”,‘""‘“ .‘}""‘"‘ at_approximately fugieral parlors. ier Greek elections. carrying the veterans program bert Tollong, C. Tisdale, Peter War- | 020 o'aleEX s moming, with | cfroops, ocoupied. strategic points Royalists already were making through in Alaska. But as for ans-{ner, Ray Nevin, RSbert Klyman, g‘:‘“ weather all the way ahead to at midnight, but later returned to preparations to welcome King Wers, he asked questions designed toj Tommy Pullian and Jean Scott. eutile, B Spcatakiion, | barracks George from his five-year exile. Royalist leaders predicted victory by a large majority. Their Com- bring out" any solutions Alaska| To Anchorage: G. Tosti, Ella Mae x'csiflems may have. { Houren, John O'Neill, Will B. Da- First question the General put;vis, Helen Davis, Charles McInness, was: How fast are veterans whoi saw service in Alaska coming \mrk“ to live in the Territory? Concern-; ing housing, he questioned shipping' costs on pre-fabricated homes. ) Also sitting in on the press ses- |sion was Alaska’s Governor, who’ KING CONFIDENT |outlined the Territorial veterans'! _LONDON. Aug: 31:<Xing- George Progtam. Seventy-thres loins, ag-| II was represented today as confi- Brégating about $800,000 have so far munist opponents, on the other hand, have accused Britain and the United States of meddling in Greek affairs, and the Moscow press has charged that the plebiscite was fraudulently rigged. { dent he would win a 2 to 1 victory been made, he cited, in ndditlnn; in tomorrow’s Greek plebiscite up-| L _bonuses. BER on. his. return to the throfis, | Questioned regarding the ceiling Associates of the 55-year-old ex- of $175 placed on “on the job train-! ile said he would “spend a quiet""s~" its deterring effect in Alaska i weekend in the country, as usual,” and if it might be possible to amend | and would make no statement for the law to provide a 25 percent ! eral dhyt: Alaska differential similar to that} King George fled Greece in 1941 for Federal salaries, Gen. Bradley ! after the German invasion, replied it seems worth looking into. | The ceiling, he said, had been | {brought akout by “abuses.” He cited | in that of a corporation vice-president an article appearing on the eve of 4rawing $700 per month who ap- the Greek plebiscite, said today the plied for allowance for training to| Athens government had lost its succeed his father as president oi; independence and was being turned 'he firm. Any attempt to set a; into & calony. of Britain, general standard to prevail through- out the country inevitably is not; satisfactory everywhere, he poinl-l COLONY OF BRITAIN MOSCOW, Aug. 31.—Pravda, MOOSE-TEEN AGER Rt ety ponsnscs i BALL BOUT IS TIE " qisiionea whetner any appoint-| |ment is immediately forthcoming| The Moose-Teen-Agers ball feud of a permanent Alaska VA Manager | still is unsettled. Last night the|to succeed A. E. Karnes, Gen. Brad- scheduled seven-inning game, which'ley referred the querry to North-j was to settle it, was called because West Deputy Administrator Donald} of darkness at the end of the sixth /M. Shute, who answered: “No per- | frame, with the score tied, 7-7. jmanent appointment will be an-i The game is to be replayed next|nounced for the time being. Mr.| week, it is announced, but no def- Lincoln (E. E. Lincoln) will i con- | inite time has yet been set. |tinue as Acting Manager. AL 0 I The Washington FAVORITE SPOTS Merry-Go-Round BECKON HUNTERS | rrimsox | ONOPENING DAY By DREW PEARSON With the Southeast Alaska hunt-" (Ed. Note—While Drew Pear- | son is on a brief vacation, his ijng season opening Sunday, num- | column will be written by sev- |erous parties of local hunters have| gral distinguished guest col- plans set for get-aways this after-| _umnists—today, by Henry J. [noon. They're bound for spots near! Kaiser, the famous West Coast and far where they feel sure the Industrialist.) deer are waiting for them. Last season, the close to home hunters By HENRY J. KAISER had the best pickings, with Doug- SAN FRANCISCO—Almost ex- last Island yielding the majority actly a year ago to the day, I took of opening day bucks brought in. advantage of Drew Pearson’s first eee - —— offer to ride free on the Merry- Go-Round. He is vacationing again. Drew may need vacations, but our| Democracy cannot afford one. 1 So" RHURN SouIH Some people tell me we're ncc‘ P { going to recover. They say we're| Mrs. Jacob Britt and son Dick beaded toward inevitable disaster; left by PAA yesterday for Seattle that we're well on our way to the after visiting hert the past week dogs, and that nothing short of a with Mrs. W. E. Britt miracle can save mankind from ob-| From Seattle they plan to drive; livion. I don’t believe it. T don't to their home in Baltimpre. Mary- think the people of the United land. States believe it. Our way of life! During their visit they were en-| will stand any test of competitive tertained by their many friends. comparison. So, let’s think about and Dick, 13, said the highlight of Drew's slogan—to work, fight, give, his visit was a fishing trip wlth: to, make Democracy live! |Norman Banfield as his host. and| How about, taking a look at the also a day on Auk Bay with Fred- so-called “horrible” things that are erick Wyller i happening to us. Some say, “To-| T P e BT T morrow we're going to have infla-| WARNER, NEVIN RETURN tion. Tomorrow either the com-; Pete Warner and Ray Sevin re-‘ munists or the fascists are going|turned from Anchorage via PNA &5 — —— yesterday after spending several (Continued on Page Four) days in that city, Kit McInness, Mary Shaw, Jean Shaw, Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Shelton and Ernest Tripp. To Yakutat: Mrs. Albert Weed, Tommy Weed and Ginger Milton; and to Cordova, J. B, Cauley. AFL Will Take No Part In Labor Day Parade In Seattle; Tells Why SEATTLE, Aug. 31.—Leon Flynn, General Representative for the Am- erican Federation of Labor, an- nounces that organization will take no part in Seattle’s Labor Day parade. He asserted last year's parade “stank to high heaven.” “I recognize it ouly as an oppor- tunity for the Communist - sym- pathizers to put on a demonstra- tion,” Fiynn told interviewers. CHAPELADIES T0 MEET ON TUESDAY All Chapeladies are informed of a meeting which is to be held at the Chapel-by-the-Lake on Tues- day, September 3, at 8 o'clock. The attendance of all members is desired. In addition, the meeting is for anyone that is interested in continuing the Sunday, School at | Auk Bay. ! — - i RICH AND NEHIL LEAVE | Phil Rich, publisher of the Mid- Jand Daily News off Midland, Michi- gan, and Reardon Nehil, business- man of that city, were passengers for Fairbanks via PAA yesterday.' For the last several weeks, they have been traveling in and out of Juneau engaged in hunting, fishing ' and taking pictures. The trip to! Fairbanks is also being made for| that purpose. | e i GIRL FOR HENSEYS Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Hensey are the proud parents of a baby girl born at St. Ann’s Hospital at 3:18 | o'clock yesterday morning. The little Miss weighed 6 pounds and 14/ ounces»at birth. i AR L T | WINGERSON ENTERTAINS | ing party at his home last evening.! Following the dancing, refresh-| ments consisting of sandwiches, | cookies and punch were served. | e e DEPUTY KREPPS HERE Jack Krepps, former Sitka police chief who has been named to suc- ceed George Taylor, resigned, as Deputy U. S. Marshal at Wrangell, is presently in Juneau for training! duty at the Marshal’s headquarters | office before taking over at Wran- gell. i gt Mrs. Jirdes Baxter and son Fred, ! flew to Seattle yesterday by PAA.| Mrs. Baxter has been visiting with | her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John| Winther for the past seven weeks, and is now returning to her home in Seattle, COFFEY FINDS THAT BUSINESS LETS HIM 60 UP IN AIR MORE | Federal Police Chief Pereira Lira !said in an official communique that the riot, which which groups, of high school students participat- ed, was inspired by more serious] motives than a merée student demonstration. He did nof elab- orate, however. 4 | Flying tirougn Juneau yesterday [Im the tface of the nationwide; from Fairbanks enroute to Port- economic crisis, President FEurico land was Harry Coffey, insurance agent for the-Mutual Benelit Thsur- ance Agency. The vice-president of the Nation- al Aviation Association, Coffey also organized the Northwest Aviation Association planning board. According to Mr. Coffey, he stays Gas par Dutra decreed a moratorium of 30 days for payment cf bills by produeers of livestock. The decree followed a ban on the exportaticn of prime foodstuffs while admitting various types of foods free of duty. Hospitals report that 40 persons had Leen injured seriously enough in the insurance business so that|to require hospitalization. he can fly. He owns his own| Police fired several volleys and Beechcraft which has recently been tear gas to subdue the rioting. returned from the army, and hopes to be able to fly his own plane in making his next trip to Alaska. While in Anchorage he was able to attend a meeting of Q! SUMMER GUESTS NOW HEAD HOME Mrs. Mortimer Goldman who with her son Ronald has been visiting, her parents, Mr .and Mrs. Jack | Kristan, will leave by plane tomor- Divan of the Seattls Nile Temple. row for her home in Los Angeles Mrs. Anne Mahoney, also a house guest this summer at the Jack Kris- tan home, will return to Los An- geles where she teaches school The visitors have been honored with a series of farewell parties in the lats two weeks. Tonight they will be guests of honor at a dinner party given by Mrs. Alex B. Holden - e Princess Norah, scheduled to sail from Vancouver tonight Princess Douise, from Vancouver, due tonight at 10:30 o'clock. Sched- uled to sail for Skagway at 11:30 o'clock. Aleutian, from Seattle, due some- time tomorrow. Tongass due in Juneau south- bound at 4:30 o'clpck tomorrow morning. Sword Knot, from Seattle, sometime Monday. Northern Voyager, scheduled to sail from Seattle September 6. Jumper Hitch, from Seattle, due sometime tomorrow. Square Sinnet, from Seattle, morning of September 3 due due Lucidore scheduled to sail from Seattle September 13, Estebeth scheduled to sail for Haines and Skagway at 10 o'clock Monday night. ——a - CESAR SEBENICO IS YET UNFOUN Still no trace of missing Cesar Sebenico has been found by local law authorities. Newest plans in- clude scouring of the hills sur- rounding Juneau, it is disclosed - JOIN PARENTS GO TO Sonia and Zelma Gross left ! PAA yesterday for Seattle where|route to San Mateo, Calif., where they will join their parents, Mr. and Mrs, W, D, Gross, RECEPTION FOR * NILE_OFFICERS ARRIVING HERE Monday night a reception for Shriners and their wives will be (held in the Gold Room of the Baranof Hotel at 9 p. m. in honor of the five officials comprising the ‘The Nile group is expected to ar- rive from Anchorage Monday after ting the various Shrine organ- izations in the Interior. Members in the group are W. Hay McDow ell, Potentate; Kendall Howe, High Priest and Prophet; Joe D. Ccok, |Chief Rabban; George Rogge, A: Itant Rabban; R. L. Van Lossow, Director of the Second Section. ! Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock ia business session will ke held in Ithe Scottish Rite Temple, immed- {iately after which all candidates are to be at the Temple. | Between the hour of 5:30 and :30 an' informal recepiion for Shriners and candidates only will |be held at the American Legicn | Dugout, and immediately following | {will be a dinner for Shriners and | candidates in the Templs dining :mom. The dinner is in charge of | jand being prepared by Mrs. Julla‘ 'Rice. At 8 o'clock in the Temple lodge {room the Ceremonial will commence | -and immediately following the First | Section, the Second Section will be conducted in the Temple Ball-! 'room. | Wednesday. the Divan continves | lon to Ketchikan, where a like i f MRS A(os BRI'"' | Don Wingerson was host for a _NOrth Sea scheduled to sail from ceremonies will be held before they|to school at St. Martin's in Lace | L] ¥ igroup of ten teen-agers at a danc- Seattle September 6. “ lreturn to their homes in Seattle. |Washington. 'AMERICAN LEGION | \ AUXILIARY MEETS | | The first regular busmess meeting | |of the fall season will be held by | |the American Legion Auxliary nrxtl | Tuesday at 8 o'clock ifi the Dugout. | | Mrs. Olaf Bodding, President, s hoping for a big turnout at the flrst‘ session. Among the items to be taken | care of at the gathering are con- vention matters and the election of a chaplain. * ! — e | BOB GOLDSTEIN SOUTH | Bob Goldstein was a southbound | nger via PAA yesterday en- he will College, enter San Mateo Junior |to AZl CRIMINALS MAKE FINAL PLEAS ~ \GOERING, 19 OTHERS IN End "Rooster Fighting!”" 1AST RANTS BENDIXRACE PACENEARLY JET'S SPEED Cross-Country Air Contest Won by Maniz in New Record Time BY JAMES J. STREBIG A2 AVIATION REPOR CLEVELAND, Aug. 31.—Streaking cross-country at corching speed averaging 4356 miles an hour, Paul Mantz, Burbank, Calif., flier who virtually grew up with aviation, to- day held the winner's share of the Bendix Trophy Race prize—with an assist from “movie stunting” that showed him a way out of a Jjam The 43-year-old pilot's speed was more than 150 miles an hour faster than the former record for the 2045-mile dash from Van Nuys, Calif., to the National Air Races. DOOLITTLE FIRST WINNER The previous record was set by Frank Fuller in 1989 when he aver- aged 282 miles an hour. Jimmy Dceolittle, ‘who: lived“to bedevil the Axis with bombers, won the first Bendix in ‘1931 with an average speed of 223 miles an hour Mantz, flying a North Amcrican P-51 Mustang salvaged from mili- tary surpluses, fell just short of doubling Doolittle’s speed, and h four hours, 42 minutes and ten s onds elapsed time from Van Nuys, Calif., was only 33 minutes behind plane which flew the same course at 493.5 miles an hour. JETS RACE NEXT YEAR ce pilots already were talking about flying jets next year, al- though they recognized the diffi- culty in getting engines which even now are scarce for the military ser- | vices. Jacqueline Cochran, war time leader of th2 WASP and the 1938 Bendix winner—only weman take the $10,000 first pr finished in second place with average of 4208 miles an hour. Miss Cochran, wife of financier Floyd Odlum, d she had watch- ed anxiously for most of the flight a dent in the left wing flap caused by drepping one of her auxiliary fuel tanks “I guess I'm going to quit ing,” she laughingly told friends ever an rac- after climbing out of her green P- Liz nuinber 51 with a 13 on Foth sides. ducted here t Tuesday after- noon at 2 o before U, S. Com- missioner Felix G , on the rape charge brought against Albert Lee, negro, by a white woman. S —eee - FIRST FLIGHTER Ed Coffey, Territorial Senator |from Anchorage, will be making the through trip from Seattle to Anchorage tomorrow on the first flight of the Northwest Airlines. - D MARCUS RUSSELL SOUTH Marcus Russell, son of Mrs. J. D. Smith, was a southbound PAA pas- senger yesterday. He is returning D ON VISIT TO SITKA Mrs. Maude Wakefield and Wake Anderson arrived by PAA yesterday from Seattle and were met by Mrs. Neal Anderson and daughter, Lu- ella of Sitka. The four left yester- day by plane for Sitka. GOVT. SCHOOL T0 OPEN ON TUESDA The Government School will open Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock. Amelia Butts will replace Mrs, Thomas Allen who has resigned af- ter several years on the faculty. This is the only change in the teaching staff, WASHINGTON, Aug. 31.--Senma tor Pepper (D-Fla) propesed today another “Big Threc” meeting of President Truman, Prime Minister Attlee and Stalin to end “rooster righting” in international relations. He told reporters, before leaving on a West Coast sy tour that affairs have reached a point where the United States, Great Britain and Russia all ought to “back up and start over.” Pepper sajd he tho Big Three meeting might “r the major conflicts which will have to be settled before there can be agreement on more minor points There is too much rcoster fighting going on today too much spar- ring for position.” He held both sides equally ac- countable for this, addir “I am not suggesting that we al- low ourselves to be pushed around by Russia. Neither do I think that we should attempt to push Russia around.” The Florida Senator said he Le- lieves the world might have escaped Several Blamé Hitler for Ordering Afrocities— Verdict Sept. 23 NUERNBERG, Germany, Aug. 31, The verdict in the nine-month- old Nuernberg war crimes trial will be given Sept. 23, the Tribunal an- nounced today. The disclosure was made by Lord Sir Geoffrey Lawrence of Britain, presiding, after 20 hénch- men of Hitler in the prisoners’ dock completed their final pleas. Lawrence announced that the In- ternational Military Tribunal would recess until Sept. 23, when the ver- dict is to be given against Her- mann Goering and his fellow de- fendants and seven Nazi organiza- tions For four hours the Tribunal heard impassioned speeches by the Justice | ringleaders of Hitler’s war machine many of its present misunderstand- | ings if President Rodsevelt had liv- ed. He said he plans to urge West Coast Democrats to “support the Roosevelt program at home and abroad.” Pepper will made a series of poli- ' tical speeches in California, Wash- (ington and Oregon, topped by his keynote address to the Democratic| Olympia, of both prosecution and defense for State Conventjon in ‘Wash.,, Sept. 7. Bt g e SUIT HUNT TO (CONTINUE FOR 2 YEARS YET ,and Army Air Force jet-propezlled ‘Men’s Clothes Facts Bare—' Envy the Girls; They Can Cover All They Want | WASHINGTON, Aug. 31.-—-8Shoo the moths out of that suit, gents. It may have to last another two vears, A civilian production administra- tien man told a reporter today that these are the bare facts on men’'s clothes: Fifteen million men still will be hunting suits on Deg. 31, 1946, Not until 1948 will suits be plen- tiful enough for men to be choosey The $hirv scarcity will last for a year. There'll be a shorts shortage for six to 12 months. Yes, sighed the CPA man, a trifle| case denying they were guily of war atrocities and crimes against hu- | manity Hitler Blamed It was their last cnance to ©X- ties. plain Nazi Germany's conduct be- fore they learn their fate. Most of them blamed Hitler for war devel- opmen Some said nevertheless they were not afraid to die. Justice Lawrence praised counsel | the way they performed their du- Four of the 24 men dicted ‘were not in the court. They were Martin Bormann, a Hitler aide several times reported dead, who was tsed in absentia; Ernst Kal- tenbrunner, secret police chief who suffered a cranial hemorrhage; Gustav Von Bohlen and Halbach Krupp, ailing armament maker; and iabor boss Robert Ley, who committed suicide. Goering Shouts the 20 co-defendants sat the prisoner’s box, Goering opened the string of last minute speeches by shouting his innocence While ,over and over again in an impas- | sioned 10-minute plea. Gaunt, white-faced Rudolph Hess followed Goering. Unleashing a storm of abuse, Hitler's one-time deputy attacked the entire proce~ | dure, “I predicted that witnesses would appear who under oath would make untrue statemerits and the court weuld receive affidavits of untrue statements: that the defendants would hear astonishing facts,” he shouted. Ccurtroom Packed old courtroom, remodelled fcr the trials which started Nov. 20, 1945, was packed to the doors for the wind-up of the drawn-out against the one-time Nazi The enviously, the girls are better off.|leaders, charged with high crimss That's because, 50 there’s more profit in turning ut wemen's garments, According to the CPA man, wo- men now get almost all the s o of for the ci hose, women are well fixed although some lon troubles. D COASTAL AIRLINES FLIES 49 FRIDAY manufacturers | against humani! rural | mer dwellers still have rayon and ny-|peal The once arrogant Goering kept his sharp, peering eyes averted from the four-power Allied court, slips|as he read his last words of justi- and under-pretties they need. Most ! fication for his conduct. In a high, strong voice the for- Reichsmarshal made an ap- “for the German people” re- | gardless of what fate lay in store | | | for himself. Never Decreed Murder He sought to ameliorate any guilt for himself, however, by declaring. that the prosecution had failed to show by documents proof where Alaska Coastai Alrlines flew the | and how he could have known ev- following passengers yesterday to | erything that happened under Hit- Skagway—J. Stone, T. J. Chilbeck | ler, even though he admittedly was and A. Andrews; from Skagway Mina Lee Coughlin, Herbert and Hazel Forde; to Sitka—T. Kessler, D. Kessler, K. Kessler, Kessler, Mr. and Mrs. V. C. Volz Mrs. O. Orr, R. Volz, W. Volz, Mrs, J. Ireland, Mr. ands Mrs. A. Marciel, J. Hope, M. Mayber J. Fenball, T. Anderson, T. A. Barnscth and A. Donalson From Warm Springs- Val Poor, Jr. and Jo Poor; from Tenakee Eugene Myes, John Asp, Grace Mur- phy, Sam Asp and Roseria Kimset- ter; from Sitka—S. J, Endres, Bill Vernon, Richard McNulty, Helm |Tvans, B, Evans, Robert Cunning- |ham and H. P. Wright; to Pelican J. Johnson, P. Rogers and R. Har- |dy; from Hoonah Esther Bock, Charlotte Underwood, Mrs. Al Shaf- ilestad, Al Shaflestad and Fogn i Shaflestad: from Pelican Pat !Jones; from Excursion Inlet—Inez Wilson and Frances Marvin, c Rieve | | the number | | ) | serted he Nazi. “I wish to state emphatically,” sald Goering, “never did I decree a murder of a single individual.” In a final outburst, Goering as- was nevertheless “stand- of everything I have two ing back done.” Von Ribbentrop's Plea Joachim Von Ribbentrop, who followed Hess, defended his conduct s Foreign Minister with the de- claration that Germany sought much the same things as the Unit- ed States, Britain and Russia—"the only difference is that they think in terms of continents, we in terms of corridors. “In 1939, I met Stalin in Moscow and he didn't seek a peaceful set= tlement,” he said. “The conduct of the man in 1939 was not considers ed a crime against peace.” (Continued on. P;Z};P-Fh‘c} originally in-