The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 5, 1946, Page 1

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DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1946 TH —_— ] PRICE TEN CENTS VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,366 1 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS HIPPING IS TIED UP ON ALL COASTS 960SPECIAL |BIG SEARCH Sen. W. Morse 20KILLED [NOSPECIAL American Air 100,000 PICKETING VISITORSTO CONTINUING Urges Defense IN (RASH ' SESSION IS ShowatAthens SEAMEN ISSTARTED COMEHERE FOR PLANEOfPacfich.W. OF PLANE TOBEHELD Is Called OFf WALKOUT ATSEATILE | A { ST | — i e ! e H B Canadian Cruiser and De- Air Forces, Fishing VesselS.‘jgvf.Ai %’1?52‘?’;?3;?2};‘;,%;5;::‘Irans - Luxury Liner Rams | Truman Says CONgressmen ,.iue amencon wrones acose AFL - Sailors Everywhere Walkout on Pacific Coast | Pacific Northwest “a valuable tar-| the skies of Athens were called off : | Declared to Be 100 Percent Effective Into Low Hill, Bound | West from East Leave Ships Over Dis- pute on Wages , Have Right to Campaign ~Enters N. Y. Politics Small Boats Hunt for Skeena Queen today as the U. S. aircraft carrier| Franklin D. Roosevelt and escort- ing vessels reached Greece Rear Admiral John H. C +get for any potential aggressor na-; tion,” and added “we had better see | to it that the Northwest is better :deffl'ded than it is now.” stroyer Will Arrive in Juneau Tomorrow | assady, ! ' NEW YORK, Sept. 5—AFL se Canadian Cruiser Uganda and! PRINCE RUPERT, B. C, Sept. 5. Here for a sub-committee inspec-' ELKO, Nev, Sept. 5-—Ripping WASHINGTON, Sept. 5—Presi- commander of the task force, an- - SEATTLE, Sept. 5.—Picket- Canadian Destroyer Crescent are|—The air forces of two countries,|tion of sites for a prospective Navy apart when it rammed into a low dent Truman today virtually ruled nounced at Naples last Saturday men struck in Atlantic, Pacific and| ing began at 7 am. today on scheduled to arrive in port tomor- provincial police and fishing ves-|post-graduate school, Morse warned hill two miles west of Elko Air-{out any possibility of a special/that the Roosevelt would send up|gulf ports at noon (EDT) today, in| the Scattle waterfront with Ed row for a six day stay. The Ugan- sels, and 22 rowboats conrmued’agamst “a tendency to demand|port, a trans-luxury liner two-|session of Congress this year. 120 planes to write “FDR” abovela tieup union lead predicted| Coester, agent for the Sailors da has a complement of 60 offi-|today to conduct a foot-by-foot that all Naval bases be centralizgd engine plane carried at least 20| He told his first news conference Athens “at the request of the would stop all saltwater shipping Union of the Pacific (AFL), cers and 700 men and the Cres- search through the fog-shroudedin California.” I persons ‘to their deaths today. since returning from an 18-day Greek government.” President Truman announced that| asserting the union had 46 cent has 10 officers and 190 men, wastes of Chatham Sound and the; “If any nation should go ‘mad, There was one survivor, a blond,|vacation cruise that he knew of A naval attache of the U. S. em-|the dispute over limitation of nego- “eangs” of six men each out on aboard, meaning that Juneau will surrounding wilderness for some|the Bonneville and Grand Coulee blue-eyed boy about four years old|ne emergency that would require | bs said today the air show had tiated wage raises by the Wage| duty. be visited by 960 navy men for altrace of the missing flying boat,{dams would be among the first Who was found dazed in a sitting|such a session before the November been considered but had been call-|Stabilization Board was in the | “We're going to keep it up 24 six day period. the Skeena Queen. targets of the enemy,” he con- Position about 100 feet from thejelections. ed off because it could not be in-|hands of Secretary of Labor| hours a day until this thing The first scheduled event for the| Three bodies, those of Ken Wil-|cluded. shattered wreckage. First report| Then, in response to further|tegrated into a jammed four-day,Schwellenbach | is scttled,” Coester declared. visitor's entertainment will be free son, 26, skipper of the ill-fated; Morse particularly criticized dis- Said he escaped with minor in-|questoning, he said he had given program. | In New York and Baltimore,| ; 3 4 dances at the Elks Hall Friday and |craft, Mrs. Margaret Dempsey, a|mantling of the Tongue Point in- Juries. no consideration to a special ses-| The carrier crew had made plans|members of the Seamen’s Inter-| Saturday nights. Hostesses will be| passenger, and her 3% -year-old. stallation at Astoria, Ore Eighteen bodies, including those|sion after that time. Thus, Congress for the air show but was advised 'national Union and the Seamen’s! members of the Business antl|daughter, Bernice, have been re-| -, of three women and a baby boy!apparently will not get back in while at sea to call it off Infor-'Union of the Pacific began walk-| SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 5.—The Professional Women's Club. 1 Saturday night officers of the two vessels will be honored with an invitational dance given at the Governor's House under the aus- pices of the American ‘Women's Voluntary Services, Juneau Chap- ter. Besides inviting all chapter' members to the dance, the AWVS will extend invitations to several local girls as guests of the omgan-, ization. { Members of the American Legion Auxiliary wiil hold open house at covered from the water. A battered It was to bring the sick Dempsey | child here from Stewart, B. C., that the giant aircraft turned from To R E l EASE and the plane headed back, only to| run into fog conditions so severe| as to prevent its landing. The American cruiser Tucson in oil tank, seat cushions and several ts course Saturday night. Thel the harbor at the time, turned its life-jackets also have been fuund.'quoSlAvIA child and its mother were picked up | searchlights aloft in a vain attempt the Dugout Friday and Saturdsy|to guide the Skeena Queen down,i ArMy Sergeant Have Been afternoon. and citizens could hear the craftj Teen-Age Club officers are plan- circle the city twice before heading ! ning open-house entertainment dur- northward. i fng the five-day visit. Plans are, Royal Canadian Air Force and! Held in Custody | akout six months old, were brought ito an ertaking parlor here. TWO | yenes in January. cr three more bodies, believed t0| The subject came up during a Le those of the crew, were 1>i""5did’4cu.~ on gf politics. Mr. Truman in the nose of the plane which was|gsaid he thought all members of swept by fire. - | Congress ought to have a chance Wreckage Smoking | to drvote their time to campaign- Deputy Sheriff Edward Lundberg|jng yight up to election day. reported the wreckage still Wwas| e also endorsed the New York smoking at 10 a. m,, Pacific Stand-| peocratic ticket headed by Sen- ard Time, some eight hours after|agor Mead for governor and former the plane erashed. Gov. Herbert Lehman for Senator. _The plane took off from New|pup. Truman said he intended to York yesterday morning, headed|gjye the candidates his support and for San Francisco, where it Was| greqjoted their election. due at 3:45 a. m. PST, today. 'y Searching parties led by Sherifif Tlie President also told reporters: Charles L, Smith found bodies of | 1. He is leaving government nego- | tiations on the maritime strike to many of the passengers strewn in Secrotary of Labor Schwellenbach Isaid the call-off order came from| a diplomatic source in Athens. | e IMPORTANT SPEECHTO | BE MADE | H i |ing the problem but that he would | harness until the new session con- mants who arrived with the carrier jing off ships several hours before AFL Sailors’ Union struck today al the - scheduled hour. | along the West Coast and thre Shortly after noon John Hawk,! hours after the first picket ap- vice president of the SIU, announc- peared Harry Lundeberg declared ed here “the strike is on; it is in|the walkout was *“100 percent ef- effect and 100 percent effective.” |fective.” The strike involved approximately| Acting in concert with AFL sea- 100,000 AFL seamen and 300,000 men in the Atlantic and Gulf ports, other AFL union members and the|pickets from the Sailors Union ol CIO National Maritime Union!the Pacific formed lines in thic which has announced it would ob-|big port at 6 a.m. (PST) and across serve picket lines. | the bay in Oakland. RAILROAY EMBARGO | Other pickets took up stations As Mr. Truman announced at his|in the ports of Seattle and Portland press conference in Washington|and tc the south at Los Angeles that Schwellenbach now was "“““"i""d San Diego. 8,000 Men Out Lundeberg, President of the un- act when it was put before him, the! reports flowiny in Since February a 100-fcot area about the wreck-| s 5 o4 AndesUill . met insesvene . amtil jyhe ! The surrounding country is bar-|m8"9r is put before him. ren and treeless, broken by low| 2- The Allies are making plans to hills and knolls. It is used for|bring Nazi industrialists to trial cattle grazing. as war criminals. H # There 15 "B Bio the hi| 3. He still favors the £ 3 !consigned or reconsigned to any|creasc of $22.50 a month to $17.50. \\'her:: th : lan cr':’l:e:"‘ld e(_ w:-) | of 100,000 Jews to Palestine and an BERLIN, Sepl. 5—U. 8. Secre-iport area and intended for ex-| OJOymaritime unions were e e e b ASE S i AR BT rking [ATY of State James F. Byrnes ar- port, coastwise or inter-coastal| ported respecting the AFL pickets believed possible that the pilot mis American-British group is working rived at Templehof Aird day ' Yook the tieahdn fob ithe" Beghmmth !on the problem. | ot plehof Airdrome to “Y;movemem by water, including ex-|in line with the recent statements g Shn egoin TO L T s : By enrcute to Stuttgart, where he is'port freight intended for storage|of the Committee for Maritime of the airfield. William Wunder-| expected to deliver an important | 2 lich, manager of the Elko Airport 1 . jwithin e ‘port grea. | Unity that it would back up the o il | speech tomorrow on American; y.,ochoremen worked through-| AFL union in its demands for re- said the plane wheels were down aims in Germany. | b for a landing and apparently the | Almost the it b {out the forenoon in New York, butstoration of the full hike. most on the same SpoL MLt |Charles Spencer, Secretary of the 83 Vessels Tied Up IS Prips: DA RS LI DRI0E D | R Hitler used to receive visiting headsiy,y 'yore District Council, Inter-| Lundeberg estimated that 83 ves- B | ‘: t:ld a Byx;;e.; rasMg:e;t?d bfi!natimml Longshoremen’s Association' sels in the San Francisco-Oakland i janRag i ovep b 3 s |<AFL>. said New York’s 25,000 long- | port area were tied up. Seattle re- also being completed for special pnited States Army and Coast- | trips to Mendenhall Glacier B"d‘guard planes have _maintained a; visits to-the Tervitorial Museuin.” ' five.day search along the coast and | BymeS Will TomOfrow’Assomtlon of American Railroads iin il 2 A oo, - kembargopd all ratirond Mrelmit. shine finie Terl Anvoul Atfedicali thents to ports, with certain excep-| that .,§§ West c“?”"m had B0 i H tions. | walked out because of ‘the U. S. Aims in Germany The embargo applied to all car-| Wuge Stabilization Board's deci- iload and less-than-carload Ireighlrsion cutting a negotiated wage in- admission | >>o——— i o e protective custody that German government in lhe] |and to make eleventh-hour plans president of the Powell River Ccm-ldead and 600, wounded. 'here as mediator between the Ju-!ter his wife'engaged in an argu- bis zome was “far advanced over: Lundcbetg in reply relterated he | Board’s reduction of the wage in- WASHINGTON, “Sépt. 5 —~Yugo- > slavia authorities have agreed to m?“z?rhgm‘:zmfimes‘::eagg Scev |far to sea. permit the departure of three Am- Sl oisthex visitors to. dinner dur- jerican Army sergeants detained in 5 K& ar- { Belgrade since early February, gov- ing their stay here could make ar [ s 4 4 3 rangements to do 5o through the j ernment ofh_clals disclosed Lud::). City Hall (phone 88) or Mrs. John I | These officials said the Yugo- McCormick at the Red Cross Of-| lslav government finally had yield- fice (883) { led to persistent American Embas- 2 i |8y demands that the men be grant- \ e r a a led safe conduct out of the country.' . i It was not known here whether powe“ Rlver (o. | > ithe Americans have actually left | ! the United States Embassy in Bel- Boa'd (hairman | » y rl elgrade where they have been under 1 for nearly 1 | e Ay s ! b faling Lt. Gen. Lucius D, Clay, Deputy U. g0 emen would respact picket lines| ported 50 ships affected there, Los i i icloria | - {9y governat las soon as they were established, Angeles 27 and Portland 25 ies in ICIONI@| moMBay, sept. 5—Scattered| The Yugoslavs had charged the | { " On’the eve of Birnes' speeth, the1ts 5000 a8 they e established, Ang : by i 5 ¥ a A . ! | tomorrow. The actual walkout on the West ‘puhce and military gunfire still|trio with complicity in the shooting | U. S. army commander £ AR | Coast. bel terday whi es- VICTORIA, B. C., Sept. 5.—Shel- | €choed today in troubled Bombay]of a Russian soldier but the Em- NEGOTIAIE IN | H { Const RS CKRRGAY. Whil. % Sn Dwight' 4‘Ssn‘1‘7 Bx:oo'ks 67 |but order appeared to be returning'bassy and the United States War 1 el of tho’ boas " of Bowen SloWly after four days of bitter|Department contended it was a lo(Al S'I'R'KE‘ L | American zonme of occupation “of-! BN Biitiva iy oie b bhe worids|ommunal Shiite Jn Wil ofCHgle(oate of miataken 1qgniloy. { | SEATTLE, Sept. 5--The cele- fers reasans for optimism as to the| g ol ANt pulp i peper mills, died| aid 189 persons had been slain| The men were identified several |bration of a young couple’s sixth future of Germany as a respected | Secretary - of Labor Schwellenbach 3 " 7 |and 527 wounded. | weeks ago as S-Sgt. Kenmeth E.| walter P Sharpe, Territorial wedding anniversary cnded in tra- member in the soclety of nations "l | e Taiasissre: TRk Might it placed the{Schussel of San Francisco; S-Sgt. Commissioner of Labor, arrived to-|gedy today with the fatal shooting' McNamney speoke mfl:“::mc‘::;; Io TEST IF [ it to oall st thia striks uatit s 1933, in 1940 became, g 3 :}::f;n::n o th:n?)m;:d b A government communique issued | Centerville, Calif. His widow, four children and two‘a.t 1p. m. said stray stabbings sull! - - — Ineau bar operators and the Bar-|ment with another man. ‘thal existing on any other zone.” dered illegal the Stabilization brothers, including Harry Brooks, "¢ ¢ teing reported in scavlterem |tenders Union now on strike. | J. F. Frost, 55, an apartment g2 -y 5 ¢ 4 SEC‘T‘O“S \3; ;"f’nocfié’s,t‘;‘t‘i‘lll";s"?;‘d! Behind him, Mr. Sharpe left an- owner and manager, in front of ¢ U orense Lad ddde ere wo e 1 of { r ra-| - 4 - " b4 !other unfinished, though compara-|whcse door Michelotti was shot, B l l I I WASHINGTON, Sept. 5—Rep. | “There is no way at this time to IS DEAD HORSE Andrew J. May offered today to Postpone a strike that already has PARIS—Russian Minis- submit to Senate war investigating | taken place.” in Europe, timated 3,000 seamen left their Bete Huiesday night. Unofficial estimates than 200 | Chester B. Scott of Nashville, Tenn,, day by plane from Ketchikan in of Vasco Michelotti, 34-year-old ference at Frankfurt. | dispute could te. reviewed next president of the Brooks-Scanlon/ Dpsinigia AAshaur ourlew, in. froubled |tively quiet, labor-management | was held without charge. Michelotti committee questioning—either im- ! ” s vive him. Gen. Joseph T. MeNarney, mfld] ! ships to sign up for picket duty Brooks succeeded his father as| o0 "o at more jand T-Sgt. Theodore Nelson Of yesponse to requests for his services| war veteran and photographer, af- German governmental machinery in| A EAR G Tuesday in Washington. Lumber Company, Bend, Ore., sur-| { ity ™ 2 |areas if the situation warranted. tangle. The Commissioner has been | shot twice in the head and Meanwhile all the city’s 70 mills i ¥ | Foreign in Ketchikan for the past six days once in the chest. {ter V. M. Molotov returned to Paris remained closed. Few shops re-: SAYS pRESIDENT in an advisor: i | i 2 H y capacity as Ketch-! In a signed statement, Detective ., .° . . & s vl a | e as lng on‘"‘*’”?"’d open l“.‘d, in the northern WASHINGTON, 5.—A - ;1kan‘s Retail Clerks negotiated a| Licuts. Austin Seth and Don (;‘(_”; d,f‘m SL;ppbl.nL’ .ov.f,l ,MMBL;”;"';"”dmmly 8% s Presu?n.aburg. Ky,‘ [ d section of the city traffic was sus-) ¥ (INGTON, lsem' ~—AMerl- oy contract with employers. | Sprinkle reported, Frost said he gne (”"'\;;” i Taat :1: ‘dloo‘ov..hnme oF It 1o WasRIngLons \SIKB DE(lARES el'l'Y- 0- Oun | pended. ca’s wartime Canol oil venture in| aypough no trouble appears im-|fired the shots when Michelotti f““(‘ 3 cscow last Saturday for| A subcommittee of the group, | s 'g:l“:i: “;sta‘;e“:sbe: Z’;aires“_“:";‘s‘:‘minent in that quarter at pres-|kicked in the door of his apart- “OPTCTeRCes: ‘“'1:,‘.“ Sp:’;l “'e.e‘i' “';“““ ltms‘ s REV § 1 ent, Sharpe said, he plans to re-|ment, breaking the lock. RO |sumimer delving into the wartime By DREW PEARSON STOCK OUOIAHONS which has been fully investigated |y, ,." +o Ketchikan to complete work| The \vcterals'h WASHINGTON—The Army today joperations of the Garsson muni-| . 30-year-old wife, | NEW YORK, Sept. 5—Closing {by Congress. i 9 ; i e i [with the Retail Clerk’s labor rum-| Marien, rang his bell about 1:30, cleared —the quotation of Alaska Juneau mine{ The President, in reply to News oo 4 soon as the Juneau strike! ;. and . asked the whereuhouls;comm““ of any responsibility for! ’slock today is 6, American Can 94,|ccnference questions, said there i5(is ended. 15t aimoman_ previously employedidfi"”"e 42 mortar shells which| Anaconda 39%. l:.ux'tlss:WL'ight.l{B‘r},;;q pol?t.m .asl}(]l'ng "}dm' Elrnesl ""} Shortly after his arrival here,|py the Michelottis, Frost said. He | Killed 38 American soldiers and in-| phniernatiorial Hapyctfe i e"'l;l,"’g' tm:n?l'ic ‘?Dt xlwva OPera-yne Commissioner contracted rep-| recognized her and told her shejlured 127. A War Department re- KRS0V ¥Ta,, e Xouk Central { tions, to testify about the project. | ecentatives of the Bar Operators|pad not delivered certain pictures|POrt attricuting the shell defects 1193, Northern Pacific 22'4, United| King has been accused by Chair-| . | taulty fushs s to i8 3 Mead (D-NY ¢ refusi {and of the Bartenders Union to ar-|pne had owgered and that he would| to faulty fuses was given to e ! States Steel 79%, Pound $4.03'%. |man Mead (D-NY) of refusing 0 on00 o meeting sometime this af-| o do any favors for her. Senate War Investigating Commit- Sales today were 2,360,000 shares.|give the Senate war investigating | S . tee He told her to leave and when| a ternoon. Dow, Jones averages today are committee access to the Canol files' v Gha decli 6 : | industrials 181.18, rails|of the joint chiefs of staff. Mr. Sharpe declined to comment|sne refused, he took her by the| on whether or not the bar opera- 4, and she struck him in the| tions combine could meet with him | (HIM (o"'km in Kentucky, May wrote Chairman . Mead (D-NY) or a formal session could be arranged here‘at a date! pgRIPING, Sept. 5—Russia is “as determined' by my physician.” pigding “for control of all China” Simultaneously, the chairman of 'gng if successful, “we can prepare the House Military Committee made 1, move out of the Orient eptire- public a prepared statement whichi iy~ today declared Rep. Robert he said would have been read to0. gjkes spokesman for a group of \ the Senate tommittee on July 26 if|{he House Military Affairs commit= illness had not prevented his ap-|iee inspecting Pacific areas. Sikes pearance in responss to a subpoena. is s Democrat from Florida. Garsson munitions (Ed. Note—While Drew Pear- son is on a brief vacation, his column will be written by sev- eral distinguished guest col- umnists — today’s by Commo- dore John D. Small, Adminis- trator, Civilian Production Ad- ministrator.) | By JOHN D. SMALL |as follow. PARIS — Andrei Y. Vishinsky,| ‘The Admiral contended he act- WASHINGTON—One of the most| unexpected things that has ever happened io me has been to be in- vited to write a column for Dx'ewi (obfusestion spelled sideways) Pear-| son. There is no point in my try- ing to compete with the crack- making expert so T will write aboul; my own field—production—and try, to give you a clear picture of the| progress industrial America is mak-| ing back to free enterprise. | Our country’s industrial produc- | tion recovered sharply in June to! 2 new post-war peak and in July| preduction climbed still further to| a point higher than our best pre-| War year. In August production has; steadily increased. The outlook is; heartening if nothing occurs tc rock the boat, and if production allowed to continue without inter ruption for at least the next fiv or six months. In the case of many products w (Continued on Page Four) 53.79, ultilities 37.27. The stock market came backi{ed “not for myself, but for the strong today, with leading issues|joint chiefs of staff as a group. advancing by from $1 to more than (Mead said Tuesday he will ask his| $6 a share, to wipe out some of | committee to invite King to appear the iosses suffered in the violent |before it as soon as possible. market break of last Tuesday. {, Mr. Truman, who headed the A new upward flurry in the finaljWar investigating committee as a hour pushed many stocks well | Senator, reminded his news confer- above the levels established earlierence that the committee had in- in the day, when yesterday's late Guired into the expendituré ol “yast jally was continued. The volume sums of money on the Canol re- of trading ran well above the 2,-|finery and pipelines under his own 000,000 share mark. chairmapship, >, — i After its earlier investigation, the _Full D AY committee criticized theé project as jwasteful and ineffective in the iprosecution of the war. PORTSMOUTH, N. E., AuY birdie kept Dr. 2} —l ) invitation golf tourna- is now a dead horse. mer rday. - v he stork. Nijinsky made his first public called from the cource appearance at the age of three, in ng the day to deliver a dance number his father had girl and two boys, composed for him, nagui Ch He thrice dur bapies. one Mr. Truman said the invesugatio'n‘ J. H. Robbins was made when work was still pro- i |busy while competing in the AbE-}ceeding on the project and that it|Mich., in jail. |tors had mentioned, or indicated,|yce, Frost said. She then went out- {any proposal for arbitration With|gige the building and called her |the bartenders. | husband, while he returned to his Otherwise there is no change in|,u. ¢ment and locked the door. ithe local situation in which the, “po <hot as Michelotti broke in bartenders are asking a wage in-|, . door, Frost said. crease from $12 to $15 a day. 1 L e The strike has been on since 1| o'clock . Sunday afternoon and a| ] picket line has been maintained at SIAIE S RIGHIS the Baranof and Alaskan Hotels.| HANOVER, Pa., Sept. 5—A truck trailer that skidded off a highway | near here provided police of two {All bars in Juneau are closed. | " HOYLE FOILED | |states with a jurisdictional head- | PEORIA, Ill, — Police said every- ache The vehicle landed across the thing wasn't according to Hoyle, so they put John F. Hoyle, 46, Detroit, Maryland-Pennsylvania border yes- | terday with everything but the rear wheels in Pennsylvania. Police disputed jurisdiction over the aceident, but finally agreed it was Pennsylvania's case since most of the tonnage was in the Keystone State, He was held in county jail for the grand, jury on charge of oper- ating a confidence game. Detective Capt. Fred Nussbaum accused him of passing two worthless checks to- taling $48.83, ] | Russian Deputy Foreign Minister,! iculled on the 21-nation peace con-} erence today to “reject emphati-| |cally” TItalian claims to disputed | Trieste. | | EL ROSA, Minn. — A tornado,; | lashed this central Minnesota area | today, damaging every building in this village of 450 persons. First| ON WITH THE DANCE PORTO ALEGRE, Brazfl—Spec-' tators claimed it was an illustra-| tion of art for art’s sake,“but police | | insisted on closing the show at the local Baltimore Theatre. | Popular Ballerina Isabel Morais was in the middle of her ballet! when her costume'slid off. She con- tinued to dance, ignoring the inci- dent. Interest in the dance increas ed so enormously that police arriv-} In the statement, the Kentucky| nembers of the group voiced de- Democrat reiterated previous as- mands that the United States stii= sertions that he did not profit Injfen jts attitude toward Russia or any way from his association with yun the risk of being the scape- ithe combine, and specifically’ that'goat for failure of the Chinese to he received no compensation for gettle their internal problems. aiding in the operations of the The committeemen conferred here Cumberland Lumber Company, one ywith' leaders of both the National- of the Carsson affiliates. ist and Communist factions of Chi= reports made no mention of cas- = P T na, whose troops are engaged in | ualties. wide d civil strife e IROOD MAKES SURVEY | R i | REINDEER INDUSTRY "YOU LARE MY SUNSHINE" FAIRBANKS — J. Sidney Rood, NEW YORK, Sept. 5.—Striking former Alaska Native Service u~in-‘ApL musicians, walking picket lines deer supervisor, has arrived in'around ‘New York hotels, have Fairbanks from Aklavik, Yukon found one personal benefit stem- Territory, where he made a study ming from abandonment of the of the reindeer industry there for|pandstands. the Canadian government. He is| A member of the “night club pal- taking over a new post at Anchor-|lor crew” expressed it this way:® age, as Alaska agent for Pacific) “We're getting meore sunshine “m before the end of the act, Overseas Airlines, than we've had for years."

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