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HE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME" 'VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,378 JUNEAU, ALASKA, THURSDAY, bLPThMBhR I‘) ‘)46 ED PRESS =] * PRICE TEN CENTS BREAK NOW SEEN IN MARITIME STRIKE UNITED STATES OFEUROPEAIM OF CHURCHILL Former Brifish Premier Calls Upon Germany, France fo Lead Way By ERNEST FISCHER ZURICH, Switzerland, Sept. 19.— Winston Churchill called today for “an end to retribution” for Ger- many once she is stripped of the power to make war, and for French and German partnership in “some kind of United States of Europe.” > British war-time Prime Min- ister’s speech at the University of Zurich was the second within two to cheer the Germans. Sec- retary of State Byrnes, at Stutt- gart Sept. 6, advocated speedy es- tablishment of a democratic provi- gional government for Germany and gave notice that Germany’s eastern borders had not been final- ly determined. Churchill made no reference, however, to the American foreign policy controversy arising from Sec- retary of Commerce Wallace's re- cent speech and letter to President Truman on Russia. Puni-h Guilt) After citing Germany's crimes Churehill said: “The guilty must be punished Germany must be deprived of the power to re-arm and make another| aggressive war. But when all this has been done and it will be done, as it is being done, then there must ve an end to retribution.” Chuarchill called for a government for Germany, saying “the ancient states and principali- ties of Germany, newly joined to- gether into a federal system might| take their individual place among the United States of Europe.” Declaring that “we dwell strange- iy and precariously under the shield | and nrotection of the atomic bomb,” | Britain’s wartime Prime Minister | gaid Europe needed a regional or- t‘amzmlon within ons. France, Germany Must Lead “France and Germany must take the lead together,” he said. “Great Britamn, the British Commonw ¢i na '.mm. mighty America, he said, #nd, I trust, Soviet Russia—for then' mde‘q, all would he well—must be the friends and sponsors of the new urope and must champion its ,pghl to live and shine.” & Speaking of the urgency of fmd- « soluticn of the world's prob- :k-ms. he said: “the atom bomb is #till only in the hands of a state r nation which we know will never use it except in the cause of right nd freedom, but it may well be ihnl in a few years this awful igency of destruction will be wide- snresa and the catastrophe follow- ng its use by several warring na ftions will-not only bring to an end all that we call civilization, but may! ly disintegrate the world it- Churchill made but the one re- ferenice to Russi - e ALASKA GAME IN DANGER Bob Bartletr_ in a talk Anchorage Chamber of | Cominerce said that Alaska's big {game—one of the territory’s most ‘fmpertant resources—stands in dan-| ger of depletion. — - The Washingto * Delcgate "before the n Merry - Go-Round By DREW PEARSON " WASHINGTON—It is unusual in any administration for a cabinet member outside the State Depart- ment to make a speech on foreign licy. But it is more than unusual or him to express a policy—es- pecially with the ok. of the Presi-| dent which differs from that of the Secretary of State. The fact that Henry Wallace was| Able to persuade President Truman to approve his Russian-appease- ment speech in New York was due| in large part to a comprehenslve and confidential letter Wrote .to Truman setting forth the fmstukes of our Russian policy. ‘ This column has obtained a copy | of the secret Wallace letter, and, becnuse of the importance of the (Continued on Page Four) federal | the United Na-| ealth | Wallace | ate under BULLETINS WASHINGTON —Restaurant shutdowns spread today as Restaur- ant Associations fought the roll-| back of prices on meals containing| meat. The meat shortage has al- ready forced many meat packers ind butcher shops to close. | LAKE SUCCESS — Delegates to the United Nations Security Coun- | cil teok a day off from their war | of words over Greece today to pon- | der ways of ending the dispute their next meeting tomorrow. | | HOT SPRINGS, Ark.—Prosecutor | Curtis Ridgway said today that | Chester W. Ellis, 39, an aluminum plant worker, has signed a confes- ‘x‘loll that he accidentally set the G urday that claimed three lives. PEIPING—The 46-day-old Com- munist siege of Nationalist-held Tatung, important rail junction west of Peiping, was reported brok- en teday as Gen. Fu Tso-yi's gov- ernment army fought its way to- ward the city to relieve the defend- ing garrison. WASHINGTO! OPA today boosted tanners’ ceilings on sheep- skin leather by 26 percent. This paved the way for retail increases {on shoes, leather jackets and cther | | | | day cut their way through a wall of the Parkview Savings Loan Co. broke into the vault, and es- with $65,000 in cash. The | theft was discovered shortly after 9 a.m. when the first employes ar- | rived for work, found the wall bro- |ken open and brickwork scattered around. | | | CLEVELAND-——Burglars early to- | | here | caped |- PARIS—President Truman today i conferred with Secretary of State James F. Byrnes by trans-Atlantic l!clelluone, it was learned tonight, {and Byrnes appeared to be in good spirits after the talk. The call was | “fairly lengthy.” WASHINGTON—The Bureau of Min=s said it has been advised of | an explosion in a McCoy, Va., mine where 50 or more men were said (to be working. A spokesman said the Bureau had no details akout the Llast. NEW YORK-—Heavyweight cham- pion Joe Louis received $103,611.89 for his knockout of Tami Mauriello ‘n two minutes and nine seconds at Yankee Stadium last night, while the unsuccessful challenger got 1$38,804 for his appearance of less ! than a round NEW YORK — A Pan American Constellation carrying 34 passeng- ers encountered engine trouble today and returned to New York’s La Guardia Field 41 minutes after | taking off. As the plane circled the | field at about 1,500 feet, part of | the pasoline was dumped. The | landmmg was made without mishap. | The plane was bound for Vienna. OTTAWA—An economist for the |Bank of Canada, Miss Agatha Chapman, was charged today with ‘conspir‘mg with the Russian spy ring which was operated in Canada. ‘Vhss Chapman surrendered to po- \l.ce headquarters today when she was told that the government in- | tended to prosecute. | SEATTLE — Infantile paralysis \chimnd the fourth life here this | month with the death today of Roy ansLPr 6-year-old son of Mr. -and Mrs. Lavern Brister, North Bend. \Healh authorities list nine such deaths in the state during the re cent outbreak. | SEATTLE — Reese H. Taylor, 1:"r sident of the Union Oil Com- | pany, declared at a news confer- | ence here today that his firm which | holds leases on lands in the Cen-| | tralia and Chehalis areas and large acrenges in the Olympic Peninsula for oxploration purposes, is ready |to spend millions of dollars if "wcrrsar) in a search for oil and I“ new industry in Washington | state. | | — eee —- | ALCOHOLIC SALAD? | way to produce slcohul | fromw mandiocca plants. These palm- | like plants furnish a firm and tasty pulp for salads and a flour gener- |ally cohol will be a new service from this piant if the present experi iments ' are suceessful, at| 2t Northern Hotel fire here Sat- | upparel made of this type leather.| RIO DE JANEIRO—Experiments, served with meat dishes. Al- SURVIVORS |Alaska Draws WRECKAGE OF WRECKED ' Plans for Big OF PLANE PLANE SEEN Public Ouffay, 1S FOUND | | | Mysiery of "Headless Valley” MayBe Solved; American Parly Is Sale €10 GIVEN PARITY PAY N AWARD Five or Seven of 44 Aboard FWA Makes Planning Ad- Seven Bodies Located- ; The mystery of the legunds -"R fion of Shippi | FIVE TOURING Py of e, loemans:Resumplion of Sigging I Airliner Reported Alive jvances on Projects Total- | Searchers Hunt for Eighth the tivemen o e o oo Activities Urged - Does B | 1 | N v d “Headless Valley"--may have beeni| \ —Rescuers on Way | ling Near 13%2 Millions | Navy Vidim’'s Body CONGRESSMEN cotved by three amercanc, mena- | Not Affect West Coast o | i ing a woman, who today ave safe NEW YORK, Sept. 19.—At least| WASHINGTON, Sept. 19.—Alas-| SEATTLE, Sept. 19 at Watson Lake bl e NGy Y ¥ [five to seven persons are reported |kan communities have asked the| |ground party of 35 early md.._\ re- James: Watts, a school teacher- | o (e Tork, Sek |today by separate sources as having | Pederal Works Agency for advances|sumed search for the body of the prospector, his wife, Beatrice, and| gno o l‘”"' Guif coast. sitip survived the crash of a trans-Atlan- | totaling $279.730 for planning pro- | 2ighth crew member of a BPY am- | her brother, Bdward Rose, left Wat-] oo wioms Iate. fofiay agrent Wit tic Belgian airliner which crashed |jects estimated to cost $13,419,806.iphiblan plane which two Granite son Lake in mid-August, lured by! atlon SWArE. feent in the remote wilderness of New-| A survey of applications through |Falls High School boys and their e reports of gold and undaunted by for parity ,”I M:_r::lm:;l l:‘;: | foundland June showed the requests broke |principal found wrecked in the Cas (BY THE ASSOCIATED 'PRESS) I')-' stories that 13 white men R ,“-m“'“"l‘”l‘ 1 i e | A Transworld Airlines pilot re-!down like this {cade foothills, some 45 miles north-| Five Congressmen, just back from |disappeared in the Nahani co e 1 Wty T.. '_“l" w30 ported seeing three persons at the| Highways, roads and streets, $3.-|east of here yesterday. a sixweek tour ofy the Far Fast|in the last eight years st e G s sy 4 site of the wreck and four others|829,800; bridgs, viaducts and grade| Seven bodies were found befors have repeated their previous sug-| : ; B Mtk Bniathe S o walking about four miles from the|separations, $589,600; airports, $189,- | darkness ended the hunt, Witnesses|gesticns that the United States| A deadline for Watts return was. Seenty Sor sk DRI 0 T i oS o e WAt it sacitAtio s i MR s e R NS S Giceny e A0 i e anbl Vo B | ony, Ll i almest . i, S NPLY ik of its search planes had seen five facilities, $712,067; scheols and other |some debris festooned in the trees | Pacific 3 ISehbauL whi Lis Belios DAMDIS) persons [educational facilities, $1,2938,000; | on the side of 500-foot Dolberg's Hill.| The five members of the Houge!Of the far- northern region would (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) The Transworld Airlines plane,jother public buildings. $902200;(The Navy withheld names of the Military Committee are back in|nWC been set in actlon, the lrio} 4, °g tration award by James | which left Boston early today for {parks and other recreational fac- |victims pending notification of rela- | Washington after covering 38000 qire OUt Of the “mystery country” |} "y BN re of the CIO iro and heading tow r, | ilities, $290.255. and miscellaneous tives miiles-ainee Avguat 107 SAnd. what|-Hexiay. night {National Maritime Union toda circled the scene for an hour until |public facilities, $4,950,284 | ‘The wreck was discovered by Ger- | they saw in the Far East convine-| Only. & briel message WhS S8nt| . .4 NN sednan SIM okNers 2 other. planes could arrive to take| The FWA sald that through June ald Ladley, Schaol Principal anded all of them that another war, it ‘he Whitchorse Division of thei, iy with AFL ship personnel and G hhe rottak it had approved $5746651 of the|Wartme Navy Lieutenani Jom- lis a possibility—that we must main-| LCMP, and no detalls of thelr),...j04 wnat Ply described as an All the survivors were said to be|projects, with advanc totaling | mander, and two students, Ronald !tain our defenses, just in adventurous journey are ¥NOWD, o jcouate baais Ser Ehe Niteiiets “very active” and waved their coats $145 The airport requests were | Carpenter and Thomas Trunty, after | One of the touring Congress g o ivesumption of all shipping activ- vigorously at the plane. approved in full as were the \L‘lmols‘ Oscar Sandman, logger, told of Representative Robert kes ofl i e }nuw i bRy o ation faciity mpoHcetionk "\mu‘:nk the plane’s engines Monday | Florida, said army sources have re-| | Declaring West Coast workers The pilot reported according to | the bridge and viaduct program. Tt “and then I' didn't hear them any ceived work that an entire MHV}SHQRIA E {were not directly affected by the TWA., that the Sabena plane was 8000 for the p.“m&.‘mun'. army of one million mer { ‘decision, Fly said, “this award af- S olbtaly e R eram. $435,567 of the! The plane was enroute to Whidby | being trained in Russia. Another in {fects the West Coast in that it af- one piece. Trees were levelled for sewer program, 00,000 for the park Island, ncrmally a 30-minute hop th group, Representative Dewey ;fords a basis for a back-to-work 500 yards where it had smashed |program and $2,055,884 for the mis- from Scaulo. during a rain storm Short of Missouri, said a hi me F | movement on tha West Coast along the ground, he said | e 1eous program and with peasoup fog shrouding the nesa2 official predicted the Unites + Fly's award was on collateral is- vival kits were dropped by e aisis hills. Seventeen U. S. and Canadian States and Japan will be f hlm' ;.suew of a June 14 agreement which renbtn I, planes had hunted since Monday. side by side if there s a next var. faverted a nation-wide CIO mari- Most passengers were American BT o i R | IN BRlTAIN'“m" strike then. Operators and the union had agreed to accept his rul- and Belgian businessmen The Coast Guard said a PBY plane landed with a rescue team on a lake four or five miles from the Earthquake oy canapian Registered SAVES 23 FROM 'RECORDED, TRAFFIC,' SIX DEATHS ARE S1. HELENS, Lancashire Bl y_increases chiefly .of from s 55 to $10 a month are provid:d by 9 ‘nu- award. The present wage scalc crash scene and slowly was making | y v 3 Britain, more than a year after its way acr rocky, hilly country } ! gt l: «Im)nln:g mnx ul ‘; (for the NMU seamen affected is Two Army rescue teams also wer: OTHER A(C'DENIS B 817250 a month | and the industry is striving with, % to be landed near the scene. e v : { Requests Back To Work MinMI, Sept. 19— Navy offi-| new, eificient, war-born techniques R Party E " MinMI, Sept. 19.—A Navy offi 1 y said he announced the escue Party Enroute Y @ has . WS s . ANBOCTATED PARGS and perhaps 80,000 e work - 3 . al says that a large thquake T # 5 {E ASSOCIATED PRESS) ind perhay or more wor s s 9 | ‘arlier, Savena; the company op- T ed o instruments| , STANDARD, Alterta, Sept. 19.~' 1. i ang other accidents have ©1S 1o satisty this demand and at RAId 1 Sov At T e Piegriangion - garra gl o, <y gt ) An 1l-year-old Canadian schoolboy P R I § Tima i ox. | VB8 requesting all sbagolug person- g iy A8, eseue "ihe Navy’s micro-seismograph | . claimed the lives of six Pacific the same time hang on to Its ex-|pne) b party was rushing to the scene 22| aeprer. The quake was recorded| ' Credited with saving 23 compan- nopyect residents during the past POrt market sl to relirn to:wopk® LmpaciEiy miles southwest of Gander. center. The quake was recorded |, apoarq a crowded schoolbus gy pr oot Soolden's during Lhe pa and asserted there was no longer a o @ . arly this morning. The official said % 3 24 hours. In addition, a trainman Houses nced windows, shop-fronts cause for tt ; £ 8 : The airliner made a last report to | .. from possible tragedy. A young i ! : oL e parslysts oF Mg o S0 tha! the center of the earthquake] " ' wag slightly injured in a train de- are boarded up, museums lack s -lnn all coast: He "saild he w the Gander field at 3:37 a.m. East- n Grant fought his way ., AR e cp it ¥ Sl is 5.000 kilometers from Miami and R 5 Y railment near Hedges, Washington. jights and train sheds are |)n|ll' ask all shi 3 g rticularly orn Daylight Time yesterday when A gh scrambling passengers to . s D operators, particularl 3 4 ‘1"I o S | hossibly was in Chile. e the AMEL o Bekath Two men dicd at Yakima. - uanrooied in cities bombed in 1940 those on the West Coast, to rein- fm:\:lx( -;ir:ah'-;”;l,u”.l: o0 e BRETRe: sty the steering wheel when the bus '7 )81 old George Thielke, a night and 1941 and attacked by flying|state all men on strike. 'J‘hr‘;; : k;']ll) r,lm.” AT ovariiEneA ‘m_“_ S'um!:n'd Albarts watchman, we killed when struck bombs and rockets in 1944 and Also involved in the hearings be- : Diane, with & - OF Weven 40 w k i b Passshail feit s Al truck, and 57-year-old Willam 1945, fore Fly, which were concluded on nf“(, 37. p‘\wmfgm.s‘ mude"zm ms‘utx: y or ers a ‘wr'x;:. (‘rlI;m;; “1’|’um .'liu- l'.x’nu’m‘\ Harold Lallashute of Ahtanum - Glessmakers say that, even the|Friday, were the CIO Marine Cook: feat apprnch 1o Hhe SRkl a O e MUON cumbed to injuries suffered when he plant expansions they have planned [and Stewards Union and the Tnde- bohied in fou g (hrys‘er pla"' Go ho ptilled the wires, avérting ‘s 1:‘“ from a truck near Wi production will not catch up with {pendent Marine Firemen, Oflers pulle s, 8 N8 8 yhree days ago e alore. ihe o g . The e o p SRR s A R da P ! temand before the end of 1948, Wipers and Watertenders. These airplane crash in aviation history B k' 'lh J b o e e ot ol fue In Seattle, 45 year old Racbum Glass is so scarce that manufactur- {with the NMU, struck at the end of iR ne oo Aemm.m:ié.; a( o e“‘ o s e ) R A.lm"lv‘/.nlh -v-IMu:m was fatally ration it monthly to ulaziersllhi- AFL maritime stoppage de- afeoniug . 2 Y i ipjured when his car overturned gnd glaziers pass it on to consum-!'manding wage parity with AFT ; Board, claimed 27 lives. 3 e ter a collision with rs under Ministry of Supply pri-|mariners. : The plane left Brussels Tuesday DETROIT, Sept. 19.—Four nmus- STO(K OUO‘I‘AHONS chine. ritfe s g Parity Basis io P a T i P P 1) <]e] o 2 WAVES. H asis Xil.h! and r}mdfl a lvefuehng stop at and Chrysler workers went back to A logging truck crashed into an PR | “With very few exceptions, the Shannon Airport, Eire, before head- 'their jobs at the *strike-bound NEW YORK. i Closi embankment n Wash- '{“ ard Dblace m, Al A ing out over the north Atlantic. It Dodze truck plant tcday, but 46,000 v . Bep ~Closing . : ¢ AWAIC D 808s F SRAR ON DRE was piloted by Capt. Jean Ester, other automobile worker: ouotation of Alaska .]um*nu mine i illing the EEZED pRopERIY [““h athes Uoinkl v L S e RAF and Belgian Air Force pilot. |idle in a dozen factori stoch today is American Can o!d Cecil Kelly of JLE {activity will be on the same basis ki To8 BHot. e 8 e O er oo | £8%. Anaconda 38%, Curtiss-Wright year-c*d Frederick g as settlement of the Seafarers In- g l‘"uducuuw S X "swn‘i) 6, International Harvester 76, Ken- injured when an ol ‘NGERMANY w!ll [1('Ilmlh)n:ll Union (AFL) dispute. L] . #259 % % iz = 1 nec w Y el g 5 tu a highway north f » here Bre & el - Jines of Chrysler and the Packard \l.’“, , New Yor (,n'm(.{l 15%, L X : 1wa) o IX:’:::‘xl:.\xl(l.:‘l1“:‘1:iq‘umu:u.numf Hll I ral er Motcr Car Company still is frozen, Northern Pacif by B, Btes] . ARGt BE IURNED BA K o A < o s The Dodge Lrick walkout ihagan | 00% Pound $4.03'%. h acciden as \urU\ ted, they can be settled by Ia week ago in a dispute over the| Svles today were 2,890,000 sharcs. Dennis of gotiation. These are so incidental firing of a probationary employee.| DV, Jones il _“'?‘,L“ sre GOIDR : SRLIN, Sept. 10.—A :Ulu'—pu\wr:k:“fl.l,v o A0SR SR L Settlement terms announced today :1 X ”’_‘;' “"‘f;z"“‘ L2 greement has been reached to turn{ Byt paul Palazzi, chairman of have not been revealed. 46.11, utilitles 33.47, of marks worth of d|the NMU strike (u;x;r' ittee in New s - .- - % 4 erties o te 5 i STOCKS GO BO pertice over - the local|york, was auoted by another NMU LOS ANGELES, SeRod b ik A break of 1 to 4 points carried B ¢ governments for. disposalepokesmen as “the arbitra- Trainer, used to teach many World SolDIERS WIN oul | the stock market today to the low-|tWe s of a Uxm n Pacific freight an official source reveals |tor's award is not a contract and War II pilots to fly blind, was on its | est lovel since April, 13, 1945, the (Fain enroute from Yakima to {o¢ agreement affects more ~’“”"wm|l we have a signed contract the way to Alaska today, to do a peace- |day after the death of Franklin Wallula, left the tracks One 3500,000,000 marks ($350,000,000 at | will centinue.” |time job at a flying school operated | | D. Ruosevelt. trainman suffered minor cuts. !‘-‘ military exchange rate) ""“x'lli Earlier, NMU President Jos2ph |by James M. Cox in Fairbanks. i ki [ on the il v bich eiaskdd - of property in the Am n ZOne Curran had blamed “mysterious Cox bought the $6,500 equipment | ayip KILMER, N. J., Sept. 19— nearly $2,000000000 in market alone. The tota) s much larger I |forces in high government circlea’ for $1,200 via the mail-order method, i ¢ oA e : i 5 : the British ¢ Rough [and the “arbitrary attitude” of J . °C:| Five soldiers who faced summary | values of listed stocks, prices for stimat licate the " e 3 according to Leo R. McGehee, chief| .. 4 | A v estimates indicate the properties In-1'g. ‘Bryan, head : of ' the B of the War Assets Administration-s | CCUrts martial for bringing dogs) railroad shares sagged to a new low volve approximately a third of the| " e ' Pacific o 3l back from Europe soon will be with since Dec. 13, 1944. Selling in the AI pEA(E SESSION b g g s S"”""‘";"; AROIRHOR . heir pets ai | rails dev on 4 executive v ¥ (for delaying a quick end of the |Link Trainers are available at slzoo}c e oy |2 guilty | of th nsylvania sa 1 Wasl "Alv AGREEMEN]‘ -power coordinating committee, West Coast Deadlock ' b bl 0 cl urges [ vm ating army regu-|ingten the road would operate this is now in the hands of the occu-i « 9 - or those in usable condition, and |, ;s “against the movement of|ycar at a deficit, the first in its Curran’s refersncefo Bryms was tat $600 for others that are repair- pets on troop transports, were lln-‘i }‘ ey s d i A K. pation forces’ legal departments forlin yegard to the continued refusal ble. Furth ¢ 00-year history, unless a freight 5 pr. g 19 The United drawing up into a directive i oble. Puriher Informaiion can be |ed $20 each and sent from this di ate e s granted N e ) 3 % |obtained at the WAA office, 155 W. ‘emumka‘“o‘ S e R [ 358 ?"f"; i : A States emphasized to the Pari o ot (Continued on Page Eight) | Washington Blvd Los Angeles. fion antm‘s F; dmhdlg: AT xh”‘)";”zu '? ‘;‘“‘”l‘l” "“”"l‘ "‘“ ace conierence today that it's all -ee the tirsf rst of selling, just af- . ' — — " ; ’ Jor nothing iu the Italian territorial G I' h h | Four of ll_\.fl dogs went h(mo “er mid-day, that high-speed tickers agreement o el o“g w“ Mis Ia(ed perso“s jahead of their master. The fifth, a“m. thrown seven minutes behind | S5eo0°' ¢ 1unn the American am- 'RHS i S AL f {¥ived the bembing of Naples, et | New York stock exchange ical commission that the Big Four ( Io Be Ifled In'o |with his master, Staff Sgt. William | while losses in the general list yoroome o™ “lieste and the it . {Commander | |E. Loe, of Shreveport, La. ranged to around 4 points, SOmeyralo vugoslav frontier was all one ' WASHINGTON, Sept. 19.—Presi-; pla(eS III Bralll oty | were outstanding on the downside, gecisipn, He said that the United dent John L. Lewis of the United| CALGARY, Alta. Sept. 19—John pl ' | including Standard Gas $6 preferr-'giarec agreement to one part of Mine Workers (AFL) today asked [Stelle, National Comfhander of The _____ a ypusses omlng :d, down 11 points. Eastman Kodak tnat program is contingent on all "¢ Price Decontrol Board to re-iAmerican Legion, s:id the 3,300,000 | RIO DE JANEIRO—British and {lost 67, International Business Ma-|the other parts being accepted, in- move OPA me controls “to insure | membership of the Legion is firmly | American agricultural experts are| NEW YORK, Sept. 19.—Three “Dincs was down 5 cluding the creation of a truly 20 adequate coal supply i behind the “get tough with Russia” accompanying members of Brazil's young natives of Australia will take Santa Fe lost 5z and Union Pa- free Trieste Lewis tclegraphed the Board and | policy of Secretary of State James Immigration Council into the in-|up permanent e in thelcific was down 4% points in the Brooke Claxton of Canada yrg- SeCretary of Agriculture Clinton P.| Byrnes. . terior of this large country to study | United States within the next few | ! U. S. Steel lost 3'i, points eq the establishment for the pro- Anderson that™ the “ill-timed re- Stelle. enroute to the Legion Con- possibilities of settling hundreds months—and the won't have any,and Bethlehem 3% points in the jected free state of a tribeal sm- stablished control of meat” has!vention in San Francisco next week, of thousands of immigrants on farm housing problems. steel group. flar to the American-Canadian .u,m 1 shortage of “ilamine pro-|made the statement last night in an land. Immigration Director Joao Al-; They arc duck-billed platypuses, Chrysler and General Motors 10st| joint commission ortions” in six southeastern Ken-|interview in which he termed Sec- berto Lins de Barros expects thou-'ameng the world’s rarest animals, and 2%, points, respectively,| - oo — tucky counties. He said the meat retary Wallace's recent utterances a sands of displaced persons from'and will be quartered at the Bronx |in their section. Tire stocks had los. -.,,u,,”. ght percent of Argen- age 15 lorcing the closing of !bid “to get a share of glory by ad- Europe to begin arriving soon to,Zoo where elaborate preparations ¢5 ranging to 4's noints in U I““ s population is of European Mines in Virginia, West Virginia'vocating a policy of appeasement extraction 1d Kentuck with s settle on these tracts are being made for their comfort J; ubber,