The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 12, 1946, Page 1

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§ | | i “an “answer to the beef industry’ sl SA'I'IIBDAY 1P.M. Edmon . “ALEL THE NEWS A LL THE TIME” I'THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE | SATURDAY L 1 P.M. Edition VOL. LXVIL, NO. 10,398 JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTS TRUMAN T0 TALK MEAT ON MONDAY i(illsrlr)og fo Get ' Meat for Child; Fifteen Mmuie Speech on|Faces Trial Now Stabilization Program . = -~ Over All Networks 12—The “Obser- military govern- reported this: | ver,” .American ment weekly, today { A German locksmith arrested by WASHINGON, Oct. 12—Presi-| apevjcan military police is await- dent Truman will make a radio)jne gra] in a military government Ipeech on meat and the stabiliza- |court on charges oi larceny. He tion program at 7 p. m. (PST) on|pag admitted stealing a dog be- Monday. longing to an American civilian The White House, making this|cp;ioved by military government announcement, says the President! and killing it | for my five-year-old child.” - - will speak over all radio networks for about 15 minutes. Charles G. Ross, Press Secretary, said the President would speak on “the stabilization program.” “Does that mean meat?” he e .. PROPOSED MAGYAR “Meat, of course, is part of umt( program,” Ross replied. - This statement, however, did not| rule out the possibility of some ac- POPULACE SHIFT tion early next week to get mea(‘ Qo once more Yo market. Thers was a| PARIS, Oct. -12—Lt. Gen. Walt- well-founded belief that whatever er B. Smith told the peace con- Presidential steps are taken will|ference today that the United come probably Monday or Tuesday.|States was ready to back the trans- President Truman pondered argu- | fer of some Magyar-populated areas ments for and against easing or of Czechcslovakia to defeated scrapping meat controls and a high Hungary, if necessary. official said the chief executive will| Smith, the U. S. Ambassador to decide “very soon.” | a, said the United States “It’s all up to the President now,”|Wwould support Czechoslovakia’s said this official who has figured compromise proposal to transfer prominently in White House discus-| 200,000 Magy: from Czech ter sons of the seething meat problem. ‘tol\' to Hungary through a bilater- One indication that an announce- al agreement. ment is near came as the Agri-| “Every effort should be made,” culture Department rushed work on Gen. Smith declared, “through mi- nor territorial changes if necessary, to reduce to the minimum the num- Iber of people forced to leave their | under such an formal petition for removal of ceil-! ings. i Secretary Anderson said yesterday|ancestral homes” he might be ready with a reply to agreement. the packer< tr)day Smith’s statement was sandwich- ed in between a string of Slav speeches which opened plenary ses-' (sion debate on the peace pact for | Hungary——the fourth of five treat- |19s to be (Dll\ldl‘l'&d Sld\ dc gaws urged Huni e solid with the Slm Danubmn group oi | states 16 DEADIN PLANE CRASH RABAT, Morocco. Oct. 12.~—-Elevem passengers and five vrew members were killed when an air ocean plane | crashed near Seffrou, Morocco,! Thursday night and burst into| flames. Reperts reaching here today said the plane, a JU-52 hit a hillside while flying in a fog. There were; no survivors. Among those killed were Carlin C. Treat, 26, newly appointed U. S Vice Consul at Casablanca, and lho wife and daughter of Howard Elt- ing, American Consul-Delegate at| Casablanca | Elting missed the fatal crash be-| cause he was forced to remain in| Paris on official business instead‘ > HULL BETTER WASHINGTON. Oct. 12.—Cordell Hull, 75-year-old former Secretary of State, was reported to have passed the immediate crisis in his illness today after suffering a stroke on Septembcx 30. lOUISE MAY PASS 'UP JUNEAU SUNDAY estimated between 700 With an of accompanying his family to Cas- | and 800 sacks of mail and between | ablanca. 50 and 60 passengers aboard, the | Princess Louise may pass up Juneau | tomorrow unless orders are received — The Washington Merry - Go- Round ‘ ing Secretary, to handle the stea By DREW PEARSOI\ | here. e | The Governor ‘:VASLHXNGTOINO;H;; Si:;er:lhe_n"gflgress and Chamber of Commerce side story on X - | have. wired Glumaz asking if the man happened to issue his recent iy, jocal officials have any author- statement on Jewish immigration | |ity in the situation as the CPR has into Palestine. & |no dispute with the Juneau union. About a week before the state-|previously the CPR announced the ment, Dave Niles, one of Truman’s|ouise would not land here. White House Secretaries, tipped| 1t is understood the longshore-, him to the fact that Govemm\men at Ketchikan and Wrangell Dewey was speaking before the will handle the mail from the Louise United Jewish Appeal on the week-| | and also baggage of passengers. end of the Jewish holiday 2nd| Mail for Juneau will be discharged would make a strong statement for|at Ketchikan and either flown to Jewish migration. Niles suggested Juneau or brought by the Coast that Truman beat Dewey to the Guard. Passengers will be forced punch “and re-emphasize his own to go to Skagway and either fly to previous position for Jewish migra- | Juneau or come by small boat. tion. | In line with the recent agreement Accordingly, the White House of Naval and Coast Guard author-! asked Acting Secretary of State!ities in the 13th - 17th divisions to, Will Clayton to drait a statement assist in strike-bound emergency| for the President to be issued on|mail delivery to and from Alaskan Oct. 4, the eve of Yom Kippur. ports, Commodore Norman H. Leslie, | Clayton turned the matter over to C. G. District officer at Ketchikan, Loy Henderson, head of the State has dispatched the following mes- Department’s Near East Division, sage to all units in his command: who has been accused of being pro-, “In course of operations, you are attle, to George Ford, President of | the local Longshore Union in Ju- | neau and Don McCamman, R?c:‘lé 3-Cent First Class Mail “in order to get meat 0.5, TO BACK CZECH | irom Longshore Boss Glumaz at Se- | Delegate to Con- | SEATTLE, Oct. | George E. Starr announced today | he had received instructions from | Washington, D. C. to send three- cent first class mail to Alaska by plane until ship sailings, suspended | during the maritime strike, are re- 12.—Postmaster Around 18 Leading isumed. Between 1,700 and 1,800 pounds of such mail will be flown b C G 2o b iact toany abowva e resu.| HostelriesinCapital | fice in Juneau : Pan American Airways plane s { ——— e SHINGTON, Oct. 12-The After Ilcoking over properties service at 18 of Washington's bestjowned outright by the City of Ju- CONVI(IION oF known hotels went cafeteria style neau; the Council last night decid-| today. ed to open all available lots to the (A]‘HO”( MAY Outside paraded the picket lines! Veterans Administration for erec-| ,[n iking AFL waiters, wait-|tion of temporary, Quonset Hut es, chambermaids, elevator up-rl\uusim It s2ems that about all| GET u S KI(K elators, telephone girls, porters,|the ity controls outright is side- bellhops, tenders, Inside, made their own bags striki; occasional elevator:. hungry, they ate out The strike began ter breakdown WASHINGTON, Oct. 12.—Possibil- that the United States will pro- test against the way Yugoslavia tried and convicted a Catholic pre- late accused of Axis collaboration was raised in diplomatic quarters today Public concern of the State De-!; partment with handling of the jcase by Titc's government gave plain evidence that this countr in an apparent broadening of for- eign policy, is interested now in civil as well as external affairs of other nations. Undersecretary of State Acheson told a news conference there were aspects” upwards of 10,000 guests t own beds, carried their e and walted for If they got f late yesterday | of negotiations a for those which expired September The unions asked wage increas 15 cents an hour for 30. ' a of hour for those who, do. Association, representing the whose contracts had expired, of- fered 5 cent and 2': cent hourly'e in the trial of Archbishop jncreases Lht Council Four new union contracts to replace lots at Fourth and Kennedy Streets es between employes jeet and the Subport, who don't get tips and 10 cents an City has a War ‘The Hotel mit 18 have to be set up on piling Waino Hendrickson Keep Coast Guard Of- kitchen workers and b.n-(hfll.& and tide flats. All the choicer hunks of proper- y % which the City lays claim ither have buildings on them, are non- |devofed to public use or must still 3 white collar help to run an be taken through the for inal title clearance. Made available to the V-A, action last night, above Basin courts by were lots Road, nd the section of the FPHA tidelands lying housing pro- on which the Department per- Housing there would to fill action at meeting, Ma was instructed Council special In other ast vening's Alojzije Stepinac, head of A government conciliator persuad- to request thz Governor to join Catholic church in Yugoslavia, ed the unions to compromise at 8 with the City of Juneau in repre- which have caused “concern and ang 4 cents, but the hotels declined, scntations to the Commandant of deep worry." erting it would add $1.000000 a the Seventeenth Coast Guard Dis- Acheson acknowledged that his year to operating costs trict in effort to forestall removal remarks were based on press re- ——————— |of the Coast Guard and Marine |ports of the trials and that no ac-| Inspection office here to Ketchi- count has been received chrouzh‘ kan. i diplomatic channels. SHIP AFIRE, In a recent reply to an hl&usry From Zagred, Yugoslavia, came e . ‘word yesterday that the Arch- | by the Empire, Commodore N. R. pishop had been sentenced to 16 Leslie, Seventeenth District Coast years imprisonment at forced labor G MIDOCEAN svard officer, stated that lack of personnel and office space has caus- and that courtroom spectators| e his convictio i {cd the Coast Guard to determine | to close the office here. STOCKHOLM, Oct. 12.—Flames = Immediate purchase of a new (ANADA 'LOGGERS STRIKE FOR BUSH | | Kristina Thorden ‘a1 a cost of three lives Were thorized by the Councilmen hluught under control today after proximate cost of the new equip- | which swept the Swedish motorship Caterpillar street grader, on condi- in mid-Atlantic tjonal sale contract, also au- Ap- was 36-hour battle, a message 0 ment is $8,500, FOB Seattle, with (AMP pAY RA'SEHM ship-owners said delivery expected about December 1 One of the dead, the message The City has been undecided be- | said, was Commodore Walther Le- tween two makes of graders, but TORONTO, Ont., Oct. 12.—Some | roy Heiberg, former Naval Attache’ i moving for purchase last night | 12,000 bush camp workers whose at the U. S. Legation in Stockholm.|Councilman George Jorgenson stat- main job is cutting pulpwood for Heiberg was buried at sea on the g d in his opinion the Caterpillar newsprint, struck today for a $5 request of his wife, who was among,would prove more satisfactory since daily minimum wage, union recog- | seven Americans aboard the ves- parts for it are available through nition and improved working con-lsol the Northern Commercial Company ditions. The Norwegian liner Stavanger-'outlet in Juneau. The vote was It was believed that newsprint|fjord reached the stricken vessel unanimous. It was also decided production would not be aflectedlrar]:.' today, pumped oil to calm a'that the City's old grader will not until next year. Newsprint and:violent sea, and sent food, medi- be sold, at least until the new one pulp mills normally have enoughjcine and a doctor aboard. pulpwood on hand for winter oper-; | b | ations. Wood cut in the winter is | believed that price can be obtained !sent down streams. for smpmem‘slMpsoN Io DU“ for it at any time. 9 to the mills in the spring for use‘ 7 vy, It was also suggested that weld- the following summer, fall and| WITH ": FR'GID ing equipment be purchased for the winter. | City repair shop, but the response The lumber and sawmill workers| 1t comdr. Robert W. Simpson,| Was less than lukewarm. d an appeal from the| v gmien Folctlo Py |U. S. Navy Medical Corps, son of, ,ciion was deterred until the Ontario Labor Ministry to call orr[Ml and Mrs. Robert Simpson of the strike and mediate. The bush|jyneay has been ordered to report camps are spread over wide and| ;. gervice with the Army’s Task solated areas, making it impossible | popce “Frigid,” at Fairbanks. His to tell immediately how effective recent bride, a former Lieutenant the walkout was. {in the Navy Nurse Corps, will ac- o | company him to Fairbanks. RODEOMEET 1y ian NEW YORK, Oct. 12. — Toots, Mansfield, Rankin, Tex., cowboy| Fish landings at the Cold ‘Stor- # who won the Madisin Square Gar-|age have been slow. Two boats,'P ‘den rodeo calf roping title three|the Rainier on Wednesday, of the last four years, is currently|this morning the Explorer, brouyght T |t FISH LANDINGS - !leading in that competition at !he‘ in loads of black cod and halibut. M annual championship events| The Rainier sold 8,000 pounds to " Z1st here. | Howard Baker, Livermore, Calif, is the pacesetter in the bareback bronc ridin® competition, while| Dave Campbell, Las Vegas, Nev,‘ Ileads ihe steer wrestling competi- ‘ | tion. i | ACF, and the Explorer's ! pounds has not been reported sold. - — RE-ARRESTED Daniel Telles, at liberty on own recognizance, failed to appear for sentence by the U. S. Commis- > o sioner here yesterday afternoon CLAIM_FILED {on a charge of petit larceny. Later Libby, McNeill and Libby com-|in the day he was arrested by City | pany is defendant in a civil action| Police on charges of drunk and filed with the Clerk of the Dis-!disorderly conduct. This mun)ing 1lllLL Court here today by Steve|he was turned over to Federal /au- Chutuk. The plaintiff, who wasl thorities and again is being held employed as a cook at Taku Har-!in the Federal jail here. ! bor cannery, seeks to recover $672.- — e 138, plus $100 attorney fees and|JOHN OEN SERIOUS cests, under the Alaska Workmen'’s c his rla t Y Arab, and came up with a milk-/authorized to transport U. S. mall‘chc"t‘pcl:‘s‘".‘:“l _A":'dCh“‘“k“B“"fef v and-water statement calculated not'between Alaskan ports if desired by| !hal he contracted a pulmonary; h oWH authorities. It not ! | disorder as a result of entering erman, is seriously ill in the Mar- to offend the British and Arabs. |local postal When this went over to lhe‘mtended that this service mater-| White House, it got the immediate ially delay prosecution of primary thumbs-down sign. By this time mission. Contact Pestmasters at Under Secretary Dean Acheson had}PmL\ of Call in this connection.| |When able render services indicat- led.” is (Continued on Page Four) a sharp freeze room on July I8, 1946, | ine hospital in Seattle according to |at the defendant’s order. isult he sufiered severe coughing)in the hospital for the past week. who ruled for 91 years beginning lattacks and blecding and required| Oen has been in Alaska for about iy 2566 B, C.; the longest modern dauspltnluulmn and medical care, 35 years and in Juneau the past'reign, 72 years, was that of Louis X1V ‘m addition to loss of employment, four years. lis delivered. Itend the time allowed to present a hazard The old grader has ecn appraised at $1,000 and it is regular meeting next Friday on the evised sale offer by the Alaska Electric Light and Power Company. In response to the Council's re- uest, the AEL&P has agreed to ex- to pay for he electric utility holdings from 90 !days to 180 days after purchase may e approved by the voters. The company also presented detailed ‘]N& of properties to be included in sale to the City at the quoted rice of $900,000 and another of and Properties withheld from sale. Peter Warner, of the Warner achine Shop, was present in last He pointed out that the condition of the float is so poor as Warner was, ured by Mayor Hendrickson that | contract already has been let for he rumng of logs for a new float D g - COLUMBUS DAY, MARKETS CLOSE NEW YORK Oct. 12. — Major securities and commodity muxkcs - longest ancient The reign on two | ght's scani audience to ask for a 11,000 speed-up on repairs to the City]| d. | Float. EASTERN-GULF STRIKERS MAY PARLEY AGAIN Is Dropped by ClO i Marine Engineers (BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS) There is a possibility of resump- tion of negotiations in the 12-day old nationwide maritime strike after CIO marine engineers proposed to negotiate an immediate contract with the East-Gulf Coast operators Earlier they had held out for a national agreement unless the mari- time commission would make an ad- vance commitment that terms of jany Eastern contract would apply to government-owned vessels on the West Coast. It was not determined immediately if the operators would accept the union offer The union proposal followed a breakdown of government sponsorec negotiations in Washington. The strike has tied up more than 600 ships on all coasts. The CIO union and the AFL Masters, Mates and !Pilots have - kolght - wage. increases of 35 and 30 percent respectivaly. Pittsburgh’s power and hotel strikes continued. Representatives of four unions and the Duquesne Light Co, planned to meet with National Labor Relations Board of- ficials to plan an election which will decide the collective bargaining agency of 1,700 striking company workers. > - REINDEER CARGO TC BE UNLOADED BUT SILK WAITS SINTTLE, Oc! IZ TH> first shipment of reindeer meat to arrive in Seattle since the war is due Monday aboard the steamship Square Knot. Because of the meat shortage, longshoremen now on strike have consented to unload the cargo. The meat was loaded from light- off Nunivak Island in the Bering Sea. The destination of the rein- deer meat, once it arrives in Seattle, been revealed while, relief ships are still aded, and the steamship n Daly is completing a grain However, the valu- has not Mea bein Augus able silk carg ‘rom i‘he Orient are waiting in the holds of ships awaiting the maritime strike settlemen The steamship Frank B. Kellogg has been in Seattle since October 4 with a cargo of more than 4000 bales of raw silk, and another ship with more than 2,000 bales valued at over $2,000,000 arrived yesterday Duke, Duchess of Windsor ~ In England for First Visit Together Since 6 Years Ago The Duke and Two Wrecks Result Within |West Coas?ifommitmentj( | They promised that the fall of the leity would Another shortage may hit Seattle | soon as a result of the maritime strike. No coffee has been unloaded from ships at Seattle since Septem- | | ber 5, and a spokesman for a lead- ing Seattle wholesaler has predicted that if the maritime strike lasts for more than another month, coffee will be added lu l)w list of \h(u‘(ag(‘\ LUCKY BREAK IN ONE WAY; TRAGIC ~ ANOTHER SENSE LOS ANGELES, Oct. 12.—Norton | Baines, a sales agent, winced when another car crashed into his parked automobile, but mentally congratu- throughout the United States were|lated his foresight in paying the ILL, SEATTLE HOSPITAL (losed today in observance of Col- | insurance on it three houi before imbus Day. Various livestock mar- John Oen, wellknown local fish- gets will operate as usual. Approaching the wreck, he found | the driver of the second car slump- led over the wheel, dead. He was | Milton Goldberg, the insurance As a re-|advices received here. He has been,yecord was that of Pepi I of Egypt|agent who had taken Baines' pre- mium, >os - Buffalo Bill once was a rider for the Pony Express. | near |attle | Francisco where LONDON, Oct. 12 Duchess of Windsor the former wearing sports attire which the British reporters found a little breathtaking chatted informally | with newsmen today at the pic- turesque Sunningdale estate of their | host, Lord Dudley, near Epsom !} Downs. | The Duke wore a pinkish shirt with tie to match, a fawn-colored | pullover sweater, a sports jacket | with loud checks and sloping pocket 6 SPARED IN FLAMING PLANE CRASH SELF SERVICE VA MAY ERECT WillBe Flownfo Alaska INORDERFOR 'ON CITY SITES HOTEL GUESTS BUT LOTS FEW Picket Lines Are Thrown:Council Orders Effort to FIVE AIRMEN KILLED WHEN BOMBER HITS Few Minutes During Pea Soup Fog ALEXANDRIA, va, Oct. 12— Two plane crashes in a pea soup fog eight miles apart last midnight jkilled all five aboard an Army bomber but spared 26 persons who crawled from the blazing wreckage slits, and slacks daring attire in ai . country devoted Lo sartorical m.-[“r a big Eastern Air Lines DC-4. Bidety: ! The planes, attempting to land The American-born Duchess was | Under @ 300-foot celling, = struck smartly clad in a silver grey wnt‘“““““ 40 minutes of each other in with black edging and black but- jthe scrub pine countryside near tons, hnn. a few miles south of Wash- The Windsors, who arrived late | P8tOn- I 'day from Paris on their first ~witnessts sall tha DO, ¢he together to England since | '0Ute from Miami to New York via 1939, before going to America expected to remain a month The couple’s arrival inspired a crop of new rumors con- cerning the Duke’s future, A Lon- don dispatch to the Rome Espresso ish Ambassador to Italy. The For- eign Office commented, however, that “nothing like that seems to be in the wind.” “We are staying here until Nov. 6, when we leave, I hope, for United States,” the § told newsmen, - KALGAN CAPTURE DOOMS CHINESE | the | 2-year-old Duke | { lumber i : meanwhile, | P1indly 12,300-volt id the Duke would be named Brit- | ¢r@shed in a valley and burst into | flames, HOPES FOR PEACE: 12.- which the Chi- made’ their No. NANKING, Oct, capture of Kalgan, nese Communists 1 military citadel, okservers to conclude today that China’s peace talks were deflnileh prompted many | Guvvmment‘ Miami, 3 doomed. I Communists sources concedé that the loss of Kalgan is a severe blow. unify all Communists and make them fight the govern- ment armies harder than ever. The Communists had insisted they would not return to the peace table until the Government called | ‘N Atlanta, apparently hit a farmer's pile as the pilot groped through the dense fog for landing. The ship careened against a well house, ripped into a high tension power line Debris Far Strewn Debris was strewn over half a mile of the wooded muddy ter- | rain about five miles south of here. One by one the stewardess, Miss Betty Camera, 26, Harrisburg, Pa., hecked off the 21 adult passeng- ers as they emerged from the es- icape hatch of the flaming fuselage. t Then she shepherded them to the {top of the hill for safety in ease (Of an explosion, Mrs. Marvin Bawafds of Sweet- boro, N. J, came out with her shoes torn off by the plane's im- pact, but with her 10-month-old son safe in her arms. The pilot, Capt. Joe S. Morris, of stepped dazedly irom the i plane after the passengers had got jout and said: “I'm all right. the beam. . . ."” Pilots Only Injured ‘Then he began tq gush blood from the mouth. Capt. Morris and his co-pilot, P. K. Zepernick, also of Miami, were reported by East- ern Air Lines officlals to have I was right on ibeen the only ones injured. Narrow as their escape from | laming death had been, most of passengers expressed willing- off its drive on Kalgan, a city ot‘urzss to fly on immediately to their even greater strategic their political capital at Yenan. Gen. Chou En-li, who walked out] i in Nanking when | on peace talks value than :Dum | destinations beyond Washington. fog continued through the ghts from National Airport. The B-25 Army plane was en- the Government loosed its multiple ( ‘OUte from Richmond, Va. to An- drive on Kalgan, refused at Shang- hai to comment on the fall of Lh? fortress. Previously he had told Geneml-l issimo Chiang Kai-shek through | POIt, XmVv Field, Md. At 11:26 pm., the Army craft reported heavy tog and asked per- mission to land at National Air- Washington, or at the Navy's intermediaries that if the govern- ‘Bulhnu Field, across the Potomac ment captured Kalgan, China would River. Told to wait a moment, that he split wide open and the respon-|another plane was coming in to sibility ‘would lie with the Govern-jland. the B-25 circled away and ment nothing more was heard from it e e — ‘unlfl it crashed in a wooded area DONTDIE | Oct SEATTLE, 12.-The facture of manu- day at two Seattle plants when 42! members of the AFL-Upholsterers International were called out on strike. Union leaders, who are seek- ing industry-wide agreements on wages and working conditions, said the work stoppage affected the en- tire Pacific coast - SEATTLE, Oct. 12.—Butter was the $1 a pound mark in Se- today. Retail prices went to {94, 96 and 98 cents Friday when wholesale prices jumped two cents a pound. One distributor another raise to prevent butter | from Seattle being shipped to San he said the price a pound higher -ee— - 18 STRUNG UP HAMBUR! Germany, Oct, is three cents 12— The British say that 12 more Nazi| hanged Priday, ) action war criminals w bringing the total for the week to 28. Among those executed was Doctor Werner Rhode, held responsible for four British women agents at the | They | Ftruthof Natzweiler camp, askets was halted Fri-! predicted | BUTTERUP {Security detail said, jget one about six miles ort south of the air- > FLYING DElAYED NEW YORK, Oct, 12. Bad weather forced cancellation today of 63 domestic flights at LaGuardi: Field and delayed 21 inbound anc departing trans-Atlantic flights as much as five hours. "Too MTIEh Meat” Is Cry of Hess; Give Me Prunes” NUERNBERG, Oct. 12.—Rudoll Hess complained to prison officials today that he was getting “too much meat” in his diet and would like to swap some of it for prunes. Capt. A. M. Binder of the U. 8. “l assure you he isn’t getting tco much meat,” ex- plaining that the Nazi prisoners big meal daily at noon, coffee and bread for breakfast and a light snack for supper. i NO MORE APPLE PIE Lawrence P. Apple has filed an in the District Court here secking a divorce from Marion M. Apple, on grounds of desertion who was!The Apples were married at Priday the deaths of | Harbor, Wash,, have property January no children rights are to be 1, 1939. and no settled.

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