The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 13, 1946, Page 1

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N - 7 THE DAILY VOL. LXVIIL, NO. 10,450 —_———— e = ALASKA EMPIRE “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1946 MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS = PRICE TEN CENTS SWIRLING FLOOD WATERS RAGE IN N.W. 15KILLED, 50 ARE INJURED, Rescue Crews with Torches Cutting Through Mass of Steel for Victims | Says British FOR 32 VICTIMS OF Powerlessto HOPE ABANDONED | CRASHED PLANE Worst Storm of Years i Ofl Mt‘ Rainier LONDON Dec 13.—A Labor member has charged in the British "Housc of Commons that Britain no SEATLE, Dec. 13.—Hopes waned longer is strong enough to rule In teday for the 32 Marines aboard n}dm by power politics. The Labor- Marine Corps transport plane when |ite, W. G. Cove, declared that Brit it disappeared Tuesday afternoon | ain no longer has the reserve po Russians " "Wrecked' TRAIN WRECK Rescue partes siatied by, Govern India. Manchuria <z% BODIES ARE UG FROM RUINS (OLLAPSED BLDG. 1 Steam Shovels to Be Put fo Work in Removing HOTISSUE OVER SPAIN IS SETTLED WASHINGTON, Dec. 13—Edwin ; " ! ¢ {W. Paucy, President Truman’s re- Debris Diplematic Represenia: ipum(iuns representative, puts i squarely on Russia the “major re- sponsibility” for the “wreci con- dition” of Manchurian industry. Destruction that MANSFIELD, O., Dec. 13.—A pile enroute here from San Diego, Calif. er in the modern world. He add- o o onfiscation and removal of up of the Pennsylvania Railroad’s crack “Golden Triangle” and two freight trains killed at least 15 per- | sons today and caused injuries to an estimated 50 or more. | Nine hours after the wreck at Coulter, 12 miles southeast cf here, seven of the dead had been identi-/ tied and seven more. bodies had been found in the wreckage. Rescue crews with torches still were cutting through the mass of twisted steel and splintered wood in search of other tictims. { ‘Approximately 150 of the passeng-| ers were soldiers enroute from Fort! Dix, N. J., to Chicago for a 12-day Christmas furlough before departure for Japan. Seven of the known dead were soldiers. The 13-car train ploughed into the wreckage of two east-bound freight trains which had derailed | just a few minutes before at about 2:46 a. m. (EST). H One freight train had stopped Le- cause of a broken airhose and was rammed by a second freight. A spokesman for the Jennslivan ia’ Railroad said at Pittsburgh tha L. Petroskey, engineer of the sec ond freight, failed to heed an “ap- proach signal” two miles west of| the accident, and thus was unable to apply his brakes in time wheun the stop signal showed 600 feet from the accident. ! The Pennsylvania spokesman said' the “approach signal” meant the| engineer of the second freight should slow down to 30 miles an hour and be prepared to stop hi train. Petrosksy was not injured As the Triangle’s two locomo tives crashed into the wicckage:' reported a severe storm in the Pac- dent of Insurance considers fur-| the second coach back broke in the| middle and fell over a 30-foot em-! bankment. The dead were pinned| beneath four overturned coaches.| Eight coaches remained upright on; the rails | R. H. Williams, Pennsylvania railroad agent here, said at least ip! - Snowstorms Tying While official sources were silent,/ed that she has lost command of gaarchers, chafing under inactivity| the sea and that America now had enforced by some of the worst|the biggest fleet in the world. Cove storm conditions in a decade, ex-|told Commons that the greatest fac- ssed fears there can be no sur-tor in holding the British Empire vivors of the missing plane. |together had been her sea power, They were based on Mount Rain-|but that such power had slipped ier, to kegin a search of its slopes, away. particularly on Nisqually Glacier,] Cove oke in defense of his par- above the 8,000-foot altitude as|ty’s independence policy for India scon as the weather permits. |in answer to criticism by Conser- The plane last reported herself|vatives and Nationalists. He enter- south of Toledo, Wash., at 4:13 ». ed thé discussion of the snarled m. (PST) Tuesd: Toledo is some |India negotiations after Nationalist 40 miles southwest of the moun-|Sir John Anderson warned against tain. baste in withdrawing from India. Search turned to Mt. Rainier af- €ir John, a former governor of In- ter Park Supt. John C. Preston re-|dia, described the governmen ported hearing a plane overhead handling of the India problem as about 4:15 p. m. Tuesday, during|a tlunder of the first order a heavy downpeur, and & ranger at Paradise Valley, near the Glacier, - also told of hearing the plane. REPOR' (HARGES Preston said that if the plane struck the mountain, it would have! been buried in the deep snow, and EXIRA SAlARIES PAID INS. EXECS. it may be some time before it can Le located even after the weather clears. NEW YORK, Dec. 13—The New | York State Insurance Department made public today a report charg- i ing salary irregularities in the Home Insurance Co. largest fire insurance ccmpany in the nation, |and involving its President, Harold V. Smith, and former Vice-Presi- dent George E. Allen, now director of the RFC. - e MUp I@_f!ic, Japa TOKYO, Dec. 13.—Blinding snow- storms tied up railroads and halted | operations on coaling ships of West and Northeast Honshu today. ekt One mountainous section reported The finding were made in an 30 inches of snow, the heaviest in| €Xxaminer's report and, the Depart- early 50 years. !ment said, are a matter of public At Yokohama, the Eighth Army record while the State Superinten- ific had delayed the arrival of 5ev-: ther treatment of the alleged ir- eral ships three or four days. regularities. - { The report stated Smith w SCOTTISH RITE MASONS e $vg g S, g B ENDING DEGREE WOR {continued to charge costs of trav- eling, gifts and entertainmert against the company. and machinery, Pauley |declares in a formal report to {President Truman, indicate there were “long-range strategic reaso: Ibehind the Russian action | focdstuffs | The veport was dated Nov. 12 and has now Leen distributed to some | Congressmen “The chacs caused by the So- |viets,” the report said, ‘“‘has pro- |duced a condition of instability both | politically and economically which will take a long time to correct. It {left a populace cold, hungry and full of unvest.” With its abundant natural |sources and industrial plants, Paul- ey continued, Manchuria wou'l have been the logical point to begin the rehabilitation of China Pauley, who made an inspection trip to Manchuria last June and July, said, “'$2,000,0600,000 is consid- tered to be a conservative estimate of the damage" to Manchuria re- sulting from the Soviet occupation. - lewis Demonsirated re- (ourage §_a!s Journal WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 — The Unircd Mine Workers Journal said | tcday that John L. Lewis demon- _‘su'a(ed courage and statesmanship }in calling off the soft coal strike {in the face of Jegal entanglements. { It was the fast issue of the { Journal since the recent coal strike | began. | declared : “Governmert intervention and | court preccecings had crystallized linto such an overall blockade to | negotiating a contract that there | was nothing left for the United |Mine Workers to do other than accompanied | | Explaining the sudden’ ending of | i{the work stoppage, the publication 70 of the 150 troops on the pas-| v ” genger train escaped injury and The Scottish Rite Masons will were placed aboard a special trainconclude, this year's degrec work and moved into Chicago. jthis evening when the 32nd degree Pvt. Chester Harp, 17, of Keno- | Will be conferred in full form on As Vice-President, Allen, long an intimate of President Truman, re- ceived $14,000 a year, the report |said. Then he was given an ad- | ditional $5,000 by Smith's order, it {act upon its own.” The article added that Lewis took | matters in his own hands and de- cided to act while union attorneys | were in conference with Chief Jus- sha, juries, said that steam rushing into the first coach back of the. engine was “a most terrible Lhing": and burned many of the 75 soldizrs: in the car. ! —,—— — IDAHO VISITORS Bessie M. Little and Della L.‘ Pearson from Jerome, Idaho are; staying at the Baranof Hotel. ! The ’Wm‘ihfg ioné Merry - Go-Round By DREW PEARSON i WASHINGTON—A lot of miners| were not in sympathy with thei coal strike and John L. Lewis| knew it. especially, were lukewarm, and were | returning to work in droves. That,| undoubtedly, was one factor behind | his strike collapse. | However, Lewis had a nucleus of miners, especially in Western, Pennsylvania, who were ready to! go the limit for him. And though,| fortunately, they had no chance to, use it, they had an answer all| ready for the President’s Sunday ! night radio appeal asking them to! go back to work. i UMW leaders had planned to! have thousands of miners each| mail a shirt to the White House With it was to go the inscription “You have taken the shirt off our| back. You can go back to the| haberdashery business.” : All of which illustrates the tem- per of one segment of the popula- tion in one of the worst domestic! crises the nation has ever experi-| enced. 1 FIREPROOFING CHRISTMAS TREES Apropos of Christmas, don't for- get about fireproofing your Christ- mas tree. A Yule tree needn't be (Continued on Page Four) ! Wis. who received back in- 2 Class of candidates. & |added. The additional $5,000 was Preceding the work will be a din-| .ooorded on the books of the com- ner at the Temple scheduled mr‘pany as traveling exbenses, but 6:30 o'clock. T : Allen said he regarded it as salary The degree Work, which Will beland “treated it accordingly,” the directed by John J. Fargher, Master report stated. of Kadosh, will begixlat 8 o'clock.| “y. Washington, Allen said that Tk L {he had treated the expense allow- lance as additional salary during B.u l l E I I N Sllhv nine-year period prior to his {resignaticn. He told a reporter |that he had paid income tax on i 3 the money as salary and had ex- MABSAW. Hliof Rooscwelt‘ plained that to the State Examtm and his wife have arrived here by erg o their last examination about airplane from Moscow. They expect}m > years ago. - to see President Boleslaw Bierut,| Premier Edward B. Osubka-Mor- :ru:ki and other government lcad-EpRIN(ESS lou“E IS NORTH TONIGHT Canadian Pacific steamer Prin- SHANGHAI — The U. S. Graves Registration Service today announc- | ed it has recovered in China the, The strip coal miners,!remains of nearly 3000 of America’s|cess Louise is scheduled to sail| war dead for shipment to the irom Vancouver tonight at 9 United States. Included are the o'clock and is scheduled to arrive ashes of 140 cremated American'in Juneau Monday afternoon or airmen and prisoners of war. ! evening. 7 | The North Sea and Tongass are OTTAWA— Canada’s Army, Navy|scheduled to sail from Seattle to- and Air Departments, under sep- morrow for Southeast Alaska ports, arate ministers during the war, were | both loaded with freight. back on a pre-war basls under a Freighter Palisana is expected single defense minister today after|i, arrive in Juneau from the West- a series of cabinet changes. ward about Sunday. { - CARACAS, Venezueia— President Romulo Betancourt’s government K TERRITORY FILES SUIT announced today leaders of the FOR NING CO. BONDS hort-lived revolution of a few mili- ary aviators had been arrested and that the “last small pocket of re- sistance in the interior is elimin- ated.” The Territory of Alaska has filed \suit in escheat for unclaimed bonds of the Alaska Gastineau Gold Min- ‘ing Company, a corporation. Bonds AT lin the amount of $9,949.83 were HERE FROM ANCHORAGE | transferred to the Clerk of the Registering at the Baranof Ho-|District Court on January 31, 193 tel from Anchorage are Mrs. Carol and since said bonds have remained D Weis, Zada L. Barkam, Gladys A.|unclaimed until present date, the | Newell, G. Strickler, and O. V.!Territory of Alaska is filing an)J. Dimond. Kukkola. escheat petition for title. FROM CALIFORNIA | ATHENS — Police reported that Gertrude M. Georges arrived three persons met violent deaths in from Glendale, Calif. yesterday to|Athens during the night in political visit in Juneau. She is a guest at slayings, as outbreaks increased the Baranof Hotel. throughout this tense capital, | tice Vinson. R 'TB SUBJECT AT BPW( ' LUNCHEON THIS NOON The weekly Business-Professional | Women’s Club luncheon was held !today in the Gold Room of the I B: Purington presiding. Club mem- ! bers were reminded by Betty Mc- Cormick to sign up for the Christ- mas party which will be held Dec {18th in the Odd Fellows Hall. The Executive Board in charge of the deccrations should be at the Hall not later than 5:30 o'clock that evening to help in the tree trim- | ming. | Mrs. Francis Paul, Secretary, read | this week’s business correspondence |and Isobel Funk asked member to |take gifts for exchange at the ! Christmas party. Mrs. Bess Winn, Secretary of the Tuberculosis Association, presented |a dialogue with the assistance of | Isobel Funk on the background of iearly tuberculosis work accom- plished in the Territory and on | the splendid results brought about | by present modern equipment and mobile units in the prevention and cure of the dreaded disease. i The dialogue touched upon the first committee work that took |place in the Territory to se | funds for the required program and names from the past, instru- ! mental in orgahizing the ground- |werk for tuberculosis care, were | mentioned. Among the list were Dr. W. W. Council, Alaska's first Health Commissioner; Dr. Kendali Emerson, late Governor John W. Troy, and former Delegate Anthony Also the late E. W. whose memory was | Griffin, in founded Griffin Memorial Hospital |at Kodiak, late Ernest M. Polley, 'and among the early workers in | Juneau were Mrs. Jack Thoma: 'Mrs. Mildred Hermann, and Mrs. William Paul nof Hotel with President Irma tives fo Be Withdrawn from Franco’s Land By LARRY HAUK NEW YORK, Dec. 13.—The Uni- lieved buried. under tons of rubble.|ted Nations General Assembly to- As the brcken bodies of a 16-]day tossed one of its hottest issues ar-old girl and 60-year-old man;into the laps of its 54 members by |were carefully extricated from the:recommending withdrawal of i ruins, police said they planned to!matic representatives from |fet three steam shovels to work on'Spain and a British spokesman im- tke ruins of the building in which|mediately announced his country more than 3¢ were injured. Work- would “very shortly” recall its am- ors _had previously, dug by hand!bassador from Madrid. |because they feared heavy machin-{ A government source in London ery would cause more crashes said Sir Victor Mallet, British am- The building at 2515 Amsterdam|hassador to Spain, would be recall- {Avenue in Upper Manhattan, which:ed in accordance with the U. N NEW YORK, Dec. 13 | workers who dug the bodies of 21) perscns from the wreckage of a collapsed tenement house in a slow| 'grim procession death gave up hope |today for the lives of 15 others Le- Weary {housed 22 families, was smashed! resolution declaring the Franco carly yesterday by a two-foot thick|government to be a F wall of an adjoining ice house}gime.” The informant |which toppled on it after a five-; Howard would be designated Brit- alavm fire in the ice house ish Charge D'Affaires in Madrid, This blaze, which started nbuul'gnnd that the embassy probably 11 b, m. Wednesday night, was the would be reduced to the status second in the ice plant in a fewjof a legation |hours. The earlier one, occurringi In Madrid a Spanish foreign min- taround 5 p. m.. was put out swiftly}istry spokesman id it was “too by firemen rearly” for comment on the U. N. , Joseph McCabe, 13, and [ Assembly vote. No official Spanish B/ h Elfo, 10, were arrested last]comment on the U. N. vote was night and held as juvenile delin-]expected until after the regular ‘quents on arson charges in con-!cabinet meeting, scheduled for late neetion with the earlier fire. They,! today along with two other bo; had. Diplomats in Madrid who would beén questioned by Assistant Dis-{be affected by the U. N. resolu-| |triet. Attorney Jacob Grumet {tion include ministers from *the . ey i Dominican Republic and El Sal- !vador, which voted against the U :N. resolution, and the Netherlands tand Turkey, which abstained from. {voting. All other U. N. diplomatic iMissions in Spain are headed by i Charges D’Affaires, some of whom vhave the personal rank of minis- ABRECHT BOOSIING ;tv but not of ministers plenipo- j tentiary | The United States has had L ‘& %meflffl‘»fldol' at Madrid since jreturn of Norman Armour e L To strengthen its recommenda-| ition for actio he sel in- WASHINGLON, bec. ition for action the Assembly in 13—Alaska : needs Statenood for urgent medi-|Cuded & clause asking all member cal reasons, Dr. C. Earl Albrecht,! report what action they had 3 P 5 ' o *itaken. It was the Assembly’s first Terrifuigy. B (’(’m"‘“mn"r"iconm'rau- action against the Fail- said today Alaska’s no the ;angist regime during its long and fillieretidels AERth l_‘““"bltlcr debates over what to do with . that of the United ; yap who once aligned himself Albrecht said—and tuber-iyyp mitler and Mussolini. often linked closely with; i s oA mainutrition—has been called “a’ | disease of the underprivileged.” et oea_ BILL OF RIGHTS is eight times States t “The _b(jneul.s of i o mention” e s b g DAY DESIGNATED ;?::‘\‘«‘tipslhcm are the medical ud-’ AS DE(EMBER 15 ‘Our hard-working and able tore Delegate, Bch Bartlett, has no vote.; According to a wire recedved (o Two Senators would make a lot of iday by Acting Governor Lew Will- difference.” 'iams from the Department of Inter- The Juneau physician, on his an-:ior, Washington, President Truman pual visit to Washington, told re-|Pas designated December 15. 1946, ‘This date periers the Alaska Legislature has)@s Bill of Rights Day {recognized the sericusness of its'Will mark the 156th anniversary of| Jth problem by establishing athe adoption of tke Bill of Rights. €,000 fund—one-tenth its leg-1 As quoted from the wire, the tive appropriation for the year— President lis upon the officials for tuberculosis control jof the government to display the the Terri-'flag of the United States on all ithin the past year K ; 4 bas acquired its first two tu-|government buildings on that day perculesis hospitals—converted Ar-|and urges the people of the United! structures at Skagway and ' States to observe the day with ap- Seward. Funds have Ween allotteq ! Propriate ceremonies and prayer at for construction of a p(*rm:\nentl"hmr homes, in hools, and in 200-bed sanitorium at Sitka. In|Places of congregation. | the planning stage is a hospital P IS SET FOR MONDAY PORTLANW, Gie., Dec. i3—Cap- tain Henry Burns, of Seattle, mas- ter of the Alaska relief ship Reef atures of | Knot, now loading here, reported SCHOLARSHIP FUND i ~ COMING UP AT P-TA | One of the important fi [the Monday night business meeting|today that the ship is now pdul- of the Parent-Teachers Associationled to sail Monday i will be the choosing of a project! The ship is expected to arrive in jfor attaining the scholarship foriCordova, Alaska, by next Thursday 1947 and the time and place. : The cargo consists of breakfast “A beautiful, intriguing picture,”|foods, soap, eggs, boxed apples, stated Publicity Chairman Carol | orang potat paper products Beery Davis, “which must be seen and household necessities, which are to be appreciated, will be awarded hard to get here as well as ir to- the classroom holding the best Alaska parent representation at the meet-| The goods are bound for distri- ing” Each month it will rotate'bution in Matanuska, Seward, Fair- from room to room, according to'banks, Kodiak, Anchorage, Seldova, the number of parents who attend Palmer, Cordova, Woodrow, and P-TA, and at the close of the year|Moose Pass it will go permanently to the room} - which has had it the greatest num-! "SHANGHAI Dr. J. Heng Liu, ber of times. i chief medical officer of the Chinese Following the business meeting,|National Relief and Rehabilitation Miss Cordelia Keppinger, music in-|Association, told reporters today he| |struetor, will present a violin solo would leave by plane tomorrow for| { from the Wieniawski concerto., Washington ,to protest a contem- Christmas refreshments will be plated $6,000,000 slash in UNRRA's Servec $41,300,000 budget for China ARMS REDUCTION PROGRAM SPEEDED UP AT UN SESSION Draft of Resolution Is Un- animously Approved by GA Committee. By MAX HARRELSON NEW YOR¥ 13--The Unit- ed WNaticns sped toward final tion on the principles of a worle wide arms reduction program to- day when the General Assembl powerful political committee ap- proved unanimecusly a draft reso- lution ing down the general terms of the arms plan The 54-naticn committee, meet- i LaKe Success, sent the mea- re to the Assembly for final ac- | tion ter making a few minor chan In view of the unani-: mous vote, it sured of adop- ticn by the Assembly The resolution recommended that the urity Council formulate maments limitations and up inspection and control ma- Se nery to detect and prevent viola- ticns The machinery Will be free of the Power veto. It must be ap- ed finally by a special ses- sion of the General Assembly and be ratified by individual program includes provisions of the outlawing of atomic bombs and cther weapons ot ticn and the control of atomic cnergy used for peaceful purposes. The Political Committee immedi~ ately turned to the controversial question of an immediate interna- ticnal treop census, which was vot- ed down last night by & 20-nation ub-committee over Russian objéc- tions. A Meanwhile, the Assembly in plenary session at Flushing Meadow Park started debate on the Big Pewer veto, which had been one of the, most hotly ‘contested issues of the present session As the Assembly drove toward adjournment, which originally had been set for tonight but apparently would have to be postponed, the United ates and ' Great Britain planned to send in their top-rank s destruc- | HUNDREDS EVACUATED ~ISREPORI gValleys Near Seattle Inun- dated - Highways Clos- | ed-Large Damage { SEATTLE, Dec. 13--Official esti- | mates counted more than 500 per- |sons evacuated from their hcmes today as the Pacific Northwest !faced renewed devastation from ! flood with forecast of intermittent | rain continuing all day. | At Kent, apparently hardest hit, the Police Department estimated ibetween 300 and 400 persons had {been removed from their White | River Valley homes into the city. The King County Sheriff's office said prebably more than 100 per- scns were being harbored at Ren- ton sons from Earlington Flats in the inundated Gieen River Valley. Both main highways leading to Kent were closed, one being cov- fered by six 1eet of swirling water from the .Gieen River, its flood crest swollen by abnormal - high 1 tides backing in from Puget Sound. In Oregon, the Willamette man- aged to carry off additional bur- throughout Northwestern Oregon | were receding, at least temporarily. l The 40-acre State Hospital dairy {farm at Pendleton, in Eastern O1e- igon, was Inundated in a flood {worse than that of 1946. The tloda- (g Walla Walla River threatened to carry away. two bridges and at along Mill Creek's banks. i Some of the worst flood condi- tions in the past decade were re- jported from Snohomish County, inunh of Seattle. | Slides blocked many roads. i A heavy toll of property dam- tage and livestock loss is reported in the agticulturally-rich White | River Valley. A survey indicates the valley be- Latest evacuation was of 150 per- t dens of water, and stream crests/ Walla Walla sandbags were piled diplomats who, until last night, had | tween Auburn and Renton is the been tied up in the Council of | hardest hit Kent Pclice Chief Foreign Ministers. |James O. Allread cays drowned - - &ammuls are floating against fences, NO TROOP CENSUS i chickens are roosting in trees and NEW YORK, Dec. 13—The l,,Jw.‘cows and calves are dritting to erful United Nations Political and j8ll parts of the valley. Allread Security Committee today approved ; believes everything in the lowlands tiie general principles of a world-{has been damaged. wide arms reduction program and | # | recital at the same time rejected proposals for an immediate international troop census. Shortly after the 54-nalion com- j ttee had agreed unanimously on for setting up arms chinery, it decided 29 to 4 to toss the troop inventory questicn into the hands of the Se- curity Couneil along with the arms limitation program for detailed consideration. Soviet Russia had initiated the troop census debate by proposing that all nations report immediately on the number of troops they had in allen non-c questicn later w e f and, iin stic troops as well It became so complicated by amendments that the committee beeame hopelessly deadlocked. The final action -was ¢n a com- resolution offered by As- President Paul-Henri Spaak Belgium Both the arms reduction plan and the troop census resolution new go to the Assembly and may come up for action tonight The arms reduction resolution was assured of final Assembly ap- proval when it was adopted by the Committee without a dissent- ing vote, of - - PUPILS OF MRS. DON McMULLIN IN RECITAL Mrs. Don McMullin will present the following pupils in an informal Sunday afternoon at 3 at the Methodist Church Georgie Robards, Sonny Robards, Dorothy Robards, Pat Cross, Ida Blankenship, Freddie Chester, Rudy Ripoli, Mollie Jo McSpadden, Pen- ny Blood and Sylvia Lister The program is open to the puk lic and a cordial invitation is tended, o'cleck countries | ¢ Cold W;ve - Hils Juneau | ot { Well, it has come to Juneau for !the first time in many years. Yep, it struck here during the [night and has continued to hang round all day. We are talking about the present leold wave { It is two degrees above zero and 1ase back in the record: n't find such a tempe jebeut 10 or 12 years back i Besides the temperature, there is {a cold wind hitting it across the | Sbreets, altogether too often. And !just think of it, cheechakos are rushing around purchasing ear :Imulrs. Gosh, what will they do ywhen it gets really cold, like at | Mayo where it is 70 below and | Dawsen, 60 and Fairbanks {from 47 to 5 ? ! But it wen't get that cold here. { But it is geing to keep the same ! temperature i maybe go fdewn about degree or so. OLDTIMERS, YOUNGUNS . WILL BOWL TONIGHT | There is to be a at bowling ,game cn the E! alie.s tonight, starting at 8 o'clock. The Oldtimers are to meet the youngsters and show ‘em up. Oldtimers are Henning, Met- calf, Stewart, Carnegic and Holm- quist The small fry are Hagerup, Me- Kinnon, Barragar, Snow and Burke. — e PEIPING — Chinese Communists attacked government forces 15 miles from Dairen, said unconfirmed re- ports today, but were driven off after two days

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