The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 15, 1950, Page 1

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- e THE DAILY ALASKA. EMPIRE VOL. LXXIV., NO. 11,479 “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” JUNEAU, ALASKA, SATURDAY, APRIL 15, 1950 RUSS MAY HAVE | SHOT DOWN PLANE MISSING ON BALTIC Moscow Newspapers Pub- lish Reports-Threat Is Also Indicated i By EDDIE GILMORE MOSCOW, April 15—{M—Moscow newspapers today published Tass news agency dispatches under for- eign datelines indicating a belief abroad that Russian fighters may have shot down the U.S. Navy Pri- vateer plane missing since last Sat- urday. Under a London dateline, Tass quoted the News Chronicle as say- ing that: “Incidents such as the present one in which a plane was downed will be repeated in the fu- ture as the Russians will not halt at anything to preserve military sec- rets.” Tass said the missing plane was equipped with “exploratory radar” and aerial photographic equipment and had on board “three specialists in electronics.” The American press was accused of distorting the facts of the case and of minimizing the “real pur- poses” of the plane’s trip. The agency dispatch also said the widespread search for the missing plane during the past week was a mask for air intelligence explora- tion in the Baltic. It quoted the New York ‘Times as saying in a Frankfurt story that the Baltic shore is a very interest- ing place for aerial observations. 1t is becoming clearer all the time that if the missing plane actually was shot down, the Russians regard this as just punishment for viola- tion of international law. Likewise it is very apparent that the Soviet,si would deal out similar treatment to} any other foreign military planes which show up on this side of the frontier. The Soviet press has maintained from the first that this has been a “crude violation” of international rights and sovereignty and the plane got “what was coming to it." TWO PRESBYTERIAN ORGANIZATIONS 10 HOLD SESSIONS HERE The Presbytery of Alaska and the Alaska Presbyterial Society of the Presbyterian Church will meet in Juneau, at the Northern Light Presbyterian Church, beginning next Wednesday at 8 p.m. This is the annual mecting of the Pres- byterian Church in southeastern Alaska. Delegates, about 75 in number, will be in attendance from out of town. Dr. Price H. Gwynn, Director of Leadership Education, and Dr. Walter Barlow, Director of the Department of Faith and Life, will be present to lead discussicns and to speak at the evening ses- sions. Dr. J. Earl Jackman, Sec- retary of the Alaska Unit of the Board of National Missions will also be present. The Presbytery of Alaska will hold all their sessions in the Nor- thern Light Presbyterian Church and also all evening services. Al the popular evening meetings will be held in this Church. The Presbyterian Soclety will hold their daily business sessions in the Methodist” Church. ‘ The Public is invited to attend all sessions of these two bodies and especially the evening programs. The meetings will continue through Monday evening. The Washington Merry - Go- Roun (Copyright, 1950, by Bell Syndicate, IneJ By DREW PEARSUN ASHINGTON—With U. S.- U. 8. & R. relations getting no better as a result of the U. S.- plane-over-Latvia incident, it's im- portant to take a look at the re- cent Hague conference and see how the North Atlantic Pact is working. That pact was founded on the idea that the United States would furnish arms, Europe the men— for the defense of western Europe. It wasn't given publicity at the recent Hague meeting, but that principle isn’t really working out. In brief, western Europe is hang- ing back about supplying the men. ‘The French, usually considered the great reservoir of military man- power, told Hague confeerees they had an army. tied up in Indo- China, where Communist gueril- las are killing French officers at the rate of one-half a West Point graduating class per year. It Our Freedoms Threatened by Rumors: Veep ‘WASHINGTON, April 15 — (® — Vice President Barkley said today the sharpest threats to American freedoms come from sources within this nation which “sow rumors and suspicion among us.” In a speech prepared for the open- ing of the Washington sesquicent- ennial celebration, the Vice Presi- dent said this country now faces “the most powerful and aggressive foe in our history as a nation.” Witbout mentioning Russia by name, he said the Soviet Union now is offering the world “the counter revolution of tyranny.” “What is hidden in the vestments of an utopian Marxist world of peace and plenty is a perverted and gnawing lust for imperial power which in its magnitude of scope would have made Caesar pale and Alexander tremble,” he declared. He said there “is another foe of our freedoms, no less insidious, nc less dangerous, and this lies within ourselves.” ‘Without identifying those in- volved, Barkley declared: ° 1 “The sharpest threats to the free- doms which we enjoy here in America have come, up to now, not from outside sources but from with- in. “It is often precisely when we are threatened with a loss of our freedoms from the outside that we‘ hear voices among us demanding that we cede away some of our freedom here at home in order toj protect ourselves from this outside threat. “These same forces which would abridge our freedoms, sow rumors and suspicion among us.” 1949 LOSSES FOR KAISER - FRAZER | | { H-BOMB NOT FORQUICK USE, THINKS NIMITZ LAKE SUCCESS, April 16—P—| U. S. Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz told 85 visiting West Point Cadets yesterday he doesn’t think the hydrogen bomb can be de- veloped in his lifetime. He added: “I hope I don't live to see it.” Nimitz, who is engaged by the United Nations to administer a plebiscite for Kashmir, spoke to the cadets for 30 minutes. His opinion that man would not produce a hydrogen bomb in the near future was concurred in by Dr. Robert Millikan, chairman ot the California Institute of Tech- nology. > Millikan, one of the nation’s tov scientists, said the stumbling block to the hydrogen bomb is that man can’t produce 25,000,000 degree cen- tigrade temperatures to transform helium into energy, like the center of the sun does' He told reporters here the world does not have to fear that Russia will have a stogkpile of atom bombs very soon. He said Russia is getting most of its urnaium from the Joac- himstahl fields in Northern Czecho- slovakia and Saxony and added that he doesn’t think there is much ura- nium there. TWO ARRESTED IN CONNECTIONWITH | BURGLARY HERE: Police this morning arrested two youths in connection with a burglary in which more than $500 worth of sports equipment was taken from the Quilico Sport Center on Front The first arrest was made just 24 hours after the burglary was lis- covered at 9 a. m. yesterday when police officers took into custody Charlie Jimmy, 17. Two hours later Albin Frederick- TOTAL 30 MILLION| DETROIT, April 15—(M—Kaiser- ;‘er::m Corp. lost $30,329,351 last son, 20, was apprehended. . Both youths were booked on open Thip s dml"sfd in the auUto- 1, 1ges Police expected to make | motive corporation’s annual finan-|,,ner arrest in connection with cial statement, issued today. It com- |, burglary this afternoon. pares with a net profit of $10,362,098 Part of the loot, including several after all taxes, in 1048. pistols, was recovered, Police Chief Kaiser-Frazer's experience ran|penardq E. Hulk said. contrary to that of the indusityl pe said Jimmy admitted his part in general in 1949. in the burglary in a signed state- Earnings were at a new high with { o a record production of 6,238,000 cars The’ Quilico store was entered and trucks. Big General Motors early yesterday morning through earned $656,434,232, Chrysler $132,- 5 trapdoor in the floor of Skinnner’s 170,096. Gun Shop in the rear of the Sport But K-F is optimistic about the!center, future. It has three new models in production or soon to reach the; assembly lines, and Edgar F. Kaiser, president, believes most of the losses “are behind us.” K-F said the major cause of itsj Street. ' FIRST COUSINS MAY MARRY IN NORTHLAND loss in 1949 was inadequate financ-{ Queries as to whether Alaskan ing. Long-term financing from "hellaw permits first cousins to marry Reconstruction Finance Corp. has|i, the territory brought an opn- improved its position for 1950, how- ever, the company said. Kaiser-Frazer Corp. was orga- nized in the summer of 1945. Since ion in the affirmative yesterfay from Attorney General J. Gerald Williams. The was furnished to U. 8. Commis- sioner Rose Walsh of Anchorage, and F. E. Kester, director of the Bureau of Vital Statistics in the Alaska Department of Health. Kester said he has had queries from other commissioners on the i question and that opinion seems to have been that Alaskan law prohibited the mar- riage of cousins.” Attorney General Willlams stated that the pertinent portion of the act says “The following marriages then, the report shows, net losses have totaled $21,008,977. § PROGRAM MEETING, SOROPTIMIST (LUB, IS WELL ATTENDED ‘The program meeting of the Soroptimist club was weil attended Friday noon in the Baranof Hotel. A short business meeting was|gre prohibited—when the parties conducted by President Alice| thereto are nearer of kin to each Thorne. She read a letter from|other than first cousins . . .” Dorothy Bilbo of the Soroptimist club of Sitka which told of the Origin of the act, the attorney general pointed out, is from Ore- Bitka club’s participation in the|gon state laws on penal, criminal, coming bi-annual meeting of the|political and eivil procedures which American Federation of Soropti-}were the basis for codes compnigd mist Clubs to be held in Seattle|as “Laws of Alaska” by Thomas in July. H. Carter in June, 1900. Mildred Hermann reported on ‘ her recent visit to Ketchikan where i:e an;o Mildred Maynard attended BPW(' I-Io"s lo "olD e roptimist club luncheon there. The Ketchikan club sent jolm MEH Mow" greetings to its sponsor club of| Business and Professional Wo- Juneau. men’s Club and the Lions will hold Guests introduced were Clara|a joint luncheon meeting at noon Robinson, Elizabeth Rundell, Miss|Monday in the Gold Room of the Knickerbocker, Betty Lockridge, | Baranof. Mrs. Elton Engstrom, Ol_lve Trower, Jane Hawkins, Ml’s.i]eg]slafive chairman of the B. P. Minard Mill, Frank Field, Mrs., W., has arranged for the showing Jane McMullin, Mrs. Vic Power |of a sound and technicolor film on and Mrs. Phesant. 'the development of Aluminum. The entertainment of the hour| This film showing the history was the showing of tha film loaned {and research of aluminum, titled | by the Alaska Development Board,|“Unfinished Rainbows,” is loaned “Alaska, U. 8. A to the clubs through the courtesy e of the Aluminum Corporation of Tex is a small, evergreen bush|America. It was shown during the | activity period of the high school Jstudents Tuesday. and blodms with beautiful cream white and rose tinted flowers. written opinion | PLAY GOES ON AFTER FONDA'S WIFE KILLS SELF IN SANATARIUM BEACON, N.Y,, April 15 — (f — Henry Fonda went back to Broad- way last night after his wife's hastily-arranged funeral and played “Mr. Roberts” to an audience that whispered the first news of her suicide from seat to seat. Thirteen hours before — shortly after dawn yesterday — the actor’s beautiful society wife had cut her throat from ear to ear with a razor blade. She was in a private sanitarium here, 40 miles north of New York City, and was believed to be re- covering from a nervous breakdown that followed her consent to a di- vorce, She was 42. Her death note ended: “I am sorry, but this is the best way out.” A doctor and nurse found her dying on the floor of the bathroom in her suite at 6:50 a.m. Her death came just as Broadway heard rumors that romance had cooled between the 44-year-old Fonda and Susan Blanchard, 22- year-old step-daughter of Oscar Hammerstein II, the librettist and producer. Fonda disclosed plans for a di- vorce last December, amid reports of a romance with Miss Blanchard. Until then, his marriage had been considered for years as one of the soundest in Hollywood and Broad- way. No legal action for divorce had been started. When word reached Fonda in New York of his wife’s death, he hastened here with his wife's mother, Mrs. Eugene Ford Seymour, and went to the Craig House Cor- poration Sanitarium. After the death was pronounced a suicide by Dr. L. Edward Cotter, Dutchess country medical examiner, a simple, private service was held in a local funeral parlor. Then her body was taken to nearby Hartsdale for cremation,| while the actor returned to New York. In the 26 months of the hit, “Mr. Roberts,” Fonda never missed one of the 882 performances. AEC POST OPEN AS MEMBER RETIRES WASHINGTON, April 15—®#—A vacancy occurs on the Atomic En- ergy Commission today, opening the way for President Truman to appoint a new member-chairman. | Lewis L. Strauss, a member since Congress created the commission three and a half years ago, is quitting to take a rest on his Virginia cattle farm. A former New York banker and business- man, he has been in government service nearly 10 years. President Truman is reported to be still undecided on a new chair- man for the important AEC, wirch is in charge of developing the hy- drogen bomb, producing dtom nom-l bs, and experimenting on peaceful uses of atomic energy Reporis on Losses In Past Two Years SAN FRANCISCO, April 15—(® “the general| _Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Co. reports net loss of $343,099 for 1949 compared with net loss of $708,738 in 1948. All nine properties were idle lfst year; as they have been since the wartime shut-down of operations, HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. Millle Brundige of Skag- way, John Filiphuk of Tulsequah, and Lola Day of Haines were ad- mitted to St. Ann's Hospital yes- terday. James Gilbreath, Philip Bogren, and Mrs. Charles Merila were dismissed. Jessie Stephens of Wrangell and Margaret Jacobs of Juneau were admitted to the Government Hos- pital, SPECIAL MEETING OF COUNCIL MONDAY NIGHT A special meeting of the Juneau City Council will be held Monday evening at 8 o'clock in the City Hall to read for the third time the new traiilic cole lor STTieau. In the absence of Mdjor Waino Hendrickson, who has gone to Van- couver, B. C. Yo attend the gen- eral conference of the Northwest AJ Gold Mining Co. | Trade Association, one of the sen- ior councilmen will preside at the MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS RESULTSIN | RED PROBE IN HAWAI Eleven Contempt Actions in Prospects Affer 3 Weeks Inquiry By LEIF ERICKSON HONOLULU, April 15—®—The House UnAmerican Committee, winding up the first week of a three-week inquiry into Commun- ism in Hawaii, today had 11 con- tempt actions in prospect. That many Hawailan witnesses since Monday have refused to say it they are or ever have been Com- munists. Seven of the 11 are from Harry Bridges CIO International Long- shoremen’s and Warehousemen's Union. And the ILWU has announ- ced that contempt action will be used as the basis of a new legal; challenge of the committee’s right to ask the Communist question. The committee’s inquiry echoed in Hawaii’s Constitutional Conven- tion. Frank G. Silva, tonvention delegate, is one of the 11 who have refused to testify before the com mittee. Of the 37 questioned, five were in A committee set up by the con- | possession' of National Guard 30-06 vention to look into the matter was | rifles, issued to natives in the north, closeted yesterday with Silva and! along with unlimited quantities of his counsel, Myer C. Symonds. Sy- | ammunition. None of these men monds is the ILWU attorney who| were among the seven who gave up is challenging the House committee. | their guns. After the secret session, the con-| The action caused considerable vention committee announced it was | buzzing in the north country, with inviting Silva to appear again Mon- | the climax reached when Percy day morning. Ipalook, house represertative, wired Silva flatly told the convention|zhe governor that “unless a satis- that “T am not and I have never | factory corrective move is taken, the been a Communist.” He has told re- | only solution for native welfare is porters he refused to talk before| establishment of reservations in na- the House probers because ‘per-|tive areas.” Ipalook has opposed establish- Confiscation of seven. rifles from their Eskimo owners by officials o the Fish and Wildlife Service, after they had admitted shooting 10 caribou illegally, has started wire: cracking Alaska-wide and a pro- test from an Eskimo house member from Wales was sent Gov. Ernest Gruening, now in Washington Clarence Rhode, regional direc- tor for the service, termed the seiz- ure “fair, considerate and justified,” while the legislator did a somer- sault in the traditional native atti- ture toward reservations by calling for their establishment as the “only solution for native welfare” unless “moves are taken . .. Reports of large numbers of cari- bou being killed in the Noatak vil- lage area, some 50 miles north of Kotzebue, led to an investigation by service representatives, and the questioning of 37 men in the village of 48 families brought confessions that they had killed 280 of the mi- gratory animals in a shoft period. Guard Rifles Not Taken The seven worst offenders were asked to give up their guns, with no further action taken. jured testimony by witnesses out to get. e could still cause a lot of | ment of reservations for natives, as trouble.” has Governor Gruening. His atti- Only one witness, admitted formeri tude expressed in his wire was in- i i Governor Gruening wired Ipalook mmediately that an investigation | would be carried forward by Day, to see whether any injustice has been perpetrated or undue hard- ship involved with a view of cor- recting any possible abuse. Reservations No Way Out “In regard to your suggestion that reservations are an alternative to enforcement of game laws . . . legal Lopinion says that exactly the same game laws will apply and will be no less rigorously enforced on than off reservations. “It is therefore clear that reser- vations furnish no solution whatso- ever. “The matter gives me great con- cern and I will do my best to see that enforcemerit of game laws, sole purpose of which is to preserve game for future generations of Alaskans, be not accomplished by unduly harsh and drastic official acts which impair the livelihood of those who depend on hunting for focd and their livelihood.” An answer rom 1palook was awaited here, with expectations that he might change his view. Rhode, when questioned, defended his service’s action with the follow- ing statement: “The widespread wholesale and wasteful slaughter of caribou makes it imperative that some action be taken to safeguard these animals from further depletion. “The recent seizure of guns at Noatak was fair, considerate and justified in order to help curb this wasteful slaughter and to safeguard the caribou for the future. Caribou in this area are taken only by native peoples and it should be their direct concern to conserve the herds for their own use.” i He said that of the seven deprived of their guns, most were single, had ATURDAY 1 P.M. Edition PRICE TEN CENTS Eskimo Rifle Seizure Brings |AIRMAN SPY Reservation Cry from Ipalook; "Wasteful Slaug!jfigr’ Charged DENIES STORY, GETS 5 YEARS I9-Year-0lfl&mits Steal- ing Papers, Wiring So- viets for Confact i GARMISCH-PARTENKIRCHEN, Germany, April 15—®—A US. Air |Forcc court martial convicted Cpl. Gustav Mueller of St. Paul, Minn., today of trying to give secret Amer- ican military information to Russia. The 19-year-old airman was sen- tenced to five years imprisonment and to be dishonorably discharged from the U.S. Air Force. Mueller testified in his own defense that he was only trying to trap some Rus- sian spies when he gave away sec- ret documents. The court, composed of seven Air Force officers, deliberated an hour and a half on its verdict after a two-day trial. Mueller, slim and dark-haired, took the verdict quietly, standing erect before the court. The small courtroom in this pic- turesque Alpine resort was packed with about 100 American soldiers and their wives, most of them here on holiday. | The court rejected Mueller’s claim that he was trying to catch Soviet sples. US. agents had testified earlier that they posed as Russian | agents and that when Mueller gave l them secret documents he told them i he was doing so because “I believe in Communism.” They said he asked : | no pay. I Mueller admitted to the seven- | man court that he wired the Soviet Consulate in Bern, Switzerland, last September asking to contact a Soviet agent. He admitted stealing secret papers gence School in ni - no dependents and had received|gau, where he was a student. He Communist Ichiro Izuka, has hung the Communist label on Silva. Izuka said Silva showed him his Com- munist membership card in 1946. Silva is ILWU business agent at Kauai. CZECH CHARGES ARE DENOUNCED; U. S. STATEMENT The United States has denounced Czechoslovakia’s charges that the U. S Information Service in Prague was used as an espionage center. It called the charges “demonstrably false” and a “de- licerately planned propaganda at- tack.” The State Depatrment said the U. 8. 1. S. was carrying on legl- terpreted here by some not in the service as one of “martyrdom” to escape responsibility of heeding the law set up for conservation pur- poses. After Ipalook’s wire was received, another wire arrived on Rhode'’s desk, from his chief, Albert M. Day, asking for facts of the case. Rhode dispatched a long explanatory let- ter of the facts to him, and is now awaiting reply. N LIONS CLUB HAS CONGRATULATIONS IN MEMBER DRIVE The Juneau Lions Club and .its officers are receiving congraulations this month from their International and District officers and reason for timate functions in diplomatic re-, the honors is that out of 7,725 clubs some cash income during, the past summer. ! Ray Woolford, service represen- tative in Kotzebue, who questioned the 37 men, said in a communica- tion to Rhode that “other rifles weren’t seized because we had held no previous conferences with the people. Didn’t Prosecute Fully After studying Woolford’s report, Rhode said: “The case shows that the service did not prosecute to the full extent of the law because this case was the first in the village and the people have not had the laws ex- plained fully to them.” More than 3,000,000 caribou roamed Alaska ranges 15 years ago, with the number today estimated at around only 160,000. “The advent.of modern firearms together with wild shooting herds,” said Rhode, “greatly in- creases the kill and causes much Jconlmd giving those papers to {agents “whom I believed to be 1 Soviets.” But the young man said on the witness stand: “I am not a Communist. I hate Communism. I am loyal to the United States and always shall be.” “I was only trying to fool the agents all along,” Mueller testified. |“I wanted to trap them. But they struck first. “I thought they were pretty gulli- ble for Soviet agents, but I guess I ! was really the gullible one.” |G-DAY PLANS ARE IN READINESS FOR | JUNEAU VETERANS Veterans of both world wars to- lations and in the maintenance ‘df}in 26 countries on five continents, friendly contracts between coun-|the Juneau club was high in new crippling. If the hunters admit km-i'fl""‘“' morning join in a program ing 280 animals surely many more|0f divine worship in Juneau’s Every ex-service man tries throughout the world. memberships for the month of Feb- The statement followed the sen-}ruary. tencing Thursday of two Czech ‘The International Association of are killed or crippled and wasted. ) churches. “Usually shooting continues until|2nd woman s included the the herd is out of sight cr the(invitation and organization mem- hunter is out of shells, with no|Pers attending are asked to wear employees of the U. S. L S. to|Lions Club, was organized by its long prison terms on charges of spreading hostile propaganda and Ipresent Secretary General, Melvin i Jones, on Juneau 7, 1917, when he supplying state secrets to the U. S.! organized business men's clubs from Embssy press attache. At the same time, Rumania re- jected a U. S. protest ageinst the recent closing of the American in- formation office and library in Bucharest. The Communist-dom- inated Rumanian government char- ged the U. S. agency was used for spying The center was closed on March 6. FROM KETCHIKAN Louise W. Miller, wellknown Ket- chikan woman, is a guest at the Baranof. WEATHER REPORT In Juheau—Maximum, 45; At Airport—Maximum, 46; minimum, 34. FORECAST (Juneau and Viclaity) Variable cloudiness with a few showers tonight and Sunday. Lowest temperature tonight about 35, highest Sunday 44. PRECIPITATION (Past 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. today @ City of Juneau—0.27 inches; since April 1 — 117 inches; since July 1—61.74 inches. At Airport — 027 inches; since April 1 — 0.71 inches; since July 1—40.82 inches. ® o000 0ce00000000000000000 0 i all over the country into one inter- national organization. This group represented, 25 clubs. By 1927 there were 1,810 clubs, with a member- ship of 61,000. Now it has mush- roomed to nearly 8,000 clubs with a total membership of more than 385,000 members, largest service club in the world. In Juneau, this group of men has been very obvious in their activities and have proved why a club of this nature would grow to such proportions. On Monday the Lions will meet as usual in the Gold Room of the Baranof Hotel for a noon luncheon meeting. This will be a special oc- casion, as the Business and Pro- fessional Womens Club are meeting jointly with them, and are provid- ing the Lions with entertainment in the form of a special show, arranged by their program chairman, Mrs, Thelma Engstrom. Not to be out-done with a pro- gram, Lions program chairman, Fred Henning, announced there will be an added treat in the form of a first appearance by a young local artist, discovered several years ago at a Lions’ sponsored amateur show. STEAMER MOVEMENTS Seattle due Sunday. Baranof scheduled to sail from Seattle today, due Tuesday. Princess Louise scheduled to sail from Vancouver April 19. Denali from westward scheduled to arrive 3 a.m., Monday. ) s thought of the future.” their organization caps Speaking of the timeliness of the Imovement the Rev. Walter A. Soboloff said “we are prone to forget that lives were given in the “Can’t Be Condoned” “This type of killing is unneces- sary to the current needs of the people and simply cannot be con- doned by an agency of the govern- ment charged with the conserva- tion of natural resources. “If our action is criticized,” he warned, “it seems to me it should be because the penaliies are not severe enough.” Rhode took Ipalook’s wire to in- fer that his service does not re- cognize problems of the Eskimos. “The reservation idea needs no comment from me,” he said, “ex- cept that caribou have unpredict- able migrations and I fail to see where a reservation would be of any value in providing more animals for the native welfare. Caribou roam constantly, never stopping even when a calf is born—the wlf starts ambling beside its mother 10 minutes after it is on the ground.” Laws Are For Natives Rhode maintained that conser- vation is for everyone, and the pro- tection and wise use of wildlife in Interior Alaska is largely for fu- | ture prosperity of the people there, | “not for those in New York to take out a license and kill them.” | “Conservation of wildlife,” he |sxaid. “is more important to the na- : tives than to anyone else, as their or out of a reservation.” Rhode and his biologists, after prolonged study, feel that in order to maintain caribou herds, not more than 10 percent take can be allowed, as that is about the rate they re- produce. i ‘ \ E ; 3 ; last war to safeguard freedom of = religious * worship and unhappily, many neglect the exercise of that freedom, so dearly won.” Churches of the city, and the entire Channel area, wil wel- ccme attendance of veterans to- I morrow. In addition to this attendance, according to Major Eric Newbould, Chaplain of Juneaw Post No. 4, The American Legion, a group w@l meet at the Legion Dugout at 10:45 o'clock and go in a body to the Juneau Methodist Church in response to the invitation of the Rev. A. B. Morgan. Earlier Sunday morning those who worship at the Catholic Church will report at the Parish residence in time for the Mass of 8:30 o'clock, to be conducted by the Rev. Leo Sweeney, S. J. The movement, to which there is being realized a nationwide re- sponse, had its inception in the urgency of today’s need for divine izuldnnce. It was developed and presented by National Chaplain the Rev. Edward J. Carney, O.SA., of Lawrence, Mass, National Com- imander George N. Craig, and the | national executive committee, The ! Freighter Coastal Rambler lrom] very lives depend on it, whether in | American Legion. | Tomorrow's municoipal council | elections in the Yugoslav-controlled | Zone “B” of Trieste are expected to give overwhelming victories to the kl’eoph‘s Front ticket patterned after Premier Marshal Tito's party.

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