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Oldest Newspaper In Alaska. “The News Of The Day In Pictures” Member of The Associated Press, | Nuclei '.Vialher Forecast. | f Increasing Cloudiness; |* Sligo.i> v. ' o'; Tonight and Thursday. i THE NOME NUGGET Published Every MONDAY. WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY VOL- 38. No. 20. NOME. ALASKA, Wednesday. Feb. 16. 1938. Single Cody 25cts. Shooting in Fairbanks Two Killed MORGENTHAU ANNOUNCES GOLD PLANS ALARM is felt over pro Hitler activities of Konrad Hen lein, 39, who Is campaigning for autonomy for German people In Czechoslovakia. Government fears he’ll disrupt republic. Marines Turned Back Japanese Shanghai Area SHANGHAI Feb. 16,(/Pi—The United States Marines turned back for the fourth time armed Japanese patrols of 13 men, at tempting to enter the American Defense Sector of the Internation al Settlement. The incident came as Marine officers and Japanese authorities conferred in an attempt to settle amicable the issue of authority 31 the Settlement. The Am ri cans maintained they were per fectly capable of patrolling the area with Japanese help. Japan.se troops in the vast Lun ghai corridor battlefront, fought desperately to e tabh'sh a base for crossing the Yellow River in their drive to sever Lsnghai railway to Teiraten and Hankow. Cary T. Gravson Head Red Cross Died Washington _ WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 15, </P>—Rear Admiral Cary T Gray-| son, renowned as head of the Am erican Red Cross, ph.psician and; oondante of three presidents, died early today. The 59-year-old retired Naval officer had been in poor health! a’mwt fro*n the time his close’ friesrf. President Roosevelt, per-1 sraaded him to accept one of the world’s foremost humanitarian jobs in 1935. H-» contracted a cold during his Southern Visit last month and developed bron chial infection after he returned here. President Roo&eveSt was Inform ed of his illness arid called at his home late yesterday. Former President Theodore Roosevelt started him on his em inent career by appointing him1 to the White House for duty in 1907; William Howard Taft re-! tained him and Woodrow Wilson made him his personal physician Two Dead And One Injured in Brawl Fairbanks FAIRBANKS, Feb. 15th, (/T>1— Shot while sitting in a parked ar in the business district, was Howard Shade, aged 26, and his companion Myrtle Rurchard Grin nell. aged 20, who was seriously wounded last night, having been wounded in the left breast and hand. Charles Fisher, aged 19, was found dead a short time later with a self inflicted bullet wound, at a cabina on the edge of town. Witnesses said the three had quarrels and had been drinking together before the shooting. Shade is a truck driver; his father carries the winter mails out of Nenana. Fisher, who was a railway employee, and the girl are both part native. Bill Introduced Increase Pay of Postmen Alaska WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 16, </P>—Delegate Anthony J Diimond in roduerd a bill providing for ustodial service for employees of thr Postoffice Department in Al aska, who should receive twenty ner cent higher pay than those in the United States. New Gold Policy Announced By H. Morgentliau WASHINGTON. D. C.. Feb. 15, (JP)—Socretary of the Treasury, Hnry M ugenthau announced a partial abandonment of the treas ury's golf sterilization program. The tre - try head announced a plan under which up to four hun dred tni 11 n dollars worth of gold which may come into the United S'ates in any one year, will be permitt.d to flow as the Nation's credit base and thereby relieve the Treasury the trouble and ex panse of borrowing money to pay for gold and keep it inactive. The plan will be retroactive. On January first app: aximately th'r'y m<Hio,n dollars in gold was acquired by the Treasury, since then it was d'.posited with the Federal II -:erv. System. Action was immediately taken to freeze at lea.- t temporarily, one billion, two hundred and twenty three million now in the treas ury’s inactive fund. The thirty million had not been made a part of the fund. The action was taken by Mor gen'thau with the approval of the Federal Reserve Board. It was learned however, that the ne.v program iwas initiated by the Tres v.ry and not the Reserve 3y item. F deral officials declined to give their opinion on the policy, and what affect it will have on business credit and other matters. FOR RUSSIA'S FLYING VOLGA BOATMEN tins monste. est ever constructed in America, was launched at the Glenn L. Martin company’s Baltimore plant. Room for 46 passengers is provided in the air leviathan whose 63,000 pounds are borne on a wing span of 157 feet. Its four 1,000 horsepower motors are capable of carrying the ship at a speed of 140 miles an hour from New York to Moscow non-stop. Japanese Near Objective Today SHANGHAI. Feb. 15, UP)—The v?.r '.nrd of the Japanese army is fighting its way into Central Ch;"3 a.: 1 i' is reported to be on ly t n mi.es North of China’s lif line railway at Lunghai. The advance patrol is said to be on the North bank of the Yellow R v.r opposite Kaifeng, a Lun g'nai railway point, nearly three hundred miles inland from Chi na's eastern coast. Th t capture of Kaifeng would choke off the railway and give the Japanese a base for their drive oahwaid three hundred miles D Harakow, the temporary loca tion of the Chinese capital. SEA PERIL WAS WORSE THAN WAR PERIL for the W,000,000 3.8. Presl dent Hoover which ran aground near Formosa while trying ont a new course to avoid Sino-Japanese war. Here, lifeboats filled with passengers are pulling away for nearby Island. Reported japan To Stop Salmon Fishing Alaska WASHINGTON, D. C., Fob. 16, i/P)—Representative Fish told the House Naval Committee that State Department officials inform ed hiim that Japan had agreed to stop alj salmon lishing off the Al askan coast. He made the statement after Representative Magnuson had as serted that there would be "blood shed” if conditions vver. not chan ged. “If trouble comes to Japan it is going to come to Alaska, and there is going to be bloodshed there unless it sto-p,.’ Magnuson said. Rep. Fish said that R Walton Moore, Counselor for the State Department, informed him that Japan had agreed to terminate all its salmon fishing “off of our coast", and Fish further added, that he assumed all Japanese boats would soon be withdrawn from Alaska waters. The Congressman said, he un derstood that there was still some d: pule with Japan ever Crab fishing according to State Depart ment advices given Representa t ve Fish, but testimony obtained dec'ined to confirm that an agree ment had been reached with Ja pan. Salmon canning officials said that Japanese vessels engaged in making a survey of Alaska coast waters, have disputed the fisher ies question the past several years with knowledge of the United States officials. Wilkins Enroute Back to Aklavik Repairs Plane EDMONTON, Feb. 16th, (/P»— Carrying a new engine for his damaged plane at Aklavik, on the Arctic coast, Sir Hubert Wilkins left here today aboard a Mac Kernzie Air Service plane, to re sume his search for the missing Soviet Polar fliers. (Free Queen Votes Given Away) When paying your subscription to The Nome Nugget. Sentenced Life §2.1!) Robbery Of Bus Driver NEWARK, N. J„ Feb. 16, </P)— Judge Daniel T. Brennan said he would sentence to life imprison ment two girls—one a poli.ce man\- daughter, convicted of first degree murder in the $2.10 hold up of the slaying of bus-driver William Barhorst. Counsel for Mrs. Ethel Sohl, aged 20, and Genevieve Owens, aged 18. said they did not plan to appeal from the verdict which was reached last night by twelve middleaged married men. Patrolman Frank Strouge, who testified that his daughter Ethel was insane, wept as the verdict was read. FLORIDA CUSTOM. to sun after swim, is followed by Janet Kneale. Baseball Doubleheader—High School Gym, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 16 NOME WOMEN Vs. BLAZERS. ALASKANS Vs. ALL-STAR TEAM ADMISSION: ADULTS 50 cts.—CHILDREN 25ctsv