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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, SEPT. 18, 1939. T Der Fuehrer Peers at Results of Army’s Work Reservafions for et 05 ALASKAPRINTING o0 it 52 [ SCHOOL - STUDENTS Bill S ing barite »1os were impressed by the Tine standard Norlitemen Dinner | &ai vt INDUSTRY GIVEN oo oo | GIVEN AWARDS FOR End This Evening|s ™ 7o HIGHEST PRAISE ('™ s pyyigyTs AT FAIR .o E llent Printing All who have not made their res- | TODD PIANG SCHOOL _: “While the Alaskan printing tra- T LI, O ervions o the Nremen dnner | caroln. T3 o ) Booklet by NEA Conven aon s 0 "han ica-cenrs| Domestic Art Division of rro’ nig 0 Cl piar 1 lay S It k old, we encountered many evidences parlors o fthe res- | 11, 1 677 t “0" Deleqa’e Pays T”' | of craftsmanship of a high order S i ' I f t ' e g b i | ; pecial Interesi 10 byter Church to calllg pm ad bu'e '0 Crafismanshm | both modern and traditional in style | the Rey. John A. Glasse at 373 not | PP I | —outstanding in typography, press- Juneau“es later than this evenir s E work, design and, above all, appro- Members of the rtha Society The Book ALASKA, p A colorful 36-page booklet has priate to the occasion will be hostes for the affair and | Enlarged. Now On Sale; $1.00. been published as souvenir of the | «Ag one printer to another, we are N National Editorial Association Vvisit | proud of you and your work!” Outstanding was the Public | o e 4 to the Territory this summer. Rhoda | A two-page spread pictures the |School exhibit at the Southeast Al- (),")"(l,")(’ i)y' /1 Ihl"”!:' ‘(’lf';:!" o A. Porte of the Porte Publishing | front pages of nin aska N a Fair. Work of students vied & “i¥& Company, Salt Lake City, prepared | papers of the days the editors visited | for honors in all divisions. This the booklet in the form of an issue the various cities. ection was marked by close compe- of The Business Printer and Cata- —— - |tition and keen workmanship log Digest 4 ] Those judging this section includ- Behind a colored cover picturing M t T h' f od Mrs. John J. Keyser, Mrs. a totem pole, Miss Porte tells the ee mg Ofllg 0 Charles Burdick and Mrs. Fred W. story of Alaska in 34 photographs. . Tiedt 15/ draGiteE Tand'a Hitkmam of Ama]eur Radm Club Siigi Bedivel: AWALRE te: Alaska she describes as the Best sport tog—Ada Mangsolm, hd of the totem pole, midnight first: cookies—Verna Mae Gruber, sun, glaciers, hospitality and good first: Jimmie Glasse, second; candy : printing.” —Jimmie Glasse, first; jelly—Mar gl 4 ! Woad:of ‘Aicesiation | the season will be held at the office syl S e IR s ; Under the title “A Word of Ap- |Of Pastor H. L. Wood, club Rresi-} =000~ witvinia Worley, | first; Partially concealed by a camouflage of foliage, Adol’ Hiller (righi), peered through binoculars as he ot ¥ (Eetow, ;Orlainen, "‘m'x:, ::’,',“'T‘l“, t,fi.,“.':l::cz in joining |Still life charcoal—Jim Wilcox, first- Porte sa g ; 5 g econd; figure draping—Jim Wilcox, watched troop movements on the German-Polish front. The German Chancellor had joined his troops B Y “Our friends in the newspaper and | the organization are invited to| P LR e o Jim Wile at Kulm, Poland. (Picture by radio from Berlin to New York). 3 ; R publishing field did a grand job of | attend. first; Harry Sperling, second; reporting the facts and significance E poster in tempre colors—Jim Wil= of this 54th National Editorial As- FALL DANCING CL cox, first; Harry Sperling, second; Germans Push Across River in Polish Advance 5 \"QulvASF- 4 & | | Il socnton conventon tour of Alska, Now enoling. Phone Dorothy S | conventional drawing—im Wik, The first meeting of the South- east Alaska Amateur Radio Club for e e first; conventional in colors — Jim “To them we express our deepest P Ve | Wilcox, first; poem—Betty Wilcox, e E i ’ appreciation, | The Book ALASKA. Revised and|fiyei: apron--Lenora Olsen, first; R % “A large amount of printed mat- | Enlarged, Now On Sale; $1.00. embroidery—Harold Zenger, first; b A Lenora Olson, second; best table— . y Griffith Nordling, first; Andrew N('zl, G" nners R'll() Str()()t Sutton, second; best worked copper Ll L ~John Gareia, first; best individual i i N Liene. e e 2 ecimen—dJuneau High School shop & * & class, first; Horace Adams Jr. sec- 1 J ¥ b . ond; best individual pilece—Rodney ‘ £ L3 Ncrdling, first; John Hawke, sec- cnd; best table—Phillip Forr first. Grade Scheol Ari Wins Jest still life in charcoal—James Nielscn, first; Rcbert Carothers, geccnd; design in black and white— Walter Fukuyama, first; Doris Ca- | hill, recond; design in color—Marie Han first; Erna Meier, second; !blcck printing — Elroy Hoffman, first; Ann Lois Davis, second; pos- | ter in color—Doris Cahill, first; Do lost in the sea tragedy, which was eapsed by a submarin (Picture = » ¥ % in Heinke, gecond: building in ne cabled from London to New York,) 3 " o 5 b £ spective—James Ederer, first; Bon- - : 3 & ) ;o nia Klein, second; soap carving A ol A ~ § Lofs Allen, first; Ruth McConnell, Best Seller_B]aCkou[ Clo[’h P . s 4 { |second; cclor chart — Mike Johu- : : | stone, first; Dick Christianson, seg- . -, i ol nal crayon drawing -— German troopers had 1o take to boats to cross this river, “somewhere in Poland” as they pressed for- : e R v e e T ] » 5 | Mary Gregory, first; Dorothea Hen- ward in their drive on Warsaw, which was their majo r objective in the European conflict. (Picture via radio 2 9 E: 1 & ;(lli('k\(m. second; water color — Ad- from Berlin to New York.) i # { rienne Landsdale, first; Arthur . ’ s 3 s % | Knight, second; original posior = 3 § i § ; 1 Lois Allen, first; Elwell Krause, sec- “First Soldier of the Reich” Confers w / ~ b -4 Bt Roy Barrington, 12, of Toronto, Canada, is shown being carried ashore at Glasgow, Scotland, by rescue crew members upon arrival of the ship bearing survivors of the liner Athenia. The boy's mother was Jehnson, paper poster—Teddy Tanaka. | first; Richard Brown, second; cray- on drawing (3 and 4) — Lodema | Johnson, first; Denny Merritt, sec- | ond; crayon drawing (1 and 2) — Betty Jane Jones, first; Margila German gunners crouch behind an anti-tank gun in Bydgoszyz, Po- 42’:‘ 12;,9:?;0"((:;,-5“‘);:1:; u}gg;sr::: land, apparently in command of the street, during the German ad- | ;14 booklet on Alaska—Curtis Rod- vance toward Warsaw, where Poles battled to defend the city against | pey Bach, first; mechanical draw- three converging armies. (Picture radioed from Berlin to New York.) |ing—Jim Wilco, first. :’U .S. Neutrality Bill ‘Grounds’ British War Birds Blackout cloth, and not the popular books, is a best seller in Lon- don these days as housewives follow insteuctions in making \?’md{)wa light pront as preparedress for possible war and subsequent alr reids. He Is Back in Cabinet 4 Somewhere on the Polish-German front, where he joned his invading army, Adolf Hitler (third from left, facing camera), conferred with his army and air corps officers. His troops, driving into the heart of Poland, appeéared to be forming a great semi-circle north and west of Warsaw. (Picture radioed to New York from Berlin.) i A ; - — g W These two Lockheed bombing planes (Hudson type), for Britain’s Royal Air Force were completed too B l l P l P S l ll B b B i ; ' & | late for shipment abroad before the United States acms embargo became effective under the neutrality elea gure( oles ray as 1e s’ omos urst act. However, the camouflaged ships, bearing the Royal Air Force insignia, are shown at Burbank, Cal., | . . , S being prepared for test flights. " Britons in Los Angel:s Seek to Join Colors While a group of pilgrims prayed at the Shrine of the Black Madenna, Czestochowa, Poland, in the midst of the German attack, they were joined by Louis P. Lochner (right), chief of t] e Berlin Bureau of P g5 y ? Crowds of British subjects residing in southern Calif rnia jammed the Los Angeles British Consulate of- The Associated Press, one of the first newsmen on the Eastern Front with German forces. In the chapel o - b fering their services for overseas duty as soon as war was declared. Photo above shows Vice-Consult Peter of the shrine is a picture of the Madonna, who, legend says, appeared over the beleagured city when it was » , E o Wilkes signing up George Kent and his sister, Ruth, for pessible future service. Thus far, no instructions attacked by the Swedish army. Lochner won the Pulitzer prize for distinguished reporting of foreign S 2 £ have been received for enlistment in the U, 8. British members of the motion picture colony alse vol- . (Picture by radio from Berlin to New York.) Z L AR A i % nen'r‘s (Elcture by eofrich st % . b ) 3 unteered, Americans are being turned away. .‘n.i.. ‘“.Lu. L N5t B | B! a