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g THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 5, [ation I w’zl l’n W ar | SPZAYY | .’ | | * | © TEWERAN » T wosuLe ’ Ve i FRIENDLY TO AR BRITAIN (:RENCN A . ANDATE, Mediterranean Apupngallo V. 1 BE YROUTH §*=- e IRAQ Sea HAIFA , goamASCUsF f ALLIED WITH JAFFA BRITAIN p PALESTINE, RO® & CA™ syE2 CANAL LI BYA £EGYPT L' Ta%Y) BRITISH PROTEC TORATE For a century England and Russia have disputed control over Persia, now an independent nation friendly to Britain indicated by multipie arrows on map, are coveted by both the Allies British exist from the Mediter- ible from latest dispatches, whose rich oil deposiis scle Lower points to the Suez Ca possible Black Sea Pact” arrov materialize d a ranean shoul as appears Battlefront Moves W est as Nazis Shift Troops G E 5 M GERMAN TANKS FROM POLAND NAZIS RECAPTURE ROAD LINKING &//“ ARRIVE BY TRAIN N\ =\ OFFENB AC “ANNWEILER — LANDAU ‘RINNTHAL o GERMANS BEATEN BACK IN FIGHT FOR RAIL JUNCTION e BUNDENTHAL lALTE STATT WisSEMBSYR : LAUTERBOURE : LEmBACK Under pressure of Nazi forces quitting Poland, principal battle fronts in the European conflict moved to the western areas with railways and roads the prizes Map indicates movements. Fighting centered around Fischbach and Altenstatt. of war. Woman Sni per Faces Deatli-dealing Court Radionhoto above shows a Jewish woman prisoner named Bayla Gelblung testifyig beforé a Nazi mili- ght sniping from a wir dow at passing German troops “somewhere in Po- shown hearing her story. Later they decided whether or not the woman ot was not made known. ter she was ierman of¢icers was to face a firing squad REVENUE /(OllEUORS furniture, boat building, paper | on the refugee problem, copies to be SLA"ERY ASKS d fur firms regarding the pos-|sént to“all Cong\ecsmen ] biities of development near Ju- ju"EAu AII"‘UDE neau. He desires to know he says 1‘ wheth : e Ct ::\\).11 of (?ummvn‘;' world’s population, has more would encourage or discourage such 1 A I © wor ole) P! 1 | cterimim irtenbe ite st 5 0| - OV ER BY SULLIVAN than half the world's tel phones. | Wrobide Giiiriant 1 reRIGees. | ) asenall rans ‘ | mployment to 1 € { { he famo baths f ancient Not Dumping Ground 1 = FA!‘I'OEP To[ le(‘aouflA A' se"es ‘Roln‘l‘t“ W ‘::‘ ‘i:nhm‘nhun((i m‘-:: "“-IC‘ CALL ie local office o au i s Sl sonsed g+ Wants fo Know WhatAlas- B s | el W 4L b O] e Rl stomsbiig B Ablers _ ump- | ymtil the end of October ihile| Among baseball fan e 1 kans Think of Plan ! lless refugees I)prul,\' léolle‘:erW('sl::_:')z: Overby | World Series games in New York " w Exclusive Dealers h a plan. The | goes south on the steamer Aleu.|vesterday and today were two Ju- for Refugees 1 he puts forward, he | fan o attend the Bureats SR, figedu for each set-| o nstryction at Tacoma. Deputy Eaidee ok . tely financed so that | conectors from throughout *he Col-! i '1 » he would never become a public|yootion District of Washington and ry of the Interior, is rge e o Alaska will be present for the cent report on A ¥ has appointed | o,y 0 “session has written to the J meau Chambey ¢ o= i s Deputy Collector O. 8. Sullivan of Commerce to learn the organiza- Chatrman. to ‘ g B J is through passenger o h tion’s attitude toward the report. A l('l(‘L am was re Ale?t’ - ,”fo ])L‘;l‘d f‘('_ T',’u,n', o san refugees odav Ir he - . - oY a na :?:g\(‘nvmmw e R headquarters. He has spent the Slattery writes he h received commmw 's plan to prepare a pam | spring and summer in Interior and Westward Alaska, many inquiries from mining, smelt-' phlet setting forth Alaska’s stand 1| neauites, NO DIPLOMATIC forcing six- month quarantine on dogs entering the cnuntry held ’ seen going into quarantine. “Hippy” belongs to , former ambassador to Germany. FAST FIRE-FICHTER —Funner Sydney Wooderson (right) and brother now belong to Loadon’s auxiliary fire service, SWEETS FROM SWEDEN_Not even a candy flower was broken on this gay wedding eake brought from Sweden to Kansas City by Mrs. Emil Eeed for the wedding of her daughter, Evelyn (above). The cake—and Mrs. Reed, who guarded its every move—came through the zone where the liner Athenia was sunk. Evelyn is to wed Russell Peck of Falls City, Neb. ! on Juneau 5 William B. Kirk (Dolly) Gray. ind J. | Latimer FOR HEALTH Kirk, Director of the Territorial ND Department of Public Welfare, will A go to Washington tomorrow to con- EA fer with Jane Hoye, Chief of the PL s“nfi Public Assistance Division of the AT THE Social Security Board. He hag'fl-| BRUNSWICK Complalely flehnishod ready discussed Alnska problems | with Katherine Lenroot of | the Children’s Bureawn - - H Try an Empire ad, l head IMMUNITY_England’s rule The U. S. with only ¢ percent 1939. 1 'BERGDOLL WILL' | " SERVE 3 YEARS | - FOR DESERTING | Dodger Convicted by Cour | Martiat and Is Given | Term in Prison | oS NEW YORK, Oct. 5. — The United States Army court mar- tial has finished the case | against Grover Cleveland Berg- | | doll, World War draft dedger, | and convicted him on charges of deserting to escape military | custody. The court sentenced Bergdoll to three years imprisonment. - - WHITESOX - EVEN SCORE CHICAGO, Oct. 5—The White €ox, behind the five-hit pitching of | Ted Lyons, defeated the Cubs to- | day. 9 to 2. This victory squares the 22nd {annual city championship series | with one victory for each club - 'DUFRESNE RETURNS | ON BEAR TOMORROW Executive Officer Frank Dufresne of the Alaska Game Commission| has completed his conference with| wildlife Agents at Petersburg and is enroute to Juneau on the ves sel Bear, Don Gallagher, Capta | The Bear is patrolling the E‘w‘ Coast of Admiralty Island. It i heee tomorrow ‘ e | (CHNCILMAR 0T ON PRINCESS LOUISE Coincilman h. E. sailed south on the stz ess Louise for Seattle | Messerschmidt will be south for| | about s weeks on a combined business and pleasure trip, going as far south as California and taking in the San Francisco fair. locate his father, whose letters he found after his mother's death, Edward Scott, 14, hiked to Washington, D. C., was | i | | ! REUN 10N —Determined to : ‘ united with Cornelius V. Scott, | 39. Boy's mother took him to { Tennessee soon after birth, | | e — Are You Tired of Ordinary | Food? | Drop in at the Newly Renovated BRUNSWICK CAFE | WHERE YOU'LL FIND Chinese and American Dishes at Their Best! . Special Breakfasts, Lanches, | Dinners i WHEN YOU NEED PLUMBING ‘ HEATING SHEET METAL of WORK or Bl’ifl&l ’BEAUTYWAHE" umbing Fixtures b = 0d § Burners OUAKER OIL RANGE U. 8. nsrmrmr OF AGRICULTURE, wznmm BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Jun~an and vicinily, beginning at 3:30 p.m., Oct. 5: Increasing cloudiness with light frost tonight, cloudy Friday, prob- ably rain by night; gentle northwesterly winds, WBecoming westerly Friday Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Fair with increasing cloudiness tonight, cloudy Friday, probably with rain by night; gentle to mod- erate northwesterly winds tonfght Yecoming westerly, except''mod- erate southerly over Lynn Canal Friday. Forecast of winds along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Mcderate northwesterly winds from Dixon Entrance to Cape Hinch- inbrook, except becoming variable over the northern portion to- night. Moderate to fresh westerly and southwestenly winds - Friday. LOCAL DATA : Time Barometer Temb. Humidity wino Velocity Weather 3:30 p.m. yest'y 29.99 41 22 NNW 9 Clear 3:30 a.m. today 30.16 34 39 w 4 Clear Noon today 30.19 40 22 E 14 Clear RADIO REPORTS TODAY Max. tempt. ‘ Lowest 3:30a.m. Prezip. 3:30am. Station last 24 hours temp. temp. 24hours Weather Anchorage 1 ' 34 s 0 Clear Barrow 26 | P 24 0 Cloudy Nome 44 | 43 42 43 Clouduy Bethel 46 | 30 34 63 Cloudy, Fairbanks 34 | 32 B2 .03 Cleuay Dawson 32 | 26 26 o Cloudy Lutch Harbor .. 50 | 42 50 12 _Cloudy Kodiak 56 | 40 40 0 Pt. Cldy Cordova 51 : 37 38 [ Cloudy Junéan 49 | b 34 0 Clear SStka 51 i 20 0 / Ketchikan 52 i 39 39 i i Clear Prince Rupert .. 53 | 38 38 05 Pt. Cldy Seattle 57 ‘} 46 47 25 Pt. Cidy Pertland 51 i 50 51 56 Rain San Francisco .. 66 i 57 57 0 Pt. Cldy WEATHER SYNOPS1S An area of high pressure extended this morning from the Gulf into interior Alaska wih a center of 30.25 inches at Fair- banks and another centei of 3036 inches cver the lower 'Gulf re- gion, iatitude 40 degrees and lonzitude 144 degreés. Barometric pressuures were falling over western Alaska and the Aleutian Is- ands with the approach of a well developed disturbance located at Iatitude 52 degrees and Iongitude 175 degrees, which appeaved 1o ke moving northeastward. Clear and cool weather has prevailed during the past 24 hours over Soulheast and Southern Alaska and cloudy weather with snow and sub-freezing temperatures w eéd in Interior Alaska. Teémpera-freezing temperatures wi ed in Interior Alaska. Temperatines were rising over the portion of Alaska this morning. of Alaska Juneau, Oct. 6.—Sunrise, 6:14 a.m.; sunset, 5:22 p.m. CARD PARTY P,ml m Star, Masons and escorts, v, Oct. 6, 8 p.m., Masenic Tem- | 3¢ admission. | haas gy | The Book ALASKA, Revised and Enlarged, Now On Sale; 5100. ik FRENCH FRIED FILET OF SOLE with COLE SLAW | Baranof Tomorrow Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Coons. Oct. 5—While studios are looking over their vaults for old war pictures for possible re-issue, it appears that “Vigii in the Night” will be the first movie to incorporate angles on the “new world war.” This will be possible solely because of the illmess and subse- quent operation on the star, Oarole Lombard, which delayed production on the A. J. Cronin story by five weeks. Carole and Anne Shirley are playing nurses and sisters in the Shereham county hospital in England, and the set today is one of the dreariest masterpieces of construction itaginable. The sun shines brightly outside, but within the sound stage a fine drizzle falls—by courtesy of overhead spraying pipes—on the brick hospital exterior past which Carole, in raincoat and galoshes, must walk. Beyond the hospital, a large miniature built in perspective shows a Bray industrial skyline, with a couple of smokestacks spouting live gray steam into the dreary sky. The rain is of that soft, seemingly interminable variety, most de- pressing. HOLLYWOOD, Cal., George Stevens, the director, has lines to stir the actors emotionally. The only really cheerful noté apparent is the raucous, un- squelchable laughter of one C. Lombard, who looks hale and hearty and twice as beautiful as before her hospital siege. Carole “mood music” on the side- NOW AT Percy’s THat's the reception charming hostessess give thoughtful §uests who bring gifts of delfcious Van Duyn Candies. Little attentions make you & "must come" guedt. fry (ti I‘RESH @Il (" exclusively CMOCOLATES VAN DUYN Cflxoflfi SHOPS is chrered ma}’be by the thought that uexL umc she: zoing back to comedy. There's a real comedy, strangely, on the set of a movie with the gruesome title (to be changed) of “Send Another Coffin.” The comedy here dis provided mot so much by the script as by the demeanor of the actors, veterans all, who are pitted against each other in the scenes. There is thievery in progress. This scene, for example, in which many actors share the camera—a session in a district attorney’s office during which the “killer” is in process of being ‘“‘unveiled.” Veterans present in- clude Pat- O'Brien, Bernard Nedell, Alan Dinehart, Addison Richards, Edward Arnold, Broderick Crawford. It is no coincidence, obviously, that Nedell is carrying a pair of white gloves, mice for waving in the air at appropriate moments; that cigars are being lighted and, smoke exhaled—also at appropriate moments; that shoulders are being shoved into position to dominate the camera; that Broderick Crawford, in desperation, finally gets himself a fly swatter, exceptionally nice for swatting imaginary flies in the background duting somebody else’s camera moment. Tay Garnett, directing all this, sees the humor in it, for- tunately, as indeed do the actors. The situation resolves. itself, finally, with the fly swatter’s removal from the scene. But the groans that went up from the others when casting announced that Henry Armetta, the scene-stealer to end scene-stealing, would join in the fun! It's working out nicely for Ruth Terry, the leading lady, here doing her first straight acting role after a term in 20th Cen- tury musicals. Ruth thinks “everyone is so wonderful—" and the truth is they are: they’ll help 4 newcomer but for rivals the PHONE 34 e W knife is out. ) W -~ % P .