The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 27, 1940, Page 2

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| : . THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MAY 27, 1940. — | e | . Gruening. but refused to comment h p ENEMIES ON To Organlle on the possibility of foundation do- ¥ [’IL ‘t Ill /1TIIL[\ : 7 nations. According to the present & ‘ rule the foundation is unable to (By ||nl . W ather Burean) [l onate to a library in a town of — — = Forecast for Juneau and vici beginning at 4:3 1'“ Me“ than 5.000 population # Occasional showers tonight, lighi rain Tuesday; minimaum about 44 ‘ o Th < # ¢ jeht: moderate southeriy wind 1 ReEe.z L t for Southeast Alaska: Occasional showers toni Salko fil'h 7 ain Tuesda lichtly warmer ton'ght; moderate sontlierly wir ' arccast of winas along the coast of 1k Gult ol Viaska Syl Case There Is Quick : ‘ ' Need for Defense Ik, 1S Jaie Yemp, Humid ' & K L 4 Time Barometer ‘lemp. Humidity Wind Velocity % ‘ President Calls for Greal| = Mee (Dpe-! . Batopger. feiipy HiEe B0 S . 4 2 : i Na'I0n6| E"or' fOI’ ACRAMENTO. Cal, May 27 Al Nan I 1 : : 1) 30.22 48 G6 NE 4 ! | Both houges of the California Stat Noon y < NE 1 ) Preparedness [ episiature have adopted o Tesolu SADIY; Atbon ' ; tion calling for the 'or .unmun TODAY % minute men rifle clubs for th Max. tempt. | v 3:30am. Precip. 3:30am. | il (Continued Fage Gne) defense of. airports and water’ an Ca') aln A | aSk a Bound Station last 24 hours | te np temp, 24 hours Weather ’ communication units in time 3arrow 25 20 Clon d Bi i vt Satisfies B. C. Offic- LLA entuality, the dent said “pa- NANAIMO, B Safeiy Bithel 7 15 BL o triotic Americans who have proven AlASKA ]'0 ver the tides hurdles st. Paul 45 5 03 cl ! Satko family is “getting along | Dutch Harbor 51 39 01 Clc ) tc all rizht” on the Alaska trip. Capi Wosnesenski 43 1 1 Clou INVES'"G&IED Paul Satko brought the Ark intc Roatilk W 1 06 e the or yesterday from Anacor- Stihva o % i capability i prohibited by a Seattle court crder ek 13 1 13 Fslen ‘Today's threal v our natjiona last Saturd at dawn, bringing his e . Sitka 53 11 42 o security,"he said not o inaite Camegle Foundation Pres- |citice. tamits. wite and ther seven According to the British-approved caption on this pi:ture cabled from London to New York, it shows rui ke Koo e P 1 S of military weapons alone, children, six of whom were expressly P S ' in Belgium after a Ger man air raid. Prince Rupert .. 56 43 46 PL. C T e e ane | ident and Seaile!Libriar- |pionted by a Seatte court oiger| Of An ‘When town” somewhere In Belg ; — e . & e 4 P i The o column be-| . from boarding the craft | . i Beatti. 62 39 10 x trays e wpreases. 1| ian ‘on Research Trip. | Buod combin, oficiats evine- | . RIG ATVENDANCE, S ‘ treachery. 8 boteurs and| bk ed satisfaction with Capl. Salko's U S lIN R un Ing i ; AL 1 )1 & aitol this new| KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Mpy, 27— | papets . [] @Ué?‘i (; zx. DTN ‘wm 2y th we must | Dr, K. P. Keppel, President of the| > Ui i WEATHER SYNOPSIS deal vigorously Carnegic Toundatign of New York, i o q s 2N < - 2 e d g . Jennings, Seagtle Li.| ~MERE FROM WESTWARD ] ! s om e AFE ..Xp@fi“@h A moderae Siiericn Yas \‘".d :‘\ el 300 " ox o brarian, 1 parly. this| E. W. Galbraith, representative i me, ey 2 B i REODE. Wi SDEESSUTE (W ) MY SKIN WAS FULL OF | ot ACNC S0 O taska | f (he Ingersoll Raid Company. ar & o 0, Cil.. Ma Sonthenst % eaiiir s, dlagy A ot of PIMPLES AND BLEMISHES" - o ; et : The 206,000| clear over the North P tates. Light showers occurred over () libraries. Shortly after their ar-| rived in Juneau from the Westward . . W the v X in coastal L nd Southeast Ala There avs Verna S nee using Adlerika the | Yival, they left for Sitka, Jungau, on board the steamer Alaska. He Japanme Make Alf pa” he w g of, Goll p d heast Aln icre W i ppmples are gone, My skin is smonth and | Fairpanks and way points. will be here for seyeral days and ot en Gate o 1 Faliin) S 0 y and 1a the Mackenzic Distrit BOTI howels: anal relieons. tommmnre: e | They said they had hecome in-|is registered at the Gastineau Ho- SU[‘,dfiY*ZSO (:lVlhfinS dhecrplite n ; o | ki acgu wbse, 4110 am. sunset 9:45 pm ;r‘wv(":uu“vl:n’l;ll (::,'V(“x‘lui'}\)(:”»k:r\ |:;d“c°n:v'.~ | terested “in~Alaska- libraries through tel . 1 I bus ; J . v i s i vt e ‘uq‘uun}lvvmwfi._ vith _Goy, Emest ot st Abaut 500 Americans Un- Are Killed The T BamoLIHAR W Hin There is no substitute for Newspaper Advert tember able fo Get Passage CHUNGKING, Ma CARB P A !‘ T Y on Manhatfan p (s i 7 H SPONSORED BY FINNISH CLUB ' SRS day. One school was wrecked b R 7 i PLES, May 2T v\ er | bomb: s/ For Norwegian Relief L AR X - \ %fi;@ ) - » | ¥ Ry S 3k aboard - the first of about 2,000 SCHOOL TEACHERS | et 2 A s« & 2 . DNN -N'YA- N'Y / 4 : ieiicans B xi 4o Four school teachers from 3 ON'T You WISH You ODD FELLOWS® HALL s o S oo s et i s 7 e i 5 be unable et Coast. Staying SATURDAY NIGHT ? . | TOESDAY, MAY 28--7:30P. M. o T Sl sy ' § ADMISSION 50¢- PUBLIC "INVITED * The Manhattan may be the lac e Bromley, Celia Klotz, Mona 7 Zgofi;gflg ¥ | over. HARDWARE MAN HERE ? \,,4 [Ty S e A F. Flosence. Seattle Hurdva .- ‘ representative, arrived in Juneau 5 » A a { 3 ir At Gas- 3 HO"YWOOd Slgh’.! And Sounds an ; f u(xl-‘tyu.u”!'l»k\ Bl e~ dlars o = By Robbin Coom passes Away B i s : HOLLYWOOD, Cal, May 27.—“Four Sons” is a story of a 4 1l 5 LT :‘,“:::m"?\','“ LT A e B — family caught in the Nazi invasion of Czechoslovakia, in the Sude- tenland in particular. The family gets torn to pieces pretty effectively, if you can judge by a scene I saw involving Don Ameche, George Ernest and Mary Beth Hughes. Ameche, badly wounded and covered with mud and blood, has been hiding out in a straw-littered barn, and the blonde Mary Beth is answering his question as to what has happened to another brother. star. ¥ I talked to Director Archie Mayo, who is sure Leontovich will be “grand.” I asked il his story would not be another sweet piece of propaganda. He said with emotion: “If we admit that there is a Germany, and there was a Czech- oslovakia, and we admit that Germany took Czechoslovakia, all of which is simply history, and if what went on there strs up an emotional sympathy. then-—-yes, this is propaganda. Other- wise it is a good, hwnan story of real people in a crisis and what happens to them.” Archie ‘was touring in Cuzechoslovakia when the deed was dong; he was in Munich during the momentous conferences that thnuwndul guests whe bring gifts of deliciows Van Duyn Zand!e thuo attentions meke yow "oust come” gue: t. fi-y 11} “UanDuy* CHOCOLATES VAN DUYN CHOCOLATE SHOPS Pereu exclusively led to the republic’s dismemberment; he was in London when the man with the umbrelta returned, waving a piece of paper crying of peace-in-our-time. “Four Sons” has a companion picce in a sense in Metro's “The Mortal Storm,” likewise a study of a family disrupted by Nazi influence. There’ll be a race to get the rival films to the marquees first—but “The Mortal Storm” won't be propaganda, either. 1 have Director Frank Borzage's word for that, in virtually the words as Director Archie Mayo used, But I'm’ sure neither of them is counting on a world premiere in Berlin. Just a visit to the “Four Sons” farmhouse set is a revelation of the power of inanimate objects to stir emotion. Here is quaint- ness and charm and sweetness, a “feel” of good people living simple, useful lives before they were shaken into féar and insecur- ity. The “feel” is in the well-worn tile floor of the parlor, with its big square stove, its center table covered in turkey-red, its rows of pottery ornamenls. its colorful beer steins, its chairs and its whole rustic simplicity. and same Here is a room where good people lived in peace, and outside, in the yard near the barn, a tense girl is télling a weary young man: “You killed him-—he was shot down in the swamp!” And vet I agree with Archic Mayo. “Four Sons” isn't propa- ganda. It is no more propaganda than a moyie of a cloud © bank; of & bathing beauty, or.a'crowded slum street, of anything AL “He was shol—down in thie swamp—you killed him!" she correspondent with the British He managed the campaign of "Tor- mutters. Ameche, held up by Ernest, is overcome. army, Webb Miller, 48, Veteran for- | mer Senator James Reed of Mis- e is * s ' Bons” eign correspondent, was found deac| souri and had a hand in the cam- Of such strong stuff is “Four Sons” made, with Eugenie beside the railroad tracks near Clap ‘])algn& of Williem Jennings Brvat Leontovich, in her picture debut, as the old mother who is the real ham Junction, England. It is be and the late Speaker of the House NEW YORK, may 27-—Rétired | General Emmel Newton is here at the age of 76. He had been ailing for many months. Gen. Newton was a well known figure. Webb Miller Pictured in the uniform of a waj| political as well as milita; w liexed hefell fromgtrain. of Representatives Champ Clark. CHIMREY SWEEP ReduceFire Hazard SAVE FUEL BY HAVING CHIMNEYS AND FURNACES CLEANED PROPERLY ALL CHIMNEY SWEERP PHONE 229 """ NEWEST IMPROVEMENTS IN'KITCHEN EQUIPMENT | { Murphy Cabraneite Kilchen | ollice at {4 Radio Engineering uml:lI M:nuinclunnq Company - ! 176 Box 2824 ! e o o St SRS M o o e s ) THESE THREE ENEMIES OF INTERIOR DECORATION Grease Steam Odo STQPPEDI —With a CONSULT i PAR Al R & AHLERS C6, TS TIME T0 CHANGE YOUR HEAVIER . LUBRICANTS! ) I.UBRICATIUN con:l“o:;‘:gmn i mpensmmmrorrrreseensencd | Administrator for Administr; | United States Army Quartermaster We¢ ut to Haine dead all. the Public Works ation, and Mrs. Shepard 5 on the ste: - >o o WOMEN OF MOOSE al meeting tonight at 8 o home attend at the of Gertie Olson MRS. W. W.—_This is s. Wendell Willkie, the one- librarian whose husband is g mentioned Republican pres nomi- nee. They were married in 1918 when W was on leave ki from an officers’ training camp. “Dark Horse”? Wendell L. Willkie Here is the latest character snap- shot of Wendell L. Willkie, utilities! executive, made in his New York of-| fice. Frequently mentionel as a Republican “dark horse”, Willkie's| chances were spurred with an- nouncement that Russell Davenport, had resigned as editor of Fortunel Magazine ‘to devote full time: tol lmherlng hil nomin-tion. GERMAMN PARACHUTISTS, UNLUCKY AND IN A MARKET- PLACE IN HOLLAND, HAD TO BE RESCUED BY DUTCH SOLDIERS AFTER BEING THOROUGHLY | BEATEN BY KOUSEWIVES. ENOUGH 7O L., MODES teps or d by SUPREME WARLORD - LAST WAR 15 NOW GERMANY'S - WHILE THE OVERLORD OF THE LAST WAR 15 NOW JUST ANOTHER PERSON IN THE PATH OF THE GREAT GERMAN MILITARY MACHINE, PRIVATE DIARIES HAVE BEEN FORBIDPEN GERMAN SOLDIERS BECAUSE SUCH JOURNALS, FALLING INTO ENEMY HANPS MIGHT REVEAL VALUABLE INFORMATION / A shert veil o[ t/re by Adelaide The long sleeves are detachable. hids nested in a spray of lace and constructed without froth. Not a ribbon in sight. wears a frock of soft blue mousseline with-applique lace bows.in-theskirt, . - Kerr MOMENN Dressed for Lher wedding day this June bride wears a {rock of white net trimmed with uet rucking and There’s news in her boucuet of pale mauve Her bridesmaid

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