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» THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1941. U. S. Move in Al.lska 3Halibuters 11 American Sell,Sea!!Ie Pilots Said ToBeMlssmg !" mee SEATTLE, M. bank. w Report of 122 Persons Lost at Sea Includes U. S. Fliers I OTTAWA, May 6.—Eleven Amer- jcan plane ferry pilots are ed mong 122 persons reported missing it sea in various branches of the civilian armed services of Britain The full list included men in the ' Army, Navy, Royal Air Force, Royal Norwegian Air Force members of the United Kingdom Canadian Inspection Board and ome civilians, List of ferry pilots mssing inclu J. C. Torpey of silverdale \Vu\ll\)ulon EDEN BANKS “FOR VICTORY ~ ONU.S. AID British Foreign Se(re!aryr Gives Review of War | Before Commons i Continnea 1rom Page One) General Marshall * | Testifying befove a special de- fense invéstigating committee in Washington, General George C. Marshall, chief of staff of the U. S. army, drives home a point as his picture is snapped. General Marshall told congressional mem- bers that the U. S. shortly will have 20,000 troops in Alaska. $1.00 and Hollywood Sights And Sounds ") 4 | ] R el [ ] By Robbin Coons Leslie Hore Belisha, rose to attack S review of the wai HOLLYWOOD, Cal. May 6— , . y f the west these days is naught Dranerle Pr RS ing against us, I trust only tem- Of the west t 3 g Properly Proportioned porarily, ‘there is tendency to |but a huge, collective feminine STOFKINGS minimize their importance.” | sigh. Jean Gabin, the leading movie 3 i 3 Laborite Lees Smith, speaking in | &ctor of France, is in town. in a special and unique front of the opposition bench, warn- | Gabin, you will know if you GH_"T BOX ed that in the battle of the Suez, [have seen “Pepe le Moku" or other Great Britain has a smaller mar-|of his French films, is no sleek, Flawlessly lovely stockings that for gin of time than in the battle of | hand-kissing Latin, He is rug- beauty. perfection of fit, and wear, the Atlantic :flvdl» handsome, in the Spencer score another triumph for Holeproof - > — Tracy-James Cagney style: strong fine craftsmanship! Not just differ- A e R R Sy _ chin, prominent nose, brown, gray- ent leg lengths, but correctly knit BOUND FOR NOME ‘Ing hair waving back from a high to fit ankle, calf, knee, and thigh : _|strong forehead, keen blue eyes g D. Lammers Of, wiy, a Gallic twinkle when he & = Nome arrived on the Princess Louise| g ioc Falnlly bl‘fl(‘ [last:night after;a trip Lo the States, poivwood got him not without! s‘ol‘e ‘:‘; - f l“\”; .l{‘.'[)\v‘lfl)l' today \11“4‘ -\“UL’,EI(‘, Gabin, long unheed- ! - p R | ing Hollywood’s blandishments, was LOU HUDSON, Mgr. e A in' the French navy on a: mine- o TODITE BRIioaR SR | sweeper while France was in the | war. He was on leave at his new| . s 3 home in Dreaux, some 75 miles MORE THAN A MILLION WOMEN . . . west of Paris. when the Nazis broke | through at Sedan. The word came Now C mk Electrically ot WOl AN Bl B 16 mibc| utes, so he packed an extra shirt, The modern Electric Range |leaped - into his car and headed | implified the art of good west toward Cherbourg to rejoin | Hollywood offered way » Daven, French producer | )u‘ Century-Fox, brought lnm ben Remember: Genuine “CALROD" is found ot | here and he will make a picture as {soen, he s 5 he can learn “not |only to speak but to think in Eng- Only on | lish.” 1t r - | i General Blectric Ranges || s v kg dany anguage! : : | lessons, going to movies, he has Prices start at $89.95-—TERMS! | mastered quite a few American expressions. These he uses with small accent, fills in with eloguent A I- A S K A El E (T R I ( l IG H I | gestures, but is still most at home "m French with Daven or Margot | Fragey, the producer’s secretary, as interpreter. A N D p 0 w E R ( 0 Through his slight English, his| L gestures, and the aid of Miss| Fragey (after throwing my school French out the window), I learned bin, PHONE 616 who will be 37 next month, np stranger to Ger- man invasion. As a boy of 10, in 1914, he and his family fled thewr home in Creil. His father, an actor, wanted him to become a comedian but Jean ran away in protest. He worked at manual labor before, a wiser lad, he came back to the stage. About 12 years ago he made his movie, has cared little for theater since. that G In Paris he had his own way on scripts and roles. In Hollywood he together they will select his first movie, He does not expect to make «he same kind of pictures he made n France—censorship, and all that. He does expect to remain the same gind of person—no glamour-boy stuff for him. Divorced last year from Doryane, music-hall artist, he is fancy-free at the moment, but his name was of RKO's Michele Morgan. In questions about love or women. Herb dressing gives a delightful flavor to cheese or vegetable salads. | Mix 1 teaspoon chives, one- thlrd teaspoon thyme and one-fourth tea- spoon sweet marjoram, all finely minced, with a cup of French dress- ing. Cover and store in a cold place. ML /s & The Danish colony of Greenland forty-six times the size of its mother country, ITRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY—90 PROOF ® SCHENIEY DISTILERS CORP, N. Y. €. eob IS AR A B e o his unit, The Nazis beat him there. _ ¢ He swung toward Brest. found the tric cookery is at its best g Fa ? enemy ahead of him, dodged south | on a ( RAL ELECTKIC to Toulon. There, with Paris taken, RANGE cquipped with “HI- he was demobilized. He was in Mar- | SPEED CALROD. seilles, bunking with friends and with only a spare shirt to his name, | first | the i is reading scripts with Daven, and | linked frequently in Paris with thati France, he says, no one ever asks| U. . FIGHTS HUGHESSAYS | Chrysler M A RINE Engine FOR DEFENSE | Chief Justice CaIIs Amer- | ican Way of Life 'Path- | [ way of Justice” | | | at all times WASHINGTON, May 6. — Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes of the Supreme Court of the United States said today that the people of the United States “are engaged in harnessing cur national power for the defense of our way of life,” but | this life “is worth while only because it is the pathway of justice.” Addressing the annual session of the American Law Institute, Hughes pointed out that “the lamps of jus- |tice are dimmed or wholly gone out in many parts of the earth, but | these lights are still burning bright- |1y here.” ACE 6-EYLINDER npP. 45-8: R 'FIFTH PLANE COMING FOR AIRWAYS 0. ?Second Lockheed Vega fo Arrive on Columbia | from South PHONE 57 British Ar Repulsed af Tobruk Siege e They Are Ready o Bury U. . Culture | In Hole in Ground (Continued from Page One) The fifth steek cf the will be unloaded bound steamer Columbia this after- noon as the Company receives livery of its second Lockheed Vega airplan® in the flying al airways company | from the mnorth- de- The additional ship is a five pas- fellow of the Library, senger, 450 horsepower job, and was 324 dinator. Then he- asked for vol- purchased from the Hanford Air- (By Associated Press) unteers to work on the cata- lines in Kansas® City. The Vega Y loguing. Seven hundred men and was flown to Seattle, shipped to! The Italian High Command said | women stepped forward and to| Juneau on the Columbia, and will|today that a new British attempt date they have put in more than be in the air as soon as pontoons to break through Axis forces in the 10,000 hours of overtime (with- month-old siege of Tobruk has been repulsed “thanks to the prompt ac- tion of valorous Italian and German troops who inflicted grave losses on the ener | out pay or compensating time off) to get the library's treasures tagged for storage. replace the wheels now on the plane. The local airwa now has two Lockheed Vegas, a Bellanca and a| Fairchild on floats, and a Fokker on wheels, —_—eteo——— | ORIGINALS HEAD LIST At the head of the list are such The hides of circus elephants are| y.opigceaplediterary and historical | ep them from| gopg the original Declaration | of Independence, the Constitution, Lincoln’s first drafts of the Gettys- burg address, the private papers of George Washington and other Presidents, Thomas Jefferson’s li-/ brary (or rather what was left of | it after the British got through| burning Washington . in 1814) and thousands of irreplaceable first edi- | tions which comprise almost all| the masterpieces of American lit- erature. There are scores of prints,| | inciuding the world-known Pennell| ! collectipn of etchings. There are musical gems like original scores by the great German compose! | Beethoven, Brahms and Wagner.| There also are Payne's nrlzmal‘ The Daily Alaska Finpire has the | iargest paid circulation of any Al-l(oiled regularly to ke aska newspaper. vnu»kuu, “Home, Sweet Hom Key's Sm‘ Spangled Banner,” and Nevin's' | “Rosary.” Perhaps that will give you some idea of what will go into the, bombproof hole in the ground. As for the hole or holes, David Lynn, | Capitol architect, and MacLeish| 'still are working on that . You| ,can’'t bury books and art tr ures like you do gold. The libra | caches will have to be ventilated,! | bug-proof and fireproof. That's no | | small order, but the successes and | failures of European libraries and | museums are pointing the way. | So far, Macleish and Lynn { have little more than plans. To| J execute them will cost money. The | only way you can get money out of the Government is through| Congress. Therefore, if you are in- Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Reagan and daughter Making her eamera debut in Hollywood, Maureen Elizabeth Reagan 1s shown with her happy parents, the film players Ronald Reagan and Jane Wyman. Maureen now is four months old. Brolhers Form Fwe Muskeieers for llnde Sam The ftive Harkless brothers (above) look forward into induction into the United Btates’ Army under the LAUSON OUTBOARD MOTOR The New Sensation in the Outhoard World! Cowling-Davlin Co. | terested in following up this safe-| | five ® : Enginesin Stock A Marine Engine for Marine Use Enquire About ] (Not a Conversion) Our Financing Plan Designed and Built for Marine Use by Chrysler Corp. CROWN ROYAL : 6-CYLINDER 8-CYLINDER ALSO THE NEW 4-CYCLE AIR-COOLED JUNEAU, ALASKA C_lemcnccauKmHere & guarding of the library’s gems of inestimable value, watch for an ap-| propriation bill that will provide | the funds. | WERE YEARS AHEAD Some of the great libraries and museums of Europe were more than years ahead of the United States in working out this problem of preserving their ,most valuable assets. The business dates back a lot further than that, though. Ever since the great library at Alexan- dria was destroyed nearly 2,000 vears ago, librarians have been trying to plan against “any even- tualities” in time of war The art galleries, museums and other libraries in Washington, al- ready following the lead of the Library of Congress —even the newly opened National (Mellon) Gallery of Art—are working on methods of burying their treas- ures where no blast from the skies can touch them. | officials Library and museum y this work is not confined en- tirely to Washington. Requests | for suggestions from other cities| have been numerous and it is Mme. Clemenceau and son likely the Army or some other| <in of the late Georges Clemen- agency will include such sugges-| ceau, France’s World war premier, tions in the series of pamphlets| Mme. Pierre B. Clemenceau and her son Paul are shown in New now being prepared about what Tork otlowh o il to di 5 ai tacl | Xor! ollowing arrival rom s meaWz’:i.lr.n( n | ‘Burope via Clipper plane. Mme. Clemenceau is the wife of the son > HALIBUTER SELLS | @ the late “Tiger” of France. Halibut schooner Margaret T, | TS D Capt. Peter Hildre, sold 11,500 pounds of fish to the New England | FLIES INTO CANADA Fish Company this morning at | prices of 7.75 and 6.30 cents per | pound. Pilot Tony Schwamm will operate a plane service into Telegraph | Creek, Dease Lake and other poin s {in the Cangdian district as he has - e — Subscripe 1or The Emplre ‘secured a permit for such a route. ¢ » chilling § EXQUISITE - FLAVOR If you enjoy really fine tea, drink Schilling’ g ...fragrant, refreshing. Compare its qualityl GET READY TO DRIVE A NEW KIND OF CAR Nash A.M.B. 600 See Me Before You Buy Any Car at Any Price . . . Now on Display CHRISTENSEN BROS. GARAGE selective service act. Frank (center), the youngest, receives congratulations volunteer papers. Left to right: Leonard, 21; John, 25; Frank, 18; Weldon, 24, and Busrell, 31, up-in the draft the others volunteered, l et 909 WEST TWELFTH STREET ;o R