The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 15, 1941, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE VOL. LVIL, NO. 8854. “ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME” st e —— JUNEAU, ALASKA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1941. MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE TEN CENTY THRUST ON MOSCOW CONTINUES UNITED STATES All Siles on the Tokyo Front ARGENTINA, Delivery Flight of Substralosphere Inferceplors PESSIMISM EXPRESSED BY NIPPONS Relafions Between Two Nations Discussed in | General by Papers IPORTANT CONFERENCES ARE BEING HELD IN TOKYO | Emperor, Premier, Mar-| quis Kido Mainfain Ut- | most Secrecy TOKYO, Oct. 15.—Authoritative , JAPAN SITUATION ACUTE [ | |again, off again” negotiations for The treaty signed last night - U.S.SIGN TRADE PACT Negofiafior;F—inaIIy Com-| plefed Between Nations | After 72 Years E WASHINGTON, Oct. 15—Argen- | tina and the United States have| entered into a new phase of com- mercial collaboration by virtue of a broad trade pact cfimaxing. “on | 72 years E = | | in Buenos Al by Norman Ar- mour, United States Ambnssudor.j and provides for free entry into| the United States of such producL.\I RED ARMY . MENACED FIERCELY {Germans Rep?ied Swarm- ing Over Their Own Dead, Heaped High ' PARACHUTISTS FAIL 1O MAKE ATTACKS Soviet Officials Claim In- | vaders’ Footholds Are | Being Broken Down | (By Associated Press) A fiercely driven new menace to | as canned corned beef, hides, woois | |and assured the United States or) Moscow is today acknowledged by expressions of pessimism concern- the Red Army. It Is declared the | Bridges has been tabbed for depor- | Film actress Constance Moore gave H ing Japan's relations with the Unit- ed States are published in the Japanese newspapers today as the Empire’s leaders continued a series of conferences believed to concern matters of extremely high impor- tance. | The Privy Council, the highest| advisory body on foreign com- mittments, met today in the pres- | ence of the Emperor and later| Marquis Kido, Lord Privy of the Joseph Clark Grew (right) U. S. ambassador to Japan, and new Foreign | Minister Teijiro Toyoda of Japan are all smiles as they meet in Tokyo. | Toyoda was making the customary call on the dean of the Tokyo diplo- matic corps after taking over his portfolio. wsaGit [EOUR ARMY AIRMEN DIE, continued most favored nation treatment for shipments of autos, refrigerating machinery and gad- gets without number to the rich agrarian republic. e, — DR. ARIAS LOCKED UP | Plieted by 'U. . Army fliers these speedy Lockheed Interceptors ave in mass Pictures, the first taken of “Lightnings” in formation, were taken shortly after Lockheed Air Terminal at-Les Angeles. The P-38, now in mass production, is idable fighting planes ifv-the-world. today. , it is pechaps the only, fighter- . | headguarters in the East. | the Wlanes teok off from X | dpnciftered one of the mest forml cquipped to go up into sib-dtratesphere after bymber : First la&y on New Job delivery flight to Air Corps NAVY READY s flyirg higher than 30,000 feet. | Germans are swarming forward over | their own dead, heaped high in an {attempt to turn the capital city’s Volga River defense flank near Clin- |in, 95 miles northwest of Moscow. Admitting the Nazi masses, men fouward; the | Army, sald that - nevertheless the {German parachutists, seeking a "Ioothold behind the Russian lines, {have been wiped out by Moscow's | grim defenders who have also pinch- ’Chuters Trapped Seal, held consuitations at the! Palace with Premier Konoye and | P | ed off tha wedges thrust ddep into Lieut. Gen. Susuki, head of the | | ‘\ To ARM All their lines. | | Cabinet Planning Board. v | Secrecy is maintained on the subject and matter of the discus- | sions. | still later, the Emperor received ! Premier Konoye who thereafter ! 'Pilot Becomes Blinded by Searchlight During | INCITY JAIL Ousted President of Pan- U 5. SHIPS Some parachutists are said to have been trapped behind the Kalinin line where armored units smashed the approaches to the city directly | west of Moscow. Other German forces are reported conferred with Kido and Susuki. 1ai i . i | Marquis Kido plays an impor- | Antiaircraft Practice ama Returns fo Capifal | 3 | in London dispatches to have rolled r Ry o daedR Y : iKnox Says Not Only Guns nait way from Vyazm toward the (Continued to Page TW0) MANILA, Oct. 15—Four United City - Surrenders | Capital City to the south. | States Army airmen were Kkillea| | Buf crews 'o Man Them ‘) b Tulsa Captured i | when a bomber crashed on Clark| PANAMA, Oct. 15—Dr. Arnulfo | o e German newspapers declare (:Ihe | Field, Pampaga Province, in “"“"Anas, ousted President of Panama, | ! Prepared fOI’ AdIOII [::"m“;“m‘;:’;m ':’I"";I‘.:”:?“‘: | aircraft practice last night. | Second Lieut. Rexford Kinsley, tof Evanston, Illinois, pilot, appar- ,ently was blinded by searchlights is locked up in the city jail after surrendering to the Panama Pollee“ of the Canal Zone. i Five vans filled with police met WASHINGTON, Oct. 15—Secre- 0, Ihe g‘::‘:'m;flp’f’:p < tary of Navy Frank Knox wday.now in progress after the gigantic caid the Navy is ready to put guns|encirelement and battles of Bryansk ‘, and lost control of the bomber, | g | d hant /ships iy ia special motor railway car as land crews aboard merc and Vyazma. ual:m | Army officials said. Dr. Arias, journeyed to the Capital! |as “fast as the ships come to the Moscow Bombed | {City from ‘Cristobal where he sur-, lUnxted States,” once that cmress[ In Moscow, the streets are crowd- Rcbert $.Alles | rendered from aboard the steamer ‘Iauthorms such action. ed as all of the population not | % | WASHINGTON—Now that Harry | is Fritz Kuhn, ex-Fuehrer of the | German-American Bund. AIRMAIL Constance Moore - SCHEDULED | jed President stuck his head out of | from Cefalu. H As the motorcade left, the oust-' the window and shouted: Panama.” ! Dr. Arias flew to Cuba on Oe- tober 7 and claimed he only left| “Viva | | operation with the United States her office being instructed by LaGuardia on her duties, Secretary Knox made the state- needed in the fighting or war work | ment as the House Rules Commit-'streamed east toward safety. |tee granted parliamentary right of| Unconfirmed reports say Moscow | way to legislation lifting the Neu- Was bombed for a brief time this trality Act ban against arming o(‘momina by German warplanes. GREAT PRICE | Earlier in the day the Senate] tation, the Justice Department is | birth to a girl in Los Angeles. It ! ; Lok ! | p?anning to put the b: on other | was the first child for Constance, to consult an eye specialist but n“ ol ,.-v-’f.!' l‘melgn]Commmee approved of Lh«‘ noisy alien ismists | the wife of John Maschio, an actors’ new government, with Ricardo de | voesumil | Proposal. i ’ el . First of those marked for the axe | agent. e e e e ook onc| M. Franklin D. Roosevelt went to work at a new job in Washington, | ! g D. C. that of assistant to Mayor Ficrello H. LaGuardia, She is in ;N Avv S AYS | BEI"G p AID A petition in equity will be filed | scon in the Northern District Court | of New York to revoke Kuhn's citi- | zenship on the ground that he lied | when he swore to support and de-‘ fend the Constitution at the time he was naturalized in 1934¢. Also | | West VirgifiSoldiers fo Receives Dispafches by | Navy Flying Boat WASHINGTON, Oct. 15.—A Navy frenchmen Shot Down in all defense matters. ! Dr. Arias leaned to Germany. He will be kept under close guard. Producdion Hans Kindler Taps Barrel - 0f Fun by Serving Capifal - BYGERMANS '|' ‘Successes on Russian Front - GERMAN SUB HIT FIRS that _he did not, in fact, renounce his . plane will carry mail to the soldicrs 5 allegiance to Germany. | ermans from West Virginia assigned to out- | ‘ H The Justice Department will | |posts in Alaska, according to Rep- | Gamed ai Ifemefldous charge that Kuhn's “subsequent | resentative Andrew Edmiston, of u os s H 2 ; [ H acts” as organizer and leader of the S | West, Virginia, { a( WI' rln o eer | Official Repor[ Claims U.S. Toll-Men, Material | " as he would be forced to register as | an alien, and would be under con- un-American Bund prove its charge. | A number of precedents will be cited | whereby the citizenship of natural- | ized aliens was revoked because of | un-American conduct subsequent to receiving their papers. The action will be brought while Kuhn is still in Clinton Prison, Dan- nemora, N. Y., serving a term for embezzlement of Bund funds. How- | ever, even should the Federal Court | revoke his citizenship, there is small | likelihood that he will be deported when his sentence expires next June. | Authorities doubt. that Germany | | Edmiston said that under the plan | |expected to be effective within a | Executions Occur Daily with Tofal List of 78 Victims for Week | short time, a Navy flying boat will | | deliver mail at least every ien days | |to the West Virginia soldiers now jat Kodiak and possibly a weekly | service shortly. £ Al The Congressman also said Sew- | PARIS, Oct. 15—The German|,.4 ang gitka detachments receive | authorities today announced the poq every 10 days but Kodiak only execution of 78 before firing gets one steamer a month. squads in occupied France. This| — Pplans for the special airmail serv- | keeps up the record of executions jce were developed at a wn_!erence; performed daily. | with Brig. Gen. Rose, of the Adjut- | ————————— |ant General’s Office. = | leen SIaSh} By JACK STINNETT _— i WASHINGTON, Oct. 15 — The OPM Supply Diredor‘mpmn is taking beer with its Makes Order to Con- WASHINGTON, Oct. 15. — Gen. | and nieces. There is no other con- | Gfeer Droned Depfh |George C. Marshall, Chief of the sion 1o, be. aruwts trom the way| Chrges AfterTorpedo | army General Siatt, e seporied te & have told the Senate subcommittee the opening night crowd entered | that*the Germans are paying a tre- into the spirit of this combina-| WASHINGTON, Oct. 15. — The mendous price in men and materiat tion of culture’ and commoness.| Navy Départment’s official account for the ground gained in the drive They whistied and cheered and|of the shooting clash between the on Moscow. | Bach. Down at Riverside Stadium, serve Materials | which is only a flying fish hop WASHINGTON, Oct. 15.—Leon | Henderson, OPM Supply Directer. |certs | from the Potomac, the National| | Sympliony. orchestra, under the di- { rection of big, genial Hans Xind- ler, is giving a series of “pop” con-~ tables seating ' 1,100 persons, thumped the tables until Kindler had added 45 minutes of encores!is disclosed in a report which says to his scheduled program and they | that a British patrol plane put the wouldn't have let him go then if destroyer on the trail of the U- he hadn't explained that he haillpoat, only seconds to catch a train 0| The report dlso flatly contradicts 7.8.8. Greer and a German sub| Gen. Marshall, according to the |report, says information has been received ' that thousands of men, | hundreds of tanks and other mot- orized %units have been lost in the fight against the Russians. | would take the Bund leader back.| —————— |today ordered reduction by at least| At Also, there would be no way to ship| SUNTRANA SCHOOL OPEN MES. LARSEN RETURNI |51 percent in passenger automobile| you can get beer, sandwiches, pop | Toronto. Ithe German claim that the Groer| The report is said to have been him to Germany while the war 2 . 8 od ili throughout the e | staastoft” ping depth bombs on given the subcommittee of the Ap- production to January, 1042, as/and chill throughout the program. | umping dep! ombs lasts. Loss of citizenship, however, ne | MrB: Jetace AN, WieCF $08 g t | Thy acher gang,’ which runs to |the sub more than two. hours be-'hroP riations Coimyiites considering 4 »| The new territorial school at t22' wel known building contractor, re- | Sompared to January, 1941 output. The T BANg. Whlch T “POP” IS FOR “POPULAR” "~ | the new lend-lease bill. would terminate his Bund activities, | stant surveillance. Suntrana mine, 150 miles south Of {yned to her Juneau home on the Fairbanks, was to have open:d Northland after called south on last Monday, according to word pusiness purposes. fore the U-boat commander loose e The slash is ordered to conserve| better than 2,600, has to wait for| defense materials and means an, intermissions and-a junket to tl'w Some of these days, Congre: going to vote a medal to Hans|the first torpedo, | | The Navy statés that the tor-| The 1941 corn crop of Argentina ove;all reduction of at least 36 3/10| sandwich stands. It's ‘all as infor- | Kinoler. This one-titme Dutchmar | Kinoler. This one-tiae Dutchman.| ., "¢ eq first, and eight minutes is estimated at eight million tons. in passenger car production for the mal as 8 jive session or & bz u1, was the Yehudi received here today. Opening cf S e — first six months of the model year lcasue baseball' game and Wash-| (yin his 'celloy of Holland, be- Menuhi the school was delayed a week Existing metal shortages will not |later the first depth charges went! HAPPY BIRTHDAY, HENRY! A Western Union messenger walk- T (Continued on Page Foun) TO VISIT IN KETCHIKAN past - the 'previously announced Mys. J. B. Burford left on the opening-time because of delay n Northland for Ketchikan on 8 yisit- receiving - school supplies, t Jlng trip. J which began Augtst 1. —— e — — BUY DEFENSE STAMPS | ington loves it. chili and Tchaikovsky are hamk and eggs to Uncle Sam’s nephe-v..l over tite Greer's side. ¢ - e - BUY DEFENSE STAMPS fore he was out of his 'teens, has " (Contmued on Page Five) seriously affect the wood furniture industry, the Department of Com- | merce reports, i

Other pages from this issue: