Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
for tomorrow— Feature Coat Clearance 1dous sav in two groups, lovely | ! h . fur trimmed models, and also untrimmed Ire or casual coats. All in 1009, pure ‘ yol, on most coats you save less than 16 FUR TRIMMED MODELS badger, red fox, and Labrador Tuxedos, shawl collars, most Handsome savings on e fox interlined Coats, reg. 98.50-110.00 $ 55. 45. 0. 85. 95. 110. 38 DRESS AND CASUAL MODELS Chesterfields, casuals and dress models. Blacks, pastels, colors. Sizes 12 to 40 20. 30. 89.50 3 Coats, reg. Coat, reg. 118.50 2 Coats, reg. 150.00 1 Coat, reg. 175.00 1 Coat, reg. 193.50 3 Coats, values to $55.00 20 Coats, 39.75 to 47.50 15 Coats, 49.95 to 55.00 R, Behrends Co QUALITY SINCE /887 g their race toward Hamburg, 50 Harold Heidy. 3 i miles distant. North of Hannover g te for Seattle were the British tanks and infantry cut a passengers: Leslie Ner- 2 20-mile gash in the paper-thin William Lessard, Ed Shepherd, German defenses as they headed | Walter Jchns, Miss Gloria Johns, for Hamburg. Mrs. Millicent Olson. The Canadian First Army march- Juneau to Whitehorse—Miss Es- telle Wolf, Richard Simms, Lt. Harry JF HANNGVER @ - ed to within 15 miles of the North Sea, and within 25 miles of the |Meyers. ! EN I E R E D Dollart Bay U-boat base of Emden, o o gy in a thrust to seal off landward routes into The Netherlands. Nlflih ArmyTanks, infaflh’y The First and Ninth Armies, in progfess Repomd, Make Crash Info Burn- Wage Agreement, their attack from the northeast ing City Today Soft Coal Indusiry and south, have shrunk the Ruhr (Continued from Page One) WASHINGTON, Aptil 10.—John peeket to less than 2,000 square miles. The flattened city of Gelsen- kirchen, with a population of 131,- 000, fell without a shot. - E L. Lewis and the soft coal opera- tors reported “further progress” to- ward agreement on a contract but |eaid one controversia¥ question is £til unsettled. PAA BRINGS FARES FROM WHITEHORSE - Meanwhile the Government stood by ready to seize the mines if oper- reached Saltzgitter, 115 miles from Berlin and 17 miles from the big enter of Brunswick. Saltz- site of the sprawling Iron Works. the A Pan American Airways plane 1t the following pakséngers to 1 Goering Enemy reports said also that Han- from Whitehorse Monday ators and miners fail to produce a over as encircled TROOT Mi Mildred Murphy, new contract, and to halt a wave of Race Toward Hamburg Louice R 5 | work stoppages, in which at least British forces crossed the Aller ttle to Juheau—Hans Floe, 20,000 miners are reported idle in River, captured Verden, and started 14 2101, Jr., Olaf Syre, Olive Pennsylvania and Kentucky. E FROM KER DAINTY LINGERIE CAN BE MAD CHIEFS Lett, frilied collar from embroidered hankie; center, collar and jabot; right, lingerie for V-necked dress. e lingerie accent on a suit or dress. If you can’t buy the hand-made type, you can make them from fine Irish linen handkerchiefs. On the dark dress, left, a hand-embroidered handkerchief has been used as a bertha. A circle has been cut out of an embroid- ered or printed linen handkerchief and fitted into the round neckline of the dress with one corner at center front and a corner on each shoulder. The collar and frilled jabot worn with the suit, center, are made from two hand-rolled linen handkerchiefs with the interesting clip-cord borders you are stiii able to find in some stores, The V-neck dress, right, uses the four corners of & handkerchief to m.nke a crisp white lingerie touch which is the very breath of spring. “International) There is nothing so spring-like as a crisp whit THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE- ELLA'S STELLAR, ACTING NATURAL WITH A FELLAR By ROSALIND SHAFFER AP Newsfeature Writer HOLLYWOOD — Ella Raines is not the usual Hollywood actress 'She's an outdoor type, and strenu- | ous, though she looks fragile. She takes boxing lessons with | Frankie Vann, studio athletic train- |er for male stars. “Just so I won't get stuck like Lana Turner in the ‘mlddlc of a Hollywood night club brawl,” she says. Not that youd be |likely to find her in a nightelut iunlt‘s'fi it was with her husband JCupl Kenneth Trout, who likes to {show her off a bit when he’s on |leave. In New York, t girls go to see and be you'll | find Ella rowing in Contral Park She Plays Ii Straight P oted a: natural type of yeauty by Howard Hawks and Char ‘es Boyer, Ella has uncurled hair on features, lithe figure with real suntan on her clear, smooth skin a dynamic personality prefers fliers (her hushand is « ELLA RAINES . She's Strenuous . . . flier, holds a Presidential Citation the Distinguished Flying Cross, and the Air Medal.) She isn't the sort of gi her husband to rememb saries and bring her pres rather he’d bring me some thing spontaneously,” says Ella. Ella says her vocabulary needs re- straint when something annoys her. It dates back to when she was with her father, a dynamite engineer {working with his crews and explod- ing into expletives in the typical Irish way when the men didn’t move | fast enough. | little Vivacious Lady Ella’s idea of lovemaking isn't holding a red, red rose in her testh and running her fingers through a man't hair. She likes to wrastle em. Once Capt. Trout thought he's fool her by ducking into a rcom and locking the door. His little bride broke it down. Not that she hasn’'t her senti- mental moments; she does. She likes to write verses, but she even gets strenuous with them; she finds herself getting so sarcastic that she stops. She enjoys solitude and can be perfectly happy that way. The University of Washington, not Itoo far from her native Snogualmie yFalls, is her alma mater. She got ' jdrama training there. | “I like to act because I can hide imy real self behind the roles I Iplay,” says Ella} “I loved doing that |impersonation of a hot jive cat in ‘Phantom Lady’ because it was some- thing different. ‘Working with JUNEAUALA KA > in “Tall in the Saddle ; 1 love horses and ne was a real pleasure to SAYSHITLER I ., He didn't think my uge? 5 ut - scenes = were 3 dumb.” One Look Was Enough Ella Raines’ rise to stardom, though not as widely publicized as cme, 1 becen sensational. Boyer and Hawks tock one look at the phetes of her brought from New| York by an agent a signed her, CRITICISM DANNED BY CHURCHILL London Pap'ersrPredict Fall of Cabinet With End | of Europe War ‘ April 10.—Prime Min- | | | BIGATTACK ion of England Against His Leaders’ Advice By HAL BOYLE (AP War Cclrespendent) GOETTINGEN, Germany, April 10--A small, mouse-like Geman General, who built sites for a barge-borne invasion of England, caid Hitler himself postponed the venture against the advice of his military leaders. Sitting almost unnoticed in the banner-hung City Hall among clamoring civilians, the Ordnance Major General said he had been relieved of his command a month LONDON, ago because Nazi gauleiters no ister Winston Churchill, in the midst |jonger trusted him. of a thre his wartime coalition| pyplaining his role irw the abort- inat, Ct id that Cabinet e jnyasion of England, he said: Ministers could advocate conserva-l.yon Rundstedt wanted to attack tism or gocialism on their own, but England immediately after France that he will not tolerate criticism bY ‘g 1, 1940, but was overruled by h “reflects on actual ol-| pgyzer, Instead, we were ordered icles pursued by his government.” | o“Cia “un gur campaign in Yugo- Virtually all London papers pré-ig.uia and prepare to attack dicted the wartime coalition willlZ . ., | me to ; end with the finish |V isia- i COMEII AR St S b ; He declared that in 1942, Von e approaching ALL GIRLS IRVITERTC USO DANCE cf the war in Rundstedt thought the golden op- portunity had been missed and that England was too strong to be invaded, but, he said, Von Bra- chitsch wanted to establish a hold- ing line in Russia and prepare to strike against England. | The General was given the job of organizing invasion sites in Holland, and, he said, thousands of barges were concentrated but the invasion s finally abandoned because of a: concentrations and because of the invasion of North Africa by the Alijes.” | CADIT PORT RAVAGEDBY NIGHT FIRE CADIZ, Spain, April 10.—The - part of the port section of has been destroyed and an un- 1own number of persons have been 2d to death, avy which started kefore midnight. Theusands tons of flour, cork, coffec and o.her goods have been Cestreyed. 1 Rescue workers said a large num- b { persons working in the many warchouses were trapped by the flames and perished. | The fire was brought under con-| trol shortly after daybreak. RO N FALLEN CITY IS HANDED OVER avitation s extended ;. ladies of Juneau and nd the dance at the s Thursday night, ng at 9:30 o'clock. The music be furniched by Service- the 1 Gordon, Club that & number oon become inter- 2 membetships in ice Organization the fire house just | | TO GENERAL | | By- ROBERT EUNSON | (AP War Ccrrespondent) HANNOVER, Germany, April 10 _—Axnm'ican Doughboys, riding Ger- | man half-tracks, who captured this ‘seveu-cemuries-old city, gave the (city to their General in honor of | pn; liberation of his soldier-son, | Stilithwick (above): a |who was freed from a Nazi prison | Wiiameton N ¢ e Grtone |camp_ this morning. majorette of the Skymasters, Air | Meanwhile, the U. S. Ninth Army | Transport Command band at :dmve two spearheads out across| Fairfield-Suisun, Calif., base. |the last seretches of the Han-| i | noverian plain north and south of MAJORETTE — put. Lala THE COSTS OF CONGRESS | Brunswick. ! BANNISTER IN JUNEAU | Fred C. Bannister, of Enumclaw, | Wash,, is a guest of the Baranof | |during his stay in Juneau. } | e | Hugh R. Tennant, of Seattle, has | arrived in Juneau and is stopping | at the Baranof. | i ———— i | The land under irfzation through out the world is estimated at about 200,000,000 acres. e > :Fuehrer Postponed Invas- | | ‘RAPF bombing attacks on our barge e TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1945 b TOURING THE LIBERATED AREAS of Holland, Queen Wilhelmina is greeted . » by hundreds of flag-waving youngsters as she visits the town of Sluis. [ The Queen, who recently returned after a four-years absence, has been 4 making an inspection tour of her stricken homeland. (International) : - EI s v " [orim e ‘o & 9 4 4SS edricity Lights |* WEATHER REPORT * i, b . (U. S. Weather Bureaw) » Eskimo Dwelling el : ® Temperatures for 24-Hour ® R | ® Period Ending at 7:30 o'Clock ® GOOSE BAY, Labrador — Fly-|® This Morning: . ers returning from Baffin Island, ® e o o . cne of the most isolated of the net-|® In Juneau—Maximum, 38; @ 9 work of stations operated by the ® minimum, 32. Precipitation, e North Atlantic Division of the Army ® .97 of an inch. ° - Air For Air Transport Command | ® At Airport—Maximum, 37; e | :cen what is probably the|® minimum, 32. Precipitation, e world’s first electrically lighted ig-|® .82 of an inch. . 02, e oo o v 00 ¢ s' 0w An ingenious Eskimo built his iglco|© TOMORROW'S FORECAST e next to the station, and persuaded |® o o o . nnel to let him run an | e Decreasing cloudiness to- e d to his ice-block e night; clear Wednesday and e !’ dwelling. {® Wednesday night. Tempera- e i - - |® tures: Lowest tonight, 20°; e : Donald A. Date, Seattle, is in|e highest Wednesday, 43°. . f Juneau, a guest at the Baranof. |, 5, ¢ o o @ o & & ® 8 B O e R A R S S LR Re MERCHANTS..x < SELL TO THE NAVAL TRADE L Ll <L 4 P00l e We carry a complete line of Naval Apparel and Accessories IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Tailor-Made White and Blue Serge Sailor Suits G.. ond Tailor-Made Neckerchiefs Marine Dress Blues G.. Navy Raincoats and Officers’ Coats Elastic Back Wooden Shower Clogs Hosiery Naval Rates Boatswain Whistles Sea Bogs' White Gob Hats Bathing Trunks This is an outstanding business cpportunity for you Nowi' Write for our trade list S. J. SMALL COMPANY Manufocturers and Distributers of “2‘\ ARMY AND NAVY MERCHANDISE ,4‘" 1209 BROADWAY - NEW YORK 1, N. Y. OSITIPIIT L IPP TV e O "I‘h SPECIALIZING IN PERMANENT WAVING - HAIR CUTTING AND GENERAL BEAUTY CULTURE - A FULL LINE IN DERMETICS CREAMS LUCILLE’S BEAUTY SALON PHONE 492 For FRESH MILK and CREAM Delivered Daily fo Your Door CALL 117 UNION TRANSFER (0. ; in W (Figures for fiscal year . 1944 from Budget Bureau) Peace... Serving the- Cause of Victory Courteous and Dependable Service to Alaska “r.O..' . Seattle, Wash.