The OREGON STATESMAN, Salgn, Oregon, Friday Morning, September 1.-M39 SPAGE THREE Japanese Honor v Departing Friend Local Churchmen Present Ellises With Dinner, Special SerTices i ... ... The local Japanese Community Christian church honored Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ellis Tuesday night at a - farewell fellowship dinner be fore their departure to New York city. The dinner was held in the social hall of the Sunday school unit. Following the dinner the guests and hosts convened in the . chapel for the services. Farewell talks wye given by Anna Takayama, president of the Senior league; Minnie sOgurai imA.iHJM WMrrxvn BIG FEATURES Also News, Colored Cartoon STARTS Special Midnight Matinee Saturday at 11:30 p.m. 15c Continuous Performance Sunday I to J I p.m. THE GREATEST AMERICAN ADVENTURE PICTURE OF THEM ALL! IS" TODAY - ' - t l r .rTO - LzAi K mm fen mi tin if 1 f v.. tV-K Ofii&A - BORIS E2AEEi(0)PP AS HUGH WILEY'S CHINESE SLEUU1 OF COLLIEIl'S MAGAZ1NB "MR. WONG; DETECVE, GRANT WITHERS and EVELYN BRENT president of the Toung People's league; E. Okuda, representing the church; and Mrs. J; M. Yada, president of the Fujin-kal. Both Mr. and Mrs. Ellis responded. Mr. and Mrs. Ellis,, who hare been with the Salem Japanese church for the last four years, have been advisers of the leagues, organizer of the Senior league, and Sunday school teach ers In various departments. In addition, Mrs. Ellis has been di rector of religious education and superintendent of the Sunday school. They left Thursday afternoon by auto and expected to arrive in New York by September 20 to enter Columbia university. On their ' way they will make stops at relatives' and friends' homes. TODAY AND SATURDAY 000GU & Chap. 9 of "Red Barry CECIL B. DeMILLE'S -union pacific A Paramnl Pidvr ttarriafl Barbara Stanwyck Joel McCrea Mte TmMI Bktft rmt Ijm mwm riH MhwrrOMJ vd KncM r, Ctd I MEBt HZ! PHONE 2721 ia JHJHEATR ,4 " ' t I t -....f';vv(:v r .. . I I V'TV -111 I r m m 2ndHn Ickes Denies Shift on Dam Hits Reports He Abandons Power-for-All Policy at Bonneville Dam WASHINGTON. Aug, 31--Secretary Ickes denied west eoast reports today that he Is abandon in his policy of promoting the fullest public use of Bonneville dam's power and seeking a mar ket through private utility sys tems. Ickes said Dr. Paul Raver, new ly appointed Bonneville adminis trator, would encourage public bodies and cooperatives seeking energy irom me Dig pian:t on me Columbia river. ,., i. "My own policy," Ickes said, 'is to give all the help consistent ly and legitimately possible to pub lic utility districts. My interest is in selling as much cheap! power as possible over as wide an area as possible. There will be no depart ure from this policy." j Ickes said that if private utility companies seek to thwart1 efforts of public bodies wishing to take advantage ot Bonneville power, there nvjght be 8ome j delay in working-out a distribution pro gram and that at ' the j start the market might be limited. ' "There is a potential market for a great deal of power in the Pacific northwest, he said. Sees Trouble -Ahead Private utilities, he isaid, will probably confront local people who want cheap public power with law suits "and all sorts of - ob structive practices." I The Bonneville authority prob ably will encounter many troubles experienced by the Tennessee val ley authority in working out Its public power program, Ickes said. "It took a long time to work things out at TVA, you know, and TVA had a great deal of help from the public works administration which provided funds for the purchase and construction of pub lic power plants and distribution systems, Ickes said. j "Now, we haven't got that situ ation in the Pacific northwest. No public agencies, so far as I know. can make loans and grants as PWA did to the Tennessee valley authority territory which made it possible forAhe authority to work out its plans." . ! Dr. Raver expects toibe at Bon neville September 14, to relieve Acting Administrator Frank A. Banks, Ickes said. Banks has been acting administrator I since the death of J. D. Ross. Banks will return to his post as federal sup erintendent of construction at Grand Coulee dam. ! Canadian Airmen, Bombers on Move CALGARY, Alta.. I Aug.-(CP) Thirty-one members I of No. 1 fighter squadron, Royal Canadian air force, carrying gas masks la knapsacks and headed by Sergeant Major A. H. Warner, Jeft Calgary tonight on an eastbound Canadian Pacific, railway train divulged destination. The men. half of for an un the ground icrew forces of the squadron, left less than 12 hours! after- two squadron Hawker Hurricane planes, capable of 00 miles an hour, soared away i to eastern Canada. - 1 " AH RCAP planes, formerly sta tioned at Currie barracks here have gone to eastern Canada, semi-official quarters revealed Seven Wapiti bombers of the No, 3 squadron and one Of the No. 1 squadron Hurricane: ships left here last Saturday. Call Board ELSIXORE i Today "Each Dawn 1 Die" with James Cagney and Geofge Raft, plus "Ev- erybody's Hobby" with Henry O'Neill and Irene Rich. . ! Mickey Mouse matinee Sat-, urday. Doable hill, stage show and chapter 11 of "The Oregon Trail." GRAND j Today "Stanley and Living- stone" with Speqcer Tracy, Nancy Kelly, Richard Rreene. STATE Today "The Hardys Ride High" and "Mr. Wong, De- tective" with Boris Karloff. : CAPITOL! Today "The Island . of Lost Men" with . Anna May Wong and Anthony Quinn. "Boy's Town" with Spen- cer Tracy and Mickey Rooney. j Saturday 'The Angela Wash Their Faces" with Ann S h eri dan and ;the Dead End Kids. "Colorado Sun- " set" with Gene An try. ; . -i--' HOLLYWOOD Today "Riding ion Air" with Joe E. Brown, Guy Kibbee and Florence Rice. The Great Man Votes" with John Barrymore and Virginia WIedleri Saturday "Spoiler ot the Range" with Charles Star- Ttt Snddmi Mn-np-r" with . Charles Rngglea jand Mar- f Jorle Rambean. j ESS AM "Unfriendly " I-, V- - - v ; . fe7ssw' h ? ,J t a' - x v "r i. ? ! - ' v ', ? I ' - A t H v v - . 1 v I v I .f J ,l "r r?-4Z2rt y,. I ... f ritmf if ujijS? "A very unfriendly act on the part of the Hamburg American line aescnoea ine aetaining in Kew loric narnor angnst 2 01 we wigc German liner Bremen. Search wa made by 10O federal men for weapons capable of nse In raiding which automatically, In time of war, would convert a liner into i "privateer." Tlie Bremen was held at her dock two days after scheduled sailing time with the Trench line flagship Xormandie and two British liners. The Bremen is pictured at her dock guarded by two US customs boats. Northern Italy Field Of Battle, Is Belief Writer Sees French Armies Sweeping Over Pass to Cripple Italian Munitions Industry; Strike at Germany From South By DREW MIDDLETON LONDON. Aujr.'Sl. (AP) Northern Italy, cockpit of Europe since the days of the Roman empire, may be the scene of some of the earliest decisive fighting of the next European war if it comes with a French-British army striking through the Alpine passes against the heart of industrial Italy. This is the opinion of neutral military observers and some retired British and French officers in London. ' They base it on four conditions : 1. Italy will not remain neutral, O but will enter the fight on the side of Germany. 2. Germany's Siegfried line and France's Maginot line will stale mate each other along the old western front for at least a year, perhaps longer. 3. Germany, fearing a wave ot hostile world feeling if the rights of the small nations are disregard ed, will not invade France through Belgium or Holland. 4. Polish resistance will re quire the attention of at least half the German army six months or more. "Under these conditions it is easy to see. why the theater of war should shift to northern Italy," one officer said. ''That is the in dustrial region; the munitions In dustry is centered in Turin. A break through with the subse quent destruction of these plants would force Italy to call on Ger many's none too extensive mili tary stores, cripple Italy's fighting forces." It is no secret that the French general staff has considered two possibilities: an Italian - German invasion of southern France and a French invasion of northern It aly. The former, reputedly the plan of some blackshlrt strate gists, has received scant encour agements from experienced Mar shal Pietro Badoglio, Italy's first soldier, officers here report. Terrain Favors French The character of the land, which makes an Italian blow at southern LEGAL NOTICE SHERIFF'S NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that I will, on Saturday, Septem her 23, 1939, at 10:00 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the west door of the Marion County Court House, In SalenV; Oregon, sell at public auction In the man ner provided by law for the sale of real property on execution, the following described real prem ises, to-wit: " Lot 8, Block 1, Brooklyn Addition to the City of Salem, Marion County, Oregon. Said sale will be by virtue of an execution issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Marion County in that suit heretofore pending therein in which City of Salem, a mu nicipal corporation, Is plaintiff and Walter D. Smith and Kath erine Smith, his wife, Cora B. Harding and Marlon County, a body politic, are defendants the same being Clerk's Register No. 27740, j Dated and first published Au gust 25, 1939. j A. C. BURK, Sheriff of Marlon County, ! Oregon. By Kenneth L. Randall, Deputy. A.25-S.l-8-l-22 SHERIFF'S NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that I will, on Saturday, Septem ber 2, 1939, at 10:00 o'clock In the forenoon of said dayf at the west, door ot the Marlon County Court House in Salem, Oregon, sell at public auction in the man ner provided by law for the sale of real property on execution, the following described real premises, to-wit: Lot" J, Block 9..J. Myer'a Addi tion to the City of Salem. Mar ion County, Oregon, fcald Sale will be by virtue ot an execution issued out of the Cir cuit Court ot the State ot Oregon for, Marion County in that suit heretofore pending therein in which City t Salem,! a municipal corporation,' is plaintiff, and Frank E. Frickey and Edna H. Frickey, his wife, Verna B. Frick ey, unmarried, and Marlon Coun ty, a body politic, are defendonta, the same being Clerk's Register No. 47488. ' Dated and first published Aug ust 4, 1939. ; f . A C BURK, , Sheriff ct Marlon County, i Oregon. . I 1 : ' By Kenneth L. Randall, Deputy. A 4-11-JH5-8 l Says Nazi Line as ft of the United States was the way France a hazardous undertaking, favors the French. The passes through the Alps at Mont Cenis and Mont Genevre converge as they near the French frontier. "With sufficient artillery the French could hold that road for ever," said, one expert. The possibility of secondary op erations even more dangerous to the axis armies was advanced by one observer. "It Is altogether possible the French could march across Italy, swing northward and feint at Aus tria. Such a maneuver would draw a considerable number of German divisions away from their eastern and western fronts, Poland and the Siegefried line. "I am convinced the latter will be smashed only when' the French and British boast an overwhelm ing preponderance of men and guns, which they w o n 1 d then have." Italy, extending Into the Medl terranean and with the Tyrrhen ian and Adriatic seas on either side, is considered by naval ex perts to foe vulnerable, by reason of her geographic situation to at tack from the combined British I ' Starts ay. - - Five Days r (Si). - THERE'Q'X " '-jKfr GOING TO be pr- WQ'Ol'l-kvl I The loter goes to the morgue, the winner goes to tbe chair in thii battle of the. killers! Who's going to-crack? Who's going to win? You'll find out when JAMES i i GEORGE ifflW H I I JANSKtYAN 1 3 t ' . j C:02CI6ANCSOfT' " ' PLTJ8 83TD BIG BIT j y "EVERYBODY'S HODD . A with " " t I IREXE RICH, HEXRYQyEDLL I Bfemen Held W V A. s 4 tlie New York port superintendent and French Mediterranean fleets Should her fleet be swept out of the way, her long coasts might be subject to a raking from British' French guns. ! British Fleet Alone Enough The British navy alone is con sidered stronger in : most respects than the' combined Italian and German fleets. On completion of current construction programs. Britain and France will be able to muster 33 capital ships, 130 cruis ers, 14 aircraft carriers, 230 de stroyers and torpedo boats, 160 submarines and a swarm- of pa trol and anti-submarine craft. The combined German and Italian na vies, it is estimated, could pro vide 20 capital ships, 42 cruisers. 2 aircraft carriers, 195 destroy ers and torpedo boats and 175 submarines. Military men admit British and French aid to Poland will be tremendous task; the annihilation of Poland's army the primary Ger man objective. "The Germans cannot allow the Poles to remain unconquered for long," said one. "Such an army, highly mobile, familiar with the ground it is fighting on and of high morale Is always dangerous doubly so to a highly mechanized force. "The only aid I can see Brit ain and France giving to Poland is continuous bombing by plane of German munition dumps, rail heads and communication lines in Germany. The 'shuttle plan of British and French ; bombers fly ing across Germany, 'laying their eggs,' refuelling and reloading in Poland and repeating the proce dure on the way back is far from being a military daydream." Y achats Man Killed ( Under Load of Logs GOLDENDALE, ' Wash., Aug. 31.-()-Clarence fVIUiam Miller, ZZ, Yachats. Ore., "was killed . In stantly last evening when crushed under a truck load of logs. Edgar H. Canfield, Klickitat county cor oner, said Miller was unloading logs near White Salmon, Wash Spread Retarded In whitman Fire Control Looms; Bla2e at " Imnahavls Corralledi . Weather Assists " BAKER. Aug. tl.-iD-The 40,000-acre blaze in the Whit man national forest. In eastern Oregon was held to a spread -of only 800 acres tonight, as 1900 men doggedly fought to uring it under control. - State foresters a!d 'consider able headway is being made, and STARTS S SHE SMILES... AND COJIPAXION jk " " sl ' Greaieit variefy of new sfytes in' v ? 0 wnl Plerrty of Seddlel . Blacks " - V y Antique Tn$,,. Slues... Wmet, J i l 00i ' RM9e r Smooth OJXiUm , V. Tfs- - TKie pori$ wHf gel you off on tbt ;TA V iTHICK .",5,- , - 1V V CREPE OR fZfcCl '1" frL I H 1 7 "C Vernation J ' " : HJW XHi : WiNE'-BROWN ; 1 ' ll BLUE GREEN . ! "rtCilr, vx BLACK , ? - : ' ". V V lift ,J: -' w-- ... - & i - , . . LAST TIMES TONIGHT "Island of Lost Men" ' -vita , ANNA UAE WONG jr. CARROLL- NAISH ; 7 T the situation; looks muchttftter Fire In the Imnaha region of tfc forest mop brought unde con.- lit TtfalfAva anil Mnrrli Ololir injured when tbelj plane 'crashed while dropping supplies Wednes day, came out of the Imn'aha re- glon today by pack train. . " Rain' put out fires $i other sec tions of the state " The fic weather forecast: . "jfloudy tonight with local showers, becoming Jr Friday with alowjy , rising "Temperature ' and tailing humidity; moderate southerly - becoming . west and . norihwest'wind, fresh high elera- Uoni.? ' - ATURDS;i TIIZ 'ANGELS' SIMGI 1?v FEATURE . AUTR Y'S GREATEST PICTURE usaIa buka aa&a aLStd 4PaA 1 wwanp v amww vnwm jew rfpn i S SB IRQ SJBSJS4 9SlflHSISJf BbSJSA Stlflfl i Ss2eyE: III! tl(I tMUU Hf HI Iktdl Mtltl plus: SPECIAL NEWS " PROS EUROPE BY PLANE Europe Under the Sword FRANCE ENGLAND DANZIG . POLAND GERMANY GIBRALTAR! T P "Boys'. TownT L . lritlr-v' - v . tf - SPENCER - TRACT, S MICKEY-ROONEY i I