Past IS THE WAYNESVTLLE MOUNTAINEER 1ms of The World As Gathered By the Camera lIto Senate v - i 4 I - i V Australia-Welcomes UrS.SaUors -"MCa"!- L JKkwn Houston, 87-year- f Vfiffleral Sam Houston, ffi Army to victory ?Lu,r Morris Sheppard 1 Boston be required June 28 when Section will be helo tyed by Cupid imf V? v -v.' i nn?', .i . .rT r ;,,v iflTV) - - .s "- V'&- r? ?i Kiddie King P A :'! pgueen of Sydney ' Made It This Time t t, , c r -CM.i"Jj t '1 vn. r iuIi the streets anin' a blizzard of confetti. The service men visited Australia in a train :2VLn warsr.i us. Qja.r. Unwelcome in Rome 1 14 Br' ' Apple Queen Ju h 1 r j-i," : ' r- nminc in Julia EvirendaaL ?inlA. lam"?'.J ioi .nnl I i I King of the kiddies is nine-months-j old David Gallagher of New York City, chosen as the typical AmeriH can baby by officials of National Baby Week. Little David has a drink on the house in honor of the occasion. I Tells of Norse Aid The first time Wolfgang Sonnen feldt, 16, a German refugee, tried ito reach the United States, his ship was torpedoed in the North Atlan tic. The Nazi ship that did the sink ing returned him to Germany and a 'prison camp. He finally made hl way to Bombay, India, where he go transportation to the United Statea. tie is anown arriving ai new aboard the frttuieni moquotv Vargas Diamond Cut sea Pretty Arrival j I ' iimmmmmmmmm irw I, -(, nf thm bathihar beau ties at Bondl Beach in Sydney, Aua-; tralia, Doreen Boads was one of the! reasons U. S. sailors did a lot of! swimming during the good-will visit 1 j there of American warships. Miss Southern Pine Aet from the war but not nminM in Julia EvcrendaaL ,-ear-old Belgian, pictured as sha pd in New York aboard thaj Uiir en rnntA to Venezuela ta mihnv h mat. In HnllnnH fn b. It took her almost a year to a America in her flight from ui-captured Brussels. ; Sues for Million -iafincriiixhed Vir- einia Lee family. Moine rouivi Le has been named the 1941 apple blossom queen of Winchester, Va., and will rule over the annual May fete. Queen Shenandoah 18tn is xa years old. t In Ottawa Post Beatrice Phillips, daughter of Wil liam Phillips, U. S. ambassador to Italy, arrives at New York, enroute to her home in Boston. She had been vacationing in Buenos Aires, Arv gentinn. M , f 1; lit " 0 I iiiit -mmmmmm i i r li-. i.. un. Homaniioii the recall of f AtMl J lino - Capt. William C. Bentley, assistant American military attache in Rome, h retaliation for Washington; ex pulsion of Admiral Alberto Lais, Italian naval attache, who was charged with directing sabotage ol Italian ships in U. S. waters. No explanation was given for Bentiejr being termed "persona non grata. Fritz Kreisler Hurt Gets New Post" . . Crown Prince Olav of Norway puffs on a cigar after finishing dinner given by the Economic Club of New York. Making his first public ad dress since arrival in the U. S., ha revealed that 1,000 Norwegian ships are carrying goods to Brit ain. The Prince called thlsths "greatest contribution that Nor way is makingjo the allies," j rT - . ri tJacksMiip seizures V-"" S" , 1 .. ( 1 F crusader for labor, Miss P Wont, member of one of Pjs foremost industrial fam suit in Federal Court, Lk. cllarglnS officials of t . Steel' Company "with f '5 11,000,000 in anti-labor ac- stockholder, she demands ww such expenditures. fated by Britain .. . rr:u PjiTnmissioner Britain s new ui8u .ij to Canada, ltolcolnv M.fD.0nnld' former Minister of Health m the British Cabinet, arrives at Ms Uttawa posw. - ' r ; a I ..?'- ' 1 JssV.jsM v r i (Mi S 4Wv , Ths world's largest uncut diamond; the Vargas stone, valued at IV '000,000, is held by Kay Herma just before cutting work was itarU ed in New York. The diamond la) .being split into twenty-three stone ranging in size from five to fifty carats. . . Exiled Crown Prince' 7 r Steals Plane Plans i o il- .M matet violin- Une oi mo . - , ists, Frits Kreisler, 68, was struck, by motor truck and gravely r to, jired when he was trapped in New York traffic while crossing Madison Avenue during rush hour. Uncon scious and suffering from a frac tured skull, he was taken to tb Stal, where his condition wa. h described as -satisfactory." Willkie's Sbter Back Sima' r-andson of U shown aa he left lt! where he was A,' 4 I J -v., Spring time la queen time in the United States, and here is another lovely lass who has been elevated to royalty. She is Miss Southern Pine of 1941, pretty Mary Black of Beau fort, S. C, dressed in newsprint toj m.. fir ttnnfVin vmar nf nrncrrAsa In' nidi n - r - - , r-nr P F Rpvnolds renrc' the use of pulp and paper products, Commander F. F. K W "P" the South's newest and potentially sentmg the chief of. naval opera inrfntrie. ,111 IIWI - 1 l, knfnpa f hO HnUflft www V v" . flout Gen. Sir Thomas uiamey, uuns, . tt 'commander to the Mid- merchant .marine comrnieeh , , Hie East was namea seconu ing . - ----- - j- irww. - - - command' to Gen. Sir Archibald acquisition of foreign ships in long and useful life for Wavell in an effort to stem rising American ports. He the Xoleum by varnbhing when Australian discontent over conduct ahips would be used to replace ton- J and thereafter waxing lightty of the war In Greece and North nage taken over by the Army and afur waihinjf. Africa. j Navy for transport and supply. Governor Breaks Ground For Power Plant Addition 1, : Upper left, crowd watches Bt Governor Broughton operates shovel breaking ground for Caro lina Power & Light Company's $8,000,000 addition to its Cape rr Plant In Chatham County -V near Moncura. Lower left shows jrvY-itw o- ' :': Sutton, company president, left, In cab. Lower right shows Sut ton, Governor Brougnton, w. n. Weatherspoon and S, P. Vecker, company vice-presidents, as Gov ernor praised the company for Its "farseeing policy" of "co bperatnig fully" with the national defense program by having an ample supply of electric power available at all times. 64. who rAnnt JOSPIia UC f - served as a spy for Italy e. )Pihl, sister of Wen- in the World Wr-'id the dell WiUlde, returns to New York i Mow York to have eoniessea wB three-year I pumps u r.-rflaeouriei saaader raw . riu, w. . sk mm v . ' . WW', ; n C"& ,3J.: -1-J- lift- f f- j . 5 ' " "i ,,', v - : ! ' : V -y ' - Vnnnmat ilnn of rnvaltrv - made homeless by an axis invasion Is little Crown Prince Alexander Alhnnfa. hown in London. Ha W only a few days old on April lOQQ vdan hla tiaff. A mnrln .mother, Queen Geraldine, and Klngj Zog were forced to flee Albania, j "Tiger's" Grandson y Mrs. Pierre B. Clemenceau, wife of son of late French premier, tb - . . M Tt M - - World war Tiger oz r rmncn r rives at New York. The yonnji mother, a native of New Orleans,! aid she had fled from Bordeaux to, Marseilles to Dakar, Africa, then to i the air base at Boloma where aha, boarded the transatlantic plana feri thu: s. 1 ilbIhelen prints. i uorge. . 4