Newspapers / The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, … / Feb. 2, 1942, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE JOUM^Ai-lPiSiaW. NOBf» WI iifirijg MC ■■» J-T- ie C^Hil:% Gets News In Views Frtfm AH Sections .MtBfeSw " Where Japs Got Hot R^cq>tion . ji- ' THE BIG FOUR OF THE FAR EAST Li r’BNERAL SIR ARCHISALD /''HINESE GENERALISSIMO ^ WAVELL. hero of Lib^; ap- CHIANG KAI-SHEK, now ■ * “ . - .. Commander of all Allied lard and air forces in China, Burma and Thaila^ (Siam). pointed Snpreme Commander of all AHied forces in die aontbwest Pa- I IBUT. CBN. GEORGE H. ^ BRJ5TT, former Chief of, the U. S. Aimy Air Corps, now serving as Deputy Commander under Gen. Wavell. This American Tire Made From This American Bush Mi PAVE THE WAY CLOVER A promising new recruit In the Food-for-Victory c»mpftlgn;,U the •ow klgb-yielding, disease-^resist- Jag MidUnd rad cloveT, Ipti^u- Md lut ywr by serdml SUM bx* ■nilwit aUtloM. Lucky Thiver jt'T Over the Hill Lie Riissian Troops '■ {• , '35^7'’ ■ . '■ "’'TaV 'ff In the lee of s hill s motorised division Is awaiting the command , to attack the Russian positions on the other ifde, somewhere in the O.S.S.B. Infantrymen, not shown, were used in eoUaboration with the 1 miis auto, driven by Philip Falco, IJ4, of New York, smashed through itbe guard rails, sending car and driver to railroad yards below. Falco got off with a bruised knee and a cut over the eye. panzers in this attack on Russia's mighty mechanised army which has been making a heroic effort to stop the onriuhing Nazi war machine. A dmiral thomas c. HART, Commander of the U. S. Asiatic Fleet, now serving as Commander of all Allied Navies in the Far East. O’Neil Jones Kloesner Proving that manufacture of Ures fronj the American grown guayule tfirub is practical, William O’Neil, president of The General Tire & Rubber Ca, has turned over to Jesse Jones, secretary of commerce, a specimen of the mature plant and a tire made entirely of guayule rubber. The tire was made in the same General Tire plant and in the same machines used in making tires from far eastern rubber. O’Neil has urged the development of guayule as an emergency rubber supply for years. A bill now before Congress calls for the immediate planting of all available guasmle seed in the states of Texas, California, New Mexico and Arizona. Because it thus far is impossible to make a tire from synthetic rubber alone, O’Neil is urging the growth of guayule to supplement the 400,000 ton production of synthetic already announced by Jones. American Legion Posts in all parts of the count.>7 are supporting the O’Neil guaj-ule program, which O’Neil dis cussed this week with S-. crctary Jones and H. J. Kloesner, president of the Ku.,ocr Reserve Corporation. Stork Still at Home •* ' announced by the United State” Department of Agriculture. Speaks for Dealers . At' ' p‘ "5k' L. Clare Cargile, president of the . National Automobile association, ' who told members of the senate | committee on small business that. the government must take prompt : steps or 44,000 anto dealers and | their half million employees face ■ immediate disaster. | From Distant Lands I This Berlin-ccnsor-approved pho tograph shows a stork, whose na tionality is unknown, calmly roost ing in his abode, blissfully unper turbed at the destruction all around him. The photo was taken some where on the eastern front. Modern Apollo \ A view of the yard at the naval station at Olongapo, FhUlfptoe Is lands, BO miles from Manila on the Bataan peninsnla, where Japaiuwe army forces in a large-scale offensive met with a deadly hail of Are from General MacArthnr’s embattled defenders. Olongapo is an important submarine base equipped with floating docks. Press Conference a la Berlin How’s this for a dream man. | girls? He’s 21-ycar-old WaUy Lasky of Brooklyn, chosen America’s most perfect male iif a magazine-spon sored contest. Lasky is an ex college student employed by the New York city department of sani tation. He gets a movie test for ^ winning. | Tops in Chemistry Little Pedro Hadhandia, seven. Maria Rosa, seven, and her sister Anainda Rosa, nine, warm their bands as they arrive in New York. They came aboard an unidentiSed ship from some distant land. They are Americans, and await aid from Traveler’s Aid society. Prof. B. J. Williams of Texas, (top) who was awarded the chemis try medal of Columbia university for his discovery of panthothenlq acid. Below: His brother, Dr. B. B. williams of New York, who re ceived same medal for isolation of vitamin Bl. To Fill Men’s Shoes 1 Berlin has its press conferences, too, but how free they arc is anotbei matter. This radiophoto sent to New York via radio and to Cbicag* via soundphoto shows Dr. Otto Dietrich annonneing military achievement! claimed by the Germans on the eastern front, tv foreign correspondent! in Berlin. Note large-sized war map. These Cadets Are Officers Now First members of the Canadian women’s army corps ro leave Can ada on active service are shown as they left OtUwa for Washington, D. C., where they will take over d-utles formerly performed by men at the Canadian legation. All are company sergeant majors. There’s good reason for the smHes worn by these yonng men as they surrender their rifles to the seated sergeant. They have just rhanged status from cadets to commissioned officers at Randolph field, “West Point of the Air.” They don’t need the drill rifles any more, and are plenty happy abont It. Recovers Sight Back to the Wars j Chooses Not to Run | On Guard and Ready to Go .Aloft I BAGGING « >'aggin' program for ibt?. providing for the man” * ef nn to 4.000,000 ”pa' terns’’ or hale cnvArtn*rs. ha« kor,- Bernard M. KeUmnrray ef Nei , Baven, Conn., who sncUenly recov. ered hia algbt after being bjindl fqi. nearly five yean. He ia shown wit' his ”aedaf eye" dog, Shep. Released by the British na^ at- r tache, photo shows Britlah hdMe- { Ship HJf.8. MaUya steaming eat ef New Tetk fcnrber after amlergetog repairs under lend-lease ftefram. j Sen. George W. Norris •( IMcna- ka, U, who anaotuKcd be - imaM not nm for re-election beoanse he to "wearing oat” and worid be ashamed to take his salary.. He has served in senste siaoe UU. Gnardlnas sf snr hesvlly popriated and seaboard,.men sf a pnrsnK squadron of their "werUng doUies’’ at the air leld to 8t banra a.day eaU. ney are set te'toke phUMS apjrsaeh their section of the coast fadnstriaQy importnaf i the U. B. army are shown to* New Verk where they nrf en to toe nir to the event hostile -xa
The Journal-Patriot (North Wilkesboro, N.C.)
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Feb. 2, 1942, edition 1
4
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