PAGE TWO Following the News Around the Globe With a Camera Crack Nazi troops Seem Docile to Hitler Here " _ " ■■■■■■■»■- ■ ■ ■■ i Ammmmm—— & ; • % • V--* \ ’’ s <. . & -• •• •** • . •* •• s * - * : ** <. 5 ■ ■ Nazi troops on parade before German dictator World interest is focused on Germany as rumors of unrest have continued following the cabinet and army leadership shakeup which placed Chancellor Adolf Hitler in complete command of crack Na i legions. Apparently all was peaceful when this picture was taken shewing Hitler reviewing-troops at Nuremberg, and not much credence has been placed in “revolt” rumors. Lost Appendix at Sea life .v w^s^mst mlbt-'- ■ Pictured in her sickbed aboard the President Harding is Miss Mary Josephine Gibson, of Arklow, Ireland, who underwent an operation for the removal of her appendix in mid-ocean. The Harding hove to for two hours while Ship’s Surgeon Herman Rhoad performed the operation. Miss Gibson is shown conversing with her fiance, Matthew Kearney, who met the ship at New York. (Central Press) EVANGELIST HELD ON MANN CHARGE ' i.y * ■ 1 Hjgk Wanda Pinson The Rev. Cecil Everart Chapman ... seized with evangelist ... held on Mann act charges Charged with violation of the Mann act, the Rev. Cecil Everart Chap man, 29-year-old Lincoln, Neb., evangelist, and Wanda Pinson, 15, arrested with him, have been held at Union, Mo, 4 after a five-week flight from Miss Pinson’s home in Lincoln. y Aoah Numskuu. DE.AE- NOAK=IF A GIRL. HAS MONEY To IT EASY FOR. HER.LTO I=l ND A MATCH? / UILI—IAN I_ELEL < WONBOE, NO. DEAE NOAH '“CAN A baseball player, DO DIRTY WfeRK- ON A SCRUB TEAM? CARL- LASKEY OgANO AAPIDS,Q DEAR NOAH =WHY IS IT NIGHT FALLS, BUT IT«S THE, DAY THAT BREAKS? JOHN M c <£LYNCHEIf EVERYBODY!SCHD IN HOUR, IDEA' /Voah Numskuu. = jOGOtfZfr =1 , ”J-LJT-run DEAR |SOAH*=WIL.U WE HAVE ANY USE FOE THE GOLDEN GATE IF THE BAY LEAVES 7 y - MARY PARR > RICH WONp, CAUIK. DEAR NOAH— IF A MAN HAS HORSE SENSE, i DOES HE ALWAYS KNOW WHEN "TO SAYj i neigh" 7 BERTHA CANPL.BC. WINSUBK AR>fr j Dear noah«dio homer. : pigeon invent the first fuying machine NUM-PAN TOL-ECK*, O. 1 AN .pgA YOHITC.- —I HELEN HICKS GREETS FIANCE ffx'- :•■ : # : . ,; • }. •' , '%l;i : : :;; . ; ' ; -y •.... : -!4f •. / :^Mi^JBiMBIIMWBB6i^mKpiM|ip|BM Whitney Harb and Helen Hicks Former national women’s golf champion, Helen Hicks, greets her fiance, Whitney Harb. as he arrives in New York. Harb is a Little Rock, Ark., business man. The wedding was set for Feb. 15. Child Saved from Eagles •' ' ** ** * ** v >• *' S2li-i—-■""' . ♦» W l„ two eagles attacked little Betty Ernestburger (inset) as she played . thp vard of her home at Gunpowder, Md., Albert Alms shot one down, kpnt the other off. Alms is shown with the eagle he killed. It weighs beat the om fifty pounds. (Central Press) Wife Preservers Store your leftover vegetables separately in the refrigerator even When you are planning later to combine them. Separated they keep their individual flavors. HENDERSON (N.C.) DAILY DISPATCH WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 16, 1938 Wife Preservers Add a can of corn to a plain omelet and serve it for dinner or lunch, or you can serve it with i fish, bacon or ham. Columnist Dies m m pppw mm o. ::.|MHj S B $m 0. 0. Mclntyre, native of Gallipoli#, 0., whose New York column was syndicated more widely than any • other column in the country, died in his Park Avenue apartment of a heart attack. He was 64 years old. (Central Press) i Italy’s Heir ; a ■y/y'Q-y Prince Vittorio Emmanuel ... heir presumptive to throne A new portrait of the infant Prince Vittorio Emmanuel, Prince of Naples and heir presumptive to the throne of Italy. The boy is the son of Crown Prince Hum berto and Crown Princess Maria. He was named after his grand father, King Victor Emmanuel. —Central Press Missing Co-ed awr f||p&: BPs&s;- 'ip 111 ’ ■-MSI Margaret Lewis • • • disappearance is mystery Caught smoking in her room and ordered not to leave the college grounds without permission, Mar garet Lewis, Beloit college senior, later mysteriously disappeared from the campus at Beloit, Wis. Heard Verdict mL> Mrs. Maureen Kimmel ... hears mate's slayer convicted When Paul Wright heard a jury in Los Angeles court convict him of manslaughter on two counts in the slaying of his wife and best friend, Mrs. Maureen Kimmel, widow of the “best friend", was in court. She portrayed no emotion when the verdict was an nounced. Wright later went ori trial on a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity. —Central Press Hero Cop Solves a Murder Patrolman William Orman, of North Castle, N. Y., who won nation wide attention when he captured the notorious Merle Vandenbush, then Public Enemy No. 1, is pictured holding the belongings of Morris Felzner (inset), found murdered near North Castle. Felzner’s death was laid to a 10-year revenge hunt for an alleged diamond swindle. Orman arrested Joseph Horowitz and his brother-in-law, Bernard Benkler, of the Bronx, New York. (Central Press) Tenement Kids Have Pet Show Mr. Duck nonchalantly waits for his owner, 3-year-old Henrietta to register him in the pet show held for underprivilege • Madison Square Boys’ Club in New York City. The reg jj 0 g t Smith, club worker. Nazareth Markanan, 12, and Sal g •, » j patiently await their turn. (Central tr Saved by Mercy Fliers hot niwwwiww IB ■Hi ■HHBBHMkai m Bh:f *<f*s&&;■&?■ A ißcu' m t •■ Albert Morris, 39, whose eye had been injured, is shown as he alighted from a Coftst Guard plane at Salem, Mass. Physicians at Nantucket ltaand said only an operation in a Boston hospital could save his sight. When islander# failed to secure a boat, the Coast Guard plane was flown to Nantucket for the transfer. (Central Press)

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