rage 6 THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER THURSDAY, NOVEMBER , The Looking At i U.S. Patrol Over Greenland's Icy Mountains News ui.iH.Muu.. ,nn II. i tii.wwwwmmii - K n ;JXX 1 tfK" V , ? "-? . :(,i,iiiii.iyg t , -s-- f. " " - ----- - IT1 WiK'" In solitary splendor a U. S. Navy PBY air patrol plane wings its way on a flight over our far nuithcrn outpost in Greenland. Far below is nothing but icy wastes as winter begins slowly to close in. This is an official U. S. Navy photo. Here's How Nazis Would Dismember Russia Iffisiflii THE NA2I PLAN RUfriA- TO Of RMANy. TO RU55IA TO JAPAN ALL EUROPEAN RUJ ALLTERRITORV ALL TERRITORY EAJT SIA WEST OF THE EAST OF URALMTS. OF LAKE BAIKAL AND URAL AAT5. AND WEST OF LENA R. LENA RIVER W k": a vmtcfm m vim. . . . I fe MVAKIA- JH&10- MtyPTtAlf SUP AH MiiPiaiBi This map shows bow the Naxis plan to eat up th Russian Bear (with the aid of Japan). Germany has cut a big slice In the West for herself; a big slice In the East goes to Nippon, and what's left would be a "free" Eussia under orders from Berlin. Even the name of Russia would disappear from the map. This plan was elaborated in detail by Alfred Rosenberg and bit expert staff. Another Milestone The U. S. Navy on Patrol in Iceland Water! Camerd 4i 1 ' Oscar, famed chef of. the Waldorf Astoria in New York, is shown ci the eve of his 75th birthday, whkn he is celebrating with a gala chai if ball for the benefit of the U. S. Oscar has been with the noted hot for 48 years, ten of which were w the new Waldorf. J " ? Thi nffixmi 11. S. Navv Dhoto shows units of the fleet on actual patrol duty, guarding ,nn... nnrti anH merchantmen en route to Iceland. In the foreground is a sailor on watch abnarrf . J the background is a cruiser and a transport It was in these sea lanes that the Kearny wajtorpj One More Answer to Hitler 11 . i - f r - -.......MmMMmMaaiy Grid Star Plays Nursemaid lit ' . '' -- - n ritn i i " -x " - r i America's fast-growing two-ocean navy, greatest in the history of the tl world, is augmented Jay another warship s the submarine Gxftnling : ! goes' down the ways at New London, Conn. , A Durocher to Wed Escapes the War Vern Miller. 250-pound tackle on the Harvard football teamjitj pay his way thrnuprh the Cambridge, .Mass., school by serving m maid for 16-months-oM Georgie Owyer in nearby Brighton hails from Milwaukee, Wis. Vacation from War Envoy to Icelar! jgr ' X. f II 1 h' i J Miss Nellie Durocher, daughter of Leo (Lippy) Durocher, manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, National League baseball champions,is shown at her St. Louis, Mo., home with her fiance, Edward G. Holtxman. Lieut. Stanley E. Jenner tells the Overseas Press Club in New York ' how he regularly thumbs his nose Lisette Veris, stage and screen star at death. He is a member of Brit- ; from Budapest, Hungary, arrives ain's Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve at New York on the President and an expert on disposal of land. Grant. She boarded the ship at Bom- mines, the kind the Nazis float down bay. India. by parachute to wipe out whole blocks at a clip. Lincoln MacVeaph of Connej nominated by President Bool to be Minister to Iceland, MJ first envoy of thw ram km Danish island recently occup . naool fnrccS. HK .-tin otiirnoH to the U, B-i service as Minister to Greej Blowing Up a Spitsbergen Coal Mine Proud Moment for Morgenthau Iceland Greets U. S. Regulars ; jpjiwii in i in m 'ft, ?M 'X fe . " '; " . -. "... . . -vwfc. mom Three generations of Morgenthaua are shown at the graduation exer ' cise of the Midshipmen Training School aboard the PrairU StaU at New York. Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau, Jr (left) beams as hia son, Robert, one of the newlyinmisaioned ensigns, is congratulated by Heliry, r former ambassador to Turkey C. T. CabUpkot MaJ. Gen. H. 0. Curtis (right), commander-in-chief of the British troops in Iceland, greets Maj. Gen. Charles H. BonesteeL commander of a field force of the U. S. army, which arrived at Reykjavik with vast supplies of equipment and materials. The Americana were reported ready to make the former Danish island one of the most formidable fortresses la the North, i ' . ,i - - X ii rTiiei-hi ii."' ; ; p , ,- - ; ,', im ,i'H8' n n ?.nKiL British raiders who recenUy landed on the Island of Spitzbergen north oi l"wc4 he blew up one of the coal mines there to prevent the fuel from falling into German hands- w. w N great tt knocke, him off his feet Seven hundred inhabitants were

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