Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / March 27, 1938, edition 1 / Page 5
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HITLER LIEUTENANT hP* hi 3aaM|Jßp»' # v „ vg\V^,' >SMMH : .-; -. Sjfji ji •3gg& ' Arthur Seyss-Inquart, tnkcLe cb ~ i cellor ot Austria by decre§ tfeAtfolf.- Hitler, following the resigns <•; Kurt Schuschnigg and the 'Access ful Nasi coup. Seyss-Inn art ah took over the duties of Preside Wilhelm Miklas and pr«cla ! m' Austria as. a “state of the Germs reich.” NAZI ARMY CHIEF mgmfflteJ H ___ : • ML Field Marshal Herman Wilhelm Goering, under whose direction the plans for the Naziflcation of Austria were successfully completed. Ad dressing an audience in Berlin fol lowing the coup, he declared that Germany is determined further to 1 increase her army and keep it i strong as a guarantor of the peace I of the world. - i SAMMY ON DIAMOND “Slinging Sammy” Baugh, ace performed of the professional foot ball ranks who is being given a baseball tryout this spring by the St. Louis Cardinals. “If I make the grade with, the Cards, I’ll give up football,” Sammy announced. “I re alize that you can’t play football without endangering your baseball | career.” j i ■ „ I NEW JAP COMMANDER , Gen. Shunroku Hata, Russo-Japa nese war veteran, who recently was appointed commander in chief, of the Japanese forces in China to succeed Gen. Iwane Matsui, who was recalled. General Hata is one of Japan’s “big three” in military 1 circles, ranking with the minister | of war and the chief of the general 1 staff. He is one of Japan’s five fuli 1 generals. t An Inversionist in Action ' MB jjr i ■ ;W "IK J - v uHlcv' gj| > ■ • HjPg . B'-Mj Frank Bclck, age eleven, an inversionist, is a pupil in the fifth grade of the Fulton school at Chicago. At left he is shown reading a book upside down, at right he is shown writing on a blackboard upside down. He is said to he the best speller in his class, a thing virtually unheard of in an inversionist. “The Law” in Austria Today These German r. e : . craft machine gunners and thousands of others like them are enforc ng Cermany’s will on Austria now, since that coun try became a part of the German reich in Hitler's bloodless coup. When this photograph* was made these gunners were merely playing at war in maneuvers at Kissingen, Germany. In the Oriental Manner ■'% A JL . r - SfacaaMßß *••*■ ■ Scovere (left) and Promoter, two prominent candidates for trotting , horse honors this year, shown in a bit of affectionate nose rubbing at ( Pineburst, N. C., where they are in training for the Hambletonian and ( other leading three-year-old stakes. Dr. H. M. Parshall, of Urbana, Ohio, trains and owns them both. Czechoslovakia May Be Next WkSTI •&. , Hw /•+■ isygß jjPw|| ''K'-■ j | am. nw \W >} • JP &Mm Vvij j % V EM? With informed observers predicting that Czechos’avakia will be the next object of Adolf Hitler’s Pan-German campaign, following his blood less subjugation of Austria, the government of Czechoslovakia has re iterated its previous warning that it will resist to the last any attempt to conquer it. President Edouard Benes (center) is shown conferring with some of his military chiefs during army maneuvers recently. PERSON COUNTY TIMES ROXBORO, N. C Srenes and Persons in the Current News h RS '3hi‘ xi ■ ■ : JMfr Jr ipk ffp|M|r Vf v -.i z •• I—Battered by months of Incessant attacks by the superior forces and equipment of the insurgent*., tho Spanish loyalists were falling back in disorder on Barcelona. War-torn loyalist soldiers are shown in an in surgent camp. 2—Secretary of State Cordell Hull shown signing a trade agreement with Vladimir Hurban, Czechoslovakian minister to the United States. 3—Joseph Buerckel, who was designated by Adolf Hitler to the Austrian National Socialist party following the Fuehrer’s successful coup. K tau*:- •’*,> ..-SMte Ai. vSafi i &m LI H “No More Headaches” was th; title cf this fir a*. In t’e -recent Rose day parade in Koln, Germany.' The tableau depicts the newest v* ur -S BS i n Soviet Russ.a. A big head of S.a'.ti dominates the scene, while lesser Soviet lights are holding aloft their heads. One of the signs reads “Ihanhs of the Little Father.” I—Adolf Hitler, who made a triumphant entry into Vienna after Germany took undisputed possess.on of Austria in a bloodless coup, defying the world to interfere. 2—On to Austria went 100,000 crack German troops like these as Hitler captured his homeland for the reich. 3—Armed German trucks and tanks such as these patroled the streets of Vienna. ■„ "fit B| c . *' fflßt 11P2 '< ' *.’ • P m HI in -m HpBBH HBMPM ' \?\ i rv ;B JX il|jr Jm!>, fjiw 1 \* W y-"ifi' - - s 1 i ■> y J. International News Radiopholo. A contingent of the Hitler Youth Organization of Austria are shown parading through the streets of W ■ni.. in celebration of the Nasis’ triumphant march into Austria. The successful Nasi coup spelled the end of Austria’s existence as a nation and its beginning as a state of the German reich. SUNDAY, MARCH 27, 1938
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
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March 27, 1938, edition 1
5
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