Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1942)
PAGE ELEVEI? FSJ1 M POCTP UN lJ L3 t ' The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem, Oregon. Friday Morning. August 2L 19i2 ID) inr vv - - - r -r i X?r' "'"jZ1 r ' " 1 A A - v , ' r " jj i . I'll ' W- i , 4 " L -4 1, i as - I' fA,j V Y N , Taken somewhere at a United States port, U. 8. soldiers are shown boarding a ship for a distant fight ing front. The soldiers have arrived safely, it has been announced. (I. I. N. Phonephoto) "ifl'jfcf "Jfc A.i Ths CMBcial U. S." Marine Corps photo shows actual landing: operations on a South Sea Island. An . Army truck is being lifted from the barge by a derrick. t : 4$ L I . - I A v , x r . , IT a ),v, , 'ft w , j ''A"'w-x r r f j v: A- J -H - .te;1 I'. -.- ,A -:' - - I- A:i . ? -f va Airt4i - Ii? a;a , r . First full-blooded American Indian to be sworn in as a naval a via- - - - 'm -I tion cadet in the Third Naval district, Leo Thompson of Gowanda, . . i 4 V. I ; N. member of the Seneca nation, Iroquois confederacy, is shown .t, .. j f ; ; i ; being congratulated by Lieut. Comdr. W. H. Gardner in New Tork. : . t I Thompson, 19, will soon begin" his Navy flying training at Chapal ,-. -' i . , . . ' L r . . HilL N. G. Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd, V. S. N, retired, is shown onfer- t ring with a U. S. . Marine Corps officer on an unnamed Bouth Sea - I sA r A" ' ' q?towr Is : special inlattoo,.;--! hU.Phontphotoi .. i - , .-' '' ' - ' ' ' : :- : : f : A''; 'i-'r; A;?.'.. '" A'. A A:-".' '! hi I A 5 r- When the International Stewards' A ' ; ' r 'v P and Carpenters association holds r fi.2 .- 1 -A 7 .. , A A ' v its 41st annual convention in Chi- , .VO ' ' i x , -' 'i B : cago, Aug. 16-19, GreU CUussen t f " ' V " j - - t ' ' t A f ' of Chicago will reign as queen. V - ' ) ' ' ' A A " I Greta, wielding a knife in the J ' , i';" ' ! m - T - , . " . 1 I kitchen, above, will supervise ac- ' " 't IN - ' I tivities of more than 400 caterers f . f ' I and stewards Who gather to dis-i J " " . . 7 j cuss problems of food nutrition, - t ' conservation and salvage, " f jl : -Cv- ' l-i . : : : ... , ' ' '"nr I f vmvuibiuk jucvumuvai vuwim wiui ss taosaia ui itci bvuivwucis ata N -V ' ' .Vi. f 1 .DuKusslnr mechanical trouble with a Buasian driver, somewhere in North Persia, is Staff Sergt McElvain of the U. S. Hihtary Mission, . In the center is Miss Julia Chembereve of Moscow, one of the Russian interpreters. U. S. built tracks are assembled in South Persia and are driven over 750 miles to Tabriz, where they are handed over to Soviet authorities after final overhaul by American specialists. This picture was directly radioed! rcim Cairo to the U. S. If rou want to anger the public,' just take a picture of your three-year-old son dangling ov mounUlB cliff and let it bo published in a national magazine. That's what Mr. and Mrs. St. Clair of Chattanooga, Tenn., did tome months ago and the indignant letters are still pouring in. In self-defense, the Sinclairs have allowed their hoax for that is what it was be exposed by another magazine. Tab, a new weekly, in this picture. The original photo was cropped at the point indicated by the dotted lines, bo the sojdiers who were holding a blanket beneath young David were not shown. i.vrf-J...Vi;-'.v.'.".fc-.ni-.''-"r',"-"'"L,'-""v"" Representative Hamilton Fish of New York is shown with his wife as they voted in the primary elec tion at Garrison, N. Y. Fish over came three "opponents and intra party opposition led by Wendell L. Willkie to win Republican re nomination, for congress. Fish was widely attacked by rival can didates and Republican leaders for what they termed his pre-war iso lationist views. He is a . veteran of 22 years in congress. (I.l.N.Phonepbpto) tt w unw t - v y '-' I AIL. . - - , OOekl U. a CoMt Caw Fboto Seen from the port hole of a Coast Guard escort' vessel is part of a eon ; . voy headed across the Atlantic with war supplies for our f sr flung war fronts. The Atlantic is regarded by many experts as the most important front ; for it is vital to the war effort of the United Nations that nothing : interrupt the flow of material from the U. S. Hill , " " ; A ft "'V . ."-! t . i A': lj v ? Ail W u O fiaVr A . . A 1 - 1. - : A m - ' X - 7 Overhead KghLi at the Douglas Aircraft plant at Santa Monica, CaL, building planes for the Allied forces, form a "V" f6r victory, symbol making it a shining example of the battle for freedom. Work at this plant goe on 24 hours a day. Lieut. Comm. MOdred H. McAfee (right), director ef the WAVES, ia shown being- congratulated by Capt. Paul Blackburn, U.S.N., after she had given a press interview in New York. She announced that her girls will don well-tailored uniforms. Lieut Grace Cheney (left), ef . the Naval Office ef Procurement, looks, en. fr in hi 1 1 11 iin if Mm n jiu 5 . V t t I X ' -. i a SL .' . 1 - . ? "ATrni 1 s4 BATS FLY ON WAR T I M E.Tnoasands of bats these days come cut ef the huge CarlsbaJ civernt at CarUbad, K. IU v , ,ri iban their customary sundown exit. Longtime bserrers wece unable to exjlila the bats' shift la time schedale. - an 1.. A t - Need one say what contest these two New York youngsters wont Uriel Sam's troops stationed at Vl SrArmy base in the Caribbean j We thought ni. ; Well, anyway, we'll give you their names. ' The Bhow how they take advantage uf their surroundings. They havs bov is Gerard Vrdon. 12. and the eirL Mannierite Fltzs-eraLLH. ' V" crfu1l mnnfll th Iimw fidi run with srrass and foliage . boy is Gerard Verdon, 12, and the girl. Marguerite Fitzgerald.' IX. The cones were part of their award. earefullv eamnnnaMl the heavv field run with grass that it cannot be detected front the air. -