VERNONIA EAGLE, VERNONIA, OREGON Spanish Loyalists Taken to Prison Camp Hands raised In token of surrender, a party of loyalist prisoners marched to a prison camp at Pueblo De Utrera, one of the small towns in possession of Army-Fascist rebels. Machine Gun Crew Ready for Gas Machine gun nest camouflaged and soldiers wearing gas masks as the regular army and national guard went through war maneuvers in the Michigan area. Lumberjack Shaves With Ax Big Airport Which San Francisco Will Build Jack Wallulis, lumberjack who works among the giant firs of Ore­ gon, shown shaving himself with a double-bitted ax which has one blade ground to a razor edge. He has shaved with an ax for three years without an accident, and says that it is as easy for him now as shaving with a razor. First official sketch of San Francisco’s great new municipal airport, to be opened in 1940 at Yerba Buena Shoals. The 430-acre site, now under reclamation by army engineers, will be the scene of the Golden Gate International exposition in 1939. Part of the exposition program is the construction of the three perma­ nent structures shown in this oil painting—the Administration building, embodying the most modern design and equipment of aeronautical engineering, and the two hangars. The three buildings, financed by PWA grants, will cost more than $1,600,000. WINS HERO MEDAL Clara Katherine Van Horn, twelve, of White Cottage, Ohio, who j was awarded the annual gold medal I by the Army and Navy Legion of Honor which awards the medal to the American boy or girl who per­ forms the most heroic act during the year. Last winter Miss Van ! Horn saved two boys who were coasting into the path of an ap­ proaching express train by throw­ ing herself under their sled. She , received the medal at the Legion i convention in Cincinnati. 1 Tin Can Tourists of World Hold Convention BROADCASTS POLL Because of the unusual interest in • the Presidential campaign this year, P. W. Litchfield, president of the Goodyear Tire & Rubber com­ pany, has completed arrangements I to broadcast three times weekly the result of the Literary Digest Presi­ dential poll. “Of course, we are not in politics.” Mr. Litchfield said i in announcing the series of broad- I casts. "However, we believe people will be greatly interested in getting information op the progress of the j poll more frequently than it has The Tin Can Tourists of the World, folks who have put wheels under parlor, bedroom and bath, assembled , been available in the past. So far 2,000 strong for their summer conclave at the Erie County fair grounds, Sandusky. Ohio. From all the high­ i as the results themselves are con- ways and byways of the North American continent, they poured into the fairgrounds for the largest gathering ' cerned, the broadcasts will be com- of automobile trailers ever assembled in one spot. Formed in Florida ten years ago by a score of tourists who . pletely impartial and based entire­ found a new way to escape boredom and zero temperatures, the Tin Can Tourists of the World number more ly on the Digest's own tabulation of than 97.000 in their membership. i the returns.”