Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, January 21, 1938, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PAGE TWO
VERNONIA EAGLE, VERNONIA, OREGON
Modern Bridge of Sighs for China
t
r f
FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 1938
Scenes and Persons in the Current Mews
«i
fi
i dii
Reflections of the invading Japanese soldiers stand out clearly in the placid water below as they march
1—Most Rev. Eugene J. McGuinness (right), who was installed as the second bishop of the Catholic dio­
across a picturesque bridge in North China. Cogs in an inexorable war machine that is rolling juggernaut­
like across China, these fighting men might be mistaken in the distance for peaceful workers homeward cese of Raleigh, N. C., by Dennis Cardinal Dougherty (center), as Most Rev. William J. Hafey, co-adjutor
bishop of Scranton, Pa., looks on. 2—Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey City, N. J., shown as he broadcasts a de­
bound.
nunciation of the C. I. O. 3—William E. Dodd, retiring United States ambassador to Germany, who recently
returned to the United States, shown (center) as he is interviewed by reporters.
SKATING CHAMPION
A graceful picture of Miss Cecilia
Colledge, brilliant young English
skater who holds the world's wom­
en’s figure-skating title, shown at
St. Moritz, Switzerland, as she pre­
pared for an international meet in
which champions from many coun­
tries participated
A Kiss for Carter Glass
TAKES BLACK’S SEAT
Lister Hill of Alabama, who was
recently sworn in as a member of
Sen. Carter Glass of Virginia, oldest member of the upper house of the United States senate, succeeding
congress, shown being kissed by his niece, Miss Nancy Carter Boat­ Sen. Dixie Bibb Graves, who had
wright, on the occasion of his eightieth birthday recently. The elderly held the seat for several months
statesman insisted on attending the sessions of the senate'on his birth­ after the resignation of Sen. Hugo
L. Black, who accepted a post on
day in spite of doctor’s orders to the contrary.
the United States Supreme court.
ODD POWDER PUFF
Champ Takes One on the Nose
Fred Apostoli of San Francisco, claimant of the world middleweight
title, sends a left jab kerplunk to the nose of Freddie Steele of Tacoma,
Wash., middleweight champion, in the first round of their recent 12-round
non-title bout at Madison Square Garden, New York. Apostoli won in
the ninth round on a technical knockout when the referee stopped the bout.
Garner Takes a Trimming
►
ATHLETICS BOSS
/
You can’t beat nature. Miss Bar­
bara Bronner, one of the many vis­
Although he is eighty years old, Kt. Rev. Arthur F. W, Ingram, itors to the recent New York poultry
bishop of London, England, just refuses to feel old. The bishop is shown show, utilizes the crest sported by
here (right) as he took part in the annual hockey game for the old this white crested drake as a pow­
Vice President John N. Garner, pictured in the barber shop of the
Malburnians against Radley college in the grounds of Fulham palace der puff. She says it’s softer than
house of representatives as he had his locks trimmed before going to
the kind you buy at the store.
recently.
preside at a session of the United States senate. The barber is James
Neale, who has cut Mr. Garner's hair for the past 21 years.
Asa S. Bushnell, the new execu­
tive director of the Central Bureau
for Eastern Intercollegiate Athlet­
ics, who becomes an arbiter over
the sports activities of more than 50
colleges in the East. His position is
somewhat analagous to that of the
“high commissioner” of baseball,
Judge Kenesaw M. Landis.
Top Command in Japanese Invasion
Like a huge fish out of water, the German steamer Manissa is shown shortly after running aground on the
shore of the Mediterranean near Adalia, Turkey. Fogs and a heavy sea threw the ship off its course and
landed it on shore.
Pictured above are Japanese officers in the field following their entry into Nanking, recently. Left to
right: Vice Admiral Kiyoshi Hasegawa, commander-in- chief of the Japanese China fleet; Gen. Iwane Matsui.
commander-in-chief of the Japanese army hordes in the Yangtse area; Lieut. Gen. Prince Yasuhik: Asaka;
and Lieut. Gen. Heisuke Yanagawa.