The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 23, 1937, Page 5

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, SEPT. 23, 1937. LEARN st Point cadets. Here is ek | manner with 155 mm. ING TO BE A BIG SHOT S INNOCENCE ABROAD, youthful faces reflecting fear of war, filled Shanghai as thousands fled from death and fire as bitter warfare raged between China and Japa everywhere as airplanes rained cargoes of death into streels clogged with fleeing hu the International Settlement provided no haven as bombs exploded in its thoroughfare illing hun- Areds, wounding hundreds more. streets Chaos was i ST o WRON G NUMBER, 1 pirate queen of Long Beach, Calif., shown leading the si ited John Roosevelt when band of buccaneers who will vie for the title, “Queen uce g;ktd if it was he who smacked More than 25 contest winners will participate, representing fiestas M-yor Pierre Nouveau (above) and rodeos in all sections of the state in the face with a bouguet of flowers, THE DUCE STEPS OUT tothe end of the platform at Maddalena beach as his chief aides stage a swimming race. Smilingly Mussolini marks the fourth arrival, Guido Buffarini, undersecre- » . v tary of inierior, SAYING IT WITH FLOWERS is not his policy, the President’s youngest son, John, declared in effect, denying he tossed champagne and a bouquet into the face of Cannes’ mayor. The Harvard youth is shown with friends at a seaside resort in Eurons \ SAILS IN THE SUMLIGHT were like a vision from the past as the Joseph Conrad (above), a sauare rigged ship of an- . f 'APPROPRIATE ACTION ' toward the Japanese governs 2z vessel, the Seven Seas, raced from A LOST WORLD, isolated perhaps for thousands of years, will be explored by the Paterson Grand Canyon expedition, seek- ment was promised by British Foreign Minister Anthony Eden Newport, R. L, to Berm “ing any animal life that may be present atop Shiva Temple near the north rim of the vast gorge. On this photograph of a model of \ffer a Nipponese aviator had shot down Britain’s ambassador to tions had <nch a contest ke red the canyon in the American Museum of Natural History, the sky-island goal of the expedition is indicated by A, and the base camp to Shina as he motored from Nanking to Shanghai. A threatened naval be esiablished on the north rim by B. The trail will follow a narrow strip of land that leads to the vlatean. The canvan is a mile deen. blockade further heightened the crisis. re::rl fir Itl?cs: Hlifdreen L(Sufilvlyingch:';Atn:c'th.e’:‘ixlnh: %;:’::I:ie;l:ll:lel:e‘s’t’rfilcekfl;g:v:r:;‘:’x‘z‘:e‘r‘i):l .. AND SUDDEN D E_A T H claimed this driver as he THEY ALSO SERVE wholiveto clear the streets of carnage. This was the scene in Shang- bomb. For those who survived there lay ahead bit ter fighting, suffering, starvation, disease, and after at at the wheel of his automobile in a busy street of the famed In- hai after bombs plunged into crowded Nanking road in front of the Palace hotel, Hundreds died an that unteld verrs af reconstruction. But fate spared these net focen that‘ i o detend Rorrible ernational Settlement. In the rear seat are the mangled remains of hundreds more lived to suffer the agony of wounds. Those who escaped removed the dead and injured, . jeath and unmarked graves at journey’s end. 1is passengers, a few of the hundreds killed in an air raid. They paid as depicted in this copyrighted Associated Press photo flown to America by Clipper. Aerial destruction /. y 4 a ghastly price for peace, was carried ont on a seale seldom if ever egualled in the history of war.

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