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P DOWN WAR'S ANCIE old Great Wall of China, march Chinese troops in full battle array through mountainous country to engage invading Japanese. This picture was taken northwest of Peipin held by Japanese forces followi 3 AGAINST EXTRAVAGANCE i litical waste of public funds, New York campaigned for a s ...AGAINST RACKETEERS fought dynamic Prose- uflnr Thomas E. Dewey, Republican candidate seeking election as L New York county district attorney. ... AGAINST COMMUNISM which he charged his opponents with fostering, battled Jeremiah T. Mahoney in New York’s heated mayoraltv election. ! n 1 ar have d .THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, NOV. curbs one, as ands of hom ding their occupants to live tling against cold, hunger and disease, 13, 1937. ASSOCIATED PRESS N E DPOWN IN FRONTa lent contest was going e, Wash, But a cam- led out non-partic- rette Barbara Ruth a near-per- A HUNDRED FINGERS PAINT THE CLOUDS with light as giant searchlights on big battleships of the U. S. Navy staged a pageant in celebration of Navy Day. A low: OUT TO REPEAT his national corn husking cham- pionship was Carl Carlson of Audubon, Iowa, in 1937 competi- tion at the Anderson farm, Ma- haska county, Ia. DOES IT SAIL TOWARD PEACE OR WAR with this cargo of serap iron? Whether this metal was destined for use in machinery of peaceful factories or in engines of destruc- tion remained a mystery as the S.S. Berlin loaded its cargo in New York harbor. But certain it was ipat sumeone held a vital interest in junk. Among buyers of large quantities of scrap metal, as well as paper and other waste material, have been Japan and Germany. row” at Saa Pedro, California. SEEING THE BRITiISH SIDE of aviation, a German air force mission inspected England’s bombing forces at the Milden- hall airdrome. General Milch, i state seeretary for air,isshown in- specting the gunner and cockpit of a “Wellesley” plane. The German officer headed the aviation mission. = WITH BOOTS AND SADDLES much in evidence, the nation’s finest horses were groomed for the National Horse Show in New York City. One of the outstanding competitors was Moreland Maid (above), earrying colors of Mrs. L. Vietor Weil's Fair City Stables, winner of this year's major saddle horse events. ging cloud diffused the powerful beams shooting skyward from the boats of WITH $6,000,000 Alex- ander Korda (above), Briti motion picture prolucer, ar- rived in the U. S. with plans to purchase control of United Art- ists, Inc. DOWN TO DAVY JONES' LOCKER went the schooner “Taini” of Raumo, Finland, i sure was taken. Ablaze from stem to stern, the ship burned to the waterline and the Baltic . ea. Her crew, however, was saved by a fishing boat. At the left above lter th i benea an h sappe LS8N, FOOTBALL TAKES ALL SIZES of men at Louisiana State University at Baton Rouge. The largest and smallest its at the school have one thing in common—both dabble in g activity. Tiger tackle, Ben Friend, 6 foot, 5 inch, 246-pounder, hol aloft Z. T. Dark, 54-inch mascot. ra THERE'S SINGIN' IN THE SOUTH these days with the harvesting of the largest crop of sugar cane in history. Here's a young colored child chewing on a sweet stalk of cane near Dorion, Miss., as cleavers rang out a chorus of prosperity in the “sugar forests” of Dixie. L may be seen a small boat, standing by as lh‘: SI.I‘HI'IK vessel burned while black clouds of smoke bil wad fanth