Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 February 1946 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
BYRNES BACK WITH UNO REPORT fig 4Hn Bl Blfli BmBBHBhBbH WITH HIS WIFE. Secretary of State James F Byrnes waves a greeting to newsmen and photographers as he leaves his plane at the Washington National Airport on his return from London The Secretary of State, who had been attending the opening sessions of the UNO Conference, returned in the President’s plane. (International) APPEAR AT PEARL HARBOR HEARING ■y M y « /a s| IM& > |T IE . I fe smEt 1 FORMER SUPREME COURT JUSTICE OWEN J. ROBERTS, left, and Capt. Ellis M. Zacharias, right, naval intelligence officer, appeared before the Joint Congressional Pearl Harbor investigating committee on Capitol Hill. Roberts disclosed the 1942 Roberts commission Pearl Harbor report was modified to prevent the Japs learning' their top secret codes had been cracked, while Zacharias told the committee he warned Adm Husband E. Kimmel in March. 1941. -that Japan would open war with* a surprise week-end attack on Pearl Harbor, probably on a Sunday morning. (International Soundphoto)
Child Accepts New Pet
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Francine Opon, 4, of Chicago, Illi, appears reluctant to accept "Peewee." Boston terrier, given her to replace her late pet However, several days later, (right), Peewee apparently has succeeded in ingratiating himself with Francine. (NEA).
AS TRUMANS ATTEND INFANTILE CAMPAIGN PROGRAM
r , . . - ——j Mitt MA*GA*ET TtUMAN, left, and her mother, Mrs. Harry S. Truman, second from nght, * r * s 2; SStSTSih Crdlnw rtfth* first lady and her daughter to the midnight performance presented in behalf of the cam f» thTNaXal FoondatlSi for Infantile Pandpda. (InteraWcerf
Chira’s Budgeteer
Fi M John B. Blandford, Jr., above, head of ihe National Housing Agency, w ill soon be in China, setting up a national budget system fcr that country, according tc recent White House announcement “Civilian Control” Sy- 'w; HB L< R 2 MIG ■ 1 *• Hb g|[ jM BbthMMOBW.. -» SHOWN AS HE asserted that atomic energy controls should be put tn the hands of civilians with the Army’s viewpoint ‘’subordinated” is Secretary of Commerce Henry A. Wallace, who appeared before the Senate atomic energy committee. (International)
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NEW NAVY DIVE-TORPEDO BOMBER
I- ——uißiisimii i irr ■ Mill-:... ■■ —' —” | * ■■ A ?• ' H' E ' '■< DESIGNED FOR OPERATION from new large aircraft carriers of the Midway dass, the Martin “Mauler,” shown above, is a large, heavy, long-rar jje, multi-purpose plane. At the present it is the Navy’s most p* verful single seater dive bomber torpedo plane, and has a level s_ ed of 350 miles per hour with a maximum of 1.700 miles. (International Soundnboto) W WAR TRIALS TAKE PLACE HERE 11 v -, IB ' I MAJ-JS Japanese war criminals will be tried in this war ministry buildhi * in Tokyo. Former Premier Hideki Tojo, who had his offices here, v-ill be among those so go on trial. (International) Highest Award to ‘Bravest Man’ F ▼IM k ‘ ■ w m Mei B'\ . ' - -I X..4J I Z. ,x... C.nunander Joseph T. O'Callahan, Catholic navy chaplain, of Cambridge -Mass., whose commanding officer called him the 'bravest man I evt>'"-'»aw awarded fie congressional medal of honor by President Tru ri n. The award was made for Father O’Callahan s gallant conduct durln the bombing and near-sinking of the aircraft carrier Franklin last March 19. (International/Soundphoto). DRAMATIC COURTROOM SCENE E li^^HßflßßßE : ' -• ifeft■ IWLIiSi w ? « •■ ■ 4t * . . ► < DRAMATIC MOMENT in the Loe Angeles courtroom at the l ™iuest ■4 o the poison death of Everett McElhinney, 28-year-old returned flier, is shown above as the victim s wife, Mrs. Me .tney, foreground, and her mother. Mrs. Stella Briscoe, lie prone ■- the floor. Both women fainted for the second time during e bluest, when the coroner’s Jury recommended Mrs. -Id for murder for putting arsenic in her husband s coffee. e low told the jury that she fed her husband ant paste in his coffee I could nurse him and convince him that I loved him.” But her » abend died. (InternationalSonndnhoto)
Mac Wants Him 1 :kJT -' ''Wfe 4 - --"J j ' *ssr»-' # w O ' ' J J n i JB S'« BMMflb JHKiJ Gen. Douglas MacArthuV has requested the services of Lewis J. Valentine, above, former New York City police commissioner, “to establish fundamental policies of public safety.” Valentine may be asked to create a new Jap police administration along the lines of the New York force, in which he rose from rookie cop to commissioner.
WHAT THE PUBLIC
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AN INDUSTRY AUTHORITY has estimated that a single day’s total steel production, now halted by a strike, would be sufficient to manufacture 195.869 automobiles or 37,332 small houses or 1,469,018 ranges or 2,350,429 refrigerators. (International)
THE STORY OF THEIR DEATH UNFOLDS IN SHANGHAI
IMBLER 4» "'■ '■■ ■■ - - -Bk£* xwlo few » w* • * --IspaSte » uHW’""' 'J '..■ .- 'X-M /? ’X S. a< : * ; ' . -• ■» 1 -SSr II v 0 iUr lr J CAPT CHASE J. NIELSON, right in lower photo, of Hyrum. Utah, Is having a slight measure of -etribution today for the execution of three of his buddies and indignities he suffered as a war prisoner following the famed Doolittle air raid on Tokyo. The recompense started when Nielson visited Shanghai’s Ward road prison, where he is shown above with his former Japanese Jailer. Capt. Sotojiro Tatsuta. who, now behind bars, is awaiting trial. Tatsuta has been named as the officer who gave the execution order for the three flyers shown right above—Lt. Dean E. Hallmark top, I Dallas, LL William G. Farrow, center. Darlington, S. C., and Sgt Harold A. Spatz, Leopold Kan. The manner in which the order was carried out, is shown in the top photo by Jap Warrant Officer Mayama, who witnessed the execution. Col. John H. Hendren, left. Kansas City. Mo., and Capt. Robert N. Dwyer. New York City, trial judg ? advocatesun the impending Shanghai war trials, watch ar'May’ama tells how the Americans were forced to kneel when shot Crosses were staked the ground and the men bound to them. (International)
Prints Photos Directly on tW • ' Jja fz?i vWMssa Photo murals can now be printed directly on a wall, just as you would make a print on a piece of paper Scientists at the Glenn L. Martin Company’s Baltimore laboratory perfected a jelly-like emulsion which, when melted, may be applied to the wall stirface with a brush, sponge or rag When it dries, the negative is held against this sensitized surface, light is applied and development of the picture proceeds normally The entire operation is carried out under darkroom conditions, with ruby light. Above, an operator is making a print on a wall
: LOSES EACH DAY OF STEEL STRIKE S y Wlifl
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