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Show ( New Pictures of Indias National leaders r--- " - i I J r' K Graduation at Miami Officers School Warning to Adolf! 4 i t f f ' U ith food ranking equally in importance as a vital uar material tiith the stuff of uhich planes, tanks and guns are made, little wonder that America is witnessing a great boom in commodities. Commodity exchanges, principally those in iYeio l or fe and Chicago, are hpctic spots these days. 1 he following series of photos give you an idea of how business is done on the exchanges, ufiere the lift of a traders evebroty may mean another penny more on your pound of extra dollar on the suit youre going to buy. A r I V y t f x ; , - n drip-grinTra- 1 1 . ? ( i i f K M ) V t I . As the clouds of war gather ever more densely over vast India, greater attention Is focused on its leadIs Mahatma Gandhi, spiritual head of the Indian national congress party, who was instru- i A ers. At the right mental in thwarting Sir Stafford Crlpps efforts at war nnity. This new picture shows Gandhi walking with his secretaries and aides. At the left is Pandit Nehru, active and more belligerent leader of the same national congress party, (Picture from March of Time's India in Crisis.) Hawaii on Its Toes, Ready to Dish It Out to Japs . r, n--- w ' ' rv" -- I K ..r M ! r i 1 ' A i! 1 f 7 f i f rJ "i ! 0- v bf f LA 1 . k I ' A the the the for ' if L A Dizzy Job S. Soldiers y Gen. Douglas MecArthur stands with head bowed before tbe ahrlna built in honor of Australia's World War I dead, on Anzao day. Melbournes lord mayor, Frank Beaurepaire, Is shown at the right. i Heros Thrill Philippine President Here From Australia - tMf t i t ' 1 i! 1 Leon Henderson, bead of OPA, the organization in charge of gasoline rationing, will have to get along with A ration cards for his two cars. Mrs. Henderson Is shown bolding tie two A cards which entitle the Henderson family to six gallons of gasoline per week. 4 K ; ' A L-- . L SWEET COFFEE ...And here These men are cotton brokers on the !ew York Cotton exchange. is part of the Coffee and Sugar They are seated at the trading exchange in New York. An employee is posting trading prices. ring during an intermission. A. . i t J V i fto.v 0$ rs' i-i- , Mobile Optical Shops for U. A; L work. days -- 3 i U. S. soldiers are now encamped throughout the Hawaiian islands, ready to meet any onslaught of Japs. The gun at the left has been installed on what was once a huge private estate. It points toward pacific, and its crew keep guard day and night. The soldiers have erected showers at whatever part of mud of the hills they are primping up (right) Here amidst the gumbo-lik- e Island they are encamped. hard I & I v 4 fs - , v t i J. V ( , -5 I , K t In Honor of Heroic Anzac Dead k t 1 t v f Young men with special ability from all over the country were among the 500 in the first group of officers from the Miami Beach offUers school. Photo shows the graduates receiving their diplomas from General Weaver. They will soon be putting tbeir newly learned theory Into practice In actual combat with the enemy. ; yX I f t ' .A I xrJ tC t i .V I ' i . ' i 'f J. . f For OPA Chief ' 1 I.V 1 : t . , - aI A FUTURISTIC . . . When it comes to wool, you cant pull eyes of these brokers on the Neto York Wool exchange. They buy the sheeps overcoat sometimes even before it has grou n it. it over the s H one-tim- L wwx .. ! V I t In a recent radio speech Churchill warned Hitler that if Germany used gas against Russia the RAF would use it against Germany. Apropos of all this, inventor W. Lee Lewis e colonel in the (above), C. S. Chemical Warfare service, says the U. S. has at its disposal a gas more deadly than any used in the last war. The gas, known as Lewisite, will be a revelation to any of Hitler if be asks for it. i i t AA s V - L ' A. 'f 1, 4 4 s i. t y A - I T , - a i :a f C ' . T i . ; 1 '-- -f ' f A A "1- - Li: wr ,emrn kvil ... d f A i i i rn.Wg.Jkm ROUND FIGURES The bidding ring at the New York Cocoa " exchange. It is very calm and dignified, with no fanfare or fireworks . T .n s A 'SB " i Overseas soldiers who break or lose their spectacles on the battlefield will have them repaired or replaced In the field by mobile optical shops, the first of their kind to be attached to U. 8. field armies. In this unit a total of 120 single lenses can be edged and mounted daily. This with other equipment make it possible to take rare of the requirements of a field army of 300,000 men. Approximately 1$ per cent of tbe men in the armed forces wear glasses. For Latin American Expeditionary Force -- i. t. , WaS . en; , i i D 4 Born only a month ago while his dad was making life miserable for the Japs in the Philippines, John a Men who work to increase our supply of electric energy are soldiers, too. Photo shows a jackhammer operator drilling a hole for a dynamite blast on an abutment of Shasta dam, near San Francisco, Calif, , Love Leads Way ' L. J 4, V v - - V, W i . A, j D. Bulkeiey Jr. monopolized the attention of his proud father when Lieutenant Bulkeiey arrived at his Long Island city home. Daughter Joan, feeling neglected, looks at cameraman while her hero dad feasts his eyes on his son for the first time. Lt. Bulkeiey Is on a furlough. He expects to be assigned to a torpedo boat training center. President Manuel Quezon of the Philippines, left, is shown with Lieut. Gen. John L. De Witt, commander of the Fourth American army lid chief of the western command, second from left, as they and tbe Philip, pine executives party, after arrival from Australia, Inspected the color In civilian attire In center Is guard at the Presidio in 8an Francisco, Assistant Secretary of the Interior Oscar Chapman. In right foreground Is MaJ, Gen. Basiiio J. Valdes of the Philippine army. President Quezon was accompanied on his trip from Australia by members of his family. New Credentials Iceland Stablization Agreement 10-d- . ? T Vs s r Jt 11 wf i , 1 Aj 1 ;; v t 4 - C f v. a-v- iI Vx 1 i i r ! ... v View inJde the Board of Trade building in THE PIT Chicago. Trading in this particidar market is confined to com, winter uheat, oats, barley, rye and hay. t i 5 I X ' 4 i i fc. ! X i A ! ' t Hugo Fernandes Atucio (left), Cruguayan professor and director of the branch of tbe Free World Movement, is shown with J. Alvares del Vivo, former Spanish foreign minister, at New Tork headquarters of tbe Free World Movement. Alurio calls for a expeditionary force to fight under United Nations command. Latin-Amerie- Latin-Amerlc- i f Mrs. Henry Fecht of Chicago refused to believe that her son, James, was lost at sea, as she hsd been informed. Aided by the USO, tbe found him in a San Francisco hosshrapnel pital recovering from wound In tbe back. f " Xi 0 (X 'Zt-.'A Here is the big board in the Cocoa exchange. New York. now envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, and now extraordinary and plenipotentiary of the Netherlands. : A N -- 9 y .. 1 T Iff L&. As another step in cementing tbe solidarity and good will between tbe two countries. Secretary of tbe Treasury Morgentbau, right, signs the exchange stabilization agreement with minister from Iceland, Thor Thors. |