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Show THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM. UTAH ff Pictures of India's National Leaders clouds of war gather ever more densely over vast India, greater attention Is focused on its lead-Kri-is Mahatma Gandhi, spiritual head of the Indian national congress party, who was instru-thwrtb- g Sir Stafford Crlpps efforts at war unity. This new picture shows Gandhi walking with At the left Is Pandit Nehru, active rlet nd aides. and more belligerent leader of the same na-;rf-party. Picture from March of Time's "India In Crisis.") Graduation at Miami Officers' School ftl c, V, v ? M f 1" I A" fJ.vA I i mv' , w. ' .ahii& t3 s;i illI Young men with special ability from all over the country were among the 500 in (he first group of officers from the Miami Beach officers' school. Photo shows the graduates receiving their diplomas from General Weav- - tr. They will soon be putting their newly learned theory Into practice in actual combat with the enemy. Commodity War Boom KT ith food ranking equally in importance as a vital war material with the stuff of which planes, tanks and guns are made, little won-der that America is witnessing a great boom in commodities. Com-modi- ty exchanges, principally those in New York and Chicago, are hectic spots these days. The following series of photos give you an idea of how business is done on the exchanges, where the lift of a trader s eyebrow may mean another penny more on your pound of drip-grin- d, or an extra dollar on the suit you're going to buy. Ail ;' L f - I hhbHHK sN . .VJXOif AV ttMBBSBJSSBBBSBSSBBBSBSjSSBSBJSJSJBJBSBSBJSBBJ FUTURISTIC . . . When it comes to wool, you can't pull any of it over the eyes of these brokers on the New York Wool exchange. They buy the sheep's overcoat sometimes even before it has grown it. 1 wm "" ii 1 " ' 1 'f f t !i J f "1 These men are cotton brokers on the New York Cotton exchange. They are seated at the trading ring during an intermission. SWEET COFFEE ...And here is part of the Coffee and Sugar exchange in New York. An em-ployee is posting trading prices. tt L - ck iol fill. i : -r. rS3f . ROUND FIGURES . . . Tie bidding ring at the New York Cocoa exchange. It is very calm and dignified, with no fanfare or "fireworks." Hid rJJJtil immi Fr . . . View inside the Board of Trade building in Chicago. Trading in this particular market is confined to corn, winter wheat, oats, barley, rye and hay. Here is the big board in the Cocoa exchange, New York. i tihm Its Toes, Ready to Dish It Out to Japs soldiers are now encamped throughout the Hawaiian Islands, ready to meet any onslaught of the ran at the left has been Installed on what was once a huge private estate. It points toward the d its crew keep guard day and night. The soldiers have erected showers at whatever part of the ' ire encamped. Here amidst the gumbo-lik- e mud of the hills they are primping up (right) for ;'i work. In Honor of Heroic Anzac Dead Xtfb 1'. .7 if fefl .' : Gen. Douglas MacArthur stands with head bowed before the shrine built la honor of Australia's World War I dead, on Anzao day. Mel-bourne's lord mayor, Frank Beaurepaire, Is shown at the right. Philippine President Here From Australia i rrl ' !T1 f' j J: J ! t ' Is ' l' ' ''I (tJ 1 I I ?j ; ! :ss3 - 1 : ... ZJ&Jfi-- , , - n friiafikni- i-i .i. r", President Manuel Quezon of the Philippines, left, Is shown with Lieut. Gen. John L. De Witt, commander of the Fourth American army and chief of the western command, second from left, as they and the Philip-pine executives party, after arrival from Australia, inspected the color guard at the Presidio In San Francisco. In civilian attire In center is Assistant Secretary of the Interior Oscar Chapman. In right foreground Is Maj. Gen. Basilio J. Valdes or the Philippine army. President Quezon was accompanied on his trip from Australia by members of his family. A Dizzy Job u I Men who work to increase our sup-ply of electric energy are soldiers, too. Photo shows a jackhammer operator drilling a hole for a dyna-mite blast on an abutment of Shasta dam, near San Francisco, Calif. e Optical Shops for U. S. Soldiers "soldiers who break or lose their spectacles on the battlefield repaired or replaced In the field by mobile optical shops, M kind to be attached to V. S. field armies. In this unit a ""S'e lenses can be edged and mounted daily. This with other nke It possible to take care of the requirements of a field men. Approximately 15 per cent of the men In the armed r 'lasses. Iceland Stablization Agreement V; Lzf! Ft I As another step in cementing the solidarity and good will between the two countries, Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau, right, signs the ex-change stabilization agreement with minister from Iceland, Thor Thors. Love Leads Way Mrs. Henry Fecht of Chicago.re. to believe that her son, James, IS at sea, as she had been Srmed. Aide I br theJSO she wound in the back. jatin-Americ- an Expeditionary Force r--- ,. .v,,v iiiijp, III" J fce, Alnc!o professor and director of (lcfl) CrBguayan fg branch Movement Is shown with of the Free World 'ormer Spanish foreign minister, at New Tork head Wor,d Movement. Atuclo calls for a Latin-America- n wce to fight under United Nations command. |