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Show . I Page 2 , '- I , , i ' ' - ' , The Deseret News, Salt Lakes City, , . , , ,ilnerl.challAllmy In , , , ., n. Hai-va- - 1 Held-Ullabl- , i't1(1- - , , , IMexico 0, - ,s,,,- e In West Port ,, , : , 0 Illeet Blitzkrieg - , , I . I , , - I - I ' ' 1 1 , t4 I , detente probleme.) - .411t1011111 ' A, . ::1:..:,,, :"'; ,:: .,:: ,.......- --- ,55 , 0 . . 1. ,,,,,:, "? ..i nt lin ' 1:,:,:;,:i;:,:i; 1.,: ::,,,;,..:z CF:,..':: .:: C 22-Year-01- ni. '',::',: ; - - , a' : f t - 4 t t : - . ' , Ct. ...wiffrerorsr, , ( "' ii 1 4 t t.t: t A :!,11 ,,,i ' i o4' ,o0119mob,. nr! i AZ , 4 ' 4 , I SANTILFE BUS .'' z ..., ,,'' .. I . --, Eg. 4 , "IL DEPOT s .. -- , c r 1 j1 , , tifteAtoro ..0. ,,. .. 1 . ...... . , i ,, ............ ' ,,,,,..:, F1 .. c ' 7 -ei---- ,, 41 '' ' 47 ,-z -. ' '' 11 , , , ; , ..701Q... l a.5.,46..e.h. on our vacation it rings:" , -- t - "We'releaving it , , ,' .. 8 - 2e, lomommonnoons. .,. would ,., - you please , , ' rA 7',' 4,th, ,4' '.1' - answer , ,...,, iii; 71 X , d0 :.,,,,,, ,,,,,,,. ;;;:.'. extra-settleme- Creek. Dr. Westrick Leaves America - If he is not this type VICHY. France. Aug. 20.(AP) Dissolution of two large Free. "the Grand Masonry lodges, Lodge of France" and "The Grand Orient of France" was decreed today. The order was Issued under authorization of the recently approved law for dissolution of societies which the government maintains exercised an influence harmful to France, es- because of deception and elected, - neckstret,Ams Member Pnblished Entered Lake City enrdint to 1171). itt..The Audit Circulation& -- SCINIC VIIWS-REA- RATES SIIBSCRIPTION , THE TAMALPAIS I 100L .. , if 111 ' p, - - A il I NIN1 ' it 'Alt, :. It. ....,, 41 SAN RAMO., CALIFORNIA Box 30-S- . One-ha- . hour from San Francisca lf Vj FRAMING s I . ' kiks:-.1--- 'NIIIII' , ail co,.,..,,,,,,,,4.-44- .1 '4,.1,-- .. '' 2 , 11,,,i .1 ' ,, - out-bo- 20.-- , . , f select college prepare. tory school for boys from the 5th through the 12th grades, with an outstanding faculty, The Tomolpais School is accredited to leading universities both East and West. En. tirely modern buildings and equipment, with a private room for each boy. .The mild climate at San Ra. feel, in the shelter of Mount Tomalpois, California, encourages competitive sports for all all through 'the year. Write for the new illustrated catalog. THE TAMALPAIS SCHOOL 414 ......., ,.. 117;'-..- , c ., ., . - - , , , '' glow ,,, I , , ' No wander so many motorists are framing Standard's ScenicArt Prints they're so beautifultThe selection - was made fromover 4,000 natural-colphotographs! They're free! ' , o , ,i. It 41' 3,11:RA 'It STANDARD Ott COMPANY OP CALIFORNIA , i , II. , -- , - i f ' . , 3 ' ,t tmr,Trwrio 1 ,,, or Ono month I 48 4 Mi Sla monthi traid to adanneat) c""1 year toatd in advaneitt SAO 'INV? TS ratan amity to Ettab. Ida. ho. Noenda and Wytootne, All other states Si month. , FOR DY - , 3 PICTIiRk - FREE T I s Sumo et Alterndons Eiteept Sunday. at the voidance at Salt an .end clamp manor me. Aet of Sontrase Match & -- Aug: rs. - at inandetarisnleadndby Thpeandee said they had started on a yacht. ing trip to Manila and had been reported missing until located at Hainan Island. ANGELES. Blanche Rogers Lott, tis, a founder of the Southern California Symphony Association and program chairman for the Hollywood Bowl Association, A native died yesterday. of New York, she was a sister ' of the late Earl Rogers, noted criminal attorney, and an aunt of the writer, Adele Rogers St. ' Johns. , , , LONDON, Aug, 20.(AP)-- The Exchange Telegraph. Corn. paw; tilirtish news - agencyy in a dispatch from Hongkong re'. ported today that Norman Tor. James rev, art American, and Petersen. an Australian. had LOS (AP)--M- r. 9 Music Friend Dies pecially under the regimes immediately preceding the present one. Property of the dissolved lodges was ordered seized. It will be liquidated for the benefit funds. : because of his absolute refusal 4o say a word in behalf of the 11 000.000 Negroes in the Unite'. r States during his seven years in the White House. we cannot sup. port him in 1940." Gerhard A. Westrick. trade counselor to the German embassy at Washington, sailed for home on the Japanese motor-shi- p Nitta Maru today. With him were Mrs. Westriclç their two sons, Fred Peter and Nicoloss, and his assistant, Baroness Irmgard von Wagertheim. Dr. Westrick has been the center bl much publicity since discovpry that he had been living at a Scarsdale, N. Y., mansion and had entertained promment Americans there. Dr. Westrick herded his party into cabins aboard ship and declined to talk with reporters. (AP)--D- P) Grand Masonic Units In France Dissolved' Calif., Aug. 20. WILMINGTON, e CAIRO, Egypt, Aug. British Somaliland was minimized today by British as "an empty victory" for Premier Mussolini in no way endangering Britain's control over the Red Sea or the'Gulf of Aden.Although evacuation of the Port of Berbera left the Italians in command of the entire Sbmaliland coast, these sources said the city would prove t'valueless to the enemy" and would provide no nPW base for attacks against British territory. On the contrary, it was said, the British withdrawal will have the effect of drawing the Italians further into the open for a showdown fight. The Royal Navy and air force apparently were regarded as in- surance that the Italians would gain nothing by their victory, which the British said was won at heavy cost. The navy,- it was said, 'Would prevent any Italian ships from reaching the occupied territory, while the air force would keep Italian troops in the area under harassing fire. The center of action was expected to shift to the Libyan frontier from hare it was be." lieved Marshal Rodolfo Craiani might ,attempt a drive across Egypt toward the Suez Canal. Aug. 20. night-Monda- American Detained , - T..;:..,.... I e,,,, , . --,, . ,V, 4eli'llist, ,.. , 1 , ' ,,4' 1 o . I - x cagi r c 144. le lAen71 60 Er2anre ' oef, .1 1s e 4(4-- The rest of the British troops plan to leave Shanghai Aug. 26. last The British withdrew night from the western district and a handful of Japanese bluejackets moved in as an advance guard preparatory to full occupation. Under last week's proposal, adopted by defense commanders the over Japanese opposition, Japanese were assigned that district while the U. S. marines were alloted defense of the commercial and financial 'zone of the settlement and the west Hongkew area north of Soochow s night-Monda- presidency. In an article in the Pittsbnurgh nationally-circulate- d Courier. weekly newspaper devoted to Negro interests, he said: 'We supported Nit Roosevelt In 1932. We supported him with less enthusiasm in 1936; hut he is a far different man today. "Because of his changes and because Of the Nutble wey in which hp has shifted his position toward the American people and because of his willingness to frighten 130.000,000 people Into believing that this country is going to be at War by Christmas of ..--- I 414, LI--1 . Ai ,:.,. f ,.... I.7C: - . 40 i --,1- 13 . . , ,,, ' , , .......... fit ' 4t Ai ' ,6,,',,,,,,, ..::, 11:" I? 1.:AerliA ..1' - ii 7; P It- --- 1 40 , ' ' fl 4 4Waele,,-,-,,,- -- - '- "..."' 4 rIli.... , if' , lb, i 614Os ...; ' '' I. " - ;- 41 13 , 03 -:- i BERN, Switzerland. the vessel. Somaliland Declared 'Empty Victory' The British government (AP) has expressed its "deepest regrets" to the Swiss minister in London for violation of Swiss territory by British bombing planes en route to Germany and Italy, it was announced here today. A British note apologized for air violations which caused air raid alarms Sunday morning and three nights last week in various parts of Switzerland. 'The note did not specifically mention the bombs dropped on the Swiss side of Lake Constance Sunday morning which cut telephone and telegraph lines when the British attacked German armaments plants along the lake. The Swiss minister, however, was informed RAF pilots had been instructed to stay out of Swiss territory in flights to and from northern Italian industrial centers and South German - - d African Loss Is Minimized British Apologize, To Swiss For Fliers PITTSBURGH, Aug. 20.(AP) Robert L. Vann, Negro leader and publisher who backed President Roosevelt in the campaigns of 1932 and 1936, threw his support today to Wendell L. Willkie, Republican candidate for the Sant i's house. 44 . penalty, years 65 returned to this country today with the execution of Carlos Santi, Norwegian citizen of Italian parentage. Sang was condemned to death by a German military court which convicted him of murdering a Germtn air force soldier during a quarrel in - Aug. Roosevelt Deserted By Leader Of Negroes Aug. death Norway ago, 4110. A in Norway, through the Japanese-occupieIlongkew district to reach Cagney was a Commu- nist sympathizer. Saying Leech's charges were "silly and ridiculous," Cagney asserted in New York that he did not sympathize with any group that is alien to American democratic principles. railroad traffic between occupied and unoccupied France hat been suspendPd by order of German authorities it was officially announced today. No reason was for the action. given Railway and all other forms tit traffic between the two zones were forbidden in the German order for the coastal strtp of occupied territory between Tours and the Spanish border. Highway traffic across the tone frontier between Tours and the Swiss border still Is permitted. (Similar sudden interruptions of traffic by German authorities In the past have been interpreted as Tsighs of impending large scale military developments. Pas. senger traffic on German railWa s was suspended just before the' invasion of the low countries last May.) German-occupie- $14114r . , abolished , .1izt-E.-- VOW--Wowr.--.- - stab F. - , - It 11 S 20.(AP)The - i . - 1 TRONDHEIM, 4 111. VICHY, that er, Areas Forbidden 'Death Penalty Restored 7 QV I war-tim- - Japanese French Rails All Traffic Between - By arrangement with the the troops will march Nazis Close ., 1 v,s, TO ' i I anti-Naz- BURNS- '' Unit-Japa- - By Fred Neher 11111 Catholie hospital. The American Methodist 'hospital escaped (ONDITIONED) ' 1 .... the intelligence department of the army, navy and air corps, could move into undisclosed underground quarters, hewn out of solid rock, well stocked with provisions and gas and tomb proof. Food is now stored in some underground shelters as are large quantities of lethal gas. At Lualualei, navy ammunition dump, millions of dollars of ammunition is now stored in underground shelters ready for instant use. Incoming, battleships are adding to the store. At Red Hill, just outside Honolulu, a full $20,000,000 worth of ammunition is stored. Together With insuring emergency food rations in underground elters, the army has taken mes- ii es to protect its water supply system. Special artesian wells already drilled, will avert shortage In time of war. "'Zfil MRS. PIP'S DIARY e. .100-be- 111 - . LIFE'S LIKE THAT several hundred casualties. Officals said the ,conflagration which threatened at one time to spread to the new western resi. dential section, was the Worst experienced by the city In nearly two vPars of intermittent bom6- Ings. 1Iremen fought the flames till Long afterinidnight. Waves of Japanese planes rain d bombs on the capitak for more than two hours during the raid the fifth within three days. Among the buildings destroyed were the American Methodist Church and a French -- .. , - On "Certainly." he adds, "there is no apparent reason for supposing that the ratio will be smaller in 1940 than it was in 1917- '918." He says he has no data to exled plain why the the field in the World War but that it appears obvious as they got beyond age 22 the potential draftees were more likely to he employed in essential industries and occupations and to have de. , pendents. Aug. 20.(AP) agencies were taxed , today by the task of- caring for 25,000 persons left homeless by a huge fire which swept the center of this provisional capital last night after a Japanese bombing raid estimated to have caused , lands. ' seagoin- . 1917-191- CifUNGKING, AND IT'S AID IN.' I ' i - . , ; 21-3- 1 Leaves 25,000 Without Homes France, with the French army before it lay down its arms before superior force. At Scofield barracks high on the hMs In the center of Oahu 1slact. heart of the Hawaiian Islands, there are 30,000 soldiers, drilled Mthe ways of, defense, trained to meet any Invader...But these thousands of men are not' - service under the pending draft bill was Issued here today by Prof. Hai'vey C. Lehman, of Ohio University., Athens. O. 'Prof. Lehman, a psychologist, Is an expert statistician on ages at which all sorts AA human activities are at their peak. His happened graph is based on what men musin a group of 2,908 tered into the U. S. Army by draft in the World.War. Their ages ranged up to 44, but more than 1,000 of them were of the ages 22, 23 and 21, with the leading. "The data should be of public stated. Lehman Dr. Interest," "Young people are very directly concerned. College presidents and their faculties will be interested because many of them are wondering what the effect of a conscription act will be upon future enrollment?' In the World War draft figures Dr. Lehman said there was a sharp decline in numbers of men mustered in dropping from the ages of 22 to 32. Because of unemployment now-hsaid it is likely the younger groups will Supply an even greait- er proportion of service a 1940 draft than they did In dinese Fire - ' HoNo LuLur Aug. .20.The United States will soon have its first underground , hangar. Unostentatiotisly, the army recently acquired property "somewhere on Oahu" for the project. The property contains a natural beach runway next to a hillside which can be excavated without revealing the contemplated hangar. In other Ways, too, the Artily and Navy in Hawaii have kept abreast of modern underground, unbombable developments. A $300,000 project is now under way to put gasoline storage on tanks underground, both Oahu and the five outlying is- ds 20.--(- AP) years. skies. LACKS EQUIPMENT , As Jot the army in Hawaii, may be big enough and brave but enough for any emergency, it is definitely hamstrung at the ,resent time by lack of modern , equipment. The American Army in Hawail,- spearhead of the Anted-ca- n defense the Pcifie, is equipped like an army of the last World War's yintage and could not meet any modern blitzkrieg army on equal ground. This is solely the opinion of one man. but of one Who spent months with the British army before it was driven out of I .,; e ' BY HOWARD W. BLAKE'SLEE NEW YORK', Aug. A graph predicting that men would be the most numerous class called to military inhabitantsor more 05, than a thirdare Japanese of whom there has been a steadily increasing infiltration in recent I ci. .4 t- ' s ;;1'.';,,: Ages .Compiled w , '::' ,.": .:;0:-- n , 1111 - fleet, apparently satisfiedthat a local Japanese-Americacrisis had been averted, left Shanghai today for Tsingtan aboard the U: S. patrol vessel Isabel to rejoin the main body Of the Asiatic fleet. He came herelast Wednesday from T;ingtao aboard a g-submarine amid Japanese demands for control of the British defense sector of the International Settlement from which British troops are to be withdrawn, beginning tomorrow, for service elsewhere. Under a temporary agreement reached yesterday, to be in 4ef- feet while further negotiations' are carried outhetween the States and troops of the Shanghai volunteer corps astonight assume patrol duties unU. S. marines to the signed 'a proposal last week to divide- the British defense sector between United States and Japanese forces. the proThe Japanese-oppos-ed posal holding that their forces should be assigned to the entire sector as the British withdraw. The British withdrawal begins tomorrow when a contingent of .300 officers and men of the second battalion, East Surrey Regiment, hoards the steamer Tak- - - : Draft Statistics On from Seattle. This tropical paradiqe of iuxuriant vegetation and volcanic mountains is the mainspring on which the American armed foreeg count to block and ward off any attempt by any power to the t. and strike a blo-153,539 , 1:. To Take Brunt States. Honolulu Is 2,100 miles from San Francisco. 2,229 miles from Los Angeles and 2,409 miles 1 St BY EUGENE ., ar-v-7e-sie-ras.- AS Underground Hangar Will Be Built On Hawaiign Isle ern Avar. The Hawaiian roads of the Pacific"are re. garded by American Navy and Army experts as of utmost tegic importance to the United of the total population of , ;;7:::t::::;:.:: ::-- ',:: ..0N0::..::....,.,,.::1";;,,:,) " Aug. Admiral Thomas Charles, Hart: commander of the U. S. Asiatie - Map shows probable route of the American Legion returning from Northern Finland with war refugees through the German blockade zone about Britain. Meanwhile, British reported bombing Nazi troop con. centritions as German airmen raided London (2).--(- AP Wtrephoto.) anti-aircra- today the greatest show of naval force that has ever been right here tn these Ameri- can islands. ' After surveying all- the fight--trig Craft anchored in- Pearl Har-- bor. I inquired among naval oftiters and other officials engag- ed In the rearmament program and learned that many more ships were anchored in the shai- lows between this island of Oahu and the adjoining islands of the Hawaiian group. ! Every fighting ship I saw was in readiness for action; painted. manned, engines turning over so f that slow smoke drifted into the4 syrntropic sky, guns pointing the sea, bollcally westward-t- o to the sky. ,tI Upward If trouble ever tomes out of to the west, complicate the tanI gle of national interests in Europe which have set the world --- -pn fire, the U. S. navy will be surface ships are any readyif more of use against the aggression of the blitzkrieg from the :::1. : SHANGHAI, aThe American Ship Stearns Through Danger Zone fde- I siw i IL -- . vt J . ,, ::::::::: . - ,. Settled - , ' , Vi;::::'':."' anti-aircra- , VU , -- of s Spies On Coast e tii:A ... ' , ' , ' Al S.-fl- ; . -- tt)(3 I: 1,,,:;1:,,,,ti. ,l.',!;..:i:::1;;:1:;;:. 20.(AP)--Hundred- Aug. wes uncovers e :N. ,,,,!: 111,:i:iii:.$ ' e .,x'',9) .A , ' . - ,.. 'MEXICO CITY, Aug. Navy Department, declin- , :,, ' - , -- ;. A 0 . . .4 ' . -- - 0..0.17.. I ,21:,:::::::::::::!:::!: -- t- - , '$ CHANCY, SWITZERLAND, - Crisis With Japan In Shanghai Believed German antiNazis who fled their homeland when'Adoll Hitler came into power are being rounded up by his agents in con. quered France and taken ..back - to Nazi Jails, reports from , across the border disclosed today.- , .. Ends 1Dispute, Leaves Orieiit - ' m WM , ing official comment on the halt- -ing Of anedAmerican freighter off .. with lonk 71ists- -- of Acapulco,-pointout today That 1 TT names, Nazi officials were said Mexico's territorial waters Corti to be. snaking the rounds of civilher rugged Pacific coastline are ian internment camps in the unpatrolled by six warships occupied zone in France 'in a The United States. freighter, widespread search for fugitive off 'Herman, Frasch, was halted German nationals. -G22 the cutter yesAcapulco by Neutral observers told of seea terday as precautionary move, ing large groups of Yorlorn prisBoth Italians Mexican authorities said, after . Germans, oners herded Into trucks 'under she had steamed into national guard of heavily armed Germans Have Oroinizations from The waters. vessel, bound in civilian clothes and being to New San Diego, Calif., York, driven off' to Germany via- the Aug. 20. SA. ''R.1.471CISCa.,,Martin was allowed to proceed after a one. occupied Dies brief search. Several hundred' German na- he had evidence that said today said vy Department both Germany and Italy main, tionals were said to have been gunboats or armed ntsta c t en n rog taken from the Gurs camp in tam n active espionage organizacutters are based in the reput3lic's the Pyrenn-ein this fashion in San Francisco. Pacific ports to prevent smug-- , tions, have the names of seven within the last week.. arms a of for political gling Man'); of these fought for the known Italian spies in San Franrevolution. cisco and the names of 20 of the army during the The section of coastline near leaders of the German espionage Republican Spanish civil war as members of coves has inlets and Acapulco the international brigade and organization here," he said aftwhere contraband could be lander taking testimony from half a later sought refuge in France, ed easily. Acapulco is in the dozen witnesses at, a secret hearwhere they were interned;--So- me state of Guerrero, tronghold of enlisted in the French ing. Names of the witnesses Gen. Juan Andrei! Amazzan, Inwere not made public. Foreign Legion at the outbreak election to claims who of chairman the of the present war, hut were sent congresDies, dependent the presidency over Gen. Manuel back to 'internment camps last siona) committee on tin,Ameri-- , said he had can activities,, also Avila Camacho, administration March when the Frencti army. election. 'been told- - that-1- - three maritime candidate in the July was "purged" of all German unions operating on the San nationals The war ministry announced as a protection against Francisco waterfront and on that Gen. Alfredo Lezama, forvessels plying Out of this port mer head of the airforce, and Tattered French uniforms still were controlled by Communists. were worn Ceti. Jose Dimingo Ramirez Carby these men as they He named these as the Inter' rido, both prominent o Amazantheir ,started journey back to national Longshoremen's - and cus istas, had been taken-IntGermany. the Union. Warehousemen's ' todv in Acapulco. Others being sent back to the Radio Telegraphers As Antmofficial source said the Atnerican Reich include intellectuals who Marine Cooks the and sociation tense politicill situation between In one way or another participatCamacho and Almazan was a and Stewards. i ed in organizations. of file and the rank While Various Nazi extremists of principal reason for the navy's Communot unions these were strict vigilance off the coast of nationalities taken into Many nists, Dies said,- they nevertheGuerrero. custody by the French at the less were run by Communist It said also that Mexico has beginning of the war already . leaders. been cooperating with the Unit. have been released from internDies declared that gaining corted States in patrolliing hemiment camps in the unoccupied of such unions was in keep. trol sphere waters "because of the Germany, it with Communist policy, the zone on orders from ing disturbed world situation." was added. to prevent the United being plan In this connection it was reAmong these .vas the Belgian States from preparing its nacalled that there have been retional defense and, if,war should Bexist chief, Leon Degrelle, and current rumors that German subabout 1,600 Belgian soldiers who come, to have men in positions marines were operating off the where they might engage in had been disarmed by the French Mexican coast and even secretwhen they demonstrated in faespionage and sabotage. ly using small ports as fueling While the investigation was in vor of King Leopold. bases. progress here, several movie acApproximately 1'5,000 persons, A number of naval craft are tors were, taking steps to repudiand civiIncluding also guarding the republic's exate charges made before the Los lianswomen as well as men tensive shoreline on the Gulf of still remain in French concenAngeles County grand jury that Mexico. tration camps in the Pyrennes, they were Communist sympathizers. It was said. Jimmy Cagney, who has flatly Among these are Germans, denied Communist membership Jews, Poles, White Russians, move-, Red or sympathy with'the Austrians. and many other, forment, was flying' here from the eigners who are without papers. east to discuss with Dies the The prisoners also include many statements to the grand jury of French suspected of political acJohn L. Leech, former Los Antivity against the geles County Communist organiz- - . I 1 r " ...:,::: ,, --Th- e - , .::;,A - - 20.-44- '1, Op 101 CA, ItV. , Irti,.!t 4,6.,:,:,':, .,, . BY,W. W. CHAPLIN (International News Service Correspondent) HONOLULU, Aug. today is the great est maritinie fortress in history soleiy because the U. S. fleet is gle vicinity. armed to meet any invader as At the moment, the fleet is invaders are armed today. bar. steaming slowly out of the The army in Hawaii is motor- bor for maneuvers and - when and can be moved swiftly ized, It finally movesfarther away central position to any from this base, it will leave be. - from its point or need, but when It gete hind It nothing but a skeleton .thpro It hasn't the equipment c defense for the American main-- , necessary to do HA Job. land. r Made a careful survey of ., But the fleet Is still sufficient- -the, army equipment here and ly near at hand to make the HaI uncovered the following facts. wallan Islands the impregnable This army has none of the new spearhead of the main American rifles. It tarand defense line In the Pacifiel--t- he has no-- tanks, no armored cars. triangle It bas none or the new 90 m1111- which its the American Insurance ' meter guns. policy against aggression from ' Orient. the The strategy of the army her -ti4 based on the fact that the main Today; before a of I made the parture, survey Hawaiian Island of Oahu (the riaval defene of these Islands, Only island the army plan; to and while It Is not complete It ' defend In case of aggression) Is gives a reasonable idea of the cut by two mountain ranges power the navy has in this in- which dictate that landing must creasingly strategical section, of be made at Honolulu or directly the world. across the island. Virtually all of the U. Therefore the army is held at was concentrated here. Navy of-center of the Island, ready fleets wouldn't tell how many the to rush to one side or the other, ships were here. how many bat-bwith little modern equip. tie veagons, how many cruisers. ment to meet attack. destroyers, aircraft carriers. sub- - GUNS OUTMODED -- marines and. other units of' the In the , section fighting fleet RIDES THROUGH LINES: there are 100 mohile modern But by special dispensation I antiaircraft searchlights, but rode through lines marked "no there are only 24 mobile anti-on- e aircraft guns. And such guns may pass here" and counted for myself the naval strength , as there are consist of 75 milli.' massed in these islands as the meters (three inches) which first line of American defense in have been declared outmoded by . the Pacifié. army officers testifying before the I visited Pearl Harbor. congressional committees. . drove and great naval base here, Scofield Barracks is the larg. along docks to which were tied est army post- anywhere in the seven battleships that I, counted United States, it is equipped to and long lines of cruisers. dethe proper feeding and submaand wallowing stroyer! training of its 30,000 men, but tines. For reasons of national it is not furnished with the ' safety I am not in position to mechanized equipment which the tell exactly how many ships war has shown Is nee- .European were present (lest potential ene dactirnota frelm thnt ...I what, . e,g sary to the continued existence :1, -- - . .esday, 20, 1940 U. S. Admiral Refugees Will Be Sent Back To Berlin ..... '.........,,,,'''' -- ::'''' Viig.,:iciii:c30 .di.:;:iiiiii::::. . Precaution - , : (. VI,::', Ss, ',C.) 6 ,:.:,!..;:.:!..::,',.::. - , :. ::::::::::::: 1'''':;:r':::'.;'".:. f . - - f,7:::7,::,11riiIII:i.::::'C'e. . ' '1 - ',:i.7:,',1. ., , uT -- - For Internnient As Aleasure- os,, lIo tiii,':iliiii:f4:iiii:::,"::::1.1ifilit) . - oo b , to et'.1.11 .vo.or,:t::.:.:,. of' ::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ooy , ' ,, IN . - , , - GermanyRoundtngUp In France 4 - E xp l ana ion- bG.1' .,11b3 e0 ,sft...rn.::::::::i1::iiI:iii."iY1,t,s::..i:. ':.:i;:il's !:::::::i:;;I::::::;i;::,:::.. si' ;i:::;:::;. :i::: 11 ow dri::?:..::,;N:::',;...NliN,,1::; 111::::1:1::::;,:b t, 4 , D. , , t . - iltgeuse6 , , . , Iss. 0, 1, - Ilho Amerleast program of military preparedness. W. W. Chaplin, International News Serviee war eormpondent and tuitional defense expert, is making o MON. Mile flying survey by Clipper pianos. FrOM LOR Angeles, he flew to lionoluin en roots to Canton Island, New Caledonia, New Zealand, the Initeh East Indies. Singapore, Hongkong, and back Si California by way el the Philippines., . Gaon, Wake end Midway Mr. Chaplin's first bated IS Hawaii foliews. Yew eorrespontle,nts are as well equipped as Mr. Chaplin to survey and appraise American vital defenss In the light of iooâi.rn blitritrieg war techniques. A veteran himself of the A. IL F. with which hit fought in the Argonne and was detonated for valor during the last World War. Mr. Chaplin returned to the United w or rorreapondent with the Allied that"' recently after Mg month. as form. en Front. Since that time, ate has been assigned to IPOVering America's 7 i, ,, amorist's first !Moot defense la the fare Of ILIWOUOting tension and strained Illations in the Par Feat emulate of a eh sin el island outposts hi the Pacifie. ' To report on the stets of these Pacing defenses,which form an integral part elf ,i. , ,,, 00 tt . ICtile . - - .- , t i I . . , ,. 1 5 . o ev,, e, ., b - - ' 00.10, 11' ' - ntt-Naz,- ts ' . '. , Guns Anti-Aircra- ft - ,.. , 1 - ' , , ,,e, ' . ,.Has No Tanks- - . : lObserver Says LargesttU . S. Post . t ' . ' - Ship , . 1 lAalt - , . 1 , c'" - J. . lit.1.11 , , , , - - . - ' - , , ,mtumekcE FoR EXTRISERVI STAN DA R D Casoiine -- Ut,surpassed -, - Amines , , z,. , , , , ' , 1 5 b ' |