Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 230, Ed. 1 Monday, May 25, 1942 Page: 3 of 6
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ing and Fighting the War
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IN ICELAND—Correspondent
Phil Ault, outside a postoffice -
in Iceland, after cabling a
United Press dispatch.
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with United Press Correspondent Francis McCarthy, cantor,
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TIPS FROM CRIPPS--Far aste rn United Press News Manager '
John R. Morris, left, whose revelations of terms Britain would
offer India were a two-day news beat, chats with tho bearer j
of tho terms, Sir Stafford Cripps, at New Delhi.
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DEPARTING DIPLOMAT—As the German Minister Baton H.
Rudt von Collenberg loaves Mexico’s foreign office after that
country’s severance of diplomatic relations with tho Nazis,’
Edward P. Morgan, chief of the United Press Mexico Qty
bureau, obtains a hurried interview.
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AT BATTLE STATION—Atop the "sky tower" of an American aircraft carrier in the Pacific,
United Press Staff Correspondent Joe James Custer eye-witnesses the shattering, surprise attack
by bombers of a U. S. naval task force on Japanese military establishments on Marcus Island.
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JAP SLAPPERS—American pilots just back aboard their carrier after bagging 16 of 18 attack-
ing Japanese planes, talk it over
who covered the battle fros the
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WEST OF SUEZ-U. S. Marine Colonel F. P. Malcahy, left, and air force squadrcn leader Lord
Kinross, center, with United Press executive Virgil Pinkley in Libya. - ’ - —
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FIRST PEEP AT JEEP—The British army driver never saw a U.S. Army jeep until he drove this
one in Northern Ireland, but he handled it like a veteran. Among his passengers is United Press
ONCE MORE WITH WELLES—Everotf R. Hollos, left, of the *
United Press, who accompanied Under Secretary of State
Sumner Welles on his visits in 1940 to European capitals, again
traveled with the diplomat to the conference in Rio de Janeiro.
This picture shows them arriving back in the United States.
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STILL FIGHTING. STLL WRITING—Chinese soldier in Burma
and United Press Correspondent Kerl Eskelund meet near Kun.
-I ming after Eskolund"s dramatic escape from Japanese invaders
el Shanghai. .Pvom his now headquarters Eskolund centinued
H write qf the colorful exploits of America's "Hying Tlggyo.
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From the Arctic to the Antipodes, United Press Reporters
. Gather First-Hand News of the Men Who Are Shap-
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IN PRESIDENT’S PARTY—
Ricardo Loon, left, United
Press Lima bureau head, with
President of Peru, Dr. Manuel
Prado, on his visit to tho
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"PLYING NEWSHAWK—First American correspondent to fly in an American bombing piano in
action against Japanese, Harold Guard, veteran United Press reporter—nearest seated officer-
takes notes on air force press conference at an advanced flying base "somewhere in Australia."
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STRONG AGAIN—Recovered from assassin's bullet, restored
to political power, Nazi collaborationist, Pierre Laval—in hat
in picture above—talks in Vichy with Ralph Heinzen, of the
United Press, who scooped the world on Laval's recent elevation.
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hfONDAY, 1^25^1942^1
With Your Foreign Correspondents
On the News Fronts of the World
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CAMEL ON WHEELS—United Press Foreign Correspondent Henry T. Gorrell finds a mob
practical on the sands of Libya. Here he dismounts to talk with a giant Sikh trooper,
going to Africa, Gorrell reported the British campaigns in Greece sand lran4
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Gainesville Daily Register and Messenger (Gainesville, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 230, Ed. 1 Monday, May 25, 1942, newspaper, May 25, 1942; Gainesville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1481192/m1/3/: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Cooke County Library.