^ Picketing at Bethlehem Steel k Under the watchful eyes of Pennsylvania state troopers, C.I.O. pickets, some of them carrying American flags, demonstrate outside the Bethle hem, Pa., plant of the Bethlehem Steel company. Work-bound men, singly and In small groups, passed into the mill unmolested. The strike held up the production of defense materials. Hitler Greets Japanese Foreign Minister This radiophoto from Berlin shows Adolf Hitler greeting Japanese Foreign Minister Matsuoka. They discussed questions confronting the Rome-Berlln-Tokyo axis. Picture shows Hitler introducing the foreign minister to the crowds. Matsuoka is at the left, then Hitler and Am y bassador Hiroshloshima. Off to Prison Earl Browder (left) shown leaving for Atlanta, Ga., en route to the federal penitentiary, where he is scheduled to serve a four-year sen tence for passport fraud. Right: Robert Minor, who succeeds him as secretary of the Communist party. Rules Jugoslavia Seventeen-year-old King Peter ol Jugoslavia, who assumed power from his pro-Nasi ministers, and ascended the throne in a bloodless coup d’etat. m I United States to Observe Army Day I WANT YOU &. I ' SIZE of U. S. ARMY Jrti mmmh - 1803 (UN10K) 2,128,948 HHMHH HHHH 1918 (kov . wii) 3,673,888 4 1 1939 187,886 1941 (MAR) 1,CX)3,500 0S5.ARMY The rapidly growing armed forces of the U. S. will be on review on Army day, April 7, when troops will hold open house to visiting citizens. Upper left: Gen. George 8. Marshall, army chief of staff. Upper right: A recruiting poster of World war days, which is again being widely used. Lower right: H. H. Arnold, chief of the army air corps. A ‘Big Shot’ for Uncle Sam U. S. NAVY Built Building 15 Battleships 17 6 Aircraft Carriers 12 37 Cruisers 48 159 Destroyers 166 104 Submarines 81 wmmmammm.H The North Carolina, (above) first new battleship of the U. S. navy tn 20 years, is to be commissioned April 11, five months ahead of schedule, has nine 16-inch guns, which can fire a broadside of 20,000 pounds for 20 miles. Its displacement is 35,000 tons, the biggest in the U. S. navy. It was launched June 13 at New York. Collegiate gymnasts will compete at the National Collegiate Athletic association championship at the Uni versity of Chicago April 12. Co-cap tains Delver Daly (top) and Bob Hanning of Minnesota are favored for top positions. Chemist W. L. Evans (above) will preside when some 3,500 chemists gather in St. Louis, April 7, for the Ameri can Chemical society convention. Subject, chemistry and defense. New Martial Notes in a War-Minded World Left: Diana Wells of Pueblo, Colo., comes forth with some novel headgear for the forthcoming Faster parade. The hat Is a metal helmet, relic of the first World war. Bight: Star attraction at New York’s na tional flower show was this English air raid shelter. The protecting sandbags are painted green, and between them flowers are blooming. The shelter accommodates six persons. Food for Hungry France Here are two recent steps taken to provide aid to stricken France. The Bed Cross mercy ship Exmouth tails from New York to unoccupied France with a $1,250,004 cargo of medicine, milk and baby clothes. Inset: & food station is opened in Paris by Nazis, serving bowls of chocolate and soup. Those who can pay are charged one franc. Britain’s Most Powerful Battle Wagon Great Britain’s newest and mightiest battleship, the King George V, is shown here—somewhere in the Atlantic—firing its quadruple 14-inch guns on the quarterdeck. This was the ship on which Lord Halifax, the new British ambassador to the U. S., was brought to the United States. He was quite safe, Judging from this picture. First New Powder Plant Ready to Roll Ten thousand people cheered as Undersecretary of War Robert P. Patterson dedicated this big new $44,100,000 smokeless-powder plant at Radford, Va., three months ahead of schedule. It is rated to produce 300,000 pounds of powder a day in the nation’s defense drive. It was rushed through in seven months. No Frivolity C. A. Higgins, president of the Hercules Powder company, of Wil mington, Del., sliding down one of the safety chutes at the new $44, 100,000 smokeless-powder plant at Radford, Va., at opening ceremonies. Rescued Countess Edda Ciano, daughter of Mussolini who was saved from a hospital ship sunk by British torpedo planes near Valona, Albania, ac cording to Italian dispatches. /? CJ - KO Scott Motion (Beleustd by Western Newspaper Union.) First Presidential Death ONE hundred years ago Ameri cans were mourning tire loss of their Chief Executive—William Hen ry Harrison. When he died on April 4, 1841, it marked the first presi dential death in the White House and the end of the shortest presidential term in history—exactly one month. Harrison was also the oldest man ever chosen to that high office. He was nearly 68 years old when he won his victory over President Mar tin Van Buren. candidate for re-elec tion, in the campaign of 1840. The rigors of that campaign undermined his health and the long tiresome Journey to Washington from Ohio, made by canal-boat and on horse back, told heavily on his strength. March 4, 1841, the day of his in auguration, was cold and disagree able. While delivering his inaugural address, the longest ever given by any President, Harrison stood out doors bareheaded. He caught a se vere cold which developed into pneu monia and resulted in his death. Despite the fact that Harrison is chiefly remembered as the leading figure in the exciting "Log Cabin Hard Cider” campaign of 1840, he had many other real claims to dis tinction that are little known to most Americans. Born in Virginia Feb ruary 3, 1773, the son of Benjamin Harrison, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, he be came the ward of Robert Morris, the "Financier of the Revolution,” .after his father’s death. Prophetic of Harrison's later role in the development of the West was his determination to enlist in the army for service against the Indi ans in the Ohio country. Morris op posed this plan, but young Harrison ) applied directly to President Wash ington and, although he was only 19 years old, he was commissioned an ensign. His gallant conduct during ‘‘Mad Anthony” Wayne's campaign won the favor of his commander, a promotion to a captaincy and com mand of Fort Washington, later Cin cinnati, Ohio. In 1798 Harrison resigned from the army but President Adams im mediately appointed him secretary of the Northwest Territory. In 1800 President Jefferson made him the first governor of the new Territory of Indiana, an office which he held for 12 years. As governor he was also charged with negotiat ing treaties for the cession of Indian lands. It was his activity in this regard which caused the famous Shawnee chief, Tecumseh, to unite the tribes to resist further encroach ments upon their hunting grounds. But Tecumseh's plans were ruined when his brother. The Prophet, made a premature attack on the force of 1,000 soldiers which Harri son had assembled on the banks of the Tippecanoe river. That victory made the young governor a popular military hero. The War of 1812 added to his reputation, culminating as it did in his victory at the Battle of the Thames at which Tecumseh was killed. In 1818 Harrison was elected to congress and after serv ing one term retired from politics. However, he was elected to the sen ate in 1825, but, during the admin istration of President Jackson, his fortunes, both political and financial, sank to such a low state that he was glad to accept a position as county recorder in order to support his large family. (He was the father of 10 children, more than any other President before or since his time.) In 1836 Harrison returned to the political arena as the Anti-Masons* candidate for President. Although he received only 73 electoral votes, he apparently was the strongest of Van Buren’s prospective opponents. This belief was justified in the cam paign of 1840 which sent him to the White House for his short and ill-fated stay there. Few of our Presidents have had more nicknames than William Hen ry Harrison. Because he had lived on a farm near North Bend, Ohio, he was called the “Honest Farmer of North Bend,’’ also the “Buckeye Who Follows the Plow.” Significant of his role in opening the Old North west to settlement were his two nicknames of “Hero of the West” and “Father of the Great West.” But his favorite nicknames were those which reflected his career as a military hero and an Indian fight er—“The Hero of the Thames” and “Old Tippecanoe.”