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Show The Cache American. Loean. Cache County. Utah Personalities on Days News Front ' ' i U-- y 1 '?v jl First Radiotelcphoto From African Front Winds Up in Tree J s:j f ty Hi V Tp tf r Pare Three Jr & in L- - : i! Vv at left I Llrot. Gen. George 8. Patton Jr., native non" of California, who I a crack ahot with a General rattona armored force bave been giving Gen. Emin Rommela deaert army In Tunlala aome-tbin- g la think about. Center: Petite, attracUve Mme. Chiang first lady of China, w ho baa become the American spokesman for Chinas fighting masses. Mme. Chiang thrilled great audiences bere. Eight: J. Lester Perry, president of the Carnrgir-llllnoi- s eompsny, a subsidiary of U. 8. Steel, shown as be sppeared before the Truman committee Investigating war production. Charges were made that false tests were made on steel which was being used by the navy. Ebonm pistol. Kal-ahe- k, Teamwork Keynote of I s a Anti-Aircra- Artillery Success ft - The idea was to attack" at dusk, during Third Army maneuvers in Louisiana. But first, this paratrooper had to call for help to get down out of a tree. Good News v I b V5W;e' . A gun crew digs In snd Is on the alert during the battle for Gafma, in Tunisia. II. 8. armored forces under command of Lieut. Grn. George Patton Jr. in two days advanced St miles to recapture Gafsa and to go 12 mites beyond. Photo was flown to Algiers and transmitted from that radio transmispoint in seven minute to Washington In the new sion system put to its first practical test by the U, 8. army signal corps with the transmission of these radiotelcphoto. Chicago Cubs Mascot to Be Goat jv , u-Vr- V v ::t i, ' 0 two-wa- y t U A ? i . 1 - ; 1 v ' w;M r- Jjt 11 5 V- - lif-- 7 f tAtr 1 , JA M .K--V 'Srtii n 01 rA iVv: 'fr Li va h- - -- .v. t A In few branches of our armed services are teamwork and more Important than in the antiaircraft artillery. Pictures shown here were taken during maneuvers at Camp Davis, N. C. Cpper left: When the alert sounds, crews must reach their stations in seconds. Dress is of slight importance, but they must have their rifles, cartridge belts, gas masks and helmets. They race to their posts. Right: This gun was actually in full recoil. Lower left: Captain Rousseau peers picture was made while the through a slit in the battery commander's underground station to check on the operations of the crew. ft Mrs. Paul D. Brown of Orange, N. J., admires the portrait of her husband, an air corps major. After bearing rumors of his death, Mrs. Brown had cabled for confirmation. The day after, stories were released telling how Major Brown commanded a Flying Fortress which took part in the raid on Yegesack sub plant near Bremen, during which V. S. planes blasted 19 buildings. m Sends Son to Fight Against Homeland Block-Bust- er !(r Its a goat instead of a bear that Manager Jimmie Wilson of the Chicago Cubs (left) will use for n mascot this spring, as his charges play exhibitions in and about their French Lick, Ind., training camp. Manager Jimmie Dykes of the White Sox (right) will have a similar talisman. The goats names are Bunt" and Homer." Caution Wrecked Plane Being Repaired Visits Home Fleet -- i a 4 MMwk r This is a of the dreaded 4,000 pound made In the United States, and dropped on Germany in night and day raids by American fliers and RAF men. Approximately 2,2041 bomb art pounds of the two-to- n TNT and other secret explosives. The rest are shell and fuses. Dropped from a plane 20,000 feet up, the bomb strikes the ground al pulverizing speed. Surprised? So were we to learn that the two seemingly peaceful rural scenes depicted above really masked the repair and restoration to service of a wrecked U. S. air force plane. Members of the service group at Greenville, S. C., are taught to rescue, salvage, and repair wrecked planes in a battle area subject to air and ground attack at any time. At top, plane is covered by a screen which blends it into the disguise and makes it unrecognizable from the air. The farmhouse" and silo" in the background actually are engineering installations. Below, a realistic touch is added to the camouflage Installations of the service group by these cows. Shots for Dogs Even Boys Go for It Their Majesties Pay Visit to Yanks It's inoculation day at San Angelo, Texas, army air field, where bombardier school mascots get immunized by post veterinarian Capt. H. R. Collins, against rabieSt Children are learning the princl pies of nutrition and the art of pre paring and serving well balance! meals, at Central school, Lony Beach, N. Y. Here a husky lac permits a girl to pin on his aproi before going to work at the stove Their majesties, the king and queen of England, are shown passing a group of American soldiers who are busy playing cards at the American Red Cross club in Northampton, England. The photo was made during their majesties visit to the club, and here the king seems anxious to give a bit of advice to the Yanks. photo-diagra- r, Prime Minister Winston Churchill Is being piped over the side as he leaves a destroyer depot ship while Shamed by the Jap attack upon Pearl Harbor, James 8. Hondo, 51, a the British home fleet. Leadn resident of the Hawaiian islands, was gratified when the army visiting the prime minister down the lading permitted his son, Herbert, 18, to join a special combat regiment made up der Is Vice Adm. Sir Bruce Austin Herbert is shown in the center Fraser, whose appointment to comf Americans of Japanese ancestry. with his mother and father, who wears his American Legion cap. He is mand the British home fleet was a veteran of World War I. recently announced. Jap-bor- This Wildcat Is a Real x j .; Jap-Kill- y er ,V4 , 3, - ; 1 Nineteen stenciled Jap flags mark the score of this Grumman Wildcat shown on famous Henderson Field, Guadalcanal. The score was made by several different pilots, of which Tech. Sergt. R. W. Greenwood, a marine from Jamesport, Mo., is plane captain. lie is shown in cockpit. |