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Show .Mews PHOTOS JUST RECEIVED IN U. S. 9E0W: AustraUa Set to Slap Back Jap Invasion, Led by "That Fightin' Man From Bataan" PAGE SIX PROVO ' (UTAH) DAILY HERALD, ' THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1942 Army's; Ner Rivetless Tank Gets Guns i M 4- .$ -:-:fc: , - ' 1 W.P. B. Adviser .r.v.'Xr::.'-:-:-:-.-: :.v.-.y.: 1 ft 1 1 Vr-.J 1 :I&-M;3t 4 -t i it V - v,' ''"15 ' - - S K.i 1L. ' -' J - fc as ur Thundering over a ridge at Ft. Knox, Ky., testing ground comes the Army's new rivetless medium tank complete with 75 mm. gun and a battery o(f machine guns. The M-4 has an all-cast body and mounts its big gun on revolving turiet in center instead of lower down on the right side as on the M-3 tank. New technical adviser to the War Production.. Board in the Northwest Is Oregon Mining Bureau Director Earl K. NUon, above, wholl handle zinc, coal and other mineral problems. Queen's Brother Now Errol's Alone Lew Off to 'Objectors' Camp y - 1 x Testimony that her mate was always al-ways on the go without her brought piquant Lili Damita a di vorce from Actor Errol Flynn in a v ?Sf ( i. J i ..L B MMAlvd AiMMMHrv JbQkdWhitfV : yjX y.- V, . a ' " V - .v 'jy, - v ya"ijC.l t 1 - BARK THAT BITES Ready to bark and bite at any Nipponese invaders, this big field gun ia rolled into a camouflaged position near Darwin. It's part of the feverish extension of Australian, defenses under ever-growing- threat of invasion. luafcj wwjy."1... iijnii'iiii J11..'"' i i i i iin i i urn iinrrn i iii i ill iT a xrz- - - - i Hilh -j -y DIGGERS Popular nickname for Australians is "Digger." Above, Aussie Boldiers, stripped1 to shorts in the 100-degree temperature, carve out a drain through solid rock part of the new defenses of the great military base at Darwin. mm. i- .v: :y o-' I'i '-:l :- f I'X-" David Bowes-Lyon, brother of England's Queen Elizabeth, arrives ar-rives by clipper as a representative represen-tative of the British Ministry of Economic Warfare. Housing Chief fr JAP-SCUATCIIEK Working feverishly against time, Australian troops fence in the Dominion's vulnerable northern beaches with barbed wire. IR .VM "-".uii- '".aw fx -13 VI NIGIIT-WATCII Already bombed by Japanese planes, Darwin SUPPLY BOAT New defense posts are spotted all along Australia's keeps sharp-eyed watch against the foe. Above, a huge anti-aircraft northern, invasion-threatened coast. Above, supplies for an Isolated searchlight sweeps the skies as spotters keep their all-nigTit vigil. coastar outpost are unloaded on the shore. Texas' A(dmirable) M(arksman) "Si. J ss . 1 Honored by Navy I ! a ";- . Herbert Emmerich, former WPB Los Angeles court. The couDle were With a lone soldier as audience. Movie Actor Lew Ayres, right, tells rea- married In 1940. sons or his stand which led to his removal from Hollywood to Cascade secretary, takes oath as new Locks, Ore., conscientious objectors' camp. He's shown entraining at the commissioner of the Federal film capital. Public Houslne Authority. Army's Thundering Guns Blast Targets 17 Miles Away 9 ' ' y "f , X r M&yli&i r 11111: . ......v ....v. . . Af:::;:;::X::'vfo::' r ? 11111 4 w::-: x i-: : ' . v?'.' v yv-y-: yy A - v?-y t-x j A x v. 1; &!iSf!Ai iniiiiii tn mi mii-r J yfi' i yjJfS Jji Lieut 1 1 O"! ff , i J '"X Lieut. John Kimbrough, center, former AU-Americ a fullback at Texas A. and M., shows Pvts. Tom Hall, left, and Lekind Gourley fine points o f rifle shooting at Camp Roberts, Calif. Comm. . J. V. Peterson, Navy flier, has been rec ommended for the Distinguished Flying Cross for leading a ::.!Y T-'" . 1 T 1 A.l L. :M ou Luzon early in the Pacific fighting. - Japs Literally 'Missed the Boat' on This Trip; O' Hare Got Six of 'Em y &:y'yy. V ' J': ?r' yy -MyiyyV'-. . ,; 'i: . :.; ' y ' y ys y y.-yy::- : . : :-: ::;- v:-:r ' :; : . ftiSivJ-::,:;;. : , ;"'s : . ; . 5 t : : . ' t v J -4 I - 1. 'y ii i Skies are calm but there's thunder on the ground at Fort Bragg, N. C, as these 165-cim. rifles fherarmy's biggest send shells hurtling toward targets 17 miles away; Running gunner at left has just pulled lanyard to fire foreground gun while Wa crew crouches ;! at right, some holding their ears. Gun crew in background races to reload their weapon. Here one hase of the epic South Pacific battle of Feb. 20 when 17 xiut of 13 Japanese bombers splashed into the brine after an atDtedf two--wave attack on a task force of the U. S. fleet. Of . n enemy planes downed by the sharpshooting Americans, Lieutenant Edward H. oHare Der--sonally accounted for six. Shown in this graphic photo passed by U.S. censors a column of smoke, right, marks burning Jap bomber downed to tutilo attack on U. SL sircxalt carrier, left. The J ap, disabled by O'Hare. tried a suicide dive at the carrier, but fell 200 yarcia Abort.. Note akyful ' . i,iwr;.t .v.-.., . t of antt-aircraf t hunU, . ' ; , ' |