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Show 1 w OTMJ 1 ews in ID) Q tares Envoy's Wife Sues PAGE SIX PROVO (UTAH) DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1943 Hot Air for Cold Noses 1 Halts Farm Draft . "iwUUVk. . w - - i NoTABsenteeism Here Because of Children f5 (U. S. Army Air Forces Photo From NEA) Here's how they warm dp cold warplane motors in AiasKa. iasonne-iea "wiws, uxuw iw a . i-1 . 1 T O l . I . . ,n 4- n f XT i n t-1 torn through pipes into canvas-covered engines to onng pianes inte uiis a-o cuuiua uy w ujrxs perature qujckly. Slayer Confesses Colorado's Gov. John C. Vivian has prompted a showdown on the farm labor draft question by ordering a halt to induction of farm workers in his state. (IEA Tele photo) Mrs. Prancoise ae La Puente, above. Wife of the former Los Angeles Peruvian Peru-vian consul, is shown as she filed suit for divorce in two courts, charging charg-ing her husband with misconduct with Mrs. Evelyn McX-e, wife of airlines air-lines executive, Mark T. McKee. These San rancisco women don't use children as an excuse for being absent from work on their community victory garden. The mothers simply bring children an d play pens to the garden, park them close to the plots being worked and go on about their business of growing vegetables. Di Mag Plays Again for Army :vj Vf mil mfl I And So the Poor Dog Had None Private Joe Di Maggio, left, is back in a baseball suit after six weeks of wearing khaki as a member of the U. S. Army at Santa Ana, Calif., air-base. air-base. Joe is shown autographing baseballs for the fans as his team played against the Fullertou Junior Colleen Clouds and Camouflage i- . i i ' X NSK f l" 5 , S f - , - , El Im I nywwtw - r J? f' SK, ' V ... -y 6' . .Jf Jr rNfc.' j' The dog, and the rest of the family, found the cupboard bare when it came to meat, for pre-ration rush left many stores and households house-holds completely out. Anne Doherty of Rochesier, N. Y plays Mother Hubbard. Bowl Bid for Rams (TiEA Telephoto) Raymond Latshaw, above, 19-year-old farm boy sought for the killing of five members of his family at their Loomis, Calif., home, is shown in a Los Angeles police station after his capture at a downtown theater, where he was employed as usher. He holds the gun used in the murders. Wins Air Medal Under a sky of peaceful clouSs, camouflaged Douglas A-20 attack bombers get set for a takeoff at an advanced U. S. airfield in Tunisia. April Fool? - ' s S V " ;.. f ""y- - a Jjfl-W' ' It's the Rose Bowl all right, but not a pigskin in sight as these rams, lambs and ewes go into a huddle over a tasty section of grass near the goal line. The prize Karakul sheep are expected to keep the turf in good condition at the famed Pasadena stadium. tn f,. f ... I- Army Nurse Lieut. Elsie S. Ott, 29, awarded an air medal by Gen. H. H. Arnold at Louisville, N. Y., is the first woman to win , this award. fa Is -: - 1 r,M,j' 1 V-" sfffT .c vs - Up the Hatch a , I I - - tlo," It's not a mirage. San Francisco meat dealer looks happy" about thlg tig pjJg of meat ready to fee sold ori the. ration plan. King-size St Bernard puts a protective paw t around 24-ouace 24-ouace Chihuahua at Los Ange- wes dog showj i3 Up. the. long ladder in the escape hatch from the boiler room of U. S. ship doing Atlantic convoy duty climbs a crewman. If tor 1 pedoes gtrifcg, hc'U maHe thg wwayd journey in doublequjcJi unaj i in j, nil I Miiirnij.iT---Ti-.r- i... - L . .1 . - J luiiijiiiiiii n in - l n III III . ... ' ' . 1 . 1 1 '"j" - . .;' ivJ v f On guard against any enemy, attack on the wooded British Columbia shore are these Pacific Coast Militia Rangers. Armed with rifle, ax and map, these Canadian sharpshooters patrol the picturesque western wilderness where a foe might conceivably hide. They are also trained for guerilla warfare. From One Great Statesman to Another f ' Madame Chiang Kai-Shek, second to right of wiite wreath, pays homage to Sun Yat Sen, founder of tna Chinese Reublic. by placing a wreath at his statuo durine her visit to San Francisco. British Wounded Get Quick Treatment in Mareth Battle r ii V vfr v. sap s rEJ Radio-Tele photo) Casualties ran high during the storming of the Mareth Line by the British Eighth Army but treatment for the wounded came auickly.. Medical Corpsmen are shown giving wholesale fire" aid to injured Just behind the frpntA. 'J I 1 9 |