OCR Text |
Show -------SENTINEL'S WEEKLY FEATURE PAGE OF LATEST WORLD EVENT NEWS PICTURES------ 7 • f Feast Italy; 3 Musketeers; Ingenious Sergeant Ill Military Chiefs Confer in S. Pacific ..,., - Record Catch . /1 "' t • • TIJ {'(._ ___ 1 ... • .\...!Y~Ji'~ .... • , ',... ;:::-: 1 l f Left: Two Allied soldiers utilize an oven in Italy to prepare food which they are going to share with the interested youths. Center inset: These three musketeers clown on the back of a donkey. Right: This sergeant Wallace 1\-fcMiiJan of Winnipeg. Manitoba, president of the Tyee club of British Columbia, poses with the monster salmon he caught recently .. stationed at a bomber base in England devised an ingenious method of pants pressing without electricity. His iron is a mess kit filled with hot rocks. A great deal of military authority was represented in this post in the It is 53 inches long, with a girth ot South Pacific as Gen. George C. 1\larshall, U. S. chief of staff, visited 30 inches, and weighs 60~1: pounds. Workers Make Parachutes to Rhythm of Waltzes Gen. Douglas 1\'lacArthur. Left to right are: Lieut. Gen. George C. This is a record catch. Kenney, 1\laj. Gen. S. J. Chamberlain (holding coat), Lieut. Gen. lValter Kreuger, Marshall, and 1\faeArthur. New Combat Shoe 1944 Death Trap Set for Nazis ' > < ' After months of tests during com- bat conditions the quartermaster I Icorps has developed a new combat r 1\-Jany sided trap which is expected to smash the German military boot which is expected to replace '"' machine and culminate with an Allied march on Berlin. }~rom every the leggings worn by ground forces One of the nation's largest parachute factories is located in do~town Oakland, Calif. It employs 50 I direction men and planes will swarm toward this city which is already and paratroope~s' boots. Private women for every man and all workers produce 1 chutes to waltzes and other soothing music. Left: Hilda said to be a smoldering ruin. From Russia, the Balkans, Corsica, Italy, PaulL. G:-'ble tr•es on the new shoe~ Taylor forces bomb 'chute into cylinder. 1 Chute must snap open at 350 miles an hour and must suspend frag· and from England will come the final crushing blows. Old style IS at left. mentation bomb fer an exact number of seconds. Center: A parachute is examined by Frank Bell of the experi· mental d~partment, Olga Bonelli, army ordnance inspector, and John J. 1\olaggi, head of the firm. Lower right: Louise McCormick tests 'chute harness in specially made machine. -------------------------- - Boat Blast Survivor - = ' Imprisoned Hero Consoles His Son She Cooks Too Tuning Up for New Britain Attack -~ '* '~ ·. -~¥_"'-.. ;, From: • L:B.Jor of. P. S. UOVElll'6UX, USNC Barracks No. o, noom !ro. c·l. 1 = ,I ' I ,_ ! To: lir. Patrick: Devereux o/o ~.,;olonel u. s. J. P. ueloh Arlll:1 Qow'ornor' e .Uland, Nnr QMC., ~ark. Dear Paddy: ou.r loaa Dl&'t JUlve iodeea oeen a shook to you; 1t we.• to me. botn lovec ner so lll.loh. I only wian tnat I could wit:n:ateh tnlt are 1.ncJ.eea. rort.unat.e to ll&Ve ~-~~~:;!_"!_:"~:~~,to w a oroe.dce.at. ...<lo••~r•e ~· s1ve Be wre and \7r1te everyone saytnB you thela lll;f love. ... photo of a letter by Lieut. Col. James P. Devereux to his son, ·~ Ellen Laura North, 18, HollydaJe, Calif .• who was selected queen of the Great Western rodeo by a board of cattlemen. She has won many riding cups and ribbons. She also plays the accordion and is reported to be a good cook . --~~~ ,.,.,,~- Paddy, 10. Be received it at the home of his grandmother, 1\lrs. J. P. Welch of Burlingame, Calif. Devereux was a major stationed on Wake island when the Japanese attacked. When Devereux was asked if he wanted anything he replied with the now historic phrase: "Send us more laps!" -Carter Glass, 86, Is Oldest Senator ... .....-- .. Assorted Cutlery for Combat Troops • Waterpower Damage -- Carter Glass, Democrat from Virginia and oldest member of the United States senate, is shown as he read many letters sent by friends on the occasion of his 86th birthday. He is recuperating from a serious illness. Glass said that he believed a victory in 1944 was possible and that he has 11 the utmost faith in every man and woman in the armed forces.'' Congressman Albert Gore of Ten· nessee (left_) who was accepted as ~n army P~•vate. at F~r.t Ogletho~pe IS. sho~ ~scussmg military serv1ce wtth his neJ~hbor, \Vash Reed. father of seven children. • J . · · Servicemen s(ationed in the South Pacific displ:;ty assorted cutlery used in jungle warfare peculiar to that theater. This assortment ranges from spring-blade penknives to machetes. The men are Pvt. John D. JlUcAullife, Coastguardsman Charles A. Kiernan, Coastguardsman Charles G. Allen and Pvt. lVilliam E. Verace • • I This picture, taken on the ocean 1 front at Redondo Beach, Calif., shows how tides and pounding waves ! have turned the concrete walkway into a series of broken b~cks. j |