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Show THE SENTINEL'S WEEKLY FEATURE PICTORIAL PAGE THE SENTINEL, MIDVALE. UTAH Friday, February 9, 1945 Page Seven Old Feud Renewed Supplies for Luzon Invaders Regular Diary of th~ Life of a Girl's Dog • When President Roosevelt announce(! the appointment of Henry ll'allace (above) as Secretary of Commerce, Jesse Jones (below) re- Supplies are being landed on Luzon from LST which was under fire from Jap artillery at the time. Now that regular supply routes have been opened to Luzon,· tbe invading 6th army will be able to continue newed their old feud and told contheir rapid advance into tbe enemy territory leading to the recapture of gress that \Vallace was unsuited for Manila and the rest of the island. the job. • "Beau," the 8-months-old Welsh Terrier Playmate of little 1\tary Frances Matthias of Woodside, L. I., N. Y., starts the day with a kiss. Lower left, Beau is furnished with a babushka. UJJper right, time for tea, and Mary docs the honors. Lower right, arter a hard day at play the two pals retire t'or the night. 1\lary does not care for dolls, finds that she bas more enjoyment with her faithful pal, Beau. Army Malaria Control Program Proves Effective G.I.'s Teeter-Totter The Fourth Term Inauguration Photo shows ceremonies on south portico of 'Wbte House as President Roosevelt takes the oath of office from Chief Justlce H:lPian F. Stone. Charles Cropley, clerk of the court, is hoJdicG" tl!e oM Dutch bible. Col. James ltocsevelt, in uniform, stands with his i<:.t!rcr for the fourth time during inauguration ceremonies. This G.I. just couldn't resist the temptation to stop and teeter-t-otter with these three Filipino girls in the ' town of Dagupan on Luzon in the j Philippines. General Krueger and his 6th army bad just taken Dagu· pan. Tea, Poi and Spaghetti Bowls Burmese Temple Rest Lower Jeft, American soldiers spraying sides of streams and checking for isolated pools that might breed the deadly malaria mosquito in Corsica. Upper left, this A-20 bomber is laying a dust of paris green over the swampland territory near 12th air force fields on the island. Upper right, Corsican marshes are cleared by native laborers to eliminate the breeding place of the "Spotted Wing" mosquito. Fighting Admirals of Pacific j Unable to attend the Rose, Cotton, Sugar vr Orange bowl football classics, members of the armed forces abroad had their own classics. Lower, cheer leaders at Spaghetti bowJ, Florence, Italy. Upper left, action during the Poi bowl classic at PearJ Harbor. Upper right, the Tea bowl game at London. On sidelines are Dagenham girl pipers along with benched 8th air force men. I I Underground War! Yankee ingenuity is called into play and this 11insulated" foxhole is Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker has evolved on the Belgian "bulge" front. Hay and straw provide insula- warned of a long underground war tion against the weather. A blanket covers the door into the impro~ by botb Germany and Japan after vised shelter. Shafts of a bayrake provide roof supports. Tbe tenant is Allied victories. Be has visited aU fighting fronts. 1st Sgt. Albert Luis, I.Uancbester, N. H. l ' Snow Insulated G. I. Foxhole At Tonkwa, Burma, in the shadow of a Burmese temple, a U. S. 1 soldier pauses at the grave of an American killed in action when the Mars task force met the enemy in thls vicinity. A plot has been cleared for the American cemetery. It will be landscaped. - - • Car of Tomorrow? This is the before-and-after of how a plain, garden-variety U. S. army jeep was transformed into the use· dan or jeep of the future," by men of the 8th air force in England, using only saJvagecl material from Fr:om left to right, upper, three naval fighters, Rear A'lm. Frederick crashed-up jeeps and junk piles. A Carl Sherman, Rear Ad1n. Gerald Francis Bogan and Rear Adrn. Harold large number of the first-made jeeps Bushnell Sallada. Lower, left to right, Rear Adm. Joseph J. Clark and have already been offered for sale Vice Adm. John S. 1\fcCain. These five admirals are writing new and to the public. 1\-lany servicemen glorious pages of American naval history. desire postwar jeeps. j Bombsight Aids Accurate Hits Wants Nurses' Draft Maj. William E. Smith, Hapeville, Ga., is seen with the Norden bombsight witb wbicb he has accurately dropped 4,000 tons of bombs on enemy targets in France, Belgium, HoUand and Germany. Be is bombardier of aU. S. army 9th air force, B~2!J' Marauder, with one of the best records of accuracy among many excellent records. Maj. Gen. Norman T. Kirk, sur~ geon general of the U. S .. army, baS asked congress for immediate pas~ sage of a law authorizing the draft· ing of nurses. |