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Show U. S. Soldiers Play at Opposite Ends of Earth Nazi Baking Bread for Our Doughboys Re-Captur- mji U. S. Joins Russia in War Pact ed w ms Keeping pare u ith the rapid expansion of the army, the Fourth Corps Area School for Balers and Cooks, whose parent organization is at Fort Benning, Ca., has groun from one sthool tilth a personntl of 16 to eight schools located throughout the Fourth Corps area, and tiith an especially selected personnel of 212 enlisted mem. 1 he function of these schools is to train selected ofTicert and enlisted men in the theory and practice of cooling, balms nutrition and mess management, as util as the use of equipment i h s e r j v i f i 1 1 Johnny Doughboy can now See the green grass under the Icelandic snow and Ice, and In the picture at the right we see him organizing a game of baseball with the use of a broom handle. That is Jack Reisny. der, first class private, at bat, with Sergt. Laurence Cumiskey both from Ohio catching. At the left C. S soldiers, stripped to the waist, play a game of badminton in the heat of Australia. Private IT illiam Claycomb of The next step in bread-makinBlairsville, Pa., U'cighs the in- is to dump a bag of flour into the mechanical mixer. gredients for bread. g RAF Pilots and Red Troops Are Inspected Peter Krug, recaptured Nazi flier Foreign Cpmmlssar V. M. Molotov, greeted by high ranking U. S. shown as he was being government officials upon his arrival at Washington, D. C., airport. His returned to Detroit as a witness arrival, which was disclosed by the White House, had been kept strictly against his host, Max Stephan, the secret. Molotovs visit marked the signing of a mutual assistance agreee proprietor of a German restaurant. ment pledging increased aid to Russia, including support of a Stephan had aided Krug to make his second front against Germany in 1942. Shown, left to right, are Gen. escape. George C. Marshall, Secretary of State Cordell Hull, Admiral Ernest J. prisoner, lend-lcas- Aid for Greece King and Commissar Molotov. In e Thousand-Plan- Raid on German City - rV - ,.vii W Priiate So f ness of Boston, left, Priiate J. R. Boners of Henrituts the mixed dough as it comes Olla., removes the mixed etta, from the mechanical mixer. Prifrom the trough to the vate Click of IS civ York operates dough bench where it will be kneaded, the mixer. lie seems to like his job. i w; J King George II of Greece, who First picture of a bomber crew, composed entirely of Australian fliers, arrived here for a scries of conferences with the President to plan aid standing by the Stirling bomber that came back from the great raid on of the for his conquered country, lie was the German industrial city of Cologne. Crews from ail parts British empire were participants In the raid in which more than 1,000 a guest at the White House. planes rained high explosives ai.d Incendiaries, doing terrific damage. Gn. Sefik Cakmak, chief of the Turkish air staff, Is pictured (at left) when he Inspected the Air force pilots based somewhere In the Middle East. And at the right bis royal highness, the duke of Royal Gloucester, brother of King George VI of England, inspects the crack Russian troops billeted in Teheran, Persia. Army Flamethrower Takes Pillbox Hope for Tires rr News for Motorists After First Jump With Nylon "Chute f , ; t f I ( J A . . k a i I S k I I 1 v V - v - f After the dough has set for 24 hours to rise, it is placed on this workbench where it is kneaded, weighed and placed into the pans for immeeliate baling. s ? !. . I j - y 1 ; 1 1 V Anthony Morrh, New York Inven tor, exhibits his method for convert in; water into gas for aotos. One of the bottles contains water and sodium. Connected with the battery, the electricity generates hydrogen gas which can bum. It costs 5 cents per gallon to produce. Morchs exhibit was a highlight of the Inventors exposition in New York. There is now in large scale production an artificial rubber (think-ol- ) whigh promises to help carry the nation over its critical tire shortage. Above, John Lange is shown painting synthetic rubber on an old tire at the Thiokol plant at Trenton, N. J. Any number of coats of thiokol may be applied to a smooth surface tire. After the liquid has dried it will stand up well and give satisfactory mileage. Hail Native Land Most Bombed Man tf7 rnmmy, fc! II , ) i L 4 jf- Soldiers in th j timbers set up a covering fire while a completely equipped flamethrower (top) plays the lethal stream of fire on a pillbox during chemical warfare maneuvers at Edgewood Arsenal, Md. Below: Two soldiers of the 31st engineers capture the occupants of a fortified pillbox after a raid at Edgewood Arsenal. The C. 8. army has perfected equipment that can be carried by one man. flame-throwi- Millions and Millions of Travel Miles Adeline Gray, girl parachutist. Is shown being assisted by friends after she had made the first test jump with a nvlon parachute at Hartford, Conn. Miss Gray Jumped from 2,000 tret in the presence of army and navy observers, and representatives of the Pioneer Parachute company, makers of the nj Ion chute. The successful jump assured army and navy pilots of a constant supply of parachutes when the nations stockpile of silk is exhausted. Discuss WAAC Plans in Washington r t S In the picture aberve, Priiate i I A. G. Hodges of Galax, Fa (right) pulls the bread from the baking ovens, while Private Joseph Adams of Rochester, IV. Y removes the baked bread. Right: Dumping the hot bread. VC x 1 r 7C i i .'J t J These great stacks of old lires make rubber mountain ranges over more than 20 acres of ground near the reclaiming plant of a large robber concern in Akron. There are millions of miles of travel represented here, and many an Amrriran will now look back with regret at the days when be wasn't quite fair with his tires Seymour and Beryl Everett (left to right), children of the first secretary of the C. 8. embassy at Vichy, reach the aafety of Americas shores. The children were bora in Europe. r t i ? k yA 1 f i lo ,w. it i i i i t 4 Gen. William Dobbie, governor of the British bastion of Malta during two years of daily bombing, shown on arrival in England after being relieved by General Gort. Shown above, left to right, are Mrs. Maurice Moore of New Xork city, chairman of the IsO national womens committee; Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby, director of the womens army auilior eotp-.- ; and Mrs. Pearl Case Blough, secretary of ISO services for women and girls, as they discussed C gets fully under way. (Sound-photwhen the W plana for futnre . who is o) V 4 |