f AGS inns 1PDCTIU) v J-S w.?cj v xyee-g-iqni8iii'. 0-K5AT ATTAC row - A Vv 'T it ran fi cag SS... "COFFtN CORNER" REST POINT FOR ATTACK thm Q12X2GII SUnCMAIt Sofas Oregon. Tuesday lteda Jim 21 1942 M1WS SPORT SHf$ AND VITAti -" - k V, - , - ,' J PCS SAIL IN CENTER . T . K :.y.-:-.-'. aw.' DESTROYER ZIG-ZAGGING OVER 1300-YARD RANGE SLOWEST SHIP SETS PACI FOR THE CONVOY TYPICAL TROOPSHIP 18,300 TONS) Tank. Tfck Dk f Tiooot 4"Gi I Ati-Aircfft Gun Y i Gun T FwM Goto, Anmaaitioa This drawing, by Artist Dick Browne, shows how a. small Ameri can convoy generally is arranged, with the most rital cargoes in the center. Destroyers zigzag along outside and the whole convoy changes its course on a pre-arranged schedule. Rear corners are the most vulnerable to attack because of the difficult angle for the defense guns. Surrounded by oceans, the U. S. must move most troops and supplies to foreign battlefields by Water. Thus convoys play a vital part In winning the war. Mi Arthur Ash Selected the outstanding defense worker-father of the year by the National Father's Day committee, Arthur Ash, 47, of Detroit, is shown in New York prior to go ing to Washington to be formally named the "Yankee Doodle Daddy of 1842." Ash is the father of three sens and a daughter. v ' 1 1 j j A - - l :,; f !,:! t. r ' " if v , ; rU Meet America's champion dressmakers, selected as winners in the second annual National Sewing , The four are. left to right (at right). Miss Madeline McCoy of Manassas. Vs., Mrs. Anthony Zulic of Cleveland, Miss Jane Waddell of Memphis. Tenn and Miss Thelma King of Bloomfield. N.J. Standing opposite the winners are models wearing the creations which won top honors for the quartet. Winners received (100 War Bonds and trips to New York, where they are shows, ' SV - . " - . , if V- SB' i . S 1 4 .1 J 4 , tH! . ! Hard at work down in Australia are the doctors and nurses of the United States Army, shown in two typical scenes, above. A patient is being prepared for the operating table, left, by. left to right, UaJ. J. R. Dolce of Buffalo. Hun Mary a Kin of Detroit, Capt. John W. Gurtn of Chicago, and Nurse I. Colin of Chicago. In the photo at right, a convalescent patient, Pvt. Don Lynch, rides in wheel chair. The nurse is Miss M. O'DanneU of Chicago. On the bicycle is Capt. A. M. Schwartz. -: ' : 7 .; v f , ' V - - . " c - v - , -1- - - , - - - sf O&cial U.S.N vj Photo UnitedStates i Navy encloses that a new type torpedo bomber with a top speed of 270 miles an hour was used against the Jan. hi the battle of Midway Island. Designated officially as the TBF the ulane 1. known as the Gruniman -Avenger The plane has . rang, of 1,400 milesTnoS 2,000 pounds of bombs or one torpedo and a ceiling of more than 20,000 feet. , vT ', y -'.y ' (' N 1 ( t Hew Is a hobby that really Is unusual. Jforrls 2. ttmon, 59, of Mtm Tork, uses a msgntfyinfr tiaaa and the ma's rays to burn bis Me into wood. He Is shown finishing, a historic panel he wflr pro out to President ReeaeveR. Siznon tm a former railroad policeman. s. r r c 4 - mm THE MIST ENEMY AIRCRAFT destroyed over Malta since the war began, was shot down the night of June 6th. Anti-aircraft artillery alone got more than 100 daring the month of April, and this recent picture shows s crew of Scotsmen, with their Bofors gun at a vantage point above Valletta Harbor. Though they have inflicted more than 1300 bomb ing raids on this tiny island. Nasi air strength has been considerably cat down and the fortress is still in there fighting, harassing the Axis supply lines in the Mediterranean, l v v ' " ' V t Xt 'Av - to r : if , - -. vw v a sir: u a Tw. . - :::. - ms. . o t t 7 jo s saw- A iissi i rAViYT"f1"r"W '"1 tfT Cetoael Lester, left, as4 Dinah 8bere Chevron of a first class private was awarded to Songstress Dinah Shore, right above, when she visited the Chice- Army flying school, Chi co, CaL Lieut; Col. Raymond T. Lester is pictured fastenine th chevron to her sleere. wwiw uhi.iihii y r , SieS--flit-' 4 J' . t As dawn b reals over the Atlantic an amy bomber patrolling the coastal waters spoia a torpedoed ship atari its survivors. Tartnf the plane's wing can be seen at the right. In a lifebast (eentsr) the survivors pall awrjr lraea their araking veaatl. After aunmeainfrraee craft to rescue (he survivors, the bomber . went on a hunt for the sub thst sank the shis . v 4 v -.v.v..' j v'S. ,1.1 IM, tfl K " ,m nlr'"'t''a' v ' ii. ir AV't. According to reports from London, an estimated 250,000 German paratroops are massed oa the Island of Crete, ready to descend on Egypt, as they Old in taking the Greek island of Crete last year. Some, parachute troops, according te reports, were need in the storming of Tobruk, the British Libyan stronghold which was taken by the Nazis. These pictures show the actual invasion of Crete by Nasi paratroops last year. They are released by the German propaganda bureau. 4- 4v. v 1 - -t v-.x. 2 "f'L vrr. f if-S '.if-'"- -i - - ir- c'-- 5v 1 a mkw GEZZS FIGHTEE squadron, formed lines thelaH of Greece and equipped with newHurricaM St the German and Italian, in the Bae Jor IJbysLTh, PutharsTto reoch the United States, show to the squadron's pUots lined t insp&lcp tbnrtS S) one of the jrilots, ready to take off for u trght against German planes, and (bo torn, ngt) iuadiesder. euivsicnt a cjrptaifl. with his sleek HBrrkame. which bears the insignu ol tht