Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-), 15 Mar 1945, p. 3

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F4E . Hy - 54 1 SE LP LE F ¥ 2 i Nise? ik af ES Ck eRe aka ih ade . Rat db SR ie i on PPE NP A a . doi a Al " Aven HERRERA RASA ALL rr . ' i wy eo a ud * WE HAVE THE 'KNOW HOW' NOW Ww FIGHTING MEN MUST EAT - » OR a A 2--Shelling by Battleship The Germans had four 88'MM., guns on high ground above Calcar which were captured by Canadians in their advance. The Germans never did get around to firing their . deadly 88's of which even Can- adian gunners speak with the re- spect of a horseman talking about Sea Biscuit. ea RAISE COLORS A pose, a , hit} ick th ; iid NE : ods 7 Unel These men, members of a famous Canadian infantry regiment, somewhere .on the German front, reen apprentices in amphibious warfare in the days o ualalcanal an oody Tarawa, Uncle wait in their slit trenches for the order to attack. The Nazi ; : I. Sam's Dace, fighter's now have their master's de yree--but they got it the hard way. Their "grad- " $ 0 Nazis are just np forward of this position, uation thesis" was the winning of almost impregnable Iwo Jima, Illustrated above the steps in . . - , the invasion pattern that has now become classic: enemy air power grounded and planes knocked # } CORNY PICTURE out by weeks of aerial bombardment; the foe driven from beachheads and under cover by pound- ~ing shells and rockets from warships, which also aims to knock out shore batteries; the actual landing, under covering fire; the battle to "secure" the objective; Seabees, on heels of invasion forces, repair airfields for our use, bring in tons of supplies, set up mechanical and engineering equipment; finally, the mopping up of last-ditch survivors, "REUNION IN SCHOONDYKO NON-BOUNCER x1) f= Fo : 2 1a En / A on 4 7 United States fliers bombing rail- / vA ways in Burma found that often a >? xd bomb would ricochet into the ) - ) i jungle. The spike buries itself into Nature was almost too bountiful out in central Nebraska, where there was such a bumper corn a railway tie and the bomb goes crop' that storing and preserving it is a critical problem. In photo above, 24,000 bushels lic on the off where it lands . : gound outside an elevator, at Shelton, Neb. Elevator is full and has a heavy backlog. In hiding since the .Japanese con- 1 quest of the Philippines, these three od U.S. soldiers emerge from Nasugbu island where they spent the inter- | | vening years and sport their trea- sured flag above a native outrigger canoe. They had kept the flag with them throughout the Jap occupa- tion, . DON'T BE AN ABSENTEE --~keep working regularly. GULL GAL Everybody's -happy as Mr. and Mrs. Marten Zoonevylle welcome. to their home near Schoondyko, Holland, the granddaughter they haven't seen since 1821, She is WAC Pfc. Neeltje Zoonevylle, whose parents took her to Sodus, N. Y., when she was 16 months old, She grew up there and now is serving with the USAAF oth Bombardment division, > . FRIEND AND FOE FIND REFUGE v ave. . n rd pr Se a No [A Contributed by : : Sea gulls know a good thing when 3 i g ii y TE _1 4 { - they see it, so naturally they flock German prisoners and their American guards take cover beneath : DAWES BLACK HORSE IBIRIBWIBIRY Wy around comely Lila Lee Loots, at a tank destroyer as a hail of Nazi shells whistles over head, Pris- . St. Petersburg, Fla, making the at- - oners were taken by 4th Division troops of the U.S, Third Army * i tractive picture seen above. during advances across the Pruem Valley. ° " \ / ray VS Se Ay g 3 SEN re AR

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