THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1941 " $ ' ' 1ZIZ WAYNESYILLE MOUNTAINEER Page 15 Gathered By A Camera New Bomber Captures Nazi U-Boat Navy's New Sky Giant Takes an Airing 'Nice Work, Old Pal!' M f ; V ) 0 f - I ' 5$. . , -.-v.. - v .-N ;;;:- . ' ' : --" '-'V AY? "X ::: . - 1 0 V&l&i. . ' Rolled from her hangar for the first time, theMartin XPB-2-M-1 bomber, built for the U. S. Navy, is Bhown at the Glenn L. Martin plant in Baltimore. The flying battleship hat a 200-foot wingspread. The amall ship in the foreground is a Culver Cadet and gives some idea of the hew navy fighter's tremendous size. Details of armament and performance are a secret, but the ship will soon be put through exhaustive rsu. Miss America of 1941 Ronald Coleman receives a congratulatory kiss right In the eye from his three-months-old pup, Chub, after winning a lapel medal for writing the best letter on "Why I Own a Dog." The contest was sponsored by the Greenwich Village (N. Y.) Humane League. Chub's brother, Doc, is a bit too tired to express his sentiments. Ronald has seven other pupa and their mother at Wa Jersey City, N. J home. CP. Radiophoto Nazi submarine, captured in the stormy Atlantic by an American- it Lockheed bomber in British service, is seen from the air after up forced to the. surface by explosives and surrendering under chine-pun firer Officers from British warships summoned by radio i be seen traveling by float to the sub, which was towed to port on Rations for U. S. 'Chutists - ' , 1 - M ' r f . - I- 4 v , I r 4 y " s A f ; r I Reinforcements for America's Front Line JILL jHt iri T ...v.".; . , . . &. m J il 2 ! ' . ? f " - it V. i" 4 4 I .....w'M;. j . ... -i -- Old rt" America's rising tide of fighting craft Is swelled by the launching of two cruisers, the keel-laying of a third and the reopening of the century-old Cramp's Shipyard at Philadelphia. Left, the 6,000-ton Atlanta goes down the ways at Kearny, N. J. Center, Cramp's workmen start work on the 10,000-ton Wilket-Iiarr. Right, the San Juan, expected to prove one of the navy's fastest ships, makes its baptismal plunge at , : Quincy, Mass, He's the Top Elk Heads Air Station Dad Aboard Montam t Col. Paul P T u. nn-Ama4a f.tvrrm In WftfihintrfnTl. explains the new "vest pocket" rations devised for U. S. para- inree complete meals, rich in vitamins ana minerals, m into ' boxes. Dinner, tnr namnU. onnaiifa nf picht vitaminized crackers. a pep tablets made of dextrose, three ounces of ham spread, a tub ox bouillon and a stick of chewing gum. Nazis Menace Turkey Anew Walking across the stage in Atlantic City, N. is beautiful Rosemary LaPlanche, 18, California college sophomore, who was named Miss America of 1941 in the annual pageant of pulchritude. She finished second in last year's contest ' . Southern Hospitality l-V'"'"-' 9fraDB)BIWBTJ El, nzst VA - t- ' SJ?, S S S S S A- l C VJ5- SAliiOIABA9IA fv it I Grand Exalted Ruler of the Elks for 1941-42 is John S. McClelland of Atlanta, Ga., pictured at tho con vention in Philadelphia. He will rule the national body until the con vention next year. To Feed Europe Commander Edward 0. McDonnell stands at attention a the order is read putting him in command of the naval air station at Floyd Bennett Field, New York City. His pre decessor, Coiunander Donald F Smith, was ordered to report to Norfolk, Va for sea duty. Margaret and Gunnar Knudsen, children of Captain Martin Knud sen of th Montana, torpedoed off Greenland, are shown at their horn in North Bergen, N. J. Friends re vealed the Danish captain had been warned not to serve on an Allied ship or there would be reprisals . against his kin in Denmark. SCOWS SCRAP BOOK ., By R. J SCOTT J ) B? fiT" wh Turkey is increasingly nervous about Nasi aggres- lorcinv Tn.i is -ii. l. tTifiav mmn it naval inorit. - luio line wiui mi - - I wom Russia in the Black Sea and open a route for attaolt o tha oil-rick Caucasus from tho rear. Hot coffee proves a welcome pick-me-up for Private John Hcbert as he takes time out from the greatest peacetime maneuvers in U. S. history and samples southern hosp'tality offered by Mrs. Annie Our and her husband near Lake Charles. L. ' sjiiiti.it, i 'i milt j r s mrsL kmu. ar p TV As chief economic adviser to tho British government, Sir Frederick Leith-Ros, shown at his desk in London, has been placed in charge of accumulating a great reservoir of food and other supplies into which hungry Europe ' may dip after the Nad yoke ia lifted." IUK : t TV Jig mi uutii5Htp m Siberia. tiA-f at DtAMOMDS. PEA.R.LS, S.ME.RA.LOS. RUBIES AMD RARE. FEAfrtERS, WCI4 TloKfH OVER. A MILLION DOLLARS

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