The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 25.03.1944, Síða 2

The White Falcon - 25.03.1944, Síða 2
2 ffuRLOUGIH ffiflPPy- ^ tbss-Do-Tf ------------o» Ant. ^lieQnrrf Artritcifrjy Story Behind Great Britain’s Mysterious Rocket Guns Revealed For First Time Revealed for the first time early this week was the story behind Britain’s rocket guns, one of the most closely guarded military secrets of the war. The unusual weapons, which hurl “acres of explosives” into the air, have been used by British anti-aircraft defenses against German raiders since the outbreak of the pre- sent conflict. Each measuring about six feet long and four inches in diameter, the rockets contain a propelling charge described by the War Of- fice as “one of the most effective yet known.” Now being manu- factured in great quantities in the States, the rockets have been developed considerably since they were first used and are now being employed in various theat- ers of operations by American Wolves in Norway? —British Girl Ponders The London press reported this week that a giant wolf, eight feet long and claimed to be one of the biggest ever seen, has been caught in the mountains of Nor- way. Reading this item a Brit- ish girl commented, “I didn’t know the Yanks had landed there yet!” forces as well as by the British. While the announcement said that the rockets were originally designed to hold off low-flying aircraft, such as dive-bombers, they have also been used effec- tively against bombers at high altitudes. Fired in groups, the rockets form a spectacular pat- tern when they explode. How much the rocket-gun bat- teries have contributed . to the defense of Britain was not dis- closed. Civilians Get Miami Hotels Again In July All Air Corps training schools at Miami Beach, Fla., will be transferred to the San Antonio Cadet Center, Sheppard Field, Texas, it was announced by the War Dept, this week, thereby re- leasing a total of 39 hotels for civilian operation on July 1. According to the announce- ment, classes now training in Miami hotels will be completed, but future classes will be sent to Texas. Ace Pickpocket Dies Flat Broke James Wallace, a 73-year-old pickpocket, known as the “Black Prince,” who has acquired about a million dollars worth of loot during his half-century of crime, died in Toledo, Ohio, this week. Also known as “The Black Pearl,” Wallace died almost broke after living in grand, story-book style all his check- ered life. He started his light- fingered career in Australia and was on police blotters all over America. Strangely enough, his last court appearance was in the no- vel role of complaining witness in June of ’43. HC was a familiar figure to residents of Toledo, where he walked the streets' in his best attire, wearing a dia- mond stickpin and twirling a cane. EVERY PAY DAY BOND DAY Warring: Fronts Bombings There was no let-up in Allied bombing raids on Germany this week as huge air armadas blast- ed Frankfurt, Berlin, the Pas de Calais area of France, key Nazi railway yards at Hamm in Cen- tral Germany, the Luftwaffe sta- tion at Achmer, the Werl air- craft park, the Handorf bomber base, and numerous other targets located in Germany and German occupied territories. More than 1,000 planes partici- pated in Wednesday night’s at- tack on Frankfurt, rapidly be- coming one of the most bombed cities in the world. It is report- er that 3,000 tons of bombs were dropped on the city in this raid. Italy It’s still pretty tough going in Italy. Nazi units facing the Fifth Army have been strongly rein- forced and are said to be staging many savage counter-attacks. Al- though the Germans are suffer- ing heavily in casualties, their stubborn resistance is' slowing the Allied advance northward. Entrenched in the hills, the Nazis are pounding the Allied lines with heavy mortar and artillery fire. Shortly before dawn on Wed- nesday, German long-range guns shelled an American tent hospi- tal on the Fifth Army beach- head below Rome, killing five soldier patients and wounding 11. This latest Nazi attack on Aiherican hospital areas in the beachhead zone brings the total of persons killed to 33; 74 have been wounded. Russia Nikolaev, important German- held port on the Black Sea, is the present objective of the fast- moving Soviet forces advancing in the upper reaches of the Cri- mea. Powerful Red Army units are preparing for the final at- tack. Backed by heavy artillery, Russian units are almost at the gates' of battered Nikolaev. At the same time, in Bessara- bia, another army of the giant Soviet military machine continu- es to roll toward the Prut River which separates and forms a na- tural boundary between Bessara- bia and Rumania proper. Farther north, around the southeastern tip of Czechoslo- vakia, Russian forces have slice their way to a point 55 mile* from Cenauti which is locate beyond the Dniester River in a gap of the Carpathian Mountains leading into northwestern mania. Ru- Pacific Major fighting broke out in India this week for the first time in the war. The Jap forces which crossed the Indian border from northern Burma are reported to have been engaged in close-quar- ter operations by Allied units under the command of Lord Lou- is Mountbatten. A communique from Lord Mountbatten’s headquarters stat- ed that Japanese resistance m north Burma is stiffening on the coastal plain south of MaungdaW and Arakan and in the western foothills of the Magyu Range- Farther east, Jap troops mad® six attacks' against Allied posi- tions west and south of Buthi- daung. All were beaten off by Allied troops. While the ground fighting in southeastern Asia gains momen- tum, Allied flyers continue to pound Japanese communications. U.S. medium bombers, dive bom- bers and fighter-bombers’ attack- ed targets in north Burma on Thursday and inflicted severe damage on enemy gasoline dumps, buildings, and transport facilities. a « • Even ,Nags Not Exempt GI’s living in the field aren t the only ones eating concentrat- ed rations these days. After con- siderable research on the pro- blem of how to provide a less bulky item of food than a bale of hay for Army horses, the VS- Dept, of Agriculture has come op with a food concentrate f°r them, too. The amount of hay that would ordinarily be fed to a horse wTas cut down by four-fifths, and alfalfa meal and oystershell flour were tossed in to guarantee the needed proportion of vitamin81 and calcium. The whole works was rolled into a pill, a few hundred of which will keep most normal horses well, happy, and contented all day long. Male Call Milton Caniff, creator of "Terry and the Pirates" MISS LACE, DITCH THEM DOUGHNUTS^ AM' LETS YOU AM' ME GO OUTSIDE AN' NECK FOR ABOUT 30 MINUTES', OF COURSE, GENERAL -BUT I PROMISED TO, BREAK A CAN OF SPAM OVER A NEW SECOND LIEUTENANT] - Bagged By A J.A.C.P lift Copyright 1943 by Milton Coniff, distributed by Ceatp Newspaper Service » ANY PROPRIETOR, manaser or EMPLOYEE OF A THEATER OR OTHER PLACE OF PUBLIC ENTERTAINMENT r WHO DISCRIMINATES ASA INST ANY PERSON LAWFULLY WEARING THE UNIFORM OF THE U.S. ARMY, NAVY, COAST GUARD OR MARINE CORPS, COMMITS A MISDEMEANOR AND IS LIABLE TO A FINE OF 4500..." n

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The White Falcon

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