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Zurich Herald, 1944-08-17, Page 3ARMY BAKERS, 'UNDER CONTRASTING. CONDITIONS Y Here are two Canadian Army Bakers plying their trade under contrasting field conditions, Pte. P. J. Olivex of Montreal, (left) is taking a course in field cookery and is shown constructing an oven out of bricks, mud and oil drums. At rightanother cook in one of Canada's modern kitchens, that at Webb Hall, District Depot No. 2, Toronto. Army cooks and bakers must be able to turn out their products under any conditions they meet, in permanent establishments or in the field. RED HEROINE Her friendly smile belying her fighting heart, 20 -year --old Sen- ior Lt. Ekaterina Novikova poses for the cameraman. Commander of a Red Army infantry company, the 20 -year-old heroine has been wounded five times and has been twice decorated for distinguished conduct in action. THEY'LL BE BACK, FRITZ! Photo above, received from a neutral source, was taken in Caen, France, when Germanss still held the city. It shows a German sol- dier in a bomb -wrecked street looking up at British planes streak ing homeward after bombing the plade. What appears to be the head of one of his comrades, behind him, is merely window display dummy blown into the street. CLEARING N,•:RMANDY BEACHHEADS Landing craft damaged during "D" day operations in No.. xnandy beach leads are cleaned from the, sands by ar•-. .:ngineers. 'COME OUT OR ELSE' ON GUAM Although surrounded by U. S. Marines who ordered them to sur- render, Japs in a hidden pillbox refused to give up. So Marine at extreme left in photo above makes things hot for them with flame thrower while his buddies crouch behind log cover. 'CAPTURE' NAZI EQUIPMENT French civilians are pictured bringing German small arms and a light field •piece, left behind by retreating Germans, into Brehal, France. Note youngster hitching a rid on barrel of cannon. HOT ENOUGH FOR YOU? Just in case the heat's getting you down, shed a tear for Santa • Claus. Complete with fur -trimmed winter coat and chest -heating whiskers, he had to come all the way down from the North Pols to attend the annual advance showing of Christmas merchandise in Chicago. Salesgirl Betty Jane Cargill doesn't look like a cooler -offer, either. hol Pi DESTRUCT1OM Vital vc s or Fit Day and night, Allied bombers carry their crushing. destructive might far beyond the enemy flagging lines. Daily the tempo of the war's world-wide battle mounts . , and daiiy the demand for War Alcohol grows. For planes, and countless other materiel of war, Alcohol is vital. War Alcohol is used in the plastic binder of plywood planes and gliders; it is In the plastic plane -windows the synthetic tires and oxygen masks, the de-icing fluids, the anti- freeze even the paint on the fuselage; it is in the propellant that sends shells screaming Eli enemy strong -points. From Alcohol too, comes carbon -dioxide, the magic life-saving gas that smothers flame as quickly as pinching out a candle, or inflates—just as quickly—the life raft- and life belts that keep men afloat till help arrives. Today—and as long as the need lasts --every Hiram Walker and Gooderharn & Worts plant, is distilling War Alcohol to bring Victory neared SERVING TFU UNITED NATIONS WITH WAR ALCOHOL HIRAM WAILKriR Et SONS WAITE