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Tight-Packed with Trouble for the Japanese

The War Illustrated, Volume 7, No. 175, Page 640, March 3, 1944.

Photo: L.S.T. Cape Gloucester. Crammed to utmost capacity with U.S. Marines, lorries, jeeps, water and water-purifying tanks, oil drums, barbed wire, rafts and food-canisters for dropping from the air, this shallow-draught, ocean-crossing L.S.T. (landing ship, tank), only half of which appears in the photograph, heads for the Cape Gloucester area, New Britain, where a landing was effected on Dec. 26, 1943. A bridgehead was established and Japanese airstrips were captured, from which to continue pounding enemy positions there and in New Guinea. See story in p. 601. Photo, Associated Press.

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I Was There! - The Nazis Bombed and Sank Our Hospital Ship

maa1944

I Was There! - The Nazis Bombed and Sank Our Hospital Ship

Returning from the Anzio beach-head, west coast of Italy, with Allied wounded, the St. David was deliberately sunk by enemy planes on Jan. 24, 1944. The story by Sec.-Lieut. Ruth Hindman, of the Ameri

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Britain's Colonies in the War: No. 3 - W. Indies

maa1944

Britain's Colonies in the War: No. 3 - W. Indies

Under Democratic Constitution offered to Jamaica by the British Government in Feb. 1943, and which it was announced was accepted by the people on May 19, 1943, for the first time in history they will

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