Duke of Knit Welcomed to Neo York HU royal highness, the duke of Kent, brother of King George VI of England, is welcomed to New York city by Mayor Fioreilo H. LaGuardla. The duke, in a plane of the Canadian air force, landed at LaGuardla field, where this picture was made. He took an automobile for Hyde Park, where he spent the week-end with President Roosevelt, Bombs Explode in Havana A chain of five bombs rocked downtown Havana injuring 15 persons and wrecking store fronts. Police believe the bombs were thrown by an anti-Spanish political group. The store “La Moda.” well known to tourists from Miami and other parts of the U. S., is shown after the blast. ‘Miss America of National Defense’ Alma Carroll. 18, above, captured the title of “Miss America of National Defense" awarded daring the annual Mardi Gras celebration at Venice, Calif., by the army, navy and marines. Candidates were "draft ed" in drawing from goldfish bowl, designating them to represent training camps throughout the U. S. Then enlisted men made their selection. Miss Carroll represented Quantico, Va., marine base. First Lady at Pan-American Girl Scout Rally * w Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt (center) is shown with scout leaders (un identified) as she prepared to address the second Western hemisphere encampment of Girl Scouts and Girl Guides at Camp Bonnie Brae, East Otis, Mass, Behind her are Girl Scouts from North, Central and South -- Now Sorting Nation Training schooner. Yema, cue of America's largest yachts before conversion to IT. S. service, sails from New York on maiden trainin'; cruise with some 1M apprentice sea j men aboard. The ship was present ed to Uncle Sam for $1. Thumb Ride A surprise strike of street cur tad bus operators caused Wt.Mt work ers in Detroit to struggle with make shifts. Here Evelyn Muleski and Daphne Hare are thumbing their way to work. Let the Sirens Blow If all the air raid wardens are as easy to look at as Joan Leslie, well, the more air raids the better, says we. Miss Leslie poses here (in New York) in the first women’s air raid uniform, which is completely fire re sistant and protects body against fragments. Chiefs Meet After a talk with defense leaders, Lord Beaverbrook, British supply minister (left), said be had found Wm. Knudsen, production chief (right), very “honest and generous." LumI mu! \ir M^nnuxifrs at Wes»t Point Ft»mod nahul the tilth iWV u Wtalrr rstami af the Went Pent cadets asm aliag a read ta the TtcinitT *f the l’. S. aWttn academy. Went Pet at, V Y . at the start af the cadets* aaaaal Ml eseeetsea. Pic tare at right shews a tew-dr tag "attaching'* plane getting a hat rerepltna. as cadet Infantry sad aatf-alrtraft gam epea be aa H. 'Love Your Enemies* on Eastern Front Pic lure at Ml shows captured Vaiis reretrkf bread fras lastiu nidi era, accord tag ta the Moscow aad London censor-approved caption, la the ph tare at the riftl Germai troopers are jithf drat aid ta a waaaded Russian soldier. It woaid seem that hath sides ta this tear Me cisitct Mfce to scad sat photos itishf the* men rendering aid to waaaded eaetrties. Mystery Blaze Sweeps Brooklyn Waterfront Darting as close to the flames as it dared go. a cameraman oa a special plane made this onnsoal photo of the conflagration that swept pier £7 in Brooklyn in one of the worst fires in recent years, la the center, between both piers can be seen the Caban liner, Paaaca. ablaze. Scores of firemen were severely injured and some military supplies were damaged. Home from ‘The Wars* MMHai ~ —■MMMMMMiMMI i ■ MWi—IIMMflii————— mil The U. S. S. Wakefield, formerly the 8. 8. Manhattan, is sboun arriving in New York harbor with the force of soldiers who recently went sooth to co-operate with the V. 8. marines In mimic war. Landing exer cise and beach head tactics on the coast of North Carolina were high spots of the "war.” ‘Gold in Them Peaks* Goldminer Frank Gimlett. fan from Colorado, gets Ids first glimpse at New York's architectural peaks. Equipped with pick, shore) and gold pan. he ataad« atop the Pennsyl vania hotel with the Empire State building ta the background. Be Is •C years old. ‘Ears Pinned Back/’ This German plane looks like it had its "ears pinned back." Not so, however. It was a fine, almost undamaged specimen of the latest German fighting plane. NATIONAL AFFAIRS fey CARTER FIELD l . S. and British Air planes Max Be Decisive Fat'tor in W or . . „ Sn?>> stitutes Could Result in Japan's Losing Post* IT nr Silk Market. *toH» —WWV Sw*1W.' WASHINGTON.—Britato has the Germans beaten with regard to fighting places America ss pr-duc uv* the best bcmbmg places la the ' world. Britain to to production on these crack fighting plane* .Amer ica to to production and rapidly ap proaching huge quantity production on the bombers. That ts toe airplane picture of the present war. It to likely to be the decisive factor to its settlement The British fighter to now so superior to anything the Germans have, and to being produced to such numbers— pkas the fact that the training pro gram for the men to fly and fight them to sell under way as told to a prenotis dispatch—that any thought of the Nazis mtoatag air a^cnonty ever Britan to highly unlikely It to ta teres ung to note the rea sons why Britain has excelled to fighters and toe United States to bombers. The whole thought of the British has been devoted since tang before Munich to defense—defense of their island-preventing of fleets of bombers from making a sham ble of their country. Hence they specialized an small, very fast planes with heavy gun fire. or. as the experts prefer to call ft fire power These planes not only had to be fast—w, to heavy tee power—they had to be able to climb quickly, so that when toe fleet of attacking bombers, coming at high speed, were noted they could get in toe air and attack them. Whether they had tang range or not was not important to toe task contemplated. Hence they saved weight and added to speed and ctimbmg capacity by reducing toe amount of gas carried. American Problem Entirely Different Now consider toe American prob lem. as it has bees viewed ever since we lock aviation seriously—or rather swr» the admirals and gen erals have admitted that airplanes are good for something besides sce-_ ting. We planned a defensive war. So we wanted long-range ships—big ships that could fty tang distances and deliver their blows and return. We sacrificed fire power and en gine weight < speed'- to this great de sire for king-distance operation. A “ problem, the West Indies. Hawaii, and toe Panama Canal gives part of the cine to this line of thought. But without going into rhapsodies about this new British fighter let us consider some details. This plane is the new Typhoon. It will replace toe famous Spitfire. Now toe Spit fire bad a speed estimated at about 439 miles an hour. We do not know how fast toe Typhoon is. but ob servers have seen toe Typhoons •walking away” from the Spitfires as speed bursts. The Typhoon is equipped with one engine, the new 'Sabre” made by toe Napier people of automobile fame. Experts say its horsepower exceeds 2.400. and a report to an American news service recently stated it was 2.350. Com pare this with toe Allison engine, which now has 1,350 horsepower, re cently stepped up from 1.050! m • • Japan May Lose Post-War Market Deprivation of her best silk mar ket by the banning of imports by the United States, may not deter Japan so far as this emergency is concerned- It may even drive her into that long-predicted war with Uncle Sam. which most of Japan's statesmen, and practically all naval officers, at the United States, and of other nations as well, have been expecting ever since the first World war. But, reverting to the silk situa ' tion. Japan is likely to rue the day she crossed Uncle Sam so sharply, and not because of any TEMPORA RY silk embargo. The point is that when this emergency is over, when this war is done, and Uncle Sam officially will welcome trade with Japan once more, there may be very little demand in this, the best market in the world, for Japanese silk. Or any other silk! People who are compelled to use substitutes sometimes get to like the substitutes This is not always true. at course. Mad women in this coun try today would prefer to have silk stockings than any of the substi tutes on the market But the sub stitutes now being offered may be no more like the substitutes that will be offered when this war is over than the Model T Ford is like the 1941 version. American manufacturers, more than any other class in the world, are given to improving products. So long before Atlantic liners are steaming up the new St Lawrence Seaway, this writer predicts. Amer ican mills will be turning out stock ings made of substitutes for silk which will be as cheap or cheaper, and as good or better, than any hosiery derived from silk worms.