CF&I Women of WWIIMain MenuThe Spirit of 1942The Spark Plug ClubThe Nail RoomGoils Make CoilsFemale InspectorsFirst female inspectors, 1946Minnequa School of NursingSally ThompsonWanted for Victory!Giving Money to Uncle Sam"Oh for the Life of a Marine"CartoonsVictory Canning and GardeningThe Steel YBlood DriveTruck DriversVictoria Miller39460033159c0605b61f802e1d65a3994bef40b3Steelworks Center of the West
Oh, For the Life of a Marine
12016-04-19T12:24:24-07:00Christopher J. Schrecka2fcfe32c1f76dc9d5ebe09475fa72e5633cc36d93302CF&I Blast 4/3/1942plain2016-04-19T12:24:55-07:0020160419131759+0000Christopher J. Schrecka2fcfe32c1f76dc9d5ebe09475fa72e5633cc36d
This page is referenced by:
12016-04-12T11:03:58-07:00"Oh for the Life of a Marine"3plain2016-04-19T12:25:35-07:00 Katherine Mihelich, Daisy Radakovich and Rose Mihelich are three Pueblo women out of thousands who considered themselves “citizen soldiers” using their own talents in the war effort. Shown here, they baked just short of 2,000 pounds of cookies, candies and other sweets in March of 1942. The cookies and candies were air lifted overseas to air cadets, coast guardsmen, and soldiers to keep their spirits high.