Four members of the 6-member posse tracking famous crime couple Bonnie and Clyde. These are the posse who killed Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker. Posing for a picture are (left to right) : Deputy Sheriff Prentiss Oakley, Sheriff Henderson Jordan, Deputy Sheriff Bob Alcorn, of Dallas, and Deputy Sheriff Ted Hinton, of Dallas, Texas.
Funerals of Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker. Dallas County Sheriff Smoot Schmidt seated at desk. He introduces his deputies, Ted Hinton and Bob Alcorn who were members of the posse that killed Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker. They give a brief account of the killing that took place in Bienville Parish, Louisiana. Crowd enter the church to take a look at Clyde Barrow's body at his funeral. Clyde Barrow being buried at Western Heights Cemetery and Bonnie Parker in the Crown Hill Memorial Park in Dallas, Texas. Clyde Barrow's family present during Bonnie Parker's burial.
FBI agents working inside the FBI headquarters building perform fingerprint analysis. Agent performs the Fire Arm Identification. Identification done through fingerprints. Agent operates the computerized finger print reader. Solution being put on a suspects rifle for his fingerprint identification.
The Landing Craft Tank Flotilla 29 at the Naval Supply Depot, Theodore, Alabama. The Landing Craft Tank Flotilla 29 at a dockyard. A crane removes supplies from boxcars and loads them onto the ship. Civilian workers load ammunition boxes. The workers hook loaded cartons as they are lowered by cranes. The workers wheel a large box of ammunition on a cart into the open bow door of the ship.
Documentary film 'The Jet Engines' about the develpment of an American jet airplane, with help of the British who provide General Electric Company with a prototype engine developed by British RAF Group Captain Frank Whittle. A B-17 aircraft taxis and takes off from the runway. Vehicles carry U.S. Air Forces officers and civilian engineers to an airfield where a man stands with a gun next to a U.S. Army Air Forces B-17 Flying Fortress aircraft. The visitors look at cargo containers being offloaded from the aircraft. They contain a prototype British Whittle turbojet engine. Scene shifts to meeting of executives of the General Electric Company with U.S. Army Air Forces officers. They look at schematic of the Whittle engine. GE officials commit to building an American turbojet engine to power U.S. Air Forces airplanes.
U.S. Air Force officers consulting with General Electric executives about production of an American turbojet airplane engine, a month before receiving a prototype Whittle engine from Great Britain. Workers are selected for the project. Views of the GE plant at Lynn, Massachusetts. Project manager, Donald F. Warner, is seen at the Lynn MA factory discussing modifications from the Whittle design to correct problems with impellers and other parts.Views of affected parts. Person being fingerprinted as part of security actions.
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