I'm pretty sure the bow belonged to Ralph Hulbert.
“Before leaving the States I bought a take-down Osage which I’ve been able to keep with me and with which I’ve shared many enjoyable hours. In case you’re interested, the bow was made by Fred Thomas of Denton, Texas, and has a Gibraltar lock-on handle. It is 59 inches from nock to nock with limbs two inches wide, is rawhide backed, pulls 92 pounds and needless to say, shoots quite fast. I had a bit of trouble controlling it at first but it now shoots my 3/8" fir shafts pretty close to where I want them most of the time. Targets have been entirely of the inanimate variety so far but I’ve carried bow and broadheads on a couple of combat missions and eventually may catch up with something more lively than a wind blown leaf. The Colonel saw me shooting a few weeks ago and later expressed the desire to “have an archer on every night patrol”–should keep me busy." Ralph Hulbert - "Archery" April 1945
I included his exploits during WW11 in an article titled "Silent, Flashless Weapons" published in the Dec/Jan 2010 Traditional Bowhunter.