Hitler’s Dream Is Shattered By Allied Victory European War Cp^t More Ilian Trillion Dollars, Six Million l ives By CARL. C. CRANMER Associated Press Staff Writer Germany's dream of world con quest has come to a shattering end with the collapse of the Reich which Adolf Hitler* boasted was to endure a thousand years. Ended is the European phase of the second great war of the cen tury, a war which, is estimated to have cost close to $1,000,000,- 000.000 tone trillion) in money and the lives of more than 6,000,- 000 men. The collapse of Germany was foreshadowed last July/ 20 when an attempt was made to kill Hit ler and seize power by what the dictator said was a small clique of “foolish, criminally stupid" German officers. Whole World Fooled This revolt among Hitler's en tourage, coming almost exactly a year after the sorry lackey Benito Mussolini had been broken in It aly; the rapid advances of Rus sian armies in the east, the drive of Allied armies in Italy, and the success of the most difficult am phibious Invasion in history, the invasion of Normandy, ail sug gested that the German army was approaching a debacle. At the start, the war looked to the world, grossly underrating preparations, like the throw of a mad adventurer. It turned out that the Allies snatched victory only after hair breadth escape from defeat. Hitler opened it with a razzle- dazzle of propaganda, secret weap ons, armored spearheads, bombing armadas, parachute troops, fifth columns and political sleight-of- hand which quickly established "MIu as a sinister Barnum of war. First Global W ar Before it ended, merged .with the war in Asia and the Pacific by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, it had been fought on / all the oceans and continents. “In this war there will be no victors and losers, but merely sur vivors and annihilated." Hitler threatened, and accordingly ■ he set a pace for ruthlessness and cruelty unprecedented in modern war. The conflict became: A War of Secret Battles—long silent struggles to smash his in vasion fleet , off Britain, to mas ter the submarine which imper iled the United States’ as never before, to crush robot bomb launching sites in France. A War of Secret Weapons—in which the Allies with radar, a brand new conception of massed fleets of invasion barges, the tech nique of mass bombing through clouds, and a host of inventions, outdid Hitler. War in the Air-in which whole armies of millions engaged. For the first time the capitals of great nations and scores of other cities were marked for methodical de struction. A War of Cities — Stalingrad, Leningrad, Odessa, Sevastopol, Cassino—whose streets, and hous es were turned into trenches and forts. A new technique of battle in the rubble of cities developed. London was blitzed, and Berlin shattered. A war underground between Quislings and armies of resist ance, and a war of psychology' in which the Four Freedoms and the Atlantic Charter were used to combat Nazi ideology. A war fought in the extremes of weather and terrain, from Af rica to the Arctic, in the world’s worst bogs and jungles and most inaccessible mountains. Flying Bomb Advent The war saw the advent of the flying bomb and many different rocket weapons, the blockbuster, rapid firing guns which made ar tillery barrages more intense than ever, mass mobility of tanks and vehicles, the air-borne army, the flying battleship, amphibious in vasion on a grander scale than ever. All this was started about 3 o’clock on Friday morning, Sept. 1 . 1939, when German armies in vaded Poland. Despising the Poles too much to declare war formally, Hitler an nounced only that he was answer ing “force with force." With smug conceit he declared, “I am putting on the uniform (the field gray of the German army) and I shall take it off only in victory or death.” The War on Poland Hitler planned a blitzkrieg—a lightning war—and probably nev er expected that England and France would do more than wage a token war when they say the uselessness of trying to save their ally. Amazing armored spearheads sliced through the Polish cavalry divisions to the Wisla (Vistula), trapped a huge army in the Kut- no area west, of Warsaw and an other at random to the south. In 18 days Hitler boasted of vic tory in a. speech at Danzig, though it was Sept. 27 before Warsaw, battered to a, pulp, surrendered. Hitler claimed 300,000 prisoners. Taking cognizance of British predictions of a long war—three years—Hitler declared he was ready for a seven years war. The same day Joachim Von Rib bentrop arrived in Moscow and two day’s later concluded with Russia the. fourth partition of Po land and an agreement to bring pressure upon Britain and France to make peace. The “Phoney War” Great Britain and France served an ultimatum on Germany on September 1 and declared war on Sunday, September 3, while Lon don evacuated her children and waited breathlessly for the bombs to fall. None fell. This was the “phoney war." On September 3 the French an nounced that their army had come “in contact” with the Germans, I but the French preferred to have I the Germans throw themselves on I the Maginot Line and struck into flje ^ailg Abvarpt VOLUME: XXXIV THE DAILY ADVANCE, ELIZABETH CITY, X. C. VICTORY EDITION Saga of the Austrian House Painter WhoTried to Conquer theWorld As a baby. In World War I. On release from prison,’in 1924. 'T'HE HOUSE PAINTER (1889-1924): The turbulent life of Adolf Hitler had its humble beginning at * Braunau. Austria, where the “little man with big ideas” was born April 20, 1889, the son of a drunken petty official Hitler’s early life was an unhappy one, both at home and later in Vienna and , Munich, where he went as a youth to work as a common laborer, house painter, and newspaper sketch artist ,.^ .. . Serving as a corporal in the Bavarian Army during World War I, Hitler was wounded, gassed, and | later decorated. After the war he joined with a group of six men, the original National Socialist Ger- J man Labor Party In 1923 came the Munich “beer hall revolution," when Hitler- led an uprising ; against the government and proclaimed himself dictator | Sentenced to jail for five years (he served only eight months), he spent his prison time writing “Mein Kempf,” wherein a portent of things to come was set forth as “A state which, in an age of racial pollution, devotes itself to cultivation of its „best racial elements, must some day become master j of the earth”. q”HE RISE' TO POWER (1924-36): After his release from prison in 1924, Hitler began to form his *■ party and gather his henchmen—Goering and Goebbels were among the first. By 1933 Hitler’s powar forced President Von Hindenburg to appoint him as chancellor of the Reich. The reign of terror began, with the burning of the Reichstag, arrest of 500 Communists, suppression of newspapers and Abe; political parties. All civil liberties were banished, and with the creation of the Gestapo bj Goering, the bloody persecution of the Jews began. Hitler quit .the League of Nations and disarmament conference, and in 1934 signed a non-aggres- sion pact with jittery Poland. Hitler became President on Von Hindenburg’s death that year and assumed the title of “Fuehrer.” \ During 1935 annexation of the Saar, creation of the Luftwaffe under Goering, and breaking of the Versailles treaty all presented sharp contradiction to the Fuehrer’s 1933 Reichstag speech, when he shouted, “Germany wants nothing that she is not ready to give to others. The German people have no thought of invading any country.” 1 “ “ * ” ' ' * Poles weep as Hitler and Blitzers invade in 1939. Hitler directs war with Russia. the ex-Duce in 1943. 1944 army revolts augur civil uprisings as in 1918. Hitler rescues BEGINNINGS OF CONQUEST (1936-39): The Nazi march toward European domination began in , when German troops, breaking the Locarno Pact, occupied the Rhineland. Next came- forma tion of the Rome-Berlin Axis, when Hitler joined with Mussolini in a partnership dedicated to war Find aggression. In 1937, all Nazi male youths were ordered to. work or military service and with the entire German nation now behind him either by choice-or domination, Hitler sent an'ultimatum to Austria. The bloodless occupation followed in 1938. t ^7'^ n ’"al in g. 200,000 troops on the Czech frontier, the Nazis refused all offers of concessions of }, pless nation. Chamberlain became the symbol of democratic appeasement when he signed the Munich pact, giving Hitler 11,000 square miles of Czech territory with a population of 3,500,000. In bis same city—where the Nazi “beer hall gang” met each year to celebrate founding of the party— HiTle narrowly escaped death in 1939, when a bomb wrecked the shrine just after he left. l! " o 5^ u P a ^ on of Austria and Czechoslovakia came just six months after Hitler told the world There is no nation in the world which longs more for peace than Germany.” * German territory only for a few thousand yards near Sarbrucken. Their “offensive” never developed- The British were dropping leaf lets on Germany all winter long as Hitler alternately threatened “total war” and held out hopes of peace. Norway and Denmark Ori April 9, 1940, the war broke out with all it’s fury. Hitler's troops slipped into Denmark and invaded Norway by sea and air. A few goosestepping soldiers and a military band marched in and took Oslo. Soldiers hidden in the holds of previously-arrived ships seized Narvik, Bergen, Stavanger, Trondheim and other coastal points. The British, caught napping, landed a few thousand Allied troops on both sides of Trondheim and later at Narvik, but were forced to withdraw. On April 30 Hitler proclaimed a complete vic tory, and within a short time Al lied troops had withdrawn. Battle of France May 10 the great blow in the west fell on Holland. Belgium, Luxembourg and France. The fate of Germany would be sealed for 1,000 years by the outcome. Hitler told his soldiers. Swarms of parachutists descend ed on the airports near Rotter dam, the Hague and Amsterdam, seized the bridge at Moerdijk, south of Rotterdam. The vaunted Dutch “water line” proved inef fectual. Holland fell in four days. The Nazis overwhelmed the Belgian fort, Eben Emael, and rushed their columns across the vaunted 1 Albert Canal near Maas tricht. In three days German tanks surprised the French, seized Se dan and were racing for the Eng lish Channel, with fleets of motor- cyclists spreading fire and terror ahead of the armored detach ments. The Germans reached.the chan nel at Abbeville on May 21 and King Leopold announced the sur- WORLD WAR invaded Poland, with invasions of ings of Hitler and Japan’s Kurusu, for a year later the Pearl Harbor attack came. Hitler erred gravely in 1941 when, after swallowing the Balkans, he invaded vast Russia. Early successes were followed by increasing retreats here and in North Africa after U. S. entered the war By the end of 1943 Germany had also lost Sicily and part of Italy „, . Allied invasion of France in June of 1944 forced a three-front war on Germany, already re treating in Italy and Russia Revolt of his army clique and attempted assassination brought on a “purge” of Nazi officers, as the Fuehrer "dodged blame for military disasters. Faced with humiliating army retreats and continual air bombardment, Hitler crouched in his ever-shrinking “Fortress” and desperately told his people that “Victory will one day compensate each and every one of us for the sorrows suffer ed and the sacrifices made.” render of his 300,000-man Belgian army on May 28. Then Game Dunkerque Dunkerque, the British epic of the war, in which a strange ar mada of 900 warships, skiffs, tugs and yachts rescued an army of 337*000 men from the beaches, was over by June 4. For four years the Kaiser's armies had fought .to win control of the channel ports. Hitler got them in less than a month. In vain Gen. Maxime Weygarid set “mousetraps” for tanks along the Somme. Turning south on June 6, Hitler brushed aside the vaunted French army. The Magi not Line was turned. The French government evacuated Paris June 10, the same' day Mussolini com- .mitted his “stab in the back” and sent troops into the border area of France, where they dug in without any attempt to help Hit ler clean up Taking over thp French goyern- I ment, Marshal Petain announced 1 on June 17. “with a broken heart." II 1939-44): After signing a non-aggression pact with Russia in 1939, Hitler’s troops England and France declared war on Germany, and Hitler answered them in 1940 Denmark. Norway, the Low Countries and France. Significant were the 1940 meet ¬ that he had been compelled to ask I Hitler, as one soldier to another, 1 for an honorable armistice. The high point of the, war—for Hitler—came at Compiegne on June 21 in the railway car where Marshal Foch had dictated peace terms to Germany in 1918, and France signed an armistice. Grandly pleased by this revenge for the “Dictates of Versailles,” Hitler visited the tomb of Napo-j leon. Battle of Britain Most popular song in Germany | was “we’re sailing against Eng land.” Britain seemed helpless. 1 She had lost all but a few score j guns and tanks. The RAF was outnumbered. She fell back on hastily organized home guards to fight from haystacks and hedge-; rows. Hastily importing hunting ri fles, old tanks and World War guns from America, Prime Minis ter Churchill hunched his head down between his great shoulders 1 and declared, “we will fight on 1 the beaches and the landing grounds, in the fields, in the streets, on the hills. We will never surrender—” - It was Britain’s time for blood, and sweat, and tears. Grimly, 700 Spitfires and Hurri canes opposed the entire German air force. British fighting planes mounting eight guns, and radar, which gave warning of coming raids, probably saved the British in the aerial battle that lasted from August through May. But 50,000 Britons died from bombs. September 15, 1940, when the Ger mans* lost 185 planes and were forced to switch to night bomb ing, has been called one of the, de cisive battles of the war—a Wa terloo or Trafalgar. In September and October the Germans were assembling their invasion fleet of 3,000 barges and 4,000,000 tons of ships. Not until 1944 did Churchill disclose the rea son v by the Germans never in vaded England—--the invasion fleet (See HITLER page 2 Impact of War 5 In Europe Felt Lightly In America Except for Materials and. Lives Expended Abroad Conflict Hardly Felt By DAVID TAYLOR MARKE Associated Press Staff Writer It was September 4, 1939, just one day after England declared war on Germany, that the physi cal impact of the European cos flict hit the United States—with the sinking of the British Liner Athenia. Three hundred Amer cans were aboard, and 30 died. The United States invoked the neutrality act, curtailing business activities with the belligerents Travel to Europe was banned ex cept for “imperative reasons.” Thousands came home. Harbors from Halifax to R10 De Janeiro were filled with idle ships and stranded men. Despite armed guards aboard 27 Italian ships interned from New York to Florida were effec tively sabotaged. Similar Axis ac tion followed in ports throughout the Americas. America Not Immune Prosecutions for sabotage, libel suits for millions of dollars against Axis vessels- and their cargoe. plus the sinking of the U. 5 3 Reuben James in American wa ters; the torpedoing of Latin Am. erican, vessels off the shores of the U.S., Central and South Ar - erica and the islands of the Garth bean, all punctuated the fact that, no shore of the Americas was im mune to war. The battle and subsequent scu' - tling l of the German pocket bat tleship Graf Spee were witnessed by thousands at Montevideo. Ship yard workers could see the phy sical damage wrought by war, as they were kept busy repairing Al lied merchantmen and warships. Then came the actual attack 6: the United States and most of ths Am e ri cas were at war. More than 283 American ves sels were sunk, often within sight of American shores, as Axis sub marine warfare reached a new fury. Thousands of spectator? watched flames sweep merchant men from Canada to South Am erica. Survivors of torpedoed ships began pouring ashore, more than 1,000 at Miami alone during 194. Shattered bodies, wreckage an.i oil slicks strewed stretches of beach for thousands of miles. West Coast Felt Attack Submarines crept close in shore to the Netherlands West Indies in February. 1942. to shell Anuta, huge Standard Oil refinery and to sink tankers in the harbor there. Then sank 20 vessels after creep ing right into the St. Lawrence River. The west coast, too, felt the Axis attack, and shells ones fell in California. The supply .of oil for civilian cars and homes was sharply cut and sugar and coffee stocks san 1 -' to new lows, necessitating ration ing. Fishing boats were sunk. So serious did the off-shore at tacks become that general din. out restrictions were ordered to reduce the glow against which ships were silhouetted from th* sea. The United States establish^?! air bases in South America and transferred warships to Latin American flags to combat the submarine menace. Two days after Pearl Harbor the heavily industrialized eastern seaboard from New York to Bos ton experienced an air raid alafn. “Unknown planes approaching flashed through defense office. Navy patrols soared along the coast and more than 300 plane from Mitchell Field took to tt - air. Fire and police sirens serean: ed. Civilian Defense volunteer and plane spotters manned the posts. Millions of children were dismissed from classes. Thousand'- of employes were rushed out of vital defense factories and Army and Navy centers. It was a false alarm. Saboteurs Brought Problem Even before Pearl Harbor the Americas, sheltering half a mil lion refugees from Europe, felt their internal security -threatened by the infiltration of dangerous aliens. Saboteurs tried to slip in as refugees. This Country alone held nearly 1,000,000 German, Italian and Jap anese aliens, to be augmented la ter by prisoners of war as Allied- arms swept triumphantly throng s Africa, Italy and France. Escaping prisoners kept tt j Americas on the alert. Citizens of Axis origins, aiding and abetting these internees to escape, when swept up by the FBI and local la enforcement agencies, tried and sent to prison. Six saboteurs sneaking in by submarine through Long Island and Florida were caught and exe cuted and two others were sent to prison. So were 33 member? of the dangerous Dusquesne Spy Ring, and 16 others of high de gree. These obtained information of the greatest, military value which, through counter-espionage, was rendered valueless before it could be transmitted to Germany. Scores of high Nazi leaders were (See IMPACT page 6)