“Served ByLeased Wire Oi The ^ W’ ■ - 1#S; tlmmgtnn armttg&tar ~Er VOL 49-NO. 58 -- WILMINGTON, N. C.. TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1943 ESTABLISHED 1867. " ALL GERMANS EXPELLED FROM VORONEZH AS BlA RED DRIVE ROLLS A' _ .. -—- HP I near tikhoretsk Newest Area Gained Is Close To Vital Junction Below Rostov PRISONERS ARE TAKEN Capture Of Railhead Would Draw Noose Tighter Around Foe (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Tuesday, Jan. 26 —The Red army rolling west ward on a 500-mile front has expelled all the Germans from Voronezh, upper Don citadel, and reached a point 40 miles from Tikhoretsk, key Cauca sian rail junction below Ros tov. Moscow reported today, and Premier Joseph Stalin has ordered his troops to hurl back the invaders “over the boundaries of our mother land. A special communique heard here last night an nounced the complete occupa tion of Voronezh, which the Germans had seized narthi in their summer drive. Eleven thousand more prisoners were reported taken to make the total for that front 75,000. Belaya Glina Falls The midnight communique told of ;he capture in the Caucasus of Belaya Glina, a 12-mile advance since Sunday. It put the Russians only 40 miles from Tikhoretsk, where the Stalingrad-Novorossisk and Roscov-Baku railways meet. Tikhoretsk’s capture would draw a firmer Russian noose around the big Nazi 'rasa of Rostov toward which Soviet troops already are fighting 56 miles east of Rostov and 70 m'Jes to the north. It also would cut off the retreat of Nazi troops based between the Tikhor etsk line and the Black Sea—ex cept by evacuation to the Crimea across the narrow Kerch straits. Russian troops in the lower Cau casus already are menacing Kro potkin 40 miles south of Tikhor etsk, after seizing Armavir to con (Continued on Page Two; Col. 5) _V_ 'BEN HELD. HERE ON DRAFT COUNT FBI Arrests Pair For Fail ure To Give Change Of Address Because they failed to notify their local draft boards of changes in address, two white men have been arrested here by FBI agents on charges of violating the Na tional Selective Service act. Craig Kensenger Baker, 35-year °bi seaman whose address was iist e.i as New York city, waived a pre liminary hearing before U. S. Dep th Commissioner W. A. Wylie, .v. end ay morning and was bound over to Federal court at Philadel phia. under $2,000 bond. He was returned to the county jail here in default of bond to await transportation to Philadelphia. The "arrant charges that he violated 'he act, by failing to notify Local board Number 4 of Philadelphia his, changes of address. Baker was arrested in a rooming noH!® here Friday night. agents here Monday morn I'ng said that Grady Kelly Ward, on Page Six; Col. 3) New Major Nazi Red its Predicted By Axis Radio _*_ Stalin Demands Rout Of Germans And Full Expulsion From Land (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Tuesday, Jan. ZB. —Premier Joseph Stalin in an oTder of the day broadcast by the Moscow radio today said that the Red army had ad vanced 245 miles in two months and captured more than 200,000 prisoners, and he demanded: “Forward to the routing' of the German inva ders and their expulsion over the boundaries of our mother land.” “The offensive of our troops continues,” he said in the or der, reported by the Soviet ra dio Monitor here. Stalin’s call for the expul sion of the Germans from Russia indicated that the So viets had no intention of slack ening their huge winter drive that already has rolled the Germans back from the Volga river and is threatening to wipe out all the Nazi gains of last summer and fall. The Russian leader said 1BZ Axis divisions had been routed in the westward sweep, and 13,000 guns and a large quanti ty of other enemy equipment had been captured. PROBE INTO AP SUIT DEMANDED Indiana Solon Wants Inves tigation Of Federal Action , WASHINGTON, Jan. 25—UR—A new demand' for an investigation of circustances “surrounding and leading up to” the Justice De partment’s suit charging the As sociated Press with violation of anti-trust laws was made in the House today by Representative Harness 1 E-Ind). Harness introduced a resolution to create a special seven-man com mittee to make the investigation. A resolution calling on the judi ciary committee to conduct an in quiry was introduced last week by Representative Shafer tR-Mich). The investigation proposed by Harness would be for the purpose of determining “the truth or falsi ty of assertions that the bringing of such action is a part of a plan to restrict or destroy the freedom of the press in the United States.” In a statement prepared tor tne Congressional record, Harness said he believed a special committee should be named because“this action directly and vitally touches basic private rights specifically guaranteed in the bill of rights in a way which should make it of paramount interest to the whole house.” The burden of the government’s complaint against the Associated Press, Harness said, is that it “illegally restricts the use of its news-gathering and news dispatch ing facilities.” that it has no right to restrict its membership, and that it illegally requires partici pation members to furnish locally gathered, news to the association’s membership. * Asserting that publishers ’ with out regard to their immediate re lation to the case” have denounced the suit as an attack on freedom of the press or a move to benefit “publishers who are administra tion supporters,” Harness said: “The unadorned facts in the case convince me that either or both counter-charges may be justified.” The Indianan said the character (Continued on Page Six; Col. 6) Hansen Girl Expressed Desire To Meet Actor LOS ANGEllES, Jan. 25.-W—A ht. . e te soda fountain girl, Mona /S,day told the iUfy try fJL rro1 Flynn on statutory rape in §es tilat one of the complain fnL^tn,esses> Betty Hansen, in pi ed her she hoped to meet m, ,antl get into the movies "hh his help. AIiss tVlervyn said she worked a drug store where Miss Han a H'dcoln, Neb., girl, was B '."y^ :or two wekes. She said , 1p told her she considered ‘y™ good looking. defense switched to testi Ul|j about Miss Hansen after (•.mooing as its first witness rp- Hubert L. Oliver, of Glen I dale, Calif, now stationed at a Texas Annoy camp. Oliver said he was employed by Flynn as a seaman on his yacht, the Sirocco, that he was aooard the vessel the night 17-year-ola Peggy la Rue Sat terlee, the othei complaining wit ness, contends she was seduced by the screen stai. Oliver 'testified he heard no dis turbance or outcry and that Flynn, to his knowledge, was not below deck at the time of the alleged attack. Flynn, Oliver said, was at the wheel all the way home. Asked if he watched Flynn all the while, (Continued on Page Six; Col. 4) SAY VORONEZH LOSS Berlin Claims Intention To Shorten Whole Of Red Front BY THE ASOCIATED PRESS More major German retreats to “a new main defense line” were predicted yesterday by the official Nazi news agency DNB after the high command announced the evacuation of “the bridgehead of Voronezh” and again pointed up the plight of their Sixth Army trapped west of Stalingrad. “The German high command plans to shorten the whole of the Russian front and to build up a new main defense line,” a DNB broadcast, recorded in London by Reuters, said. Undersecretary oi war Robert P. Patterson said Sunday in Bal timore that it appeared that the Russians might force the Germans back to the Dnieper river. The latest in a series of official pronouncements about the Stalin grad force, as recorded in New York by the Associated Press, said: “In heroic and self - sacrificial fighting against overwhelming su periority, the Sixth Army at Stal ingrad attached immortal glory to its colors.” The communique said fragments of the Rumanian 20th infantry and first cavalry were fighting beside the Germans, esti mated by the Russians to have shrunk from 220,000 to less than 40,000 starved and chilled men. Lord Haw Haw, the Nazi broad caster, went further in a broad cast beamed toward England and the United States, saying there was nothing left for the Germans at Stalingrad but death. “There is such a thing as giv ing life to create life,” Beflin’s English - speaking propagandist said, “in this moment of history it may be that death is the surest (Continued on Page Two; Col. 1) T7 OPA WARNS FUEL COUPON HOLDERS Dealers Must Turn In Cer tificates Or Stand To Lose Permits Dealers who hold IOA certifi cates for oil, given them by con sumers, have not turned the cer tificates in and therefore stand to lose their permit to receive addi tional supplies of fuel oil, it was announced here Monday night by officials of the New Hanover War Price and Rationing board. Last Saturday was supposed to be the final day for submission of certificates by fuel oil dealers to the ration board, yet the cer tificates were not forthcoming, board members declared. The RaVon board, as a favor to dealers, and to avoid hold-ups in oil distribution, is willing to accept IOU certificates from deal ers. Thoughtful action on the part of dealers and primary distributors will result in immediate surrender of the certificates, the board em phasized. Bottled-up oil supply will bring addpd hardship to consumers should a cold wave strike the area. Meanwhile, until the IOU cer tificates are handed in, wholesale distributors are unable to predict their needs or to release oil sup plies to negligent dealers. WEATHER Forecast: For North Carolina Continued Mild Tuesday. Tides For Today High Low Wilmington -12:51a 1 55a 1:10p 8:33p Masonboro Inlet-10:34a 4-39a Moore’s Inlet-10:39a 4.44p New Topsail Inlet-10:44a 4:49a (Elmore’s) ---;,U'i2p, s -13p (All times Eastern Standard) WASHINGTON, Jan. 25—(ff)—Weather bureau report of temperature and rain, fall for the 24 hours ending 8 p. m. in the principal cotton growing areas and Station , High Low E’fall Atlantic City-« J6 0.00 Boston- « 38 0.00 Burlington- 42 14 0.00 Cincinnati_——-3° u,uu Denver -_ 30 17 0.00 Duluth _ 1 20 °'00 Fcrthworth- 24 21 0.00 Jacksonville - 8° 62 JJjJJ ifpV West _ 80 68 0.00 Louisville_ 63 46 0.60 Aieridian - 88 66 0.00 Minn.-St. Paul- 4 16 0.00 New York-52 33 0.00 Pittsburgh- 62 43 0.00 Richmond— - 77 48 0.00 Savannah_ 79 58 0.00 V.'Cksburgh - 70 60 0.00 Washington-.1- 70 40 0.00 {Supreme War “ uncil For V lies Seen United Nations Reported To Have Reached Big Agreement OFFICIALS ARE SILENT Momentous Announcement Of Plans Believed Coming Shortly LONDON, Jan. 25—(JP)— The United Nations were re ported tonight in diplomatic circles to have agreed on a formula for some kind of a supreme council to direct and unify efforts to win the war in 1943. s British, United States, Rus sian and Chinese officials re mained silent on the grand strategy talks known to have been under way, but it is no secret that some extremely important announcement af fecting the Allied conduct of the war is imminent. Unification No Secret It is no secret either that a unification of strategy has been high on 1he Allied agenda f o r months, nor that as part of this unity, great attention is being giv en to the problem of coordinating Allied armies in North Africa un der a single command. The British Eighth Army com manded by Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomeiy under supervision of Gen. Sir Harold Alexander, the Middle East commanrer, is near ing a junction with the British First Army, the U. S. Fifth Army and the French all under the di rection of Lieut. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, the American. Recent speculation has centered on Gen. George C. Marshall, U. S. Army chiei of staff, as command er-in-chief of Allied forces in the European theater. Walter Farr cabled to the Daily Mail that “keen observers” in Washington predicted the Marshall appoint ment. He also said that Vice Ad miral Sir Percy Noble, head of the British Admiralty delegation in Washington might be placed in charge of a united campaign against submarines. Noting the great volume of public discussion, some observers viewed many rumors as having been planted de’iberately to obtain pub lic reaction. If so, the renewed public, of ficial and press attention to the submarine menace must have placed the U-boat problem high on the Allied agenda, along with the resolution of French political differences and wide scale offen sive for 1943. The cry for offensives to crush Germany, Italy and Japan has come increasingly from critics who expect an intensification of the German submarine campaign with 500 to 700 undersea craft. These critics assert that the an swer is harder bombing attacks like the week-end assault on such submarine lairs as Lorient and Brest, moie patrol craft and more escorting craft, particularly the small, speedy boats and destroy ers, for convoys. AMERICANS SLASH A T NAZIS WITHIN STRIKING DISTANCE OFROMMEL’S RETREA T LINE General Montgomery’s Mesage To His Men This is the message that General Montgomery, c ommander in chief of the British Eighth Army, dis tributed to liis men on the evening of the attach on T ripoii, Mussolini’s one-time colonial citadel. British troops raced on west toward Tunisia where Allied forces were mopping up Nazi chutists. Montgomery’s inspiring message said in part: “Nothing has stopped ,u s since the battle of Egypt began on October 23, 1942. Nothing will stop ns now. On to Tripoli.” This is a r adiophoto. United States War Production Figure Outstrips Allies WASHINGTON, Jan. 25—UP) The United States has now out stripped the war production rate of every other Allied na tion and has supplied $8,253, 000 worth of lend-lease goods and services to other countries from March 11, 1941, to De cember 31, 1942, Lend-Lease Administrator Edward R. Stet tinus, Jr., reported to Con gress today. The furnishing of lend-lease aid declined from a peak of $915,000,000 in October to $810, 000,000 in November and $757, 000,000 in December, the re port disclosed. Walter Lippmann Says: Lend-Lease Opposition Most Unsensible Thing By WALTER LIPPMANN The Associated Press reports that the Republican leaders in Con gress have decided not to support an attack on lend-lease. No other decision was possible. To oppose lend-lease today, to suggest that the United States should not do all in its power to help our Allies fight our enemies, would be just about as sensible as to suggest that we economize by closing down the Panama Canal and dismant ling Hawaii. The British Isles, Russia and China are so obviously vital to us that Senator Wheeler, for example, who was no enthusi ast for lend-lease two years ago, is now proposing to defeat the Germans by relying almost en tirely upon lend-lease shipments to our allies That is going further than a pru dent estimate of the facts can jus tify. But it shows what a political howler the Republicans would have made if they had taken the position that only Americans must use American weapons, and that Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hopkins must not be allowed to deprive Amer icans of the privilege of fighting a good Dig bloody single-handed war against the Germans and the Japanese. • Lend-lease will be continued for the same reason that it was adopt ed two years ago, once the com pelling logic of supporting our Al lies has been laid before the peo ple. What is more, the underlying principle ot lend-lease will for the same compelling reasons be ex tended into the period which fol lows immediately upon the armi stice and lasts until order has been restored. This will be done, not because we are Lady Bountiful or Santa Claus to the human race, but be cause at bottom our vital interests demand it. Once the realities are examined, the case will be so ob viously compelling that public men who are now committing them selves to oppose it will wish they had not been in such a hurry. The testimony which was brought forward two years ago against the adoption of lend-lease will show, if we read it now, that the op position thought we had a free choice between “intervention” against Hitler and “staying out of the war.” They would not and gpuld not believe, though the mat ter was explained to them, that Japan and Germany were allies in aggression and that, if Britain fell, Germany would attack us in South America while Japan ran wild in the Pacific. A month be (Continued on Page Two; Col. 3) French At Marseille Revolt Against Nazis (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Jan. 25—Revolting Frenchmen barricaded themselves inside their homes in the old port district of Marseille tonight and began fighting German troops who called up tanks and artillery, reports from Switzerland said. The revolt in restless France broke out after German occupation authorities and their puppet Vichy regime headed by Pierre Laval ordered the' evacuation and razing of the en tire area of 40,000 persons. DNB dispatches to Madrid and Lisbon said that 40,000 persons al ready had been arrested, but a few hours before the Vichy radio said only 0,000 had been rounded up. A Reuters dispatch from Zurich said that an undetermined number of Frencliment dug up their guns, fortified their home as best they could, and began firing on every German soldier approaching. The German troops then summon ed artillery and tanks and began besieging the French in a house-to house fight in the labyrinthian sec tor of narrow dark streets. The Marseille fighting highlighted the increasing trouble encountered by the Germans and their Vichy regime throughout the country. The Berlin radio broadcast a Vichy dispatch late tonight admit ting that the Marseille drive was “not only against ordinary crimi nals, but also against various secret political organizations which have settled in the city.” (Laval’s regime was saia xo nave carried out 10,000 “investigations" of Gen. Charles de Gaulle’s fighting French adherents and Communists, and the Nazis themselves have ar rested ”500 persons every month” since the occupation. Trouble has flared up previously in Marseille, where the Germans are busy fortifying the coast against (Continued on Page Six; Col. 5) NOTICE! If your carrier fails to leave your copy of the Wil mington Morning Star, Phone 3311 before 9:00 a. m. and one will be sent to you by special messenger. i ” AMERICANS GAIN IN PACIFIC WAR Important Territorial Ad • vances On Guadalca nal Reported WASHINGTON. Jan. 25.—(#1—By air, by sea and by land, American fighting men going into action in the Solomons over the week-end made important territorial gains against beleaguered Japs on Guad alcanal island and inflicted heavy damage on the enemy over a widely scattered area. The operations, a Navy commu nique disclosed today, resulted in capture of the village of Kokum bona, seven miles west of Guad (Continued on Page Two; Col. 2) FRENCH MARCHING Le Clerc’s Forces Now West Of Tripoli Near The Mediterranean NAZIS STILL RUNNING Part Of Desert Corps Now Behind Mareth Line In Tunisia (By The Associated Press) LONDON, Jan. 25—A raid by American troops to within striking distance of Marshal Rommel’s line of retreat along the Gulf of Gabes in Tunisia and sharp progress of the Fighting French columns seeking to hit his flank, were disclosed today as the bulk of his army poured into Tunisia for a possible rendezvous with the forces of General von Ar nim. Allied headquarters in North Africa announced that American troops had thrust into the town of Maknassy, capturing 80 Axis prisoners in an area only 33 miles short of the Gulf of Gabes, and Bri gadier General Jacques le Clerc’s headquarters reported that the Fighting French were now operating west of Tripoli and had only 50 miles more to go to reach the Medi terranean. Critical Phase Near Rommel’s retreat from Libya, meanwhile, had taken most of his forces some 60 miles within Tu nisia. Field dispatches reported that all his Italians and the great er part of his German corps were behind the Mareth line in south ern Tunisia, and a critical phase was approaching in the Allied ef fort to cut him down or seriously weaken him short of any juncture that the American action at Mak with von Arnim. There was nothing to indicate that the American action at Mak nassy ■ was more than a raid in force, and U. S. military sources here warned against expecting an (Continued on Page Two; Col. 4) ALLIED BOMBERS POUND JAP SHIPS Flying Fortresses Stage Another Raid On Rabaut Area ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA—(Tuesday) Jan. 26— (.T1)—A strong force of Flying For tresses spent more than two hours over the big Japanese base (lC Ra baul on New Britain island around midnight Sunday and went as low as 200 feet to plant hits on one ship probably laoded with munitions and blast a large hole in the side of another. The first vet ’^''exploded. Anti-aircraft and search lights were intense as the big bombers came, in low to assualt 1 the oft-bombed base where 20.000 1 tons of shipping was reporfQu des troyed last week-end. Other Allied bombers made smaller raids on FinscMiafen and the New Guinea ports of Lae and iEaiamat^i. The Japanesef for their part,- confined their raid schedule to light night attacks on Port Moresby and Milne Bay, New Guinea. &. Negro Cook Questioned In Pullman Berth Dearth LOS ANGLES, Jan. 25—W)—Po lice today questioned a Negro cook about the slaying in lower berth 13, and took statements from two women who said they were on the same train. Robert Folkes, 21, was second cook on the train on which Mrs. Martha Virginia James, 21-year old bride of a Naval ensign, was fatally slashed in the throat. The slaying occurred as the California bound train was nearing Klamath Falls, Ore.. Saturday. Folkes told detectives R. B. Mc Creadie and Vernon Rasmussen that he had had several drinks be fore getting on the train and then had had a few more at a pri"*te I* p.J '•: f . dinning car. He told went through ?drs. J&. < \ Might Ct the mdr dfcy, fi's \ne was-on his way to the sdSkfng car where he stay* ' ed. -5 minutes. He insisted’he wai not the slayer, police said. ^ ?. Meanwhile -wo girls, who»e iaentity was not disclosed, told detectives N. S. Meza and Harijr Rowe they were on tl)e death train. They had berth 16, near Mr». James’ fatal Vi. Shortly before Mrs. James fell dying into the corridor, the girls were given two free sandwiches by a waiter. (Continued on Page Six; Col. 8) *