"served By Leased Wire 01 Th. I + , vr4+*' + 4 I BEHEHBER assn Mtlmutgimt 4fflitntttt$ Star rr _ ^'0Ljfi^O^285 WILMINGTON, N. C., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1943 _FINAL EDITION_ ESTABLISHED 1867 _ “NO POWER O.N r.AKlil can prevent the destruction of the German Armies . . . and their war plants from the air," read the proclamation of the Big Three at the Cairo conferences. Thus every industrial area in the Reich becomes an automatic target for the Allied bombers as a prelude to the vast invasion program blueprinted at Teheran. “The RAF will bomb every city in Germany by night and we will by dav." adds Gen. Henry H. Arnold, U. S. Army Air forces chief. This map indicates the doomed cities.-—i International)._ Wilmington Snowbound In Worst Cold Of Winter; All Schools Closed Today IIAFFITT POSTAL 1 SERVICE NEARS dee Of Classified Type [fill Be Ready For Business Soon The new post office which will be opened in Maffitt Village some time in January will be a classi fied instead of a contract station as formerly announced and plan mi. according re information re ceived late Wednesday by Wilbur Cosher, postmaster. A representative- from the Post Ci'ice department, Washington, I visited Wilmington several months 1 ago and recommended that a eon I tract station be opened here. Bids were received and sent to Wash ington. Several local persons wet e of the opinion that a contract station wouldn't be of sufficient service to take care of the growing Maf t" Village community and insisted that a classified station be opened instead. Another survey was made ty federal post office officials and i’e second representative agreed with those in authority here that 5 -eQuote service couldn’t be ren dered with the contract type and lie recommended the classified ' in6', ^‘s was accepted and it p ,je opened soon, perhaps early in January. The contract type post office (Continued on Page Two; Col. 8) -V WEATHER I FORECAST CAROLINA: Fair and continu ea cold tomorrow. [ (Eastern Standard Time) | v ■ . 1 • s* Weather Bureau) _ ■ h -"roiQgi^i data for the 24 hours ;:1® 7:20 pm. 3'esterday. Temperature 37, 7:30 am, 37; 1:30 pm, ?7, «•«<) Pm, ?i. *6> Minimum 21, Mean 34, * ,.1f Humidity •*.;5'- 7:30 am, *92, 1 ;30 pm, 94, J Pm, 95. Tnt.i , Precipitation iy :l,r Ihe 24 hours ending 7:30 pm, T >‘iChe-S' i .J • hnce the first of the month, <0 inches. "0W: 5 inches at 7:10 pm. p Tides For Today V1 sonL the Tide Tables published by r ‘ Coast and Geodetic Survey) High Low unungton --12:41a 7:48a y.„r, \ 1:03p 8:30p ribor° Inlet __* _ 10:32a 4:22a * ll:0ip 4:59p \r0nn .1Se 7;ll am, Sunset.- 5:05 pm; 1Se 9:42 pm, Muonset, 10548 am. vin!Pe Fear R,’ver s'age at Fayette. on l>ec. 15, at 8 am, 9.47 feet. (Continued on Page Two; Col. 6) swopping! DAYS LEFT-I -TO GET v *roy Sailboat NEDDIE ChnstmasSea/s \ City Covered By 5 Inches Before 8 O’CIock; Tem perature Down To 18 Wilmington felt the impact of the coldest weather of the season as wintry blasts struck the city early Wednesday afternoon. The temperature was expected to drop to 18 degrees before Thurs day morning. The Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph company reported at midnight it had been unable to re store disrupted service between Wilmington, Goldsboro and Ral eigh. The interruption in its service af fected all side connections out of these cities. Western Union declared its serv ice uninterrupted. By 8 o’clock more than five inches of snow had fallen and flur ries were still falling. While the city remains in the grip of the coldest, iciest winds felt this winter the fuel oil sit uation was described as "acute” by local dealers. Many citizens are said to posses empty oil tanks; there is not enough oil to go around. Police reported 18 wrecks had occured before 10 o'clock Wednes day night. Police Chief Casteen said that the unusual weather had caused a sharp increase in minor traffic accidents. lie warned citi zens to drive as little as possible and when driving proceed with extreme caution. The fire department reported one alarm in the middle of the afternoon, with no' material dam age resulting. Highway patrolmen reported sev eral highway accidents in the coun ty, none serious, but many ve hicles created hazards. Fatrolmen have asked the public (Continued on Page Three; Col. 2) JAPANESE REFUSE GAUGE OF BATTLE Carrier Saratoga Skipper Tells Of Challenge Issued At Truk ___ j WASHINGTON, Dec. 15.— 'Literally daring the Japanese fleet to come out of its great bastion at Truk, and American carrier task force sailed close to that south Pacific island, but the Japs refused to fight., it was revealed today. Capt. John N. Cassady, skipper of the aircraft carrier Saratoga, told a press conference: “We were sent up on ‘Guinea pig’ runs on Truk trying to get the Japs to poke their nose out but they stayed securely behind their nets in the harbor.” He declined to estimate how close the Saratoga sailed to the biggest Japanese base in the south Pacific but said “we went into areas where thev normally run air searches, but I don’t believe we were picked up ” Tall, lean, tanned and a veteran flier, Cassady predicted that if the American campaign of pushing the Japanese back from the south Pa cific should be carried to Truk (Continued on Page Two; Col. 5) TREASURY WANTS VICTORYTAX HELD Says It Would Be Better On Low Income Bracket Than Substitute WASHINGTON, Dec. 15.—W— The Treasury advised senators to day to retain the 3 per cent victory 1ax in its present form rather than undertake to substitute a new minimupi tax” on persons in low income brackets. In a statement issued after the f inance committee had over whelmingly rejected an alternate plan advanced by the treasury, Randolph Paul, treasury general counsel declared: "The minimum tax endangers the collection of more than $17, 000.000,000 from over 50.000,000 taxpayers throughout the income scale.” His argument was that the vic tory tax is less complicated than the minimum tax system voted by the house; that the victory tax returns will have to be made next March anyway for 1943 income, and that introduction of a new type of levy applicable to 1944 ad vance declarations would lead to ‘ confusion and misunderstanding” among the taxpayers. Declaring that “the minimum tax in its proper perspective may jeopardize the whole income tax system,” Paul added: “It is necessary to the survival of a tax law affecting over 50.000. 000 people that the law be made understandable to those people.” The House solution of the prob lem of integrating the victory tax with the regular income tax levy was to provide that no taxpayer should pay less than 3 per cent cn his net income in excess of a special exemption. The exemption would be $500 for a single person. $700 for a married person, and a $100 credit for each dependent. The treasury clan was to lower the married exemption from $1,200 to $1,100, cut the credit for de pendents from $350 to $300, leave the $500 single person’s exemption untouched, and let the regular in come tax rates prevail. (Continued on Page Two; Col. 1) U. S. FLIERS BOMB NAZI BASES IN GREECE; 8W WINS NEW ITALIAN BRIDGEHEAD; N/M ANNOUNCE 2 NEW RED OFFENSIVES & Jw .. _ +_ x — Moscu Declares Drive South Of Cherkesy Is Successful BOTH IN WHITE RUSSIA Great Winter Thrust Is Forecast By Soviet Directed Radio LONDON, Dec. 15. — (/Ph Moscow announced tonight that Red Army troops continued their successful offensive to day south and southeast of re captured Cherkasy and a Reut ers dispatch declared Soviet forces in this sector had es tablished contact with those from the Kremenchug zone. two urives LONDON, Dec. 15. — (£>) — The Germans announced today two powerful Russian drives launched in White Russia—possible harbing ers of a thunderous winter offen sive toward the Baltic and a link with the Allies in the west—while Moscow told of 16 more towns captured in the Ukraine, where the Soviet tide rolled from captured Cherkasy to within five miles of Smela. The Russians also reported that German forces counter-attacking toward Kiev were rolled back from several populated places south of Malin while a Russian drive to ward Kirovograd in the South Uk raine gained improved positions. A Reuters report that the Rus sans had succeeded in linking their Kremenchug and Cherkasy bridge heads across the middle Dnieper was not specifically confirmed by the Moscow communique broadcast recorded by the Soviet monitor. However it said the town of Lomn vatoe, 15 miles southeast of Cher kasy and 20 miles east of Smelt was captured, indicating that a junction, if not made would not be delayed. The most important advance ui the day recorded by the Soviet bulletin was the capture of Byel ozere a rail station five miles northeast of Smela, an important communications hub on the non”' south railway in the Dnieper bend. From Berlin came reports of two Soviet drives which may prove the most significant operations now underway on the long Rus sian front. For the second day the Kus (Continued on Page Three; Col. 5) Blame For Brewster Failure Is Placed On 3 Interests Involved WASHINGTON, Dec. 15—<«— A House naval sub committee today blamed union chieftains, management and the Navy production failures at Brews ter Aeronautical Corporation and recommended criminal prosecution of Tom de Loren zo, whom it described as ^ “power drunk labor leader. It said it had evidence that De Lorenzo, president of local 3G5, United Automotive Work ers (CIO), had made false statements under oath. The committee’s report gave the Brewster firm another chance to correct production failures and end labor troubles by recommending continuance of its multi—billion dollar con tract for naval planes. How ever, it flatly declared that the contract should be cancell ed if production schedules are unmet or “at the first out break of labor difficulties in the future'.” Battle Of Kiev Bulge Has Strategic Impact By KIRKE L. SIMPSON Associated Press War Analyst Unequaled in its potential stra tegic impact upon the war in Eur ope bv any conflict in Russia ‘dnce Stalingrad, the battle of the K;ev bulge is raging through its fifth week with its outcome still ir,As° at'Stalingrad, where a year _„n the Nazi attack on Russia reached its high-water mark, Rus sian and German official reports from the Kiev bulge front do more fr ohscure the true situation than to reveal significant battle trends They leave no doubt, however, tha the Kiev salient fight is the pivot noon which events are turning in to? east to shape f*ie strategy pat tern of the struggle on all Euro pean fronts next year, the year of decision in Russian-Allied reck oning. EarlieV Moscow intimations that the massive German counter of fensive west of Kiev had been stalled prove premature. Russian surrender of the important high way junction town of Radomysl on the west bank of the Teterev river represented a new dent in the So viet defensive line. It did not, however, imply a Nazi break through or even a critical defeat for Red troops. Moscow announce ment of the evacuation of Ra damysl suggests retirement to the (Continued on Page Seven; Col. 4) ■ ■ ' ■ "ll Model Kills Self I BCUNUJS Catherine Cun old, 3a, a former photographer’s model, committed suicide in her New York City apartment after brood ing over the war. She wished to see America win the war and yet be able to see her two brothers, Nazi soldiers, come out alive.— (International). TAFT ATTEMPTS SUBSIDY PEACE Offers Proposal To Break Senate Deadlock With Cut In Allowances WASHINGTON. Dec. 15.—(A*)— Senator Taft (R-Ohio) sought to break the Senate deadlock on food subsidies today through a com promise bill which he said would eliminate government payments to roll back beef and butter prices and the present milk subsidy, but retain most other price controls. The Taft amendment, proposing to slash federal subsidy outlays from their current SI .000,000,000 a year level to $600,000,000 in 1944, was offered formally in the Sen ate after the Senate banking com mittee put off until tomorrow a de cisive vote on pending legislation to repeal the entire subsidy pro gram. Taft expressed belief his pro posal might be accepted by a ma jority of the members of the bank ing committee, even though con ceding it was unacceptable either to administration price control of ficials or farm bloc spokesmen. Under the taft plan the govern ment would guarantee support prices to farmers on selected com modities to encourage production, and pay subsidies to processors and distributors where otherwise it would be necessary for them to raise retail prices. The guaran teed prices would be supported by direct government purchases where necessary. “The net effect would be to eliminate the present $20,000,000 a 3'ear subsidy on beef and the $200,000,000 milk subsidy in the form of a dairy feed payment to producers,” Taft said. “The but ter rollback also would be elimi nated but the same purpose could be accomplished through a sup ported price. “Milk might go up a cent a quart, and beef might go up but generally speaking other prices could be held stable and the ef fect on the cost of living would be negligible,” Taft added. Existing subsidies which Taft said wouid be retained under his (Continued on Page Three; Col. 6) _v Franklin Junior On Way From Charleston To D.C. CHARLESTON, Dec. 15.—(AO—Lt. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., USNR, has arrived here en route to Wash ington, the Navy Yard public rela tions office announced this after noon. Roosevelt stopped here in tne hope of seeing a Baltimore sailor whom he rescued from the bridge of a warship off Italy several weeks ago. The man had been under treatment at the naval hospital but was moved recently to Wash ington for further treatment. The public relations office said young Roosevelt would leave to night for Washington, but declined to say immediately where he had been or how he had arrived in the United States. SALDARI CAPTURED Germans Complain Of Having To Fight Tough Men From Texas 200 PRISONERS TAKEN Clark's Forces Relatively Quiet; Battle On Adria tic Front Heavy ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Al giers, Dec. 15.-Indian and Ca nadian troops of Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomerys Eighth Army have carved out a firm five-mile wide bridgehead north of the Moro river on the Italian Adriatic coast, it was announced today, while the Fifth Army front, relatively quiet militarily, was marked by com plaints by Nazi prisoners that they were forced to fight against “tough wild men from Texas.” Caldari Captured Veteran Indian troops, fighting forward a few miles inland from the Adriatic, captured the village of Caldari, six miles from Ortona, against fierce German resistance and seized 200 prisoners. This merged the Moro bridgehead forc ed by the Indians several days ago with that won by the Canadi ans along the coast, making a solid bieach in the enemy’s defenses five miles wide and from one to three miles deep. It was disclosed that the ag giessive Canadians, who have been locked in desperate fighting around the town of San Leonardo, 2 1-2 miles north of the Moro, for six days, stager! a night ra'd o- the viliage of Berrati in which they captured nearly 150 German pris oners, including the commanding officer of the 361st - rmorc^ ■ rer adier division. The Canadians re tiled after the raid, taking all equipment of value with them. Berrati is about two miles south of Ortona, coastal anchor of the Nazis’ present defense line, upon which the Canadians have been slowly but steadily encroaching. Ortona must be taken before Mont gomery can proceed with his “back acor” advance cn Rome Among Canadian units revealed to have been engaged in the Ital ian fighting up to Dec. 1 were the Fourth Princess Louise dragoon guards. The weather improved across the front, but activity along the Fifth (Continued on Page Three; Col. 7) -V Federal Grand Jury’s Liquor Investigation Is At Subpoena Stage WASHINGTON, Dec. 15.—UP) —A federal grand jury inves tigation was projected today into practices in the nation’s billion dollar liquor industry, already under the scrutiny of Justice department agents and a special Senate committee. Subpoenas were Issued for records of the “big four” dis tilleries, Hiram Walker & Sons, Inc., Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc., National Distill ers Products Corporation and Schenley Distillers Corpora tion, returnable Jan. 6 to the regular District of Columbia grand jury. Wendell Berge, assistant at torney general in charge of the anti-trust division, disclos ed a month ago that the de partment had an inquiry un der way. The distilleries named in the subpoenas were singled out recently bv Chairman Van Nuys (D-Ind) during hearings by his special Senate commit tee set up to inquire into the liquor situation._._ Honors Hero Kin |] READY to christen the destroyer escort Garfield Thomas at the Federal Shipyards in Newark, N. J., is Lt. Betty K. Thomas of the Army Medical Corps. The ship was named for her brother, Lt. William Garfield Thomas, who lost his life in the Solomons in ’42.— (International). BOUGAINVILLE AIR BASE IS IN ACTION Allies Enabled To Apply Pincers On Both Ends Of New Britain SOUTHWEST PACIFIC ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. Thursday, Dec. 1C.—(5*1—Lifting of adverse weath er in the Solomons islands has brought the new American air play, resulting m the coordination cf heavy air attacks on botli ends of Japanese-held New Britain is land. The importance of this pincers attack was brought out by Gen. Douglas MacArtbur’s communique yesterday which reported assaults on all sides of New Britain, key stone of Japan’s hold on the South Pacific. The raids were the heav iest and most widespread since announcement lost week that the Ailied airfield on Empress Augus ta bay, on the west coast of Bou gainville, was in operation. Stormy weather had put a damper on air operations in the Solomons for sev eral days. Some 1,400 miles to the north east, Liberator bombers of the 7th Army Air Free went into their second month of sustained pound ing of the Marshall islands. The latest attack, on Monday, was on Wotje atoll, site of one of several Japanese air oases in those is lands. Pacific fleet headquarters announced the raid last night. It said that one of the bombers was damaged by am:-aircraft fire but none of the crew was injured. Jaluit. another Japanese air base in the Marshalls, was nit by two Liberators of the Pacific fleet air y/ing on Sunday. Both planes were damaged and one pilot wounded. Army Liberators had assailed Ja luit earlier in the day. The Gasmata area, an enemy supply center on the south cost of New Britain, was the target of the heaviest raid of the many re (Continued on Page Two; Col. 1) JIG OBJECTIVES HIT ieavy Planes Open Olfenr sive Foretold By Gen. Henry H. Arnold 12 FOE SHIPS DOWNED One Of 300 American Ships Felled; Damage Airdromes, Harbor ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. Al giers, Dec. 15.— W —More than 300 Flying Fortresses, Liberators rnd escorting Lightnings of the powerful new American 15th stra tegic air force opened the winter bombing offensive from Mediter ranean bases yesterday with smashing attacks on three big Na zi military airdromes in the out skirts of Athens and the harbor of Piraeus, gateway to the Greed capital. It was the greatest aerial blow yet struck at Hitler’s Balkan hold ings and marked fulfillment of last Sunday’s promise by Gen. Henry H. Arnold, chief of U. S. An Forces, that “terrible blows would be launched from this area at Germany and her satellites. Damage Heavy (Dispatches did not disclose whether the bombers in Tuesday’s raid took off from their old North African bases or from fields new ly prepared for them in southern Italy.) Returning fliers said heavy damage was inflicted on Kalama ki, Tatoi and Elevsis airfields and cn merchant stopping in Piraeus harbor. All four targets are with in 10 miles of Athens and within the vital area from Which the Ger mans must support their tenacious grip on the Aegean islands. The big bombers directed their heaviest smash at Kalamaki air field, where they destroyed hang ars, wiped out an anti-aircraft battery and pitted the runways. Smaller Fortress formations hit the other two airfields and Pi raeus harbor in what Col. K. K. Compton of St. Joseph, Mo., fly ing his 200th mission, called “a perfectly co-ordinated blitz.’’ Compton led the famous raid on the Ploesti oil fields in Rumania last August. About 35 German fighters zoom ed up to challenge the raiders and 12 were destroyed by bomber gun ners and the Lightnings One For tress was lost on thee mission. Several Yugoslav pilots were among the Lightning escort, but they failed to get into a fight. Elevsis, Kalamaki and Tatoi fields have been the Nazis’ princi pal mainland air bases in the Ae gean area, while Piraeus has been their chief port for supplying the (Continued on Page Three; Col. 4) -v Political Fires Break Out Anew Over Soldier Vote Bill In Senate WASHINGTON, Dec. 15.—Am —The bitter political dispute over the service vote bill flar ed in the Senate again today, with a Republican inviting soutnern democrats to join the G. O. P. in fighting a fourth term and a wester* democrat replying that tne opposition is “afraid” of Pres ident Roosevelt as a candidate. Seventy-two-year-old Senator i Moore of Oklahoma, a life long j Democrat until he ran in 1!H* as a Republican to defeat for mer Senator Josh Lee, a New dealer, touched a match t* the powder keg by calling un constitutional the administra tion’s rejected plan for federal supervision of absentee voting by service personnel. Railroad Brotherhoods bet Dec. 30 For Three-Day Progressive Strike CLEVELAND Dec. 15.— Ilf) — Setting a joint nation-wide walk out date foi the third time in his tory the operating railroad broth erhoods today established Dec. 30 and the three succeeding days for a “progressive strike which the National Mediation Board immedi ately sought to avert. The board invited railroad offi cials and leaders of the 350000 unionists—97.7 per cent of whom voted for a walkout to enforce demands for wage increases—to meet Monday in Chicago. Presi dents of the five brotherhoods de claring this was “a strike against inflation for the privileged few and deflation for the many announc ed they would attend The brotherhoods asked pay raises of 30 per cent in proceed ngs which began last January and object to an emergency boards iward of increases of four cents in hour under the “little steel iormula which permits raises only ip to 15 per cent above the Jan. 1 L941 level. The 15 non-operating inions also have taken a strike lallot but are awaiting final Con gressional action on a resolution which would jgiven them raise if eight cents an hour—the same imount vetoed by Stabilization Di rector Vinson after it was recom nended last May by an emergency ioard. Declaring they were “thorough y aware of a strikes ~“immedi ate effects” the brotherhood pres idents contended “in the long run” such action "will redound both t« the military success of the war fare of the common people of this nation.” The presidents are A. F. Whit ney of the trainmen D. B. Rob ertson of the firemen and engine men Alvanley Johnston of the lo comotive engineers H. 1~. Fraser of the railway conductors and T. , C. Cashen of the switchmen. “It is a strike against inflation for the privileged few and defla tion for the many they asserted in a joint statement adding that the railroad workers “do not be (Continued on Page Three; Col. 1).