FORECAST w * * I remember I pgisp timtmumt itimnmui 0tar rs 1-—^^_ 1 VOL. 77. — NO. 59 __WILMINGTON, N. C., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1944FINAL EDITIONESTABLISHED 1867 Radio Duelists Meet—With Smiles U-—— .. ^ ^ .1 ir.llV.IIKl |I ■ ■ ■ > III" ■ I . . Walter Winchell (left) meets his radio opponent, Rep. Martin Dies (right). Democrat of Texas, in what seems to be a friendly at mosphere in the reception room of a radio station in Washington af ter (heir verbal duel on the air waves. First to broadcast was Win che!l with his statement about Dies and his committee on un-Ameri can activities. Dies followed him on the air. IB CROSS DRIVE WILL END TODAY $54,676.93 Collected By Workers Toward Local Goa! Of $75,000 A total of $54,676.83 was report; ed :; Red Cross campaign head quarters last night, which repre sented division reports up until 12 noon yesterday. The first report from the North Caro'ina Shipbuilding company showed a total of $10,000 collected front the workers. Today is the last day of the drive, and divisional chairmen f.nd t -chairmen are reminded to make their reports to campaign head er. rters in the Tide Water build in- before 5 o’clock this afternoon. Officials disclosed last night that $21.023.07 remains to be reported in order for Wilmington to reach its quota of $75,000. A divisional report is given at the end of fhis report. ' Winners of the Red Cross Win dov. Display contest were an ir , need last night by the commit tee of judges. First place was awarded to the V-Tmington Furniture company for their Prisoner of. War display. Second place went to the Pender Furniture company, which had dis played 25 Red Cross boxes, which were addressed to all parts of the world. Third place was awarded to the La Mode shop, for their display (Continued on Page Three; Col. 4) BUTLER IS HEARD IN CHAPLIN CASE LOS ANGELES, March 28.—«B— Charlie Chaplin’s butler testified at the comedian’s Mann Act trial to day that Chaplin admitted having had sexual in,ercourse with Joan Berry in New York. The graying, fortyish butler, Ed ward Chaney was a prosecution witness at the actor’s trial on charges of transporting 24-year-old Joan to New York in 1942 for im moral purposes His testimony, given at the close of the government’s direct case, corroborated that of Miss Berry. Chaplin’s attorney, Jerry Giesler, said in his opening statement that the actor would deny there was any act of sexual intercourse in New York. After the government rested, Giesler moved for a directed ver. diet of acquittal, on the ground that the prosecution testimony was insufficient foi a conviction and that Miss Berry had repeatedly re' quested a trip to New York. Chaney’s testimony followed £ brief resumption of Miss Berry’s cross examination during whict shi denied indignantly that she hac demanded a $150,000 cash settle ment from the actor on the grounc that he was the father of het child.” Giesler asked Miss Berry th< question about her alleged $150, 000 demand or. Chaplin after hi had. succeeded in gaining cour (Cui^tinued on Page Three; Col. 4 HOSPITALS HERE ARE GIVEN FUNDS _ I James Walker Receives $7,051 From The Duke Endowment Trustees According to information re ceived here last night, Duke En dowment trustees appropriated $674,379.43 to 97 hospitals and 40 orphan homes in the Carolinas at their meeting yesterday. The list included an appropriation of $7, 051 to the James Walker Memorial Hospital and $3,807 to the Com n^inity hospital, Wilmington. Announcement of the action from the endowment offices said the appropriations were made on the basis of the institution’s charity work in 1943. Other hospitals receiving funds in this vicinity were: Columbus County, Whiteville, $1,223; Good Shepherd, New Bern, $2,179 and Thompson Memorial, Lumberton, $401. The largest appropriations were granted to Duke, Durham, $51,657; City, Winston-Salem, $28,820 and Baptist, Winston-Salem, $26,889. No orphan homes in this vicinity OPA SOI DS OUT RATIONING HEADS RALEIGH, March 28— Theodore S. Johnson, Raleigh district OPA director," said yesterday that chair man of all local War Price and Ratioing boards have been writ ten personal letters by Price Ad ministrator Chester Bowles asking them for frank expression of opin ion about the service that OPA is giving the public. Johnson said eastern North Car olina board chairmen were asked to tell just what criticisms they have of the OPA program, to of fer suggestions for improving the operation of the OPA, and to state frankly their opinion of the opera tions at the local board level. "OPA wants to know what the man on the War Price and Ration ing Board is thinking, how the pub lic is being served, and wants to improve the OPA in every way possible," Johnson declared. "At the same time,” he said, “to further the understanding of local price and rationing problems, two board chairmen and two chief clerks will be picked in the At lanta region to go to Washington and present first-hand the prob lems of the OPA and the local War Price an^ Rationing Boards.” "In other words,” Johnson con cluded, “we want to know just what suggestions a member of the local board might want to make ; to his own congressman, for ex ample, about suggestions for im , proving O PA. The OPA is old enough now to really be able to ’ serve the public fully and well on : price control and rationing. We ' want to know the problems and ways of best taking care of them.” Nikolaev, Key Black Sea Port, Falls To Ro4v Advancing On 175 Mile Front; E’ Fails To Challenge Air Armada 30 PLANES DESTRO. *» _ 250 To 500 Heavy U. S. Bombers Rain Explosives On French Targets LONDON, March 28. — (IP) — Striking in a campaign of mount ing intensity against bases from which the Luftwaffe defends Eu rope, 250 to 500 U. S. heavy bom bers rained explosives and incen diaries on four airfields in north ern France today. Heavily-escorted formations of Flying Fortresses slapped at Chartres, 40 miles southwest of Paris; Chateaudun, 30 miles far ther southwest; Reims, 80 miles northeast, and Dijon, 160 miles southeast of Paris. As yesterday, when nine French airdromes were attacked by be tween 750 and 1,000 big bombers, the German air force seemed to be sulking on the ground, leav ing the defense to thinly-scatter ed batteries of antiaircraft guns One pilot in the flight to Reims said he didn’t see a single enemy pursuit. “Unable to bring the Luftwaffe to battle,” said the U. S. com munique announcing today’s raids, the American escort fighters “at tacked enemy pianes on me giuuuu, destroying 30, including many bombers and three fighters were missing. Thus in two days the Eighth Air Force has splintered 12 key en emy airdromes and destroyed at least 72 Nazi craft on the ground at an expenditure of eight bom bers and 13 fighters. As an indication of the Luft waffe's declining strength, on March 18 when the Eighth Air Force destroyed 82 planes in the air during raicfs upon Augsburg, Fried rich shafen and other targets, the Nazis knocked down 43 U. S. bombers and 10 fighters. It was the 22nd major Amer ican operation of the month. In a two-day campaign which has taken the four-engined planes almost to the Spanish border, an estimated 3,000 tons of bombs has been dropped by 1,000 to 1,500 hea vy bombers. Today’s bombers covered by an equal number of Thunderbolt and Mustang fight ers, anxious to repeat their feat of yesterday of wrecking 38 en emy planes ARSONIST CAUSED BLAZE IN ’FRISCO SAN FRANCISCO, March 28.— UPl—An arsonist turned a Fourth Street hotel into a whirlwind of flaming death today. Twenty-two persons lost their lives and some of the 30 injured may die. Police agreed with Fire Marshal Frank Kelly that there was no question the bia?.e in the New Am sterdam hotel was set; that five other fires last night, and five Sun day night also were the acts of a fire bug, The deaths occurred just after midnight, and 12 hours later only one person had been identified. A policeman who helped remove the corpses said “you could tell they were human beings. But that was all.” The fire turned the three-story building into a huge torch. Some victims never got out of theii rooms. Others leaped, screaming into flame-filled light wells. Oth. ers, panic-stricken, ran into cor. ridors and piled up, body on body, in area-ways where they suffocat ed and then burned. Some leaped from windows anc many received grave injuries. One of the two women victims of the fire died that way. She was Mrs Mamie Pulosky 43, wife of a Navy man. Firemen saw her standing ir a third-floor window, her clothinj in flames. They cried to her no to jump but she slipped into the darkness and crashed to death ot th esidewalk. Ration Point Values Heads To Quit Guessing To Be Cut By OPA WASHINGTON, March 28.— (JP)—The Office of Price Ad ministration announced tonight that the ration point value of ready-to-eat hams will be re duced from three to two points per pound next month. Ration point values for fresh and cured hams will remain unchanged. April point values for all meats, fats and cheese will be announced later this week. They will become effective April 2. '< \ Army Says Aim Of Great Bomber Offensive' Is To Destroy German Air Force Entirely WASHINGTON. March 28— UP) — Elimination of enemy air opposit ion to the Allied invasion forces in western Europe has been the main objective of the bomber offensive against Grmany since last July 1, the Army said today. The campaign now has reached such a point, the report said, that the Nazis must decide whether to defend their factories or hoard their planes to meet the invasion. In an analysis of the bomber strategy, the Army made it clear that continuing operations against aircraft factories are necessary be cause of the 'tremendous recupe rative powers” of German indust ry. At the beginning of 1943, the Army reported, Germany set out to treble fighter production. By July 1 production was up 50 per cent and the AAF and RAF-which up to then had devoted their prin cipal attention to the submarine industry-began a systematic cam paign against aircraft factories. By Sept. 1, tne bomber offensive had cut monthly production of sin gle engine German fighters to ap proximately three-fourths of the July 1 level. In all of 1943, the Army reported the bomber attacks prevented production of an esti mated 2,500 fighter planes. “New plants which were con stantly thrown into operation pro vided replacement capacity, not expanded capacity” said the re* port. Early this year the scale of the bomber attacks was increased enormously anu as of March 1 the monthly production of single en gine fighters had been cut two thirds below the Jan. 1,1944, level ^win-engine fighter capacity slight ly more', and bomber capacity by one third, the review said. “That does not mean, however,” the Army explained, “that Ger man combat aircraft production had been permanently reduced to that extent.” When a plant is bombed out, the Army explained, top-flight German production men rush in to deter nine whether it is better to re ouild there or move equipment and lersonnel. Production may be lost only for the time necessary to move the workers as a second or third shift into another factory. Assuming for purposes of illu stration that only three production complexes—an assembly plant fed by component building factories— exists for a certain type of plane the report concluded that serious impairment would result only when the third had been knocked out. And even that would be only temporary, it was pointed out with the first and second plants being rebuilt or others being erected. BOMBERS BLAST PACIFIC BASES 292 Tons Of Explosives Dumped On Bismarck Sea Targets ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Southwest P > c i f i c, Wednesday, March 29.—(J*— Allied bombers dumped 292 tons of explosives in swings over enemy bases around the Bismarck sea areas, headquar ters announced today. - The bombers hit Kavieng, New Ireland, Rabaul, New Britain, Jap anese positions on Bougainville is land in the Solomons, and the prime bases at Wewak and Hansa Bay on the northeastern New Guinea coast. Heaviest hit were the New Guin ea coastal points, where the Allied planes already have dumped around 2,500 tons of bombs so far this month, greatly reducing Jap anese air and supply operations. In the latest raids, 7 tons blast ed the Wewax installations and 84 tons smashed the enemy gun po sitions at Hansa Bay. Rabaul, a daily target of Solomons-based planes, received 46 tons and other aircraft from the South Pacific hit Kavieng airdromes and defenses with 50 tons. Strikes at the Japanese troop and gun positions around the Allied To rokina beachhead perimeter on Bougainville totaled 38 tons of bombs. Other planes ranging to Kaima na in Dutch New Guinea set an enemy cargo ship afire. -V C. G. AUXILIARY SET-UP TO START An intensive training program for approximately 100 members of the Cape Fear division of the Coast Guard Auxiliary who are in the Coast Guara Temporary Re serve when or active duty, will be started Saturday morning, Lieut. Tom E. Murrell (CGR(T1, commander of the division, an nounced today. Plans for the program have been under way for sometime and def inite schedules were mailed to the members yesterday. According to the arrangement, i the men will serve as crew mem bers on Coast Guard patrol craft in the nearby sounds and Cape Fear river, under the supervision ! of regular Coast Guardsmen. One : boat will be operated daily on the inland waterway, from Topsail In let to Little River, with the Tem porary Reservist serving 24-hour tours of duty. The patrol will start at 8 a.m. Two craft will be oper ated daily on the river, on general harbor duty, on 12-hour tours of duty, starting at 6 p.m. The type of instruction to be of fered is considered highly prac tical and will deal with all phases of operation of small craft. The regular Coast Guard personnel will be in charge. In order to discuss the new duty and “iron out” any misunderstand ing, a supper meeting for all members of the division will be held Friday night at 7 o’clock at Lieut. Murrell’s fishing lodge, lo cated one and cne-half miles be yond Scotts Hill, on the inland waterway. Because of the impor (Continued on Page Two; Col. 6) Roosevelt Still Favors A National Service Act WASHINGTON, March 28.—(£>)—President Roosevelt indicated today that he still favors enactment of national service legislation although Manpower Chairman Paul V. McNutt told Congress there is no present need for it. The Chief Executive declined direct comment at his press-radio conference on mcinuu s siaiemeni but on the question of how best to use manpower, he declared there are a lot of people who are not aiding in the war, that it is a mat ter for soul searching and that if people won’t search their own souls someone should do it for them. Asked about a suggestion from Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey that 4Fs be drafted for work battalions, particularly for harvesting, Mr. Roosevelt said that left out a lot ol other groups. Help with harvests is needed, he added, from manv others—high school boys and girls and even newspapermen. Everyone who pos sibly can should be helping to win the war, he said. Asked directly how his views on rational service jibed with Mc Nutt’s statement, the President said he would first have to read what the manpower chairman said because there might be some other sentences in it. Opposing a national service law now, McNutt expressed the opinion there might be “real merit” in the idea of job controls over 4F’s. Tn testimony before a House Mil itary Subcommittee, the chairman of the War Manpower Commission also said there was “every pos sibility,” as a result of the Ar my’s demand for younger men. that occupational deferments jvill be denied or seriously restricted later for “all men under 28 or even 30.” McNutt’s emphasis on greater use of 4F’s—men deferred as un fit—and on the Army’s demand that inductees be young was re peated in an address during the day by Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey. (Continued on Page Seven; Col. 8) -V BODY OF PRETTY BLONDE IS FOUND DETROIT, MARCH 28— UPl — Sheriffs detectives questioned a Detroit physician tonight concern ing the death of Joyce Raulston, attractive 14-year-old blonde schoo girl whose stabbed an^ battered body was found on a refuse dump this morning. Detective Thomas Gentile saic an anonymous tipster named th< physician as the girl’s assailant No formal charge had been placed against him, however. Attempts also were being mad< to trace a man who telephonec the girl’s mothei Monday mornin? with the lntormation Joyce is married and has gone to Califor nia” and the owner of a tan auto mobile which a passer-by reported having seen coming from the dump in the early hours today. Tire tracks led to the top of a short hill at the foot of which lay the girl’s body both lungs punctur ed by stab wounds and with part of her clothing ripped away. Shoes, a skirt and parts of underclothing were discovered about 100 feet dis tant. Officers said it appeared the girl’s head had been battered with a concrete block that lay near the body. Sheriff’s deputies said ttiere was evidence the girl fought desperate ly with her assailant on the lonely dump. There are no houses within two blocks of the scene. MERGER OF ARMED FORCES PROPOSED Committee Of 23 Solons Named To Study Post War Military Needs WASHINGTON, March 28.—— A committee of 23 members of Congress was established with a $25,000 fund today to study the postwar military needs of the Unit ed States, now bristling with the greatest arsenal in history. As the House adopted the plan, Rep. Fish (R.-N.Y.) called for peacetime maintenance of the greatest navy and airforce in the world as a club over incipient ag gressors. He recommended that the com mittee look into the advisability of merging all the armed forces into the comprehensive department of national defense Fish spoke in behalf of the reso lution introduced by Rep. Wads worth (R.-N.Y.), The group is to consist of seven members each from the military and naval af fairs committes and nine from the House at large with Representa tive Woodrum (D.-Va.) as chair man. In the discussion preceding the unanimous voice vote for the study group, Chairman Sabath (D.-Ill.) of the Rules Committe urged that i* study disposal of surpluses. “I’m not satisfied with the way surplus property is being disposed of,” he cautioned. “The govern ment is losing millions by reck less disposition of surplus proper ty no longer needed by the War and Navy Departments.” Fish digressed to the subject of the Atlantic Charter when Rep. Mundt (R.-S.D.) urged passage of his plan for a committee to study peace terms. The New Yorker said it wasn’t feasible to take up what was the function of the executive department, then declared that it wouldn’t do any good until “we find out Russia’s and Great Brit ain’s war and peace aims.” -V BAREFOOT WASHINGTON, March 28. —(A>) —The country will soon go bare 1 foot unless some of the 83,000,000 cattle on hand are slaughtered for leather. Representative Hall (R NY) told the House today. “Well ! “.’11 soon be warm,” interjected Representative Rankin (D-Miss). < HaMaUbHiiH ) JAPS CONTINUE BURMA ATTACKS Efforts To Clear Invader Said To Be Satisfactory In Communique NEW DELHI, March 28— (Jl — Efforts of British troops to clear Japanese invasion columns from the Tiddim Imphal road south of the communications center of Im phal in India “continue satisfactor ily,” Admiral Lord Louis Mount batten’s headquarters announced today. However, another Japanese force pushing into India through the Somra Hills was making deter mined attacks in the vicinity of Ukhrul, 32 miles northeast of Im phal, with hard fighting in pro gress. Japanese pressure there was increasing, an Allied com munique said. (A Japanese broadcast said “mopping-up” operations were in progress against remnants of three brigades of American and British airborne troops who landed March 5-6 in the vicinity of Katha far behind Japanese lines. An Allied communique several days ago said this force, which threatened to cut the Japanese railroad supply line between Mandalay and Myitkyina, was being supported by planes.) A third Japanese column thrust ing toward Imphal from the south east appeared to have been halted just inside the India border. To day’s communique said a Japanese attack was thrown back in thal area and that Allied troops captur ed one position. American-trained Chinese troops in northern Burma stormed and captured the village of Hkawn glawyang in the Mogaung Valley and in the same vicinity Americar troops of Lt. Gen. Joseph W. Stil well used bavonets and erenade: to wipe out Japanese suicide squads between the Hkawnglaw Kha river and Shaduzup. Allied operations progres sed near the western coast on the Arakan front, today’s communique said, with the Japanese suffering heavy casualties in abortive coun (Continued on Page Seven; Col. 5) floridTrelTef ‘ INS CUTOUT WASHINGTON, March 28—M— The Office of Defense Transpor tation (ODT), declaring the travel emergency has passed, today de clined to approve the operation be yond March 31 of a daily special northbound train out of Florida. The decision not to extend the service was particularly warrant ed, ODT said, “in the light of heavy freight traffic and shortage of freight power and personnel on many of the lines involved.” The Florida West Coast-Atlantic Coast Line and the Seaboard Rail way were each authorized o n March 1 to run one extra-day coach train daily for northbound service only. The latter road abandoned its special service two weeks ago, declaring: “Apparent ly we have taken out all the people who want this type of accommo dations.” ODT reiterated that demand for Pullman services and de luxe coach reservations remain as heavy as ever. The Florida East Coast-Atlantic Coast Line special train has trans ported an average of 430 passeng ers daily since the emergency ser vice was inaugurated. '• GARRISON IS CRUSHED 3th er Forces Strike Swift* ly Across Flat Steppei Toward Odessa LONDON, Wednesday, March 29 —(tfl— The Red army yesterday arushed the German garrison of Nikolaev, former Soviet Black Sea fleet base at the mourn of the Bug, and in a surprise night crossing 60 miles upstream joined other Russian forces striking swiftly southward across the flat steppes on a 175-mile front toward Odessp, 75 miles away, Moscow announced today. in Rumania, otner Red army units were assaulting the key rail city of Iasi, the Berlin raido said, but Moscow has not confirmed thi* report. If true, it would be the first Soviet smash into Axis territory. Another German broadcast late last night Indicated Russian troops had encircled Kovel in the east central part of old Poland, saying Nazi troops there were being sup plied by air. Kovel’s 170 miles from Warsq and 35 miles from the 1939 German-Russian demarcation line on the Polish Bug River. Premier-Maishal Stalin announc ed the fall of Nikolaev, which the Germans had neld for two and one half years and a midnight bulle tin told of the night crossing of the Bug, the capture of Domanevka, 77 miles north of Odessa, and 40 other localities on the opposite side of the river. The Russian threat to Odessa was especially acute, Moscow said, because in Bessarabia far to the west Soviet units were within eight miles of the Odessa-Tiraspol-Iasi railroad — the last main German supply or escape artery. Nikolaev, which sticks out on a spit of land into the Bug River and therefore is surrounded by wa ter on three sides fell after several days of fierce fighting in which the remnants of the German gar rison where hurled into the Bug River to drown or be mowed down by machinc-gun fire, Moscow The Germans had been ordered to hold it “at all costs,” and to take it the Russians had to storm through a formidable mass of trenches, barbed-wire and mine fields laid out on the eastern side of the city, the bulletin said. After that was done there were 24 hours of intense stret fighting beiore the Germans were wiped out or sur rendered. The Russians^ were declared to have seized 176~towns and villages in six sectors during the day. In the southeastern part of old Poland the Russians drove to with in 40 miles of Czecho-Slovakia with the capture of Gvozdets, a district center of the Stanislav region only 11 miles northeast of Kolomea on the Czernowitz - Lwow railway. That prepresented a 10 - mile (Continue^ on Page Three; Col. 1) _17_ MAYOR TO ATTEND JOB CONFERENCE Mayor Bruce B. Cameron, of Wilmington, will attend a meet ing in Raleigh Thursday at which chief executives of 12 North Caro lina war plant cities will confer with Governor J. M. Broughton, on creation of community “Stay On-The-Job” committees, urged recently by Major General Frederick E. Uhl, of the Fourth Service Command, it was an nounced late yesterday. Being unavailable for comment, it is not known whether or not City Manager A. C. Nichols will attend the conference. Fourth Service Command Head quarters said Broughton’s confer ence would be the first of seven state meetings by representatives of labor management and the public. M’Nutt Wants Military Of Ready To Eat Hams When War Will End WASHINGTON, March 28_ (JP)—Manpower Chairman Paul V. McNutt wishes American military leaders would stop soon. predicting the war will be over He told the House Military Committee today that every such prediction moves “many war workers to leave war jobs and seek a place in civilian production, and makes more difficult the task of recruiting workers from non-essential th essential activities.” ,