Served By Leased Wires . v _ ' > _ _ | ASSOCIATED PRESS ^JjiBiiljB'Bl | MB ■ Af fj CENTS I | UNITED PRESS iSSflSJI 'H»wlF <3 EVERYWHERE j ’ffi.'sr&anc-- _ _. PUBLQHC&11 IlLiyWW I...J ~ _ .iCA^«y®wir €inrv®F^ia®®i9E®a amb> iPiuEAsmaiffe? __ VOL. 16.—NO. 61.---- ,A<^° WILMINGTON, N. C., SUNDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1941 FINAL EDITION_ESTABLISHED 1567 _ 15-Vessel Contract; Y ear’s W ork Assured -— ■¥,_____ Ml m f I ' ' ' 1 Company rians 10 con tinue On Full-Time Basis I Through 1945 NEED STILL GREAT Maritime Commission Head Urges Workers To Stay On The Job The North Carolina Ship building company has been awarded contract for an addi tional 15 C-2 type ships by the United States Maritime commission, officials of the yard announced yesterday. In making the announcement, they said that the additional work would assure operation of the yard on its present full-time basis through the coming year. North Carolina's greatest war-born in dustrial enterprise, the company is provideing employment for many thousands of men and women not only residing in Wilmington and its environs, but throughout Southeast ern North Carolina. Total of 186 The contract is one of several awarded shipyards throughout the country for a total of 186 ships, in cluding 24 Liberty type, for deliv erv during the second half of 1945. According to advices from Wash ington. heavy American losses of material in the current German of fensive in western Europe were < seen as creating further demands ' for extra shipping. The need for ships, according to maritime officials, is as great to day as at any time in the past. in a New Year’s message to shipyard workers throughout the nation, Vice Admiral Emory S. Land, chairman of the Maritime ' commission, said: f "Your accomplishments stand ^ before the world. Yet all of us 1 should today stand humble before t the vastness of our responsibility 1 to the men overseas. Ships are their power and their salvation and £ so long as the war lasts there can- i not be too many. Here is our re- t sponsibilitv—that through our con- ' tinual efforts there shall be no fail- c lire or delay for vessels to supply e our armed forces and our Allies. 1 ■'Let us resolve today to stay (Continued on Page Three; Col. 3) ( DELAY IN ANOTHER; SHOE STAMP SEEN ___ i; New Ration Ticket May a Not Be Validated Until l Next Summer \ - E WASHINGTON, Dec. 30.— (/Ft — The Office of Price Administration 1 said tonight that present indica- r tions point to a delay in validating a new shoe ration stamp until c “sometime next summer.’’ thus b forecasting a further tightening of f rationing on the home front. 1 Such action would extend for at e least two months the period the 1 current ration stamp would have to last before another is declared val Id. putting the ration on a basis of three pairs per person every two Tears instead of the present rate , •f two pairs a year. When airplane stamp No. 3 was ‘ validated last Nov. 1, it was ex pected that a new stamp would be £ brought out by May 1. ^ In a joint announcement with the. j War Production Board, the OPA v said that cancellation of outstand- ^ lug shoe steamps is not being con- c sidered. The WPB’s office of civili an requirements said that while ^ (Continued on Page Seven; Col. 4) ( Government Seizes Montgomery Ward | Lt. Edward Ceaser of the Sixth Service Command tacks up a , notice of government seizure of Montgomery Ward in Chicago, while striking employes laughingly look on. Under orders from President Roosevelt, similar action was taken in the company’s stores in six other cities, but Sewell Avery, chairman of the firm’s board, refused to recognize the action. Steel Workers Receive Approval Of Pay Boost -_ VINSON ACTS )PA Says Raises Will Not Necessitate Increase In Products’ Prices By WILLIAM T. PEACOCK WASHINGTON. Dec. 30.—UP)— teel workers received an okay rom Stabilization Director Fred rinson tonight for War Labor loard-approved wage increases es imated to average 5 to 7 cents an our. Announcing his decision, Vinson aid the Office of Price Admin stration had advised that this oost for the more than 400,000 workers in the iron and steel in ustry would not necessitate gen ral increases in prices of steel roducts. Increase Overdue OPA did advise, Vinson said, lat an increase in price of some teel products was overdue and, rould have to be made. In a letter , j WLB Chairman Willima H. Dav- * Vinson said OPA’s conclusion 'as this: J. lie Sc iUtiCdSCO vv in *-iy- muuv, •respective of the wage decision, t is the judgment of the price . dministrator that after these 1 rice adjustments are made the roposed wage increases will not equire any further net rise in the eneral level of iron and steel rices. “Accordingly, the wage increases j. equired by your directive order a ray become effective.” ^ In talking of required prices in reases (Vinson referred to the re- j uirement of the price stabilization ct that price increases be author- 0 jed in “hardship” cases determin- f d on the basis of present earnings ecoreds compared with pre-war s arnings.) s The WLB decided the steel ;age case on Nov. 25, but said r he pay changes it approved should j ot become effective unless OPA j. sund they would not necessitate c n increase in steel prices or Vin- a on ordered them into effect. r Although 400,000 workers in 116 ^ ompanies are the only ones af- g scted directly, the decision m a y f nally affect some 500.000 other .■orkers in 600 companies where r he CIO United Steel Workers have ollective bargaining agreements. OPA after cost studies wound up nth an estimate that the boost Continued on Page Three; Col. 5) Instructions For Robot ? Bomb Raids Issued Here : A- set of instructions to New ; Hanover citizens regarding their . induct in the event of robot or i rocket bomb attacks was released 3'esterday by Sheriff C. Dsfvid < Jones, commander of the county Clv'lian defense organization. \ The protective measures, for- j Warded here by R. L. McMillan, 1 s,-aie Office of Civilian Defense , director, explain that instructions t Previously issued by OCD were oajecl on the assumption that the j *he;ny might launch massed air , ®'tackf, in which cas advance ] 'Earning would be given. W;th the development of the ro *r>d docket bombs, however, or no warning .is possible, md “therefore the public should •ealize the danger and be con- e tantly on the alert, particularly 7 long the coastal areas.” Sheriff Jones explained that the he purpose of alarming civilians 7 he purpose of alarming civiilans ‘but for their protection in the 0. went we should have a robot at ack.” In case attacks are made'upon he United States and some bombs u should land in this community V lere is what you “should do- ^ 1. Air raid signals may not sound. If the air raid signals do Continued on Page Seven; Col. 3) ( Reno Establishes New Record For Divorces RENO, Nev., —(iP)— Dec. 30. —(fP\—Reno’s second year of wartime divorces hung up a record breaking all-time high when its two district courts granted 7030 decrees. Elwood H. Beemer, Washoe county clerk, today closed the divorce books for 1944 with the total which bettered by more than a thousand the previous 5,910 record of 1943. Beemer said the year pro duced its share of the country’s top flight divorce trade but the greatest number of cou ples seeking single status re presentedfhe wartime indus trial class, the professions and military, A new trend was seen in divorces granted for eign couples representing about three per cent of the total. __v_ !,000 BOMBERS POUND GERMANY: Hast Rail Yards, Bridges At Mannheim And Two Other Cities LONDON, Dec. 30.—(UP)—Near r 2,000 American heavy bombers nd fighters dropped thousands of ms of high explosives on rail ards and bridges at Mannheim, Laiserslautern and Kassel today in ie eighth straight day of attacks n communications of German ar lies in Belgium and Luxembourg. Murky weather hampered the ctivity of lighter Allied planes long the western front. Striking through heavy clouds, lore than 1,300 U. S. 8th Air Force 'lying Fortress and Liberator ombers unloaded nearly 3,000 tons f high explosives on six bridges nd six rail yards in western Ger lany between noon and 1 p. m. 'hey were escorted by more than 50 M u s t a n g and Thunderbolt ghters. No enemy fighter opposition was eported. All the bombing was Continued on Page Two; Col. 2) _\T_ WEATHER FORECAST North Carolina: Cloudy with consider ate fog and drizzle Sunday forenoon, scorning partly cloudy and warmer l afternoon, showers west portion Sun ay night and east portions Monday orning, followed by clearing and cooler onday. (Eastern Standard Time) (By U. S. Weather Bureau) Meteorological data for the 24 hours iding 7:30 p.m., yesterday. Temperature ] 1:30 am, 37; 7:30 am, 37; 1:30 pm, 41; 1 30 pm, 42. Maximum 44; Minimum 35; Mean 40; ] ormal 47. ] Humidity 1:30 am, 100; 7:30 am, 96; 1:30 pm, 91; 30 pm. 100. ( Precipitation Total for the 24 hours ending 7:30 pm, 1 12 inches. • Total since the first of the month, 97 inches. f j Tides For Today 1 (From the Tide Tables published by j . S. Coast and Geodetic Survey). -i Bigh Low J ilmington _11:08a 5:44a ] ll:26p 6:22p 3 asonboro Inlet _ 8:53a 2:31a ■ 9:14p 3:10p ] Sunrise, 7:18 a.m.; Sunset, 5:13 p.m.; j oonrise, 7:23 p.m.; Moonset, 8:56 a.m. j Continued on Page Two; Col. 4) < Soviets Enter East Suburb Of Budapest German Garrison Rejects Red Army Ultimatum To Surrender WIDEN BURMA HOLD Enemy Enlarges Forces In Effort To Halt Drive On Austria LONDON, Dec. 31.—(Sunday)— -(UP)—Red army tanks and in antry smashed into the streets of ndustriai Pest, eastern suburb of 3udapest, yesterday for the first ime, after the Nazis rejected a 3ed army ultimatum by killing wo Soviet emissaries carrying sur •ender terms under flags of truce. Simultaneously, Soviet assault roops extended their hold on 3uda, western part of t h e city, •eached the southernmost of s i x jridges across the Danube, seized 0 industrial plants and killed more han 3,600 enemy troops to boost o 35,408 the total of enemy killed >r captured in the Budapest area linpp Dprv 51 Emissaries Murdered The Russiam emissaries, bearing iemands for a surrender yester iay, were murdered in German leld Budapest after presenting heir ultimaturms. One was shot in he back as he was returning to soviet lines, Moscow said. The two Russian armies besieg ng Budapest, who had held their lire, immediately resumed their *rim battle to wipe out thousands nf beleaguered and fanatical Nazi iefenders and the struggle for the Hungarian capital flared as violent is that experienced at Stalingrad. A Moscow radio front report late last night said that the Soviets had overrun six blocks of streets in Bu ia in a few hours befve midnight ind reported that the Germans nad blown up the Vasuti railroad nridge linking Buda and Pest after t was reached by the Soviets. While crack Nazi elite guard roops in Budapest faced almost certain death at the hands of the Russians, Berlin reported that far :o the north, the Red army’s long nactive front in East Prussia had “returned to life’’ and Moscow an nounced that Soviet troops were vithin seven miles of the big Czechoslovak rail city of Losonc (Lucenec). After one emissary was killed in Kispest, southeaster suburb of Budapest, despite the white flag he carried, Marshal Rodion Y. Mali novsky sent troops of his 2nd Uk rainian army crashing through an nner line of fortifications on the nutskirts of Pest. Moscow’s mid light communique described the electrically - charged line as the fTfintilllHwl nn Do rrn ROOSEVELT DRA S ANNUAL MESSAGES Chief Expected To Confer With Congressional Aides Tuesday WASHINGTON. Dec. 30.—(UP) —President Roosevelt today buck led down to the task of finishing up his annual state of the union and budget messages for presentation to the new 79th congress which :onvenes Wednesday. He is expected to confere with his congressional advisors on Tues iay. assuming that they return to the capital in time. Definite dates Eor the congressional program will oe settled at that meeting but best guesses are that he will send up ris annual message on Thursday ind his budget message either on Friday or the following Monday. Congress will devote Saturday to ;ounting electoral ballots and de Continued on Page Three; Col. 1) Germans Launch Offensive I Against Bastogne Corridor; Command Shakeup Hinted; LONDON PAPERS STRESS REPORTS Statement Covering R e - grouping Of Allied Ar mies Expected Soon BY E. V. W. JONES LONDON, Dec. 30—(^P)— Reports that a shakeup of the Allied command on the west ern front was imminent were displayed prominently today by the London afternoon press; One military commentator declared that an official state ment covering some aspects of the regrouping of the Al lied commands and armies was expected shortly. The reports, the publication of which coincided with a definite im provement of the Allied position on the Western Front, were without any official confirmation. The T.nndnn F.venine News declar ed flatly that “important changes in the organization of the Allied supreme command on the Western Front are imminent.” It listed the present commanders without specu lating what the changes might be. “Poker Stage” The Evening Standard reported, “the big re-group is on,” and quot ed a Reuters military correspond ent as saying, “the second phase of Marshal Karl von Rundstedt’s of fensive has reached the poker stage.” The report of changes in the com mand appeared on the front page of the Star under the caption, "Al lied Command: Statement Soon.” The London Aess also carried reports from Washington that an American major general had been recalled from France and demot ed, but not because of the German counteroffensive. Despite the set-back suffered by the Allies in Belgium. there ap peared to be no disposition here to question the ability of General Eisenhower to control the situation. (Continued on Page Two; Col. 1) -V— CHURCHILL VOICES ’45 VICTORY HOPE Says ‘Evil Gang’ That Has Dominated Europe Will Be Wiped Out LONDON, Dec. 30.— (tf!—At the end of a year which had brought the United Nations far along the road to their goal, Prime Minister Churchill expressed hope today that at least half their task would be completed in the new year— that victory in Europe would be achieved in 1945. Observing that the Allies were entering upon a year “that should bring us victory in Europe,” he said in a new year’s message to the Primrose league, a conserva tive organization of which he is grand master: “Before many months have pass ed the evil gang that has long dominated that unhappy continent will be wiped out. “Until that end has been achiev ed, there can be no return to our iormal habits. “It would be tragic folly to pro long by any slackening in the last ehase the agony that megaloman iac ambition has loosed on the world.” Already that agony had been re ieved to some extent. All over Europe the lights were going on igain. Paris, Rome, Brussels and (Continued on Page Three; Col. 3) Wide Support Of Limits Extension Bill Expected General support of the proposed egislation to extend the limits of he City of Wilmington may be ex- ! jected, if the cross-section of pub- i ic opinion acquired by the ans- i vers of members of various civic ; dubs to the City Planning boards : [uestionnaires is to be considered ] is general approval. , In first place and far ahead of 1 he other seven questionnaires terns was extension of t h e city , imits, which received 51 first j dace votes and 71 marks in the , irst, second or third places. Rank ng number two was sentiment for j i city auditorium, with 14 first , dace marks and 52 in first, second ir third position. Distributed in connection with alks on city planning made by J. rred Rippy, Jr., secretary to the lity Planning board, the question laires represent an effort on the >art of the board to determine the •elative importance of planning iroblems in the eyes of the people >f Wilmington for present and fu ure growth. ■ More than 130 questionnaires j [athe^d in by planning officials n the past few months were tab dated yesterday by Rippy. Eight specific points were s e t i orth to be classified by each per- ] on as to their importance to him < Continued on Page Five; Col. 4) Japs’ Losses On Leyte Boosted To 116,770 Men BY SPENCER DAVIS GEN. MacARTHUR’S HEAD QUARTERS, Philippines, Sun day, Dec. 31—(/P)—Gen. Doug las MacArthur disclosed today, while a new Mindoro-bound convoy pressed on under Japa nese attack to reinforce his conquering forces, that the en emy had drawn troops from Manchuria in an effort to stop him on Leyte island. The American commander’s communique said Gen. Tomo yuki Yamashita had lost in the futile defense of Leyte four army divisions and the ele ments of two more, besides a naval brigade and other spe cial forces. Total Japanese losses, includ ing 601 killed in recent mop ping up operations, reached 116,770, the communique said. In a “historical resume” of the Japanese forces of Yama shita’s 35th army, destroyed on Leyte, MacArthur said one di vision, the 16th, had partici pated in the battle of Bataan against him early in the war. The opposing forces on Leyte were declared about equal in number. MacArthur declared the cam paign ended Christmas day when his troops captured Pal ompon, the last enemy port of escape. Since then mopping up opera tions have continued against remnants of the Japanese force. The communique said Japa nese planes attacked a Min doro bound American convoy Continued on Page Two; Col. 1) DamaskinosNamed Greek Regent In Peace Effort - ■¥-—-— FIGHT CONTINUES Scobie Charges ELAS With Mistreatment Of Brit ish Prisoners ATHENS, Dec. 30.—(UP)—An end to the Greek civil war was hoped for tonight with appointment of Archbishop Damaskinos as re gent, but British ahd Greek troops continued their all-out of fensive to clear Athens of left wing ELAS forces. The British commander of Al lied troops in Greece, Lt. Gen. Ronald M. Scobie, meanwhile, charged the ELAS with maltreat ing British prisoners in violation of the Geneva convention. Prospects of halting the three week-old war brightened with Da maskinos’ appointment and re ceipt of a moderately worded note from the ELAS armed wing of the | EAM (national liberation front) for delivery to Prime Minister Churchill, who personally inter vened to settle the crisis. Note Published The EAM newspaper, Free i Greece, published what it called the text of the note. “There is nothing to justify a continuation of the fight inasmuch as the left has accepted the basic points of General Scobie’s memo randum (calling for the ELAS and other forces to disband and sur- ' render their arms) and, with Its ' moderate suggestions in the po- ; litical field, help: to a great ex (Continued on Page Seven; Col. 3) ' -v- : LAW TO BACK WAR LABOR CODE ASKED Ball Says It Should Apply \ To Petrillo The Same 1 As Sewell Avery ■ WASHINGTON, Dec. 30— OP) — i Senator Ball (R-Minn) declared to- ; day that there should be a law ■ to back the government’s war time labor policy and that it should 1 apply to James C. Petrillo the , same as Sewell Avery. i The senator supported President Roosevelt’s s'atement in seizing ] Montgomery Ward stores Thurs- 1 day that what the President called the firm’s “consistent and willful defiance” of War Labor Board de jisions had threatened employer worker confidence in the agency’s machinery for settling labor dis putes. Avery is board chairman jf W’ard. But James C .Petrillo and the American Federation of Musicians, which he heads, also have defied :he board and jeopardized con fidence in it, Ball said in a state ment. Proposing establishment of a t 'legal basis for action against un- , on defiance,” he added: ‘‘A fundamental principle of de- ■ nocracy is that its rules and laws 1 ipply equally to all. I do not be- 1 ieve that is true at present as re tards enforement of WLB direc- 1 ives.” ' Petrillo and the Federation of ! Musicians defied WLB in a record ng ban case and in a st’-ike of thp 1 Minneapolis un’on against radio taiion KSTP. the senator said. I ^ Continued on Page Two; Col. S) I £ Many Enemy Agents Captured In Paris PARIS, Dec. 31.—(Sunday) — (UP)—French police and Am erican military authorities scouring Paris in a two-weeks’ hunt for German spies aiding the enemy’s counter offensive in the west have rounded up 30 enemy agents in one band and captured a “considerable number’’ of others, many of them in American uniforms, it was disclosed today. Each of the spies, whether in civilian clothes or Allied uni forms, faces the firing squad under international law for their attempts to obtain mili tary information and carry out sabotage that would aid German Field Marshal Gen. Karl von Rundstedt’s forces now fighting in Luxembourg and Belgium. XT GERMANS PROMISE TRIUMPH IN 1945 [Goebbels Declares He Planted Rumors That Hitler Was 111 LONDON, Dec. 30. —(#) —Nazi dg-wigs filled German air waves oday with promises of victory in view Year’s proclamations. Rotund, long-silent Hermann G# ;ring remained silent, but a pro damation purporting to come from lis declared that “it is our duty md our task in the coming year 0 carry war again into the ene ny’s country.” Rechsminister Paul Goebbels he No. 1 Nazi propagandist, had 1 brand new story to tell in ex donation of why the equally gar ■ulous Adolf Hitler h«s not been leard from lately. Goebbels on the German radio laid he purposely planted rumors hat Hitler was ill as part of a leep and far-flung scheme to lull he Allies into complacency and iet them up for Field Marshal Karl on Rundstedt’s winter offensive. Goering’s proclamation promised he German people “that we will ichieve victory and with it peace mder leadership of Adolf Hitler.” The Nazi agency DNB carried a >roclamation from Dr. Robert Ley, he labor front leader, saying: 'The party is the soul of German Continued on Page Two; Col. 4) FAIL TO CHECK PATTON’S PUSH Americans Are Storming Rocheforte At Apex Of The Enemy’s Bulge BY JAMES F. MoGLINCY United Press War Correspondent PARIS, Sunday, Dec. 31— (UP)—A critical new battle is raging around Bastogne where German forces have launched .a two-way attack against the U. S. Third army’s corridor through the city but thus far have failed to stem Lt. Gen. George S. Patton’s troops in their drive to cut off the enemy salient into Belgium, dispatches said to day. (The Luxembourg radio, heard in London, said that the U. S. First and Third armies had taken between 16.000 and 20,000 German prisoners since the start of the German offensive on Dec. 16.) Patton’s men were reported in censored field dispatches to have smashed five miles northwest of Bastogne, narrowing to 12 miles the waist of the enemy salient, al though a contradictory announce ment from supreme headquarters said the width of the gap was 16 miles. Storming Rochefort American tanks and the dough boys at the same time were re ported storming the road center of Rochefort, at the apex of the bulge, street by street in an effort to throw the Germans into com plete reverse after knocking back j Panzer spearheads 11 miles from the high-water mark of their drive. The German attacks from east and west against the Bastogne salient were reported mounted in strong force but Patton’s armor and infantry and previously widen ed the corridor to nearly eight miles just south of Bastogne. Late reports said that the Third army had entered La Vaselle and Chenogne, adjoining villages five miles west and slightly south of Bastogne. These gains not only bulwarked the corridor but drove a wedge across the communica tions of German troops still trying to hold their advance penetration to St. Hubert, 15 miles west of Bastogne. hold on the Arlon-Baslogne high way leading into the city from the south but Patton from the incep tion of his drive had employed a parallel secondary road and at last reports here, 36 hours old at last midnight, the corridor was still firmly held. Whether measured from 12 or 16 miles across, the waist of the German salient could be interdict ed by two-way artillery fire from Third army troops on the south and the First army on the north. Such shelling of roads within the salient already has “most likely” been undertaken, it was said in author itative quarter!. Capture Nothum Late dispatches said that the Third army had captured Nothum, 2 1-2 miles southwest of the Lux embourg center of Wiltz, in line straightening operations on the center of its 40-mile front. (German broadcasts assorted that the Allies had thrown in 25 divisions, with the bulk of their armor concentrated against the base of the salient where the First and Third army, in simultaneous assaults, were reported trying to slice off the German bulge. (Since mid-December, the enemy broadcasts asserted, the Americans have lost more than 100,000 men, fifteen of their divisions, including (Continued on Page Two, Col. 3) 1944 Disappointing Year To Many U. S. Officials x>y jun^ in. muniuwriii WASHINGTON, Dec. 30.— (/P) — American officialdom is winding ip 1944 acutely conscious that for he United States this has been in nany respects the most disappoint ng and disillusioning year of the /ar. Unjustified optimism about mili ary progress led them to believe ■hen this 12 months starts that by onight the war in Europe would e won and the shift of forces to be Pacific well started. Now estimates of the date for ictory in Europe run into the fall r winter of 1945. Optimism has iven way to the conviction that tne bermans really mean to fight all the way to Berlin. Perhaps the basic error in mili tary thinking, Allied as well a’s American, has been to underesti mate the enemy’s determination. It was believed that when he was surrounded and battered by land and air he would surrender. A tremendous series of victories east, south and west, tightened the ring around Hitler’s fortress Europe but fell so short of breaking Ger many that the enemy was able to wind up the year with a western front offensive which probably added months to the war. (Continued on Page Five; Col. 6)