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2,000 WARPLANES SLASH AT GERMANY LONDON. Jan. 28. — (/P) — -A crushing tide of Allied air powers rolled over Germany today with nearly 2,000 war planes from Bri tain slashing at the German Ruhr industrial region by daylight and RAF bombers reported heading for Berlin again tonight. The German radio warned that enemy bombers were approaching Brandenburg province, indicating the refugee-packed German capi tal was a target for the second successive night. Mosquitos hurled two-ton blockbusters on Berlin Sat urday night. Before noon, a force of 1,000 U. S. Eighth Air Force Flying For tresses and Liberators, escorted by 250 Mustangs, unloaded 3.000 tons of bombs on two Benzol plants near Dortmund, the large Rhine bridges at Duisburg and Cologne, and on railyards at Gremberg, four miles southeast of Cologne, and Hohenbudberg, five miles southwest of Duisburg. A force of probably 500 RAF Lancasters with fighter cover fol lowed, dumping almost 2,000 tons of- explosives on smoking Grem berg, whose rail web sprawls near the banks of the Rhine over an area two miles wide and a quar tgr-mile long. TRAINMARTURE DELAY ) BY Cfi L (Continued from Page One) velts who made the train change to the Ci*y of Las Angeles last night. He said the train would make up the hour and seven minutes before it arrived in Los Angeles. The Roosevelts, he said, had reservations on the City of Los Angeles. Their incoming Pennsyl vania Railroad train, he said, was due in Chicago at 12:20 p. m., but Was six and a half hours late. The next westbound train, Ever Bon said left at 8:15 p. m. last night, “but the Roosevelts couldn’t have gotten on it without reserva tions which they didn’t have.’’ Approximately 300 passengers were aboard the City of Los Ange les at the 6 p. m. departure hour. Officials of the railroad said they displayed nothing beyond the usual American impatience because of the delay. AMERICANS OPEN SURPRISE ATTACK (Continued from Page One) than two and a half miles away. At least four more towns in the two countries were liberated, in eluding Burg-Reuland, six miles south of St. Vith and two miles west of the border in the deepesi part of the bulge on the Thirc Army front. A half mile south of Burg-Reu land, infantry in a mile advance reached a point half a mile from the Our. The Fifth Division on the south flank took the village of Wahlhau sen, a mile from the German fron tier north of Diekirch. Lt. Gen. Jean de Lattre de Tas signy’s French First Army was slowly developing a squeeze on the troublesome German Colmar Mulhouse front south of Strasbourg, His French, with American com rades assigned to his army, clear ed out Wickerschwihr and Holtz wihr, three miles northeast of Col mar, and Jebsheim, six miles from northeast and but four miles from the Rhine. The mop-up of Jebsheim left the French only two miles west of the Rhine-Rhone canal, which the Ger mans have incorporated into their stout defenses along the Rhine. At Wickerschwihr they were on a canal connecting Colmar with the Rhine-Rhone waterway and N position to outflank the city on the east. The French fighting up 22 miles to the south seized Cite Kullman, a village three miles north of Mul house, after heavy house-to-house fighting. Seven miles northwest of Mul house, the French drove the last snipers from the Cernay suburb of Gebelfort. Cernay has been the scone of some of the heaviest fighting on this front. The lull on Lt. Gen. Alexander M. Patch's Seventh Army front moved into its second day. The quiet was broken only by occa sional small arms fire and the clash of patrols. To the northwest, the U. S. Third Army’s 94th Division pushed an other mile into Germany along the Moselle river valley, entering the outskirts of Sinz, four miles north of the Reich border and three miles east of the Luxembourg frontier. Activity along the Roer was con fined generally to patrolling, al though the British cleaned out St. Odilienberg, on the Roer two and a half miles southeast of the Ger man bastion of Roermond. Snow fell over most of the bat tlefront today and all tactical ait forces were grounded throughout the morning. FIGHT IS SEEN ON DRAFT BILL (Continued from Page One) the legislation, asserting that “the quicker we throw all our resources into the job of winning this war, the sooner we will realize vic tory.” But the Congress of Industrial Organizations renewed its fight to settle the critical manpower prob lem by voluntary, not statutory means. In a letter to all members of Congress, CIO President Philip Murray urged support of the vol untary program. In a second let ter, he asked War Production Chairman J. A. Krug to sponsor as soon as possible a meeting of industry, labor and government to solve the manpower riddle. These were other manpower de velopments over the week end: 1. Joseph D. Keenan, vice chair man of the War Production Board and director of the Office of Labor Production, said the labor draft was “unnecessary.” 2. Secretary of the Navy James V. Forrestal, speaking at Bayonne, N. J., said work-or-jail legislation is needed urgently. He character ized as “arrant nonsense” charges that the armed services were seek ing to regiment labor. 3. May said that passage of his bill was most urgent because, if the Nazi collapse as a result of Allied victories, workers would start seeking peace-time jobs, for getting that Japan remains to be conquered. -V Solons Protest Shipment Of Newsprint To France (Continued from Page One) complete that the German head long retreat left them practically nc, time to destroy French manu facturing facilities. It is our un derstanding, therefore, that French pulp and paper producing facili ies are more or less intact.” ! This Funny World HcNaught Syndicate, Inc.— f © Woman's Home Companion | ! “You know, Mom, the fellers were talking today—and I said my pin-up girl is right home here!” Army Newspaper Lashes 18,OOP A WOL Soldiers PARIS. Jan. 28.—lA’t—1The Army newspaper Stars and Stripes lash ed out today at the 18,000 soldiers absent without leave in the Euro pean Theater of Operations. “We don’t know the AWOL rate in the Red Army," the editorial said. “Our guess is it’s low.” Asserting the Russians know what they are fighting for and have no illusions about the Ger mans, the newspaper added: “A bitter fact can also go on record—that there are 18,000 American soldiers in the European Theater of Operations who haven't the faintest idea what this war is about, who seemingly know noth ing about its causes—and care less about its outcome: who make it a business to murder their pals by engaging in black market skull duggery; who deny the great over whelming mass of informed, think ing loyal Americans the amount of food and fuel they need to finish their jobs". Lt. Gen. Ben Lear, deputy com mander of American troops in the European theater, said yesterday he was “not alarmed" at the high figure of AWOLs, since it was like ly that only a few thousand of them were willfully absent. He said most of them were simply overstaying their pass or were accidentally de layed in getting back to their units. The Provost Marshal’s office said that the figure actually was lower than in the last war though double what it was before D-Day. Brig. Gen. P. B. Rogers, com manding general in the Seine sec tion, said the AWOLs presented a serious problem, with the men fac ing the temptation to pick up easy money in blackm&rket rackets or to resort to other crimes while cut off from the army payroll. He declared however, that only a min ority of AWOLs were in this cate gory and that most of them were ‘‘simply stragglers" who will soon be back with their outfits. He cited as an example that on a typical day in a Paris guard house, 700 men were held, with 167 accused of pilferage and black market activities, while the re mainder were routine AWOLs. In cases of wilful AWOLs the penalty is severe. If intent to de sert can be proved the offender risks the death sentence. Husband Of Resident Killed At War Front Mrs. Amos Dobson. Jr., of Wil mington, has received word that her husband, Sgt. Amos R. Dob son, was killed in action in Bel gium January 2. A former high school basketball star at Lynchburg, Va., Sgt. Dob son had been overseas since Sep tember. His wife, the former Es telle E, Vereen, was with his par ents in Lynchburg, when the re port of his death was received. They have a daughter, Andrea, two-years-old. He is also survived by three sisters, Mrs. Lloyd Shaner, Mrs. J. B. Rollins, and Miss Nancy Dobson, all of Lynchburg. WALLACEPLANS FIGHT FOR JOB (Continued from Page One) George bill. Others would not ex press themselves. Of those for Wallace, 17 are Democrats. Those for the George bill include 26 Republicans. One Southern Democrat who said he would vote for Wallace, was '‘amazed" at the tide against the former Vice President. He re called that there wasn’t a single vote against Wallace when he was confirmed as Secretary of Agri culture in 1933. "He is the same man today as he was then," the senator said, “the same idealist with the same philosophy. I see no reason for opposing him.” One Senate veteran said his proposal poll showed 47 or 50 votes against Wallace and over whelming support for the George measure. The man who holds the key to whether the nomination or the bill will be considered first—Chairman Josiah W. Bailey, (D-N.C.) whose Commerce Committee approved the bill but rejected Wallace—said he did not know whether they will be submitted simultaneously, “but they won’t be very far apart if I can help it.” CHIANG^HONORS GEN. STILWELL (Continued from Page One) contributing to ultimate victory. Wedemeyer said. “The generafissimo and Gen. Wedemeyer are now collaborating to destroy the forces of Japan in China,” Hurley said. “The forces of MacArthur and Nimitz have de feated the Japanese in battle after battle in the Pacific. The imperial istic designs of Japan to domi nate other peoples and other na tions have failed. “There is a growing opinion that the last battle, the final victory of the United Nations will be t.'.e defeat of Japan on the soil of China.” -V Wear aprons for little chores around house and garden and save your clothes. NLRB ATTORNEY REPORTS ACTION A four-day adjournment of the National Labor Relations Board hearing of unfair labor practice charges brought against the North Carolina Shipbuilding company at the instance of the C. I. O.-Ship yard Workers’ Union began Satur day and will end Wednesday. Sessions will recommence Wed nesday at 10 a.m. The long recess was asked by the senior NLRB counsel, William J. Avrutis, in or der to permit him to go to Board headquarters in Washington, and to report the progress of the case thus far. Last witness on the stand was William A. Everitt. a former pro duction worker at the shipyard, who averred that he and other workers, whom he named, had been discharged for acquiescence in CIO soliciting, alleged by the shipyard to have been carried on within the yards. He implied com plicity by the United States Em ployment Service in keeping him from being re-hired, he said, when a need for workers in his category was publicly posted in the Employ ment Service office. _ _ir_ - Local Flier’s Homecoming To Unit Told By Witness (Continued from Page One) unshaven and dirty young men entered the operations hut. Lead ing the group was Morris, drag ging a parachute bag. There was slapping on the back, and other welcoming gestures. “Who said there was no Santa Claus?”, ques tioned one man as he grinned. “Was your plane in a wash out?”, and “did you see any pretty girls.” Morris and his bomber crew had just returned from Russia. Morris’ ship had been hit over enemy territory, but he refused to bail out when his plane was struck because he still had two motors working and none of his crew were injured. The men completed their mission, dropped their bombs on the target and started for the nearest friendly territory. Soon his gas guage showed empty and an other motor was failing. The co pilot spotted a landing strip in the distance, and Morris successfully landed the plane on a temporary Russian landing field. The ship was too badly shot to be repaired or flown out. Tlje reception by the Russians was cordial, and the crew were well treated. As to how the men returned to their stations is a military secret. In that parachute bag that Mor ris had brought into the operations hut were certain valuable instru jments from the plane, which he refused to destroy. Among the sou venirs brought back from Russia, Morris valued most a very small radio, with all the known radio bands on it. This story comas from Red Cross Field Director Virgil Evans, who stated that Morris returned to dutv December 27. y Obituaries JAMES W. CHAPMAN Funeral services for James Wn liam Chapman, 74, who died Sat urday at James Walker Memorial hospital, will be held at 10:30a. m. today at St. Mary s pro-cathe dral by the Rev. Father J. H Telvin.' Burial will be in Oakdale cemetery. _ ._ A Wilmington groceryman for more than 40 years, Mr chapman is survived by his brother, John Patrick Chapman, of Wilmington; a sister. Mrs. M. C. Gallaghe , of Roanoke, Va.; and a niece, Mrs. E. L. Potter, of Wilmington. Active pallbearers will be Mar tin Flanagan, Paul B®sclJ0”’ lie White Bill Powell, John Bre mer and Paul Bergen. Honorary pallbearers will be James J. Allen, B. M. Jones, C. C. Loper, Mr. Riggins and Mr. Byrd. IREDELL J. PREVATTE LUMBERTON, Jan. 28.—Funeral services were held today for Ire dell J. Prevatte, 78, retired farmer, who died at noon yesterday at a local hospital. Burial was in the Prevatte cemetery. Surviving Mr. Prevatte are a son, Franklin, in the U. S. Navy; and a grandchild. He was the son of the late Jordon and Anza Barnes Pre vatte. His wife, Mrs. Lena Pitt man Prevatte, died three years ago. MRS. W. P. ATKINSON CHADBOURN, Jan. 28.—Funeral services were held today at the Peacock funeral home for Mrs. W. P. Atkinson, 38. The Rev. A. T. Peacock, Baptist minister, offici ated, assisted by the Rev. B. F. Allman and the Rev. L. A. Line berger. The former Norine Watson, daughter of the late Mrs. Sam Wat son, of Barnesville, Mrs. Atkinson is survived by her husband and a sister. DENNIS WILKINS LUMBERTON, Jan. 28.—Funeral services were held today at Smith's i ethodist church for Dennis Wil kins, 77, who died of a heart at tack yesterday at his home. The Rev. M. D. McLamb, pastor, of ficiated, and burial was in the Wil kins family cemetery. Surviving Mr. Wilkins are hi widow, Mrs. Zula Smith Wilkins two sons, J. D. of Route 1, anc Nye Wilkins, of Dublin; two daugh ters, Letha and Blance, of Lum berton; and three brothers, Isaac, Tom and Date Wilkins, all ol Route 5. JULIAN K. WARREN TRENTON, Jan. 28—Julian Knoi Warren. 28, prominent attorney died unexpectedly early Saturday morning in the Walker Sanitarium at Richmond, Va., where he hac been receiving treatment for the last three weeks. He had been ir failing health from a heart ailment for some time. The funeral will probably be held Monday afternoon at 3 o’clod from the residence here by the Rev. Jack Rountree of Kinston rector of the Episcopal church here Interment will be in Cedar Grove cemetery at New Bern. Born in Edenton August 20. 1886 he was the youngest son of the late William Y. Warren and Fanie iBadham Warren and a descendant !of Dr. Edward Warren, founder ot the College of Physicians and Sur geons of Baltimore, Md., medical inspector of the Army of Northern I Virginia and surgeon-in-chief oi the War Department of Egypt. After graduating from the Bing ham school at Asheville, Jule War ren completed his law course al the University of North Carolina ir 1907 and six months before he reached his 21st birthday passed the State bar examination. Through out his entire career he had prac ticed law at Trenton, but his pro fessional activities and farming interests extended to many other sections. During World War I he served as chairman of the Legal Advisory Board of Jones County, was chair man of the Council of Defense in his county and was a captain on the 52nd North Carolina Reserves. For many years he was promin ent in the Democratic party, and long served as chairman of the Jones County Democratic Execu tive Committee. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Etta Burt Warren; one son, Lt. J. K. Warren, Jr.; and two daughters, Mrs. Alan A. Marshall of Charles ton, S. C., and Frances Warren of Trenton. MEETING ON CITY TENSION SLATED A meeting of residents of Sunset Park, Summer Hill, Pinecrest and Woodlawn will be held at 8:30 p. m. today, it was announced last night by Capt. J. G. Gholston, chairman of the temporary com mittee of southern suburban resi dents opposed to inclusion of their area within Wilmington’s city lim its. In calling the meeting, which will be held in the old Sunset Park school building, Capt. Ghclston urged that all interested suburban ites attend. No definite, agenda have been outlined, but it is ex pected that suggestions will be submitted from the floor regarding action to be taken by the commit tee chosen to fight the city limits bill in Raleigh this week. The Sunset Park committee con sists of W. K. Rhodes, Jr., W. J. Wilson, G. A. Patterson, W. A. Can non and Capt Gholston. A similar committee from the eastern sub urbs was selected Friday night at a meeting of the Suburban Associ ation in New Hanover county courthouse. Its members are Fred Willetts, Jack Swartz, H. Adams, J. L. Sutton and Heide Trask. Prior to the selection of the east ern suburban committee and pass age of a resolution that the two areas’ groups operate jointly, a caution was voiced Friday night by Alton A. Lennon, chairman of the Association meeting. He warned against hasty action by the committees in any attempt to prevent the city-limits bill’s be ing put to a vote in the State leg islature this week, citing the dis advantage at which the groups would find themselves in opposing Rep. J. Q. LeGrand before an As sembly committee. He pointed out that they them selves had helped award Mr. Le Grand a “thunderous majority” in the last elections, after a campaign in which he had repeatedly stated himself to be an advocate of city extension. RATION ROUNDUP Bv The Associated Press MEATS, FATS, ETC.—Book Four red stamps Q5 through R5 good through March 31. Stamps T5 through X5 good through April 28. Stamps Yo, Z5. and A2 through D2 igood through June 2. PROCESSED FOODS — Book Four blue stamps X5 through Z5 and A2 and B2 good through March 31. Stamps C2 through G2 good through April 28. Stamps H2 through M2 will be valid February 1 and good through June 2. SUGAR—Stamp 34 good for five pounds through Feb. 28. Stamp 35 will be valid for five pounds Feb ruary 1 through June 2. Another I stamp scheduled to be validated May 1. GASOLINE—14-A coupons good everywhere for four gallons through March 21. B-5, C-5, B-6 and C-6 coupons good everywhere for five gallons. FUEL OIL—Last year’s period four and five coupons and this year’s period one, two and three coupons valid in all areas. In South, period four and five coupons for this year are valid on Febru ary 5_ period four coupons become valid in other areas, along with period five coupons in the Mid west. All stamps good throughout current heating season. Russians Seize Silesian Coal Section And Memel (Continued from Page One) to the north, Gutenfield, five miles to the southeast, and Wickbold, five miles south. Fourteen miles north of Konigs berg, Soviet troops seized Darin en. three miles from Granz, which is at the southern end of the Kuris ches Nehrung, a spit of land whicn forms the breakwater for the la goon extending up to captured Memel. Memel, ceded under pressure by Lithuania to Germany in March, 1939, was taken by Gen. Ivan Bagramian’s First Baltic Front in an assault that opened yesterday. It is a city of 43,000. The rest of Memelland was won by the Rus sians last Ooctober. In Upper Silesia, Marshal Kon ev’s First Ukraine Army was credited with hurling the Ger mans out of the rich industrial I area and_ capturing Katowice, a city of 135,000, and Beuthen, popu lation 100,000, just inside the Ger man frontier five miles northwest of Katowice. To the northwest Russian troops were reported by ' Berlin to have encircled Breslau, great Silesian capital of 650,000, and to have crossed the Oder river at a dozen points on both sides of Breslau, between Glogau, 117 miles south east of Berlin, and Cosel, 35 miles west of fallen Beuthen. Moscow has not announced a crossing of the upper Oder, but Ber ling said the Russians are fighting steadily to expand their west bank holdings and said mat in addition to Breslau the west bank strong holds of Steinau, Brieg, Krappitz and Cosel are under assault. The Soviet communique announc ed the fall of Guhrau, 18 miles east of Glogau in northern Silesia, and Berlin said that Konev’s troops in the south also were striking to ward Moravia’s Sudeten mountains to secure the lower flank of Zhu kov’s central columns hitting to ward Berlin. Stalin also announced that Col. Gen. Petrov’s Fourth Ukraine army, toiling through the eastern Slovakian mountains, had captur ed Poprad, 36 miles northwest of Kassa (Kosice) in a 13-mile ad vance from Levoca, taken Satur day. -V Save fuel by turning off the heat a few minutes before your roast or baking is ready. -V— BUT WAB BONDS AND STAMPS Father To Get Dead Son’s Congress Medal Of Honor WASHINGTON, Jan. 28.—(«— The Congressional Medal of Honor for which Sgt. Truman O. Olson gave his life, will be presented to his father Wednesday night at the State Capitol in Madison, Wis., the War Department announced today. The father, Axel Olson of Cam bridge, Wise., will receive the medal — the Nation’s highest award—from Col. W. Lutz Krig baum, commander of District No. 2 of the Sixth Service Command, at ■ a ceremony to be attended by Gov. Walter S. Goodland. Two brothers of the sergeant, Richard and Harold, also will be present Young Olson, a machine gunner of the Third Division, won the medal for sticking by his gun de spite mortal wounds and turning back an attack of 200 Germans against his company on the Anzio beachhead January 30, 1944. Twice wounded during the attack, he died while being carried to an aid station. The citation credited him with saving his company from anni hilation and with killing at least 20 Germans and wounding many more. Award of the medal pre viously had been announced by the Seventh Army Headquarters. City Briefs GIRL REPORTED MISSING Ethel Bogan, Negress, of 706 Wood street, reported to police yesterday that her niece, Irene Steven, 21, had been missing from home since 8 p. m. Sat urday night. She is describ ed as five feet and two inches in height, and between 140 and 150 pounds in weight. AUTOS DAMAGED Two automobiles were badly damaged yesterday, when a car driven by Johnnie Flem ming, Negro, of Circle drive, Maffitt village, and one driven by Richard Sparkman, of 5 Lee drive, collided at the inter section of Thirteenth and Or ange streets, according to po lice reports. Flemming was arrested for reckless driving. BICYCLE STOLEN Roy Ganous, of 115 1-2 South Front street, reported to police yesterday that his blue and white colored bicycle had been taken from his home. SUITCASE STOLEN Mrs. Ann Moore, of 508 Mar ket street, reported to police yesterday that a brown leather suitcase with belongings valued at $125, had been taken from her room. The grip was de scribed as having light brown stripes. According to police reports, it contained a red dress, a red sweater, a man’s shaving kit, a tan jumper, a tan jacket and a box of jewelry, “mostly small trankets.” ARRESTED FOR LARCENY Oscar McKoy, 38, Negro, of 1210 1-2 Brooklyn Alley, was booked by police yesterday for larceny and receiving. Ac cording to police reports ^ took 533 from Dorothy Venson, of 812 Nixon street. He was put in jail in default of $500 bond. CAR WRECKED State Highway patrolmen yesterday reported a 1942 Hud son automobile had turned over in a ditch on Highway 421, six miles south of the City. There were no signs of anyone being hurt, they said. The license number of the car was 356103. A United States Marine officer, Lieut.-Col. Francis T. Evans, was the first aviator to loop the loop in a seaplane, a feat he accompli shed in 1917. [.FZF SOOTHES : YOUR THROAT | below the gargle < I Each F & F Cough Lozenge gives ; your throat a 15 minute comforting ; treatment. Really soothing because ; they're really medicated. Used by ; millions for coughs, throat irrita ; tions or hoarseness resulting from ; colds or smoking. Only 10)i box. • : C^uifSH LOZENGES dsm is awarded ' CHUNGKING, Jan, 2fj Maj. Gen. Albert C. ' pinned the Distinguished Medal today on Bris Geo E. Gross. 44. of Hoiiv Hin *n;? for exceptionally meritorir''.', C' ice with the headquarter® off' Army Air Forces in tr‘ Gross played a major Lf"501'- ’ development and design a" ’h* can combat planes. 1 Arner BUY WAR BOXDVaND»^ St. John’s Taren Orange St DELICIOUS FOOD Chicken in Th« Rough — Frldij Hanover Theatre Will Open Thur. Feb. 1st ai S p. Located Carolina Beach Road Maffitt Village Special BUSINESS MEN'S Lunch lie 11:30 Jo 2:30 Daily j Except Sunday G & J. CAFE 118 Market St. j A Good Place to Eal! —. 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Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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