-1 FORECAST ---7-7—: - ^ m Served By Leased W ires Partly cloudy and warm today. f + ASSOCIATED PRESS Yesterday’s temperatures: III W I I W I I I I XI I and the High, 83—Low, * 62. J ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ III */— V I ■ UNITED PRESS , W * With Complete Coverage of —“77Z" State and National News t^Ts^NO. 119. -:-L_ I!-——---------WILMINGTON, N. C., SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 1945 _ ESTABLISHED 1867 Third Army E^ves To Outskirts Of Coblenz, First Slashes Across Highway At Two Points; Kobe Razed By 2,500 Tons Of Incendiaries Record Load Hits Japans Fifth Center Fires May Prove Devasta ting Due To Low Water Supply GUAM, Saturday, March 17.— -More than 300 Superfortresses showered 2.500 tons of incendiary bombs over a five-mile target area in the heart of Kobe, Ja pan's fifth city, early today in their fourth devastation raid in seven elapsed days on Japanese war industry. The record load of fire bombs was poured into the heart of the great shiobuilding, ship repair and general industrial center of near ly 1.000.000 population, starting at about 4 a.m. In pursuance of new tactics, the Superfortresses swept over the target at low altitude to increase bombing accuracy and to handi ng anti-aircraft gunners. T.iere was every reason to be lieve fiies had been started which would rival those that burned 24 square miles of Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya. Japan’s first three cities, in the previous devastation raids. Today's attack may prove a ca tastrophe. Though Kobe is Japan’s chief industrial port, it lacks large rivers and canals and its water supply for fire fighting is consid ered dangerously low. Only Kyoto remained of Japan’s "big five'’ industrial cities to feel the weight of a merciless fire bomb attack intended, as the com munique on today’s raid said, to destroy Japan’s industrial produc tion of war essentials. Kobe lies 225 miles west-south west of Tokyo and 25 west of Osa ka. Kyoto is 40 miles northeast of Kobe. The load of 2,500 tons of incen diaries dropped on Kobe was a rec ord. There were five pounds of unquenchable fire for every inhab itant of the great city — but the bombs were dropped into an area so small that each square miles received 1.000.000 pounds. Tokyo was attacked last Satur day with 2 300 tons of bombs and 17 square miles of its heart were destroyed. Monday came the turn of Nago Ja. Japan's third city. Two thou sand tons of fire bombs were hurl ed into a live square mile area and 1®'o squat-: miles were burned. Wednesday about 2,300 tons were dropped cn Osaka, the second city, and five square miles were de sl roved. Ip each instance more than 300 superfortresses attacked, in the Predawn hours of the morning. testimonial was provided by enemy broadcasts — evacuation of non-essential people from the big He, cities, merger of printing fa n:les newspapers, revision of i-aircraft defense, a decision to include Premier Gen. Kuniaki Koi ‘ ir all imperial headquarters meetmgs as an equal member. -v_ JAPS REPORT DAMAGE Thousands Killed, Hurt, Homeless After Raids WASHINGTON, March 16— (U.R)— t °UsanUs of persons were burned death, thousands were seriously Jured and many thousands were “ade homeless in the Superfor