The Alamance Gleaner VoL LXVUI GRAHAM, N. C.f THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1942 No. 30 WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS Allies Demonstrate Growing Strength In 'Dress Rehearsal' Raid on Dieppe; Solomon Victory Forecast of Further Pacific Offensives by United States (BDITOB'S IWltfTwiiii tflalsu m iwmhI la tk?w Mliua, tk?r tra ?( Western Newspaper Union's news analysis and not necessarily of this newspaper.) * Released by Western Newspaper Union. ? [ji:|B|ypf;g;|gigiia msnoAHBSc, 1 tENGJLAND: / /mmteSm !i iiiiiillltliiiB?? iliM!?* jcaiofrid? ^ippisp' f&r* ligagp hi l JHpMk Imb <**3 f c ? liai^^eiflBiMijUESiijjlj;l;j;j;;H;;ijli;j^ Vy ;i::i;:;'' j/j;;:1 ;jl;i The English channel area which was the scene of the most daring and extensive daylight raid by Allied forces on the French coast thus far. Brit ish and Canadian Commandos, supported by American Rangers, took part in the nine-hour foray which ravaged the Nazi defenses at Dieppe, destroyed artillery batteries, ammunition dumps and radio stations and left Dieppe in flames. COMMANDOS: In Dress Rehearsal Adolf Hitler learned that no mat ter how deep into Russia his eastern armies might penetrate, his western flank was open to attack that might be costly. That was evident when British and Canadian Commandos supported by American Rangers swept across the English channel and back again in a nine-hour daylight raid that was a dress rehearsal for the forthcom ing Allied invasion of Europe. The Nazi-fortified coastal defenses at Dieppe, midway between Ca lais and Le Havre were the target. Although German sources estimated the force at 15,000 men, its number remained an official Allied secret. The raiders carried tanks and ar tillery with them. While losses on both sides were considerable, the raiders were re ported to have destroyed a six-gun shore artillery battery, an ammu nition dump, a vast anti-aircraft bat tery and a radio location station. Moreover, it was reported that the city of Dieppe had been left in flames. A strategic feature of the assault was the vast aerial umbrella in the form of 1,000 Allied fighter planes shielding the raiders. This was re ported as the greatest aircraft can opy yet sent aloft. While it pro tected the operations of Commandos below, it succeeded in downing or damaging 273 enemy planes. The attack demonstrated that landings in force could be success fully made against the strongest Nazi-fortified points on the French coast. And as a reminder of the growing air strength of the Allies, American and British planes swept over France the day after the raid, striking out in the greatest force ever seen over western Europe. The air raiders, 500 strong, included fighter-escorted American Flying Fortresses and other bombers. RUSSIA: Gloom Persists Only in the northernmost area of the Russian fighting front?at Voro nezh and Bryansk?were the Soviet forces able to report any success. At these points several towns had been taken and thousands of Ger mans had been killed. But elsewhere the picture re mained gloomy. Stalingrad, key in dustrial city on the Volga, was men aced by a Nazi pincer. Further to the south, Maikop, fertile center of the Kuban valley wheatfields and source of some of Russia's oil,- had been taken and Russian communi ques admitted the Germans were moving trainloads of foodstuffs out of this area. The loss of Maikop opened the way for the capitulation of the strategic city of Krasnador, a railroad and river in the northwest Caucasus, and gateway to the Reds' naval base of Novorossick, less than 60 miles distant. Although Prime Minister Church ill's visit to Moscow had roused hopes that strategic moves from western Europe or from the Middle East by the Allies might take some of the mortal pressure off Russia, the situation remained critical. The successful Commando raid on the French coast was at least a token in that direction. SOLOMON ISLANDS: Important Victory At last it could be told, for the news revealed in a laconic navy communique was that the offensive in the Solomon islands had been completely successful. The enemy held islands in the southeast Solo mon chain were now firmly in the hands of United States marines. Only remnants of once strong Japa nese forces remained on the islands and these were being mopped up. The navy's communique announc ing the victory said also that an en emy cruiser or destroyer was bombed and set afire by American planes in the area. "United States marines are en gaged in mopping up remnants of the Japanese forces on the islands which were recently captured in the Solomon archipelago," the communi que said. "Casual bombardments of our shore positions by enemy aircraft, destroyers and submarines have in flicted only minor damage. An en emy destroyer or cruiser was bombed and set afire by our air craft." The main offensive had been launched on the strategically impor tant Tulagi harbor area on Florida island, 930 miles from Australia. The enveloping attack included land ings on smaller islands nearby. Viewed in its strategic perspec tive, the Solomons offensive meant that Japan's thrusts toward New Caledonia would be forestalled, and that the pressure on southern New Guinea and Australia would be lifted. MARRIED MEN: Face Early Draft Married men under the age of 45 with dependents faced the pros pect of being called in the draft "in the not far distant future." This pre diction was made by a spokesman for Brig. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey's national selective service board. Speaking before the 52nd annual reunion of the Legion of Valor in Boston, Ted Luther, Hershey's aide, said "the nation's reservoir of 1-A men was practically exhausted" and that it would be necessary to ob tain men from 1-B and 3-A classes. "The selective service board is most anxious to avoid breaking up homes and families," he said, "but because of the few men in 1-B clas sification and the smaller number that can be obtained from among those reaching 20 years of age each month, it will be necessary to take those with dependents. BRAZIL: Irked at Axis Submarines which tor weeks had persistently attacked Brazil's coastwise shipping roused that na tion to fighting pitch when they sank five merchantmen within a few days' span, with a loss of more than 600. Thus a tacit state of war existed between Brazil and the Axis, with out benefit of a formal declaration. "Brazilians know how to fight decisively and with or without arms will know how to die for Brazil," Air Minister Joaquim Salgado declared, as the nation's warships and planes combed the sea for submarines and raiders. RATIONING: Meat and Oil First Two rationing programs loomed ' on the near horizon for American citizens with others in the back ground. These two were fuel oil in the East and meats generally throughout the nation. The food branch of the War Pro duction board had drafted a pre liminary order embodying recom mendations of Agriculture Secretary Wickard's food requirements com mittee. These included allocation of meat supplies to different sections of the country, adjustment of price ceilings to stimulate the flow of meats into shortage areas, alloca tion among packers of government purchases of meat for the armed forces?and finally, rationing. Rationing of fuel oil for Eastern heating purposes appeared near as industrial establishments and homes using oil for heating were warned they would have to get along on less than normal supplies. MIDDLE EAST: Command Is Changed As Gen. Sir Claude Auchinleck had joined a growing list of ousted commanders of the precarious Mid dle East front, the infusion of new brains in the person of hard-hitting Gen. Sir Harold R. L. G. Alexander, focused attention on the importance of that sector. The visit of Prime Minister Churchill to Alexandria on his way to Moscow, too, had shown how vital the Egyptian sector loomed in Allied strategy. Observers pointed out that be cause of its strategic possibilities. North Africa might become the Unit ed Nations' second front. Biggest task confronting the Unit ed Nations before snow flies was halting Hitler's gigantic pincer drive against the Middle East by way of the Russian Caucasus from the north and via Marshal Rommel's Egyptian Nazi armies from the southwest. WAR PRODUCTION: - Nelson Gets Tough Criticism of the War Production board's management of the war pro gram had been mounting in recent weeks. Thus when Donald M. Nelson, WPB chief, returned to his desk aft er a much-needed rest there was considerable speculation about the next move. The usually quiet production chief made himself forcefully clear. Challenging his critics to a show down, he indicated a new spirit of I pugnacity by asserting: "From now on anyone who crosses my path is going to have his head taken off." i He underscored this declaration by immediately dismissing a $5,600 WPB employee. He declareid he was "going to get tough enough to get this job done and the job will be done." DIMOLTft For West Coast Spurred by the ever-present dan ger of enemy air attack, the West coast dimmed out officially for the duration of the war. Until peace comes night baseball will be only a memory. Automo biles will be driven with parking lights. Theater and store entrances will be dark. Movie companies in Hollywood will no longer use glar ing lights for outdoor shots. Residents up and down the Pa cific coast will blackout their win- ' dows. Dimout technique had been prac ticed for days before regulations be came official. LABOR PEACE: Green Urges Unity Another olive branch was waved in the cause of labor peace when William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, called for an bnd to "the economic tug-of-war whereby each group seeks to get the best bargain it can from the other." I DONALD M. NELSON . . job will be done" ttrnmrnMBSSMM Russian People United In Second Front Demand ? Plead for Diversion of Nazi Soldiers from Eastern Battlefields; Soviet Picture Grows Darker. By BAUKHAGE News Analyst and Commentator. WNU Features, 1343 H Street, N. W? Washington, D. C. Just at the time when Washington was anxiously awaiting news of the battle of the Solomon islands and the reports from Russia seemed to grow worse by the hour, the curtain was pulled back for a little group here and they were shown a dis turbing picture of the mind of the common man in Russia. I say the picture was disturbing. To those who read between the lines it seemed to reveal the possibility that the United Nations were about to lose the sympathy if not the material support of the single Ally which has been able to engage the Axis effectively. Not only the common man in Rus sia, but everybody from Stalin down, divides sharply with the ma jority of United Nations' military opinion about a second front. That split of opinion, it was made plain, may ^ affect not only our military relations with Russia, but post-war relations as well. Naturally the Axis is promoting such disunity. Briefly the two views are these: The Allied strategists say: Inva sion of the European continent now might mean another Dunkirk. An other Dunkirk would be worse for the Allied cause than to let Russia continue alone as she is now doing. The Russian common man, ac cording to the analysis of this mind to which I referred above, says: If you do not divert Nazi soldiers from the eastern front Russia cannot hold out. We have sacrificed greatly. Except for a few divisions in Egypt which are not fighting (at this writ ing) no Allied soldiers are attacking Hitler's armies except us. We have died by the thousands, if not millions, making last-ditch stands that gave you time to pre pare. Why should you be unwilling to die, too, even if you cannot be immediately successful with an in vasion to save us now, and, as a result, save yourselves later on? Raaaia'a Opinion That seems to be the Russian rea soning. It is understood that after the Molotov visit to the United States and the announcement of the Anglo-Russian pact, that hopes ran high in the bosom of the ordinary Russian. Since then nothing has happened?except the victorious ad vance of the German armies which now either hold the richest parts of Russia in their grip or bar them from the rest of the country. This attitude has become evident and supposedly .well-informed ob servers predict that the disappoint ment on the part of the general Russian public will have a bad ef fect on the morale of the Russian army. There are, of course, advocates in high places in the American gov ernment as well as in Britain, for the opening of a second front. But even if the American high strate gists were unanimous on this sub ject they would have to defer to Great Britain since the brunt of an invasion at this time would have to be borne by British troops. Of course, it must be realized that the Russians on their side and the British and Americans on theirs are each thinking to some degree in terms of their own welfare, as well as in terms of the common objective ?defeat of the enemy. But there may be also a philosophical differ ence. American and British officers have been trained in a school which makes them hesitate to sacrifice men in what seems a futile effort, that is an effort which they are not sure has at least a greater chance of success than of failure. The Rus sian" have shown that they are quite willing to die even when they know that they are already beaten and further resistance, although it takes greater toll of enemy Uvea, cannot be successful. ? ? ? Gunner" ? Wings Aid a Fighting Man ; The American bomber was drenched with German anti-aircraft fire, one engine was smashed and burning, one propeller was shot away, bullets had riddled the ship's tail. Down it was crashing, out of control. It struck, pancake-wise, and?miracle of miracles it bounded up. The pilot still glued to the con trols felt the plane respond. It stag gered upward?and back t* England i from that famous Fourth of July raid over Holland. I have just been talking with the boy who was in the gunner's turret of that plane and naturally I asked him what he thought about when they started to crash. He said he couldn't remember. But I have a hunch that it was a little town out in Kansas. "The world's fine," he told me earnestly, leaning across the table. "I'm glad of the chance to see what I've seen of it. But I'll be glad when I get back to Fredonia where I was brought up. Back where I know everybody and everybody knows me. I can't get used to folks hurrying so." By the time this is in print I hope that Fredonia has had a chance to see Technical Sergeant Robert Go lay?and for him to see it. They'll get out the band when he comes back with his brand new gunner's wings on his coat along with his pre Pearl Harbor service ribbons and that other bar that shows he's the owner of a Flying Cross. Of course, pretty Mrs. Golay and six months old Robert will be proud. "I like small towns," says Robert. And he's seen quite a piece of the world. In fact, you might say, after his experience on the Fourth of July, he knows Holland from the ground up. That was where he was shot down (temporarily) and he said they brought a lot of Dutch soil back with them. Surprite to Wife Most of you have seen pictures of Bob getting his gunner's wings, one of the first two pairs ever awarded, at the ceremony in Texas on August 9. But Mrs. Golay heard about the flight over Holland shortly after it happened. And it was a surprise to her. Because when Bob left for Europe he was only an "armorer" ?and that meant his job in the air corps was a ground job. And Mrs. Golay had given her husband one order?Don't fly. She was willing to have him fight the war and get it over, but not in the air. Then one day an officer called her on the phone and told her that her husband had taken part in the then widely heralded American Fourth of July expedition and that he was safe. Brass And Bra? Hats Donald Nelson popped his eyes re cently when the navy ordered 13,000 pounds of brass to make the door plates for a new battleship. Brass is scarce. The WPB asked the navy if instead of brass they couldn't use some commoner metal, or perhaps just paint the labels on the doors. It was the navy's turn to be shocked. Battleships had always been adorned with brass plates. A tradition of centuries was menaced if battleship nameplates should ever be made of anything but brass. "Moreover," said a navy brass hat, "navy men are used to brass plates. If in the heat of battle a man is ordered to a certain station, he will automatically look for brass plates to guide him. Stenciled signs will mean nothing to him. At a critical moment the lack of a brass plate may mean the loss of the ship." Nelson had to yield. He had to yield again when the ship demanded stainless steel cook ing utensils. Nelson's office thought stainless steel somewhat luxurious, particularly since a battleship re quires thousands of utensils in its cook's galleys. "Why not enameled ware?" the navy was asked. "Ever hear of tonsilitis?" an ad miral argued. "Do enameled cooking utensils cause tonsilitis?" the WPB counter queried. "No, but you can polish stainless steel until it shines. You can't do that to enamel. If it shines, we don't have tonsilitis in the navy." They got the brass name {dates and the stainless steel. They also got brass cuspidors, because the navy department pointed out: "The cuspidors are the sure barometer of whether the gobs are on their toes. If the cuspidors of the navy's lighting ships shine bright, the officers know the gobe are doing their job. If there are no brass cus pidors, how can they know?" Big Camp Veiled By Camouflage Built in 4 Month*, It Cover* Vast Section; Named For Joyce Kilmer NEW YORK.?A new army camp ?one of the first camouflaged camps in the country?which has risen in record time from orchard and meadow land in New Jersey, was shown recently to representa tives of the press. Camp Kilmer, named for the soldier-poet Joyce Kilmer, who was killed in the World war, is now a sprawling military community cov ering hundreds of acres and can house thousands of troops. Like all our army camps, it is constantly expanding and probably never will be completed, but its principal bar racks and buildings were finished a few weeks ago after four months I of intensive work, and now army cooks and bakers already are feed ing the station complement in the 1,500-man cafeteria-style mess halls. Mottled Appearance. Camp Kilmer, which is command ed by Col. C. W. Baird, coast artil lery corps, who was formerly in command of Camp Upton, L. I., and of Pine Camp, N. Y., presents a ' mottled picture in comparison with other army posts. Its barracks are the regulation two-story dormitory type wooden structures that now dot the face of America, but they have no uniform color scheme; each is painted in two or three different shades. The colors run the gamut of the rainbow from black to white, with creams, grays, mauves, mus tard yellows, pale pinks, light greens, dull browns and pastel shades predominating. Viewed from the ground?against the background of New Jersey or chards and the winding ribbons of dusty roads?the new color scheme seemed to make little difference in visibility, but the newspaper men did not see the camp from the air and it is possible that the camou flage would confuse, though not ob scure. Officers were non-committal on this point. The party of newspaper men who were the guests of Colonel Baird for the day bounced around the camp's endless roads, which four months ago were rutted fields, in . that tiny but effective ubiquitous vehicle of the army variously known from coast to coast as "peep," "beep" or (improperly) "jeep." Hundreds of Buildings. They saw several hundred build ings, including a rambling one-story hospital (spread out over many acres because of the fire hazard of wooden buildings) with three miles of corridors, four operating rooms and a capacity of about 1,500 beds, staffed by about 150 doctors and 200 nurses. Lieut. Col. Thomas G. Tousey, an army veteran, com mands the hospital detachment. iiiejr saw uic new mess nails, each of which can feed 3,000 men an hour, and the army's new elec tric potato peelers, the delight of the "K. P.'s" heart, which can do the 12-hour peeling job of 24 soldiers in 2V4 hours attended by only one man. They saw the vegetable steamers and electric dish washers ?another labor-saving machine of the new army; they saw the incin erators that could service a city of 50,000; they ate an army meal and asked for more. They saw miles of quartermasters' storehouses and great railroad sidings that connect to trunk lines. They discovered once again the one common denomi nator of all army camps?dust, and they came away impressed with the speed and thoroughness with which a great military city has grown from country fields; impressed, too, with the camp's facilities and the equipment and the care the soldiers of the new army receive. Sew* Up Heart; Rallies ? Patient With Lost Blood NEW YORK?Although bruised and shaken by an automobile acci dent as he was speeding to Syden ham hospital in response to an emergency call. Dr. Edward Fine stone remained calm enough to per form successfully one of the most delicate operations known to sur gery?the stitching of a human heart. Medical authorities at the hospital termed the operation "a miracle of surgery." The patient is Stanley Kolbusz, 19 years old, whose heart had been rent by a stab wound and who had been found unconscious in a Harlem street with blood oozing from his left side. Dr. Finestone opened Kolbusz's chest wall and took seven stitches in tha heart. He used the patient's own blood, caught in sponges as it spurted from the wound, to give three transfusions. Three hour* lat er Kolbusz was conscious and able to discuss the knife attack on him. -"I More Mileage for Tea New Problem Drop in Imports Calls for Elimination of Waste. WASHINGTON. ? The Office of Price Administration recently brought up a subject which should cause no end of buzz among the four o'clock, lifted finger set. Revealing that this country's tea imports are only half what they were last year, due to the war, OPA suggested ways and means of get ting more mileage to the spoonful. Prime principle in the tea-stretch ing code is to measure carefully. There's a good hot-weather tip, too, in a new tea-conserving method of brewing iced tea. And if sugar rationing hadn't already done away with the traditional query: "How many lumps?" the OPA's sweeten ing suggestion would. Fas iced tea, they propose a syrup made by dissolving sugar in boiling water and then chilling it. Sugar added directly to iced tea does not completely dissolve. In measuring for hot tea, OPA advises use of one level teaspoon to a measured cup of rapidly boiling water. Experts, they say, advise that tea be steeped or brewed for about five minutes. The new ice-tea process calls tor one teaspoon of tea for each cup of boiling water. Allow the tea to steep for five minutes. Strain, let it cool and then chill it in the re frigerator. The trick is in the cooling. If chilled before serving, the tea will not be diluted much when ice cubes are added. This makes it unneces sary to use it double strength. OPA suggests that guesswork in measuring be eliminated. Housewives, says the OPA, often make tea wjth "one extra teaspoon for the pot." Omit the extra teaspoonful or if s going to be so-long, oolong. Indians Stage War Dance For Defeat of the Axis PAWHUSKA, OKLA ?The Osage Indians for the first time in more than a decade held a war dance here for the defeat of an enemy. The enemy? The Axis, of course. The dance, one of the most color ful and exhaustive events in tribal ceremonies, lasted three days dur ing which time relays of dancers went through weird and mystifying procedures which all mean simply "give us victory." The ceremony was dedicated to Maj. Gen. Clarence L. Tinker, him sen one-eigntn usage laaian, who hasn't been heard from since the battle of Midway island. Tinker was commander of Hawaiian air forces. At present there are more than 400 Osage Indians in the armed services of the nation. They are doing all types of duty, ranging from signal corps work, to which they are highly adaptable, to sci entific aiming of long-range artil lery. More than 2,000 Osages, some Cheyennes from western Oklahoma and a few Omahas from Nebraska took part in the war dance. Ap proximately 7.000 members are in cluded in the Osage tribe. Wisconsin Still Holds Nine Confederate Flags MADISON.?Nine tattered battle flags of the Confederacy be packed away in storerooms of the state his torical museum here. Three others are on display, but all can be sent back to their home states, Superintendent E. P. Alex ander said, provided they go to "some responsible organization and not get into private or commercial hands." Wisconsin is the only Northern state which has not returned all cap tured Civil war flags to the South. Difficulties have arisen because there is no record of the capture of some of the flags, and their real home is a mystery. Legislative action would be need ed, Alexander said, to make the re turn legal. Flags from South Caro lina. Mississippi, Arkansas, Mis souri, Virginia and North Carolina companies are included in the state collection. Mercury-Bearing Ore Is Discovered in West BOISE. IDAHO.?A new, high grade deposit of mercury-bearing ore has been discovered in the yel low pine area of Valley county, Idaho. The bureau of mines has described the discovery as of "possible great importance to the nation's war pro duction schedule." Tests of the lat est drill samples showed one aver aging 11 pounds of mercury per ton, with a 15-foot section averaging 21 pounds per ton. The ore is con tained in a body 24 feet thick.