The Alamance Gleaner Vol LXIX GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY, JANUARY 6, 1944 Na 48 WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS Red Army Drives Toward Baltic Sea; Partisan Forces Ban Jugoslav Ruler; Allied Heavy Bombers Smash German Gun Installations in Northern France (EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinion* are expressed In these column*, they are these of Western Newspaper Union's news analysts and net necessarily of this newspaper.) ___________ Released by Western Newspaper Union. sBBm ? 4 ' j PACIFIC JITTERBUG: Doughboy* OB captured Makin island in the Central Pacific watch somber little satire hula dance. EUROPE: v Blast Rocket Guns While U. S. and British troops bat tled the Nazis at close quarters in southern Italy, waves of Allied bombers rumbled over northern France to smash at German rocket gun installations. Both on the U. S. Fifth and Brit ish Eighth army fronts in southern Italy, doughboys and Tommies en gaged the Germans in hand-to-hand fighting, Lieut, pen. Mark Clark's men fighting for mountain peaks flanking the road to Rome, and Gen. Bernard Montgomery's warriors striving to clear the path to the highway hub of Pescara. As reports continued to seep into Britain and the U. S. of the Ger * mans' new rocket gun capable of hurling an explosive charge of from T to 21 tons about 20 miles. Allied bombers combed the French chan nel coast around Calais to blast at the installations for the new weapon. Ban King Charging that the war minister of the Jugoslav government-in-exile naa maue a lasting deal with the Germans and organized civil strife against patriotic elements, Josip (Tito) Broz's communist backed Partisan forces forbade King Peter's return to the country until after the war. Broz's action followed the attachment of U. S., British and Russian officers to his staff, as King Peter a result of the Allies preference for the Partisan forces over King Pe ter's Chetniks because they have been offering the Germans more re sistance. Further, Broz's political council canceled all treaties and interna tional obligations of King Peter's government, on the supposition it no longer was representative of the people. VETS: Discharge Pay To every vet discharged after 18 months of service overseas would go $500 under provisions of a bill passed by the senate and sent to the house for consideration. Vets serving abroad for 12 to 18 months would be paid $400 and those less than 12 months, $300. Vets with 12 months or more service in the U. S. would get $300, and those with less than 12 months, $200. In the house, 44 representatives have organized for higher discharge payments, favoring Rep. William Lemke's bill providing $100 on re lease and up to a year's pay. RUSSIA: Match Wits Russian and German generals matched wits along an 800-mile front as winter fighting flared to major proportions in the east. While the Reds surged into Ger man lines guarding the Baltic re gion, the Nazis threw strong tank forces against the Russians on a 400-mile stretch further to the south. Thus did one attack act as a lever against the other. The Russian drive was ooncentrat ed on reaching the shores of the Bal tic sea: (1) to cut off Nazi armies In the Leningrad region from those Xthe south, and (2) to cut off ship g at present helping supply them ever Baltic lanes. RAIL STRIKE: FDR Intervenes Seeking to avert a strike of 1,450, 000 railroad workers which threat ened to tie up the nation's whole transportation system, President Roosevelt acted to bring the unions and owners together, while orders were drawn for U. S. operation of the lines in case negotiations failed. Following a suggestion of FDR, the basis for compromise seemingly lay in payment of overtime to the rail workers after 40 hours, instead of after 48 hours as has been the case. For the 350,000 operating employ ees of the roads, the overtime pay coupled with a flat four cents an hour wage increase, would result in an average hourly boost of eight cents. Besides the eight cents an hour for which they threatened to strike, the 1,100,000 non-operating rail em ployees also proposed overtime pay over 40 hours. Under their terms, their average hourly increase would exceed eight cents. SOUTHWEST PACIFIC: Things to Come A thorn in the Allies' shipping lanes to the Southwest Paciflc, Ja pan's Marshall islands took heavy poundings from U. S. army and navy planes, while off to the New Britain area, Yankee airmen blast ed the enemy's supply centers of Wewak and Cape Gloucester. In both cases the destructive aeri al bombardment presaged ground action. As a springboard for future ground operations, U. S. troops stood on the Gilberts, to the south of the Marshalls, and in New Britain, doughboys recently landed at Arawe consolidated their positions and poised to the north, looking toward the Cape Gloucester region from which the enemy has been supply ing its embattled troops on New Guinea to the east. To meet the Allies' challenge to their whole defensive system in the Southwest Paciflc, the Japs strength ened their air forces throughout the area, and poured in supplies for their troops. Stays on Job "MacArthur for President!" A rallying cry for some politicians, a popular topic for the man on the street, these three big - woras nave tended to color the 1944 presiden tial picture. Recently MacArthur talk received two strong stimulants: First, there was the war department's rul ing that there was no bar to any officer ac cepting a political nom ination, r Second, the rumor General MncArthni ga incu V.U11C11V./ Mia I the cocksure chieftain of the South west Pacific was preparing to return to the U. S. for conferences in Wash ington, D. C. It was pointed out that Mac Ar thur's reigning goal is to lead Allied armies bade into the Philippines. However, from General MacAr thur's advanced headquarters in New Guinea's jungles, a spokesman for the general said: "There is no foundation whatsoever for the state ment that General MacArthur ex pects to go to Washington in the near future for conferences." BOLIVIA: New Government First order of business on the new Bolivian revolutionary government's calendar was compensating survi vors of the 19 striking tin miners shot by troops under direction of the ousted Gen. Enrique Penaranda last December. As calm was restored in the coun try, U. S. withheld recognition of the new government, to determine whether it was a successful pro-Axis coup in view of the fact that the guiding light of the movement, Paz 1 Estenssoro, was once locked up in j connection with pro-Nazi activities. U. S. interest in Bolivia centers ' around its rich tin and quinine re- ] sources, among the last left to the ' Allies following Japan's occupation . of Malaya and the Indies. The revo- ' lutionists have expressed a desire to continue favorable business rela- 1 tions with the Allies, a matter on 1 which General Penaranda himself 1 had hedged. STORAGE: Seek to Ease Glut j With U. S. food storage facilities crammed, many meat packers have | been selling pork products below , ceiling prices or in carload lots at a . discount. At the same time, it was ] revealed that the War Food admin- . istration prepared an order restrict ing storage of such meat special ties as hogs' heads, bones, ox tails, tripe, hearts and liver to 10 days without permit. Meanwhile, WFA extended its price support of $13.75 per hundred weight to 270 to 300 pound hogs, because, (1) packers have been buy ing bargains outside of the 200 to 270 pound support range and guar anteed weights have been piling up in the yards; (2) farmers have been sending 200 to 270 pounders off to market to get the $13.75 top. i ? Troop Gliders I Guoa KUASCO BY TOW PUtfC 1. GUPtt UWOS ON MUDS 1 TOOTS 1USM OUT Of NO SI ~pr^^?^ 7^r ?* ?r> *.