The Alamance Gleaner V6L LXX GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1944 No. 24 WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS Allies Move Ahead in Normandy; DeGaulle Visit to White House Poses New Diplomatic Problem Released by Western Newspaper Union. 1 (EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinions are expressed In these eelnnsns, they are these ef Western Newspaper Unlen's news analysis and net necessarily ef thie newspaper.) Saipan? Wires aid children of Japaaei* soldiers on Saipan island are pidarsd after being rounded op by Doughboys from cares and jungles back mi their lines. EUROPE: Yanks Gain Developing their offensive on the western end of the French battle frant, U. S. troops drove through marshy land to envelop the com munications hubs of La Haye and SL Lo against the bitter opposition it an enemy taking every advan tage of the soggy ground and hedge rawed landscape. ? On the eastern end of the front, British and Canadian troops battled large concentrations of German forces on the approaches of the de fensive pivot of Caen, from which Field Marshal Rommel was sending ant strong detachments in counter attacks to impede the Allies' thrust inland toward the important Paris region. As the Allies nudged forward in Mormandy, Berlin announced the re placement of Anti-Invasion Chief von Rundstedt by Field Marshal von n??e. who led the Nazi sweep through France in 1940, and was at the helm during the drive on Mos cow during the first year of the Rus sian war. Other Fronts Calling massed artillery into play front dominating heights, the Ger mans poured fire on Allied troop movements in Italy to slow their steady'drive up the long peninsula ta the rich agricultural and industri al regions of the north. In Russia, German forces contin ued to give ground before strong Red armies massed along a 350 mile front in the north to escape encirclement and destruction. Near Wilno, the Reds milled on the thresh old of the Baltic states, while farther to the south, their pressure forced evacuation of Kowel, bending the enemy line farther back toward Warsaw. Focal point of German resistance fc> Italy was below the famed port of Livorno (Leghorn), whose cap ture promised to give the Allies an other good Mediterranean harbor for te easier transport of troops and supplies for the crucial fighting in the north. DIPLOMACY: French Problem U. S. support of the De Gaulle ad ministration of liberated French ter ritory without for ma] recognition of it as-a legal govern ment was the latest diplomatic problem ap for settlement ia Washington, D.C. with De Gaulle's ar rival in the nation's capital for discus sions with Presi dent Roosevelt. De Gaulle winged Us way over from ? aatk A io General De Gaulle " v ^ ? u nu ?*_? iw seek approval of hi* negotiations with Britain, under which his ad ministration would take control of Iterated territory, arrange for sup ply and equipment of underground fanes through lend-lease, and settle disputed property rights caused by transfers of ownership under Nazi weeps toon aad Allied requisitioning for military purposes. Although long complimentary to De Gaulle's Free French move ment, the U. S. has been cautious in recognizing it as the legal repre sentativs of the people, declaring that only an election could deter mine their choice when circum ?Uacci oermitted. TRAGEDIES: Circus Fire Overhead the famed Wallandas prepared for their celebrated tight wire act on bicycles as 6,000 happy spectators awaited the performance under the big canVas tent of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey circus in Hartford, Conn. Near a sidewaii of the tent, a small flame was noticed. Suddenly, it flared and leaped upward, with great patches of burning canvas falling when fire had seared them off. The cry of "Fire! Fire! Fire!" spread through the panic-stricken spectators, and their frantic shouts mingled with the din cf roaring ani mals in the corral outside. As the great sheets of burning can vas fell on top of the milling crowd below, adults and children struggled to make their way to safety, but scores were trapped, with some run ning into the steel ramps through which animals were led into the arena. As rescue workers dug into the de bris, they extricated the bodies of 133 victims, mostly children, and more seriously injured. Miners Trapped As scores of relatives of 64 miners trapped in the Powhatan pit near Bellaire, Ohio, waited hopefully at the mine entrance, officials grimly announced that the shaft would have to be sealed off to prevent the flow of oxygen feeding the raging flames uinderground. In one last desperate effort to free the men entombed in a dead-end tunnel when a rock fall broke a high-voltage trolley wire along the main passageway and sizzling sparks ignited coal, skilled crews prepared to drill down 350 feet to open a shaft for lowering food and water. In a previous effort to free the entombed men, rescue workers were cutting a new 500-foot tunnel through coal and rock to bypass the flames and reach the victims, when new fires halted their work. Train Wreck Climaxing the string of major tragedies was the derailment of a Louisville and Nashville train In Clear Fork River gorge near Jellico, Tenn., with early reports listing 25 dead and many injured. Casualties on the troop-carrying train resulted when the locomotive and two coaches left the track and plunged 50 feet into the gorge, and two other cars overturned on the edge of the decline and caught fire. Although hindered by darkness, rescue workers used acetylene torches to probe the wreckage and remove victims, while mountaineers hoisted the stricken up from the gorge with block and tackle. CHINA: Bloody Fighting Fighting with their backs to the wall, Chinese troops stiffly resisted strong Japanese efforts to seal off the embattled country's whole east ern seacoast and strengthen their grip on the Asiatic mainland. Chinese forces far to the south west sought to join 'up with Allied troops driving through Burma to open up a new supply-route to China from India. Only 2S miles of moun tainous terrain stood between the two armies. The 14th American air force Joined in the savage battle in China, bomb ing and strafing the enemy and drop ping Sans of ammunition to the val iant defenders. PACIFIC: Subs Take Toll With the Allies pressing closer to Japan's inner supply lines feeding her booming war industry, U. S. subs and air forces can be expected to take an increasing toll of enemy shipping, navy secretary James Forrestal declared. In reporting that U. S. subs re cently had sent 15 Jap cargo ves sels and two warships to the bot tom, Forrestal said such losses crimped the enemy's whole war pro gram, since he must move about 75 million tons of water-borne freight into the home islands yearly, in cluding 75 per cent of his oil and gas supply from the East Indies. Despite heavy marine losses, For restal said, the Japs have lightened the effects through use of huge stockpiles of materials built up be fore the war, lessening of trans port to encircled South Pacific areas, and the utilization of surplus prewar shipping tonnage. LEND-LEASE: Steady Shipments Lend-lease shipments of food to the Allies continued at a steady pace during the first five months of 1944, with some commodities being sent in larger volume and others in smaller amounts, with little net ef fect on domestic supplies. During the period, 9.3 per cent of the total U. S. meat supply was shipped under lend-lease, with the major portion consisting of pork. About 15.6 per cent of the nation's pork was sent abroad. The United Kingdom and Russia continued to receive most of the lend-lease food, with the U. S. sup plying 10 per cent of British needs. i i 'Black Widow' Although military officials have concealed details, a full and rear view of the new twin-fuselage "Black Widow" fighter plane with a central cockpit, was released. Said to bo the largest and most powerful pur suit plane built, the "Black Widow" la especially equipped for night fight ing. Blank spots indicate censor's deletions. ,.i BUGS: Man's Allies Acting in conjunction with the U. S. department of agriculture, the nation'i farmers are turning preda tory bugs upon destructive insects to assure crop growth. In Illinois alone, more than 40,000 wasps and flies were released to combat corn borers threatening the state's rich grain fields. No sure-fire remedy in themselves, however, the work of the predatory insects can only complement clean farming and deep plowing, agronomists Say. When turned loose, the predatory insects crawl through the corn borer's tunnel in the stalks, with the wasps penetrating its body to lay eggs in it, and the flies depositing eggs on the outside. As the eggs feast on the borer even in the pupa stage, they eventually destroy it, while emerging themselves. ROBOTS: Inflict Casualties With all Britain stirfed by the robot menace which continued to exact its toll of casualties and dam age, Prime Minister Churchill told the parliament that over 10,000 peo ple had been killed or wounded by the flying bombs and he could give no guarantee about the future of this form of attack. Although declaring that the Allies would not be goaded into diverting attention from the Normandy bat tlefront by the robots, Churchill said that considerable numbers of U. 8. and British planes have been ham mering the French coast from which the hying bombs are believed to be launched. Powered by fuel and compressed air and automatically piloted by gy roscopes, the robots have been buzz ing over southern Fin gland at speeds of 300 m.p.h. or more and altitudes of about 1,000 feet, to suddenly break off into a 30-degree glide and crash to earth with an explosive force of 1.000 pounds. The New York and Hollywood Scene: Facta About Glammerville: A) Jolson spellbinding a squad of U. S. Marines at the Beverly Hills Hotel pool . . . Bette Davis and Sec'y Morgenthau thrilling the uniformed men at the Hollywood Canteen . . . Dinah Shore thrushlng nine ditties for them . . . Bonita Granville showing Lt. Joe Wade the cine magicians. He's all mended from that New Guinea crackup . . . Ella Logan's real tears as she micro phoned "That Old Feeling" to the China-Burma-India sector via the Mail Call program, which isn't heard by the public here . . . Veronica Lake, tiny as a doll, float ing to the rhythms of Emil Cole man's and Phil Ohman's crews at the Mocambo . . . Lovely Mari anne O'Brien of the Warners' fac tory surrounded by Marines in the Clover Club . . . Miriam Hopkins at La Rue with her constant com panion, who never was itemed as her favorite male. He's a Greek biggie . . . Bob Hope and his John ny Weismuller hair-do. "No cracks," he warns with a threaten ing finger, "I'm doing a pirate pic ture." Marshal Rommel (according to Britishers who made their escape back to our lines) has a sense of humor, he thinks ... He made several British offlcert attend his frequent lectures, during which he affected a pose that the Battle of Africa was a sporting event. He would give these prisoners a testi monial dinner with all the pomp he II.. J ? Ul. iiiusKi uu uic ucoci i. in| cir trances, place cards, introductions, salutes and so on . And then, while the German staff dined on ex cellent cuisine, the British prisoners were served a meal consisting of their own K-rations captured with them. Rommel also "delighted in pointing out their errors and why they were captives. He was asked by a correspondent: "To what do .you credit your success? How will the enemy ever beat you?" . . . With a gleam in his monocled eye Rommel replied: "The German Army is great because of its great organization. I know exactly when X will enter a town. One month ahead I "know what suite I will have in which hotel. If, however, some day, I march into a place and go to my suite and find another German general?then I will know we are Ucked!" The "Oklahoma" east is reported doing so much ad libbing that "they are spoiling the show." Guild ex ecs shrug and say: "Look at the box office" . . . The New York Post Office has broken all records in the district. To date this year it has done business totaling 103 millions P*. . . The book now on FDR's bed side table is "Rendezvous trith Des tiny." The only comment on the book appeared in a Chicago paper briefly and a story in the Christian Science Monitor. Not a single re view has appeared on it yet . . . Hepburn's newest interest, they say, is a famed polo player . . . Add ditty similarities: "Time Waits for No One" and "Tales from Vienna Woods" . . . Lana Turner won't bark about it until she sees it here, but those delicious canapes Ray Bourbon served with cocktails the other sundown were made from dog food . . . R-R-Ruff-Ruffff! The Late Watch: Shirley Rosa and her husband, Kenneth Dolan (who parted last season), are hap pier than ever. They reconciled aft er he was quoted here as saying the fault was all his because: "I neglect ad my wife Instead of my clients" . . . There will be a copyright war over U. S. rights to the song popular with the troops, "Lili Marlene" . . . Douglas Miller, who wrote You Can't Do Business With Hitler," told OWI chiefs that the war with Germany will last at least another year and with Japan two . . . T. Casey, the B'klyn Citizen editor, has written two songs with Johnny Tucker of Hook and Ladder Co. 117 in Astoria ... All major networks banned the song, "Don't Change Horses," which has nothing to do with politics. It has been networked since April. The euthors wrote "Mairzy Doats." Qsstotlss Marksmanship: Noel Coward: The most terrifying thing to a man is s woman who cries in advance . . . E. Hemingway: The saddest thing in the world is the af fection at man and woman; the most fortunate ending is by death . . . J. Porter: She whines him around her linger . . . Mable Bandy: Eye lashes that could sweep the cobwebs from any man's heart . . . L. Con ing: Low clouds on the verge at tsars. v. 1 What Army Eats Isn't 'Chow' Nowadays; A GI Meals Must Be Tasty and Nourishing Quartermaster Corps Tests Insure Purity And Palatability. By AL JEDLICKA iUltAMd by WMttrn N?wspap?r Union. Wherever Johnny Doughboy may be fighting today, he's eat ing his fill of good, nutritional food. Whether it's in the South Pa cific, Europe or the Mediterra nean, he's finding his fare palat able and strengthening; maybe not quite like Ma's home cook ing, but just what a fighting man needs to make him fight hard. If Johnny Doughboy is eating well, it's no accident. Rather it is the result of careful scientific study of the quartermaster corps' subsis tence research and development lab oratory in Chicago, which is chiefly contributing to the army's conquest of food problems arising from dif ferent climatic and storage condi tions throughout the world. There was a time when the army wasn't so exacting about food, when fares were plain and repetitious. No farther back than World War I vets lost much of their enthusiasm for corned beef and salmon because of their constant serving. But thanks to the sympathetic understanding of Col. W. A. Point, who appreciated the value of a nutritional as well as a tasty fare for troops, the army instituted a subsistence school in 1920, which spawned the research laboratory in 1934. When the laboratory was opened that year, there were no indications that the U. S. would find itaelf in a world-wide struggle five years later, fighting in jungles, mountains, des erts and snowy steppes. But when that day did come, the laboratory - A MAJOR "go (he Qnartermaiter Corps laboratory staff places cari ous foods, such as navy beans, ba con, raisins, plum Jam and butter in a special testinc boa that can simulate either aretie cold or trep ic heat. was ready to undertake the vast task of adjusting the American sol diers' food to the different embattled regions. No less than 31 army officers and 81 civilian* are at work in the re search laboratory?chemists, bacte riologists and vitamin experts, work ing in approximately a half-dozen different fields under direction of Col. Rohland A. Isker. In addition, there are an experimental kitchen | for testing preparations and a dining room where help la served new food and asked to comment on its palat 1 ability. In the absence of Colonel Isker, ; who was on a mission in Europe, Dr. Jesse H. White was in charge of the laboratory, and it was he who ' escorted this" Western Newspaper Union correspondent through the : premises. A retired army' colonel who re turned to duty ank? research labor atory without asJhmlng his old mili tary rank whan the war's pressing I events forced a need for trained men. Dr. White has been associated with the quartermaster corps since 1907, and always in the forefront 1 of the drive* tor progressive proce dure. Originally a mdht Inspector for the navy. Dr. White first under took the Study of canned fruits, vege tables and other items for the army, and participated in Colonel Point's special subdstenoe schools. | * Boneless Beef. Although Dr. White has been in on the whole* gradual development of ' the army'g scientific food program, meat Still remains bis first interest, , and to hini must go the credit for the acceptance of boneless beef. It was only after Dr. White's In sistence that the army experiment ed with boneless beef during the maneuvers of 1938, eliminating the per and expensive cuts and wastes in the carcass. In 1*80, the army went still further with boneless beef under Dr. White's leadership, utiliz ing the entire carcass (or roasts, stews and sausages. Though the conservation of space was a factor then, if did not assume the tremen dous importance it did with the out break of World War II, when the long supply lines imposed a severe strain on our transport system. As a result of Dr. White's sharp ness, the army achieved additional conservation of space through his suggestion for cutting pork loins in two and fitting one end in the slope of the other, thus forming a single package of half the former size. As a fruition of the effort to pro vide a variety of food to troops, three times as many meat items have been developed under the di rection of the research laboratory than existed during the last war. Before'the wir, packers professed difficulty canning pork luncheon meat in large'-Containers, but care ful research dvwjkpme the problem. Formerly, the laA^in pork sausage had oozed from the meat and col lected around the wahs wf-tHe?can, but this liqueflcation was also'cor rected. Heading off the inevitability of complaints' front's continuous serving of Vienna sausages, a coarsely ground, ipeht spiced frank furter was developed for variety. With the extension of the fighting to the tropical climates, preserva tion of fats and oils have presented a difficult problem..but under the direction of the research laboratory remedies have been developed. ?Army-Spread." Most noteworthy of these develop ments, perhaps, is the ' socalled "army spread," a combination of butter, cheese curd and milk pow der. It was produced following a search for a palatable fat to replace the old "Carter Spread" composed of butter and hydrogenated cotton seed flakes, which tasted tallowy and stuck to the roof of the mouth. Al though "army spread" has filled the bill for an appetizing fat, it is of no U9# as s shorten in if or in frvincr Due to icientiflc methods in the preservation of lard and other short enings. troops afield now profit from the availability of high caloric bis cuits. The celebrated hardtack of old was nothing more than flour, water and salt, since no stable shortening had been discovered. But through the use of antioxidants, fats and notably lard have been so treat ed that they would stay fresh and usable from six to nine months. Working in conjunction with proc essors, the dairy products section of the research laboratory under Lieut. Robert J. Remaley has de veloped an evaporated milk with a concentration of 3.1, surpassing the old figure of 2.1. Of value to the army in the economy of space, the new product should prove of equal advantage to women shoppers in the postwar world. * ? Advancements also have been made in the production of dehydrat ed cheese. Previously sold primar ily to bakers for fillers, spraying, etc., the cheese retains its essential flavor. Lieutenant Remaley's department also has been active in the prepara tion of vanilla ice cream mixes, shipped in the form of dried powder to the various fronts, where fruits or other flavoring agents may be added. Sea Water far Baking. Technologists in the research lab orators baking department are en gaged - in various experiments on cereals and other components of breadstuff*. One experiment con cerned the use of sea or ocean water in the production of bread, since there are many military baking Jfa stallatiaq^'in the various arar thea ters where fresh water is limited. After careful experimentation with ocean water provided from the coun try's eastern and western coasts, it was discovered that the variation fa salt content of ocean water was not' sufficient to require any change fa ? I the regular army bread formula oth er than the omisaion of salt. Prior to the experimentation, however, the ocean water was trpated with cal cium hypochlorite on the basis at 0.9 grams to 31 gallons of the water! against possible content at algae, sea weed, etc. Proceeding on the principle that flour is the most important and the one indispensable ingredient to the production of baked. products, the quartermaster corps tests samples from each car offered before ac ceptance. Made from either hard spring or winter wheat, the flour must produce bread with good vol ume, grain and texture, - creamy white crumb color, and pleasing fla vor and taste, according to Technol ogist Paul V. Holton. Containing about 13 per cent protein and one half per cent minerals or ash, the army flour is enriched with thiamin (vitamin Bl), riboflavin (vitamin B2), niacin and iron. One of the outstanding develop ments was the production of a gran ular dehydrated yeast for use over seas because it will keep well for a year if under refrigeration of tO-SO degrees F. and show no appreciable loss in baking sUeugtb if stared at 70 degrees or below for six months. If kept at higher temperatures, how ever, the yeast quickly Ibaes Its qual ity. Other factors favoring granu lar dehydrated yeast, which is man ufactured in pellets and packed in two-pOund size, moisture proof cans, are its quick action during baking and its greater leavening power per unit of weight. VARIOUS chemical and physical tests of food samples are conducted constantly in the Quartermaster Corps laboratories, to determine their stability under differing cli matic conditions and other influ ences that would affect their whole someness. THE FOOD m Maj. W. E. Harp er'! plate la nilnlte .te. Ml te contained te tea ttttl* package* anal m tea taMc. Canned Rations. To meet the needs ef our soldiers under the varying conditions trf war, rations have .been developed. For instance, when establishing a beach head there is no time for the prepa ration of a meal. The "K" ration which may be eaten celd, is de signed for such an exigency. The "C" ration is intended for later use when the beachhead is established and the tension is not quite so great. The "C" ration which may be eaten cold but may be made more palat able by heating the canned compo nents, requires a minimum of prep aration. For scout troops or just baek-of-the-line eating, the 10-in-l ra tion is preferable. The "D" ration, a high calorie chocolate bar, is carried by the soldier to be used only in an emergency. Each of these rations has been developed only after the most careful research. They must be nutritionally adequate, of excellent , keeping quality (at least six fhoaths under varying conditions of cli mate), easy to carry, and palatable. One of the research laboratory's biggest tasks was in the improvisa tion of packing to suit the various climatic conditions encountered. In early South Pacific fighting, many different types of packages deterio rated on the tropical beaches un der the elements of rain and heat Through careful research, howev er, various protective coatings and waterproofing materials, such as waxes, were developed, not only to, guard against -exposure on the beaches but also to enable many of the packages to be floated ashore to facilitate unloading operations. The laboratory has a cooperative project called the Guinea Pig Club, of which every employee ee well ee every officer in the laboratory is e ?*- ?- ? "fc ? member. At noana, midmorning, or lanplet of .proposed ration items act served.. The tasters are instructs*. to tits rt? ot two items, to choose the 004 which they prefer. If only rate, item is voder S^h^eta'SSM ^ whether be 11**$ the Item o* not and why. Figure* iff tfxiteM stetia 41.. - H. ani| |A? ^ an M^Mwn wemny, arva me popuwriiy or u iwui may thus scienttftcaQy be obtained.