THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1942 THE BEAUFORT NEWS, BEAUFORT, N. C. PAGE NINE lAmerica Girds As Pearl Harbor Anniversary Nears A Review of Outstanding Engagements of Our Country's First Year at War. By CHARLES A. SINGLER Released by Western Newspaper Uni m. With the approach of December 7 the "date of infamy" Americans everywhere will reaffirm their determination ( to work, fight and sacrifice to time in retrospect. No attempt will be made here to give an overall picture of what has happened during this fateful year, but rather a review of some of the great battles in which American forces have been engaged. Without difficulty we recall that$- fateful Sunday afternoon when, over a radio suddenly gone wild, the shocking and bewildering reports came in. Pearl Harbor had been attacked! People could hardly be lieve it. But it was true. The next day the United States declared war on Japan, and on December 16 war was declared on Japan's partners in crime, Germany and Italy. Since then many thousands of brave American boys have been wrapped in the flag they loved, or have found a last resting place be neath the ocean's swell. These men have illuminated the pages of Amer ican history with deeds as bright as the orange flash of a cruiser's guns. Fall of Wake Island. All will remember with reverence the epic of Wake island, when a handful of U. S. marines, marooned on a tiny atoll In the Southwest Pacific, made history In Courage. On this occasion a heroic garrison of less than 400 marines defended Wake island against a powerful Japanese attacking force, from De cember 2 to 22, until they were overwhelmed by sheer numbers. With a few out-dated planes and a gun or two our boys sank seven Jap warships, one cruiser, four de stroyers, one submarine and one gunboat. Fall of Bataan. The next staggering shock of the war was the fall of Manila and the U. S. naval base of Cavite, in the Philippines. America took heart, though, when it learned of the mag nificent defense which was put up by U. S. and Filipino troops in the rugged terrain of Bataan peninsula, under the leadership of Gen. Doug las MacArthur. As it was impossi ble to get reinforcements through the Japanese naval blockade of the Philippines, Bataan appeared doomed. We recall that in Bataan's darkest hour MacArthur was spirit ed out of the islands in a remarka ble under-cover dash to Australia by the "mosquito boat" hero of Subic Bay, Lieut. John D. Bulkeley. Lieut. Gen. Jonathan Wainwright took over on Bataan Wainwright, the stony-faced general whom the boys loved as much as MacArthur. Lacking food, heavy guns, planes and tanks, and facing an over whelming superiority in enemy forces, Wainwright's men were final ly overwhelmed by Jap forces esti mated at 200,000 on April 9. Long after the guns on Bataan I ceased firing, the guns of Corregi- dor (Wainwright's Rock) kept fir- 4 uuiuhi u . o. n J yiiuw " w r after the Japanese raid on Pearl Harbor. Ing. Wainwright end some of his tnen had, fortunately enough, suc ceeded In getting on the Rock be fore Bataan fell. Completely cut off from reinforcements, and heavily Outnumbered, Corregidor surren dered to the Japs on May 6. Wain wright and his gallant band are now presumed to be prisoners of the japs. Battle of Java Sea. . The battle of the Java sea began February 27, when the Allied fleet . attacked the superior Japanese fleet, off the Netherlands East Indies. In this engagement 13 United Nations warships totaling 47,708 tons were lost in a series of engagements last ing from February 27 to March 1. Included in the U. S. losses was the 9,050-ton cruiser "Houston," and the 1,193 ton destroyer "Pope." The Hero Ship Sails Into Enemy Fleet, All Guns Blazing In the second round of the battle for Guadalcanal, in mid-November, when the Japs threw in all they bad to recapture the island with its strategic airfield, the navy did a magnificent job. In this engage ment, despite their great numerical : superiority in ships, enemy losses : were about three to our one. jj At the height of the action the j cruiser San Francisco sailed right ". Into the enemy fleet right through the enemy fleet at President Roose for Still Greater Effort win the war, and spend a little Allies lost all five cruisers which par ticipated In the action. These losses were hard to take, but America began to smile again in fact it howled with delight when the big news broke that Brig. Gen. James ("Jimmy") Doolittle, famous speed flier and World War I ace, had dropped plenty of "eggs" over Tokyo with a squadron of North American B-25s. That "mission" was fulfilled on April 18, and it went over big, both here in America and in Tokyo. First Real Victory of War. In the battle of that island-studded ocean known as the Coral sea, which is near the Solomon islands and about 1,000 miles northeast of Aus tralia, America's first real victory of the war with Japan was scored. The action occurred on May 4 and called forth deeds of va'or as thrill ing as any in all American history. The Coral Sea battle was the first great naval defeat ever dealt the imperial Japanese fleets. And yet this great battle was fought entirely in the air, by the planes of oppos ing aircraft carriers. The ships engaged in this battle never got sight of each other. They slugged it out without firing a single gun at another ship the first en gagement of its kind in history. In this first great victory for the U. S. in this global war the Japs lost more than 15 ships sunk and at least 20 others severely damaged. The action perhaps saved Australia from invasion. However, America paid a price for her victory in the sultry Coral sea. In this engagement the 880-foot aircraft carrier Lexiigton, famed ship that laid the foundation for our modern navy's aircraft carrier op erations, went to the bottom. This happened on May 7. The destruction of a Japanese ar mada some hundreds of miles off Midway Island, on June 4 and 5, was another action of the same kind. In this engagement U. S. army bomb ers roared off from their bases on Midway island just another dot on the Pacific to meet the most for midable array of warships that im perial Japan ever sent steaming against a foe. The armada was put to complete rout. The carrier Yorktown was lost in the Battle of Midway. It went to the bottom on June 7 in the final phases of the great sea-air battle. But before the grand old "Y" went down she catapulted from her flight Arizona deck the dive bombers, fighters and torpedo planes that swung the tide of battle in favor of Old Glory. A heavy toll of Jap ships was taken. Japs Invade Alentlans. Early in June, after bombing Dutch Harbor in Alaska, Jap forces invaded several of the Aleutian is l; nds, in the North Pacific. They made their main stronghold Kiska, and evidently believed that the ever lasting fogs that shroud these islands would be their protection. But Un cle Sam was up there, too, and soon the fleet's heavy guns, Catalina Fly ing Boats, B-17s and B-24s (Flying Fortresses and Liberators) began bombing and blasting them out On August 8, a U. S. navy task force, consisting of a great concentration of cruisers and destroyers, glided through the Aleutian fogs almost to velt told the story. All guns were blazing. At point blank range she engaged a Japanese battleship and disabled her so she could be sunk by torpedoes. Rear Admiral Daniel J. Callaghan, a close friend of President Roose velt, who was aboard the San Fran cisco in command of the spearhead of the attacking force, gave his life for his country in this battle. The San Francisco, although hit many times, was brought back to port f 1L , ' 9 v vi iTJitJ , m mil WTriwwi !. When Major General Wainwright, hero of Corregidor, saw that defeat was inevitable he said, "I'll stay with my men," And he did. Gen eral Wainwright (shown above) is now a prisoner of the Japs. the very guns of the invaders and hurled 400 tons of TNT and steel into Jap shipping and shore instal lations in Kiska harbor. In the bat tle of Kiska only one observation plane was lost. Not as much as a machine gun bullet hit the fleet. Since that time the Japs have pulled out of the Aleutians, with the exception of Kiska, their main stronghold, and the United States has strengthened its position against them by occupation of the Andreanof group of the Aleutians much closer to Jap-held Kiska. - Old Glory Hoisted in Solomons. On the very day when the Japs in Kiska took such a pounding from U. S. forces exactly eight months to the day after Pearl Harbor Old Glory was hoisted by U. S. marines over the first territory taken back from the Japs. This glorious event took place on the mountainous is land of Guadalcanal, key to the Sol omon Islands in the Southwest Pa cific. This 100-mile long island lies athwart the strategic route to Aus tralia. The Japs had labored long in hacking an airfield out of the tropi cal wilderness of Guadalcanal. The marines took it away from them, and there has been a continuing day and night battle for possession of the airfield ever since. In their efforts to recover this vital airfield (Henderson Field) and the key is land, the Japs have risked placing the main force of their navy within range of MacArthur's deadly Fly ing Fortresses and the ."Forts" that roar up off of Henderson Field. We have lost some fine ships in the region of Guadalcanal, but losses on the island have been light compared to what the Japs have lost according to navy reports their losses run four or five times as heavy as ours. However, there has been a running battle for continued possession of the island on the part of the U. S., and for re-possession on part of the Japs. Day and night the pounding goes on, from sea and sky, but the marines, backed by the army and navy, have hung on and have made some gains. A real show-down between U. S. and Jap forces in the Solomons came about in mid-November when the greatest naval battle since Jutland in 1916 was fought. Supported by MacArthur's big bombers the navy, in a three-day running battle, smashed a tremendous enemy armada, lifting the immediate threat to U. S. positions on Guadalcanal As we pause to remember Pearl Harbor, we must, to get the overall picture, have in mind the heroic work of U. S. air pilots over China, and U. S. air pilots co-operating with the Royal Air Force in al most daily or nightly operations over Hitler's Reich, and over what was known as Occupied France. We must remember the fine work done by American troops in co-operation with Australians, who have pushed back the Japs in New Guinea, turn ing the tide of battle in the Owen Stanley mountains, saving Port Moresby, and helping to remove the threat from Australia. Day by day through all the months this has been going on brave men dying while we take time out to read about it. Opening of the Second Front. Things came to a head in the Afri can desert early in November. Thou sands of American boys, tank men and aviators participated in the great push of the British Eighth army against Gen. Erwin Rommel's Afrika Korps, which at one time was dangerously close to the Suez canal one of Britain's darkest hours. Swiftly on the heels of this battle, which became a rout as Brit ish forces broke through the El Ala mein line, America got the world shaking news of the opening of the long expected Second Front at an unexpected spot In North Africa, on Saturday, November 7. Ah, we've forgotten for the mo ment that raid on Dieppe, in Occu pied France that dangerous, costly raid last August when American Rangers were the first actual units to participate in land operations on the continent during this war. The Dieppe raid was not only a re hearsal for the second front, but also a red herring drawn across the bloody Nazi trait The Dieppe raid was the foundation of the magnifi cent success with which the AEF in North Africa was launched, undei the brilliant leader. Gen. Dwigh Eisenhower. $j$$hirsi Si Released by Western Newspaper Union. AMERICA AS A MODEL FOR POST-WAR WORLD TO THE POST-WAR WORLD will come many changes. Ideological forces will provide, if possible, those conditions out of which another world holocaust cannot be produced, but out of which will come a better ment of conditions of the people. It would seem to most of us Amer icans that no better foundation on which to build a new world could be found that the government and system upon which has been erect ed the greatest, most prosperous and freest nation in the world. With in but little more than 150 years since establishing our independence, we have expanded from a narrow strip along the Atlantic to a nation that covers the width of the conti nent. Under the system provided by the American Constitution, we, as a people, have conquered a wil derness, have built great cities, pro vided millions of comfortable homes. We have built more miles of high ways and railroads than are to be found in all of Europe. For each one thousand persons, we own more than six times as many auto mobiles as the same number of Europeans own. In radios, tele phones, washing machines, in every thing which adds to the comfort and pleasure of living, America stands pre-eminent throughout the world. We, as individuals, have greater op portunity to achieve. Among us there is a much more equitable dis tribution of wealth than in any other land. Our workers receive a much greater share of what is produced than do those of any nation of Europe. Yes, America has prospered un der our American system and form of government. Let us hope it may serve as a model for the re building of a war-torn world, rather than that we adopt any one of the "isms" of Europe, which have noth ing to offer us as compensation for what we have. A REAL HERO THE FIGHTING MARINE I "JOHN IS IN defense work," said the fond mother, with a tone of pride In her voice. I The "John" in that case is a young man, less than 20 years old. He is working 40 hours a week in an air plane plant, for which he is paid better than $60 each week. I do not see anything especially heroic about "John in defense work" under such conditions. Another "John" I know is a Unit ed States marine, fighting Japs 168 hours each week in the South Pacific and receiving less each month than the "John in defense work" receives each week. To me the marine "John" is a hero. GLORY OF CRIPPLE CREEK WILL LIVE IN U. S. HISTORY AN ACQUAINTANCE of many years, E. V. Jones, who died some two years ago, was editor of the first newspaper published at Cripple Creek, Colo. It was a real pleasure to listen to his tales of experiences in that wild, and then practically lawless, place. The early Cripple Creek was a model for other west ern mining towns, but no other ever equaled it. Running a newspaper in such a town in its early days was a hazardous occupation. Now Cripple Creek is to become but an other of the numerous western ghost towns. A government edict has closed its mines, as gold is not a war necessity. The glory of the Cripple Creek of old will live long in the annals of the West FREEDOM OF PRESS VITAL IN DEMOCRACY IN CALIFORNIA recently, Grove Patterson, editor of the Toledo (Ohio) Blade, delivered a remark able address on "Freedom of the Press." Justus Craemer, former presi dent of the National Editorial as sociation, in a letter complimenting Mr. Patterson on that address, put into a concise statement just what a free press means to America. He said: "Advertising, In a profitable sense, cannot exist in a totalitarian state and free enterprise cannot exist without advertising. All our free dom, our enterprise, our civil and religious liberties, stand or fall to gether. The newspaper is particularly the medium of expression for any minority not in power, because the newspaper is not under the control of a bureaucratic government and a newspaper has the privilege of taking sides in a political contro versy. JAZZ ORCHESTRAS Recently I listened for an hour to an orchestra playing jazz music. All of the players looked healthy and physically capable of doing a real man's Job. In age they prob ably ranged from 20 to 35. I won dered if using such manpower on a saxophone and fiddle was more important than gathering corn or firing a rifle. I will not believe we are short of manpower for the armed forces, the farms or the fac tories so long as jazz orchestra? continue to operate. . (1 1 rziSt Reading thfi Papers Out Loud: This is not the first time that American battle flags have been carried to the Mediterranean. They were there over a century ago for the same purpose the extermina tion of pirates ... At that time we fought for the freedom of the seas. Now we fight for the freedom of America ... If you said that a little while ago, you were called a warmonger, an Interventionist or a soandso . . . But no one today doubts that America Is safer because men from Montana and Georgia, Ver mont and Nevada are throwing pi rates out of Tunis and Algeria . . . This AEF Is more than a lesson in geography. It Is a milestone In national responsibility. Rome and Berlin now know that Tripoli and Libya are our next mili tary objectives. But their chief worry Is that world freedom is our war aim . . . They know that while one concentration camp exists while one Nazi propaganda cell functions and while one squad of Axis troops resists our arms will remain in the field . . . America has liberated North Africa because a free America can only exist in a free world . . . The full strength of America will continue to march . . . Because the road to Berlin Is the only way back to Main St. The whispering that went on against the British is now being di rected against the French . . . Maybe it's wrong to keep Darlan on the job, but Gen. Eisenhower got that far by ignoring the clamor clique, so why should he listen to them now? You can get a rap against Giraud, too, if you turn your ear in a certain direction . . . DeGaulle has an enemy section over here, and so have most of the French military leaders our forces are dealing with . . . It's the same old line you heard against Churchill, Wavell, Ritchie, etc. You'll hear it again if we happen to line up with the Arabs or the Hottentots. Because it's easier to say some thing than to know something. Nobody has lined up more eagerly for the war causes than the Holly wood workers . . . They have con tributed their time and their talents to amusing the service men and building up bond sales. The spirit out there is right, too . . Then they tip over the works by making a flicker that gives people the idea that it's still 1928 in California. The latest to get the hammers is "Once Upon a Honeymoon." Several of the N. Y. reviewers were shocked that a picture could take ruined Warsaw as the setting for a piece of low comedy. This is the third flicker that has earned rebukes for the movie makers. They will soon have to start reading the New York re views with smoked glasses. They're too blinding for the naked eye. There's no group as superstitious as show people. They fear more jinxes than a voodoo tribe . . . One of their pet superstitions is that their colleagues always die In threes. It's just happened again, with May Robson, Edna Mae Oliver and Laura Hope Crews passing away. Earlier in the year a Holly wood trio died within a short time of each other John Barrymore and two producers, J. Walter Ruben and Bernie Hyman. Brooks Atkinson gave a tender column to George M. Cohan. Best of all was his discussion of "Over There," which was the "theme song" of the last war. Mr. Atkin son tells you why. "Although 'Over There' has the strangest and most unlikely tune," said Mr. A., "it is one of the songs almost any Amer ican can sing on the spur of the moment. It is a perfect expression of a popular emotion" . . . What more could you ask of a war song? So far there have been good ditties for the service branches Air Corps, Marines, etc. but nothing for the civilians to get hot about . . . Mr. Cohan knew how to stir up people. He might have spun out another "Over There." For that reason, and too many others, he died too soon. Two lasses were schmoosing over their daiquiris, wishing the war would end and things get back to normal. What's normal? . . . That's when the Stock Market fell on its kisser and bankrupted every body who's anybody . . . That's when Bundists strutted In Madison Square Garden and challenged the law to make something of it . . . That's when people lived in tar pa per shacks and peddled apples on the corner . . . That's when the dust storms shooed okies all over the nation. Things I Never Kneto 'Til Note That you shouldn't applaud at the end of "The Star Spangled Banner." (It would be just as correct to ap plaud a minister's prayer.) That when your doctor writes on the prescription: "Gossypium puri factum" don't get panicky. (It only means absorbent cotton.) That Miles Standish was one of the few warriors correctly chris tened. Miles, in Latin, means sol dier. (Oh, I read it somewhere!) PATTERNS SEWING CIRCLE Stream-Lined Pajamas "UR government wants us to conserve materials, even in our lingerie. We've stream-lined these pajamas to save on fabric but we haven't skimped on their allure! Colorful strawberry appli ques are suggested for corners of the neckline and for the pocket so there's glamour galore in this handsome sleeping suit. Pattern No. 8234 is in sizes 12. 14. 16, 18, 20 and 40. Size 14, short sleeves, re quires 41i yards 35 or 39-inch material, 3 yards bias fold. Blouse and Jumper CXOX down in the bodice so that it shows a good portion of the contrasting blouse beneath it, this jumper has an extra measure of charm! The front buttoning makes it extra convenient and the belted waistline makes it extra flatter ing! fv. o (v. (v. fv. fw. fv. rv. (v. w. ci. (v. o (V. c. p.. (v. o- v. ? ASK ME 1 ? ? - M ? ? ANOTHER ? v. p.. C. (v. v. (V. (V. (V. ft. (V. fv. v. ft fk. (t. (V. f.. CV. The Questions 1. Where is the natural home of the penguin? 2. What is the binnacle on a ship? 3. What country was called "Seward's Folly"? 4. How many figures on the Rushmore memorial in South Da kota? 5. What king of England signed the Magna Carta in 1215? The Answers 1. The Antarctic region. 2. The case for the ship's com pass. 3. Alaska. 4. Four Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt. 5. John. That Magna Carta laid a foundation for English political and personal liberty. LOS Lost, a cough due to a cold-thanks to the sooth ing action of Smith Brothers Cough Drops. Smith Bros. Cough Drops contain special blend of medicinal ingredients, blended with prescription care. And they still cost onlr it m box. Yes, 0 nicket clucks that tickle, SMITH BROS. COUGH DRGPS BLACK Ok Classified HAVE YOU anything around the house you would like to trade or Bell? Try a classi fied ad. The cost is only a few cents and there are probably a lot of folks looking for just what ever it is you no longer have use for Classified Ads Get Results .V MS V. Pattern No. 8232 Is in sizes 12, 14, It. 18, 20 and 40. Size 14 jumper takes 2 yards 39-inch material; 2 yards 54-inrtt. Contrasting blouse, short sleeves, 1 yards 35 or 39-inch material. Send your order to: SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 106 Seventh Ave. New York Enclose 20 cents in coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No Size Name Address Inexpensive Luxury Then let us laugh. It is the cheapest luxury man enjoys. Wil liam Matthews. fISHES'&f Relieve fiery itching and allay further Irritation with ; active, specially medicated mfm Frtt SfflDll Blto.f Md. Lacking in Feeling He who has felt nothing does not know how to learn anything. Rousseau. Send for xli month supply If your deal r rinnot nupplv you, flrnd Mr for 4 double fit k or M iMnitlvitlKv Rlmplel HUilet tn Federal neror Htldt C., Ni-w Y.hH. jMibittdf fr 10c fttntmwiit for 10c MENTHOL 5 Advertising St Joseph ( WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER AT iflP' 1 LT-p