■ C : . RAF Bombers Continue To Rain Destruction On Axis Troops And Supply Lines and Bases; Experts Believe Real Test In Egypt Is Yet To Come Cairo, July 15.—An Axis attack on Tel El Eisa with tanks and infantry, the third successive enemy assault on the British-held height in Egypt's corridor battle sone, was launched at dusk yesterday and lasted into the night, British headquarters announced today. (A British military commentator said in London that the British withstood the attack which he described as on a "small scale." There was no indication that either* the Axis or the British were ready to undertake a large offensive at present, he said.) Again the RAP played a major part in the fighting, destroying some Axis tanks and sending its medium bombers back "in force" against Tobruk last night, the bulletin said. . While the heavy clash of ground forces occurred in the north, on the coastal end of the line, patrols and columns fought minor actions further inland in the central and southern sectors of the front between the Mediterranean and the Quattara depression some 70 miles west of Alexandria. The communique did not indicate the outcome of any of these engagements but said the RAP still was dealing the Axis heavy blows to their hard-to-replace mechanized and armored equipment. "Our light bombers," fighter-bombers and fighters made large' scale attacks on enemy, forces," said the bulletin jointly issued by the RAF and army headquarters. "Direct hits were scored on tanks and troop-carrying vehicles. "In one attack on a convoy of 15, made up of armored cars, transport vehicles' ahd one tank, all but one of the vehicles were destroyed. "Other tanks were destroyed in further attacks during the day and at least four enemy aircraft were shot down by our fighters. "Last night our medium bombers attacked Tobruk in force,', starting a row of red fires which later merged into one big fire." ' 1 In all these air thrusts, including defensive patrols over Malta in which three er.emy raiders were shot down, the British said their own losses were three planes, one of whose pilots landed safely. BILL EXTENDS LOW INTEREST RATE ON LAND BANK LOANS President Roosevelt has signed a bill extending for two years the reduced interest rates on Federal Land Bank and Land Bank Commissioner loans, Mr. John T. Thome, President of the Farmville National Farm Loan Association, announced. this wade. Mr. Thome stated that this would mean a considerable saving in interest charges to borrowers in Pitt and Greene Counties. The Farmville Association is a member of a group of three associations maintaining a joint office at Washington, saving seven counties. Mr. W. G. Stancill, Secretary-Treasurer, is in change of the office which is located at Washington, N. C. Old Rubber Drive Goes Over The Top Greenville, July 14.—Pitt County has gone over the top in it scrap rubber drive, exceeding its set goal of 45 'ijj& • • "I dent want rioting or anything of that sort as a direct result at theafr measures," declared the wisened little Indian leader. If rioting talrnq place I feel helpless." The nsohCion must be ratified by the ail-India Congress committee, whWWhas been called to meet at Bombay August 8, but never ia the Abandons Town of Bogtichar and JVIiHerovo f As German Offensive Continues; Red Army Stalls Nazis At Voronezh, But CitgStill Is In Danger; Germans Using Reserves Mascow, July If.—Two German column* driving in separate sectors toward the steel city ot Stalingrad have forced Russian troop* to evacuate the towns of Boguchar, oa the Don river in the math, and Miilerovo on the Moscow-Boater railway supply line and only 175 milea frotr Stalingrad, the" Russian high command reported early today. On the northern limita of the battlef ront, Soviet troops fought off a renewed series of German attacks against Voronezh, the midnight communique said. There were ao material changes in other sectors of the long fighting Una. The official Russian press meanwhile warned that the "menace is great" on the approaches of the Caucasus. Fighting in the Voronezh area is < , "developing with increased ferocity," the Russians said. "A number of fortified positions have changed hands several times." Soviet troops, counter-attacking after German thrusts in several sectors, have forced Nasi tank and infantry units to withdraw with heavy losses. German Reserves. Several German reserve divisions have been rushed eastward from France and Belgium, the communique said, to fill the gap in the Russian trotit caused by tremendous Nazi casualties. At Voronezh, where the Germans made their first great plunge southeastward nearly two weeks ago, eleventh-hour counterattacks on the "south side of the city pushed the Germans back to the point wher* they crossed the Don, and on the north approaches the Russians stopped the upper arm of an encircling movement, then threw the attackers , into retreat. The Germans had atthempted the encirclement after, their breakthrough west of the city, accomplished by large numbers' of fresh troops and hundreds of tanks followed byautomatic riflemen, had run into stubborn Red Army resistance. One important position west of Voronezh, together with a forest, was reported reoaptured in the Russian counter-attacks. Russian dispatches said also that the third German motorized infantry division, which appeared on the battlefield only yesterday, had been forced to withdraw, and was replaced by the new 168th motorized division. A small railway creating also was retaken, and in another sector the Russians applied such pressure that the German* retired, Mowing up a bridge. Jllllllll There wu, however, no *oom for quick optimism as to the city's fate, for the Germans were sending fresh troops and new machine* with every hour into the battle area on the eastern bank of the Don. Thousands of soldiers ware fighting from behind every natural barrier and tanks were charging over the battlefield, where walls of fire were twisting into huge columns of smoke. German dive-bombers in small groups were hammering repeatedly at the Red Army formations, but the Red' air force again was showing considerably strength both over the Don battlefield and the Don River crossings forced by the Germans. \ '%• Northwest of Voronezh, a number of German tanks were reported destroyed on the west bank of the Don by strong Russian armored forces. Southeastward, on the rim of the north Caucasian area sooth of Boguchar, the Russians were reported holding today after a ocyutid