Archive.org
7
Vol. 1, No. 54, Friday, August 11, 1944
YANKS
^MEDITERRANEAN
REACH
Printed In Italy
NANTESTWO LIRE
Si. Malo Entered; Surround Angers
American Armor Presses Assault Against Nazi U-Boat Pens On Breton Peninsula
LONDON, Aug. 10 -- American armor and infantry, racing beyond the isolated Breton peninsula, today reached the strategic
river port of Nantes, on the Loire, while other armored units
surrounded Angers, 56 miles to the northeast On the peninsula itself, Yank infantry and tanks entered
St. Malo ana pressed home their assault on the other four prize
ports, vital German submarine lairs. Heavy fighting continued in
the Caen sector as the Germans brought up every gun they
could spare to prevent hard-
driving Canadian forces from
Krauts Withdraw
reaching Falaise. There however was no official
Allied forces are rapidly getting into position lor the decisive push on Paris. Canadians and
British fighting men are gradually loosening the tight German hinge around Caen while Americans have sewed up the Brittany peninsula with its valuable ports.
In Florence
Area
news of the position of the Americans who occupied Le Mans, 130 miles southwest or Paris, yesthe city.terday.A German report, however, said they were already well east of
ADVANCED ALLIED FORCE Nantes 28 miies Inland from the
Russians Hurling Three Army Groups
IN PACIFIC mmm
Kremlin Seeking Vatican Meeting
HEADQUARTERS, Aug. 10-- Eighth Army troops today held aU high ground south of the Arno River in the Arno bend east of Florence as Kraut troops withdrew to the north, following Allied capture of monastery -crowned Hill 557.
Atlanltieischa,ve yiest threeacbhiegdg,esthacviitnyg thae noArl-mal peacetime population of more
than 187,000. The drive to Nantes also markeetrdation of tthhee Asmoeurtihcearnnmosatdvanpceen.-
RusLsOiNanDONon,slaAuughgt. f1o0r-- E1Tahset Pmriugshstiya is in full swing, Moscow reports declared today, with three power-
ful Red Army groups smashing
GoLvOerNnDmOeNn,t, Aiung. an10--unTphreeceRduesnstieadn
political mrandoumvtoet,lie hVasatisceannt parompeosmion-g co-ordinated action between Moscow
Pockets of enemy resistance in this sector south of Pontassieve were being cleaned up by 8th Army forces and German patrols were reported to be the only organized erinveerm.y Cofnosrimdeartaibolnes esnoeumtyh sohfellitnhge
oNnaenteosf iFsraBnrciet'tsanyg'rseatfirrstivecrityporatnsd. It is the focal point of road and rail communications linking Paris with the Atlantic coast, and there itsherae. sizeable shipbuilding industry
German cpirocuslariftrointofnsromon thae lonnogrthseeamsitto the southeast borders of the Reich state.
Press dispatches told of German reinforcements being rushed to the sector to blunt the prong of the Soviet drive but the Russian com-
tacks tmhuunsiquefsaaird alhlavNeazibeceonuntbeeraatte-n back and great casualties inflicted on the Wehrmacht.
The bulk of the German defenders of East Prussia were reported
pinned down by the Russian drive in the center of the line. When this happened, the armies on the left and right flanks pushed off and Russian reports said the Nazis caught napping by the strategy were ''crushed."
Further gains were reported by Russian armies driving in the north and the Soviet communique told of two new drives opened by Red armies toward Riga from the south and southeast. These new
pushes made it clear that the Russian strategy in the Baltic Is to
cut off segments of the trapped 16th and 18th German armies from the main groupings and annihilate these pockets as they appear.
North of Warsaw another 150
inhabitedvancipnglSaovcieetsswhiflelel stoouththeof atdh-e Polish capital, heavy German counterattacks were smashed as the R?issians extended their bridge-
and the Vatican solution of moral
in the postwar social problems,
and mortaring continued in mountain area north of Arezzo.
the
Reuter's declared today. The report said that Marshal
Joseph Stalin had suggested to Pvoipeews Pituos fXaIcIilittahtaet athcetyionexcahtantghee
On the 5th Army front, Nazi forces reacted sharply to patrol
and artillery action and harassing tehnreomugyhouatrtiylelsetrerydayf.ire continued
A Kraut attempt to construct an
peace conference. The Russian premier is reported to have assured
the Pope that Russia has no de sire to create a social order any
underwater bridge south of San Giovanni alia Vena about nine miles east of Pisa was frustrated
where by force and even would opThe poSseosvuichetmeamseumreosr.andum asserted
by Allied artillery. Polish troops of the 8th Army
captured two important features
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT
that only
Russia hopes to reach its goal through democratic and legal
dominattwieennthge Mlstahe anhdighCesgarnooundRivebresin the Adriatic sector in the face
FDR In Honolulu;
principles. decTlhaeredV,atiiscanno'ts yaetttitkundeo,wnReubtuetr'sit
ovifllad,etoenremimnielde soopuptohsitoifont.he FrCaenscaan-o and four miles inland from the
was reported that Monsigiior Cor Adriatic, was taken by Polish end
Meets War Chiefs test, Papal Nuncio to the Polish gisovleirbsnaewrmaasetsneotdo.,n waisll thperocPeoeldishtocaWpiatra-l
Italian tfernsoivoepacstion iynesttheerdarye.newal Approximately 150 men
of ofand
PEARL President
HARBOR. Roosevelt,
Aug. 10 -- making his
This decision, the London Daily News Chronicle said, would indi-
ccialteed tIthsaetlf tthoe tlViae tfiaccatn thhaotd Porleacnodn-,
women found to have small arms and gVenades in their possession were arrested by Canadians and Partisans in the Florence sector south of the Arno where armed
first trip Into the Pacific theater of predominantly a Catholic country, and hostile Fascists were cleared
the war, spent three days in Honolulu where he inspected installs
tions and held military and naval
conferences, it w ms revealed to-
will be on close terms
in the postwar world
-- j
of friendship with Russia.'
from the area between Via ragli and Via Romana,
del Ser
day. The exact date of the Presi-
Film Biography Of Wilson securitydent'srveisiatswoanss, nboutt rietveeavlieddentfloyrBanned For U. S. Troops occurred about a week ago.
In and near Nantes, the Gerand amarns mhadatmaeknent ovfearctomraijeso,r aainrdcrafitts many military targets have long tbaecekns. the objective of Allied air at-
The Americans who reached the city met only slight resistance on tihmemeanpsperoancuhm,bebrut ofdidminreusn. iAntto laasnt eerxnettpeeonrrsitinsvge tthmheieynefcwiiteeylr.des cplreeaprairnagtortyhesteo
On thmenets of Batretloenast pefnoiunrsulGae,rmealnedivisions were fighting ferociously atonddefLeonrdienttheiraftgerreathabvaisnegs altosBtreSstt Malo. This latter port was reduced to justbone oaf itsstrdoenfgepnosientwaasftebrrotkheen bawcikt-h the capture of 3,000 Nazi troops.
(Continued on page S)
500 Nazi U-Boals Sunk During War
WASHINGTON, Aug. 10 -- More than 500 German U-boats have been sunk by the Allies since the start of the war. it was reported
head across the Vistula River. The The announcement of the Presi-
Russian communique made no mention of Warsaw but Polish un-
his whedenrt'seviasibt woausts thseinfcierst herepborrotado-f
WASHINGTON, Aug. 10 -- The
today in a joint Anglo-American statement issued under the authorto make. The film was described Primeity oMfinPirsetseirdenCthurcRhoiolsl.evelt and
derground reports said heavy fighting still was raging inside the city.
ItalSicaunttLluedxurIyn SLhinaenrghai WASHINGTON, Aug. 10 -- The
Italian luxury liner Conte Verde was scuttled by her crew in Shanghai harbor when the Japs
tciaosntfotrhetahcecePprteasnicdeencoyf fhirsomnoamiWneas-t Coast base.
At Honolulu. President Roosevelt conferred with General Douglas Mac Arthur, Admiral Chester Nim itz. Admiral William F. Halsey, Jr. and Admiral William D. Leahy on coming phases of the Pacific war.
After the war council the President told cocrorndeitsiopnaol nsudrreenndetrspotlhiecy uno-f
Prime Minister Winston Churchill
film ''Wilson," 20th Century -Fox's cinema biography of the World War I President, has been banned
by the Army for distribution to troops, ptorhteed todAays.sAolcsioaterdejePcrteesds wraesM''cHGeeaevenalnyd DMaoylsl,y". starring Fibber
The motion picture board of the Morale Services Division, which selects films for soldier distribu-
tion, banned both pictures on the grounds that the subject matter
as a ''three-hour plea for interna-
Time magazine in appraising the film said while ''Wilson" is not a tgireoantalipsimc.t"ure, it is an extremely ab-
ing one sworhbiincg,hsigniefviceanrt yaonnde einntteerrteasitne-d in the protracted coming of age of U. S. cinema will welcome.
The Time reviewer also said that ''with 1944 political tempers grow
ing warmer.terpreted a's sWtirlasiognh't mfioguhrtth beteirnm-
The statement added that Nazi U-boats were ''ineffective during sJoulyi,mpaortmaontnthforwhtihceh shucacsessbeeonf
conTthienenntuamlberoperoaftiGoenrs.m"an subs de-
stsrtoaynteidalldyugrrienatger Jtuhalny twheasnum''bseubrohfavmeercbhemaeennnttsaisd.ushn'ikp'sSewvshueinnlkte,e"eantthteeUm-pbsttoaiatntegsttorafifnitcerfseirnecewitthhe oufrirsctrolsasn-dcihnagnneolf
attempted to seize the ship at the conclusion of the Italian-Allied armistice, it was revealed today.
American nationals who left Shanghai last November said they
had seen the liner lying at the bottom of the harbor. General Joseph Stilwell announced that Liberators had hit the ship in an attack on Shanghai harbor three
days ago.
and himself applied with unrelenting vigor against Japan as well as
violatdeiesr vottihnge acptr.ovisions
of the sol-
Last December, producer Zanuck, a Republican, pointed out that the
agaTihnest PrGeesrimdeannty.'did not divulge re-
That act prohibits distribution by the armed forces ol books,
fWpierlnomdpealmgliagnhdWtai.ll"hkiaev.e
proved helpful board chairman
to of
sults of the ippmentous meeting magazines or other material con with U. S. war leaders of the Pa- taining matters calculated to in
2W'0oWtrihllsdo"nC"eZncatlinucruksyc.-kFoxwillwhporsoeduc'e'Oneif
cific zone other than to say the talks concerned new offensive plans. He did not indicate how soon realization of these plans may be
.
eflieucctnico?n. the results of the national ''Wilson," was an expensive pro-
duction even for Darryl Zanuck. It1
Only recently Zanuck announced grimly ''that if 'Wilson' flops. I'll never make a picture without Betty
the''TahremyU-bofoatlibefrlaeteitoni.s" still of impressive size," the statement noted.
Nevertheless, the U-boats remain the heursn. tNaezid clraaitmhser otfhasnintkhiengshunatr-e grossly exaggerated. June claims were acnent.ePxreasgsugreerwaitlilonbeofma1i,n0t00aipneerduntil ail chances of a revival of the
expected.
?c^st more than five million dollars! Grable/
U-boat campaign are killed."
Page 3b
THE STARS AND STRIPES
Friday, August 11, 1944
Osaka Mainichi DAWants To Know About Claims Nips Have Brawl At Dorsey Shack
RETURNS
Postwar Air Fare Of 4 Cents A Mile
New
War
Weapon
batHtOlLe LYroWyOalODa,t
tAruog.mbo1n0e-- exTpheartt
suffered during the SDaotrusredya'ys dHaowlnl,ywood
brawling on terrace last
Juan Trippe's Aim
GARAPAN, Saipan, Aug. IQ-- A new, easy way to down American planes, says a story in the NipIs to thrpoonwese nreiwcsepapberallOssaakta thMeami.nicYheis,,
sirT,hiet'sJaaspssiamrpele suapspotshaetd! to take
nTiogmhtmyis Dtoorsbeey'isnvehsotmigeatetdh,e itotwhaesr announced today by District Atthe facttornety hFraedtN.JoHnowrHsaelrl,, ifnilmvieawctoorf husband of jive chan te use Frances
Lheangthfionrkds, he''hhaass pbuebelnictlhye ivnidciticmateodf
Icaza's suit declared he was struck on the side of the head with a bottle hurled by Tommy. Jdn Hall was treated after the fight for a broken nose and had some 48 csltaiitmcehdes. taken in his face, it was
''NEmEpWerorYOoRfK,theAuAgir,1"0 --45A-myeerairc-ao'lsd
Juan Trippe, president and founder of Pan American Airways, has filed
with the Civil Aeronautics Board an ambitious scheme of postwar air travel designed to bring all the
such tall tales seriously, but victorious Americans who are mop-
ping up the Japanese in this part of the world without benefit of rice balls get a big laugh out of
the story. It's good for their morintenadlee,dwhiciht istno'tbewhaatt altlh.e Japanese
The editors even went to tnc trouble of having the story printed
atho"cr1roiumfigenhealliniavtsessmatuiylgta.t"diuonty intothemapkueblica
interest," Howser said, adding that participants in the altercation will be asked, to attend a session in liis office and if they fail to recounty spgonrdatnhedy'll jbuery.called before the
Hall said Dorsey took offense when he playfully threw his arms maartoeu,ndshatpheely baPnadtleaDdaenre'.s Eadcwtarersds Norris, the he-man film star, also suffered sundry cuts and bruises in the resulting melee, and explains his wastweetn hHaell arnodle Doofrspeeya,cewmiatkhersmablelthanks.
in English and had their circulation department leave hundreds
oldEarPliaenra,maAnnitoannio acItcoarz,a,fi3l2e-dyesauri-t
Icaza today showed newsmen his double breasted suit with blood on
world's capitals within reach of the citizen of average income.
The project, heretofore a closely guarded secret, proposes a fleet of world-girdling stratosphere liners which will reduce cost of travel to less than four cents per mile.
Trippe declared his company alliners rewadhy hiascphlacweildl osrpdeeerds tfhorrou1g0h8 the stratosphere at more than 300
of copies of it on Saipan for the edification of the Allied invaders. So, imagine how they would feel if they saw the Yanks, who are well versed in the accomplishments of Superman, busting their sides
against Tommy Dorsey and nine others, named only as John Doe or Jane Doe, demanding 40,000 dollars damages for injuries he alleges he
It, and lifted a bandage off his ear to show where the bottle whacked
if. "1 was frightened almost hall to death," said Antonio, twirling his mustachios for cameramen. "1
laughing at this report of a battle
How's The Duchess? between "a Japanese naval pilot
anTdhe twboattlAemeorfictahne rpilcaenesb.a*l*ls took
wJcalaaTnnithemes juCtsbhotauitcrbtecel.h"eiallrto,hyiarlad
also involved csotuasrilnetof v>thhec
British Prime Minister. As the male
Baltimorian Cries place, according to Mainichi, when
a crippled Jap craft was being pursued by American fighters. Out of
principals traded flying fists, bottles and flower pots, Jane got a few hand holds on beauteous Pat
RITA HAYWORTH
miles per hour. Tlie PAA president, who has been
working on tho plans for years, admitted he expects powerful com-
panies upnedteirtifono,reespiegcinallyflfagrso. m com-
The plan calls for reduction of fRliyoindge tJiamneeibreotwfereonm Ntehwe pYroersekntan6d6 hours to less than 20. It calls for reduction in rates, encouraging
pteooplveisiotf tNhoerthothaenrd cSoonuttihnenAtm,eriacnad
ammunition, the Nip began throw-
Xylophonist Has of hiisng rsahtiaotnst,erpeadracihnusttersumeanntd bpoiaercde.s Loveliest Stooge Finally, only two rice balls re-
at the Amaminede, sortihcean"she.ro"Thtahtrewdidthtehme trick all right, the article states, because the Americans thought that the rice balls were hand gren-
ades. They ducked, lost control of their planes, and crashed into atvhoeidsetahemi.n a desperate effort to
No doubt these same editors know what the true score is in the battle between Uncle Sam and Hirohito. Nevertheless, they still wonder publicly why the U. S.
dqoueostne't onademitexpeitrti,s VliiccekedA.dmTirhaely
IrvNientgs B1e0rliMni'lslioSnhoBwucks Takijiro Onishi, in a three-column
UinnitteerdvieSwt:ate"sI sdhoonu'ltd sheaeve wdhuympethde planes and ocean craft in such
DukBeALoTfIWMiOnRdsEo,r viAsuigti.ng 1t0he --natTihvee city of his Duchess yesterday was greeted democratically by a woman
bystander with ''Howya, Duke. HoTwh'es ftohremeDrucKhiensgs?"of England told his questioner who had grabbed his arm that the Duchess was well and probably would visit the city later.
Then, met by General Henry M.
wWeanrtfietlod,thethMearDyulcahnedss'Clubuncfloer, tehae. Arriving here following an inspection of Bahamanian labor
camps in Maryland and Delaware in hise.ral cofatphaecitByahaasmaGso,vertnhoer-GDeunk-e said:
"1ershvaervyewelflountdakenimmciagreranotf awnodrki-n very good condition. I found many had increased in weight because
Dtoanere'tsireeviennitnhge ignotwenrestandof Pmaotdeshtoyd -- in a big hurry -- as there was pleJnatnye oftelmlosontlhiagtht.Pat was kicking Norris while he was down, so she took a hand in the proceedings.
Meantime, Universal Studios, appalled at the whole goings-on, is
trying to figure a way out to patch Hall's nose so he can continue in a msloavvie.e Haes aMlamroisat lMoosnttetzh'e tEigpypoftiahins nose. He says, undoing his many
bandages: "Could a flower pot do
It was hinted a number of those in the melee were told to keep quiet or else, and that, District Attorney Howser indicated, is a bit of movie ignatvnhegissstt?ie"gratei.ntimidation he is going to
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 10-- Rita Hayworth, after 21 years, is stoog''Profiensgsaograi"n fLoarmbexrtyil.ophonist Basil
Rita, when a tot of four, used to come on the stage, hand Lam-
berti his millets, make a pretty cbuorwt,aintheans ttrhiep cdarionwtdilyapbpelhaiundded.the
Years passed, and Lamberti, whose real name is Lambert, bpalnadysed tothtehexyClloepvheolnaend fSryommphcoinrycu,s while Miss Hayworth grew up to be a movie star.
Recently they met again, and
provides for increased facilities to take cceantreincroeafse tihne aierxptercatveeld. 500 persleTerpieprpeaccsaoimdmoedxaptrieosnss,plasniemislarwittho those of Pullman trains, will be in-
stituted, and maintained that the new fipclwahnich cbaenfotraeke thcearewaorf atlrlavterlaefdbnoy sslteeeapminsghipaccoormmaoidractriaoftns.offerings
If approved, he said, the plan will be put into operation as soon as the planes ore delivered.
NEW YORK, Aug 10-- The stage
wholesale fashion. What is the
Chaplin Bans Picture enemy driving at? We cannot make
of the
fine
food
in the
camps."
Chorus Girls Galore Of New-Born Daughter head or tail of what the enemy's
gthaamte Aims.e"riOcnaishmiaywenhtavoen wtaostseady half her aircraft carriers in recent
Will Play Gl Circuil Pacific battles.
HOLLYWOOD,
Aug. 10-Charlie
Rroiltea-- gaot scLeanmeberitni whhiischfirssthen.ovviiees TadhonledlarAfsrimlymf"orprhtoahdseucetaAirronnmedy ofteenm'e'rTmghiileslnicoyIns
with does
Lamberti for applause. She a slow aemi -strip tease while
relief
futunrnded,fromIIrtvailnyg, Breerploirnt,edjusttodarye.-
heWhpolayswintsh?e xAyrleophyoonue kliidkdeingm?ad. Berlin said his new song, dedi-
cated to the infantry, "There Are
Slight Error
NEW YORK, Aug. 10 -- The clamor for glamor by GI Joes over
boxCLtEuVrtElLeANatD,a
mAuusge.um10 --inOscsaurb,ur-a
seas Is about to be real live chorus
rewarded girls as
with dis
ban Rocky River laid an egg to- tinguished from the pinup versions.
to
day, prompting museum announce tersely, "We
name the turtle."
officials will re-
The live ones will play the foxhole circuit of the USO for the first time, it was announced today.
Chaplin, the white-thatched British comedian who won millions by having his picture taken, said to-
day his new-born daughter would never be photographed. wilClhaepvleirn bdeeclmaardeed: of"Ntohispicbtaubrye. Ill give you 1,000 dollars if her
Ethel On Air
NaocceWpitnegds bOyn GFeonxehrolaels" GehoardgebeeCn.
Marshall, adding that he would do-
BaNrrEyWmorYeORiKs.to 1e0 --a Arneogtuhlearr infantnratyemtheenp.roceeds to a fund for
broadcaster. Ethel has just signed a contract for a Sunday series, the
Declaring he was tired from his
first program of her own although four months* tour, the 56-year-o)d
she has broadcast various occasions.
as
gue3t
on
casompaosleort ofaddgeudy,s "w1hoam arneot staisll toivreerd
picture is ever published."
Repertory Company Now Touring there " Italy
Virginia Robinson and Pfc. Fred Ullom follow the action of the play from the wings and
watch for their entrance cue.
Brooke Fleming and Virginia Robinson, well-known Broadway actresses now with the USO, are touring the Mediterranean Theater in a GI.-USO repertory company. ABOVE --
T-4 Tom Conway, Miss Fleming and Sgt. Douglas Parkliirst rehearse a scene from Margin For Error, the Broadway com-
edy hit with an anti-Nazi theme that took audiences by storm. The company of players has toured many miles
throughout this theater.
(Staff Photos by Sgt. Grayson Tewksbury)
Miss Robinson watches with a critical eye as
Pvt. Alfred Hayes rehearses an intricate dance step called for in the script
Friday, August 11, 1944
CToonnCehcotoisceut'Bsetw4etehn Two Lovely Ladies
THE STARS AND STRIPES
BUCKETS OF BLOOD PLASMA
Page 3
Hatch Act Opinion Bans U. S. Workers . From Campaigning
BRIDGEPORT, Aug. 10 -- Voters
Stars and Stripes U. S. Bureau
DoifstCriocntnecwtiilcluth'asve4tah cChoonigcreessofiontawlo
comely members of the feminine sex when they go to the polls in November, Associated Press re-
ported today. Margaret E. Connors was chosen unanimously by the Democrats in the district to oppose Mrs. Clare
Booth Luce, the Republican incumbent nominated by the GOP for a
second term. In accepting designa tion, Mrs. Luce charged the Demo
WASHINGTON. Aug- lOT-A ban. which will keep nearly 3.000.000
Federal jobholders out of the Presidential campaign, apparently has
been nailed down by decisions upholding the constitutionality of the
Hatch Act and government circles said today that the way has been cleared for action in some 300 cases in which United States employees are charged with political activity.
pcrroatgircessparttoywarwdithan 'A'mmeakriincgan mudcich-
This is thetaorship.",, first all-woman major party congressional contest in the East since 1942 and one of the few
in political history. Mrs. Luce, noted as an author, actress and
playwright, and for her phrasemaking in both Congress and pub-
lic speeches, also is famed for her stylish dress.
Miss Connors, five feet, five inches tail, has blue eyes and dark
hair. She is a graduate of Wellesley College and Yale Law School. At
Meanwhile, the ruling rendered
by one U. S. Circuit Court and two District Courts will be ap-
pealed to the Supreme Court by the United Federal Workers, a CIO union, which has opposed the Hatch Act. However, a ruling be-
fore election day is held unlikely
by political observers. CAUSE CELEBRE?
George P. Poole, an employee of the Philadelphia mint, is the man
whose case may become cause celebre in the history of the fight on this issue. Poole was one of some
S2e5crsethaerywaosf SCtaotnen,ectthiecufti'rsst Dweopmuatny and youngest person ever to hold
the job. While at Yale, Miss Connors. now 29, worked one vacation
Blood banks arriving In huge containers for Allied wounded in northern France are quickly loaded onto trucks after an American transport plane rushed them across the English Channel.
(Photo through PWB)
700 persons in the mint against whom complaints were received in cacotninvietcyt.ion with alleged political
period in the New Haven office of the Department of Justice, earning
mention on one occasion as ''ConMiss Connnecoticrut's* f,irst Gw-hwoomalni.k"es single
tailored frocks, is the daughter of James W. Connors, vice-president
of a ingnsattorie ocnhaalinl.y-known men's cloth-
AEF To
Moves Headquarters Somewhere In France
FDR Action Seen
A joint Civisilon-TreSaseurryvinivecsteigatioCn osmhmoiwse-d
In Truck
Strike
enoughters aendvicdheanrcgees"to awgaarirnasntt t"hleesteemployees. The evidence seemed to show that the mint workers had
served as Democratic ward comin other branmcittehemene, ass pololf ewlaetcctihoenreserinagn.d
issSuhee issaitdo syeeestetrhdaaty,th"eThpeeacmeainis General Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1 jury to the dog was reported to
WASaHtorIs aNndGtTruOcNke,rs Aiung.the10M--idOwpeesrt-
In its petition to the court the union admitted that Poole had vio-
Supreme Commander of the Allied be negligible. The animals, trained today are expecting Presidential
lated the Hatch Act; but it raised
won."
Expeditionary Forces, has moved to detect the smell of the mines, action to halt the rapidly spread- the claim of unconstitutionally
Fingerprints New Treason Evidence
his headquarters
from
Great
Bri-i
''freeze" much as
when they discover bird dogs mark their
them, prey.
tthaein nteow FrHaQnoe.areReustietru'astedrepionrteadn'
orchard and near an airport.
There'll be no shortage of maps on the road to Berlin for the Allied
compilnegtetrlaynspoooruutatttionooffstcrioknetroralginign
eight states, halting over-the-road
shipments the United
of vital war materials, Press reported. J
btaweseend tohne ptrhoevisailolnegeodf tchoenfllaiwct babre--
t jng Federal workers from taking
"any active agement or
part in in any
political political
mnncam-
A dispatch to Washington from forces now racing that way. Lausanne. Switzerland, reported iLondon Daily Mail reported
The .A.n.. estimated 50,000 drivers a- nd umgn that freight handlers already have , cjaus
0?pfaiugnu"tahndetuih ................
................
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