America at war! (1941–) – Part 3

The Pittsburgh Press (July 26, 1944)

Yanks crack Nazi line with great tank attack

U.S. offensive gains four miles to end Normandy stalemate
By Virgil Pinkley, United Press staff writer

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Ending the stalemate in Normandy, U.S. forces have driven four miles into the German lines west of Saint-Lô. On the eastern end of the front, the British were driven back slightly by Nazi counterattacks into the northern edges of Tilly-la-Campagne and May-sur-Orne (1). The Yanks in the Saint-Lô sector smashed ahead on a four-mile front and Saint-Giles and Marigny (2). Other U.S. forces reduced a German bulge north of Périers in preparation to storming that town (3).

SHAEF, London, England –
Two U.S. armored columns leading a front-wide offensive by Gen. Omar N. Bradley’s 1st Army smashed through the German lines in Normandy today and captured the highway towns of Marigny and Saint-Giles, southwest of Saint-Lô, as they drove ahead up to four miles.

Marigny, seven miles from Saint-Lô and the biggest town on the Coutances highways, and Saint-Giles, midway between Marigny and Saint-Lô, were the first big prizes in the breakthrough offensive which overran some half-dozen towns and villages in the first few hours of the drive.

Front dispatches reported that Bradley’s armor, in scoring the second big breakthrough of the Normandy campaign and the first by massed U.S. tanks on which sharp-looking doughboys rode, had blasted a four-mile-wide gap in the German defenses.

Gen. Bradley’s armor swarmed out of its camouflage nests in a thundering herd to crash the German lines. One column raced to Marigny for a four-mile gain and the other knifed in against Saint-Giles. Both towns fell a few hours after the big push got underway in the wake of preliminary thrusts yesterday.

At the same time, other U.S. forces went over the top all along the line, attacking across the Sèves River toward Périers on the western wing and slashing far beyond Saint-Lô at the eastern end of the U.S. section of the Normandy front.

The western section of the offensive was launched at dawn today in conjunction with the breakthrough attack a few miles west of Saint-Lô. It extended all the way to the Atlantic coast in the Lessay area, and began with a smashing artillery barrage.

Forcing the Ay River east of Lessay, the Americans established a bridgehead on the lower side.

Gen. Bradley caught the Nazis flatfooted when he threw his tanks into the push west of Saint-Lô. The initial impact of the massed armor carried through the German main line, the reserve line beyond, and at latest reports the forward elements were shooting up artillery positions far in the enemy rear.

Tonight, the Americans were credited with knocking out 36 medium and light tanks, five Mark IV and Mark V heavies, 14 of French make, six self-propelled guns and 33 halftracks. The conservative figure included only knockout vehicles which the Germans had not been able to salvage.

The greatest tank charge in the history of American warfare had the thunderous support of 155mm Long Toms and swarms of dive bombers which paralyzed the German defenses and wiped out entire Nazi units.

On their other wing, the Americans pushed down to Montrabot, 9½ miles east of Saint-Lô, to find it deserted.

Front dispatches said the entire American line moved forward an average of two miles, meeting only sporadic resistance at many points.

Sherman tanks clustered with Doughboys riding Russian fashion, self-propelled Long Toms, and every kind of battle vehicle charged the German fortifications to score the breakthrough hailed by front correspondents as perhaps the most significant single development on the French front since D-Day.

United Press writer Henry T. Gorrell reported:

This was the second breach in the wall of Fortress Europe since the invasion.

I saw the tanks go forward into the assault behind an artillery barrage and dive-bombing by Thunderbolts and Spitfires. At the same time, rocket-carrying planes patrolled the battle area, searching for the German Panther and Tiger tanks reported in the path of our armor.

Spaced 50 yards apart, the tanks churned forward in a symmetrical phalanx. Doughboys astride them did their fighting from their bucking mounts, under orders to dismount only when necessary.

Directly behind the advance guard came the self-propelled artillery, then more infantry mounted on halftracks, then more tanks and finally another layer of mobile infantry.

Giant bulldozers accompanied the cavalcade, gouging out passageways in the Normandy hedgerows and topping fortifications in the path of the massed armor.

Troops atop the frontline Shermans sprayed every hedgerow with fire. It had been raining earlier, but the battlefield dried out quickly and the armor churned up a choking pall of dust.

The Nazi defenders of the Saint-Giles area were stunned by the record weight of explosives dropped on them yesterday by U.S. bombers, and were thrown off balance in a frantic shift of strength aimed at, but failing, to anticipate the focal point of the onslaught.

While the American offensive picked up momentum, a front report said the impetus of the British attack below Caen faded out today. The Germans were making sharp counterthrusts, and stepping them up to the scale of major activity, while the Nazi air attack in the Caen area last night was one of the heaviest since the invasion.

United Press writer Ronald Clark reported:

It must be stated that the Allies holding the curving belt of country roughly three miles deep below Caen are not in an enviable position.

The German Transocean News Agency reported that British troops and material were being unloaded continuously at the Orne estuary above Caen under cover of smokescreens.

The agency said:

It is not impossible that the present attacks are merely the curtain raisers to a large-scale breakthrough attack planned by Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery west of the Orne.

While still refusing to pinpoint the focal points of the new American offensive, Supreme Headquarters acknowledged that Gen. Bradley’s forces had made several new crossings of the Saint-Lô–Périers highway in an apparent thrust toward the communications hub of Coutances and were assaulting an enemy bulge five miles northeast of Périers.

Nazi bulge squeezed

The Americans squeezed the mouth of the German bulge to two miles and reduced its depth to one-and-a-quarter miles preparatory to a frontal attack on Périers, nine miles north of Coutances.

The American attack got off to a slow start shortly before noon yesterday after 3,000 bombers had blasted a path five miles wide and two miles deep with nearly 6,000 tons of bombs in an unprecedented bombardment.

Germans who survived the rain of steel and explosives laid down heavy artillery and mortar crossfire on the main roads of advance, forcing the Americans to fight cautiously along fields and hedgerows.

Nazis in pocket killed

Other Germans moved into positions abandoned by the Americans just before the aerial bombardment and further slowed up the advance. Several hundred Germans led by a fanatic lieutenant colonel held out in a bypassed pocket until all were killed.

Once the troublesome enemy pockets had been cleared out, the Americans advanced into the no-man’s-land of huge craters, burned-out vehicles and corpse-filled foxholes churned up by the massive aerial bombardment and began to pick up momentum.

Mr. McMillan, with the British 2nd Army, said the battle for May-sur-Orne and Tilly-la-Campagne, on either side of the Caen–Falaise highway, had developed into an artillery and infantry-slogging match.

Occupy ends of villages

Germans and British or Canadian troops occupy opposite ends of May and Tilly, as well as several other embattled villages on an arc five to six miles southeast of Caen, Mr. McMillan said.

Mr. McMillan said:

Using their customary tactics, the Germans have barricaded themselves in houses which have been converted into strongpoints, while anti-tank guns have been posted on streets.

Reports reaching Allied headquarters indicated the German command was gambling everything on containing the Allied beachhead in the Normandy Peninsula after discarding a proposal by Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt, former commander in the west, to withdraw behind the Seine and Loire Rivers to take advantage of shorter communications.


Eisenhower visits beachhead in France

By Howard Cowan, representing combined U.S. press

A SHAEF ACP – (July 25, delayed)
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower visited the Allied beachhead in Normandy for the sixth time today to hold eleventh-hour conferences with Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery and Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley before U.S. and British ground forces merged in an all-out attack.

After crossing the channel in his private plane, escorted by four Spitfire fighters from the dominions, the general took time out to talk with G.I.’s at the landing strip while waiting for a transport train to Gen. B. L. Montgomery’s headquarters.

Sgt. Griffith Harris of Cos Cob, Connecticut, shoved a five-dollar bill at the Supreme Commander and asked him to sign it for a short-snorter collection.

The general joked about trading a one-dollar bill for the five as he grinned and scrawled his name.

By that time, more than 50 other G.I.’s were digging out bills. The general signed them all.

Yanks ride ‘em like cowboys –
Gorrell: Camouflaged tanks come out of hiding to smash Nazis in complete surprise

Normandy drive so sudden that no shells fall among U.S. troops
By Henry T. Gorrell, United Press staff writer

With U.S. armored forces on the Normandy front, France –
First came giant American bulldozers, smashing holes in the hedgerows and battering the German roadblocks to rubble, and then came a long, waddling line of tanks on which infantrymen were crouched like cowboys.

That was the way we broke through today near Saint-Lô and sent the Germans scuttling out of their trenches along the hedges and retreating southward toward Marigny and Coutances. The blow fell on the enemy with complete surprise and terrific force.

Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley had accumulated this armored force under camouflage in the back areas all during the time that the infantry smashed against the fanatical Nazi SS troopers, fighting like madmen to pin the Americans down into warfare of World War I type.

Today he ordered the camouflage thrown off and the great armored army moved across the front, past the entrenched doughboys who rose up out of their slit trenches to cheer as the tanks and bulldozers churned past them.

Following close on the bulldozers, the tanks banged through the hedges and rolled across fields which our terrific bombardment had pitted like the craters of the moon.

This was a great, self-sufficient army entirely on treads and wheels.

Along with the giant Sherman tanks rolled self-propelled Long Tom gun mounted on tank chassis, halftrack ambulances equipped with mobile operating tables, vehicles loaded with mines, bazookas, anti-tank guns, grenades and other heavy weapons for the tank-riding infantry.

In the wake of the armor rolled, huge halftracks crammed with tough infantrymen ready to jump out inside the breach and exploit the breakthrough. Special vehicles near the head of the mighty procession carried engineers equipped with explosive devices to clear any obstacles the bulldozers couldn’t smash.

So secret had been the preparations that not a single enemy shell fell among the vehicles as they moved up to the front through village streets lined with enthusiastic Frenchmen who looked with awe and wonder at the armored army.

As I watched the armor pour across what had been the front, I could read in the faces of the doughboys who waved and cheered them on the hope that this audacious thrust would deal the enemy a heavy blow here at the base of the Cherbourg Peninsula.

As the procession slashed southward, it dropped off special armored traffic cops wearing red armbands to guide the following vehicles through the proper hedge holes. Up in the front where the fighting was toughest, the “tank-busting” troops steadied themselves on their bucking Shermans and poured streams of automatic fire into the hedges along which the Germans had dug their trenches.

Dust rises

Great columns of dust rose over the line of advance.

The commanding general kept in touch with the tanks by walkie-talkie radio. At one point I heard him ask his battalion commander somewhere up forward in a Sherman: “As you moving?”

“Yes,” the reply came back, “but slowly due to difficult terrain – no contact yet.”

The general replied, “Get in there and gain contact.”

“Roger, I’m pushing them,” was the response.

Through glasses we could see the tanks weaving their way across bomb-torn field which Bob Casey of the Chicago Daily News, an old artilleryman himself, remarked reminded him of the battlefields of World War I.

Soon German prisoners came stumbling back through the gap. Some of them, punch-drunk from shelling and bombing, surrendered as soon as they saw our tanks.

They said yesterday’s bombing by 3,000 light and heavy bombers on the American front had wiped out entire German units.

Infantry in high spirits

I have been with this armored force for the last two days awaiting today’s attack. The infantry was in high spirits as it was ordered to mount the leading tanks for the attack. The men ran forward clutching their automatic weapons, eager to get at the enemy which had forced them to live in foxholes for many long days and nights on the front.

One doughboy told me:

I don’t care what lies ahead. What counts is that we’re busting their line.

I saw a bulldozer go by bearing the warning “Achtung, Adolf!” Its pilot was the first to smash a hole through the hedges near Saint-Giles.

Force never halted

As the bulldozer shoved out, I heard the commander giving priority next to a company of engineers on halftracks whose mission was to weed out mines that might delay the forward tanks.

And so we rolled up to the front along roads as peaceful as a country lane back home until we hit the front. The great force never halted. It just bucked on through and vanished into the German rear to wreak its havoc.

Americans link Guam beachheads

By Frank Tremaine, United Press staff writer

Cigarettes scarcity likely to be even more acute

Industry hit by many war-born shortages; demand is up 40% in last four years

Up to 54 hours!
Army lengthens war workweek

Hour-a-day boost effective immediately

americavotes1944

Truman’s wife on payroll of Senate at $4,500 a year

‘I never make any decision unless she’s in on it,’ says nominee for Vice President

Washington –
Mrs. Bess W. Truman, wife of Senator Harry Truman (D-MO), Democratic vice-presidential nominee, is on the Senate payroll as his clerk at $4,500 a year.

Records of the Senate secretary’s office show that she went on the payroll in July 1941, at $2,400 a year, and remained until June 1943. She went back last fall and is still on.

Senator Truman said from his home in Independence, Missouri:

She is my chief adviser. I never write a speech without going over it with her. I had to do it because I had so much to do and I never make any decision unless she is in on it. She also takes care of my personal mail.

The $4,500 salary is the top pay for Senators’ clerical help.

At Senator Truman’s office here, it was explained that Mrs. Truman chiefly handles the Senator’s personal mail, that she knows his old Army friends of World War I, and knows them to call “Dear Bill,” and whom to address as “Dear Mr. Jones.”

She does not typewrite nor take dictation, his office said, but writes some of the Senator’s personal letters in longhand. She comes down “a couple of days a week” to gather up the correspondence she handles.

Senator Truman married Miss Bess Wallace of Independence, in 1919. They have one daughter, Margaret.

As Senator, Mr. Truman receives an annual salary of $10,000.

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I DARE SAY —
About books

By Florence Fisher Parry

War prisoners who fled camp recaptured

Rubber chief resigns, says work is done

First war agency to request abolishment


Lend-Lease aid tops $20 billion

Reds to beat other Allies in Berlin race

Russians advance at faster pace
By Reuel S. Moore, United Press staff writer

12,000 strike; general war output tied up

Five major walkouts settled overnight
By the United Press

Petrillo orders strike – they do

Eight musicians walk out at Station KSTP

americavotes1944

Dewey to make two appearances here Monday

Parade, reception set for GOP nominee

Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York, Republican nominee for President, will be seen by Pittsburgh on two occasions when he comes here next Monday for conferences with Pennsylvania and local Republican leaders and candidates.

Mr. Dewey will be escorted in a parade through downtown streets on his arrival at the Pennsylvania Station at 8:55 a.m. ET.

General reception planned

The parade will travel from the station down Liberty Avenue to Fifth Avenue, up Fifth Avenue, to William Penn Way, across William Penn Way to Sixth Avenue, up Sixth Avenue, to Grant Street, and thence to the Grant Street entrance of the William Penn Hotel.

From 3:30 until 5:30 p.m., Mr. Dewey will be present at a general reception for party workers, open to the public. This event will be held in the William Penn Hotel, as will all conferences.

Mr. Dewey will hold two press conferences, one at 10:00 a.m. and another at 9:00 p.m.

Several conferences here

He will leave the city from the Pennsylvania Station at 9:44 p.m., going from here to Springfield, Illinois, where he will consult Republican leaders of Illinois. From there, he will go to St. Louis for a meeting Wednesday with the 25 other Republican governors of the nation.

While here, Mr. Dewey will hold conferences with party leaders, labor leaders, business representatives and spokesmen for agricultural interests.

David Williams, AFL leader and deputy state secretary of the Labor & Industry Department, is arranging the labor conference for 11:00 a.m. He will meet a business group, to be invited by Republican County Chairman James F. Malone, at 11:30 a.m.

Farm group conference

From noon until 12:30 p.m., he will confer with a farm group selected by State Secretary of Agriculture Miles Horst.

The next half-hour will be devoted to a meeting with the leaders of war veterans’ organizations, arranged by Maj. Gen. Hugh Drum.

In the afternoon, after a luncheon with Republican candidates for Congress, Auditor General and State Treasurer, which will also be attended by U.S. Senator James J. Davis, Mr. Dewey will hold an hour’s conference with these candidates.

Private dinner in evening

In the evening, he will attend a small, private dinner with local and state party leaders. No speech is scheduled.

Mr. Dewey’s schedule of conferences in Pittsburgh was worked out here yesterday by Mr. Malone (Republican county chairman), George I. Bloom (secretary to Governor Edward Martin), Frank J. Harris (former county chairman), Hamilton Gaddis (assistant secretary to Mr. Dewey) and Douglas G. Mode (secretary to Mr. Brownell).


Dewey, Bricker to meet

Albany, New York –
Governor Thomas E. Dewey, Republican presidential nominee, and his running mate, Ohio Governor John W. Bricker, were to meet today to discuss organization of their campaign.

americavotes1944

‘Cotton Ed,’ Roosevelt foe, is defeated

Governor beats Smith; Mrs. Caraway loses
By the United Press

South Carolina Democrats retired the anti-New Dealer, Ellison D. “Cotton Ed” Smith, from the U.S. Senate after 36 years today, replacing him with Governor Olin D. Johnston who presented himself to the voters in yesterday’s primary as “pro-Roosevelt but disagreeing on certain domestic policies.”

Another veteran Democratic Senator – and the Senate’s only woman – was retired in yesterday’s primary in Arkansas where Mrs. Hattie Caraway, a member since 1931, was defeated for renomination.

Her leading opponent was Rep. J. William Fulbright, author of the Fulbright Resolution favoring U.S. collaboration with other nations to keep world peace, but it was indicated that he would fall short of a majority, thus necessitating a runoff primary to decide the winner. Mrs. Caraway was running fourth in the field of four and thus was eliminated.

Runoff is necessary

Returns from 1,510 of the 2,170 precincts gave:

Fulbright 51,380
Barton 30,497
Adkins 34,568
Caraway 18,006

Participants in the runoff primary will be the two candidates with the highest totals. Mr. Fulbright was assured of a place and the second place was between Mr. Barton and Mr. Adkins.

Returns from 1,356 precincts out of South Carolina’s 1,540 gave:

Johnston 111,462
Smith 73,971

Three other candidates for the Democratic nomination, which is the equivalent of election in South Carolina, received less than 23,000, thus giving Governor Johnston a majority of the votes cast.

Dean of the Senate

Senator Smith had served in the Senate continuously since 1908, is dean of that body, the chairman of its Agriculture Committee. He was one of the conservative Democrats who survived President Roosevelt’s “purge” efforts in 1938.

Mrs. Caraway was appointed to the Senate in 1931 to succeed her late husband, Thaddeus H. Caraway. She was elected in a special election in January 1932 to his unexpired term and reelected in the fall of 1932 and again in 1938.

Negroes were permitted to vote in the Democratic primary for the first time in Arkansas history. The only requirement was a poll tax receipt and election officials estimated 10,000 participated. No untoward incidents were reported.

americavotes1944

Truman exhausted, ordered to bed

Independence, Missouri (UP) –
Senator Harry S. Truman last night was ordered to bed by his physician, who said the Democratic vice-presidential nominee was suffering from exhaustion.

At his home here, Senator Truman himself answered a telephone call to report that he was not ill, but that three days of almost constant handshaking had left him so fatigued his doctor had ordered a rest.

He said:

I’m pretty tired, but perfectly well. Homecoming is fun but it’s mighty tiring, and when the doctor said go home and go to bed, I came like a good boy.

Soviet forces end aloofness from Allies

U.S. fliers first to join Reds in drive


Vienna blasted by U.S. bombers

RAF night raiders batter Stuttgart

Japs withdraw in New Guinea

By William B. Dickinson, United Press staff writer

McGlincy: Nazi captives shellshocked after record aerial assault

Officers abandon troops, leaving orders to shoot in back any who try to surrender
By James McGlincy, United Press staff writer

With Allied forces in Normandy, France –
German prisoners captured west of Saint-Lô by U.S. infantrymen today were suffering from shellshock as a result of yesterday’s aerial assault when some 3,000 planes dropped 6,000 tons of bombs in the war’s greatest air bombardment in support of ground troops.

Two of the first prisoners captured following the 2½-hour bombardment said German officers in some sectors abandoned their troops, leaving orders to “shoot any man in the back who attempts to surrender.” The all-out aerial bombardment was the most hellish thing they had ever experienced, the two prisoners said.

One was an 18-year-old Bavarian, conscripted into the paratroops, the other was a 26-year-old, hard-bitten sergeant with three Russian winters behind him. Neither showed signs of shellshock as did many prisoners taken as the Allied forces advanced after the air attack.

17 planes lost

A fleet of 1,500 heavy bombers paced some 3,000 planes in reducing to pulp everything and everybody throughout the wide attack strip where they were estimated to have dropped a bomb every 15 yards. Seventeen aircraft were lost, but it was officially announced that 30 German planes were also shot down.

It was the most concentrated aerial assault in history, and as in the attack the day before, some bombs fell on our own boys – not many but enough to shake some of the troops. Onlookers held their breath and prayed and hoped it would go well – and as it came, it seemed it would never end.

There were many moments indeed when one thought “truly this must be the end of the world.”

Come in 12s

The Flying Fortresses came in flights of 12, four abreast, 48 at a time, and they came in flight after flight. Every time one looked back there was another half-hundred thundering across the gray horizon.

With puffs of black smoke bursting around them, they headed unswervingly for the targets, then wheeled away majestically to the west. There was never a letup in the death symphony, for when the bombs were not falling our artillery was firing.

After the first batch of bombers came over and the bombs fell directly on the targets, infantrymen began swearing for the fliers instead of swearing at them. They waved the bombers on, or talked and laughed, or were silent, nodding their heads solemnly as the target area rocked and the air was filled with a crazy cacophony of whistling bombs, tremendous explosions and roaring guns.

Bombs visible

The falling bombs were visible from the ground and when they fell, they sent up columns of greyish smoke which blended into one huge pillar climbing into the sky.

There was no sign of enemy air opposition, but flak bursts around the incoming swarms occasionally would come too near a plane and a burst of flame would shoot from it, and it would begin a downward dive.

Then the infantrymen on the ground would share anxiously upward.

“See any parachute?” one would ask.

“No. Yes, there’s one.”

And then everybody would take up the count, “two, three, four,” and soon somebody would say with relief, “They’re all right.”

We saw only three shot down by flak out of all those planes.

For a solid hour, the great bombers ripped through the flak, and after them came the mediums. In between and after, Thunderbolt and Lightning fighter-bombers added to the massacre.

Prisoners collected at a point within rifle fire of the advancing front told of the deterioration of morale among the Nazis under the bombardment, but some said the experience was too awful to talk about.

British eight miles from Florence

Yanks mass for final assault on Pisa
By Eleanor Packard, United Press staff writer

Kirkpatrick: Nazis tighten restrictions on Parisians

Food situation worse, refugees say
By Helen Kirkpatrick

Bayeux, France – (July 24, delayed)
Daily, the German occupiers tighten restrictions on Paris; daily, the food situation worsens. And daily, the enemy intensifies its search for transport of any and every kind.

This is the story of Paris since D-Day, brought out by two young women who left there last week.

The Germans seized all buses in the early days of the invasion. At that time their military vehicles used to go through the city. But since, troops and supplies have been going through in civilian trucks and cars, the women said. On their way here, though they traveled entirely by road, they saw no German convoys. And all railway bridges had been cut.

Parisians were elated tremendously on D-Day but they concealed their excitement to avoid German reprisals. During invasion week, virtually every young man who had escaped forced labor or deportation disappeared into the bush.

Evacuate women

The German occupational authorities began the evacuation of women and children from the working-class districts of the city almost immediately after the Allied invasion began. Almost all etchers were taken into Germany for forced labor, only a few being allowed to remain to feed the children at lunchtime.

From June 6 on, the food situation became increasingly acute. No food shipments had arrived in the city up until the women left. For two months, they said, there had been no meat, though some vegetables and a little bread had been obtainable.

The Germans seized stocks which the French had gathered for emergency use. Only enough food remained in the whole of Paris to open 40 soup kitchens. Restaurants had had to close because of the gas restrictions. Since May, gas had been turned on only between 11:00 a.m. and noon, and between 7:00 and 8:00 p.m., while electricity had been permitted only between 10:00 p.m. and 5:00 a.m.

Districts lack water

Some districts of Paris were without water because of insufficient pressure.

Paris had an average of eight alerts daily. Theaters and movies opened only on Saturday and Sunday. Fire services had been prohibited by the Germans from going to the scenes of air raids unless there was fire and, since all tools such as picks and shovels had been seized, it was impossible to dig victims from ruins.

The Le Chapelle district of Paris has been damaged extensively, the women said, but bodies were allowed to remain under the debris for more than two months. Many people, unhurt but buried in cellars, died from starvation. In factories during air raids the Germans closed the shelters and would not allow workers to leave what might well be a target.

Few stations open

At no time, both young women, said, did any Allied prisoners pass through Paris streets. The Germans were afraid of the reception they would have gotten from the French.

Only Gare de Lest and Gare de Lyon were open with the former station reserved for incoming German military personnel at the time the women left the city. Civilians were permitted to use the Gare de Lyon to go to southern or central France but otherwise were forbidden to leave Paris.

These two enterprising young women, who will join the French Women’s Volunteer Army, say that all Germans look sour. There is no doubt in their minds that the enemy knows it has lost the war.