America at war! (1941–) – Part 3

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.

231 hostages released as Nazis flee monastery

Italian civilians have narrow escape after serving as shield for German outpost
By Robert Vermillion, United Press staff writer

Just back from fronts –
Stimson: Keep pressure on enemies

Report carries appeal not to slow down


Jap-held port off Sumatra shelled, Tokyo announces

Sabang in East Indies target of attack

U.S.-Argentina fight nears climax

Both governments to state policies

Editorial: Mild reproof

Some London newspapers have chided the liberated Norman French for shaving the heads of women collaborationists. One called the practice the “despicable technique of the Fascists.”

But we have always understood that the Fascists, or rather the Nazis in France and Italy, had not contented themselves with such mild reproof when the collaboration was with Germany’s enemies. Weren’t the concentration camp and the firing squad more typical of their technique?

The hair of the “collaboratrices” will grow back. The patriot victims of the Nazi technique will not return. We do not think that a haircut for those women who fraternized with an enemy is too severe a punishment.

Ernie Pyle V Norman

Roving Reporter

By Ernie Pyle

Somewhere in Normandy, France – (by wireless)
Let’s go to what the Ordnance branch calls one of its “mobile maintenance companies.”

This type company repairs jeeps, light trucks, small arms and light artillery. It does not take tanks, heavy trucks or big guns.

The company is bivouacked around the hedgerows of a large, grassy L-shaped pasture. There are no trees in the pasture. There is nothing in the center except some grazing horses. No man or vehicle walks or drives across the pasture. Always they stick to the tree-high hedgerows.

It is hard to conceive that here in the thin, invisible line around the edges of this empty pasture there is a great machine shop with nearly 200 men working with wrenches and welding torches, that six teams of auto mechanics are busy, that the buzz of urgent labor goes on through all the daylight hours.

Actually, there is little need for such perfect camouflages for this company is perhaps 10 miles behind the lines, and German planes never appear in the daytime. But it’s a good policy to keep in practice on camouflage.

This is a proud company. It was the first one to land in France – first, that is, behind the companies actually attached to divisions. It landed on D+2 and lost three men killed and seven wounded when a shell hit their ship as they were unloading.

Proud record in two years

For five days it was the only Ordnance company of its type ashore. Its small complement whose job in theory is to back up only one division in medium repair work carried all repair work for four divisions until help arrived.

The company had a proud record in the last war, being in nine major engagements. And it has a sentimental little coincidence in its history, too. In 1917 and in 1943, it left America for France on the same date, Dec. 12.

In one corner of the pasture is the command post tent where two sergeants and two officers work at folding tables and keep the records so necessary in ordnance.

A first lieutenant is in command of the company, assisted by five other lieutenants. Their standby is Warrant Officer Ernest Pike of Savoy, Texas, who has been in the Army 15 years, 13 of them with this very company. What he doesn’t know about practical ordnance you could put in a dead German’s eye.

In another corner of the pasture is a mess truck with its field kitchens under some trees. Here the men of the company line up for meals with mess kits, officers as well as men, and eat sitting on the grass.

The officers lounge on the grass in a little group apart and when they finish eating, they light cigarettes and play a while with some cute little French puppies they found in German strongpoints, or traded soap and cigarettes for. The officers know the men intimately and if they are in a hurry and have left their mess kits behind, they just borrow one from some soldier who has finished eating.

Unit is highly mobile

A company of this kind is highly mobile. It can pack up and be underway in probably less than an hour.

Yet ordnance figures as a basic policy that its companies must not move oftener than every six days if they are to work successfully. They figure one day for moving, one for settling down and four days of fulltime work, then move forward again.

If at any time the fighting army ahead of them gets rolling faster than this rate, the Ordnance companies begin leapfrogging each other, one working while another of the same type moves around it and sets up.

Once set up the men sleep on the ground in pup tents along the hedge with foxholes dug deep and handy. But usually, their greatest enemy is the hordes of mosquitoes that infest the hedgerows at night.

The more skilled men work at their benches and instruments inside the shop trucks. The bulk of the work outside is done under dark green canvas canopies stretched outward from the hedgerows and held taut on upright poles, their walls formed of camouflage nets.

Nothing but a vague blur is visible from a couple of hundred yards away. you have to make a long tour clear around the big pasture, nosing in under the hedge and camouflage nets to realize anything is going on at all.

In the far distance, you can hear a faint rumble of big guns, and overhead all day our own planes roar comfortingly.

But outside those fringes of war, it is as peaceful in this Normandy field as it would be in a pasture in Ohio. Why even the three liberated horses graze contentedly on the ankle-high grass, quite indifferent to the fact that this peaceful field is a part of a great war machine that will destroy their recent masters.

Editorial: Veterans, unions and jobs