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U. S. Naval Carrier Force Joins Yanks Continue
British in Attack on Sumatra;
Allied Pincers in 'Clearer Focus'
Ated Prm
The early outlines of • grand-scale naval pincers against the J•panese
empire came into clearer focus today with disclosure of the successful
ritish-American fleet-borne air attack on Sumatra last Wednesday.
As the Times of London put it. • new chapter in the Asiatic war
opened in the coordinated assault of American, British. French and
Dutch war craft against Lhong• airfield on the northwest tip of Sumatra
and the nearby island of Sabang.
'Until now the American navy has borne almost the entire burden
of the Allied naval offensive against Japanese so•power," the Times
said. "With this , , . well-planned attack the mainly British eastern
'!,ct. now built up to formidable"
Indian ocean becomes a theater of
major conflicts.
First Tentative Squeeze
• °'=e°'°lSt0ry 0f Allied
cers executed its first tentative
sueeze with the loss of one plane
(whose pilot was snatched out of I
the water by•British submarine, Blow at 5abancj
braving shore gunfire). I
On the Pacific side the other I
arm of the pincers is the formld-]
able 2merican fleet. Planes at-j
tacked the famfli•r targets of, By HAROLD GUARD
Wake. Ponape, the Mm'shaILs, the P United Press War Correspondent
Carolines, Geelvink bay on New With Allied Fleet Off Sabang,
Guinea and RabauL April 19 -- (U.P.) -- American, Brit-
For 15 furious minutes carrier ish. French. •nd Dutch warships
planes poured explosives on the more than 25 strong sliced into the
Sumatra base, wrecking planes, rim of Japan's stolen empire today
ships, docks, off tanks and otheA" and devastated Sabang with • car.
objectives. Twenty.five e n emy rier-borne aerial strike that was
planes were destroyed and anti.air, like vatting a mosquito w,,. Britis h 'Sub
craft resistance was ineffective, baseball bat.
Japan was not idle either, throw. The United Nations forces, In-
Ing • crack army •gainst the stt- cluding a U• S. aircraft
egic north China rail junction of moved in under orders from Ad-Makes Dramatic
Chenghsien. Chinese sources saw miral Sir James F. Somerville to
theenemy offensive, driving from "catch them with their kimonos
three directions, as aimed at Honan up," and from the •ir arm wing
wheat crop, upon which 20,008,000 commander to "go in and flatten
Chinese depend, them." Rescue of Yank
Southeastward in the China.Bur. They carried out the assigent
ma struggle, the Japanese threats m a manner that caused Somer-
to Imphal and Kohima apparently ville to signal after it was over:.
were withering, on the basis all "Congratulations on a successful Aboard an American Carrier Off
Allied reports. In thse_areas in- day. As far as I am concerned this Sa ....
fantry an¢.'f-nkgpushecl out .... ' • oang, umau-a April 19 -- (De-
occasmn ]s the first m which Bnt- la__ d, , ; ....
against t.e Japanese and headquar, ish and American naval •ircraft ' .--_tw -- unaer me.mmoKmg
ters reoredfl "situation con- formed • single attacking force, guns.o. Japanese coastal o•tterle
tinues td velop ." May it prove the first of many." a Bnttsh submarine made one of
Tokyo radio broadcast, however An American officer who cannot me most dramatic rescues of the
that Japanese troops captured Moi- be identified replied, "yours much war today, picking up an Ameri-
rang, 24 miles south of Imphal. appreciated. Also hope this is be- can pilot, Lt• (J.g.) Dale Christian
Moirang, Tokyo claimed, is a stra- ginning of similar joint operations." (Klondike) Klahn, shot down in
tegic bastion guarding •pproaches Jap Fleet Still Absent the task force blow against Sabang
to ImphaL and Lhonga.
The attack on the Japanese out- Swift navy planes -- 80 per cent
By THOBTJRN WIANT post at the tip of Sumatra on the of them American-made -- had
road to Singapore may have been hopped off from Allied carriers this
Southeast A s i a He•de aimed at enticing the enemy fleet morning to hit Sabang island and
Kandy, Ceylon -- (A ) -- A strong into combat. But it did not stir. Lhonga airfield on Sumatra, wreck-
United States navy carrier force Two striking forces threw their ing Japanese planes, ships, docks,
has joined with British, French aerial weight at Sabang and the off tanks, and other installations in
and Dutch n•val units in the In- Lhonga base across the straits on a 15-minute tattoo of bombs and
dian ocean and participated in the the Sumatra mainland from two di- machinegun.fire.
blow which caught J•panese nap- rections. Klahn's plane- the flier's home
ping at Sumatra and Sabang, Al- Caught fiat.footed, the Japanese is in Laramie, Wyo. -- was the on-
lied headquarters announced today, opened their anti-aircraft barrage ly one downed by the Japanese
Speedy navy planes, 80 per cent late. The Allied planes, during the raid.
of them American.made, hopped were swarming in to knock out the
off from American and British car- Sabang radar station, smash • pw- Hellc•ts Flew Guard
tiers at dawn last Wednesday and er station, coaling wharf, barracks, Twelve Hellcats meanwhile
smashed nearly every installation and radio station, rake two ships spread a star-spangled umbrella
in sight at Sabang on the inland of in the harbor with gunfire, and set over the Httle yellow life raft an€
We. just oft the northern tip of fire to two destroyers, the rescuing submarine, nailing
SumatraSUmatra' itself.and at Lhong airfield on Fifteen parked planes were down the Japanese air force. A
wrecked, and three destroyed at Japanese destroyer which tried to
The air-sea attack was the first another field. (Altogether 22 Japa- close with the surfaced compare-
strong assault delivered •t the nese planes were destroyed, an tively slow-moving and unmaneu-
Japanese from the direction o Coy- earlie communique reported), verable submarine was stopped
lon. British naval headquarters in Bombed fuel tanks caught fire and "dead in its tracks" by these Hell-
this area, and indicated that at smoke rose 7,000 feet.
cats.
long last Adm£raf Sir James Sos- The task force of battleships, The Japanese, who reckon life as
erville, commander of the British cruisers, destroyers, and c•rriers cheap, must have been amazed •t
eastern fleet, had the strength for sailed from Ceylon Sunday. The
other zm.shes of at least • hit-run destination was secret. The next the rescue show. For one solitary
nature, day it zig-zagged through the bay pilot, the submarine risked its en-
Permanently Joined? of Bengal in open battle formation, tire personnel, closing within point-
with Catalinas constantly on watch blank range of a coastal gun, while
(There was no indication wheth- overhead. On Tuesday a carrier 12 fighter pilots risked their necks
er the American carrier force had commander said: for 90 minutes to dive upon the
permanently joined the British for Japanese, strafe the Japanese de-
operations in the southeast Asia Kept •t Battle Stations strayed, •nd explode aircraft
theater. Presumably the movement "With luck, Wednesday will be warming up on a nearby field.
of the large carrier force into the the day we have been waiting for When our fighters ran, out of am-
Indian ocean was a costly and el•b- for some time." munition they simply made threat-
orate operation, however, which That same day Somerville set the ening runs.
would not be performed for the mood for the dramatic strike with a The fighters remained, said Pilot
purpose of making this one •ttack peremptory statement signaled to Lt. (j.g.) Earl B• Crawford, Stare-
which was first announced on the fleet: ford, Tex., "until Klondike waved
Thursday.) "The target for our Allied air- his hand and disappeared into the
(Dispatches from Associated craft tomorrow is S•bang. Thus far sub while Six-inch shells boiled the
Press Correspondent Eugene Burns we do not appear to have been water around the crash.diving
from "aboard an American carrier spotted, and as the Japs have regu- submarine."
oft Sabang" indicated the carrier lar habits I hope to catch them
force had come from the Pacific. with their kimonos up. Once our How Americans Feel
Burns has been with the Paciflc presence is known we must expect Summing up what the American
naval forces.) attack, and we must give a good men feel about the heroic subma-
The carriers were screened by account of ourselves."
British and French battleships and Carrier crewmen were at battle rine rescue, Capt. John Caady,
lighter units of the British, Dutch stations throughout the night` The of Spencer, Ind., flashed a visa1
message to Admiral Somerville
and U. S. navies, it was flight deck crew was on watch be- saying "we take our hats off to the
4 fore dawn. The planes began rev- submarine."
Flier Returns
uled at 7 a. rZ'L With a mighty roar One plane damaged by Jalmmme
the planes from the American fire was flown by Lt, (J.g.) John
U d"amage- Plane British carriers hurried oft the D. Gawm, Mlwaukee, Wts,. but
decks into • moderate wind as the he managed to get •board his car.
ships rolled in a long swell, tier despite loing • third of hts
o Against a glowing tropical sun- taft surfaces. Gavan previously
Hse the squadrons of B•rracudas, had returned from a strike off this
Aboard an American Carrier.Off Dauntless dive bombers, Avengers,
S•bang, Sumatra. April 19--('e- Corsairs. and Hellcats were sil-
layed)--(A=p--in the attack against houetted in the distance.
the Japanese bases, the plane flown The firs . wave of bombers
by Lt. (Jg) John D. Gay•n, of HI/- swooped down on the tiny target,
waLLkee, Wis•, was damaged by an- dumped their explosives from low
emy fire, but he managed to get level and roared away. The time
aboard his carrier despite losing was 6:58---two minutes before the
• third of his taft surfaces, appointed hour.
Gavan previously had returned Continuous Precemdon
from•strike off this carrier with Food Processors
4 holes in his plane. By 7 o'clock swarms of war-
The division of fighters rudely planes were rolling over Sabang in
• wakened the Japanese commander a continuous procession," dropping
in chief at Sabang by riddling his ,oad after 'o•d on the JULUgl• isle. Need More .,Hetn
building with bullets. This was At the same time the carrier cap-
done by four pilots including T.t. taln said tersely:
"We have just heard that the
Jg) John E. Nearing, 'Y.,akewood, strike is dead on time. That's alL" Chicago --0P)-- Food processors
Wis.
The fleet wheeled in broad cir- have eat/mated that more than
• cles under a tight umbrella of fight- 70,000 additional workers are need-
Jury Accuses Driver er planes. Then the Barracudas be- ed throughout the summer and
returning. As they wheeled to early fall to process and pack as-
Sparta, Wis. ---- A coroner's a stop on the decks, the grinning Par•gus, peas, corn, beans and to=
ury at Kendall yesterday found crewmen clambered out to report mato crops in Wiscousin, Illinois
that Carl SulUvan, driver of a car
in which Cleo Coleman, Kendall
farmer was killed, had "contributed
to the death of Coleman."
Aerial Blows at
Caroline Isles
Allied Headquarters, Southwest
Pacific -- (U.PJ -- New American
raids on the Carolinas were
closed today, witk Liberator bomb-
ers again hiring Sat•wan and
Woleai islands on either side of the
big Japanese base at TruLk.
(A Japanese Darnel new= agency
broadcast, recorded by the /rc,
said that "several" Allied PBY-2
planes raided Tarakan in north.
eastern Borneo Thursday, Tarekan
on the island of the same name off
the east coast of Borneo, was one
of the main oil producing centers
in the Netherlands of the East In.
dies before it fell to the Japanese.
It is 84)0 miles southwest of Dav•o
in the Philippines, and the nearest
Allied point is Melville island, off
Darwin, Australia, 1,350 miles to
the south.)
Sat•wan, 150 miles southwest of
Truk, was attacked Wednesday for
the fourth consecutive day, as
big four-engined planes flying from
Solomon bases spread 49 tons of
bombs across the island's airfield.
JAP8 OPEN NEW DRIVE IN A--Arrows indicate Japanese drives Woleal aided Same Day
at Chenghsten, • Junction on the Peiping-Hankow railway linking Woleai, about 500 miles west of
e[taemmand centl ina. Bal•at Kaeng and C-tmgmow, the aaps Trttk, also wasraided the lame'day
atumpung o wrest central of tae rou¢e from the Chinese. Japanese by Liberators, which dropped 50
drives also threaten the wheat crop in the area. Shaded areas indicate tons of explosives on the air.
areas of Jap domination. (AP Wirephoto). drome, a communique said, •nd
? supplementary reports showed that
two additional planes were de.
Flashes 0f Life stroyed in Tuesday's attack, bring.
ing the enemy's losses to eight cer-
tain and probably three others.
The raids on Sat•wan •nd
RMY'8 TRAINING TRAIN BLASTED -- A train on the army's Clai.
borne and Polk military railway gets its baptism of fire in maneuvers
along the 59-mile run from Camp Claiborne, La., to Camp Polk, La.
Dynamite charges are exploded on each side and in front of the train to
simulate bombing by planes. The army uses the line for training its
railway operation units. (AR Wirephoto).
Today's War Moves
By LOSS F. ErLZ
United Press War Editor
U. S. 'Seeks' to
Abolish British
Trade Barriers
Washington---.P---United States
representatives at the Anglo-Amer-
ican oil talks were believed today
to be seeking removal of British-
foered trade barriers which have
injured the competitive position )f
American oil companies in the
world petroleum market.
Informed sources said the Amer-
Ican delegation would raise the is.
Sue of trade barriers -- such as
cartel arrangements and restric.
t/on• in British zones of influence
Which have frequently tied the
hands of American oil operators --
and that their abolition probably
would be sought.
The U. S experts are expected
to point out that no such re•trio.
tions exist in this country or Its
territories for •ny competitors,
British or otherwise.
Often Inconclusive
It was pointed out that in the
past, when questions of American
rights of access to foreign oil con-
ceuions were fought out diplo.
matically with Britain. the ax.
ch•nges were long-drawnut and
alton inconclusive.
The question of concessions in
Iraq required negotiations over a
seven.year period, and onl in
1927 were American off interests
)ermitted to participate in that
field•
The German counter-offensive southeast of Lwow is the first important American members of the petro-
enemy reaction to the staggering defeats in the Ukraine and Csimea in 1 leum delegation are represented
the last two months• It may turn out to be a conclusive test of Nazi I as now anxious to set up an over.
By zociated Woleai were part of a joint often- strength •long Hitler's east wall.
stve by central and south Pacific If it succeeds in splitfln the Russian fir-rt ,€ k= "[Tb-... .la i al/ understanding with the British
Undismayed air forces on the strategic Caro- .............................. " "
is rather rkily extended on a Ion front fr +o --^* .... - .... I wmch wll make sunilar protracted
lines• Pan•pc, P•kin, Ant, and the Ram•man border the threatened Russian drive in *^ ---,- ---, I g tlation unneceary m the
Noblesvtlle, Ind. -- Betty Jean Ujelang island% all in the eastern Hungary may be averted for months. 1 "
Sylvester is only five years old, Carolinas, were attacked Wednes- ' If it fails, the German waU will I Other Prospective Proposals
but she has sturdy legs, a,good day by Mitchell medium bombers • s
Wflhholdm0Iax be Irreparably breached I
sense of direction and self- of the 7th army air force• Fifty " In addition to seeking the re-
reliance, tons of bombs also were dropped In the view of Allied military ob- moral of trade barriers, the Amer.
servers, this front is far more is- ican delegation was expected to
Going with her father, Fred in the daily attack on enemy po-
Sylvester, to a livestock sale, sitions in the Mar•halls. portant to Germany than the one make the following •dditional pro.
Betty Jean became |o in the J ,, u n aoyCc00e00u'e"e'00 developing in Romania frorn around posais:
crowd. Home was five and one- Rabaul Raided Again Iasi to the Black Sea. " 1--Oil to be made available in
half miles away. She made the Solomon-based bombers from Vital to Defense of Reich ample quantity to all peaceful
hike without difficulty and the south Pacific again raided Re-
reached home while her father baul, New Britain, hitting Laku- L w Oo:hetehree:RCdheaeta e 1 :mfe
and police were looking for her nat airdrome •nd supply areas hWeeSulngt: =itt)l-'ng A t e a tA:g
in town. sc "
_ with 45 tons of explosives, while slightly higher than present oayroll t Bal.a ns' which would be a stagger- , ..... - by the Nether.
'Horse & Bu y' Candidates airdrome•fighter patrol•one attackedplane wasRap°P°lost` deductions and designed to cover ing.ou noc mortal blow, despitez the ,_france .and Russia.
Spokane, Wash.- The "horse Light navel units •iso ,shelled h0 :l ttaaxXp:yebr:lit:jnfi:;m:p 30 o mi::c:?nC o le pep.o :f, mc'mne6/:nn pa:be
and buggy" d•ys will be revived buildings at Ulamona on open bay, $5,000 annually, was reported to be I ,, ........... - = leum commission with the right to
in Spokane county's political cam- south of Rabaul. vctory on the soumern front
p•ign year In the southwest, , 00iberator or e ways and l would neve.heless preparethe waymake r0000endatio00 but
Former Commissioner Sam sank a 1,000-ton enemy cargo ship cuun. for an eventual march into Ger ,legal power to enforce its deci.
Webb announced he would use • west of Hollandia, and medium The committee previously an-
surrey in traveling about• Incum-
bent Commissioner Wylie Brown
was quick to reply that he had •
saddle horse.
"Fro not too much concerned
about Webb unseating me,"
Brown said, "but I'm not so sure
about the horse."
--4.-----.---
Good Training
Oklahoma City- Pc. Merle
Lansden, 38-year-old Oklahoma
legislator, was given a furlough
from the Marines to attend a
special session on service voting.
The lawmakers elected him house
speaker•
Said Lansden as the legislature
adjourned:
"I thought the marine corps
was tough, but serving as speaker
of the Oklahoma House of Repre.
sentatives is good training for
anything."
t
in the state capitol.
At present the board occupies
several third floor assembly com-
mittee rooms which will have to
be vacated when the 195 legisla.
ture convenes next January.
The board prefers some ground
floor quarters which would be per.
manent and more accessible to vet-
erans or their dependents who
have business with the board.
The board also voted to invest
$125,000 of its funds in war
design•ted Camp American Legion
near Tomahawk as a convalescent
bombers hit Vanimo, East of Hol- nounced its plans to incorporate
landia, with 45 tons of bombs• all taxes for most taxpayer under
Heavy bombers also ranged as the withholding principle, thus
far as Geclvink bay, in Dutch New simpli£ying present procedures and
Guine• more than 300 miles west eliminating the need for filing re-
of Hollandia, to drop 24 tons of turns. The new schedule, drawn
explosives on Namber •nd up by committee tax experts, gave
airdromes on Noenfoor island, the specific amounts of the pro-
S
nnaa "eac"e" "" levy.
I+ hi ||"t |10 Under it, • single person earning
$30 a week would have $4.10 in
withholding tax deducted from his
pay, whereas a married man with
0n Air SU nd00y salaryfr°m°ne child would misshislevel.paycheck . atOnlythe50 sameCents
Others in Proportion
Anzio Beachhead, Italy- .R)- A single person earning $50 a
The Anzio beachhead will go on week would have $8•20 deducted,
the air tomorrow, night beaming while a married man with one
a program to the United States child earning the same amount
from the most shell battered radio would have $4.40 taken out of his
station on any war' front, check.
The Station JJRP---Jig Jig Roger Other proposed reductions are
Veterans B0ard Peter--will broadcast to New in proportion, A single person
York for the Sunday afternoon earning $100 a week would pay
Army Hour. The program will in- $19.90 of it in withholding
clude a newscast by broadcasters while a married man with or with.
g l'eques-s Utti-ce theater and a regular out children would suffer no de.
beachhead news review for BBC duction if he earned $12 • week
in London. or less.
The broadcast will originate in The schedule, if adopted, would
the AYE studio which has go into effect next Jan. 1 and ap-
Madison, Wis.- (p)- The vet- broadcasting press copy by voice ply to salaries received in 1945.
.erans recognition board, anticipat- transmission and Morse code to Withholding taxes now in force
Naples for retransmission to the would remain effective throughout
mg an acceleration of its functions United Stales and Great Britain. the remainder of 1944.
of rehabilitating veterans of the
current year, yesterday voted to Bangor Man Jn Charge
ask Governor Goodland for con- The idea for the broadcast was Seek Deferments
venient and permanent oce space developed by the men who have
been running the station in the
oo, =,. =..,,. For Cheesew0rkers
last night a pet horse which the
staff had been keeping near the
rest camp for veterans of
War II; and agreed to cooperate
carrier.with holes. , with the University of Wconsin
.,.eLr zomer, mv. ion_ of fighters [ in the program it is sponsoring for
ruaey awaenea me J•pane tom- I general postwar economic rehabili-
mander.in.chief, riddling his build-]lation. --
lng. They incinded Lt. (J.g.) John [
E. Nearing, Lakewood, Wts., and lq ^^ n In
slgn bert G, .heae, SeaUl/ NNI lallllnln
Mound, Ill. I z.@vvv mummmIl%,muu
IEmployes Strike
Hammond, Ind.---.P--An unau-
",horized strike by 2,800 employes
of the Pullman-Standard Car Man-
ufacturing company ordnance plant
caused • shutdown today.
The workers walked off the Job
yesterday after the company re-
fused to sign • new contract with
the United Steelworkers of Amer-
ica (CIO) guaranteeing the era.
ployes whatever scales were ap-
proved by the War Labor Board.
Norman Harris, Steelworkers'
sub-district director, •laid the strike
was unauthorized. A meeting be-
tween uninn and company oelala
was cancelled when management
representatives re/used to negotiate
until the workers returned
Job=.
4
Napoleon's efforts to preA
perishable foods for his armie
created the canning industry.
m
mKLL
a successful venture, and Indiana, the regional War Man-
Within an hour all British air. power Commission announced la¢
craft returned undamaged, except night.
for one Barracuda which was ptmc- Dimming labor neKts at • meet.
tured by • sheU burst` lng of state W'MC plaesnent rep-
Only one plane was lost, and o resenteUvas and regional o(z,
that incident an American c•rrier William H. Spencer, regional WC
signal said: director, said:
"Hats oft to the British mzb. "We face the earning seo with
marine which proceeded to a point the knowledge that the labor mar-
two miles off shore and rescued ket n the region u a whole is
one of our pilots under the fire of tightening rapidly. very lrso, re-
shore batteries." gardiess of his or her occupation,
will be asked to contribute his
Death Claims Educator ,re to the =guam's
Berkeley, Cal. The Rev. food supply as the pro-
William I-L T. D•u, 80, ormer prd. greases.
dent of Valparaiso (Ind.) tmiversity
and Concordia college at Conover, Marine engines, • million times
N. C., and author of numerous bigger than watch mechanisms must
books on theo]ogiod topics, died be constructed with the same ac.
Friday. curacy,
many through Romania and Hun-
gary if the eastern wall held, el.
though it might be along and diffi-
cult struggle. The persistent Allied
bombing of rall and river highways
in Hungary, Romania and Bulgari•
suggest that Russia and her western
Allies have hopes of early dividends
in that theater.
'Best Equipment'
For Invasion
Chicago ---(p)-.- The finest war
materials of all types, in the great-
est quantities, will be available to
the American troops "to match
their courage and discipline" when
the great invasion of Europe starts,
says Donald M. Nelson, chairman of
the War Production Board.
"Regardless of the dangers and
hardships and loss of life which
must inevitably attend the inva-
sion," Nelson said in a speech lazt
night, "They and we have the com-
fort of knowing that the quality of
i American weapons and equipment
will be a shield of safety by which
thousands of lives will be pre-
served."
Civilian Production
Civilian production, Nelson said,
will be expanded "as it becomes
possible to do so without interfer-
ence with the war program, but we
will permit no expansion at the
expense of essential military pro.
duction."
Of the post-war period, he told
SI0ns.
$
station was killed by a the meeting of the Chicago A.sso-
anti-personnel bomb. Loyal, Wis. -- (P) -- The Clark ciation of Commerce, "to recognize,
The station ls operated by county selective service board at a once and for all, that we are still •
unit of the Fifth army's signal meeting last night stood firm on tts long way from large scale readjust-
corps under command of 1st Lt` assertion it would resign in a body sent• to peacetime conditions."
James Holmlund, Bangor, Wis. unless national headquarters
Soldiers who will appear on the amends draft regulations so that
program include: Wilfred Pa- cheesemakers can be granted de-
14 State Soldiers
Hissin00 in Action
(
Washington ---(/p)--- The war de-
partment made public today the
names of the following Wisconsin
soldiers missing in action:
In the Asiatic area: Sgt. Robert
E. Nichoison, Manitowoc.
In the European area: Sgt. Wil-
liam Brown, Sank City; Sgt. Earl F.
Kendall, Madison; Cpl• Emerson W.
Lee, Weyauwega; ]st Lt. James B.
Ohrt, Sturgeon Bay; 2nd. Lt. LaFay.
ette G. Snyder, Lodi; 2nd Lt. Clark
A. Teasdale, LaCrosse.
In the Mediterranean area: Pfc.
Andrew Adklns, Crandon; Cpl. Ros.
coe G• Hosrner, Butternut: Pvt.
George R. Linde, Madison; Pvt.
Peter G. Ress, Racine; Sgt. Clinton
L. Wusterbarth, Manitowoc.
In the southwest Pacific area: 2nd
Lt. George p. Gaffney, Evansville;
Sgt` Francis M. Spencer, Madison.
Dial 5121 for your Classified Ad,
FOR THE BEST
SUNDAY DINNER
IN TOWN, IT'S
OA00E THOMSEN'S
RESTAURANT
2227-60th St. Phone 9314
quette, Columbus, Ga., driver of ferments.
one of the "ducks" which ply The board said present procedure
between ship and shore and CpL would send 24 men into service
Philip Edward, Grady, Ark., in. immediately and close down 20 of
fantry reconnaissance patrol man the county's 100 cheese factories•
who will tell what it is like hunt. CoL John Mulien, state selective
lng the enemy in daylight, service director, said every effort
ges St te €0 0b erv w be made to ease the situation.
U In reply to Mullen, the board
r a s e agreed to order the men Up for,
P li h C D pre-induction ph.icals, but would
0 s onstitution ay not remove them from the 2-A
category.
Madison, Wis.--.PJ--Acting Gay.
Walter S. Goodland today urged .Say F h F it
Wisconsin residents to join in the renc urn ure
observance of Po weC°nstituti°nmay re- I d R ed
00ay. "so that n ustry e0rganiz
assure the people of Poland that
their cause is not forgotten and Lisbon---(=)--The Berlin Narht-
that their outlay in sacrifices has ausgabe says the entire furniture
not been in vain•" indmxy of France has been rear-
The chief executive called at- ganized for mass produciton of
tention to the day in a letter to standardized beds and kitchen
the Polish Women's Alliance of pieces for bombed-out German
America, Chicago. householders.
He was a prisoner
--but the prison common-
dont invited him out to
dinner!
Reod this now story of
suspense ond intri9uo---
by Lester Dent
Beautity
Your Yard!
3 for Sl.00
• Privet Hedging, 16€ oath.
• Evorgreens, Sl.00 up.
• Hcwd Maplos, Jln Elm. Vorlr fino woU
brnohod b'mm,
• ruli lino of m.ul.
• Rppio Tnmoa, 8 ft.
• Hm.dy Poach TnmN, $2.00 each.
• The Mow lhmn'iso Rimt. Plat=, $1.10
per doson. Only a low lolt.
• rull iino of Plants for Vitorl Gin.dons.
Our Trees and Shrubs •re Wiseensin grown -- always ask
, for Wisconsin grown!
MACEMON & SON
LANDSCAPE CONTRACTORS
South Lakeshore Road, Racine, WiL Pros. 359%W
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