111011=11111. 11Ma New York London Edition Paris Daily German Lesson Daily French Lesson

Was makhen Sie hivr? Vous etes tr.2s belle Vass makhen Zee here? S Von zet tray hell THE ST TRIPES You are very beautiful What are you doing here? Daily Newspaper of U.S. Armed Foices In the European Theater of Operations VOL. 4 No. 303-1d. MONDAY, Oct. 23, 1944 100,000 Yanks Ashore in Philippines Baby Parade BritishOpen Softening Up the Philippines Big Airfield Out of Aachen Assault on Anti Leyte's A Dutch Front Capital Fall With an estimated 100,000 troops The spotlight on Allied operations already landed and heavy equipment along the Western Front shifted yes- moving ashore in a relentless stream, terday from Aachen—whose garrison U.S. invasion forces steadily tightened surrendered unconditionally Satur- their grip on Leyte Island yesterday day—to the British salient in Holland. after driving the enemy from a 6,000- as six columns of troops and tanks foot bomber field and the island capital stabbed from two directions toward the of Tacloban. •• sea and Hertogenbosch, one of the Ger- A Reuter correspondent with the troops ' X.. . mans' chief strongpoints in their defense • • ID . on the Philippine island where the Pacific's . line across the Low Countries defending greatest amphibious force waded ashore the Dutch coast. Friday said that at the end of D-plus- The Tommies' western flank swung one most Japanese pillboxes and gun em- 1 - Into action at .6.30 AM as hundreds of placements had been knocked out "and guns opened up on the surprised enemy. the few that remain cannot hope to hold whose alarm bells started jangling five out much longer." minutes after the British had shoved off, -= - too late to stop the advance. MacArthur Jubilant His dispatch, received in London last Through Outer Crust night behind an Allied communique Already through the outer crust of the reporting a four-mile advance in all a -.-- foe's defenses and within four miles of sectors, bore out Gen. Douglas Mac- their objective, four British columns were Arthur's earlier comment, delivered after .:0-•' --. - I k moving in from the northeast, while two a tour of five miles of beachhead, that armored spearheads closed from the the situation "couldn't be better." southeast. At the same time. Tokyo started Continued progress was reported on two making excuses for not repelling the in- other British and Canadian fronts in vasion and began talking about what Holland. Allied forces have gained ten might happen "even if one of the Philip- miles since Friday in their drive north pine islands should fall into the hands of Antwerp toward Rodsendaal, which, a, the enemy.- The answer, as given by - . like Hertogenbosch, is a bastion in the the Japanese den. Homma, who directed is g, German holding line in this area. the invasion of the islands in 1942, was On the. Scheldt estuary, which the that the Americans "will never be able to Allies must clear before Antwerp can be reconquer the Philippines as long as the ...." used as a part. Canadian troops fought Japanese have troops and planes at their their way into Breskens, one of the last disposal." German defenses on the south bank of (It was reported in 1942 that Homma ..,_. the waterway. Storming into positions committed hara-kiri when the Japanek manned by veterans of the Russian front, This is an aerial view of one of the many softening-up raids by American carrier- assault on Bataan bogged down in the- the Canadians attacked over roads lased planes upon Japanese installations on the Philippines prior to the landings on face of the stubborn American defense.) _ _....:._ exposed to enemy fire rather than have Leyte Island. Enemy supply dumps are shown going up in smoke. Many airstrips .laps Fear More Landings the assault bog down in rain-soaked fields. were crippled by the attacks. Further Philippine landings were anti- 1,500 Seized at Aachen cipated in Tokyo, where the newspaper ."- The Germans' Aachen garrison, Yemiori Hochi reported new assault ordered to die rather than give up the forces being concentrated in New Guinea. --. frontier city, surrendered unconditionally Reds Put Squeeze on Budapest, Details of the fighting on Leyte were ut noon Saturday after they had been scarce, in contrast to the flood of news driven into a trap beyond its limits the that followed the first landings Friday. . r • day before. Fifteen hundred prisoners Start 3rd Drive In E. 'Prussia. It was clear, however, that the Americans were driving inland everywhere. Japan's . were taken by the First Army. By The Associaied Press - A • .,; Only a short Prave before the Ameans 16th Division, remembered for its torture were about to blerst the bunker where the .The Russians hav ittonglier a 01411 offensive asain$4 invaded East Prussia. ,af kleriaans and Filipinos. "W:10 :Me:- Nazi troops had set up a position, the reaching Tilsit nvIITIL•r?; %Aka in Ibtigi4-y thou. vnv;.:t .r,;! • Id at Bataan, had not sties:eta:eat German commander hung out a white forces batter :_hetid seeking a stranglehold on Budapest, gateway to the at lama tang a large-scale counter-attack. flag. Carrier-based dive-bombers pounded eats . •....nA. invasion of Austria and southern Germany. Taken before a brigadier-general, the Fresh advances in Hungary were reported by Marshal Stalin in an order of remaining Japanese strongpoints. The ' 6 German commander, astolonel with 22 Japanese. operating from a few fields • the day announcing capture of the com- r• years' service, wrote out surrender terms. temporarily repaired between carrier- munications strontspoint of Nyireghaza. plane attacks, achieved a couple of The American officer refused them 30 miles north of Debrecen. because they did not contain the word Heavies Pound scattered night raids on small units of The advance by Marshal Malinovsky's the Allied armada. unconditional, but gave his foe five army brought the Russians no closer to • Air and naval support for the invaders 1 minutes to reconsider. Budapest hut incr.. zed the encirclement 2 - • was overwhelming, and in addition there r Feared for Family threat to German and Hungarian troops 5 Reich Cities ...... -.- • was enough Allied air power for diver- Saying he feared, for his family in Ger- in eastern Hungaia and Transylvania by After two days of inactivity because of sionary raids on enemy shipping in the many if he surrendered on such terms, narrowing the gap between Malinovsky had weather, more than 1,100 Eighth Air Sulu islands. southwest of the Philippines, the German colonel debated with him- and Gen. PetrtIV S army moving south Force Fortresses and Liberators yesterday and off Zamboanga. MacArthur also te- self as the Americans watched. Finally from the Carpathian passes. hammered industrial and communication irTZVIIIIIP ported fighter-bomber raids on airdromes i;;I; - he signed. Permitted to address his At the same time, Be:lin announced in objectives in the Hamm, Munster, on Cebu. west of Leyte. troops, whose officers were well groomed a broadcast last night that the Russians. -41k411 4114/11!- . Hanover and Brunswick areas of Ger- At Pearl Harbor, Adm. Chester W. .... and wore shiny black boots, the colonel driving south t!.r.augh Lithuania, had many. Nimitz announced that only seven planes forced the German to retreat to the south - — told them he had surrendered because Over 750 Thunderbolts and Mustangs of ilie 'U.S. Third Fleet were lost in supplies were exhausted. He wished bank of the Niemen River. covering the Leyte landings, as against German Radas reported heavy fighting escorted the heavies, all of which returned .2; them "a speedy return after hostilities safely. Two fighters were missing, but 61 Japanese planes destroyed and 26 . to help rebuild the Fatherland." against Marshal Chernyakhovsky's troops were believed to have landed in friendly damaged. 1611. Following Friday's Thunderbolt dam- Sinea Oct. 9, when the Third Fleet . territory. ; tit 4 / 0 busting raid in the Dieuze area, which One group of strafing PS is reported the opened its series of carrier attacks against threw German communications and • 411.• •••• WU.. ..:. destruction of 13 locomotives and 25 the Ryukyu Islands, Formosa and the supply zones into confusion as flood it....:lr7.,.m--,..—----_ .,-7 nava." tuu5'm WI railway cars. Philippines, it had destroyed 1,122 ...... waters inundated five towns, American . le Alor lea - /10bbaroefx, The BI7s and B24s bombed through Japanese planes and 426 enemy ships and IF Third Army forces were reported yester- El ngi .._ rtawbul Mt; \ small craft, Nimitz said. atsIIII day to have opened a new drive, gaining r .../ solid overcast by means of instruments. enbegyiS t frrif's s 1 a SLTV There was no enemy fighter opposition. several miles in a sector about 18 miles MILE east of Nancy. Resistance was fairly Ilgt.tM o so tio Meantime, RAF Lancastets, escorted strong at first, but fell off as the dough- by fighters. carried out a big attack on Allies in Italy the German inland port and railway int boys pushed on. south of Gumbinnen, 20 miles inside East Prussia, and only 17 from the railway of Neuss. junction of lnsterburg on the main rail- Saturday night, Mosquitoes were out Gain on 3Fronts way leading to Konigsberg. over Holland and the Reich, bombing Seize Lemnos In Hungary. the Russians began clamp- and strafing road and rail crossings. ROME, Oct. 22 (AP)—Eighth Army troops, chasing the retreating Germans t ing a pincers on Budapest. with Malinov- Ninth Air Force fighter-bombers flew astaasaa . sky in the middle drivingacrossthecentral through marshes and flooded areas north more than 550 sorties Friday. slashing of captured Cesanatico, on the Adriatic OffDardanelles plains west of th.. Tisza River. 50 to 70 enemy communications and destroying . s Aka., IB coast, 124 miles northwest of Rimini, are .•." . ALLIED MEDITERRANEAN HQ. miles east of capital ; Tolbukhin enemy planes in the air and two on the coming up frog the aouth beyond ape aching Cervia, five miles farther up Oct. 22 (Reuter)—The important Aegean cap- ground. the ,oast and 13 miles from Ravenna. island of Lemnos, off the entrance to the tured Baja on saat oatrube, 90 miles due in addition, about 40 Marauders south of Budafa-- _ and Petrov driving n the Fifth Army front the Americans Dardanelles, has been completely occu- attacked two enemy-held bridges south- ha t• -:cured Mount Cuccoli and Mount pied by Allied forces, it was announced to sever north and south communications east of Rotterdam in support of Canadian Ceres in the hills dominating the area .,,,..: between Slovakia and Hungary. and Polish forces. officially today. Tolbukhin's spearheads were reported five miles south of Highway 9, between British troops landed on the west coast only 120 miles from Austria. Lightning pilots. shot down ten Nazi Bologna and lmola. of Lemnos Oct. 6. After fierce fighting, craft over Coloene. two over' Hamm and A few miles inland from the Adriatic, the town of Mudros was taken. Four six over Coblenz. Nine U.S. fighters New Zealand tank units pushed seven hundred German prisoners were cap- and no medium bombers were lost. mile:; north of Cesena. tured. MacArthur's Troops Enemy craft attempting to escape from Rescue.(T.S. Captives , i the island were driven ashore by naval . . gunfire, with heavy casualties. GEN. MArAtitHUR'S HQ., Philip- '200 Dead,' 10,000 Homeless pines. Oct. 22 I Reuter)-1mprisoned by the Japanese for more than two Van Fleet Now Heads years, 83 U.S. Army officers and men have been rescued in the Philippines. As Fire Sweeps Cleveland A eroone Photos The 90th Infantry They recently escaped from a torpedoed _CLEVELAND, Oct. 22—At least entire east side. It occurred at the East When the Americans besieged Aachen WITH U.S. THIRD ARMY. Oct. 22 Japanese transport, after confinement 10,000 Clevelanders evacuated their East Ohio Co.'s plant on East 61st St. when and started their occupation, the Nazi (Reuter)—Brig. Gen. James A. Van Fleet, at Davao penal camp. They swam Side homes today, as fires caused by a one of three spherical liquid-gas tanks, cult lost large numbers of future devotees. 52, has assumed command of the 90th ashore and Filipino guerillas hid them terrific explosion among several huge the first of their kind ever built, blew up. The exodus from the city included streams Infantry Division, one of the best-known until they wa.,- rescued. liquid-gas storage tanks Friday spread Debris was blown hundreds of feet of baby carriages, bearing budding and hardest-fighting divisions of Lt. Gen. "Japanese guards deliberately tired on rapidly through an area of 50 blocks, high, while tha entire neighborhood was Hitter youth from the toils of war. The George S. Patton's Third Army. He re- the Americans trapped in the sinking At least 200 people may have been showered with flaming liquid, setting off anxious evacuees also used the buggies lieves Maj. Gen. Raymond S. McLain. ship." a statement issued here said. killed thus far, the Red Cross estimated. hundreds of street fires. to earl away their belongings, piling their Van Fleet landed in France on D-Day Some of :tie men aboard the trans- Eighty-three people are known to have The streets soon were filled with dazed clothes, blankets and household utensils as commander of the Eighth Infantry port were !aimed down as they tried lost their lives. white 248 are reported survivors wandering in a state of shock. in frantic confusion as they were dis- Regiment of the Fourth Division. which to swim. Others were picked up by missing and hundreds injured. Police in cruiser cars sped through the lodged by a war they believed would subsequently received a Presidential Japanese patrols and at least 30 were The explosion, cascading, flames thou- streets shouting, "the neighborhood is on never come to the Fatherland. citation. brutally execnted. sands-of feet into the air, rocked the fire. Get out as quickly as you can." Page 2 THE STARS AND STRIPES Monday, Oct. 23, 1944.1 Age May Be Blacking Out Another Ray in That Rising Sun Gliders Back MILES q C ells A Factor in 100 200 390 400 500 -%ulan..., fill From Holland. e 4.(Z' • e'e e 4E. Lakanq 1 Minus Gadgets Navy Releases 1,ZIA ,o WASHINGTON, Oct. 22—The Army- . a Cal o By Jim Chaney and Navy Journal reported that Navy "Q Sun's and Strips Special Correspondent Department officials had indicated that U.S. TROOP CARRIER FORCES the age of Navy men would be a factor in determining priorities for release from STATION, Oct. 22—Gliders which carried men of the Allied First Airborne service. But the Navy has not indicated the Army into Holland -began arriving_ back relative value of the factor of age, the in England today, the first of many Journal said, despite its importance in TOD hundreds scheduled to return for repairs. its demobilization planning "actually to c. Most of the damage to the gliders was date." done by souvenir hunters, civilians and "The value of nine of the factors has- Le German troops who had infiltrated the been announced, and the Army's de- Do landing area. Many of the gliders mobilizetion plan tells the individual condemned to salvage were ruined serviceman very little as to his actual 2) by removal of large sections of fabric priority for release," the service publica- bearing the Air Forces insignia, and by tion said. -c-hr &basin theft of the instruments. Not one com- Age is not a factor in determining pass remained in all the hundreds of priority for release in the Army, which gliders in the area. has announced its intention of assigning First glider to leave the Holland strip values to each month of Artily service Surta was piloted by F/0 John D. Hughes, of at the conclusion of European hostilities Los Angeles, behind a C47 Poen by and to each month of overseas service, agaran Capt. L. T. Campbell, of Anderson. S.C. the Journal pointed out. The Army has With F/O Marshall Ellis, of Memphis, announced it would set the value of the Mindanao:' Tenn., pilot, I co-piloted one of the firsr-- points after Germany was defeated. gliders reclaimed from landing zones near The Journal said it understood Army Stars and Stripes Map Nijmegen, after spending a week with plans to assign definite values to various American landings on Leyte Lslend, aimed at driving a wedge between Japanese in troop-carrier airmen, working within factors already had been changed several Guatemala Now the southern half of the Philippines and those to the north, place the whole of the sight of the German lines. t imes. islands within easy aerial range of captured airstrips and imperil Japanese sea com- Rough weather made the flight back a munications with her entire empire in the southwest Pacific. Close-up of Leyte Island breath-taker. Rain and fog cut visibility Run By a Trio shows territory, including a vital airfield, recaptured by Gen. MacArthur's troops. so low that it was impossible at times Freight Forts to see our tow-plane, and wi rocked Guatemala's three-month-old govern- So Love Gets in the Barracks Window the glider, threatening to shift tilt ballast. ment of Gen. Frederic° Ponce was over- Lack of instruments — removed by Also Fought souvenir hunters, except for the air- thrown Friday by a revolutionary military speed and climb indicators—reduced navi- AIR SERVICE COMMAND HQ, Oct. junta, the Guatemalan embassy in Mexico Dodge Tries to Pull His Rank gation to guesswork. 22—Flying Fortresses, fitted with im- City announced yesterday, giving the The rain-soaked Holland runway from provized floors in their bomb bays, re- first official news that rebellion had swept which we flew represented hours of labor cently lugged urgently needed supplies the Latin-American republic south of by both British and American troops. The direct to the front, Brig. Gen. J. Mexico. On Cpl. Son, but Army Balks taxi-way was cleared and packed by the Morris, Maintenance Chief of the Air Unconfirmed reports from Guatemala DENVER, Colo., Oct. 22—The Army refused tonight to interfere with First Airborne Army engineering platoon Service Command in Britain, disclosed. City said more than 1,000 persons were romance despite the urgent pleadings of Maj. Horace Dodge Jr., son of the under 1/Lt. Lee Parcels, of Kinkaid, The Forts were chosen because of their killed or wounded in bitter fighting that Kan. heavy defensive armament, in contrast to ensued when the commander of the city founder of Dodge Bros. automobile concern. In the take-off, one glider did a pick- the unarmed C47 cargo carriers usually garrison was assassinated and his men Dodge. in a long-distance telephone call from New York, asked Lowry up involving use of apparatus resembling employed. joined the rebels. Tanks were used at some Field authorities to stop his 21-year-o d son's marriage Tuesday to Margery a hook. Nylon rope was looped When the Forts returned to England points, these reports said. Getman, 20, slim, red-haired daughter between two uprights, and a C47. piloted the floors were removed and bombs The country's Mexico City embassy of a Buffalo (N.Y,) college professor_ by Capt. E. L. Stone, of Gorman, Tex.. loaded for a raid that same afternoon. said the new government would be headed "Please confine my son (Cpl. Horace dipped to within a few feet above the An ETO Air Service Command arma- by a triumvirate consisting of Maj. Fran- These Outfits Dodge HI) to the post until he comes to waiting glider, a dangling hook snatched ment officer, Capt. Leo Vanderhoven, of cisco Arena, 38, Capt. Jacobo Arbenz, his senses," pleaded the elder Dodge, to the nylon hauser, and the plane and Taylorsville, Cal., has learned that a 34, and a 35-year-old merchant, Jorge Col. R. P. Todd, commander at Lowry glider, with F/0 Don C. Stevens, of bomb-cluster adapter which he invented is Toriello. It added that "absolute tran- Field, where young Dodge is a student in Hollywood, at the controls, went forward now being manufactured for the B29 quility" now prevailed. Are in Action the AAF Training Command. into flight. Superfortresses. A simple loop of wire, After taking the matter up with higher fixed by a spring hook, it enables three President Ponce, who came to power WASHINGTON. Oct. 22—Here is a last July after the resignation of Gen. ist of U.S. Army divisions whose assign- brass, Todd told the irate father there to six small bombs to be slung from a Jorge Ubico, left the country with his ments to the principal fighting fronts have was no basis for such action, as young single bomb shackle. cabinet, the embassy said. Dodge had a clean military rocord. MPs Ignore Repair of combat plane automatic been officially disclosed to date: pilots in the ETO has been upped 500 Western European Front—Second, "Well, I'm coming out to Denver per cent by an electrical testing panel Training Discontinued Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth and Seventh myself right away," snapped the elder Picket Anode— board designed by T/Sgt. Ernest C. Armored Divisions ; 82nd and Joist Air- Dodge. Robinson, of Canton, Ohio. Formerly borne ; First, Second, Third, Fourth, Want's Old Man as Best Man KANSAS CITY, Oct. 22 (AP)—MPs At Santa Ana Air Base patrolling the street in jeeps kept rolling it was necessary to send them to the U.S. Fifth, Eighth, Ninth, 28th, 29th, 30th. Meanwhile, young Dodge said: "If he for repairs. SANTA ANA, Cal.. Oct. 22—Santa 35th, 36th, 45th, 79th. 80th, 83rd and Saturday without interfering when ser- gets here on time, I'll ask him to be my vicemen, aroused by work stoppage al the Col. H. G. Bunker, ASC director of- Ana Air Base, one of three AAF pre- 90th Infantry. best man. I hope he accepts. He'll try technical services, has announced that a flight training centers, will be transformed Italy-34th, 36th, 45th, 85th and 88th Nor* to-ileac= Aviation Co, bomber to talk. me out of getting married. We've Plane stained :the entrances, dispersing secret gyroscopic gunsight now in use in into a major station of the newly created entry. folkecl ibis thing over before arid he this theater has greatly multiplied hits by 1AF Personnel Distribotion Command 'outh endloutho* Pacific—Sevaith, advised me against war-time marriage." pickets and tearing up union placards. Nov. I. Since its completion early in 2 th, 32nd, 40th, 41st, 43rd and 96th Allied fighter pilots. The new sight "I Can't understand Maj. Dodge's ob- Because of the usual Saturday after- makes the use of tracers unnecessary. 1942, the base has started more than Infantry ; First Cavalry. noon holiday, only a skeleton force of 125.000 cadets on flying careers. Pre- This list does not purport to be com- jection," chimed in Miss Gehman. "I've pickets was on duty. All but one left flight training henceforth will be con- plete. It is confined to official an- met the major in New York and he was extremely cordial to me. Now, I don't when the soldiers and sailors appeared. Honeymooners Ride, centrated at Maxwell Field, Ala., and nouncements up to now, and includes The servicemen tore up the picket's San Antonio, Tex. assignments since the start of the war. want it to look like I'm a poor girl who Thanks to a Queen set her cap for a millionaire's son. 1 come placard and destroyed several others. from a good family and I am a good girl. Moving on to other gates, they tore down AIR SERVICE COMMAND HQ, My father is a college professor and I more placards. Oct. 22 (UP)—Cpl. John Hrusik, of know he and my mother and my young Te lone picket told the men that no Chicago, and his English bride nar- Paper Says Lindbergh Flew sister will be upset if I'm pictured by workers were due to report because of slowly missed a nine-mile- walk -through Maj. Dodge as a girl marrying Horace the half-holiday. the lonely Scottish countryside on the just for his money. "We'll be back," shouted a soldier, first night of their honeymoon—and In Combat, Shot Down Jap Miss Gehman, an artist, expects to live "and they'd better get in." they have a queen to thank for saving PASSAIC, NJ., Oct. 22 (AP)— to encounters in which his aggressive with her husband in Denver—on his cor- them. poral's pay. Queen Marie of Jugoslavia, staying at Charles A. Lindbergh flew on combat action had been a matter of necessity. Ml) Victim of Disease a little hotel in the countryside, heard missions on his recent stay in the Pacific At one base, the paper said, "he awed the young fighter pilots by taking out that Hrusik and his bride, the former and is unofficially credited with shoot- He Fought For Army Betty Clayton Richmond, of London, a Lightning on a flight into Jap territory Study Inland Control were stranded at a railway station nine ing down a Japanese plane, the Passaic after only five hours of practice—an un- For deGaulle's Regime WASHINGTON, Oct. 22—Victim of miles from the hotel where they were Herald-News said in a copyrighted article heard-of feat," and he often strained the disease—scrub Typhus—he sought to honeymooning. When the only car in today. range limits of planes, once returning just WASHINGTON, Oct. 22 (Reuter)— conquer for the Army, Dr. Richard G. the district broke down, she immediately The newspaper said that Lindbergh's as his gasoline supply ran out. President Roosevelt told his press con- Henderson, 32, of Los Angeles, a research Lindbergh resigfied his Army commis- worker, will -be buried in Arlington sent 16-year-old Prince Thomas in the assignment as a civilian expert for the War ference today the question of turning over queen's private car to bring them to the sion before the war and was not commis- certain inland regions of France to the National Cemetery tomorrow. Henderson hotel. and Navy Departments took him to front sioned again when hostilities began. He jurisdiction of Gen. Charles deGaulle's had attempted tc find a vaccine to com- bases and on fighter-plane flights leading is now with the United Aircraft Corp. de facto government was being worked bat tsutsugamushi, a form of scrub out between Washington and Gen. typhus. He had previously done work on Eisenhower. epideMic typhus. Tale From Vienna • U.S. Nary . Some WAG Will Fill the Bill Report Final Secret Weapon Quitting U . HQ, U.S. NAVAL FORCES IN Should Be Ready by May EUROPE, Oct. 22—The Fleet's out. STOCKHOLM, Oct. 22 (AP)—"I pray commanders-in-chief, thanked them yes- After two years of readying for D-Day that God will forgive me for the last week terday for having "inflicted a decisive in Channel ports the. U.S. Navy is moving of the war," Hitler is supposed to have defeat" on the U.S. fleet off Formosa. to France. said concerning the Nazis "final" secret Several British ports Oa served as weapon which, German officers in Vienna htimnzler Reported Shot operations and supply bases have already say. should be eeady by next May. Bucharest reports that Heinrich Himm- been entirely cleared of4W.S. naval per- The Swedish opera singer, Morn ler, Gestapo chief, had been assassinated sonnel and equipment, and as operations Forsell, just back from the Austrian in Budapest went unconfirmed yesterday. concentrate more and more on the Con- capital. reported that the Germans there tinent, more of the ports will be were quoting this remark in support of Dispatches from the Rumanian capital said it was reported there Himmler was evacuated. their firm belief that this weapon really Some personnel are going to the States would win the war for them in the end. shot at while driving through the Hun- for leave or reassignment. Others are garian capital, moving directly to other theaters. Horthy in. Germany Deeper Siegfried Line Mm. Nicholas Hardly, former Hun- STOCKHOLM, Oct. 22 (AP)—A Ger- garian regent, has "placed himself under man military spokesman's claim that the U.S. Can Replace the protection of the German government Siegfried line has been doubled in depth and taken up residence in Germany," by emergency defense works extending Argentine Meat German Overseas News Agency said in back to 30 or 40 miles was reported today a weekend broadcast. by Swedish correspondents in Berlin. WASHINGTON, Oct. 22 (Reuter) The main characteristic, apparently, is The U.S. is now in position to assure Reds Hail Aachen's Fall most of the United Nations a meat a series of makeshift anti-tank ditches 25 supply, a high official said today. MOSCOW, Oct. 22 (AP)—Moscow feet deep by 15 feet wide. In a reference apparently to Argentina s newspapers gave great prominence yester- place in the international meat market. day to the news of Aachen's capture. Only the Brave he declared : Russians were particularly pleased to "The U.S. will be well able to ship learn that Aachen received the rough BUENOS AIRES, Oct. 22 (Reuterl— Col. Juan Domingo Peron, vice-president enough pork and beef abroad at short treatment so many of their own towns got -. wi'I till the question mark when W/O from the Nazis. of Argentina, announced today that notice to make the United Nations inde- 'l he question before the house is: What WM Army regulations would be revised with pendent of the whims and wills of a K. LeRoy Thies, of the U.S. Signal Corps and formerly a Hollywood photographer, the basic object of rejuvenating the officer nation unfriendly to our cause." "shoots" the ;ginner of The Stars and Stripes contest to choose the prettiest GE We Detect Some Irony? Next year's slaughtering will be one of Jane in the U.K. The deadline for entries is Oct. 30. Thereafter, the judges will go corps "to avoid Army chiefs reaching follow soon after the hair- eels -nun rank v ith in Give brains and the biggest on record, the official said, into a huddle over the photos-- and their decision will while presem meat stocks are extensive.' pulling ends,

Monday. Oct. 23, 1944 U.S. NEWS THE STARS AND STRIPES U.S. NEWS Page 3 Life in Those United States Curvature—of the Earth and Otherwise - Says FDR Knew Plan To Attack P. Harbor WASHINGTON, Oct. 22 (ANS)—Amid charges that six hours before the blow fell President Roosevelt knew of Japan's plan to attack Pearl Harbor and the Philippines, but failed to notify Army and Navy com- manders at Hawaii until after the assault, Secretary of the Navy James V. Forrestal today continued to with- hold publication of a naval board of inquiry's report on the disaster. The charges against President Roosevelt "and other high government and military officials" were made by Rep. Melvin J. Maas (R.-Minn.), who accused the Administration of withholding the report and said he would try to force its publication before the election. Forrestal said that he had asked Adm. Ernest J. King, chief of naval operations, to determine the possible effect on military security of the report's publication. Maas charged that while the President knew of the plan to attack Pearl Harbor six hours before the Japs struck, a commercial telegraph message containing the information FORRESTAL was not sent from Washington until after the assault already was under way. CAPITAL RAMBLINGS: The Navy announced President Roosevelt had ap- proved a plan for the acceptance of Negro women into the Women's Naval Reserve. Both officer and enlisted candidates will be trained. . . The USAAF revealed that the first airplane designed solely for hauling military cargo—the -C-S2—now was under construction. Good Neighbor Plea From Natchez to Mexico City. HARLINGEN, Tex., Oct. 22—Agri- NATCHEZ, Miss., Oct. 22—The culture Commissioner J. E. McDonald governors of four Southern states dis- has urged the Texas citrus industry to closed plans for the completion of If this lovely figure is designed to prove that its likes make the world go 'round— withhold shipments for three weeks to Natchez Trace, historic buffalo and or, for that matter, make it stand still—we have no objections. In any case, she's give Florida growers an opportunity to Indian path ranging through the South, a sight for C-Eyes, draped so becomingly around the globe. Her name's Rita save anti ship fruit that fell or was as a scenic driveway linking up with Daigle, she's a Thornton model, and 'tis said she's known as "Miss Morale Booster Now,Fellows,1 damaged in last week's hurricane. Mexico City. of 1944." Lou Tell One Rotary Puts a Price Tag on the War Criminals SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 22 (AP)— Modern Development The goat is back now minding his own ROCKY FORD, Coto., Oct. 22—The local Rotary Club has passed a resolution business along with several other goats which calls for the paying of cash awards to any Colorado soldier who plays an who Live on .a sandlot back of Pier 88 active role in the capture alive of any of the arch criminals responsible for the war. 'Reincarnated Vestal Virgins' after the SPCA dug him out of the mud Each of the Axis heads carries a cash evaluation, topped by 100 bucks on Adolf where he was stuck fast after a sailor Hitler. Emperor Hirohito of the Japs rates $85, while Heinrich Himmler is worth yelled at him which scared him off a $49.50; Hermann Goering $44.75; Joachim von Ribbentrop, $39.95; Dr. Josef Posed in Nude, Witness Says sea-going tug which he had boarded Goebbels, $37.50, and Benito Mussolini, $24.95. after a dog started barking at him while Mentliers refused to announce "how we arrived at the various price tags." How- HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 22—The late her. MacDonald was killed last January he was minding his own business, ever, OA resolution passed with only one dissenting comment—The amount offered in a hunting accident. for Mussolini was too much. Eugene H. MacDonald's interest in the LAKIN, Kas., Oct. 22 (AP)—Mrs. occult didn't interfere with his hobby of Jarboe testified that MacDonald's model for at least one group of photo- Wesley Mace, who carries the mail Eyewash. Gun. Smoke photography, especially when he got a graphs, posed in the nude, was Mrs. Carl from Lakin to Ulysses, was en route to SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. 22—The HAY WARD, Calif., Oct. 22—Frank chance to take pictures of nude and Wickstrom, Oakland wife of a service- Lakin when the ignition wire on her traditional boulder in the center of the Robertson asked for two packs of shapely "reincarnated vestal virgins," a man overseas, who had testified against --SO I FIXED University of Utah campus is going to be cigarettes in a tavern. Told only one friend said today. Mrs. Carter. THE IGNITION hidden. The student committee decided' could be sold to a customer, Robertson The friend, Thomas W. Jarboe, a bank Mrs. Wickstrom had described seances WITH MY' that the rock, which fresh and sophs clerk. testified in behalf of Mrs. Shannon at Mrs. Carter's home and said Mrs. 14AI R PI NS ---- have been painting red and green all pulled out his guns and started shooting. Carter's claim to MacDonald's $70,000 Carter told her about numerous conversa- these years, was an eyesore. No one was injured. WHATt 11-1E • , estate. MacDonald's father is attempting tions she had had with a Russian dancer. MATTER, B0551 to break his son's will, charging Mrs. Suzanne, dead for 300 years. Marines and Navy Come to Joe E. Brown's Support Carter, pretty 34-year-old real-estate Jarboe testified that MacDonald was agent, hypnotized his son with a story "a happy, normal man," answering the NEW YORK. Oct. 22—Not only have Hollywood stars resented the that she had been his wife in another plaintiff's charge that he was mentally recent CBI Roundup editorials charging big-shot USO entertainers with allegedly world, where he had wronged her, there- depressed and had made his will under running out ahead of their schedules on their tours in the China-Burma-India fore inducing him to will his money to duress. ea7dIrbecause the going was "too tough," but Marines who have seen 30-months' action in the South Pacific, interviewed today at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, don't like the editorials Ford Producing Engines Blonde Weds 2nd, either—at least the references to comedian Joe E. Brow°. For U.S. Robot Bombs truck burned out. Stalled on a lonel • One combat veteran who won the Silver Star, Purple Then She, Learns road, the hunted in vain for a piece of Heart and cluster at Guadacanal, Tarawa and Saipan said: DETROIT, Oct. 22—The Ford Motor wire, then remembered her hairpins.Tem- "I don't know much about the other people that paper men- Co. disclosed yesterday it was 'producing porary repairs were completed and the tioned, but they can't honestly say anything against Joe E- jet-propulsion engines for robot bombs. No. I. Is Still Alive mail arrived on time. Brown." Engineering details were worked out by DENVER, Oct. 22 — Blonde Mrs "He's OK. [saw Joe up around the Guadalcanal foxholes Ford engineers at the request of the Air Frances Morris French, 23, of Chicago, PORTLAND, Ore., Oct* 22 (AP)—A three or four times during his time off from giving shows, and Technical Service Command following yesterday tearfully outlined to authorities disgruntled husband wrote the Multnomah he didn't have to be there. Hell, I read in the papers that reconstruction of a German robot engine the war events which led to the filing of county clerk concerning his wife, who, the man is 55, anyway." from parts shipped from England. bigamy charges against her. he said, had deserted him: "I would like ••• you to see if she has obtained a divorce A Navy man said he felt the same way about it. "I saw Ford produced a robot-bomb engine in The prrSty, one-time Columbia Univer- Old Barrel Mouth stand in a tropical rain soaked to the skin shy co-ed assured local authorities she from inc. If she has, what steps should JOE E. BROWN 19f8, but World War I ended before it I take to get one, too?" to amuse a group of Negro Sea Bees, and that show wasn't could be tested. The early model has would seek the annulment of her second these boys. The marriage, now that she knows her first * * * on his schedule. He had taken the day off to get down to see since reposed in the Edison musum at OAKES, N.D.. Oct. 22 (AP)—J. W. Navy is for Joe. and tell that to the Army critics." nearby Dearborn. husband. Paul Geer, a Navy medical officer, is still living. She said that two Enger, wild life enthusiast, recently 1 observed a pintail duck rescuing her Soldier of Fortune Dies _A Start in the Alphabet years ago she received word he was killed brood of nine ducklings from a dried-up in action. • TAOS, N.M., Oct. 22—Capt. Irving LARAMIE, Wyo., Oct. 22 (ANS)— pothole. Enger said be watched the Going Somewhere? She then married Lt. David J. French, mother carry the nine, one at a Patric O'Hay. 74. veteran of seven wars, The arrival of Triplets to Mr. and Mrs. an Army fighter-pilot, in July, 1943. A time, on successful actor, horse trainer and after- Glenn Powell caught the parents unpre- month later. French was reported missing rtes IS ONE MINS YOU dinner speaker. is dead. He fought in pared with names, so for the present the in action and later a captive in a German Lime South American revolutions, the Philip- infants—two boys and a girl—are called prisoner of war camp. GRAT5 l4AVE Tb ICE-EP TOUR pines and in World War 1. "A, B and C." Geer. now in the Pacific, is slated to mocr11-15 SALM/ return to the U.S. shortly. Court Snaps Edna's Girdle Back in Place NEW YORK. Oct. 22 (ANS)—Miss Edna Desseau, 40, one-time Broadway 5 Dead, 100 Injured model, is almost her old self again. At least she's happy—she's got her much- discussed, much-fought-over, two-way-stretch girdle back. In Coast Harbor Fire The prized article was returned to Miss Desseau by Judge Jonah Goldstein, who LOS ANGELES, Oct. 22 -A harbor previously had ruled that the girdle was important evidence in a trial involving the fire in which at least five men were killed, shooting of Miss Desseau last New Year's Eve. more than 100 injured and two landing However, when Dr. Samuel Weinrib, 54, a Bronx dentist, pleaded guilty to wound- ships seriously damaged was under con- ing the ex-model the court ruled the girdle no longer was needed in the ease. Wein- trol today, the Navy announced. rib was sentenced to live years' probation. A spokesman said the Navy Was in- Easy Does lt What a Relief—Just Cops vestigating a report the fire started her back, depositing each safely on the . from gasoline afloat on water around shore of a near-by lake. The ducklings, PUEBLO, Colo- Oct. 22 (ANS)— OMAHA, Neb., Oct- 22—A police car four landing ships, two of which were he said, in turn crawled up on their James Pitcock aimed at a buck. killed eased up alongside a speeding motorist (Owed to safety. A series of minor ex- mother's back and gripped the feathers the animal and also a doe, which was who had run a red light. Spotting the plosions of possibly acetylene tanks on the back of her neck with their bills standing nearby, with the same shot. But cops, the motorist high-tailed it away. followed a flash of flame which enveloped to present falling off during the hazardous Pitcock's luck didn't end there. Besides Finally halted, he spilled the beans: He the other two landing craft, he said. take-off and landing. having a regular game permit, he carried had been in a woman's apartment when • a special license which allowed him to her husband arrived and "I thought you hunt does. guys were the husband." WPB Helps Santa Get Toys Fulfilled 'Old Testament' Pact WASHINGTON, Oct_ 22 (ANS)—The bicycles, tricycles, scooters and other War Production Board has eased its mechanical toys requiring gears. Manu- restrictions on Santa Claus, but he will facturers who once produced them are Says He Slew Unfaithful Wife still find it hard to fulfil the Christmas still tied down with war contracts. How- hopes of the nation's youngsters. ever. some replacement tracks for electric With the war going better than a year trains will lye on store shelves, When She Insisted on Penalty ago, WPB has decided to dole out some Some steel wagons and steel runner second-rate material stocks' for toy- sleds will he on the market, WPB said, NEW YORK, Oct. 22—A confession When Wolfe's wife admitted an affair making, it was disclosed yesterday. although their quantity will not approach by Lewis Wolfe, 37-year-old Canadian, with a ship's officer on her voyage here it has granted permission to use pre-war levels. Other items available in in which he claimed his beautiful, titian- from Palestine—where Wolfe married her 'ejected and scrap materiag in making limited amounts include doll carriages after divorcing his first wife—he begged haired dancer wife goaded him into carry- toys only where this will not interfere with metal wheels and under-carriages, her to say it wasn't true and he- would with war production.• steel and china doll dishes and metal ing out "an Old Testament" pact by kill- forgive. tier. As a tesult, WPB said, more stamped construction sets—about 10,000 with ing her for infidelity, was read yesterday She refused, the statement continued, metal toys will be available—about 15 motors. to a jury trying him for her murder. and said: "You know what you can do. per cent of the pre-war supply. This Dolls. including those with moving A 16-page transcript in which Wolfe If I were a man, I would kill you." - isn't a great deal, but it will be a change eyes and real curls, witr continue to be described himself as being "not an ordi- "You know I couldn't do that because from last year's ersatz playthings available in pre-war quantities. The nary person : I'm too considerate" was I love you too much," Wolfe was quoted fashioned from wood, plastics and card- supply of chemistry sets will be "fair." read to the accompaniment of the de- as saying. "And then after a while 1 To the southeast of (his New York board. Easing of the zinc situation will permit fendant's sobs. The- statement, made a thought maybe I wasn't a man. Maybe corner occurred the Revolutionary Battle But, WPB emphasized, the order for- manufacture of a limited quantity of toy few hours after his 26-year-old wife Paula she was right." of Murray Hill; closer and to the south- bidding steel, copper, iron, chromium, soldiers, miniature automobiles and was bludgeoned to death with a metal- Asked after the murder if there were west there are occasional engagements tin, rubber and other critical war trucks. However, games such as cleated shoe in their hotel room last any basis in the Bible for his crime, he known as "Battles of the Stork Club." materials is still in force. This means checkers, dominoes and darts are. going December, told of a pre-marital agree- replied : "The Bible says clearly my life These details don't appear on this other- no electric trains, mechanical steam to soldiers overseas in such large ouan- ment that if either should be unfaithful belonged to her and her life belonged to wise informative lamp post, but we engines and miniature washing machines. titles. that the supply for civilians will be she other's life should be forfeited, me. She was given to me by the Lord." thought you'd be Interested anyway. WPB reported that there will be no small, Page 4 THE STARS AND STRIPES Monday, Oct. 23. 1944

THE STARS AND STRIPES PHnted at The Times Publishing Company, Ltd.. for U.S. Armed fortes, under auspice% of The Jobs For All 'Top U.S. Post-War Plans Special Service Division ETOUSA. -1-iasl-L@aAkz Contents passed by the U.S. Army and Navy This is the first of a series of articles on censors; subscription 26 shilling: per year Was post-war employment, the material for postage. ETO edition. Entered as second class matter Mar. 15. 1943. at the post office. New Anti-Climax. After sweating out a which_ was taken front published reports York. N. Y. under the Act of Mar. 3 1879, All package from home for months and of American government, industrial and material alsocaralt in this publication has been written and edited by uniformed members of the months—and ?" hoping for food and labor leaders and front announcements of Arm), and Not.)• except where stored that a cigarettes, Pfc AM:rCurtis finally received steps already taken by government civilian or Warr outside source It being Quoted. a big bundle' fic-rnitilie7 U.S.A. it was agencies charged with she task of planning Editorial office—The Times, Printing House So.. Lando°. E.C.4 (Tel. Ceti. 20001. Business and loaded down with forms. jobs for discharged soldiers, circulation oases-37 Upper Brook St.. London. W.I (Tel. ETOUSA 2133). Once upon a time an irate mess By William E. Taylor Vol. 4, No_ 303, October 23, 1944 sergeant started griping, "Listen you Stars and Stripes Staff Writer guys, I cook and slave for you all day What happens when a soldier finally gets back to the U.S., passes through a separation center and becomes a private citizen again? B "G What happens after the joyous wel- BLOW IT come and the glad-eyed survey of scenes long missed? OUT HERE Well, eventually, he has to go to work —for he realizes that the post-war world doesn't owe him a living any more than NOTE: Lack of space forces us to limit did the pretwar world. all kuers published ro not more than 200 And because that's the case—and even words.—Ed. though the war is far from over—both public and private officials in the U.S. Home BEFORE We Win? have shown increasing concern about Oct. 17, 1944 converting war-time economy to peace- and what do 1 get w:nothing but com- time requirements without duplicating the Dear Stars and Stripes, plaints." "You'reiltIckY," 'snapped a GI Here's "Why We SHOULD Go Home mistakes that followed the 1918 in the chowline, 'we get indigestion." ArmiStice. BEFORE Germany is Defeated." We * Today's Daffyintion (by Pfc E. J. Tackling this complex problem for the need a much larger rotation based on governinent is the Re-training and Re- Foley): Drawbridie-,:--a bridge that's open A discharged vet now begins the job quest, overseas service alone. Thousands of when it's closed and —Closed when it's employment ,Administration. an agency families are being broken up that would open. created by executive order and directed records. Probably 20,000,000 people will the ways of peace, Hines said, will he- not he broken otherwise. Ever notice * * * by Brig,Gen. Frank T. Hines, head of have to change their work at the end gradual demobilization of the services, some of the fellows that were "true" in Our spy at thet.F„ronLsays the German the Veteritis' Administration. Its pur- of hostilities." since the war 'will probably end in the States? There are a lot more lives soldiers talk like this about secret pose is to provide job security, when In 1918, he declared, the public offi- different places at different times ; retire- being ruined than the casualties on the weapons: peace comes, . for the men and women cials failed to draw up adequate plans ment of many women workers and older battlefields. The reason—too much Hans—"What are you carrying in that who will be leaving the regular military for the transition from war to peace, with tame:ins; return to school of younger separation. True, many stay straight ; pack?" and naval establishment as well as for the result that "peace caught the country workers and a large proportion of hut, also true, too many slip; even if just Fria—"Shhh, it's the new secret those in the country's largest labor force unawares." The methods of demobiliza- veterans; re-training of soldiers gnd war is little. weapon." who will be- released from war work. tion and re-employment of veterans re- workers for new jobs ; new elterprises I've lost most everything I ever had Hans—"But there's nothing in there Serve as .4dvisors turning to civilian life were "thrown into based on war inventions and a reduced or knew in the line of respect, health and but straw and blye confusion," he declared, adding: work week. Fritz—"That'rjor,the Serving as an advisory policy board for education after two years over here and asses who still this agency are representatives of the De- "Soldiers returned from Europe and hundreds I know admitted the same. believe in secret- vTiapons," from camps in rise U.S. to cool their heels Help Find Jobs * * * partment of Labor. the Federal Security We're ruining a world at the time we're Agency, the War Manpower Commission. in employment offices and to walk the While the'Veterans' Administration is Quip of the Week. Hitler on awaken- equipped to deal with all phases of the attempting to rebuild it, Further— ing and reading the morning war news the Selective Service System, the streets looking for jobs that did not exist." where is there any material proof of a Veterans' Administration, the Civil Ser- Asserting that "our impending disloca- problems facing returning soldiers, the screamed, "Ach, I shot der wrong particular question of finding jobs for better post-war world" We're building a generals." vice Commission, the War Department, tions are for greater than they were in the foundation, from already apparent dis- the Navy Department and the War Pro-. last war, hence the potentialities for many of them is handled by the U.S. putes, for a continual state of war. From the pen of some unknown poet duction Board. economic and social catastrophe are Veterans' Employment Service of the War BEFORE this war ends, our people comes this new version of an old rhyme: The reasons for preparing a durable greater," Hines listed 85 tasks of his Manpower Commission. should get a few views of England, its My Bonnie lies over the ocean, foundation for peace-time activities well agency in dealing with the broad problems As of September, 1944, nearly 1..300.000 government, people and policies, as seen My Bonniilics over the sea. in advance of the expected unconditional of re-training and re-employment. soldiers had gone back to civilian life, by those who have studied it first hand. When she unswerving, devotion, surrender of Germany and Japan Were and of these more than half a million At least, give us a few months in the My Bonnie lies obviously. Outlined,by Gen. Hines in a report to the Rank as Top Problems had obtained jobs through the Veterans' States for rehabilitation and then return * * * War Contract Subcommittee of the Senate Ranking as the top-priority problems Employment Service, according to Paul V. us, but ROTATE US NOW.—TfSgt. Life in the Army. The other day a Committee on Military, Affairs last M!iy. are: providing jobs for all who can and McNutt, WMC Chairman. T. S. E.. AC. drill sergeabt °Meted ,the platoon ser- "The Magnitbde of the task." hesiid. want to work ; rate and method of.de- Veterans are leaving the services now [Rotation is swell.'but we're got a war to geants to give their, men 20 minutes of "is indicated by the fact that more than mobilizing the armed forces ; vocational at an estimated rate of 100,000 a month, win. Him about the soldiers who died in drill—and then told them they had 15 12,000.000 workers have been added to the training; rellabilitition and employment and an indication of how the Veterans' Africa, Italy, France and Germany to get minutes to do it in. payrolls, that half of the 62,000,000 of disabled veterans ; resumption of war- Employment Service has kept pace is us this Ear? They wanted to go home, too. * * interrupted education ; timing of release the steady rise in the number of place- Typewriters in France have funny key- persons in the labor force are directly in Ed.] war work and that there has been a dis- of workers from industry and changeover ments it has made from July, 1942. when boards with the letters in places where you of gavel war industries to peace-time pro- it provided 5,00 jobs, to August, 1944, least expect to find them, and a lieutenant location of workers in industries and GI Wants Neuter Films occupations as well as a geographical dis- duction. when 83,633 veterans were supplied with location which breaks all migration "Cushioning factors" in re-establishing employment. Oct. 13, 1944 Dear Stars and Stripes, In my locality there is a chronic situa- Pilot Laughs at Law of Averages tion which is proving most monotonous and unsatisfactory. In basic training in America, the radio, screen and newspapers were forever screaming that a large share 75 Lib Missions and Still Going Strong of the new movies of Hollywood , were 29 days. Later, rather than return home started combat flying Apr. 12 He finished By Sid Schapiro for the customary furlough upon comple- a tour July 12. His 75th mission took him going to the boys in the ETO and else- Stars and Stripes Staff Writer where. Since we have been in the ETO, tion of a tour of operations, the blond, fn Cohlent Oct. 9. Two days later he and judging from the reports of Yanks 93RD BOMBARDMENT GROUP, went to a rest home for the first time, Oct. 22--The top-mission LI ,S. heavy- remaining six days. who have been here over two years, we words gather they rather overlooked England. bomber flier in the ETO minces no Four complete crews and 12 spare in debunking the Jaw of averages, say- crewmen•cornpleted their tours of opera- At the stime time we note that British ing: "It's a lot of hokum." theaters throughout the U.K. have a more tions with -him. His original engineer, What's more, Capt. Kenneth L. Gil- T/Sgt. Joseph Evanovich, got in 47 tips, up-to-date American film than we. Our bert, 21-year-old Liberator pilot from situation is acute, as we have seen all while his first radio operator, T Sgt. we know is sal sorry that be used one Newport. R.I., who completed 75 con- Dale Jennings. finished 39 missions. the present supply of "old" films and secutive combat missions over Germany now are starting over on the same. I say, to write a letter to his wife. • He just No member of his crews has been found out that he hit the wrong key and and enemy-occupied territory in six awarded the Purple Heart, "We were since we are a cog in this fighting machine months by turning down chances of re- and since a movie is generally the chief told her the "high cost of loving on the always lucky and never had too much Continent was terrific," cuperative rest, leave or even a 24-hour trouble." Gilbert said. "They weren't all entertainment here, we should be entitled pass, has no intention of returning to to movie films that at least parallel those * milk runs, though." Comment at the Front. "Why do T wish the States even now. His squadron commander, Li. Col, being shown in the British theater today. I were in my other "I'll keep on going up, so long as they —Pic E. E. Johnson, Medics. shoes? Because they Thurman D. Brown, of Plant City, Fla, are back in Iowa in my bedroom." let me," lie said. wants him to take it easy. "Gilbert is J. C. W. He completed his first 25 missions in an extremely good pilot," the CO com- In-Service '4F' Gripes mented. "He flies in combat with great Oct. 17, 1944 ease, and most of all he enjoys doing it." Dear Stars and Stripes. UP FRONT WITH MAULDIN M /Sgt. John L. Underwood, of After reading your literary counterpart Jacksonville, Ill., has been Gilbert's crew of the "Mr. Anthony" program I'd like chief from the start and be is still look- to contribute. We ground force men (air ing after Missouri Sue, whose No. 4 engine force), due to the efforts of the classifica- has put in 750 hours and is still going tion boards, can's win, or have donated. strong. any medals besides our "Spam Ribbon." Capt. Ken L. Gilbert While he has no regard for the law of so that lets us out. averages, Gilbert does not wear his five-foot-seven Gilbert kept right on fly- decorations—the DFC with cluster and Having lost an eye nine months ago ing in his 824 Missouri Sue. on duty, non-combat, I'm still on duty. Air Medal with ten clusters—because of "The boys get a big kick out of kidding superstition. When the hell do we, in service 4Fs. me because I don't drink or smoke, and get discharged? Probably I should have believe in getting at least eight hours' been a football player, or would house- sleep each night," he said. "But when maid's knees qualify me? If you have they start joking about my not liking the AFN Radio Program any angles on this let me know.— girls, they're way off base." - "Yank," Ground Force, Air Force. On Your Dial However, Gilbert let loose with his crew 375 kc. 1402 kc. 1411 kc. 1420 Sc 1447 he, when he won a bottle of bourbon from 218.1m. 213.9m. 212.6M. 211.3m. 207 3m Tracy Score-2 to 24 medics who bet he wouldn't do over 50 Monday, Oct. 23 Oct. 11, 1944 missions. But he still maintains that 0755—Sinn On—Program Resume. Dear Stars and Stripes, drinking and flying don't mix. 0800—World News. He was a private in 1941, when he left 0805—Songs by Helen Forrest. In agreement with A. P." (who de- 0830 —Music by Les Brown. nounced The Stars and Stripes for run- Rhode Island State University to enlist 0900—Headlines—Combat Diary. in the Air Corps. Later, he became a 0915—P.ersonal Album with Sally Sweetland, ning Dick Tracy), may I suggest that you 0930—Music from America. blow Tracy out of your barracks bag? flying sergeant. piloting training planes, 1000—Headlines—Morning After (Jubilee). It is bad enough to have to acknowledge In May, 1943, he was given a direct com- 1030—Strike up the Band. mission as a, second lieutenant. 1100--Heacitines—Home News from the U.S.A. that the home public has such a low in- 1105—Dulne Bag. telligence, but over here, where other He arrived in the ETO Feb. 3 and I200--sWorld News. 1205—Dunce Bag. nationalities may currently base their 1306—Headlines—Sports News. opinions of our native intellect (or lack 1305—Symphony Concert. thereof) only upon observation of 01 1400—Headlines--Visitina Hour, 1500—Headlines—French Lesson. tastes in GI publications, The Stars and 1505--Strike up the Band. Stripes deals my national pride a low 1530—On the Record, 1630—Allen Young Show. blow indeed. Leave us, let the morons be 1700-Headlines—Political Broudenst. content with Terry and his Pals ; let us 1730 owic by Harry James. not flaunt our mental shortcomings 1740—AEF Laura. 1755—American Sports News_ before the whole world! —Sgt. IL Clark, Twilight 1800—World News. QM, 18115—Murk OP It141 Map Walking through the evening twilight 1510 Cif Supper Club—Program Resolute 10, 1944 As the dusk begins to fall, 1900—Headlines—Home Ncws from the U.S.A. Oct. 1941,—soldier and .1 Song. Dear Stars and Stripes, In -Se hush of night approaching 1915—Strings with Wings. We of Hut 95 have adopted Dick Shadows steal across the wall. 1930—Amos and Andy. 2000—Headlines—Combat Diary. Tracy as our ideal and it hurts us to no Crimson spreads across the skyline 2015—Fred Waring's Pennsrhanlans. end to hear gripes about him, In a recent 2030—Canada Show. Where the sun has slipped away, 2100—World News. issue of The Stars and Stripes an article Disinclined to leave the heavens 2105—Top Tm with the FLAP' Ors:her:Ho ant] claimed the Kraut didn't like Li'l Abner. As it holds the night at bay. Beryl Davis. We like Dick Tracy and would like to 2130—Village Store with Joan Davis, Twilight beauty is but fleeting, 2200—Headlines—Tea O'Clock know whose side A. P. is on? Twenty- 2300—Fina1 EditrtuL* four of us subscribed for The Stars and Just a pause 'twist night and day. 23115—Sign off undl 0755 hours Tuesday. Oct 24. Stripes. Score now stands: one subscrip- Then in swiftness it has vanished. On the C0111111C1X !Men to your 111V9131C ArN And in silence passed away. programi over the tion lost, 24 gained.—Per. O'Shea and Allie j Elpcditionau Forces Prugraco: Boys of But 95. 6•Straigbten those shoulders! How long have you been in the Army?" Frances B. Nolan. 583 Sc, 514m. Monday, Oct. 23, 1944 THE STARS AND STRIPES Page 5 FDR Fears All This and Cold Beer, Too Prettiest? Vox `GOP Threat' to In Paree the Babes Are Lovely, Pop-Off Security Plans The Chain a Work of Art QUESTION NEW YORK, Oct. 22—President By Robert B. Forest How do you explain the frenzy on the Roosevelt declared last night that Repub- Stars and Stripes SIMI Writer part of American girls for swoon-crooner lican control of the next Congress• would What's Paris like? Some of. it is like this: Frank Sinatra? imperil what may be the last chance "to Take (you can have 'em) the French drivers, than whom there is none more organize the kind of world in which future unpredictable, not even the U.S. female. !Pvt. Nat Adelsberg, ASCS generations could live in freedom," fol- Given a vehicle and some gasoline, there's no holding a Frenchman behind i guess it's "1 can't explain it. But lowing the defeat of Germany and japan. the wheel. He gets one foot on the accelerator, one hand on the wheel, a death better to worry about a Sinatra than a In a nationwide broadcast delivered grip on the horn—and then he really moves. buzz bomb. I suppose he's doing a good before the Foreign Policy Association Woe unto him who gets in the way. The French driver would have been morale job-ten the home front. Person- meeting here, the President assailed what a cinch in Brooklyn. Like the Brooklyn cabbie, he drives on the right-hand ally, gimme Crosby." he termed the isolationist attitude of Re- publicans in the Senate and House. side of the road. Except, like the Brooklyn cabbie, when he's passing someone, "If the Republicans were to win con- which is most of the time. trol of Congress in this election," he said, Paris warmly resembles U.S. towns, too, in a matter that is cold. That's its "inveterate isolationists would occupy drinks. The beer is cold in Paris, and it's pretty fair beer, too, considering positions commanding 'influence and everything. The Parisian, however, mostly goes for wines and champagne, also power." served iced. Reviews GOP Record The bars themselves are pretty much like those back- home. There's plenty After reviewing the Republican record of elbow room, and he who hoists a beer can probably do it without fear of ramming on international affairs, he declared: "A quarter of a century ago we helped to save our freedom, but we failed to organize the kind of world in which future genera- in tions could live in freedom. Opportunity Air Transport Command betimes boosting its own and offers to The Stars knocks again. There is no guarantee that and Stripes contest to name the U.K,'s it will knock a third time." prettiest WAC this picture of Cpl. Jessie ADELSBERG YOUNG In a Republican Senate victory, the E. Carrasco, of Bakersfield, Calif. A chairmanship of the Senate Foreign Rela- member of the ATC historical section, Wallace Young, U.S, Navy: tions Committee would go to Sen. Hiram "Must really be a shortage of men at she's the wife of an Army corporal in Johnson, the President said, characteriz- home. Sinatra probably brings out the the U.K. and the daughter of a captain. ing the California Republican as "one girls' mother-instincts. Anyway, most of the leading isolationists who killed guys in the service don't like foolishness international co-operation in 1920." like swooning gals." Discussing the projected United Nations Name Carriers Lt. Monica E. Thomas, ANC: Council. Mr. Roosevelt said the U.S. re- "I suppose they swoon because Sinatra presentative of that group must be is handsome, in a different sort of way, if granted in advance the authority to act, you know what I mean, He is attractive. adding: "Peace, like war, can succeed After Battles You can't deny that, But I don't swoon only where there is the will to enforce WASHINGTON, Oct. 22 (AP)—The easily." it, and where there is available the power names of two famous battles, Coral Sea to enforce it." and Midway, will be perpetuated by two Cheers for Dodgers new 45.000-ton U.S. Navy aircraft car- Reiterating the principle of uncondi- riers, the Navy disclosed this weekend. tional surrender, the President said the Allies would not leave to Germany ''a They will be the largest known ships single element of military power, or of someone in the belly. Thew are comfortable stools at the bars, and more of their type in the world, the Navy :said, potential military power." comfortable seats at the tables. and will serve as bases for planes larger Before the Foreign Policy dinner, the Of course, the prices for those drinks leave the buyer as chilled as the beverage. than any heretofore operated from car- President toured Brooklyn, Manhattan Good food goes with those nice drinks, too. Ernie Pyle once said the French riers. and the Bronx. In Brooklyn, he spoke could take anything and make it taste wonderful. Ernie Pyle is a good reporter. The Battle of the Coral Sea in May, at a political rally in Ebbets Field, home Preparing a meal over there is highly regarded as an art, and Paris kitchens are 1942, is credited by the Navy with of the Dodgers, and urged the re-election filled with artists. They sure can cook, of Sen. Robert F. Wagner. effectively checking the Japanese advance A comparsion of Paris women with those in other lands would be only a matter southward in the Pacific and marked the The President also confessed he never of degree, all women being pretty popular, no matter where. However— before visited Ebbets Field, but added: end of the period during which the U.S. THOMAS CHETHAM "I've rooted for the Dodgers and I Spotted one day in Paris was a gorgeous creature with, believe it or not, purple Navy was totally on the defensive. Joan Chetham, ENSA: hope to come •back and see them play hair. Such an attempt probably would have been a terrific flop most anywhere The Navy said the Battle of Midway in "I don't know, English girls don't sometime." else, but on this lovely it was perfect. June, 1942. was the first decisive defeat swoon and they certainly wouldn't swoon Somehow the Paris women have a knack of making the most of everything, of suffered by the Japanese Navy in 350 over a singer. 1 suppose it's the man- PITTSBURGH, Oct. 22 (ANS)—Gov. always looking chic-shape. They're smart, they're trim, and they make a heady years. power shortage in your country that Thomas E. Dewey told workers here use of perfume. Friday night that the New Deal was "play- accounts for it. Crosby is the singer we By heady, we mean they're wise in its use and the head whose nose gets in the Hatriman Reaches U.S. like over here anyhow." ing with the rights of labor for political draft is lost. cash." He asserted that "the Roosevelt 117/5gt. Harry W. Hop, 8th AAF: Women elsewhere are mighty nice. But those Paris women have the big leagues WASHINGTON, Oct. 22 (API— regime has turned collective bargaining all to themselves. And when they sit down—well, see panel above. Ambassador W. Averell Harriman, U.S. young girls have active imagina- into political bargaining." tions. They make themselves believe that One last thing. observer at the. Stalin-Churchill confer- Frankie is singing to them personally. When you pull the chain over there, it really works. There's no hesitancy. no ence, arrived from Moscow yesterday OMAHA, Neb., Oct. 22 (ANS)—Vice- guttural wheezings of anticipatory action. Just pull the chain and wham, every- with a first-hand report for President That makes them let loose their natural President Henry A. Wallace yesterday thing disappears except the rumors . Roosevelt. love urge, and they shriek as though in said that "Gov. Thomas E. Dewey's con- pain, And I guess, too, there's a bad version to the cause of international col- shortage of boy friends." laboration smacks of a death-bed repent- A Mystery of the Sea ance," He accused many of Dewey's Frontline Honeymoon followers in Congress of "launching daily torpedoes against Bretton Woods and Over for Cl Couple Dumbarton Oaks." Ghost Ship With Only a Dog USSTAF' HQ, Oct, 22—The Bur- Mediterranean S and S dettes, man and wife, are back on duty after a honeymoon right behind the Aboard Found Off Florida Staff Member Killed front lines. • MIAMI, Oct. 22 (ANS)—A maritime to investigate and found she was Tne ROME, Oct. 22-5/Sgt. Alfred M. Lt. Col. Carlyle B. Bttrdette. of mystery reminiscent of that involving the Rubicon_ of about 90 gross tons. Kohn, of Miami, a member of the Medi- East Stone Gap, Va., was married to Marie Celeste was reported here today , The craft's lifeboats were gone. but per- terranean staff of The Stars and Stripes, Lt. Eileen Perry, of Duluth, Minn.. at with the discovery of a Cuban cargo ship sonal effects of the crew were still aboard. has been killed in action, it was announced Isigny, France, Aug. 7. They honey- A broken hawser was hanging over the shrift in the Gulf Stream with a dog the today. He was reported killed by Ger- mooned seven miles from the front. ship's how. and there was no indication, only living thing aboard. Aga man machine-gun fire. The bride now is in Germany, a nurse at first, whether lifeboat moorings had HOP CHASE Kohn is the second Mediterranean staff in a First Army hospital. Bordette is Possibly a victim of the recent Carib- been cut, broken or had slipped. The back on a special mission in England. bean hurricane, the vessel was sighted Margaret Chase, ARC program director: member to be killed in action in the last ship appeared to be in good condition. by a Navy blimp which notified the Coast "If you've been overseas for two years, five months. S/Sgt. Gregor Duncan, an where the couple met. The most noted of all . maritime Guard here. Two boats were dispatched as I have, you certainly can't appreciate artist, was killed last May. mysteries centers about the Marie Celeste, Frank Sinatra, let alone understand why whose story never has been unraveled. American girls make fools of themselves The vessel put out from New York on over him." S S Crossword Puzzle—A New Feature Nov. 7, 1872, and one month later was found sailing without a crew member T14 Bernard McKay, SOS: Across Down / 2 3 ' 5 6. 7 8 9 near Gibraltar. There were. evidences a "I used to like The Voice. 1 even went 1—Soldier who falls out of ranks 1—Transporting troops by a series to hear the guy occasionally. But this of round trips of Me same meal had just begun when her personnel without permission, vehicles. publicity hooey's too much. I think all 10—Small case containing articles disappeared. There were no signs of use in 2—Shade of gray in which an violence or evidence stormy weather this swooning crap is faked. Make mine carried by soldiers for 10 object appears in an aerial Bing. He's a man's man," mending. photograph. e had been encountered. II—Any military force having a 3—Allied bombers are causing a prescribed organization- lot of these in Germany. i2—Mil. ahbrev. for "Basle Field abbrev. for "Army Help Wanted Manual." Specialized Training 'Unit." 13—Lenath of office, civil or military. 5—First two initials of Mat. Gcn. —AND GIVEN Edgerton, Governor of Panama W rite abbrev, for "Enemy air- Canal Zone. your question or problem in R'f craft." /3 14 15 Wowed. Stars and Stripes, 37, Upper Brook 6—Initials of the first Commander- 16—Mil. abbrev. for a school where St.. London, W.I. or APO 887, selected men are uaintx1 to be- in-Chief, U.S. Armed Forces. U.S.' Armor, come officers. 7—Nickname for Consolidated Telephone. ETOUSri, Ext. 2131. 17—Mil. abbrev. for company offi- /6 B24 bomber. cer who ranks nest below 8—Fit and ready for active service. Oklahoma Reunion captain ■ ■ 9—To replace your nas mask. 19—In the ETC) you might do this EN from the Seventh Congressional District Of ismc of "crawling." ■ ■ 14—Murch in which troops are M Oklahoma will meet Friday, Oct. 27. at the /7 18 1.9 20 allowed to break step, talk Or ARC Mostyn Club, 32 Edgware ltd., London, 21 Mil. abbrev. for a full-teack sing. armored vehicle. Or a reunion dinner at 7.15 PM. This district abbrev. for the speed of III 18—Last element of a column In the includes .counties of Greer, Jackson, Beckham. an aircraft as shown on an .air- order of march. Tillman. Roger Mills, Ellis, Dewey, Washita. speed indicator. 23 211--Sliding mechanism that closes Klowa, Armen and Custer. Officers and names ItIcHAY WEBER are welcome. 24—Mil. abbrev. for chart showing the breech of some types of Ruth personnel 'of a military small arms. Philatelist Meeting LI. Grace Weber, ANC:' 11 ahbrev, for Seacoast THERE Will be a meeting of stamp collectors There are other voices better than uplt. - 25—Metal used for armament. 25 26 27 id Artillery, s at the ARC Mostyn Club, 32 Edgware Rd.. London, Oct. 30, at 7 PM. Sinatra's. But the guy looks so helpless 27—Mil. abbrev. for type of dis- 26—Mil. abbrev, for killed. that high school girls kind of feel sorry ease formerly causing forfei- 28—Mil. abbrev. for type of reckon- Ninth Church of Christ, Scientist for him, especially when so many people ture of pay under AR 35-1440. ing used for desert travel. THERE will be a free lecture at the:Vitali Church Could be I'd be this to net back home 29 30 of Christ. Scientist, Morahan% St.. Westminster, tire so down on him. again. London. SW I, Oct 26, at 1.10 .PM. Smiqeca swoon, too—if 1 were a little younger." 311-!Ira warehousing, any one sepa- (Answers in Tomorrow's Stars are at 11.30 AM and at 6 PM on Sundays and rate part of a corium. and Stripes) At 6.30 PM Wednesdays, Arthur H. Gross, Tank Corps: "You say some guy's been throwing OH, WELL ,A GUY eggs at a crooner? GETS USED To Real eggs? Real TALKIN' TO honest - to - good- HIMSELF SACK ness in , the - shell eggs laid by a real honest - to - good- ness hen? I can't believe it. What guy would be nutty enough to waste eggs that way? Capes, I haven't seen a real egg for months and months. And who the hell is Sinatra? GROSS 1 never heard of him." ?y Conescay of New. Syndicate Page 6 SPORTS THE STARS AND STRIPES SPORTS Monday, Oct. 23, 1944, Notre Dame Rolls Over Badgers, 28-13 Kelly Leads Behind fins ding Hoosier By Pap The Sports Powerful Irish — TNi= FR.E.s.mtani reOretc/ARG, On. SSA-1 ACE To 4th in Row Headlines OF /94-3 HAS 630457'ErZEE) -7,7 /E-- IA/O/4/VA SOUTH BEND, Ind., Oct. 22—The ELE VE.A.1 Fighting Irish of Notre Dame, first-rank- Cpl. Billy Conn had to undergo treat- MADISON, Wis.—Wisconsin police ing college grid ream in the nation, reified ment for a sprained back and bleeding used tear-gas and water hoses to disperse M their fourth straight victory here yes- gums suffered during his tour of British crowd of 3,000 home-coming Wisconsin terday afternoon, defeating a scrappy bases as big gun of the Air Force team University celebrants here after they held Wisconsin eleven. 28-13, before 40,000 of boxing champs. Checking up on the a pep rally, then started downtown and fans. The heavy, fast-charging Irish line "casualties incurred by the team during were 'tearing several large theaters ruined the Badgers' number one hope— its tour, Lt. Maury Schwarz, who is damaged in other homecoming celebra- "victory through air-power"—but yielded leading the team through a tour of Air tions. Eggs and tomatoes were thrown two touchdowns in the last two periods, Force installations in the Mediterranean by the celebrants at the cops, and then the first scores made against the Ramblers theater, found that members of the troup the police turned loose the gas and water this year. played pretty rough, collecting an assort- and sent the crowd fleeing. Seven per- Bob Kelly, a fine broth of an Irishman ment of black eyes, two .broken noses, sons were injured and ten arrested. from Chicago, racked up Notre Dame's one cauliflower ear, a dislocated knee and Madison citizens described the scene as first two touchdowns, the initial tally a sprained' ankle. "much more quiet than usual," coming on the second play of the game * * * * * * 5/GAIALS made its bow in BUFFALO, N.Y.—Bucky Harris. OFF with a 50-yard run around right end. He picked up interference along the way and the Northwest km week when 30,000 former boy wonder of the Washington British and Americans jammed Black- Senators and famous major league nobody laid a hand on him. His kick for the point went wide. pool's Bloomfield Road Stadium to manager, will be getting more money watch the Air Service Command War- here next year than he made while A Wisconsin fumble on the nine-yard riors edge the Bearcats, 6-0. Cpl. managing the Senators. His new con- line set up the next touchdown, the Ted D'Ctva, of New York, slipped over tract 05 boss of the Bisons in the Inter- Ramblers recovering and Kelly popping for the game's only score late in the national League calls for 15 grand. over on a fourth down. His kick was third period on a triple-lateral pass wide again. SALEM, N.H.—The horse-racing boom play. .4 GI band paraded during the has benefited most everyone connected , Pick Up Nine More half and kepi up a steady flow of college with the game in an official capacity, but Another nine quick points were picked music during the game, while WAC Salem is probably the greatest beneficiary up by the Irish as the third period cheer-leaders were on hand to parade with an "On To Victory" banner. of all. This city, which had a debt of Nu C;4*, opened. The kickoff was fumbled and $194,000 when the Rockingham track Cu-.5 Mergenthal of Notre Dame went into AERE.TORNE-0 opened in '33, last week burned its ‘3,, Gat,/ the end zone to tackle Jerry Thompson Crudr. Jack Dempsey of' the U.S. 717 COLZ_EGE /A! mortgage and shows TWO LNYEu for a safety. And when Wisconsin kicked Coast Guard was on hand at Tewkes- NOO.S7ErP-S bury last week when 3,000 soldiers, a bank account of rtFEFOrZE 77/E Zo IfaCD c4ctsE.r out, ground play brought the Irish back ./Z.1-/N0/.5- sailors and civilians turn out to watch a 552,()00. And all G.-44/E to the 35, which was close enough for citizens on the wel- 0,45 Mr. Kelly, who grabbed the leather and Navy football team trounce a GI eleven, Ar fare rolls have been was away around right end for another 12-0. Seaman 2/c Pete Lisec, of moved to jobs con- touchdown. This time his kick was good. Warren. Ohio, ran 30 yards for the first nected with the Another blocked punt gave Notre Navy score, and Seaman 1/c Ervin Miller, track. . . . WASH- Hoosiers Defeat Northwestern, Dame the ball on the Wisconsin 41 of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., tallied the other INGTON — After shortly afterwards, and Frank Dance- touchdown on a short run around end. finishing last in the wicz heaved to Chuck Maggioli on the Outstanding for ;the Army team were American League. 14-7,for First Time Since '29 first play for the final Irish touchdown. S/Sgt. George Brown, of Kingsbury, the Washington Kelly hooted the point, and Notre Dame N .1 and S Sgt. Lester Dooley, of Beloit, Senators had seven EVANSTON, Ill., Oct. 22—Indiana University defeated Northwestern, led, 28-0. Wis... . HQ of the — Port Bn. has a 14-7, here yesterday for the first Hoosier victory over the Wildcat's since Negro football team which would like to STAN SPENCE men on the club to A pass from Girard to Mead gave the whom Owner Clark 1929. Both Indiana touchdowns came in the first two periods, but they Badgers their first touchdown just before arrange games either with white or Negro troops. Griffith paid bonuses, although no fell apart and barely hung on to win after Northwestern took to the air the period ended after another pass play by the same combination and a 12-yard * * * member of the club had a contract call- for a third-period score, - ing for a bones payment. Stan Spence, run by' Mead had put the ball on the Cpl. Jimmy Allison. former Okla- slugging outfielder, was rewarded with a Fullback George Sundheim plowed through from the one-yard line for Notre Dame I2-yard line. Girard's boot homa University star, has new contract making him the highest paid the first Indiana touchdown in the open- was good. lined up more than 70 basketball teams member of the club. ing stanza to cap a 33-yard drive. Final touchdown of the day was scored at an Air Service Command depot * * * Shortly before the Hoosiers had blown by Girard in the last period on a cutback here_ Organized in seven leagues, DETROIT—The only member of the Illinois Routs another scoring bid on the Wildcat five inside his own right end from the five- "Jimmy's Dribblers" boast a number Detroit Tigers to get a prize was Mrs. with a bad pass from center. yard line. of college and* prO* stars. * Steve O'Neill. wife of the manager. Bob "Hunchy" Hoernschlmeyer had a The statistics: Three weeks before the season was over Panthers, 39-5 good day, connecting for ten passes in NJ). WIS. The unbeaten, untied. unscored upon Steve decided his boys were in and 19 tries for the Hoosiers, one of them First downS .. 13 12 Shuttle-Raders scored their third succes- wanted to get something for his wife, so PITTSBURGH, Oct. 22—Illinois stuck Yards gained noshing . 281 132 sive victory Saturday, trouncing the for a touchdown in the second period Passes attempted .. •• 15 15 he ordered a little diamond bracelet to a ground attack and threw only six when Abe Adams gabbed his short screen Passes completed .. .. 6 5 Thunderbtilts, a fighter station _eleven. watch for his better half. The Tigers passes here yesterday in handing Pitts- toss and dashed 32 yard4. Yards gained passing .. 90 20-0. The Raders, representing a First Yards lost penalties ., 65 97 didn't get in, but O'Neill had to pony up burgh's Panthers their third straight set- The Wildcats, without a first down Strategic Air Depot station . commanded for the ordered jewelry for the little back, 39—S. The Panthers held a momen- in the first half, came to life in the third by Colonel William E. Shuttles, racked woman. tary lead in the opening period when Mike chapter, marching 71 yards to score. up their first touchdown early in the third After a gain. of five yards on the ground. quarter after two passes by Pfc Ashley COLORADO SPRINGS—• The day the Roussos booted a 16-yard field goal, but they took to the air and were home in Kansas Slaps Anderson, former Wisconsin halfback. deer season opened in Colorado the the Illini soon erased that and had the two plays, a 32-yard toss from Ben brought the ball to the four-yard largest drug store in town closed. The game won early. Schadler to Max Morris doing the trick line. S/Sgt. Tom Baddick, of Hazel- sign in the window read, "Closed because Don Greenwood tallied twice for the from the 32-yard stripe, Don Funderberg Nebraska, 20-0 town, Pa., plunged over for the score. of illness." The postscript read, "Buck Illini, once on an 80-yard romp ; Buddy converted. LAWRENCE, Kansas, Oct. 22—Two The conversion was muffed. Second score, Fever." . . ST. PAUL—Proprietors Young went home twice, once on a spec- The statistics; end-zone passes and a blocked kick pro- at the start of the fourth quarter, came of 160 bowling alleys have closed their tacular dash of 92 yards, and Paul Patter- N'THW'T'N IND'A duced scores here yesterday as the Kan- on an interception by McCoy, 200-pound doors for the duration. W. D. Espland, son and Don Johnson each scored once. First downs 10 sas Jaybawks defeated Nebraska, 20-0, center, on the Thunderbolt 45-yard line spokesman for the owners, said they The other two Pitt points were registered Yards gained rushing .. 78 126 Passes attempted ,. 15 19 for the first time since 1896. from where he tallied. Pvt. Ed Snow, couldn't hire pin boys at the seven cents when Phillips, husky Pitt tackle, nailed Passes completed 10 Warren Riegle, Kansas end, came ex-New Hampshire University back, per line wage scale ordered by the War Greenwood in the end zone, • Yards gained passing .. 77 133 added the point. Pvt. Earl Doscy, for- Labor Board unless the boys were under Average distance of punts 31.6 28.1 through with two touchdowns for the The statistics: Yards lost penalties .. 16 40 winners, one in the second period when merly of Purdue, returned a punt, 60 16, and then they violated another labor ILLINOIS Pin' he grabbed a blocked kick on the five- yards for the final touchdown. Snow law. The decision put a halt to what First downs .. 10 15 again converting, would have been St. Paul's greatest bowl- Yards gained rushing .. 294 t69 Penn State Topples Colgate- yard line and went over, and the other in the fourth when he made a circus catch ing season with 1,586 teams listed for . Passes attempted .. a. 6 18 HAMILTON. N.Y., Oct. 22—Penn .4 General Depot football team won in the end zone on Dwight Sutherland's play in 190 leagues. Passes completed .. .. 2 IO State edged Colgate, 6-0 here yesterday its second game of the season yester- as John Chuckran picked up a rolling 21-yard toss. Barrington passed four * * * Yards gained passing -. 54 66 day. defeating the Northway Raiders, punt in the waning moments of the game yards to Moffett for the other touchdown PULLMAN, WASH.—Washington Average distance of punts 30 45 18-0, be/are 2,000 fans. LI. James Yards last penalties 54 and ran fifty yards to the only touchdown, in the third period. State College, which dropped football a alt F . McKinley, of Portland, Ind„ year ago, has adopted the Second Air plunged through center for a first Force Superbombers and plans to make Dick Tracy By Courtesy or Chicago Tribline By Chester Gould period score after SISgt. Mike the Washington University-Superhomber Mileusenich, of Columbus, Ohio, had game at Spokane, Nov. 18, the school's SHAKY, le, ' NOW OID VOU CENG EASY, NOW, MR. TRACY pounced on a loose ball in the end- "big game" of the year. The student IIFF ONLY THAT - ...,, . .TO LIVE I NEVER DID LIKE THAT MANAGE BSI WANTS TO KNOW IF zone for another. 7'I3 Jint Alercia, of body at State has reserved an entire.sec- FLATFOOT HADN'T - Ir.- . kisr_M_E?everrn me THERE ARE ANY STORE 94E's- wErmaiNG DREGS GAG AND COME ALONG .f..-- YOU__ WKLE ANYTI4 Cl LABELS IN YOUR BEEN Detroit, went over for the lino! touch- lion of Gonzaga Stadium for the game NOW WE'VE GOT TO GET • down after T/5 Elderfield, of and will take along the Washington State BEFORE BANKS to V ALONE, IT'S A F . CLOTHES. WE'VE GOT DOPED Carl SNOWFLAKE BACK BEFORE TO FIND OUT WHO - -, - Greenfield, Ohio, had brought the hall band, cheer leaders and the school's TausT AMNESIA DRUG re A (la $)) -ss. OW ))), YOU RE to the one-yard marker at the begin- mascot. a cougar. WEARS OFF -7-- OW L. ok0 _ tit ning of the last period. . . . The 12th tai .....b ' 6 Ikkk P . ,a( kel : ...::- Replacement Depot grid te con- 111‘' ,,i '1.. '----, - Les Horvath Stars "I( pis e! -- r tinued to roll yesterday, defeating 1 Crowell's Cowboys of the Eighth Air iii», , i ,., •- A ,.. tW Force, 34-0. Two of the touchdowns • _ - 6 , As Buckeyes Down were scored on long runs and two more .1 ( 1:1.-- NV 6 1141 .1 V.' 11/11111.:- ' i MN • i on passes. Outstanding for the win- Great Lakes, 26-6 11 ( ners was T/5 William Dinwoodie, of Gary, Ind. . . . An Eighth Air Force • COLUMBUS, Ohio, Oct. 22—The Ohio Male Call By State Buckeyes poured it on the Great Milton Caniff Service Command grid team scored in Lakes Bluejackets here yesterday with 20 the second and third periods yesterday Y'SEE,M154 LACE — oue cseLs WE -E -LL %NUEVO FIFTEEN GP to defeat the — Port, 13-0. Half- points in the last period to win, 26-6, AT HOME NAVE 50gT4 GIVEN 05 L 6U6Si; ITS THOSE POSES MAKES Pty before 63,000 fans and spoil the home- A FAST Big060 AN' WE -nlouotir A 0000 CALliE J., 44---,, A TOUGH WAR — HEY! backs. Frank Allen and Fred ErClva coming of Lt. (jg) Paul Brown, former iF WE COULD SEND 'EM 5051E .. OKAY, TltagE ARE Elan' EaCtsSual rallied the touchdowns and Korvilius SNAPSHOTS OF US 14.1554N. YOU ssEeszs! 4 fi'n w - , ow 71104E ROLLS- asp THEY added the extra point. Ohio State mentor now coaching the nievb Be JEALOUS ouzo* TO c. .` o4 ewer caaks.s Fax! sailors: PUT US SACK rti THE NUMBER ONE Les Horvath. Ohio State's leading EFOT/ THEY Live IN DIFFERENT ite-L-*4 TOWNS —AND THEY WONT KNOW Quiz Answers pound gainer, started the play that WIl0 )OL1 AgE.., Mk, I' meant the ball game when he passed 26 ARE YOU AN EXPERT ? If you yards to Jack Dogger on Great Lakes 39 0.4E sores. get less than 314ths of the questions PLEM,F , shortly after the fourth period started. right, report to the orderly room On the next play he bit left tackle to as a candidate for KP ! That's an the five-v:4rd stripe and went over three order. plays later. Tom Keane converted. Correct answers follow 011ie Cline plunged from the six for the 2.-B; 3.-B; 4.-C; 5.-C; 6.-D. second last-period tally and then con- verted. and Horvath capped a 35-yard drive with a two-yard buck to end the STAND IN LINE I'M SERVING BUFFET YOutt HAVE scoring for the day. 0 ., Freshman Dick Flannagan scored from TO GET IN THE STYLE, THIS EVENING TO GET IN FOR the two-yard stripe for the Buckeyes in GEE vvH12, 4 t: .*. MOVIES- A CHANGE, DEAR LINE/ the first stanza and the Bluejackets YOU HAVE TO GET ON A BUS

evened it up in the third period when GET IN LINE _ GOOl> Charlie Avery, former Minnesota back, FOR EVERY- SODA/ WS 1.- 7..0 ;.-'0;1 . TO GET HOME — tv.r.q; ; caught a pass from Don Mangold and THING THESE - ...... / ran 24 yards to a touchdown. DA\S-s--STAND t). . The statistics: IN UNE TO - 01110 GREAT GET IN A . STATE LAKES RESTAURANT First downs .. .. 12 --..____....._..."---- Yards gained rushing 275 46 4 • ' P;mcs -attempted 22 . Paws completed 6 Yards gained by passes .. .. 34 86 .-- s s., 9.14 .,, \.:k . Average distance of punts .. 28 38 Yards lost. penalties 5 25 By Coormy of tints rcaturm Monday, Oct. 23, 1944 SPORTS THE STARS AND STRIPES SPORTS Page 7 Wildcat Back Ga. Tech Clips Navy, 1745 , on Field Goal Gains HaV-Yard Bowen's Winning Kick Comes in Final Minutes ATLANTA, Oct. 22-The Georgia Tech Yellowjackets fought their way to a 17-15 upset victory over the favored Navy gridders here yesterday before 35.000 fans, with the educated toe of Dinkey Bowen spelling the difference between the two squads as Navy outplayed Tech in almost every phase. Bowen kicked two extra points and in the final period, with the Georgians trailing by one point, sent a 25-yard field goal through the uprights that settled the ball game. But even after that last field goal the going was tough and the Yellowjackets had to prove their spirit by holding the College Fives desperately battling Middies for downs within the five-yard line in the last two minutes of play. Threw Games, Navy went ahead on the first play of the game when Bobby Jenkins grabbed the kickoff, lined up his blockers and Allen Charges galloped 83 yards to a touchdown. Vic Finos missed the try for placement. NEW YORK, Oct. 22-Ned Irish, pre- sident of Madison Square Garden, has Quick Kick Aids Tech asked Forest "Phog" Allen, Kansas Tech got its first break with less than University basketball coach, for specific four minutes remaining in the half. The information on a story printed in the Jackets quick-kicked to the Navy four Denver Post yester- and were given possession of the ball on day in which Allen the seven because of a clipping incident was quoted as say- while the ball was still in the air. Frank ing in a letter that Broyles bucked to the three, an offside college basketball penalty moved it to the one, and Broyles players have sold went over. Bowen then booted the point. out to professional Each team scored seven points in the gamblers and third period. Navy made it first when thrown games at Ralph Ellsworth plunged over after a 49- Madison Square yard drive, and Finos kicked the point, Garden. while Tech's touchdown was again the Jack Carberry, result of a penalty. A pass from Tex Post sports editor, Ritter to George Matthews was allowed wrote that Allen on the one-yard line for Navy interference bad warned college and Bob Williams bounded over on the authorities that a next play, Bowen kicked again. stink was brewing NED MISII Tech recovered a fumble on its own "worse than baseball's Black Sox scandal I TH I live-yard line in the final frame, but on affair." the next play Billy Williams was trapped Irish also had. asked Carberry for any in the end zone and tackled for a safety, information Allen may have given him Halfback Jim Yungwirth of Northwestern is brought down after a half-yard gain putting Navy ahead, 15-14. so that an investigation may be started against Wisconsin in a genie which went to the Badgers, 7-6. As the period ran out, Tech drove immediately. from its own 47 to the Navy nine, where "Allen, in making his charges, alleges Army Wallops the Middies held and Bowen came that newspapers with full knowledge that through with the winning placement. games have been thrown in Madison Strangest statistical story of the day Square Garden, 'havd kept it quiet I Coast Guard showed that in losing, Navy piled up 221 or fairly quiet. If the charge is true he Once Over Lightly WEST POINT, N.Y., Oct. 22-Army's yards by rushing, as against a minus six need but submit any proof be may have By Gene Graft' powerhouse football team was downright yards for their conquerors. upon which he has 'based his charge to ornery here yesterday and never let little The statistics: TECH NAVY the Denver Post and it will receive full PARIS, Oct. 22-You make your choice, you bet your money, and you Coast Guard Academy reach the 50-yard First downs 10 21 airing," Carberry wrote. Jose your shirt, but that's where all comparison ends between horse line us the Cadets rolled to a 76=0 Yards gained rushing -6 221 triumph on soggy turf. Passes attempted . 22 17 Flat Statement racing in France and the way it was back when GIs weren't GIs and Passes completed .. a 10 9 "That Allen's charges can stand The parade started five minutes after Yards gained forwards .. 172 136 they could feed the mutuel machines with their hard-earned money. the opening whistle when Doug Kenna let Average distance of kicks 49 40 ignored by Madison Square Garden ThAngtp_ey_aste bankruptcy was, in itself, a knotty problem for horse players in the go a 29-yard scoring toss to Ed Rafalko, Yards lost penalties „, 48 90 authorities is unthinkable," Carberry -Mates. Here it's just the beginning of a day at the races. went through for another in continued. "Allen makes a flat state- Some 20,000 customers ventured to Tremblay, a spacious grassy course on the the first period, Felix Blanchard blasted ment without a single qualification." outskirts of Paris, for the privilege of losing their money on Saturday. They through for two touchdowns in the Cloudbasters Win., Carberry quotes Allen as having traveled by bicycle, bus and horse-drawn carriage, the latter looking liken lend-lease second, George Poole caught a pass for written, It has already happened." relic from a Hollywood horse opera. One determined gent galloped to the gate another, and romped 59 3-0, on Field Goal Irish issued a fiat denial of Allen astride a drooping bay mare that had seen rosier days while harnessed to a milk yards to still another charges. "I aril wiring both Allen and wagon. Davis consumed 94 yards in three tries Carberry for specific information," he Tremblay is a minor league track compared to hippodrome de Longchamp or to score in the third period and Dick By Pacific War Vet said. "If they produce that information Maisons-Laffitte, the famous French ovals, but it dwarfs Santa Anita, Belmont or Walterhouse and Dick Sensenbaugher CHAPEL HILL, N.C., Oct. 22- we will turn it over to college authorities Arlington. The grass course-all races are run on the grass-makes an oval of 2,500 added touchdowns before the period was Buell Saint John, a veteran of the Pacific and the police department. We have seen meters, the back stretch is about half a mile from the home stretch across the infield, ended. Bill West and Bob Chabot ended war, kicked a field goal from the eight- hints at various times about such charges, , and a miniature forest at the far turn obscures the horses long enough for the jockeys the slaughter with fourth-period touch- yard line on fourth down here yester- but these never have been proved." to pull up, discuss the latest latrine rumors and decide who'll win. downs, The Army also picked up a safety day with seven seconds remaining to The Associated Press reported today Bettors who used to moan that their thoroughbreds "ran the wrong way" in the third period, and Walterhouse give North Carolina Pre-Flight a drama- that Allen bad declared at Lawrence, would be stymied for conversation in France, where races are run clockwise, kicked eight extra points in 11 tries. tic 3-0 victory over Georgia Pre-Flight. Kan., that Vadal Peterson, Utah basket- just the opposite to the way they are in the States. There is no automatic start- The sordid details: Saint John, a former Alabama half- ball coach, had knocked down a gambler ing gate and the race begins when the starter lifts a wire-after the horses toe ARMY C.C. back, returned to the States in February who came to his room in New York last a mark as well as horses can. But there is a modern camera to separate horses First downs 18 6 after being decorated as a member of spring and asked how much it would at the finish line. Yards gained metes .. 443 S3 Passes atm:awed 13 30 Carlson's Raiders. cost "to have Utah lose to Dartmouth" In the infield, the betting minimum is 50 francs (5s.) in the enclosure it's 100 Passes completed .. 8 9 After the Cloudbusters had threatened in the finals of the NCAA tournament. francs. If more than seven horses run, win, place and show prices are posted on Yards gained passing .. 157 66 Average distaoce of Punts 31 25 in the final quarter, only to lose the ball the board, although there is no show betting. To add to the confusion, show Total yards kicks returned 126 220 on a fumble, Otto Graham and Stan Padres Sign Pepper Marlin money is paid to customers who have place tickets on the horse that finishes third, Yards lost penalties .. 70 5 Koslowski, who personally gained 122 SAN DIEGO, Cal., Oct. 22-John which makes France the only place where a cautious man can buy place tickets yards for the day, drove to the Georgia on three horses and collect on all of them without having a dead-heat. L. "Pepper" Martin has signed a contract eight-yard marker to set up Saint John's to manage the San Diego Padres of the There were 62 entries listed on the program for the sixth race. After 30 Brown, Holy Cross kick. owners graciously scratched their horses. 32 nags galloped to the post Indi- Pacific Coast League. vidually, snuggled together like the deicing line at your favorite burlesque house, Battle to 24-24 Tie and then put the charge of the Light Brigade to shame 'when the starter raised the wire. WORCESTER, Mas,s., Oct. 22-An Only 31 crossed the finish line before nightfall. The straggler, on whom, of course, underdog Brown University football team we had bet, was still reported missing when we started back to town. Nobody can be battled to a 24-24 tie with Holy Cross on NATIONS' GRID RESULT sure of these things, but the man who arrived aboard the swivel-backed mare passed mud-covered Fitton Field here yesterday us on the boulevard and his charger looked awfully familiar. If she wasn't our belated as each team missed four conversion Friday's Games Missouri 21, Iowa State 21 attempts, any one of which would have Ball State 19, Franklin 6 North Central 13, Elmhlirst 12 "13," the horsey lady had a twin sister. Boston Collette 42, NYU 13 Notre Dame 28, Wisconsin 13 meant the ball game. Drake 14, Gustavus Adolphus 2 Ohio State 26, Great Lakes 6 Bill Moody scored twice for Brown, Ft. Denning 33, Louisiana Tech 0 Ohio Wesleyan 33. Denison 6 Oklahoma 68, Kansas State 0 Maybe in Brooklyn once in the first period on a 28-yard pass Ft. Pierce Naval 38. Miami 0 Purdue 26. Iowa 7 from Charlie Tiedman, and again in the Georgia 53. Daniel Field 6 St. Olaf 7. Cornell (Iowa) 0 Miami-Jacksonville Naval canceled Wabash 14. DePaut 7 third when Ile grabbed a fumble and Michigan State 8, Maryland 0 Wichita 14. Doane Navy 13 scampered 95 yards, while Tiedman and Monticello Aggies 21, Jackson AAF 7 Dick O'Leary came through with the Otterbein 12. Muskingum 7 SOUTH Grid Pros 'Bums'? No Siree , Pittsburgh 6Kan.) Teachers 19, Warrensburg Catawba 19. Presbyterian 0 others for the visitors. Teachers 7 Florida Agates 21. Morris Brown ii Leo Troy, Walter Sheridan, Bill Purdue B Team 19. Ohio Stale B Team 7 Georgia Tech 17, Navy 15 Southeast Mo. Teachers 13. Missouri Valley 0 Kentucky 26, VMI 2 Says Giants' Stout Steve Owen Halliday and Joe Sullivan shared scoring Temple 7, Syracuse 7 Millsaps 19. Howard 7 honors for the Cross. Western Michigan 27, Wooster 2 Mississippi State 13. LSU 6 NC. Pre-Flight 3, Georgia Pre-Flight 0 NEW YORK, Oct. 22-Steve Owen, coach of the New York Football Saturday's Games Tennessee 0, Alabama 0 Giants, is a hit put out by an article in the Saturday Evening Post entitled, EAST Tulane 16. Auburn 13 Oklahoma Aggies Stop Army 76, Coast Guard Academy 0 Tulsa 47. Mis.sissippi 7 "Don't Send My Boy To Halas," written by Bill Hewitt, former Chicago Bear Connecticut It, CCNY 0 W and M 39, Richmond AAF 0 and Philadelphia Eagle end. Denver University, 33-21 Cornell 13, Sampson Navy 6 Wake Forest 21. N.C. State 7 Holy Cross 24. Brown 24 West Virginia 20. Bethany 0 Hewitt claimed in the article that a football player is "the peon of big DENVER, Oct. 22-Bob Fennimore Lafayette 44, Lehigh 0 SOUTHWEST league sports" and also pictures a player wasting five years during which he put on a one-man show here yesterday as Maine 13. New Hampshire 6 Oklahoma Aggies 33, Denver 21 Penn State 6. Colgate 0 Rice 21, Southern Methodist 10 might become a "chronic loafer." (Mr. he sparked the Oklahoma Aggies to a Villanova 7. Mublenberg 0 Norman Navy 19. Amarillo AB 13 loafers, and he topped the list off by 33-21 victory over Denver University. Worcester Tech 7, N. London Base 7 Second AF 68. N. Texas Aggies 0 Hewitt, a college man, uses that term, we Sub Southwestern 21. Texas Tech 19 presume in place of the more familiar wondering out loud what professional Fenimore's fourth-period touchdown MIDWEST TCU 13. Texas Aggies 7 and vulgar "bum.") football players now in the services would 'was the picture play of a great game. Baldwin-Wallace 9, Case 7 Texas 19. Arkansas think of Hewitt's article. "Seventy-five After Denver had gotten within six points Bemidji Teachers 18. Concordia 6 FAR WEST Lt. Cmdr. George Halos, owner of the Capital 25. Kenyon 0 Alameda Coast Guard 19. College of PAO& 0 , is in the Navy. So Owen per cent of professional football players of a tie. Halfback Cecil Hankins took the DeKalb Teathers 18, Macomb Teachers 6 Colorado 28. Colorado College u in the services are officers," said Steve. kickoff on the 13 and Fenimore cut Illinois 39. Pittsburgh 5 Fleet City 19. California 2 felt it was his duty to rush to the defense Indiana 14, Northwestern 7 Nevada 13, Utah Aggies 0 of football. Owen said Hewitt was a "I don't think Hewitt would call them behind him, took a lateral and raced all Indiana State 13, Illinois Normal 6 St. Mary's Pre-Flight 'II. UCLA 12 link off in his facts when he said the bums." the way to pay dirt, Kansas 20. Nebraska 0 Utah 38. Idaho (So.) 12 majority of linemen draw only $100 to $175 per game. "The fact is, very few AN 15 TOO REPULSIVE T' GIT OUT,CLAMWI NKLE MAH A14 AIMS T'ATTA4t4 TH' AN'-EP DAISY MAE DAISY MAE linemen get less than $200 per game," DAISY MAE IN A HONEST WAY, CHILE- WHUT IS 'VD ALARM CLOCK T' TH DON'T KETCH ME BY GOTTA Owen said. "And many more make about SO GIT HER BY usina , AIMIN' TOO WiP rst • DYNAMITE AN' MAKE A SUNDOWN ON SA0iE KETCH YOt tit TH' MEANEST TRICK ALARM CLOCK -AN' TIME-BOMB ouTo. MAHSELF y! HAWKINS DAY, SHE CAIN"T five grand over a four-month season." KNOWN T' moat an oft.!! YYS4UF5IZe AH AIMS T'SET TH' rH' APPLE a YO' EYE- Owen contends that professional base- BEAST IS NOT - NAMELY- AUSTIN' MAN YO' GOT ma'r ALARM PO' SUNDOWN -WILL BLOW UP- MURDER DYNAMITE ON SADIE HAWKINS ball, with a season about twice as long. OWN MAMMY'S • sizersis INTO A MILLION YO' 1.1 cannot claim many five grand salaries. LOY I N' HEART!? AROUN' YO' DAY!? WAIST? BLOODY CO LE Hewitt said that five years in profes- , , errs BLOOD", sional football were wasted, but Owen said Hewitt missed the point entirely. -Professional football is not a career," Owen pointed out. "It is just a stepping 'stone to a career for a fellow who has `the ambition and can put the money to ood use." The Giant coach then recited a long iJ list of professional football players who ,04 !turned out to be anything but chronic By Courtesy of United Fe:tains Page 8 THE STARS AND STRIPES Monday, Oct. 23, 1944 `Tlie Supply Line' GIQ Picture Quiz

1.—An American plane turns home after doing its share in pounding the strategic 2.—Making with the feet down the steps of Central Park's Hengelo Railroad yard, 40 miles northeast of Arnhem, Holland. What plane is it? Mall, New York, at a war bond festival are : (a) Pil er cub (c) Flying Fortress (a) Turner & Fechit (c) Gorgina & Robinson (b) Marauder (d) Corsair (b) Temple & Robinson (d) Colbert & "Rochester"

3.—Billy Schiedel (I) and cousin Mickey Suchoaa (r) eating a 4.—These three lovely ladies fought it out fur the title of "Miss America" at nirthday cake. They're one year olds. Mickey's old man's Atlantic City. L-R, Virginia Warlen, Florida, Birmingham's Betty Jane Rase, and serving in England. What's smearing babies' faces? Venus Ramey, Washington, D.C. One is now "Miss America, 1944."Which one? (a) Shaving cream (c) Snow (a) Ginny (c) Venus (b) Whipped cream (d) Ice cream (b) Betty (d) The Judge

5.—US. Marines, who recently invaded the Peleliu Island of the Palau group in the Pacific 6.—Gen. Omar N. Bradley shows Ike award given him are shown happily examining bags of what? by King of England. What's the award? (a) Girls (c) Mail ANSWERS ON PAGE 6 {a) Order of Suvorov (c) Iron Cross (b) Cheesecake (d) Overcoats lb) D.F.C. (d) Knight Comm. of Bath

UPPLY SERGEANTS, BELIEVE IT OK NOT, are popular supplying the wont line doughboys with winter clothing ik grinning appreciative doughaoy—it gets pretty cold guys in the front lines where they take their chances The first panel shows the s.s. loading up with overcoats. out there in the pillbox, despite the heat of German fire S against the enemy to deliver the goods, in this case most Driving up by Jeep as close as possible to the line, the s.s —mai es his appearance, grabbing the overcoat, like milady welcome goods — overcoats. An Army Pictorial Motion dismounts making for his destination — a foliage-hidden back home grabs for the ermine. The precious habilment Picture news reel, taken somewhere in Germany, shows the pillbox, formerly German-held, and now the temporary disappears through the aperture (hole, to you), and look, essential steps taken by the sergeant in reaching and home of a couple of doughboys. he wants more. Can you blame him?

Printed in England by The Times Publishing Company. Limited, Printing If OU3C Sallaie, London, E.C.4, and Published by the United States Armed Forces-23-1.0-44.