EUROPEAN EDITION USAFE WEATHER FORECAST One Year Ago Today NORTH & WEST: Clear, Max. 70, B-29s blast airfields on Honshu. Min. 45; SOUTH & EAST: Same, Max. U. S. lifts night-club curfew, track 73, Min. 45; BERLIN: Partly cloudy to IPES cloudy, Max. 63, Min. 40; BREMEN: ban. Army announces occupation THE SimAU- Partly cloudy, Max. 65, Min. 40; army will total 400,000. Forces in (he European Theater VIENNA: Clear, Max. 75, Min. 45. Unofficial Ne*«papef of U.S. ^nul^^^^^^^f^ Saturday, May 11, 1946 Volume 2, Number 130 20 Pfg., 2 fr„ 1 d. Coal Strike Forces N.Y. Brownout

House Group 4 pproves Westinghouse Senate Draft Measure Umberto New King as Victor Quits WASHINGTON, May 10 (AP)— The House Military Affairs Com- Walkout of mittee approved a Senate-passed 5 f resolution extending the draft law <6race ot God Titie until July 1. 75,000 Ends Chairman Andrew J. May (D.- Subtracted From Ky.) said the committee's action , May 10 (INS)— was not unanimous, indicating the Mayor William O'Dwyer ordered Ceremony measure would face opposition on an immediate "brownout" of the House floor. New York today to conserve He said he would seek unani- ROME, May * 10 (UP)—The mous consent of the House for coal as the nation's soft-coal Italian cabinet ended a five- its immediate consideration. A strike entered its 40th day with hour session accepting Um- single objection, however, could no sign of settlement. berto II as king of Italy but block House action, he added. O'Dwyer's action followed an subtracted from his title the emergency session of the city's board of health yesterday at which the phrase, "By grace of God and world's largest city was declared will out of the nation." He will Senate Ready to be in "imminent peril" because of be sworn in as king before "God power and transportation cutbacks and nation" in the acceptance made necessary by the coal shortage. To Ballot on The city board of transportation ceremony at the royal palace announced that subway service today. would be curtailed beginning Wed- Just before midnight last night, it British Loan nesday. Rush-hour service will be was announced in a communique WASHINGTON, May 10, (AP)— cut 10 per cent and other service as issued at the Quirinale Palace that much as 35 per cent, the board said. King Victor Emanuel III had signed The Senate, after a stormy debate the act of abdication at Naples which lasted almost to last mid- Electric Strike Settled earlier in the day and "according night, agreed to call the British New York joined Washington, to custom had gone into voluntary Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia and loan proposal up for a vote late exile." hundreds of smaller communities in Continuing, the communique said: today. returning to wartime lighting re- "As soon as the new king (Umberto) Unanimous agreement came on strictions. has returned to Rome, official cogniz- the vote after Majority Leader In Pittsburgh, the Westinghouse ance will be given by the council Alben W. Barkley, (D.-Ky.) had Electric Corp. announced that the of ministers." struggled to get such a pact, 115-day strike of its 75,000 employes Falcone Lucifero, minister of the urging senators to remain in ses- had been settled. It was the longest The Royal Family major postwar strike. royal household, said that the king With the abdication of King Victor Emanuel III, Italy finds herself sion in an attempt to pass the would go to Cairo to live. with a new king, Umberto, formerly Prince of Piedmont. Here he is measure last night. ' President Truman told a press The king's act brought to a close shown with the royal family, Maria Jose, the queen, sister of King Barkley predicted that the Senate conference in Washington that the a reign of 46 years, and after the Leopold of Belgium; Princess Maria Gabriella, 5; Princess Maria Pia, would pass the loan today by a government would seize and operate cel-emony he boarded the Italian the railroads if necessity to keep 11, and Victor Emanuel, 8, prince of Naples. Another child, 2ryear-old margin of 3 to 2. cruiser Duke of Abruzzi at Naples Princess Maria Beatrice, is not in the pictfure. transportation rolling. With service with Queen Elena. During the debate last night, the already greatly reduced because of Ship Circles Gulf Senate refused by 54 votes to 27 dwindling coal supplies, the rail- to, lay aside discussion of the loan After circling the Gulf of Naples, roads are faced with a threatened the ship steamed southward to- until the House had considered it. strike of 300,000 members of the Propositi 21-Power Talks Action on Strike Urged railway brotherhoods demanding wards Egypt. wage increases. The strike is set for Monarchists were said to have The vote came on a point of order raised by Sen. Edwin C. Johnson May 18. been urging the king to abdicate for Asked whether he thought the some time in the belief that it (D.-Colo.) who contended that the Cause New Big Four Split loan bill is a revenue-raising Railway Labor Act was endangered would strengthen the monarchy for by the brotherhoods' rejection of an the plebiscite on June 2, in which PARIS, May 10 (AP)—Secretary of State James F. Byrnes and Foreign measure on which the consitution requires action by the House first. emergency board's recommendation Italy is to decide between a repub- Minister Vyacheslav M. Molotov battled verbally for some two hours of a boost of 16 cents an hour. Mr. lic and an monarchy. today oh the American proposal to call a 21-nation conference" June 15, Sen. James O. Eastland (D.-Miss.) Truman said he did not think the Candolfo Pacciardi, the Republican and the Council of Foreign Ministers adjourned today's session without then asked the Senate to lay aside dispute-settling machinery of the Party leader, said the abdication agreement. Against vigorous American opposition, Molotov sought to the loan bill and take up the revised ^ was "of no importance" and could strike control bill, previously passed act had been exhausted. require four-power accord on all treaties as a preliminary' to such a con- Freight Shipments Cut in no way affect the nation's swing ference, according to American by the House but this too was towards a republic. sources. resected. (A widespread curtailment of "The House of Savoy had it-said Molotov presented the Russian Vet Home Subsidies (President Truman earlier in the freight shipment went into effect on of Umberto that he was anti- position in the form of an amend- day told his news conference that the nation's railroads at one minute Fascist," he added. "But this is ment to Byrnes' original proposal, Approved by House, he did not favor laying aside the after midnight, The Associated Press merely the traditional strategy of calling for the four major power British loan discussion in the Senate reported, as the Office of Defense the ruling house. In reality, Um- ministers to met again on June 5 Reversing Decision to take up labor legislation. He Transportation made desperate ef- berto sent thousands of telegrams and pass on the treaty drafts to the termed the British loan just as im- forts to stretch fuel supplies. of homage to Mussolini." full 21-nation conference "when they WASHINGTON, May 10 (AP)— portant. (Passenger traffic was reduced 25 The House approved ,$400,000,000 in have agreed on, the treaty drafts." Eastland had said he would move per cent by the same regulation. Byrnes Countered with a proposal housing subsidies today thus giv- the loan measure be laid aside and (Leaders of the United Mine Work- Army Probes to amend the ^Russian amendment, ing President Truman a victory in the labor disputes bill called to the ers, AFL, and hard-coal operators inserting the words, "as far as pos- his- program for construction of floor. "I want the British loan passed, were in New York to begin con- sible," after the word "agreed." He 2,700,000 houses by private enter- prise in two years, and reversing but something must be done to save (Continued on Page 8) Nazi Display argued that otherwise the ministers, the country from John L. Lewis, by their disagreements, would be a previous decision. president of the United Mine Work- The vote was 187 to 158. Hoover Arrives in Frisco The Stars and Stripes Bureau ers," Eastland declared. SAN FRANCISCO, May 10 (INS) VIENNA, May 10—CIC agents in NEW YORK, May 10 (AP)—The Wilson W. Wyatt, housing ad- A proposal that the United States —Herbert Hoover, President Tru- Salzburg are investigating an in- New York Herald Tribune today ministrator, immediately declared, make Britain a gift of $1,250,000,000 man's special food investigator, was cident in which a Nazi flag flew for quoted Sen. Arthur H. Vanden- "This throws the veterans' housing instead of the proposed loan was resting at a hotel here today after 20 minutes over the Salzburg for- berg (R.-Mich.) as saying in a program into high gear." rejected by a vote of 50 to 16. his arrival from Honolulu. tress during the V-E Day parade of trans-Atlantic telephone call from The House a month ago rejected, units of the 42nd Div. on May 8. Paris that the outlook for the for- 161 to 92, a proposal for $600,000,- The flag, which was hung from eign' ministers' conference was 000 in housing subsidies, but some the high walls of the ancient castle "pretty grim—unless you want to Southern Democrats, who teamed Ike, MacArthur Meet in Tokyo- overlooking the city, was clearly in go to Munich every day." with Republicans in the earlier view of the thousands who witnessed vote, sided this time with the Ad- the parade from 4 to 4:20 p. m. preventing the governments of the ministration. . Said Goodby in Manila in 1939 Authorities said that the top of the In a roll-call vote, 155 Democrats world from going ahead on treaty- were joined by 30 Republicans and TOKYO, May 10 (AP)—Top com- castle had been open to everyone, making. an interviewer yesterday that he two minor-party members in sup- manders of victorious Allied armies was not satified with the Army's and that no arrests had been made Molotov accused the United States port of the subsidy program, 'des- Salzburg local police have a of back-tracking the Moscow agree- —Gens. Douglas MacArthur and demobilization program. cribed by Mr. Truman as»the "very Dwight D. Eisenhower—met today "We need men and they must be theory that a child might have hung ment of last December in which, he heart" of the housing program. Op- the flag as small footprints were said, according to British sources, for the first time since the war began. provided." ^he said. "Men in service that all three governments had posing were 25 Democrats and 133 "We never thought we'd be getting must not serve an unduly long time. discovered near the wall from whicn Republicans. the flag had been draped. decided that the four ministers together out here," Eisenhower said. They must have replacements." would have to draft the treaties T^hey had not met since 1939, when Addressing American soldiers together before submitting them to Two Earthquake Shocks Eisenhower, then a lieutenant colo- stationed in Nanking, Eisenhower President of Eire Saved the other 17 nations. nel, left the staff of MacArthur, said, "We have no ulterior motives By Police From Attack The Byrnes proposal, he vsaid, Recorded at Fordham toward China, only friendship and DUBLIN, May 10 (AP)—Mounted "emasculated" the Moscow accord, NEW YORK, May 10 (UP)—Two NANKING, May 10 (AP)—Com- to help as much as possible." police prevented a crowd of about (Continued on Page 8) earthquake shocks, proably in Mex- munist and government forces He assured the GIs, "You are 380 men from attacking Sean T. ico, were recorded on the Fordham have reached a cease fire-agree- not the forgotten men of the O'Kellv, president of Eire, yesterday University seismograph here last ment in central China which of- world." while he was on his way to a Two GI Prisoners Escape night. ficial sources here said today Eisenhower invited soldiers to memorial service in honor of Ire- In MP Garb; One Caught The Rev. Joseph Lynch, Fordham opened the way for fresh discus- turn over problems to his staff, and land's 1916 rebellion dead. seismologist, said the shocks were sions on Manchuria. said that if they had any feeling The crowd, protesting against the The Stars and Stripes Bureau 2,100 miles southwest of New York PARIS, May 10—Disguised in the that they should be going home imprisonment of John McCaughey, and occurred at 11:41 and 11:46 p. m. they should speak to him personally, a hunger striker, attempted to reach uniforms of military policemen, two then commander in the Philippines. prisoners escaped from the Paris because "I do not believe in run- the presidential party, but police "Well, Mac, how are you?" said ning an impersonal Army." intervened. Detention Barracks Monday night. Blum to Stay Out of Race Eisenhower as the two shook hands. One of them, Pvt. Charles T. Mor- Eisenhower lunched with General- WASHINGTON, May 10 (AP)— "It's good to see you again," said issimo and Mme. Chiang Kai-shek Belgian Envoy Dies in London gan, 22, of Wilson, N. C, was ap- MacArthur, slapping Eisenhower on prehended yesterday. Leon Blum, head of the French loan and met Gen. George C. Marshall, LONDON. May 10 (AP)—Baron mission, declared today that he the shoulder. President Truman's personal envoy De Cartier de Marchienne, Belgian Still at large is Pvt. Leonard E. Lett, 22, of Huntington, W. Va. would not be a candidate in the Eisenhower arrived here today by to China, and other high-ranking ambassador to the Court of St. Neither was a general prisoner. French Assembly elections June 2. plane from Nanking, where he told officers. James', died today. Page 2 THE STARS AND STRIPES Saturday, May 11,1946

Europe's Diet 1946 fo Be Record Vacation rear forU.S Sub-Marginal In 13 Countries (This is the second in a series summarizing Europe's food situation by Haynes Thompson, who accom- Address all letters to: B Bag panied former President Herbert Editor, The Stars and Stripes, Hoover to 16 capitals on his emer- APO 757, U. S. Army. Include name and address. (Names are de- gency famine mission.) leted on request). Due to space ARIS, May fO (UP)—Although limitations, letters may be cut for publication, provided such editing P health experts estimate that a does not alter the meaning of daily consumption of 2,200 cal- the original. ories is the minimum at which public health and progress can be 'Too Much Freedom' maintained, : there are today 13 countries in Europe where city pop- I am a Regular Army guy ulations have an average intake who would like to offer soma of less than 1,900 calories daily. suggestions on the occupation. Of these, six countries are at or I think the reason why below the 1,500 calorie level. And American soldiers fraternize in all of Europe, there are millions so much is because they have of people who today are receiving too much freedom, and I don't less than 1,000 calories from their mean idleness. If a soldier is daily food consumption. By con- going to be the father of a trast, the average American receives fraulein's child, or if he about 3,200 calories per day; the Attractions such as these will be offered, among others, by America's beaches. catches VD, or if he walks the average Britisher, 2,800. streets throwing slurs at frau- With its average of only 1,100 cal- leins, or any of the things we ories per day per person, Poland By Carle Hodge know aren't right, is he is in more desperate need of food punished? Hell- no. People than any other nation in Europe. EW YORK, May 10 (AP)— Vacationers, like nylon buy- don't do things like that in Greece Hard Hit N ers are crowding into line America simply because Greece is perhaps next. Although early and grabbing what they can they're not allowed. Guys do indigenous foods amount to approxi- get. Lack of hotel space is the things over here that would mately 700 calories, because of lack problem tfiis year. Transportation get them a year in jail in the of transportation and faulty distri- is eased. United States. bution, between one third and one Travel experts, an Associated Also, since many of the half of Greece's 7,000,000 people get Press survey discloses, herald a flood German people are beginning none of this food. of summer tourists that will dwarf to understand English, why As a result, they are ^existing any past vacation year and spend . are GIs allowed to curse as solely on UNRRA supplies', which from six to 10 billion dollars, up to they please, anywhere and amount to only 900 calories daily. twice as much as ever before. any time. How will the Ger- * A reduction to 700 calories imme- With pleasure trips to Europe and mans ever understand the diately is viewed as unavoidable the Orient still forbidden, 1946 will American way of living if we unless shipments of food destined don't practice that living elsewhere are diverted to Greece. be a see-the-Americans-first year and the season will begin earlier right here? Other countries, with their esti- It's not the GI's fault, either, mated daily calorie consumption, are and last lAger. Finland with 1,300. Yugoslavia 1,200 Vacations will cost more, but this that he has the freedom to do to 1,800 in areas supplied by is the planned-for, saved-for vaca- with the frauleins as he likes. UNRRA, Italy 1,600, Czecho-Slova- tion year to hundreds of thousands I say that when a law is pas- kia 1,800, Holland 1,800. France 1,800, of Americans, stranded at home four sed which forces a guy to Norway 1,933 with possibly an ad- years by war and then by the tide marry the woman who bears ditional 300 from unrationed foods, of homecoming warriors. his child, if she can prove it's and Belgium with 1,950. his child, it will almost put Crowds Expected an end to fraternization, and Austria Gels Little They will jampack hotels to cut the VD rate 95 per cent. Austria, by far the worse among oc- capacity, turn highways into rivers And I think a police force in cupied countries, is down to an of touring cars, cram trains and Service veterans view new vacation styles for men. Germany is all that's needed. average of less than 1,000 calories buses and climb, in record numbers, I'm on my way home for a daily in the American. British and into the airways. of America's 169 national parks and Lipton regatta at Panama City, Fla. 90-day furlough, and I hope French zones, although theoretically things 'are changed by the Many will be disappointed. monuments will be open—and they As before the war, the famed its ration is 1,200. In Germany, the Virtually no new hotels- have been expect a record-breaking 25,000,000 time I get back, for we are ration even in the U. S. zone is Central City play festival in Colo- only making the German built since before Pearl Harbor, and visitors. i now down to 1,275. It is 1,045 in rado, the Great Lakes regatta and people bitter, and that leads even with those^ relinquished by the In Canada, always a favorite of national air races in Cleveland, the the British zone and less than 1,000 armed forces after the war, not all to the one thing anyone can in- the French zone. • U. S. tourists, the famed hotels at colorful Gallup Indian ceremonial the would-be travellers eyeing mid- Banff and Lake Louise will unbar and Massachusetts' Berkshire guess. —Pfc, 14th Inf.Regt, Sweden and Denmark alone need summer jaunts can be housed. no help. their doors after wartime closings. Symphonic festival will'draw their In his recommendations for meet- From both North and South Mexico expects 30 per cent more share. Civilian CQ ing the present crisis Hoover used America, the tip to travellers is tourists than in 1944 and hopes it Three-fourths again as many the same: Hotel reservations must can accommodate- them all. On March 25, a circular \ what he termed "the grim and motorists as in 1941, the American from Western Base Section dangerous base" of 1,500 calories in be made early. Typically, the Maine Tourist Automobile Association estimates, estimating the very minimum The transportation prospect is Association reports 22,000 persons will be driving cross-country. authorized the use of civilians for pulling charge of quarters amount of food imports necessary to brighter. on its hotels' waiting list. The Escorted tours of the country by carry through until the next harvest. By June, railroads will have re- Northwest Tourist Association of special train will be resumed by the and as duty officers. When we On this basis, there must be ceived little new equipment be- Washington and Oregon is adver- American Express. Pan America left the Army we thought we loaded on ships for the Continent cause of strikes and shortages in tising "don't come in July or Au- World Airways is sponsoring guided were all through with CQ, during the four months between the plants that turn out , rolling gust." air tours through Latin America. and the rest of that stuff. April 1 and July 31 a total of stock. But almost all coaches and Americans love outdoor pagean- Travel is changing even for June —Civilian. 5,300,000 tons of cereals and 300,000 Pullmans, their demobilization job try, and this year there'll be more brides. One New York travel bu- tons of fats. In addition. 100,000 done, are carrying mufti again. ^and bigger shows. They begin, ap- reau says that of 2,138 honeymoon Editor's note: This letter was tons of special food is needed to The wingspread of the airlines propriately, in Oregon with the tours it is arranging, only six are referred to G-l, which replied: restore the more than 20,000,000 Portland rose festival early in June for Niagara Falls. "Due to reductions in military subnormal and diseased children in has increased manyfold since V-J In 1946, vacationing is different. day. With fleets of new planes, and end in September with the personnel, the Western Bass Europe. many reconverted warcraft, they'll (fommand, in order to main- carry more passengers—and at a tain effective security and to Official Bulletin faster pace—this summer than ever. cope with any emergency Travel Bars Down which might arise, has pro~ The Official Bulletin column is pub- Officially, except for the war- vided for a limited number of lished in conformity with Letter AG 000.76 GAP-AGO Hq. USFET, 23 Sept. wrecked countries, where only es- civilian employes to act as 1945, Subject: Official Bulletin Column sential business trips are allowed, 'Night Duty . Officers.' Em- in The Stars and Stripes, to assure rapid and complete dissemination of official all travel bars are down. ployes are given eight hours announcements to all USFET personnel. But ships, still piping food into time off following such as-, Location of Personnel hungry Europe, are scarce for signment. The following named men should be pleasure trips, even around the "The occasional assignments alerted for immediate return to the United Americas. States. Individuals will report to CO at of civilians are kept at the once and contact the AG Emergency Per- The first cruise since 1941, the absolute minimum, and have sonnel Locator Branch, Hq. USFET by American Express says, will sail to telephone immediately giving unit of been generally accepted in a assignment and APO, call Frankfurt Red the West Indies aboard the Nor- Line 33 or 22355, or 22561. wegian luxury motorship Stella spirit consistent with the Thvedt, Elmer, Cpl., 37590569; Smith, emergency nature of such as- Arthur, Pvt., 35872613; Minghi, Gene H., Polaris. Cpl., 36659580; Eeed, Clifton L., Pfc, 1463- The Grace line will run ships signments." 114; Villotti, Paul U., Cpl., 31088780; Raleigh, Otho D., Jr., T/5, 13120864; Juderback, through the Panama Canal to South Kenneth E., Pvt., 34811139; Oneal, Leon J., America's west coast, and the Delta Berlin Tour Wanted Sgt, 34006262; Uyekubo, Masaru, 36372109; Line, after July, from New Orleans What about tours to Berlin? Fangl, Herman A., Pfc, 42063927: Jamison, to South America's east coast. Iselah, Pvt., 42066546. I know a lot of GIs would like FOR THE ADJUTANT GENERAL: If the Americas are wide open, to see the biggest city in GEORGE ZANE so are tourists' pocketbooks. Germany. Major, AGD The American Express says va- Assistant Adjutant General. cations will cost about 15 per cent —T/5 Peter Arena, more than before the war—besides a 15 per cent luxury tax on trans- Who Won the War? portation. From the day Gen. Mc- To skirt the hotel shortage, many travellers will continue a trick they Narney ordered a crackdown learned during the war—taking on lax discipline, we hear nothing but adverse criticism Vol. 2, No. 130, Saturday, May U, 1946 vacations early or late. The European Edition is^ published Actually, the experts say, there from the GIs. Why don't you at Altdorf, near Nurnberg, Bavaria, will be no well-defined summer boys look around? for the U. S. armed forces under the auspices of the Information and vacation season. Resorts, to meet All you ask is, "Who won Education Service, USFET, Tel.: the demand, are running full tilt this war anyway?" Nurnberg Civilian Switch, Altdorf 160. the year around. Correspondence to this edition should Well, I will tell you. In the be addressed to APO 124, U. S. Army, Cape Cod hotels, which formerly Pacific it was Errol Flynn, in New York Office, 205 East 42d St. opened in June, are taking guests the Atlantic Humphrey Bogart, This is not an official publication of in April and May. Florida, normally the U S. Army. Entered as second a winter resort, will remain open and the atomic bomb was class matter March 15, 1943, at the invented by Don Ameche. postoffice, New Yojk, N. Y„ under all summer. the Act of March 3, 1879. For the first time since 1941, all —M. T. Homola, W.D.I,

f 1 B.D.it; Saturday, May 11,1946 THE STARS AND STRIPES Page 3 r The Blisses of Kisses From Missus First War Orphans Sail

Families Land at Bremen, Homes in U.S. Entrain to Join Soldiers Waiting for 75 BREMERHAVEN, May 10 (UP)— propeller trouble. The Barry arrived Stateless Waif• s The second contingent of dependents here April 28. FRANKFURT, May 10 (AP)— of U. S. occupation troops disem- NEW YORK, May 10 (AP)—The Seventy-five war orphans, stranded barked today and entrained for Ber- Army transport Christobal sailed in Germany without homes, parents lin, Frankfurt, Munich and Vienna. for Europe with 40 wives and 33 or even known nationalities, will Arriving last night aboard the children of American occupation sail from Bremerhaven aboard the Marine Flasher before Sunday for George Goethals, Army transport, troops. the United States, where they have the group included 162 wives, 156 The passengers, who will debark been offered homes by the U. S. children and two soldiers' mothers. at Bremerhaven and Le Havre, also Committee for the Care of European The Goethals left New York a day included three brigadier generals, Children. after the Thomas H. Barry, first de- Francis H. Lanahan, Edward Noyes They are the first contingent of pendent vessel, but was delayed by and Thomas Howard, about 2,000 such orphans gathered from war-wrecked towns of Ger- Spring Is IVo Excuse many by the committee headed by Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt and MG in Bavaria In Mahanoy City Marshal^ Field III, the publisher. MAHANOY CITY, Pa., May 10 Names Mostly Unknown Bans Royalist (UP)—It's spring in Mahanoy City, Either their parents were victims and young men's fancies are tur- of Nazi persecution or they were ning to thoughts of love—but not abandoned by their parents. Their lightly. nationalities cannot be ascertained. PoliticalBloc Widespread public "necking" No country will claim them. Even MUNICH, May 10 (AP)—The was "disgraceful," a citizens' com- their real names are mostly un- American Military Government to- mittee told the city council. known. Their ages range from nine day clamped down on the growing The council ruled that necking months to 18 years. Bavarian Monarchist Party, dis- on front porches and in parked Each wears a tag bearing his or solving the party entirely and pro- cars was henceforth a public nuis- her* name, probably chosen at hibiting any royalist political activity. ance punishable by law. random. Each represents a story of MG officers in Bavaria said the tragedy which will never be fully order to disband the "King and known. Fatherland" Party had come from Some are badly undernourished, "higher, authorities." First Jet Planes like 9-month-old Fasil Krainik, whose scrawny little body is topped (It was recalled in Frankfurt that by a pinched face which resembles Radio Moscow recently charged that Tested in Zone that of a withered old man. Fasil Husbands and wives, reunited in Berlin's Wannsee RTO, show how Anglo-American authorities, with was deserted, and found nearly they feel about each other after a long separation. The low train plat- Vatican authority, were sponsoring BREMEN, May 10 (UP)—The first starved. But so was 11-month-old form is no obstacle to one officer, who, with the aid of a friend, gets a monarchist reaction" in Bavaria.) of the Army Air Forces' 32 new Gerta Kusiealkiewicz, who now has boost to give his wife the first kiss in a long time. Announcement of the disbanding jet-propelled fighters—P-80 Shoot- been fed by the U. S. committee of the party was made by Lt. Col. ing Stars—were ground-tested today and UNRRA into a round-faced Eugene Keller, director of Munich in preparation for impending test healthy baby for whom several Military Government. flights. adoption offers already have been The jet fighters, which recently received. Party Licensed Temporarily arrived for assembling at the The Monarchist Party was licensed Bremen airport, will be flown from Aided by President temporarily last January for poli- the Autobahn outside Bremen since Some of the older children have tical activity confined within no adequate fields are available at relatives' in the U. S. who will adopt Munich's city limits. present. Eight-thousand feet of Auto- them. Homes will be found for The party was founded to restore bahn are being cleared for the tests. others through approved agencies the monarchy in Bavaria and place The tests will be made by Lock- operating under the jurisdiction of crown Prince Rupprecht on the heed test pilot Bob Harlow before the U. S, Children's Bureau of the throne which his father, Ludwig III, the jet fighters are turned over to Department of Labor. Their im- lost in 1918. the 55th Fighter Gp., which will migration has been expedited by The Monarchist Party was led by use them for patrol duty. President Truman's directive giving Dr. Max Lebsche, a noted Munich preference to orphans. surgeon. While waiting for the boat the The party, beyond enrolling a total N.Y. Times Writer orphans are housed in a sunny toy- of 550 active members, had not en- filled nursery at Bremerhaven gaged in extensive political activity, Wins Pulitzer Prize under the care of a former UNRRA although one leading supporter, N E W Y O R K , May 10 (AP)— nurse, who will accompany them to Baron Erwin von Aretin, recently America. Arnaldo Cortesi of the New York Plans for the orphans' sailing said the party had 300,000 inactive Times won a $500 Pulitzer Prize supporters in Munich alone. were announced by the Bremen for distinguished foreign cor- Monarchist Gives Views Port Command through the Frank- respondence for his dispatches from furt headquarters of USFET. Von Aretin told the Associated Buenos Aires. Press: "The Monarchist Party has Homer Bigart of the New York no need for expansion or to run can- Herald Tribune won an award for Chicago Gunman to Die didates because most of the Christ- "distinguished reporting during 1945 For Slaying Car Dealer ian Social Union candidates are from the Pacific war theater." Monarchists by belief." William Laurence, also of the CHICAGO, May 10 (AP)—A cri- The right-of-center Christian So- minal court jury today convicted New York Times, won a price for Julius (Dolly) Weisberg, 49,. former cial Union won a smashing victory an eyewitness account of the atom in recent rural elections throughout bombing of Nagasaki and subsequent Chicago night club owner, of first the American zone of Germany. articles on the atomic bomb. degree murder in the fatal shooting An MG official commenting on of Joseph McKnight on Oct. 23, 1945, the dissolution of the party said, and ordered the death penalty. "The party was disbanded on orders Salvation Army Picks Chief McKnight, 46, an automobile dealer from higher authorities. No further LONDON, May ,10 (AP)—The Sal' and former War Manpower Com- royalist or monarchists activities vation Army high council today mission consultant in Jacksonville, noment of bliss, Maj. John I. Saad is reunited with his wife will be permitted in Bavaria." elected Albert William Thomas Fla., was slain in a Loop saloon Ellen, of San Antonio. The Saads will make their home in Bad Kis- Osborn, of London, as general of the following an argument between him singen, where the major is now stationed. organizaton. and Weisberg over' car ceiling prices. Ohio Businessman Dies in Plane Crash ROCHESTER, N. Y., May 10 (AP) U. S. Civilians Ordered to Pay —Three persons died in the flaming wreckage of a private plane which crashed into a mountain during a For Army BiIIets9Transportation rainstorm. FRANKFURT, May 10, (AP)— in European' areas outside the State police identified them as L. American and Allied civilians who American occupied zones. L. Leveque, 52, Columbus (Ohio) have been sleeping in. U. S. Army businessman, a woman believed to be his wife and Robert Chester billets and riding Army vehicles U. S. NEWSMEN IN PARIS Johns, 31, of Columbus, former free of charge in Germany and SEEK OWN FOOD STORE Army flier, who had piloted the Austria were placed on a cash- PARIS, May 10 (AP)—Negotiations plane. payment basis on orders issued to open a food store for American Leveque was the owner of New today by USFET headquarters. newsmen in Paris were announced York's Park Vendome Hotel; one of Thousands of civilian workers today by Geoffrey Parsons Jr., editor the owners of the Lincoln-Leveque employed by military-connected of the European edition of the New Tower, Columbus office building, agencies and newspaper correspon- York Herald Tribune, who said that and head of the Allen Tool' Co., air- dents were affected by the order. a plea would be forwarded to the plane-parts firm in Springfield, Previously they have been paying U. S. War Department to continue Ohio. only for meals, clothing and post its present food arrangements until exchange supplies, with living July 1, when the store could be quarters, transportation , and hospi- set up. German Ambassador to Japan talization provided by the Army— Orders have ben placed for food Is Returned to Peiping a custom begun in wartime when to be imported from the United no other facilities were available in States and Denmark., The new PEIPING, May 10 (AP)—Maj. Gen. enemy territory. project was made necessary by the Eugen Ott, German ambassador to Rates of 52 daily were1 fixed for announcement last week that the Japan during the war, was returned sleeping rooms, with $1 for each War Department was withdrawing here from Japan. medical call and $6. a day for its support for the American national He was arrested here last December hospitalization. Transportation char- interests commissary at which Amer- and on Gen. Douglas MacArthur's ges will be 10 cents a mile for ican business men and other civil- orders sent to Tokyo for trial, but privately hired vehicles and regular ians drew food staples. was later released. civilian rates for railroad trains. Parsons said, however, that he In good spirits, Ott said, "I proved Simultaneously, it was announced doubted the new supplies could ' Mai Dale F Benadom shows his wife Helen how he feels about her very useful to the Allies. MacArthur all such direct Army assistance as reach Paris by May 15, when the arrival in Germany. Mrs. Benadom came from Bartletsville, Okla., and promised me to work for German rations, billets and transportation War Department support was to be reconstruction." will live with her husband in Ansbach. - signal corps Photos would be withdrawn from civilians withdrawn. I ■

Page 4 THE STARS AND STRIPES Saturday, May 11,1946 Loaded Superfort Body to Replace Goes Up 39,360 Feet Klan Initiates MANILA, May 10 (AP)—An 8th Air Force Superfortress flew up to Georgians to UNRRA Urged 39,360 feet with a load of 22,000 pounds of bombs over Guam By LaGuardia May 7 to break the world's alti- Jukebox Beat tude record for land planes in the ATLANTA. May 10 (AP)—Thai WASHINGTON, May 10 (INS)— 22,046-pound class, Army Air fiery cross of the Ku-Klux-Klan Fiorgllo H. LaGuardia, director- Forces headquarters in the Pacific burned again on historic Stone general of UNRRA, called for the announced today. Mountain today, and leaders of the The previous record was 23,759 establishment of a permanent board order proclaimed the rebirth of the to control the allocation of food feet, set in 1938 by Karl Heinz "invisible empire" which rose to supplier to famine areas. Kindermann, a German. prominence in the 1920s. In a speech before the UNRRA A thousand or mpre white-robed council. LaGuardia also criticized and hooded Klansmen from Geor- the administration of displaced gia and surrounding states initiated persons in Europe and appealed to Kidnaper, PW several hundred new members in the U. S. to place strict limitations an hour-long ceremony at the birth- on industrial use of edible fats, place of the order. particularly in paints and soap. Sought in Texas While a huge cross burned on the The UNRRA director said a per- side of Stone Mountain, largest ex- manent board would eliminate posed piece of granite in the world, speculation and competitive buying Slaying Series the ceremony was illuminated by between the nations of the world. four smaller crosses within a circle Hits DP Administration TEXARKANA, Texas, May 10 formed by the white-robed figures. He added that the work now (UP)—An escaped German prisoner Jukebox Background being carried out by UNRRA should of war and an unidentified red- A thousand spectators at the rock- be taken over upon termination of haired kidnaper were the latest sus- strewn foot of the mountain watched the relief agency by a permanent pects today in the search for a gun- the initiation, while boogie-woogie operating body of one the United man who has terrorized this Texas- music blared from a jukebox in a Nations commissions. Arkansas border region with five nearby tavern. LaGuardia bluntly declared that slayings in six weeks. Dr. Samuel Green, leader of the the administration of DPs was not Klan in Georgia, said the Klan had satisfactory. He said that the armies Police of four states and agents of a membership of more then 20,000 of occupation were not trained to the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Georgia alone. The Klan is no administer DPs and painted out combed the Southwest for Charles longer active on a national basis, but that UNRRA had very little power A. Holt, a PW who escaped from an functions under state setups, he Arkansas camp and is described as to deal with them, adding that the declared. agency had been the center of "very* dangerous," and a red-haired The resurgence of the Klan in the attacks because of situations ove* man dressed in khaki who abducted South comes at a time when Negroes which it had no control. Herbert Thomas, of Kilgore, Texas, are voting in "white primaries" for LaGuardia also criticized the Tuesday night and forced him to the first time and when the CIO and failure of the U. S. to open its drive to Lufkin, Texas. AFL are launching an intensive doors to DPs. V-2 Rocket Tested by Moonlight '"I'm the man they're looking for campaign to organize Southern in those five killings in Texarkana," In an appeal for strict controls Moonlight reflects weirdly from the nose of a V-2 rocket bomb, just workers. over the use of edible fats, La- Thomas quoted the kidnaper as before a secret night test by U. S. Army Ordnance at the proving saying. Guardia pointed out that the avail- grounds at White Sands, N. M. Numerous such missiles are being fired able supply on hand for starving at the desert experimental grounds in tests of the German weapons. News of the manhunt eased the countries is inadequate. tension slightly among residents of Court Refuses the Texarkana area, but isolated rural homes still blazed with light PHILADELPHIANS STORM STORE Alcatraz Writs FOR J.3,000 POUNDS OF BUTTER last night as armed farmers stood Love Cheater Must Repay guard over their families. SAN FRANCISCO, May 10 (AP)— PHILADELPHIA, May 10 (AP)—It In the last six weeks, two young looked like a circus in downtown couples and a farmer have been shot Federal Judge Louis Goodman Philadelphia as 8,000 to 9,000 men Her Postal Sweethearts to death and a farmer's wife denied without comment yesterday and women stormed Reading Term- wounded, all with no apparent habeas corpus petitions presented inal Market to buy butter.. The New by attorneys who said they had DETROIT, May 10 (AP)—Federal Judge Ernest A. O'Brien ruled that motive. Jersey Federated Egg Producers Mrs. Beulah Geraldine Brill, Port Hurou (Mich.) housewife, must repay been asked to defend the three con- Cooperative put 12,000 pounds up the money she obtained from men with whom she carried on "lovelorn" vict-survivors of the Alcatraz for sale , at the ceiling price of 55 DRAGNET OUT IN NEBRASKA mutiny, but could not reach their correspondence. Mrs. Brill, who has a 22-year-old son and a daughter of AFTER DAYLIGHT BANK HOLDUP clients to consult with them. cents a pound, one pound to a 17, pleaded guilty to a Federal charge of using the mails to defraud. The customer. HUMBOLDT, Neb., May 10 (AP)— Convicts Miran Edgar Thompson, court sentenced her to two years' imprisonment, but suspended sentence Sam Shockley and Clarence Carnes, on condition she pay back the3> —— Police have clamped a ring around southeast Nebraska in an attempt to were all named by James A. Johns- money. Federal probation officers capture the gunman who robbed the ton, warden, as having been among Army Missions will determine the amount she owes Soldier, 14, Jailed Home State Bank of Humboldt of the leaders of the uprising, which each man. $821 Tuesday. It was the bank's ended in death for two prison guards Federal authorities said she ad- For Going AWOL third daylight holdup in 16 years. and three inmates. mitted having received, $1,000 from No formal charges have been On Defense Job The bandit handed E,mil Kotouc, made pending assembling of infor- Paul Schwald, of Puyallup, Wash., With His Bride. 15 president of the bank, it paper sack WASHINGTON, May 10 (UP)— over a period of time under the mation, which Frank Hennessy, SEATTLE, May 10 (INS)—Army and ordered him to "fill it up." U. S. attorney, said would be pre- The Army already has a military pretense she was ill and needed authorities were awaiting instruc- mission in every Central and Latin money for medical care before she sented in two or three weeks to a tions yesterday on what to do with Federal grand jury. _ American country working to pro- could marry him. . * a 14-year-old soldier accused of War In 25 Years, mote the hemispheric defense plan Ernest Spagnoli, a lawyer, said he, Mrs. Brill said that in eight years going AWOL for a honeymoon with Robert A. Boon and Milton Dale outlined by President Truman in a she had corresponded with about • his 15-year-old bride. U.S. Poll Predicts message to Congress Monday, Army had been retained "through a man 100 men. She obtained names, she Harry James Slyter was held at in Reno" and final arrangements spokesmen said. said, from correspondence clubs, DENVER, May 10 (UP)—After less the Fort Lawton jail in Seattle, than eight months of peace, seven had been made for the defense in The missions include officers of then wrote to them representing Sacramento next week. Meanwhile, herself as "single, young and inter- awaiting word from Buckley Field out of 10 Americans expect to fight air and ground uhits, who have authorities. he said, they wanted a writ to been trying to eliminate the use of ested in marriage." another war within the next 25 The story came to light when the years, a nationwide opinion survey compel the Alcatraz warden to European military equipment, and "I started writing letters for fun," child bride, the former Patsy Ann produce the convicts. replace it with American equipment. she said. "Then some of the men revealed. Herbert, of Denver, tearfully told Only one year after the end of Chile and Argentina in particular started to send money. I found it newsmen of her husband's plight. have European-made ordnance easier to keep it than to send it the war in Europe, 68 per cent of 14 ALCATRAZ SCENARIOS She said Slyter had enlisted in the American people believe Amer- SUBMITTED TO STUDIOS useless in the defense plan, the back." Ketchikan, Alaska, last October, giv- ica will become embroiled in another HOLLYWOOD, May 10 (UP)— spokesmen said. They added that war within the next quarter century, the War Department had been ing his age as 18. Some 14 film manuscripts based on surprised by the suddenness of the More U.S. Supplies The couple met less than a month the poll showed. last week's Alcatraz prison mutiny President's announcement. Army, ago at a Denver drugstore where the The survey was conducted by the have been submitted to film com- Navy and State Department work For Babies on Way girl was working. He was stationed national opinion research center of panies thus far. Producers were said on it had been on the "top secret" at Buckley Field. the University of Denver. The re- to expect an eventual flood of many list, they asserted. The Stars and Stripes Bureau They were married by a Denver velation of increasing "war pes- hundreds. FRANKFURT, May 10—Plans for minister on April 19, after he again simism" in the American public, dis- State Department opposition to closed that 19 per cent of the people the regime of^sjuan Peron in a complete maternity service for had declared he was 18. The couple dependents of military and civilian came to Seattle 10 days ago, and think there will be another war Small Bands to Accompany Argentina was reported to have Slyter began to worry about being within the next 50 years. Only 30 blocked development of the defense personnel in Europe were announced per cent of the public believed a USO Shows to Europe plan. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower today by the theater chief surgeons AWOL. Early this week he called Fort Lawton and was told to "come year ago that the U. S. would go The Stars and Stripes Bureau was said to have urged that the office. to-war again within 25 years. That FRANKFURT, May 10—All the plan should be developed and that out and talk things over." Already on the high seas, a ship- He did and was put in jail. figure grew to 44 per cent by last USO Camp Show units now being Argentina be included. ment of infants' supplies ranging September. formed in the United States for ship- from identification beads to diaper ment in the European Theater will Two Jewish DPs Found Dead, material and delivery tables was 5-Cent Air Mail Proposed have musical accompaniment furn- scheduled for distribution to approx- WASHINGTON, May 10 (UP)— 50-Cent Ticket Wins Home ished by small bands within the Believed Slain in Munich imately 50 dispensaries and hospitals The House Post Office Committee DETROIT, May 10 (AP)—The line show, Theater Special Services an- in the American zone. recommended a 5-cent air-mail forms on the right for the apart- nounced today. MUNICH, May 10 (UP)—The ment of Mr. and Mrs. Minus, whose This system will help ease the bodies of two Jewish DPs were found The announcement stressed the postage rate today. Reporting ap- fact that maternity facilities were proval of a reduction from the pre- 13-year-old daughter Marilyn won shortage of trained musicians in the yesterday in the village of Planegg, a $15,000 home ,at the Detroit theater caused by redeployment. In about five miles from here, accord- already available and fully provided, sent 8-cent rate, the committee said the lower fee would result in enough Builders Show. Marilyn bought a the past, it was necessary to move ing to Military Government officials. and that incoming supplies were soldier orchestras from town to town simply an enlargement of the extra business to recover any losses chance on a six-room "ideal home" A preliminary investigation indi- resulting from the reduction. for 50 cents. to play with the units. cated that the victims had been present setup. murdered in Munich and that the By Milton Caniff bodies were dumped where they Terry and The Pirates fBv Courtes* of Newt Syndicate) were found. Meanwhile, officials were investigating an unconfirmed report that the bodies of two Ger- mans had been found in the same area. Investigations of DP murders have been started by public safety offi- cials, the German police and by the Committee for Liberated Jews in the American zone.

Moscow Trade Talks Start MOSCOW, May 10 (AP)—Yugo- slavia has sent N. M. Petrovitch, foreign trade minister, to Moscow for a discussion of commercial ar- rangements.

f 8.DJ.C.

/ Page §, Saturday, May 11,1946 THE STARS AND STRIPES By Chester Gould U.S.Said to Give Dick Tracy (By Courtesy of Chicago Tribune Syndicate, inc.) AND AT THE oier SMITH B O ftENTv T HOW wvOUiX pHE' S 8EEJW Axis Secrets to R INDUSTRIES I* n/v NAME ( i. IKE C 1 COuGHINCO C 3 THF NEW ^80RATOR> I'V NEW > MAKE ONE MINUSES I o 15 WONDERFUL MR.,'"WITH owN&f. HERE WONDER IF Russia, France HUNDRED t F HE'S OKAY? TRACY A/ON' —. PLEASURE. ff £* A DOLLARS WASHINGTON, May 10 (UP)-

Both Russia and France have been ON EP MIND, )y±- -^-yF-^B given details of former secret Axis SPEAK (Jf- war developments, including radar, Comr^o nUed States Department of Commerce, according to testimony rtZ\th% SAnate Committee ™

„„?r£en added that neither Russia * *u r-anCe had offered t0 share any or their war-won secrets with the United States. Sources close to the subcommittee Pauley to Sift said, 'Russia and France are 5 Sailors Held /ke and Frankie Honored spending a lot of money to procure information we possess, but the Peace Problem Department of Commerce insists [u Sabotaging everything which is made available For Examples to Youth for those countries should also be (n Manchuria given to American manufacturers." Of Jap Cruiser Non-Secret Items Sold PEARL HARBOR. May 10 (AP)— WASHINGTON, May 10 (AP)—• Court-martial specifications were The mission of Edwin W, Pauley, Meantime, the War Assets Ad- prepared today against five U. S. U. S. member of the Allied Repara- ministration is selling non-secret Navy crewmen accused of sabotaging radar and other wartime electronic tions Committee, to the Far East, the Japanese cruiser Sakawa while may determine how successfully the devices to foreign purchasers as en route to Bikine Atoll and thereby well as domestic buyers, it was United State's and Soviet Russia endangering the lives of their ship can cooperate in the vital Man- learned. And a Senate Judiciary mates. Subcommittee studying the sales churian problem. Cmdr. L. W. McConnaughay, expressed the belief that the dis- Technically, Pauley is seeking to director of discipline for the 14th posal of non-secret items would learn what former Japanese assets Naval District, announced prepara- in Manchuria and Korea cap be assist other countries in developing tions of the charges, but said he was similar equipment still classified as made available as reparations to the not yet ready to report their exact Allied countries which won the secret by the U. S. nature. The five men were held It was revealed that the War Sinatra Ameche Grimm Eisenhower Pacific war. meanwhile as prisoners at large. On Industrial Survey Assets Administration, at the CHICAGO, May 10 (AP)—Gen. Service Command, accepted the Lt. David Mergill, chief engineer Actually, he will try to find request of the subcommittee, had aboard the Sakawa as she made the Dwight D. Eisenhower and Frank award for Eisenhower. Others held up a proposed deal whereby a receiving medals included Charlie whether the industrial equipment hazardous 40-day cruise to Bikini Sinatra were among 10 men honored remaining in the two countries is large manufacturer would sell sur- to become an atomic-bomb target, by the Catholic Youth Organization Grimm,' manager of the Cubs, and plus electronic items to foreign Don Ameche, movie actor. sufficient to contribute to the said the sabotage had taken place for outstanding work in the field of economic development of China and buyers. on April 5, 6 and 7 at Eniwetok. youth at the CYO's 14th annual Korea, a factor the United States Steam Lines Cut sportsmen's dinner. PATTERSON SAVES FRANKIE believes is essential to lasting peace The crewmen, he said, knocked Most Rev. Bernard J. Sheil, FROM ONSLAUGHT OF MOB in East Asia. Six-Man Committee out the ship's fuel system, smashed auxiliary bishop of Chicago, pres- DETROIT, May 10 (AP)—Thanks President Truman, at a recent Proposed by Byrd to instruments and valves and cut ented Sinatra with the Club of to Secretary of War Robert P. Patter- press conference, said that he high-pressure steam lines so that "if Champions Award for his efforts in son, Frank Sinatra is safe and sound. wanted to emphasize the importance Streamline Congress anyone had walked in front of that the interest of racial and religious Frankie's plane arrived at the air- he attached to Pauley's mission. leak it could have cut them in two." tolerance. He termed the radio singer port a half-hour ahead of schedule China, the President said, must WASHINGTON, May 10 (UP)— McConnaughay said the accused an "honest, fearless and forthright and police were sent to escort him. be enabled to use fully the natural Sen. Harry F. Byrd (D.-Va.), chair- men hoped to be "relieved of duty fighter against intolerance, who The faithful, out in force, swarmed resources and industries of Man- man of Senate Rules Committee, aboard the filthy warship." utilized his influence with his vast across the field, mobbing the plane. churia, while Korea must be put in following to further those ideals Patterson arrived, gallantly serft sent to the Senate a resolution to If the Sakawa could legally be a position to develop its own establish a special six-man com- which are the heartbeat of our his escort to Frankie's rescue and resources and industries, if any long- termed an American ship, Mc- democracy." with the aid of a flying wedge of mittee to consider legislation for Connaughay said, damaging it wil- range program for the peaceful Brig. Gen. William Miley, 6th bluecoats, Sinatra made it. streamlining Congress. Byrd in- fully could be punishable by death. economy of East Asia was to be formed the Senate that he would worked out. The Sakawa's voyage from Japan ask for passage of the resolution State Department's Views early next week. was a 40-day tale of woe. Pearl The action marked a triumph for Harbor staff officers related they 'Signal' From Bacon to Reader Mr. Truman's comments coincided Sen. Robert M. LaFollette (Prog.- termed it an "remarkable exhibition with a similar statement issued by Wis.), chairman of the special of seamanship" that she reached the State Department, which re- Senate-House streamlining com- Bikini. Observed in Shakespeare Poems flected these points: mittee. LaFollette introduced the VIGOROUS American opposition resolution in order to prevent LONDON, May 10 (INS)—While the 1946 Shakespeare season gets into to the reported Russian removal streamlining plans from being French Banker Believed full swing at Stratford-on-Avon the perennial controversy over the from Manchuria of a large amount broken up among several different Lost Overboard at Sea authorship of the works ascribed to William Shakespeare is being reopened of Japanese industrial equipment re- committees. again in London with a new assertion that further evidence pointed to garded by the Soviet Union as "war "In my judgment," Byrd said, VANCOUVER, May 10 (AP)— Sir Francis Bacon as the real author. R. L. Eagle, a leading member of booty." "establishment of this special com- Investigation of the mysterious the Bacon Society, said the evidence related to the first two poems of EQUALLY strong American op- mittee is the most expeditious and disappearance of Henri Bar indicated Shakespeare, Venus and Adonis,"f> position to Russia's proposal to effective way to consider the plan that the French millionaire banker first published in 1593, and "Lucrece," "The references which I contend China that the two countries should of legislative reorganization. It fell overboard when the small vessel which came out a year later. are to Sir Francis Bacon are not operate jointly some of the basic will have the merit of having one on which he was travelling from exactly by cipher, but rather by Manchurian industries. Eagle, who has been sifting evi- committee to report the bill em- Shanghai to Paris lurched during signal. I have discovered the signal dence in the controversy for 30 years, AMERICAN fear that the Soviet bodying committee recommenda- rough weather six days out from twice in 'Venus and Adonis' and Ave Union might follow the same pat- tions." Shanghai en route to Vancouver, claims to have discovered a series times in 'Lucrece.'" tern in the northern part of Korea. B. C, police here said today. of "hidden" references in the two poems, which in his opinion unmis- Brazil Bans Reds From Office Price of Denmark Tour Raised takably identify Bacon as the author Her Hair Is Garter RIO DE JANEIRq, May 10 (INS)— The Stars and Stripes Bureau of them both. Newest of the Hollywood wolf- The newspaper o'Globo reported bait gadgets is this garter, braided that the Brazilian cabinet had FRANKFURT, May 10—Effective "Whoever wrote those two poems decided to dismiss all Communists May 15, the price of the Denmark is the author of all the so-called. from the wearer's hair. Starlet holding important government tour will be increased from $25 to Shakespeare works," Eagle insisted. Mary Tharp displays her ornamen- $39, Special Services said today. tal stocking supporter, which is said to be the creation of Max Blaek Market Pepper | Factor, movie make-up man. Black Market Raid, Jailbreak Prompts Pirate Ring! LONDON, May 10 (INS)—Fantastic i Put Berlin Back in Crime Race prices for rubber and pepper in j the black markets of Singapore and j BERLIN, May 10 (INS)—Berliners arrested by British military police. They were taken to the Lehrter Sumatra are causing an outbreak of are very touchy these days about Strasse jail and searched. piracy on the high seas, according their former metropolis being just There were eight passports of to a dispatch from Singapore. another German city and no longer various nationalities, a dozen forged Indonesian natives are preying on the Reich capital where everything identification papers, counterfeit each other in small craft as the is bigger and better than anywhere rubber stamps of various Allied black market products are shipped across the Straits of Malacca, a else in the Fatherland. military agencies, $18,000 in cash as well as 3,000 English pound notes favorite pirate haunt in the days "Even crime here isn't what it of the China clippers. used to be," they say. and two thousand French francs. A search of their apartment pro- Numerous cases of hijackings are Today the good burghers breathed duced thousands of cartons of reported with pepper as the chief easier on that score. Berlin once cigarettes in addition to $250,000 objective for resale to America, more has had a big-time gangster worth of other black market goods fetching four times the pre-war drama, complete with international and a suitcase full of forged papers price. crooks jailbreak, fantastic loot and and stamps of French, British and a wounded chief of detectives. Belgian occupation offices. Police Nab Suspect Accused It all started when two young Half an hour alter the pair had Of Threatening De Gaulle Kin Rumanians were arrested as been locked up, Rambela broke, out VERSAILLES, May 10 (AP)—Police suspected confidence men. of jail. The Berlin chief of detectives, announced the arrest of a 39-year- Hermann Reichardt, personnally Dragos Rambela, 31, and Con- old man accused of threatening the stants Bart, 22, both with long took up the chase. life of Gen. Charles De Gaulle's re- ' He located his quarry in one of police records in various Balkan cently married daughter, Mme. Eliza- countries, had taken an apartment Berlin's prewar gangster dives. in the pension Philipp in Grolmann As Reichardt pulled out hand- beth de Boissieu. Strasse, posing as French army cuffs, Rambela seized a beer bottle Police said that the man, evidently and struck the detective chief over an eccentric, had been picked up officers. near the De Gaulle home at Marly- The owner of the boarding house the head inflicting a skull fracture. But before Reichardt passed out he le-Roi after he had babbled that she became suspicious when the two was the cause of his troubles. They "officers" who wore the insignia of succeeded in snapping the handcuffs on his man. said he had a large club in his pos- majors saluted a captain. She session. He was taken to a hospital notified French headquarter.' which And Ramb?!a still wears these for observation. in turn had the two impostors handcuffs, in jail—just in case. \ 1

Page 6 THE STARS AND STRIPES Saturday, May 11,1946

Burglary in Pete Reiser, Dodger outfielder, Reds Shade successfully steals home, via the Doerr'sHome Run Brings seat of his pants, while team mate Gene Hermanski (22) is up at bat. Catcher Ernie Lombardi of the Dodgers, 8-7; hated Giants makes a lunge at the sliding Dodger, but it is all in vain Pirates Bow Boston 14th Straight, 7-5 as umpire Tom Dunn says, "Safe." The Dodgers won, 8-1. CINCINNATI, May 10 (AP)—The Cincinnati Reds nosed out the Brooklyn Dodgers, 8-7, to drop the Dodgers one full game behind the National League's pace-setting St Brown Checks Louis Cardinals. The Reds narrowly averted dup- lication of yesterday's late-inning Chicago Rally defeat, for the Dodgers, trailing 8-3 after seven innings, bounced back with three runs in the eighth and In Last Inning one in the - ninth before being checked. BOSTON, May 10 (AP)- Cincinnati broke a 3-3 tie in the Boston's red-hot Red Sox won fifth when Grady Hatton blasted a their 14th consecutive game, two-run homer. The Reds picked up defeating the White Sox 7-5, two more in the sixth and one in the seventh to enter the eighth with to increase their American an 8-3 advantage. PeeWee Reese League lead to four and one-half then put the Dodgers back into the games over the Yankees. game by belting a three-run circuit A fourth-inning two-run homer smash. The Brooks added another by Bobby Doerr gave the victors in the ninth and had the potential their final two runs and the tying run thrown out at the plate. ultimate margin of victory. Doerr's drive cleared the fence and screen in left field and was Giants 6, Pirates I. the only hit made off Johnny PITTSBURGH, May 10—Johnny Rigney, who pitched three innings Mize and Jack Graham belted home after he replaced starter Ed Lopat runs to help Bill Voiselle record his The winners got only one more second victory as the New York hit after that, a single in the eighth Giants defeated Pittsburgh, 6-1. by Leon Culberson. Voiselle scattered seven hits and Chisox Rally in 9th was in serious trouble only in the The White Sox threatened in the first, when thev Pirates bunched a ninth, which was played almost in walk and two hits for a run. darkness.- After throwing out Mize tied the score in the third Murrell Jones and forcing Ralph Mangrum Ties with his fifth circuit blast and Hodgin to foul out to Culberson, Yanks Hit the High Road Graham iced the decision in the Mace Brown walked Dario Lodigiani fifth with a two-run homer. Mike Tresh followed with a hard _* * * single into left. Ted Williams fell Hogan for Lead The victory gave the Giants five on the Slippery turf on his first Bombers to Fly in Quest of AL Flag games to three in their first western attempt to field the ball, but it swing of the year and put them in made no difference in the play, as NEW YORK, May 8 (INS)—It had to come and it had to be Larry In Texas Golf a fourth place tie with the Cubs, who were beaten by the Braves. It Lodigiani started with the crack of MacPhail to do it. HOUSTON, May 10 (AP)—Dark- the bat and would have made third At long last the major league ball clubs will take to the air horse Lloyd Mangrum, Los Angeles, marked the first time since 1942 that in any event. for travels. MacPhail says his New York Yankees spurn railroads and who arrived just in time to get into the Giants ended a western junket In the wet windy gloom. Brown, would fly from town to town in quest of the American League pennant. with a better than .500 average. who replaced starter Jim Bagby in the tournament, shot a four-under- Even such short hops as from New par 67 to tie favorite Ben Hogan, the sixth, got George Dickey to go York to Philadelphia will be taken down swinging to end the game. Hershey, Pa., for a first-round lead by plane. in Houston's $10,000 tournament of Braves 5, Cubs 2 The present American League When MacPhail was boss of the golf champions. CHICAGO, May 10 (AP)—Big Jim record of consecutive triumphs is Brooklyn Dodgers, he had his In third place and one shot back Wallace, rookie right-hander from 19, made by the White Sox in 1906. players fly from St. Louis to Pitts- after a day of par-shattering golf Indianapolis, held the Chicago Cubs The national League record is 26, burgh once, because of night game over the River Oaks course by 13 hitless in eight of 12 innings and made by Giants in 1916. commitments, but when Babe players, was another favorite, Jim- pitched the Boston Braves to a 5-2 Phelps, the portly catcher, rebelled, mie Demaret, a hometowner who victory. Larry thought better of the health carded 68, while five others were Wallace was in trouble ,twice Browns 6, Yankees 1 another stroke behind at 69. They during the entire 12 innings. He gave NEW YORK, May 10 (AP)—Nelson of his minions. But yesterday, eight hits' all the way. while his team was prevented by were Sam Snead, Hot Springs, Va., Potter's stingy fourhit pitching and Fred Haas, New Orleans, Harry In the fourth inning, after Peanuts home runs by Chuck Stevens and rain from playing the Chicago White Lowery led off with a home run, his Sox, Larry burst into the Yank Todd, Dallas, Herman Keiser, Frank Mancuso brought the St. Akron, and amateur Frank Strana- second of the season, Wallace gave Louis Browns a 6-1 victory over the clubhouse and called for a vote on the proposition to fly. han of Toledo. up three straight singles. Andy New York Yankees. Byron Nelson, Toledo, co-favorite Pafko drove Eddie Waitkus home Stevens belted starter Allan Gettel Ruffing Votes No with Hogan for first money, had a with the second run. for a 380-foot four-master with Only three players—Red Ruffing 70 and tjed with four other players Johnny Hopp and Tommy Holmes Mark Christman on base in the was one-—refused and when the vote for the fourth best score of the day. engineered a double steal in the second inning, and Mancuso fol- to fly was cast, MacPhail told the twelfth, with Hopp scoring. Then lowed with a blast into the left field three and the radio crew they could LOUISE SUGGS UPSET with the bases loaded, Stu Hofferth pavilion, to give the Browns a quick take trains. But to be there on time IN SOUTHERN TOURNEY lined a single to center to drive in 3-0 lead. St. Louis collected the other or else. Ruffing takes low road DALLAS, May 10 (AP)—Louise two more runs. three tallies in the eighth on three After the count MacPhail sum-'f' Suggs, whose sparkling play brought hits, coupled with two errors by moned N. B. Raeder, an official of her a new course record and made center fielder Joe DiMaggio. the United Airlines, and both inked Rollick Bowls300 her a long favorite, was upset by Following Keller's home run in the a contract calling for exclusive use Margaret Gunther, Memphis, to in- Fans Grab Ducats second, Potter set the Yanks down to the Yankees of a Mainliner 44- sure a new champion in women's without a hit until the seventh, passenger C-54. In ABC Match Southern golf tourney. when Nick Etten singled with two For Louis-Conn The Yankees, with playing equip- BUFFALO, N. Y., May 10 (UP)— Miss Gunther eliminated the NEW YORK, May 10 (AP)—Publie out and Oscar Grimes doubled. Lithia Springs, Ga., star, 2 and 1, However, Bill Dickey flew out to ment and sports writers will take Leo Rollick, a traveling salesman sale of tickets to the Louis-Conn off from LaGuardia Field at 3 p.m. from Santa Monica, Calif., turned in and moves into the semi finals heavyweight title bout June 19 end the inning. George Stirnweiss against Dorothy Kirby of Atlanta, bunted safely in the eighth for New Monday and will be due in St. Louis the tenth perfect 300 game in the opened today, and through most of Yorks fourth hit off Potter, who less than five hours later. 46-year-old history of the American who defeated Mrs. Bettye White, the day a double line of fight fans Dallas, 6 and 5. rung up his third victory of the year Plane Always Ready Bowling Congress as he took over eagerly snapped up the pasteboards against two defeats. the singles lead and moved into at prices ranging from $10 to $100. Though the Yankee Mainliner will second place in the all-events total. 40th Bomb Wing Team The first customer sitting on the make other trips while the Yankees A member of the Lo-Da-Mar team, Wants Tennis Matches floor outside promoter Mike Jacob's Tigers 9, Senators 8 are spending several days in a city, office suite when the windows the contract provides it will be which rolled into the five-man lead ERLANGEN, May 10—The 40th WASHINGTON, May 10 (AP)— Tuesday night with a 3023 total, opened at eight this morning was Eddie Mayo's timely single and waiting for the team when it is Bomb Wing tennis team would like an unnamed enthusiast who bought ready to leave. Rollick scorched the alleys with a to contact other units for home and several $30 numbers and went away Dizzy Trout's relief pitching gave 193-279-265-737 effort in the singles, the Detroit Tigers a 9-8 victory in The Yankee announcement coin- home matches within easyft travelling grinning. 12 innings over the Washington cided with fears that owing to three pins more than Ed Ford of distance of Nurnberg. Rochester registered early in the\ Comparatively few of today's Senators. curtailment of rail schedules because The team would also like to buyers asked for 3100 dollar ring- After Washington had tied the of the coal strike, baseball clubs tourney. Only seven times in pre- organize a tennis league if enough side tickets. However, thousands of score at 7-all with a 4-run rally in might soon find it difficult to make vious tournaments has that total units get together. The matches mail orders have been received for the last of the ninth, Mayo won the rail trips. beun bettered. would be played on a best four out the most expensive brand, and they game in the twelfth by hitting With the ice broken on flying in With series of 624, 691 and 737, of seven series, five singles and two are now being distributed by post. sharply to center off Walter Master- baseball, teams of Pacific coast Rollick moved into second place of doubles. Contacts by phone can be The most enthusiastic prediction son with the bases loaded. magnates undoubtedly will start the all-events with a total of 2,052, made by calling Lt. W. F. Madsen, heard, during the day was that a Stan Spence tripled and Jeff Heath plans for a major league club or two pins behind Joe Wilman of Special Service Officer, Erlangen gate of four million dollars might singled in Washington's half of two in sunny California. Chicago. Military Ext.-137. - be reached. twelfth. Trout came in as the fifth Detroit hurler and retired the last Li'l Abner (By Courtesy of Dnlted Features) By Al Capp two Senators, giving the Tiger's their fifth straight victory. N BECAUSE OF THE GUM STUCK IN -TH' PLANE ARE YOU P(-CAIN T HEAR A HIS EARS (AND FORGOTTEN) LI'L ^SNtiCK OFF WIFOL1T KIDDING? WORD SHE'S SAY/H7 ABNER CAN'T HEAR ANYTHING. NO ANNOUNCEMENT. -NORTH RECKON SHE GOT A's 7, Indians 6 THEY TOOK MAH AS FAR LAR-UN-UEE-TUSS, ' PHILADELPHIA, May 10 (AP)— THIS HAIN'T TICKET/ WHICH WAY AS THE PORE SOUL-) - Russ Derry, recently acquired from SLOBBOVIA- IT'S I DOES AH START UH-WOULD YO' the Yankees, led a 14-hit attack on MERELY NOO YAWK f ' WAL.KIN' T'LOWER KINELY WRITE IT four Cleveland hurlers with three OH.WAL-AH'LL GIT SLOBBOVIA? OUT 2 doubles as the Philadelphia Athletics BACK ON TH \ \ PLANE SOON'S THEY defeated the Indians 7-6 in the final ANNOUNCE tilt of a two-game series. THEY'S Russ Christopher, who went to the LEAVIN'/.' mound in the sixth inning after the Indians had come from behind to erase the 5-2 lead of the A's and tie the score at 6-6, pitched cleverly the rest of the way to hang up his second vicitory against two defeats. Hank Edwards hit his third home run and Lou Boudreau his firsts Saturday, May 11, 1946 THE STARS AND STRIPES Page 7 ■HMWJ-HP/- Pirked to Outrun Preakness Field

STAND BALTIMORE, May 10 (INS)—As- the derby and then the Preakness sault today was made a 13-10 choice a week later in 1936 and broke —» .4 to win tomorrow's running of the -historic over a Knockdown was bred on Alfred field of eleven formally entered for NATIONAL LEAGUE Horse Odds w L the Maryland classic. The winner of PCT. GB the , Assault, who Assault Mehrtens 13-10 St. Louis 12 6 .667 — IB- Brooklyn already has cleaned up $144,250 in Hampden Arcaro - 11 7 .611 1 Lord Boswell Dodson S' Boston S purses, will be aiming for the big S .529 2Va end of the richest stake in history, Knockdown Atkinson 3- New York 10 10 .500 3 Wall 10- Chicago a gross of $140,620. Wee Admiral 10 10 .500 3 Warren Mehrtens, Brooklyn-born Natchez Snellings 12 Cincinnati 9 10 .474 3Va Marine Victory Padgett 20 Pittsburgh jockey, who rode Assault to an 9 11 .450 4 eight lengths triumph in the mile Alamond Kirkland 30. Philadelphia 5 13 .278 7 and a quarter derby, will again pilot Tidy Bid Jemas 30 Results 60 <-meago 2 Bold Venture's colt. Billy Bumps Zufelt Cincinnati 8, Brooklyn 7 Love Me Now Snyder 60 New York 6, Pittsburgh 1 Hampden Second Choice Only games scheduled. Hampden, second choice, will have G. Vanderbilt's Sagamore farm in Eddie Arcaro aboard who rode him these parts and is the only Mary- AMERICAN LEAGUE to an easy victory in the Chesapeake land home-bred horse in the race. W X Pet. GB Stakes a week before the Derby. Boston 20 3 .870 Arcaro will be.making his fifth ARMED FAVORED New York 15 7 .682 4Va Preakness bid. He won the mile and IN DIXIE HANDICAP Detroit 12 10 .545 7Va three-sixteenth Black-Eyed Susan PIMLICO, May 10 (INS)—Calu- St. Louis 9 13 .429 10 Classic in 1941, aboard Whirlaway. met Farm's Armed was the short- Washington 8 11 In addition to Hampden, given a priced favorite to take today's 42nd .421 10 running of the 530,000 Dixie Handi- Chicago 7 11 .389 10Va chance to, win are Lord Boswell, Cleveland 6 13 with Doug Dodson aboard and cap over Mrs. Ann Held Jacob's .316 12 Stymie and six others. Philadelphia 6 16 .273 13Va Knockdown, the other half of the Results Maine Chance Entry, being piloted Armed was given a top of 130 Detroit 9, Washington 8 by Ted Atkinson. pounds in the Dixie to 124 for Boston 7, Chicago 5 Stymie, which has won two out of St. Louis 6, New York 1 Assault figures to take care of Philadelphia 7, Cleveland 6 them again tomorrow along with three races this year. Bobby Love-Me-Now, Natchez, Billy Bumps Arcaro tries again . . . . this time on Hampden Permane was Stymie's pilot today. Minor Leagues and Tidy Bid. The last named is Others in the mile and three- William Helis' long-shot hope, tak- bad race at Belmont Park on Wed- to the race it must be divided be- sixteenths feature included Service Pilot, Try Me Now, Prefect, Rick's INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE ing the place of Phidias, named nesday. tween Assault and Knockdown. As- W L Pet. originally and withdrawn after a If- there is any .sentiment attached sault's pappy, Bold Venture, won Raft, Snow Boots and Statesman. Montreal 12 7 .632 Syracuse 11 7 .611 Baltimore 9 7 .563 Toronto 9 8 .529 Buffalo 8 8 .500 Today's Crossword Puzzle Newark 8 10 .444 Southworth Rates Cards Jersey City 6 11 .353 Rochester 6 11 .353 Results Syracuse 11, Buffalo »2 • <2 3 H 5 b 7 8 9 10 11 Toronto 6, Newark 2 Tops Despite Poor Start Rochester 11 , Jersey City 3 Only games scheduled. CHICAGO, May 10 (UP)—The failure of the Cardinals to sail in a 12. H comfortable early-season advantage, may have cooled some baseball ex- AMERICAN ASSOCIATION perts on the belief that the Redbirds will "cakewalk" to the National w L Pet. League pennant, but manager Billy Southworth of the Braves continues to 15 lb n Louisville 13 8 .619 hold to that idea. Southworth piloted the'Cardinals for five years, before St. Paul 14 9 .609 he, switched to the Braves this<$ : Indianapolis 11 9 .550 10 10 21 Toledo 10 10 .524 seasons and he knows the makeup either righthanded or lefthanded Minneapolis 11 13 .458 of the club and its capabilities. power as the occasion demands. No Kansas City 8 11 .421 i Columbus 9 14 .391 "The Cardinals are the solid club rival team can do that," Southworth 72 23 Results of the league," Southworth said, claimed. Minneapolis 9, Indianapolis 7 "before the season opened, I figured While Southworth's Braves have Toledo 12, St. Paul 7 2M 25 lb 77 76 29 30 Kansas City 13, Columbus 4 been the surprise of the National Louisville 6, Milwaukee , 3 League race, thus far, the Boston % % pilot isn't satisfied. 3i 32 33 PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE Braves Need Strengthening % % W L Pet. sari Francisco 26 15 .634 "We need strengthening, and I 5M Los Angeles 25 15 .625 know it," he stated. "We are in Oakland 24 17 .585 the market for top-flight and I mean % Hollywood 19 20 .487 San Diego 19 22 .463 real high-class talent anytime it is 38 Sacramento ' 18 23 .439 available. My big worry at the Seattle 16 / 24 .400 moment is the left side of the in- Portland 14 25 .359 50 HO m MM W5 Results field." Oakland 5, Seattle 3 Southworth winces a bit when he Sacramento 2, San Francisco 1 Hollywood 10, San Diego 3 mentions that fact, for during his W6 H7 *9 Los Angeles 3, Portland 0 tenure with the Cardinals, he had Marty Marion at short, and that SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE halted immediately his worries 50 5l 92 W L Pet. about that spot. Augusta • 12 10 .545 "If any clubs have illusions about Jacksonville 12 10 .545 53 5M 55 Columbus 11 9 .550 getting Marion, they can forget Macon 12 11 .522 them," the Braves pilot said. "He Greenville 12 11 .522 Savannah 9 9 .500 won't be sold this year, and if I Columbia 9 12 .429 owned this park, I'd bet it on that ACROSS DOWN .333 Charleston 7 12 fact. Next year may be something 1—The Fourth 34— Daniel in it Results 25— Hail! 37— Piece o£ work Southworth . . . stiU Hfces Cards else." Gospel 35— Definite 26— Able 38— Fundamental Greenville 6, Augusta 1 5—Lion-headed article ■ Columbia 5, Charleston 1 27— Give (Scot.) 39— Son of Adam they should win without too much What contention the Cardinals Egyptian god 36— Greek deity 28— Huge tub * 40—Monster Columbus 10, Jacksonville 8 8—Son oi Eve 37— Neptune's Savannah 10, Macon 8 trouble. I haven't changed that belief will receive for the flag will come 29— Man's name 41—Frozen rain now. As a matter of fact, from what from Brooklyn and Chicago, in 12— Away from home 30— Period of 43— 'Law of I have seen so far they feature to Southworth's opinion. But he doesn't wind 38— Egyptian god time Moses" TEXAS LEAGUE 13— High priest . of art 32— Egyptian 44— Son of Seth Pet. win by a wider margin than I figured figure they will be very formidable 14— Sacred liter- 39— Side hanging ruler lived 905 w L of altar 6 .739 - ature of 33— Group of years Dallas 17 they would this spring." threats. Hindus 42—South wind Forth Worth 17 6 .739 Card Mound Staff Strong missionaries 45— Foolhardy 15 6 .714 15— Wire measure 46— Vedie altar 35— Beverage 48—Prefix: San Antonio ■16—Peter used it god 12 12 .500 Southworth scoffed at the idea 36— God of war before Tulsa 17— God of war 47— Goddess of Beaumont 11 13 .458 some early season cuffings have (warmihch to Open 10 16 .385, 18— Fastened harvest Houston taken the gilt-edge appearance off firmly 49— Early center YESTERDAY'S SOLUTION Shreveport 9 15 .375 20 .130 the St. Louis pitching staff. 9-Hole Golf Course 20—Not mailed of Celtic y s 22— Approves church Results "That is foolish. It always takes GARMISCH, May 10—A newly 50— Press firmly Dallas 2, Beaumont 1 23— Husband of a pitching staff a little time to renovated nine-hole golf course, said salty wife 51— The Altar Houston 11, Oklahoma City 52— God of Tahiti Fort Worth 17, Shreveport shakedown at the start. of the, to be one of the finest in Germany, 24— Consecrated San. Antonio 6, Tulsa 1 27— Israelite tribe ' (poss) season." will be opened May 15, at 3rd 28— Contend 53— Salamander He stated that the Cards have about Army's Garmisch Recreation Cen- 31— Humming 54— Norse goddess of dead SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION a dozen starting hurlers and every- birds ter, it was announced here today. 32— Moham- W L Pet. one "of them is capable of pitching All American and Allied person- medan god New Orleans 15 9 .625 winning ball. "A manager doesn't Atlanta 16 10 .615 nel and their guests will be ad- DOWN 10 .600 worry about a staff like that," he Memphis 15 mitted to the course, and necessary 1— Upright side 8— Sailor's hail- Chattanooga 13 12 .520 added. clubs, balls, and tees will be fur- of door 9— Barley (var.) Nashville 10 U .476 It is the overall depth of the Car- nished players at the clubhouse. 2— Medley 10— Adam and Little Rock 9 13 .409 dinals' talent that causes South- 3— The under- Eve's home- Birmingham 8 14 .364 Set against a backdrop of the world stead Mobile 8 15 .348 worth to insist the St. Louis club Bavarian Alps, the course has been 4— Wise teachers 11— "And the — Results will spreadeagle the national league completely reseeded with imported 5— Fixes shall be first" Mobile 4, Chattanooga 0 English grass seed and is in a con- 6— Diminutive 19—Supplement Atlanta 4, Little Rock 2 clubs. suffix 21—Fabled land New Orleans 4, Nashville 3 "The Cards have depth and balance dition comparable to the best in 7—Incumbent of in Bible Memphis 9, Birmingham 6 that allows them to field a team with Europe. religious title 24—Gloomy

A FIN Highlights Moon Mullins (By Courtesy of News Syndicate Co., Inc.) By Willard

Saturday 1800 News 2200 Date With 1S05 Sports The Duke 1900 Saturday Night 2300 This world Serenade This Week 1930 Alan Young 2345 Vocal Touch 2000 National Barn 2400 News Dance 0015 Midnight in 2030 GI Journal Germany 2100 News Sunday 0600 Dictation News 1330 This World 0730 Jill's Juke Box This Week 0815 News 1400 Andre 0830 Repeat Kostelanetz Performance 1500 News 1000 John Charles 1505 Family Hour Thomas 1600 Symphony 1030 Radio Chapel Orchestra 1200 News 1650 Vespers 1230 Concert Hall 1700 Duffel Bag- 1300 Nelson Eddy 1300 News Page 8 THE STARS AND STRIPES Saturday, May 11,1941 Moslems Stone Cairo Police, Guns Reply 200 Arrested In Palestine Protest Riots CAIRO, May 10 (AP)—Egyptian police opened fire with buckshot today on Moslems throwing stones from the roof of the ancient Azhar Mosque, after thousands of demon- strators in the square below had been dispersed. The Moslems were protesting the recommendation of the Anglo- American inquiry commission on Palestine that 100,000 Jews be permitted to enter the Holy Land. A policeman was injured by the shower of stones and debris, and the police were forced to retreat three times from the front of the mosque. It was not known whether anyone An Arabic newspaper reported that Russia had agreed to present the was injured by the shots. Delegates to the United Nations Security Council are shown at a Jewish-Arabic dispute in Palestine before the group. In Teheran, a gov- meeting of the group in New York. Left to right, they are Henri Bonnet, ernment spokesman announced that Iran was awaiting the official Soviet 300 Arrested France; Dr. Francis Castillo Najero, Mexico; Dr. Elco N. Van Kief fens, note confirming evacuation of Azerbaijan before submitting her report Attempting to block the demon- the Netherlands; Dr. Oscar Lange, Poland, and Andrei Gromyko, Soviet to the council. stration as thousands of worshippers Union. Two new problems confronted the Security Council yesterday. gathered outside the building, the police held several thousand more inside the mosque. Groups continued to gather in Women's UN Reports Arouse Mrs. Roosevelt side streets out of range of the police, who were mainly occupied with those on the roof. Police reinforcements entered the Arabs Cable building and arrested more than 200 Freedom Plan Paris to Hold Joint Fete persons. Forty persons inside the mosque were injured, most of them Long-Winded, Big 3 Chiefs, by policemen's batons. Moslems in Alexandria and Port For V-E,Joan of Arc Day Said went on strike today, but the She Complains Hitting Report situation there was reported quiet. The Stars and Stripes Bureau, Government-owned buses and street NEW YORK, May 10 (UP)—Mrs. PARIS, May 10—Elaborate preparations are being made for a gigantic JERUSALEM, May 10 (AP)—The cars in Alexandria were not Franklin D. Roosevelt scolded all celebration here Sunday by the French war office in commemoration of Arab Higher Committee has in- operating. female United Nations subcommis- the first anniversary of the defeat of Germany and Joan of Arc Day. formed Prime Minister Clement R. sions yesterday for being long- A short speech by President Felix Gouin and the presence of the Attlee, President Truman, General- winded in drafting proposals to foreign ministers of the Big Four conference will highlight (he military issimo Joseph V. Stalin and Vya- improve the status of women. She ^ceremony in the morning at the his- cheslav M. Molotov, Soviet foreign Strike Forces called on one group to cut the sub- torical Arc de Triomphe. In keep- minister, in cables made public in ject of prostitution from its prelim- Rcd. Radio Broadcasts ing with tradition, the French pres- Jerusalem today, that the Anglo- inary report. ident will lay a wreath on the tomb American commission's report would Greelings From Shaw of the Unknown Soldier. "enable the Jews of the world to N.Y. Brownout Mrs. Roosevelt, chairman of the invade our country under the pro- UN Commission on Human Rights LONDON, May 10 (AP)— A wreath will be placed at the (Continued from Page 1) Radio Moscow broadcast greetings monument of Joan of Arc in the tection of the armed forces of and ex-officio member of the sub- Place des Pyramides prior to the Britain and America." tract negotiations. The union, whose commission on the status of women, from George Bernard Shaw on the first anniversary of the victory ceremony at the Arc de Triomphe. The Arab committee threatened to contract expires May 31, served said that the subcommission was strike notice May 1. It represents going into such detail that the over Germany. A parade of detachments of youth oppose the recommendations "to the "Who am I to dare to send up the Champs Elysees will follow last man," the cables disclosed. 75,000 hard-coal miners in Pennsyl- report was going to be longer than vania as well as 400,000 soft-coal greetings to the Soviet Union?" the Joan of Arc ceremony. In the Jamal Effendi Hussieni, trustee that of the whole human rights' miners already \ on strike. Shaw asked the Moscow cor- afternoon, there will be a military for the Higher Commitee, signed the commission. - parade, with special French army In Chicago, officials of the Airline The subcommission is preparing respondent who telephoned him, telegrams, which closed with*an ap- the broadcast said. "However, I bands furnishing the music. peal "for human justice." Pilots Association said a planned recommendations for the UN will nevertheless say that I strike against Transworld Air- Economic and Social Council and ATTLEE SENDS STALIN foresaw the greatness and the lines (TWA) had been "indefinitely has included a lengthy proposal to V-E DAY MESSAGE 4 INJURED IN BEIRUT strength of your country ever suspended." BY BOMB EXPLOSIONS abolish prostitution. since the first days of its existence,. LONDON, May 10 (AP)—Prime (In Los Angeles, 2,000 CIO pro- Mrs. Roosevelt said the subject did Minister Clement, R. Attlee cabled BEIRUT, May 10 (AP)—Delayed- duction workers quit their jobs at "I never receded from this Generalissimo Joseph V. Stalin a action bombs thrown into two the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Corp. not have any place in the group's opinion and I am glad to express V-E anniversary message yesterday, shops last night injured four per- plant. report. She directed two of its it now again." members to boil down its recom- saying, "The utter defeat of our sons and caused considerable dam- (More than 1,000,000 persons were mendations, particularly the section common enemies has opened the age. idle in the U. S. as a result of way to that collaboration in peace labor dispute, The United Press on prostitution. The bombs were believed to have to which we are pledged, both by been thrown by anti-Zionists. reported.) Proposals to Help Women our treaty of alliance and common The group had made the following Big 4... membership in the United Nations recommendations in their report: organization." ABOLISH prostitution by remov- (Continued from Page 1) Doenitz Urged Hitler in 1943 ALLIED TROOPS PARADE ing legal and customary provisions and was unacceptable to the Soviet IN BERLIN CELEBRATION pertaining to it. Union. BERLIN, May 10 (INS)—The Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin To Occupy Spain, Trial Is Told TAKE strong measures to put United Nations staged an impressive down traffic in women and sought to heal the, breach between victory parade yesterday along the "The only way to meet terror is the United States and Russia with NURNBERG, May 10 (AP)—Grand Charlottenburger Chaussee, one of with terror." children. a compromise proposal that the Adm. Karl Doenitz was accused PREVENT clandestine prostitu- Berlin's main thoroughfares, in before the International Military "Why did you circulate that ministers submit first drafts -di celebration of the first anniversary among your officers?" The prose- tion by eliminating conditions that treaties along with an outline of Tribunal today of having proposed to of the end of the war in Europe. cutor asked. "Was it to inculcate make it necessary for women to points of disagreement, to the large Adolf Hitler in 1943 the occupation of Picked platoons of American, ruthlessness in your officers?" make money by those means. peace conference with the under- Spain so that submarine warfare French, Russian and British soldiers could be stepped up from new bases. "That is not so," Doenitz replied. ENABLE former prostitutes to standing the big four must agree marched in review for the four "It was merely to inform them that return ' to normal life without • before they are signed. Allied commanders who made a Sir David Maxwell Fyffe, chief the strike existed." • discrimination by providing work This would mean, in effect, that number of speeches in commemora- British prosecutor, said the infor- The prosecution introduced British for them as well as a broad and the big four would bind themselves tion of the historic day. mation came from minutes of a Admiralty records showing that 79 widely acceptable educational to agree jon the Italian, Balkan and Doenitz conversation with Hitler merchant ships had been sunk by system. Finnish treaties after the large which had been seized by the Allies. U-boats without warning in the peace conference instead of before The group proposed as its primary MclNarney Studies The prosecutor said Doenitz had first year of the war. Each case was it. It would presumably give the told the Fuehrer that the U-boat a violation of international law, the objective the lifting throughout the smaller nations a more influential world of all economic barriers which DP-German Riots campaign was going badly, and that prosecutor contended. voice in framing the treaties. the only strategic area for future "These figures cannot be checked," keep women from enjoying complete The Russians objected to this, FRANKFURT, May 10 (AP)—Gen. social and economic equality with Joseph T. McNarney has ordered operations was the Bay of Biscay. Doenitz said. saying the council had to abide by The German naval chief was quoted "You gave no warning to the men. the Moscow agreement, which they that daily reports be sent to him of all incidents involving Germans and as adding: Athenia," Fyffe charged. contended required the four nations "The best strategic solution lies in "That was mistaken for an to agree among themselves before displaced persons, it was learned Seven Die as Ships Collide here' today. The reports will com- the occupation of, Spain." auxiliary cruiser and the com- going into the peace conference. mander (of the U-boat) was Off Nova Scotian Island plement an investigation of a series Hitler replied, Fyffe said, that this Molotov. according to American of incidents in'volving Germans and would have been possible in 1940 punished for it," the defendant HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, May 10 sources, also offered another amend- displaced persons. with Spain's co-operation, but that replied. • (INS)—Sinking of the schooner Er- ment to Byrnes' proposal requiring "We hope to get a definite trend the Reich no. longer had the BRUNNER SENTENCED TO DIE mine of St. Pierre, Nova Scotia, the ministers to reach full agree- from these reports,'' one officer said, resources for such a venture. with a loss of seven lives, was re- ment on all points of the treaties "and determine whether the respon- "I do not think that I: proposed to FOR MISTREATMENT OF JEWS vealed today. before even calling the larger con- sibility lies with the Germans or the Fuehrer that we should occupy VIENNA. May 10 (UP)—A people's The schooner sank when struck ference. When Byrnes and Bevin the DPs." Spain," Doenitz told the court. court sentenced Anton Brunner to by a 7,000-ton Swedish freighter, objected to this, he offered his The action was taken as reports Fyffe retorted that the original of death at the conclusion today of a believed to be the Braeholm, in a second amendment which would of new incidents flowed into USFET the minutes was in London and four-day trial on charges of violat- dense fog 39 miles off Scatari Is- have the ministers meet June 5. headquarters. At Augsburg, a minor ing the laws of humanity, mistreat- Meantime, the United States and could be produced. land on Wednesday night. riot was reported to have occurred The prosecutor sharply attacked ing several thousand Jews and Britain have flatly refused Russia s in the railroad station when a the contention by Doenitz that the deporting nearly 50,000. demand for one of Italy s two new German navy had abided by the Brunner has no right of appeal. battleships, sources at the conference Jewish DP failed to show his ticket Browder Reported in Moscow to a German collector. rules of warfare. The execution date was not an- said. . nounced. LONDON, May 10 (INS)—The Lon- This disagreement is one ol six Meanwhile, it was revealed that He quoted from minutes of another meeting between Doenitz . The sentence was greeted with don News Chronicle reported from important points in the naval 10 armed Polish DPs had been seized Moscow today that Earl Browder, by American military police at and Hitler, in which the Fuehrer applause. Then several spectators clauses in the Italian treaty on which said, in regard to means of breaking shouted: "No! Let us not use Nazi deposed leader of" the American four power experts are approaching Wetzlar. Two of the DPs wore Communist Party, had arrived in the a general strike in Copenhagen, methods. Cut it out!" a deadlock. » U. S. Army uniforms. Soviet capital.