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Show i Yanks Finht Wav . - 3 .. r ii ii rairy-UKe Moseiie vaney aattorrs Troops Pusn Along . . - n.ii .... s i i t rnt I niA V railways hi Laiiu ui ruicai, lciivc And Ancient Turreted Castles. By BAUKIIAGE News Analyst and Commentator. VVNU Service, Union Trust Building, Washington, D. C. American history, I believe, has begun to repeat Itself as the Allies start to write the last chapter of the European war. By the time this is in print I hope General Patton's boys (the Third army), pushing down the winding valley of the Moselle river, have captured cap-tured or at least invested Trier, key city of the defenses of the Eifel. As they progress across those ancient highways or down the deep valley of the twisting Moselle river where Roman Ro-man legions, equally as homesick, once marched in the opposite di-rectioa di-rectioa they will be reenacting the steps of the victorious American army which moved eastward to the Rhine in the last war. Then as now, it was the American Third army which occupied the ancient city of Trier at the close of 1918. It left In 1923. I may be wrong in my premonition, premoni-tion, but I believe that this approach to the Rhine, which only an American Amer-ican army ever used to enter Germany Ger-many as victors, will be the thoroughfare thor-oughfare of the victors of 1945. ( This country of the "Eifel," north of the Moselle and west of the Rhine, is of particular interest to me for 1 have invaded it twice, peacefully to be sure; both times before World War L Secluded Villages Sprinkle Countryside The Eifel is a stretch of terrain of volcanic origin, of some bare and bleak hills and some tiny, secluded villages. It is also a country of towns on beautiful lakes and rivers, in valleys with the terraced "morn-ingside" "morn-ingside" (where the sun touches first) on which vineyards have grown since the Romans first planted plant-ed them in the early centuries before be-fore Christ. Part of the Eifel was "remote" even when I visited it. On the modern mod-ern highways, many of which follow the old Roman routes, thero were resorts re-sorts favored by tourists. But there were lonely villages which breathed an age forgotten by the "modern" Germany of 1912 when I first saw them. There were tall crags crowned by the ruins of medieval monasteries and castles, there were quaint and comfortable inns, there were meandering mountain paths, walled by thick 3r trees beneath which I slept in my "lodenfabrik" cape, resting ovi a thousand year old mttress of pine-needles, dreaming dream-ing of goblins and kobolds. In a momeit I'll take you up to see an enchsnted castle that might have coire ''a-aight out of a Maxfield Parrisb pa.nting or an illustration from Grin'jn or Anderson. But now, let's get back to March, 1945. As ths is written the fighting has beou s'iong the western rim of the Ei.el, which is really the western r'cn jf the German frontier from voutfi of the River Roer to the city of Trier. Trier is 69 miles from Ccolenz on the Rhine. The fighting has consisted of the parallel advance of columns along a 50-mile wide front. Patrols first move into the hills overlooking the valley villages. They secure the high points so their artillery can dominate domi-nate valleys, up which the infantry advances on the villages which are its objectives, protected by the artillery artil-lery in the hills. It must be remembered that all along the German frontier stretches the Siegfried line. Therefore, the Americans have to advance against its fortifications and will have to do so perhaps halfway to the Rhine. This means that pillboxes and other , fortifications have to be taken as the Americans advance. Tanks cannot be used in this rough country. It is the old-fashioned, catch-as-catch-can fighting, with rifles, ri-fles, grenades, dynamite, flamethrowers flame-throwers and hand grenades. Rugged Terrain Calls For Close-Up Battle In these early stages of the American Amer-ican push the fighting has been in sharp contrast to the First army'a move along the Roer river toward and into the Cologne plain. Once the Roer was bridged and tanks could cross, armor could come to the aid of the doughboys who were scrapping it out in the villages BARBS A broadcast from Tokyo said that the Japanese fleet would be only too glad to grapple with the American , navy- Sounds rT grapple-sauce to us. You will be glad to learn that a children's music school has been opened in Novgorod, Russia, with classes ip piano, violin and accordion. 3 Down T - f i if ii - r mi n uia noman iw and towns where each house wis a foit On the flat plain the use of armor is an advantage, but in hilly country, once possession of thff heights is gained, artillery can don inate the objectives below towad which the foot-soldiers are movif.g. There are plains in the Eifel, too, but it would seem that the chief arteries ar-teries of advance would be along the valleys and the roads the Romans once used in their advance in the opposite direction. It was westward, the course of Caesar moved when ho conquered the Treveri, the tribe from which Trier (Treves in French) gets its name. The Roman legions marched in 56 B. C. By 14 B. C. they were fortifying Trier. Today the famous, blackened height of 'the Porta Negri, the city's Roman gateway, has been bastioned with modern fortifications. The ancient brick basilica in the town and the renaissance fountain (Petersbrunnen) will be remembered remem-bered by thousands of American veterans vet-erans of the last war. Trier, seat of the electorate, became a center of monastic learning in the Middle ages. Let us hope some of the landmarks will be preserved and when our bombers smash the bridge across the Moselle, the ancient buttresses remain intact as they have these two thousand years. Perhaps they won't have to be bombed, but rather the destruction of buttresses than one American life. Remember what Bismarck (of all people) once said ol a piece of foreign soil? A square foot of it was not worth the bones of a single Pomeranian Grenadier. In the hope that our men can march the rest of the valley unmolested unmo-lested as their fathers did, let's turn up the valley where the Eltz river pours into the Moselle not far from the Rhine. (1 quote from my diary, April 2, 1912.) "We started out on foot, the only means of locomotion . . . the old village vil-lage with its plaster houses, the crooked, cobbled street, the old trees and the church, older than the trees , . . along the meadows, past the mill and across the stream and the huddle of houses which cluster about it, up the enchanting valley wooded with beech and birch, the hurrying Eltz below, and the green meadows, underfoot the brown leaves that fell last fall and will lie like those beneath them undisturbed until the ones still green cover them. Down a dip in the path and across a stream until the somber ruins of 'Trotz Eltz" appear. (Trotz means against.) It is the relic of a fruitless effort to destroy the real castle of Eltz below. Moat, tower and buttress but-tress were built with the sole purpose pur-pose of destroying a rival, (just as the modern artillerist seeks to take the height to destroy those below). "Then up the path until suddenly, as if the ascent were planned by the architect who built the poem in stone below, the fairy castle of Burg Eltz, turret and tower, pinnacle, portal and drawbridge appear." That is the end of the quote, as we say on the radio. May it be the beginning of new dreams of a more glorious world, of which some day the valley of the Moselle will be a part. The deaths of many semi-prominent Nazis, notices of which are appearing ap-pearing in the German papers (one man died at two different places on two different dates) are taken to mean that the alleged late and un-lamented un-lamented gentlemen have either escaped es-caped to neutral countries with a new identity or have become someone some-one else at home. , However, it is also pointed out by persons familiar with conditions in Germany that it is highly probable that a number of real deaths which are unreported are likewise taking place. In the first place, the concentrated con-centrated Allied bombing on localities locali-ties where high officials congregate (Berchtesgaden and Nuernburg) is bound to catch somebody some time. In addition, various "inside jobs" are probably getting rid of a number num-ber of persons. Negroes constituted almost one-tenth one-tenth of all the employees on the federal payroll as of March 1, 1944. However, they were disproportionately disproportion-ately concentrated in the lower grades. by Baukhage Explosive Ben Marsh, secretary of the radical People's lobby, calls the Yalta conference "a compromise with intelligence" and says that "only ignoramuses of the New Deal and the Old Deal can see much but a threat of World War III in its encyclical" en-cyclical" Conservative David Lawrence Law-rence also dislikes the Yalta decisions. deci-sions. Which leaves the middle-of-the-roaders fairly happy. 1 3 A f I -hi i -WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS- Floods Peril War Industries; Axis Losses Heavy as Allies Batter Enemies Inner Defenses .Released by Western Newspaper Union.. (EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinions aro oxproosed In these eclamni, thay oro these of Western Newspaper Union's news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.) FLOOD: Rampaging Rivers Spilling over their banks to inundate inun-date thousands of low-lying acres and settlements, rampaging riven created one of the greatest flood dangers dan-gers in recent years all the way from Pennsylvania to Mississippi, seriously threatening war industries in their path. With the flood stage already surpassed sur-passed at the juncture of the Alleghany Alle-ghany and Monongahela rivers in Pittsburgh, audrling waters rolled down the Ohio, further fed by swollen swol-len tributaries from surrounding states. As waters lapped at its 62-foot 62-foot flood wall, broken before in 1913 and 1937, the important manufacturing manufactur-ing center of Portsmouth, Ohio, lay imperiled, as did Frankfort, Kentucky's Ken-tucky's capital As the danger mounted, people were removed from the low-lying flatlands, and emergency Red Cross and other disaster relief stations attended at-tended to the distressed. No less than six persons were drowned in the early stages of the flood, and many thousands were homeless. PACIFIC: Crush Japs Fighting no open action, but rather rath-er putting up stiff albeit futile resistance from both natural and fortified strongpoints, the Japs have lost heavily in the Philippine and Iwo Jima campaigns. Latest count of enemy dead on Luzon showed over 90,000, which when coupled with an estimated 125,000 killed on Leyte, brought total Jap losses to over 215,000. The rap-Id rap-Id advance of the Yanks despite the stubborn opposition indicated the difficulties of defenders to hold strongpoints against superior and well equipped forces capable of powerful pow-erful outflanking action. By General MacArthur'i count, the Japs still have some 60,000 troops on Luzon, cooped in the northeastern corner of the Island and east of Manila. It was against - IS Shocked by enemy shell that feU Dear his position on Iwo Jima, stricken marine is escorted to rear by two comrades. these remnants that MacArthur moved, with the U. S. air force hampering ensmy maneuvers behind be-hind their lines and the powerful American fleet also standing by to smash any evacuation attempts. To the 215,000 lost in the Philippines, Philip-pines, the Japs could add over another an-other 12,000 killed on Iwo Jima by a battle-hardened marine force that had a terrific fight on its hands from the moment it landed on the tiny stepping-stone to Tokyo to seize vital air fields. ARMY YOUTH: Policy Explained With public interest centered in the use of 18-year-olds at the fronts. Secretary of War Henry Stimson declared de-clared that the urgent need of replacements re-placements dictated their dispatch to the war zones, but only after they had received intensive training both here and at overseas posts. Originally, Stimson said, the army avoided using the youngest men by drawing upon older troops in divisions divi-sions and replacing them with new inductees or returning vets. When overseas demands quickened, however, how-ever, the army abandoned this policy pol-icy for the use of more youthful troops conditioned by a program of rigorous training worked out as, a result of experience over the last four years. "Before any man is sent overseas," over-seas," Stimson said, "he is submitted submit-ted to a thorough test to assure that he has assimilated his training and is in fact prepared for combat duty." ACCIDENTS HAPPEN t You have 1 chance in 14 of being injured in an accident during 1945! That's the mathematical probability advanced by the National Safety council for the occurrence of disabling dis-abling injuries. If you live on a farm, you're luoky! The farm is the safest place to live, the chance of injury being 1 in 18, while for non-farm- people the chance is 1 in 13. Farm workers, however, have a 1 in 36 chance on the job, the council reported in its study. I I "is, 'Ail THE LEHI.SUN.XEUyJTAH -ii Zyn ' " , . - iJ" - As enemy troops surrender to Yanks, G.I. escorts German women over rubble of town reduced In great Allied drive. EUROPE: 'Sad Sacks Captured by the U. S. 3rd army northeast of Bitburg, 59-year-old Lt Gen. Edwin von Rothkirch und Trach, commander of the 53rd German Ger-man army corps, was brought to the rear in a jeep. Dejected and soured, his gray-green gray-green overcoat and black knee-length knee-length rubber boots caked with mud, the general wailed: "How can you expect to win a war when you have no gasoline and no horses? It will be all over within four months five months at the most." Even as the general spoke, four Allied armies were smashing the remnants of German forces west of the Rhine, to pull up to the 1,000 to 1,300 foot river on a broad front and poise for the first military crossing cross-ing of the 50-foot deep waterway since Napoleon turned the trick in 1813. As British and Canadian troops and the U. S. 9th and 1st armies smashed to the west bank of the Rhine to draw up opposite the vital Ruhr industrial industri-al valley, and as the U. S. 3rd army drove to the river farther far-ther to the south, they captured a motley collection of Nazis. Having again succeeded In withdrawing with-drawing the bulk of his finest troops across the Rhine, cagey Field Marshal Von Rundstedt left beardless youth, paunchy middle-aged men and foreign recruits to cover up the retreat. Receiving little, If any, artillery or tank support, and sometimes even lacking small munitions, many of these troops surrendered surren-dered after only brief skirmishing. skirmish-ing. Where the main bodies of the once - vaunted wehrmacht tried to get back to the river, however, the Allies faced lively opposition as the enemy tried to maintain an escape route. Biggest city yet to fall into' Allied hands, Cologne lay in rubble as Yanks drove into the shattered metropolis, reported 85 per cent in ruins as a result of concerted aerial aeri-al bombardment since the spring of 1942. Once the fourth largest settlement settle-ment of the Reich, it took on the aspect of a ghost city, with occasional occa-sional civilians moving out with their belongings heaped on carts, or picking pick-ing their way carefully down littered streets. To Nazi propagandists, the Allied advance to the Rhine set the stage for the decisive action of the war within the coming months. Eliminate Threat Taking no chance of an attack on their flanks and a threat to the rear of their troops fighting before Berlin, Ber-lin, the wily Red command moved to clean up the 200,000 Germans poised above Marshal Zhukov's 1st White Russian army in Pomerania. As the Reds thrust to the Baltic in this area and chewed up the German Ger-man forces, they also moved on Stettin, Stet-tin, Berlin's Oder river outlet to the Baltic. Straightening of the Russian lines in that region gave the Reds an almost solid front in eastern east-ern Germany clear down to the Lower Low-er Silesian industrial district, where the Nazis fought not only to protect their factories but also to bar the pathway to Czechoslovakia. Meanwhile, Allied aerial raids deep in the heart of Germany continued con-tinued to aid the Russian advance. As a result of heavy bombardment, the important Saxon industrial center cen-ter of Dresden, famed for its china-ware, china-ware, reportedly lay in ruins. Symbolic Sym-bolic stronghold of German resistance, resist-ance, Berlin also felt the sting of repeated air blows. Elation i JJero Scroll To Pfc. Wallace G. Drill of New Ulm, Minn., went the army's silver star. When the leader and assistant leader of his squad became casualties in Italy, he, a rifleman, reorganized reorgan-ized the squad despite enemy , shells that burst as close as 5 yards to him. Under aimed point-blank fire, he led his squad in a 250-yard flanking maneuver ta a position close to 2 enemy machineguns, which were then wiped out. est nut ussmr. Because the employment of economic eco-nomic sanctions or force would require re-quire the full cooperation of the U. S., Britain, Russia, China and France to be effective, the unanimous unani-mous vote of all five would be necessary to suppress an aggressor under machinery for a postwar peace organization worked out by th Big Three at Yalta. Meeting at San Francisco, April 25, 44 United Nations will consider final approval of the organization conceived at Dumbarton Oaks. Approved at the insistence of Russia, Rus-sia, the provision would give to any of the Big Five, as permanent members of the executive council of eleven, the right to pass upon the use of either economic or military measures against themselves in the event they were accused of trespassing tres-passing upon their neighbors. Before the question of economic or military sanctions arose, however, how-ever, the executive council could consider charges of aggression against any major power without the latter's interference, and recommend recom-mend procedure for ; peacefully settling the dispute. Neil) Doctrine In what Sen. Tom Connally (Texas) called a new Monroe Doctrine Doc-trine backed by all of the Americas Ameri-cas instead of just the U. S., 20 republics re-publics in the western hemisphere agreed to the mutual protection of frontiers and political independence in the postwar period. Though enforcement of the principles princi-ples was left to be geared to the machinery ma-chinery worked out at the United Nations' San Francisco parley, the agreement took effect immediately through President Roosevelt's war power to order U. S. troops anywhere any-where needed to promote the Allies' Al-lies' cause. Known as the Act of Chapultepec, the agreement climaxed the Pan-American Pan-American conference at Mexico City, another highlight of which was the consideration of an economic charter calling for the development of freer trade and increased industrialization indus-trialization of South America in the postwar period. RFC CHIEFTAIN: Vinson Named To 55-year-old Economic Stabilizer Fred M. Vinson was scheduled to go the management of the Reconstruction Reconstruc-tion Finance corporation cor-poration and its numerous nu-merous agencies fol- lowing its divorce-J ment from the department de-partment of commerce com-merce when President Presi-dent Roosevelt named Henry A. Wallace to head the latter. Fred Vinson Important figure in the fight to keep the RFC's vast lending and management manage-ment powers out of Wallace's hands, former RFC chieftain Jesse Jones supported Vinson's nomination, declaring de-claring that he has had both the legislative and practical experience to handle the big agency. Jones' praise of the economic eco-nomic stabilizer and formercongressman and judge was reechoed re-echoed in the senate sen-ate by Democrats and Republicans alike. Opposition to Wallace Wal-lace handling RFC funds centered in the belief that he , would use the RFC's Henry Wallace vast lending and plant management powers in a government program to provide postwar employment MINERS: Neiv Demands With the government committed to the retention of the Little Steel formula for-mula limiting basic wage increases to 15 per cent of the January, 1941, level, and with his United Mine Workers already having received the allowable boost, John L. Lewis took a different tack in his negotiations with coal operators for a new contract. con-tract. Instead of coming out for flat wage increases, wily John L. called for so-called "fringe" allowances, representing pay adjustments for new working conditions. In this respect, re-spect, the UMW chieftain asked for reinstitution of the seven hour day, with time and a half beyond that or 35 hours a week; 10 cents an hour more for the second shift and 15 cents for the third, and an increase in vacation pay from $50 to $100 in lieu of time off. In addition, Lewis demanded a royalty of 10 cents on every ton of coal to build up a $50,000,000 medical and rehabilitation fund for UMW members and joint effort by the union and companies to eliminate substandard sub-standard housing and sanitary conditions con-ditions in some mining communities. HOME CANNING With sugar supplies showing the pinch of a long war, a tightened home canning sugar program for 1945 is in order to insure a fair distribution dis-tribution of sugar to those who actually need it for canning, and to avoid the over-issuance of home canning can-ning sugar which occurred last year, OPA announced. This year sugar for home canning will be obtained by filling out provided pro-vided application forms, with the allotment al-lotment based on actual needs, it was reported. ii 1 1 n nrnnnri r v- Lint From a Blue Serge Suit: Confidential gov't statistics revc that Hitler is losing the war, but winning his biological aims. He has been able to stunt the growth of ten million non-German children of the next generation. . . . Marilyn Cantor, one of Eddie's Ave daughters, will soon make her debut as a night club singer. ... A new Byrnes edict, they hear, may be the discouragement discourage-ment of dog shows. That overworked simile, "As persistent per-sistent as an insurance man," is debunked de-bunked by the news that ninety-two per cent of all private American dwellings have no insurance against burglary. . . . When you hear anyone any-one say that a man is a member of the RCF it means "Rocking Chair Fleet." ... The big laugh these days is walking through Yorkville and seeing all the Italian spaghetti places which replaced the beer halls where the Bund boys plotted their putsches. Some Americans are urging a world-wide free press. It's a good idea. But there are still many obstacles ob-stacles to be overcome before the American press can be as free as the Constitution says it should be. . . Sudden Thawt: The American rar optimists aren't among the Imericans taking part in the bitter truggle at Iwo. The end of the ciggie shortage will be a relief. Not because it will give us smokes but because be-cause it will stop the epidemic of unfunny gags. Those quips are harder to bear than the shortage. ... Of all things. The other day a solen attacked those who censor newspapermen. He was one who attempted to muzzle muz-zle us! . . . Law and order can stop rabble-rousers. Abeut a year ago Boston hate spreaders were running wild. A new police po-lice chief was appointed, he cracked down on the troublemakers trouble-makers and they scurried back to their holes. . . . The Red Cross reports that our men (held prisoner in Germany) are being neglected terribly since German officialdom has broken down. That our men are freezing because be-cause of lack of proper apparel. . . . Over here, instead of putting put-ting Nazi prisoners in the North (in Wintertime) we bunch many in Florida to trim palm trees! That's dumbocracy! Unity Dep't: Sumner Welles ip making literary history. Two of his tomes are among the first ten bestsellers. best-sellers. . . . Memo to those who believe be-lieve war workers can be recruited via voluntary methods: A reliable daily reported that the voluntary methods were tried in one Massa-thusetts Massa-thusetts town two weeks ago and they flopped. ... So did the drive for war workers in Phila. Yon think our radio soap operas tug at the heart? You should hear foe show called "The Robinson Family," a tear-duct dilly which BBC shortwaves to our shores. . . . "Jodie Mann" is a name said to have been coined by Louis Armstrong. Arm-strong. It is spreading among GIs. It refers to a guy who thefts your girl while you're in uniform. ... A cop on a coast movie lot, now over 70, has been sitting at the gate for years complaining of the inactivity. inactiv-ity. He recently had a heart attack. The doc recommended: "Complete rest." ... Of aD things! A dep't Store on Wilshire Ave., Los Angeles, offers women's kerchiefs for $125 each! Next to rationing Sinatra has become be-come the pet subject for radio wheezes. One recent week four successive suc-cessive NBC shows twitted him. . . . Those jabbing blue pencils at newscasters news-casters who express opinions should remember Oscar Wild's common lense: "One can give a really unbiased un-biased opinion only about things that do net interest one, which is no .doubt the reason an unbiased opinion opin-ion is always valueless." . . Are drama critics losing their power' A play that opened a few days ago rated raves from two aisle-sitters-nd it shuttered after two perform-ances. perform-ances. The Newspaper Story of the Week: A Chicago newspaper considered a campaign to name the city's new Hrport after America's highest ranking General ... The publisher, publish-er, one of the New Deal's bitterest Si Ja" pleased idea started to promote toe plan. Until someone pointed out that the new airdrome would then also be named after the New Deal's best Chicago booster-"Marshall Field" 1 The Magazines: One of the newer midget mags frames a nifty pen-portrait pen-portrait of an American who has ef-fectavely ef-fectavely battled Nazi propaganda Mai" Ha arU!h0r f "Bla r ' ' Harold Ickes leaves be-h be-h tiers punchline drunk via a "geS Piece that unleashes, wallop toe"! ery paragraph. Mr. Ickes certainly mur88 Jaded with fickoVbaSoT Stem characters. Most of them a echoes of Damon Runyon's cSs.es "COUGH LOZENGtt : Millions use F A ff t. : pvetheirtimatal5mi::7,o : ing, comforting treS : reackes oil thf I??" H coughs, throatimWwZ? F nessresultingfS soothe with FiF.Boyt Vites i ,saden; we ha GOUN FLAKES OF I led for tVAr MD BRAN combaed mm SCGARSWEET bring w sband bath So tunusi rVDER MSVS famil ,er. Thetrc delicious NEW breakfast ft bdoui fc tig to til aftei A magic flavor combination. Post's 40 Bran Flakes nlusW be! he of tender, seedless raisins , in the same package. Folks 13 raving about it So ask your grorel for Posfs Raisin Bran in the tef arinmi :era jea good hlue-and-white package today, ltd rate B( aeuciousi - .cation. ve we iard to lo ions w h of i it: on "Ms I isuise: image ;e; the aflefel that b( lr the c oyer'i old lo ill as c home, ether HOUSEWIVES: Your Waste Kitchen Fi Are Needed for Exploshi TURN 'EM IN! s'jrse, I rjld bi fldren p. jo: -j .arm viodu f it bj let the goou - cited tl Mother FERW) kametii ies alou ist tal lan 10 te as fcame: Remember those wonderful vegetable j v. w iaoi ouiiiiuci w vnw-11 n goodness and mouth-watering flavor! No, I mista: more this season, but be certaia to plant Ferry's Seeds for best and lurtf results. ring i Fenthi hst p kod th fcate, a And it's easy to buy Ferry'i Seek Your favorite store carries a wide sortment. Have a fcerfer garden r Ferry's Seeds. FERRY-MORSE SEED CO. 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