1
imiiii.ifi „****■ I | WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS By Edward C. Wayne Jap Failure to Overwhelm Australia I Brings Revision of Pacific Timetable; Anti-War Feeling Grows in Bulgaria As Government Meets Nazi Demands I I■■ I .I! ... ■■Hl.. 11 ' (EDITOR’S NOTE —When opinions ore expressed In these eolsmns, they ere those of the news analyst and not necessarily of this newspapor.) - (Released by Western Newspaper Union.), —J TIMETABLE: Revised There had been much talk about the Japanese timetable being awry, but to the man in the street this was hard to believe, since the Japs had swept the East Indies, including Singapore, but excluding Bataan and Manila Bay fortresses, in the unbelievably short period since De- cember 7. However, it had become apparent that the Japanese plans to enter the Australian mainland had suffered a severe setback in the arrival of thou- sands of American troops on the continent, in the all-out plane attack on Jap concentrations in is- lands to the north of Australia, and in the reported reinforcements be- ing received by the Aussies of their own blooded troops back from north- ern Africa. These were signs all could read. The attacks on New Guinea had been going on far too long in com- parison with those on other islands in the Indies without the Japs mov- ing in for the Australian “kill.” It was inconceivable that the Jap- anese wanted to wait until the Amer- icans and North African troops had landed, had become organized. They 'had not wanted MacArthur, and President Quezon to escape to the mainland. Nor did they want their enemy to :be holding onto Port Moresby at this date date, with its airfields and gar- risons awaiting a Jap push over the almost impassable mountainsides to the southern part of the island. Here, it was evident, the Japs had met serious delay. Many be- lieved the attack on Australia was to be abandoned, thus setting the stage for a real Allied counter- offensive. The Australians, however, particu- larly General Blarney, who had been placed in command of the Aussies under General MacArthur, believe that “We must arrange- our strate- gy on the basis that the Japs are going to try an invasion.” BULGAKS: Reported on Move The Bulgarian army had been re- ported on the move to the German eastern front, the government hav- ing acceded to the Nazi demands ,that it furnish troops for the offen- sive against Russia. But the move, highly disturbing to jTurkey as well as to the bulk of the jßulgar people, was not without sharp criticism from within, almost 'amounting to revolution. An anti-war movement had been gaining in popularity, and when two .divisions were withdrawn from the Turkish frontier, reportedly to move against Russia, one radio station kept broadcasting an appeal to the iHp! vHH t " ' MBgjg :v % ill KING BORIS Only m Gorman paten? ipeople to “rise and emulate brave | Jugoslavia.” It called for the throw- jing out at King Boris, who was de- i scribed as “only a German pawn,” land “in Berlin with Von Papen.” Cause of all this antagonism jtoward active entrance into the war on Germany’s side was the blood 'kinship felt by Bulgars, as well as in the main, for Rus- sians. It was not considered unlikely that the government might be over- thrown, and that the army itself might rebel against orders sending them into action against the Reds. A possibility was seen that they might only make a “token” of fight- ing, and surrender rather than meet the fate which mutiny would bring. The Jugoslavs, who overturned ;their government, only to succumb jto unpreparedness and Croatian de- fections, were still fighting in force, land a Jugoslav guerrilla force of 100,000 was reported,about to start a “spring offensive” of jts own against the Nazi army of tecupa- tion. Chief worrier about the Bulgar .situation was Turkey, who saw in this move of soldiery the war com- ing every nearer to her borders. Political circles in Berlin suggest- ed that King Boris might renounce his old east Thracian aspirations. INDIA: At Crossroads While there had been no immedi- ate indication that the Japs were to make India the supreme objective, and abandon any idea of an immedi- ate invasion of Australia, the situa- tion in Burma was serious enough to give poignancy to the visit of Sir Stafford Cripps and his offer of dominion status to India—after the war. The sharp division of opinion in India placed three men and their followers in the forefront of the pic- ture, Gandhi, Nehru and Jinnah. Gandhi, the Mahatma, leader of more Hindus than any other man, had been the first to confer with Cripps, and a two-hour conference had found the two men willing to admit that the basis of negotiations was “satisfactory.” But the handling of Nehru and Jin- nah was a horse of another color. Despite the fact that Gandhi had been more than any other man the leader of resistance to British rule, Vs* . v ' Usm 38* Jawaharlal Mohandas K. Nehru Gandhi he was regarded as more reason- able, more desirous of defending In- dia than the other leaders. Nehru, the congress chieftain, pri- or to talking with Cripps had said that anything less than a promise of complete independence would be in- adequate. “Japan is offering us that,” he said boldly. While he professed no “love for the aggressor,” he said that British failure to offer independ- ence would leave India no recourse other than to adopt a passive resist- ance to the Japs, which he admitted would be no practical resistance at all. Nehru frankly did not believe the British could achieve Indian unity, blaming Jinnah, the Moslem head. He said that Jinnah was insisting on a divided freedom for India, and that while he, Nehru, was willing to "go along” with any type of free- dom, he doubted that England was going to accede to Jinnah’s de- mands. Relations, were worse at the time of Cripps’ arrival than at any time in history, Nehru said, talking dark- ly of civil war being “just around the corner,” an eventuality which most observers believed would be suicidal with Japan knocking at the nation’s eastern borders. COMMANDOS: Hit Daring Blow Britain’s commandos, after a lull of several weeks during which they doubtless had been “cooking” an- other raid, had descended in full power on the German-held port of St. Nazaire, important submarine and naval base, with dire results. Chief objective, outside of general demolition work around the port, had been the destruction of a huge dock, the only one on the European Atlantic coast capable of handling the 39,000-ton German battleship Von Tirpitz. The commandos had attacked St. Nazaire under cover of an aerial bombing raid, using paratroops, de- stroyers, and motor torpedo boats. The Nazis denied all efficacy of the raid, but the British just as positive- ly declared it to have been a huge success. Chief item and most daring in the raid was the use of an overage U. S. destroyer as a swiftly moving bomb to ram the dock. The destroyer had been loaded with five tons of high explosive in its bow, fixed with a time fuse to permit the crew to get ashore and fight while the ship blew up. British sources had reported that this was just what happened. The vessel rammed the dock and stuck there, later to blow up and put the structure out of commission. The Germans said, however, that their coastal defense batteries struck the destroyer and caused her to blow up before reaching her ob- jective. The Germans, however, admitted that many of the raiders got ashore, but claimed they were all killed or captured. The British said there “were some casualties,” but that the objectives were carried out, and that many members of the raiding forces returned in safety to England, It was all part of the British spring offensive, which included practically non-stop raids against Germany and occupied France. The U. S. destroyer found at her end a place in history along with the Vindictive and the blockships of Zee- brugge fame. v " MIDLAND J< BATAAN: More Bombs I ...^ ||L2 p|p MANUEL L. QUEZON Relief not long in coming. Gen. Jonathan Wainwright, pick- ing up where General MacArthur left off, was continuing the Bataan campaign, and Corregidor had with- stood the heaviest bombing attacks of the war. The guns of Corregidor and her sister fortresses had hammered away at flights of Jap bombers, dropping four one day, two the next, with others “probably downed or damaged.’’ President Quezon, on his arrival with his family and cabinet in Aus- tralia, predicted that the iron stand of Wainwright’s men soon would re- ceive its reward, and that relief for the Philippine garrison would “not be long in coming.” The Filipino president had been variously reported as killed, dead of disease, and murdered on orders of General MacArthur. Actually, he had never left MacArthur’s head- quarters, and had flown to Australia to take his stand there again. AMERICANS: Cupid ‘Down Under* Most interesting while the Amer- ican troops were training in Aus- tralia, becoming acclimated, and “meeting the people” was the flood of romance sweeping over the con- tinent. Literally scores of marriages were being performed, causing all sorts of reactions. Some of the Aussie clergy de- plored these “marriages in haste,” and one cleric had the bad taste to say the “Americans came here to fight, not to get married.” The Australian public met the romances with whoops of joy, and the press was definitely on the side of young love. One American commanding of- ficer forbade his soldiers to get married, and drew down on himself howls of rage from the rank and file, and a reprimand from his su- periors. The war department in Washing- ton capped this climax by issuing a statement that any American sol- dier had a perfect right to get mar- ried as long as he did his duty as a soldier, and obeyed the commands of his superiors—and was free to get married. And that, after all, turned out to be the only major worry of those who watched Cupid’s darts flying right and left in Australia—the fear that some enthusiastic lovers might forget that they had wives at home. RUBBER-OIL: German Patents Congressmen had been looking with a wary and angry eye at the Standard Oil group which, it had been publicly charged, had posses- sion of a superior rubber-oil formu- la, and had been negotiating with it, and turning its patents over to a German concern even after Decem- ber 7. For a time things had looked most serious, with Senator Truman say- ing: "It looks like treason and I’m going to give the Standard officials a chance to show why it isn’t,” but this feature of the case simmered down a couple of days later when he said he was “willing to let by- gones be bygones.” But the aftermath was that Stand- ard and its process for making rub- ber out of oil was on the spot, and its every move was being watched. Truman said he didn’t like the looks of the deal whereby the government was constructing plants for making aviation gasoline. “It looks as though the big com- panies are freezing out the little ones, and that they will make enough profit out of their contracts to pay for the government build- ings,” he said. Another aftermath of the congres- sional probe into conditions sur- rounding the rubber-making deals with German firms was that Tru- man said in the future no foreign pacts of any sort might be made without government scrutiny and ap- proval. Congress didn’t want to be caught napping again. OFFENSIVE: The oft-repeated question “where will Hitler’s spring offensive strike” had been sufficiently answered by dispatches from Moscow. Activity was definitely on the lull in North Africa. Activity across the channel was largely from England to Germany, with the Nazis on the defensive. But on the Russian front, both at Murmansk and all along the whole 2,000-mile line, the Reds themselves were admitting widely increased German activity. lURNAL. RISING SUN, MD. Kathleen Norris Says: This Woman Should Not Wed Faultless Man (Bell Syndicate—WMV Service.) k> M /fjm Jay, my former sweetheart, has a lovely daughter, who is a pupil in the school where / teach. So l have seen Jay again once or twice. He has all his old charm and high spirits. By KATHLEEN NORRIS ONE of the most awkward questions that youth can ask age is the one a girl named Vera asks me this morn- ing. Vera’s letter comes from a Georgia town; she evidently be- longs to a somewhat prominent family, for she was given four years at an expensive Pennsyl- vania college, and also tells me that she has had two visits in California “where Mother and Dad usually go every winter.” Vera’s problem is this: When she was 19 she had a love affair, en- tirely unknown to the family, and extremely serious. For three months she and her sweetheart were pas- sionate lovers, then Vera’s feeling waned, and she had an uncomforta- ble time extricating herself from Jay’s still exacting devotion. “Don’t think I didn’t pay for my early foolishness,” writes Vera. “I did, when it came time to try to break engagements with Jay, to cut down on letters and meetings, to make him see that I was through. The day he came to me and said that he realized at last that it was all over, and would trouble me no more, was actually one of the hap- piest of my life. “Two years later, when I was glorying in college days, Jay mar- ried, and I felt nothing but utter relief. Novels for generations have talked of the shame and danger of love affairs, but my real difficulty and tragedy, instead of being that of trying to hold my lover, was that of getting rid of him. Fell in Love Again. “I am now 27. Last year I met a man whose fineness, dignity, intelli- gence made me feel that he was set apart from the ordinary run of men. We are deeply in love and were to have been married this June. Rob- ert is a church member, indeed once studied for orders, and has an al- most fanatic sense of honor. “Meanwhile Jay’s wife has died, and he had a lovely daughter of five, who is one of the pupils in the school where I teach. So that I have seen him again once or twice. He is much developed from the im- pulsive boy I knew eight years ago, with all his old charm and high spirits. “As Robert’s wife I would have wealth, position, and the compan- ionship of a man who is bound some day to be conspicuously successful in his profession. Jay is just one business man among many. But Jay wants to marry me, and Robert feels that it might be right. “Perhaps the path I should take seems smooth and obvious to you, but I can assure you I am harassed and undecided to the point of almost going out of my mind. It has never seemed to me possible that any woman could be in any doubt about which man she wants, but the cir- cumstances here are peculiar, thanks to my little-girl folly, and I really don’t know what to do. Robert says he will leave it entirely to my con- science, and that he knows I will decide rightly, and yet—while that may make you smile with the idea that he wouldn’t mind getting out of it entirely himself, I know that, at 36, he has never cared for any wom- an but me, and would be deeply stricken at losing me. Robert Worries. “His brother tells me he cannot sleep nights for worrying over this thing; the brother doesn’t know all the circumstances. Robert has had the old house completely modern- ized; he has talked to me of our life together as though it were a dream too precious ever to be real- A NEW PROBLEM Here it a problem Kathleen Norris has not recently discussed. The “Vera" of this letter cannot choose between two men. The one, her former sweetheart, can give her charm, a spirited sense of humor and a love that has ma- tured into deep devotion. The other, a solid, successful man of 36, can give her wealth and posi- tion, but her life with him would probably be very dull. He has already told her that if she feels it is her “duty” to marry the oth- er man she is, of course, free to do so. But Vera believes that los- ing her would break his heart. What should she do? ized, and if I decide to marry Jay it may embitter him for life. “A hundred times he has said to me, ‘Oh, why, why, why, does it have to be this way? Why you, of all women?’ Of course that is what my own heart echoes. But twice lately, Robert has used the expression, ‘if you feel you must pay the debt.’ Will you tell me what you think and help one more distracted woman to peace?” Judging from your letter, Vera, I would say that life with Robert might be a rather rigid affair. It seems plain that this self-controlled conscientious man is having the sort of battle between the spirit and the flesh that comes only to religious persons. He is in love with you, and it is his first love, and so overwhelm- ing and painful. Robert undoubtedly thinks that Jay has a claim upon you, that you pledged him wifehood when you yielded to him in that early affair. And that nagging conviction will grow stronger after marriage, when the first wild glamour dies and he discovers that you are human, and can make mistakes and be trouble- some and disappointing like any oth- er wife. So I wouldn’t marry Robert if I were you. If the more easy-going, cheerful Jay is sympathetic to you, and you can imagine yourself as making a good mother to his child and working out a happy normal life for yourself as his wife, then why not tell Robert once and for all that you see the justice of his attitude and that you have determined to make the only reparation in your power for your youthful mistake. This will make him feel heroic and that you both are committed to the dutiful and self-sacrificing course. Success Rests With Vera. But if your decision meets with violent opposition from Robert, and he implores you to forget the past and go on with him into a more honorable future, then of course you might relent and accept the more distinguished destiny. A faultless husband is a fearful and wonderful thing, so be sure that you are re- luctantly talked over, if you decide to be talked over. It might be that in the future you will be glad to re- mind him that your decision was made to marry Jay, when Robert persuaded you otherwise. With either man, the success or failure of the marriage rests with you. With Jay you probably would have cheerful companionship, more laughter, more of the unexpected than with Robert. But with Robert you would have wealth, position, the power a young wife with both can wield, and the knowledge very much to your credit—that you did not conceal anything from him and that he contracted this marriage with his eyes open to your early history. Thm rm, your garden matt pro* due*. It’ important to your family’* health —to tha nation’* welfare! Tour time le too valuable to gamble on info* rior aeeda. Start right. Plant Ferry Qvalttt Seeds because they are bred to pro- duce the best possible results. Over 65,000 tests are made annually to maintain their quality. Buy them at your local Ferry dealer’s. Send for 'Terry’s Victory Gardes Plan,” free. Complete plan and grow- ing directions for vegetable garden. Write Dept. W-4. FERRY-MORSE SEED CO. orritorr san fuancisco More Raleigh Jingles Raleigh Cigarettes are again offering liberal prizes in a big Jingle contest to be run in this paper. One hundred and thirty- three prizes will be awarded each week.—Adv. GAS ON STOMACH What many Doctors do lor It Wten excess stomach add causes gas. sonrstomaeh or heartburn, doctors prescribe the fastest-acting medirinee known for eymtomatic relief—medfdneo like thoee In Bell-ant Tablets. No laxative. If yonr verjr first trial doesn’t prove Bell-ans better, retorn bot&e to as and get double foot money bmtk, Ss. UMI but there’e no way around thm if yon want to hold job. If you limnn do not get enough Vitamin B1 Mm DM and Iron in your regular diet. WWIW your eppetite needs eo- TfMI couragement, try VINOL. Tour lIHI druggist has tUs pleesent-tsst- lyyjg *** tc fc BUNIONSpn ■hoe pressure, soothes, JSiii'L cushions ths sensitive spot. Costs but trifle. To Relieve MONTHLY V FEMALE FAIN If you suffer monthly cramps, back- ache, nervousness, distress of “Irregularities"—due to functional monthly disturbances—try Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound at onceI Plnkham’s Compound is one medicine you can buy today made especially /or women. Taken regularly thruout the month Plnkham’s Compound helps build up resistance against such symptoms. Follow label direc- tions. worth trying! LYDIA I. PINKHAM’S eSSSSm V eomnmmj YOUR EYES TELL how you Hjttrfe fool inside Look in your minor. See if temporary consti- pation as telling on your face, in your eyes. Then try Garfield Tea, exactly at directed. It * the mild, pleasant way to relieve intestinal slus- gishness—without drastic drugs. Feel better, last Mist, work better.lOc—2 5c at drugstores. ■mim For liberal trial templet of toTFREE Garfield Tea and Garfield Headache Powders, writer SAMPLE °*" r, “isuTS\ co*' h -* 4lt St. a if. Ave.,ereofcin*. n.y. WNU—4 14-42 Do You Like Jingle Contests? Raleigh Cigarettes are now run- ning another series of weekly con- tests for those who can supply the best last line to a jingle. Over 100 liberal prizes each week. Watch this paper for details.—Adv. A Life Income From A Gift A* annuity wbh The Salvation Army aseures you a LIFE INCOME that i* sofa, dependable and regular. Dividends as high as 7% depending on age. Issued under authority of certificate by New York State Insuranco Department it gives double security. Thus, you ucuro an as- sured income for life, with the satisfaction of knowing that at your decease, the gift, la your name, wiH carry on religious and charitable work and so minister to the physical aed spiritual well-being of thole in need. Write jotBooklet mi OUT ano mas. coorosc M A NATIONAL SECRETARY SALVATION ARMY 120 W. 14th St, New York. N.Y. —toflH *ss*a*.s*s*s**ss*s*

J< lURNAL. By More Kathleen Norris Says: Jap I …...gones be bygones.” Butthe aftermathwasthatStand-ardand itsprocess formakingrub-ber out of oilwas on the spot, and itseverymovewasbeing

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Page 1: J< lURNAL. By More Kathleen Norris Says: Jap I …...gones be bygones.” Butthe aftermathwasthatStand-ardand itsprocess formakingrub-ber out of oilwas on the spot, and itseverymovewasbeing

imiiii.ifi „****■ I

| WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS By Edward C. Wayne

Jap Failure to Overwhelm AustraliaI Brings Revision of Pacific Timetable;Anti-War Feeling Grows in BulgariaAs Government Meets Nazi Demands

I I■■ I ■ .I! ...■■Hl.. 11 '

(EDITOR’S NOTE—When opinions ore expressed In these eolsmns, they

ere those of the news analyst and not necessarily of this newspapor.)- (Released by Western Newspaper Union.), —J

TIMETABLE:Revised

There had been much talk aboutthe Japanese timetable being awry,but to the man in the street this washard to believe, since the Japs hadswept the East Indies, includingSingapore, but excluding Bataanand Manila Bay fortresses, in theunbelievably short period since De-cember 7.

However, it had become apparentthat the Japanese plans to enter theAustralian mainland had suffered asevere setback in the arrival of thou-sands of American troops on thecontinent, in the all-out planeattack on Jap concentrations in is-lands to the north of Australia, andin the reported reinforcements be-ing received by the Aussies of theirown blooded troops back from north-ern Africa.

These were signs all could read.The attacks on New Guinea hadbeen going on far too long in com-parison with those on other islandsin the Indies without the Japs mov-ing in for the Australian “kill.”

It was inconceivable that the Jap-anese wanted to wait until the Amer-icans and North African troops hadlanded, had become organized. They'had not wanted MacArthur, andPresident Quezon to escape to themainland.

Nor did they want their enemy to:be holding onto Port Moresby at thisdate date, with its airfields and gar-risons awaiting a Jap push over thealmost impassable mountainsides tothe southern part of the island.

Here, it was evident, the Japshad met serious delay. Many be-lieved the attack on Australia wasto be abandoned, thus setting thestage for a real Allied counter-offensive.

The Australians, however, particu-larly General Blarney, who had beenplaced in command of the Aussiesunder General MacArthur, believethat “We must arrange- our strate-gy on the basis that the Japs aregoing to try an invasion.”BULGAKS:Reported on Move

The Bulgarian army had been re-ported on the move to the Germaneastern front, the government hav-ing acceded to the Nazi demands,that it furnish troops for the offen-sive against Russia.

But the move, highly disturbing tojTurkey as well as to the bulk of thejßulgar people, was not withoutsharp criticism from within, almost'amounting to revolution.

An anti-war movement had beengaining in popularity, and when two.divisions were withdrawn from theTurkish frontier, reportedly to moveagainst Russia, one radio stationkept broadcasting an appeal to the

iHp! vHH

t " ' MBgjg

:v •••• %.

ill

KING BORISOnly m Gorman paten?

ipeople to “rise and emulate brave| Jugoslavia.” It called for the throw-jing out at King Boris, who was de-i scribed as “only a German pawn,”land “in Berlin with Von Papen.”

Cause of all this antagonismjtoward active entrance into the waron Germany’s side was the blood'kinship felt by Bulgars, as well as

in the main, for Rus-sians.

It was not considered unlikely thatthe government might be over-thrown, and that the army itselfmight rebel against orders sendingthem into action against the Reds.A possibility was seen that theymight only make a “token” of fight-ing, and surrender rather than meetthe fate which mutiny would bring.

The Jugoslavs, who overturned;their government, only to succumbjto unpreparedness and Croatian de-fections, were still fighting in force,land a Jugoslav guerrilla force of100,000 was reported,about to starta “spring offensive” of jts ownagainst the Nazi army of tecupa-tion.

Chief worrier about the Bulgar.situation was Turkey, who saw inthis move of soldiery the war com-ing every nearer to her borders.

Political circles in Berlin suggest-ed that King Boris might renouncehis old east Thracian aspirations.

INDIA:At Crossroads

While there had been no immedi-ate indication that the Japs were tomake India the supreme objective,and abandon any idea of an immedi-ate invasion of Australia, the situa-tion in Burma was serious enough togive poignancy to the visit ofSir Stafford Cripps and his offer ofdominion status to India—after thewar.

The sharp division of opinion inIndia placed three men and theirfollowers in the forefront of the pic-ture, Gandhi, Nehru and Jinnah.Gandhi, the Mahatma, leader ofmore Hindus than any other man,had been the first to confer withCripps, and a two-hour conferencehad found the two men willing toadmit that the basis of negotiationswas “satisfactory.”

But the handling of Nehru and Jin-nah was a horse of another color.Despite the fact that Gandhi hadbeen more than any other man theleader of resistance to British rule,

Vs* . v ~~

' Usm ' ’ % 38*

Jawaharlal Mohandas K.Nehru Gandhi

he was regarded as more reason-able, more desirous of defending In-dia than the other leaders.

Nehru, the congress chieftain, pri-or to talking with Cripps had saidthat anything less than a promise ofcomplete independence would be in-adequate.

“Japan is offering us that,” hesaid boldly. While he professed no“love for the aggressor,” he saidthat British failure to offer independ-ence would leave India no recourseother than to adopt a passive resist-ance to the Japs, which he admittedwould be no practical resistance atall.

Nehru frankly did not believe theBritish could achieve Indian unity,blaming Jinnah, the Moslem head.He said that Jinnah was insistingon a divided freedom for India, andthat while he, Nehru, was willing to"go along” with any type of free-dom, he doubted that England wasgoing to accede to Jinnah’s de-mands.

Relations, were worse at the timeof Cripps’ arrival than at any timein history, Nehru said, talking dark-ly of civil war being “just aroundthe corner,” an eventuality whichmost observers believed would besuicidal with Japan knocking at thenation’s eastern borders.

COMMANDOS:Hit Daring Blow

Britain’s commandos, after a lullof several weeks during which theydoubtless had been “cooking” an-other raid, had descended in fullpower on the German-held port ofSt. Nazaire, important submarineand naval base, with dire results.

Chief objective, outside of generaldemolition work around the port,had been the destruction of a hugedock, the only one on the EuropeanAtlantic coast capable of handlingthe 39,000-ton German battleshipVon Tirpitz.

The commandos had attacked St.Nazaire under cover of an aerialbombing raid, using paratroops, de-stroyers, and motor torpedo boats.The Nazis denied all efficacy of theraid, but the British just as positive-ly declared it to have been a hugesuccess.

Chief item and most daring in theraid was the use of an overage U. S.destroyer as a swiftly moving bombto ram the dock. The destroyer hadbeen loaded with five tons of highexplosive in its bow, fixed with atime fuse to permit the crew to getashore and fight while the ship blewup.

British sources had reported thatthis was just what happened. Thevessel rammed the dock and stuckthere, later to blow up and put thestructure out of commission.

The Germans said, however, thattheir coastal defense batteriesstruck the destroyer and caused herto blow up before reaching her ob-jective.

The Germans, however, admittedthat many of the raiders got ashore,but claimed they were all killed orcaptured. The British said there“were some casualties,” but that theobjectives were carried out, andthat many members of the raidingforces returned in safety to England,

It was all part of the British springoffensive, which included practicallynon-stop raids against Germany andoccupied France.

The U. S. destroyer found at herend a place in history along with theVindictive and the blockships of Zee-brugge fame. v "

MIDLAND J<

BATAAN:More Bombs

I ...^||L2 p|p -

MANUEL L. QUEZONRelief not long in coming.

Gen. Jonathan Wainwright, pick-ing up where General MacArthurleft off, was continuing the Bataancampaign, and Corregidor had with-stood the heaviest bombing attacksof the war.

The guns of Corregidor and hersister fortresses had hammeredaway at flights of Jap bombers,dropping four one day, two the next,with others “probably downed ordamaged.’’

President Quezon, on his arrivalwith his family and cabinet in Aus-tralia, predicted that the iron standof Wainwright’s men soon would re-ceive its reward, and that relieffor the Philippine garrison would“not be long in coming.”

The Filipino president had beenvariously reported as killed, dead ofdisease, and murdered on orders ofGeneral MacArthur. Actually, hehad never left MacArthur’s head-quarters, and had flown to Australiato take his stand there again.

AMERICANS:Cupid ‘Down Under*

Most interesting while the Amer-ican troops were training in Aus-tralia, becoming acclimated, and“meeting the people” was the floodof romance sweeping over the con-tinent.

Literally scores of marriages werebeing performed, causing all sortsof reactions.

Some of the Aussie clergy de-plored these “marriages in haste,”and one cleric had the bad taste tosay the “Americans came here tofight, not to get married.”

The Australian public met theromances with whoops of joy, andthe press was definitely on the sideof young love.

One American commanding of-ficer forbade his soldiers to getmarried, and drew down on himselfhowls of rage from the rank andfile, and a reprimand from his su-periors.

The war department in Washing-ton capped this climax by issuinga statement that any American sol-dier had a perfect right to get mar-ried as long as he did his duty asa soldier, and obeyed the commandsof his superiors—and was free toget married.

And that, after all, turned out tobe the only major worry of thosewho watched Cupid’s darts flyingright and left in Australia—the fearthat some enthusiastic lovers mightforget that they had wives at home.

RUBBER-OIL:German Patents

Congressmen had been lookingwith a wary and angry eye at theStandard Oil group which, it hadbeen publicly charged, had posses-sion of a superior rubber-oil formu-la, and had been negotiating with it,and turning its patents over to aGerman concern even after Decem-ber 7.

For a time things had looked mostserious, with Senator Truman say-ing: "It looks like treason and I’mgoing to give the Standard officialsa chance to show why it isn’t,” butthis feature of the case simmereddown a couple of days later whenhe said he was “willing to let by-gones be bygones.”

But the aftermath was that Stand-ard and its process for making rub-ber out of oil was on the spot, andits every move was being watched.Truman said he didn’t like the looksof the deal whereby the governmentwas constructing plants for makingaviation gasoline.

“It looks as though the big com-panies are freezing out the littleones, and that they will makeenough profit out of their contractsto pay for the government build-ings,” he said.

Another aftermath of the congres-sional probe into conditions sur-rounding the rubber-making dealswith German firms was that Tru-man said in the future no foreignpacts of any sort might be madewithout government scrutiny and ap-proval.

Congress didn’t want to be caughtnapping again.

OFFENSIVE:The oft-repeated question “where

will Hitler’s spring offensive strike”had been sufficiently answered bydispatches from Moscow.

Activity was definitely on the lullin North Africa.

Activity across the channel waslargely from England to Germany,with the Nazis on the defensive.

But on the Russian front, both atMurmansk and all along the whole2,000-mile line, the Reds themselveswere admitting widely increasedGerman activity. _ _

lURNAL. RISING SUN, MD.

Kathleen Norris Says:This Woman Should Not Wed Faultless Man

(Bell Syndicate—WMVService.)

k> M /fjm

Jay, my former sweetheart, has a lovely daughter, who is a pupil in the schoolwhere / teach. So l have seen Jay again once or twice. He has all his old charm andhigh spirits.

By KATHLEEN NORRIS

ONE of the most awkwardquestions that youth canask age is the one a girl

named Vera asks me this morn-ing. Vera’s letter comes from aGeorgia town; she evidently be-longs to a somewhat prominentfamily, for she was given fouryears at an expensive Pennsyl-vania college, and also tells methat she has had two visits inCalifornia “where Mother andDad usually go every winter.”

Vera’s problem is this: When shewas 19 she had a love affair, en-tirely unknown to the family, andextremely serious. For three monthsshe and her sweetheart were pas-sionate lovers, then Vera’s feelingwaned, and she had an uncomforta-ble time extricating herself fromJay’s still exacting devotion.

“Don’t think I didn’t pay for myearly foolishness,” writes Vera. “Idid, when it came time to try tobreak engagements with Jay, to cutdown on letters and meetings, tomake him see that I was through.The day he came to me and saidthat he realized at last that it wasall over, and would trouble me nomore, was actually one of the hap-piest of my life.

“Two years later, when I wasglorying in college days, Jay mar-ried, and I felt nothing but utterrelief. Novels for generations havetalked of the shame and danger oflove affairs, but my real difficultyand tragedy, instead of being that oftrying to hold my lover, was that ofgetting rid of him.

Fell in Love Again.“I am now 27. Last year I met a

man whose fineness, dignity, intelli-gence made me feel that he was setapart from the ordinary run of men.We are deeply in love and were tohave been married this June. Rob-ert is a church member, indeed oncestudied for orders, and has an al-most fanatic sense of honor.

“Meanwhile Jay’s wife has died,and he had a lovely daughter of five,who is one of the pupils in theschool where I teach. So that Ihave seen him again once or twice.He is much developed from the im-pulsive boy I knew eight years ago,with all his old charm and highspirits.

“As Robert’s wife I would havewealth, position, and the compan-ionship of a man who is bound someday to be conspicuously successfulin his profession. Jay is just onebusiness man among many. But Jaywants to marry me, and Robert feelsthat it might be right.

“Perhaps the path I should takeseems smooth and obvious to you,but I can assure you I am harassedand undecided to the point of almostgoing out of my mind. It has neverseemed to me possible that anywoman could be in any doubt aboutwhich man she wants, but the cir-cumstances here are peculiar, thanksto my little-girl folly, and I reallydon’t know what to do. Robert sayshe will leave it entirely to my con-science, and that he knows I willdecide rightly, and yet—while thatmay make you smile with the ideathat he wouldn’t mind getting out ofit entirely himself, I know that, at36, he has never cared for any wom-an but me, and would be deeplystricken at losing me.

Robert Worries.“His brother tells me he cannot

sleep nights for worrying over thisthing; the brother doesn’t know allthe circumstances. Robert has hadthe old house completely modern-ized; he has talked to me of ourlife together as though it were adream too precious ever to be real-

A NEW PROBLEMHere it a problem Kathleen

Norris has not recently discussed.The “Vera" of this letter cannotchoose between two men. Theone, her former sweetheart, cangive her charm, a spirited senseof humor and a love that has ma-tured into deep devotion. Theother, a solid, successful man of36, can give her wealth and posi-tion, but her life with him wouldprobably be very dull. He hasalready told her that if she feelsit is her “duty” to marry the oth-er man she is, of course, free todo so. But Vera believes that los-ing her would break his heart.What should she do?

ized, and if I decide to marry Jayit may embitter him for life.

“A hundred times he has said tome, ‘Oh, why, why, why, does ithave to be this way? Why you, of allwomen?’ Of course that is what myown heart echoes. But twice lately,Robert has used the expression, ‘ifyou feel you must pay the debt.’ Willyou tell me what you think andhelp one more distracted woman topeace?”

Judging from your letter, Vera,I would say that life with Robertmight be a rather rigid affair. Itseems plain that this self-controlledconscientious man is having the sortof battle between the spirit and theflesh that comes only to religiouspersons. He is in love with you, andit is his first love, and so overwhelm-ing and painful.

Robert undoubtedly thinks thatJay has a claim upon you, that youpledged him wifehood when youyielded to him in that early affair.And that nagging conviction willgrow stronger after marriage, whenthe first wild glamour dies and hediscovers that you are human, andcan make mistakes and be trouble-some and disappointing like any oth-er wife.

So I wouldn’t marry Robert if Iwere you. If the more easy-going,cheerful Jay is sympathetic to you,and you can imagine yourself asmaking a good mother to his childand working out a happy normal lifefor yourself as his wife, then whynot tell Robert once and for all thatyou see the justice of his attitudeand that you have determined tomake the only reparation in yourpower for your youthful mistake.This will make him feel heroic andthat you both are committed to thedutiful and self-sacrificing course.

Success Rests With Vera.But if your decision meets with

violent opposition from Robert, andhe implores you to forget the pastand go on with him into a morehonorable future, then of course youmight relent and accept the moredistinguished destiny. A faultlesshusband is a fearful and wonderfulthing, so be sure that you are re-luctantly talked over, if you decideto be talked over. It might be thatin the future you will be glad to re-mind him that your decision wasmade to marry Jay, when Robertpersuaded you otherwise.

With either man, the success orfailure of the marriage rests withyou. With Jay you probably wouldhave cheerful companionship, morelaughter, more of the unexpectedthan with Robert. But with Robertyou would have wealth, position, thepower a young wife with both canwield, and the knowledge verymuch to your credit—that you didnot conceal anything from him andthat he contracted this marriagewith his eyes open to your earlyhistory.

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