WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS Senate Group Votes Farm Deferment; Rout of Jap Armada Near New Guinea Shows Rising U. S. Power in Pacific; RAF Europe Drive Forecasts Invasion (EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinion* *r# expressed In these columns, they are those of Western Newspaper Union’s news analyst* and not necessarily of this newspaper.) _________ Released by Western Newspaper Union. .. MaJ. Gen. Lloyd Fredenhall, rommander-ln-ehief of Allied forces in southern Tunisia, is pictured in a map discussion with French officers. Clockwise around the table are: Capt. Charles Ciarlet, French operations officer (light cap); Brig. Gen. Raye Porter (standing); General Freden hall; Gen. Eduard Welvert; Lieut. Henri Thewcs, interpreter to Gen eral Welvert. JAPS PERSISTENT: In South Pacific The South Pacific had returned dramatically to the fore when the news was disclosed that the Japa nese had marshaled great forces in their island bases north of Austra lia. The approach of a powerful Japa nese convoy of 14 vessels toward New Guinea under the protection of foggy weather, had lent weight to a previous warning by Gen. Douglas MacArthur that the enemy had been concentrating huge quantities of planes, shipping and men in their far-flung island strongholds ringing Australia on the north. Allied warplanes were on the alert and in the decisive action that fol lowed, they sank or damaged four of the enemy ships and scattered the rest of the convoy over a wide area. Among the Jap casualties were one 10,000 ton transport left sinking, an other transport split asunder, two other vessels damaged and escort ing warships hit. This latest Jap offensive bid was apparently aimed to reinforce en emy forces in the Lae area of New Guinea. PAY-AS-YOU-GO PLAN: W ould W ithhold 20% The new pay-as-you-go tax pro gram was not the Ruml plan nor the proposal advanced by the treas ury department. Somewhere be tween both, the new congressional plan would withhold 20 per cent of taxable income from the pay en velopes of the nation’s 31,000,000 wage and salary earners beginning July 1. Sponsored by Chairman Cooper of the house ways and means commit tee s subcommittee on pay-as-you-go taxation, the plan would provide for weekly, semi-monthly or monthly deductions from income which would be accumulated and applied to actual taxes computed at the year’s end. The proposed withholding levy would not change any person’s tax obligations for 1942. 1943 or any year. It merely sets up a system for de ductions from wages and salaries for accumulation against actual taxes to be computed at the end of the year. Taxpayers who paid their first installments March 15 would be e-pected to pay their second install ment as usual June 15. Then in July, the withholding provision would be undertaken. MANPOWER: Sendees Need 12,000,000 Upwards of 12,000.000 American: may have to don uniforms befort the war is over in order to main tain an armed force of 11,000,000 congress was told by Col. Lewis Sanders, chief of the re-employmen division of the selective service. The 1,000,000 loss in manpower he said, could be charged up to nor mal attrition, exclusive of batth casualties. In explaining his para doxical set-up. Colonel Sanders said “You would put into sone pictun an armed force of 11,000.000 anc then 1,000,000 men to replace the at trition of that armed force. In oth er words, it looks as if you havi 12,000,000 men in service, but yoi don't. You always have 11,000,000.' FARM WORKERS: Senators Vote Deferment Forecasting deferment of farm workers from military service for the remainder of this year, the sen ate military affairs committee had voted approval of a measure ex empting such workers from the draft. Viewed as a stop-gap to relieve the current farm labor and food shortage, the committee’s action took the form of a proposed amend ment to the Selective Service act. The amendment provides that "ev ery registrant engaged in an agri cultural occupation . . . shall be de ferred from training and service" under the Selective Service act, and that "no such registrant shall leave such occupation" without special permission from his local board. INVASION PRELUDE: RAF Softens Nazi land As Allied bombers had continued their unprecedented aerial attack against western Europe and had wrought destruction in Berlin out distancing even the havoc of 1940 Nazi assaults on London, this offen sive appeared to be taking a major place in the overall Allied war plan. Night after night the bombers had droned in an ever-rising crescendo over Berlin. In a single attack more than 900 tons of bombs—twice the weight of anything aver dropped by the Nazis on London—plummeted down on Hitler’s capital. Returning fliers reported mountainous con flagrations in Berlin. At the peak of the bombing at tacks, Capt. Harold Balfour, British undersecretary of state for air, said the Anglo-American air offensive was "preparing the day for our united forces to invade Europe." "I look forward to the time when there will be no hour of the day or night when the Axis can rest from the swoop of Allied aircraft,” he said. "In the long view, the pres ent raids are but the opening bars which will rise to the crescendo of a march on Europe." RUSSIAN FRONT: 'Follow the Weather’ Although the thaws of spring had slowed down their offensive in the south, the doughty Russians were still on the march in the northwest. Into the headlines once more came Marshal Timoshenko, ace Russian commander, for his armies on the move between Moscow and Lenin grad had recaptured 302 towns and settlements, freed 1,000 square miles of territory and had menaced Ger man positions by the seizure of key points near Staraya Russa. The Reds had killed or captured 11,000 Nazis. The timing of this newest offen sive—the eighth launched by the Russians since last November—in dicated the persistent character of the Russian strategy. Summed up it meant this: Shift the center of operations to follow the weather. If It thaws in the south, then attack in the north. But do not permit the Nazis a breathing-spell anywhere. In the Donets basin the Nazi ■ forces had retained the initiative in I their counteroffensive. Moscow had admitted some local German suc • cesses, but had not confirmed a Nazi : claim of the recapture of Barven i kiva. 82 miles southeast of Kharkov ’ on the Kiev railway. ET WASHINGTON: Lieut. Com. Le roy C. Simpler of Milton, Del., whose navy fighter squadron is known to have shot down 77 planes and is said to have accounted for 16 more in operations in the Solomon Islands, will receive a third decoration, the navy reported. Already the recipi ent of the Navy Cress and Distin guished Flying Cross, he has been voted a Gold Star. ZURICH: Following a tour of It aly, a Swiss newspaper correspond ent reported that United Nations' bombing planes had caused wide spread damage and a majority oi residents had evacuated large cit ies. In Milan, only one-third of the normal 1,200.000 population remains, he said. In Genoa, most of the city's important thoroughfares have been badly wrecked. TUNISIA: Axis Tries Diversion As American pressure was inten sified on Marshal Rommel’s retreat from the Kasserine Pass region, oth er Axis forces had headed an attack toward Beja, 40 miles west of Tunis, in an effort to create a diversion and remove Allied attention from Rommel. The British, against whom this drive was launched, had suc cessfully held the Germans off and the Axis attacks lost their momen tum. Meanwhile, the Allied forces’ ad vance in central Tunisia continued with the capture of Sbeitla, 18 miles from the town of Kasserine. In the far south, too, war bulletins said, the British eighth army under Gen. Sir Bernard Montgomery had at tacked objectives on the Mareth line. As the Allied air strength in North Africa had continued to grow, bomb ing raids against enemy positions gained in momentum. Widespread activity included raids on Palermo, Sicily, western terminus of the Axis supply route shuttling men and mu nitions to North Africa. The air as saults likewise concentrated on the docks at the Axis naval base of Bizerte and on railroad bridges be tween Sfax and Sousse. ANTI-JAP OFFENSIVE: ‘Prospects Are Bright' From both sides of the Pacific came indications that more effective American offensive action against the Japs was drawing nearer. In China Brig. Gen. Claire L. Chennault declared that the pros pects “are definitely brighter’’ for carrying the war to Japan, adding that the Allies can defeat the Nip ponese in a comparatively short time when they turn their whole ef- 1 fort into the Pacific, and “there is an outside chance the job can be finished this year.” Emphasizing the possibility of eliminating Japan this year, the blunt-spoken Chennault added: "I think there are some men in high position who already realize this.” In Washington, Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, commander of the Pacific fleet, said the navy was ready to start a drive toward the industrial heart of Japan. OIL FOR SPAIN: No U. S. Deprivation Diplomacy is the business of Act ing Secretary of State Sumner Welles and he showed he was well equipped for his job by the manner in which he smoothed over the con troversial subject of shipments of American oil products to pro-Axis Spain. Loud had been the outcry in the oil-scarce eastern states when the SlIMNER WELLES . . . oil, on troubled waters. news of the shipments to Spain were made public. Quick to mollify the complainers was Mr. Welles who de- j dared that such shipments were in 1 line, with the interests of the United States and “have had no eifect whatever on the quantity of petrole um available to *l»ny consumers in the United States." RATIONING PICTURE: Regulations Expanding As Mrs. Average Housewife got used to buying her canned goods on a point rationing basis, a survey of the rationing picture as a whole re vealed the following regulations in force: Coffee — one pound every six weeks; sugar—five pounds every 11 weeks; shoes—one pair between now and June 17, obtainable with Stamp No. 17 in War Ration Book No. 1; Tires—still closely rationed, but re •aps obtainable; gasoline—all pleas ure driving banned in 17 eastern states and the District of Columbia. A, B and C coupons worth three gallons weekly in the eastern area, four gallons in the rest of the na tion; fuel oil—Period 4 coupons valid until about April 12. Imminent on the ration schedule were meat and butter. Restrictions on clothing expected by many au thorities before summer. GANDHI: Success and Failure Weaker in physical strength but not in spirit. Mohandas K. Gandhi had successfully completed his 21 day protest fast. While the fast had failed in its mission of forcing the Indian gov ernment to release Gandhi from custody, it did however, refocus the world’s attention on the Indian strug gle for independence and cause the British authorities some moments of anguished embarrassment. Pennsylvania Turnpike Aids 'Flight Strip' Boom Super-Highway Serves as Ideal Emergency Landing Field for Planes; Postwar Ad vances to Emphasize Need for Runways. By BAUKHAGE News Analyst and Commentator. WNU Service, Union Trust BuiVling, Washington, I). C. The great bomber was in trouble. The pilot knew it. One engine was coughing like Camille in the last act. He looked down. Below him lay sleepy Somerset country, Pennsyl vania. On the far horizon was a smoky blur he knew was Pittsburgh. He had been following the long, brown ribbon, wide and straight as a string for many hundreds of yards before it gently curved with hardly a grade—the Pennsylvania Turn pike. The pilot picked a wide green field beside this highway, dropped down, made his landing and his repairs. A quick call to the state police and the road was ready, for it is a de fense highway now, a vital part of the arteries of transportation of war supplies. But here was a new use for this wild dream that has be come a stern reality. Traffic was stopped, the great bomber taxied out of the field and onto the highway. The pavement made a perfect runway. The straight-way was of sufficient length, the cuts were low and the wing spread passed over all appurte nances. The good ship rose and was on its way. This was no flight of the imagina tion. It was a real flight which took place and was described a little over a year ago by Representative Jennings Randolph of West Virginia, one of Washington's air-minded con gressmen. And so a super-highway becomes an adjunct of what is to be Amer ica’s super airways. More than 35 planes, Mr. Randolph tells me, have taken advantage of this emergency landing highway. New Chapter Opens And so a new chapter opens in American roadbuilding. A new rea son for the development of the coun tryside that is to come after the war —must come U#ve are to meet the demands of tomorrow’s transporta tion, of tomorrow’s demand for pub lic works to take up the slack after the war until industry can absorb the returned soldier and the jobless warplant worker. In spite of the many pressing war needs, congress is more awake to day to the needs of the air and the coilary developments on the ground than it ever has been before. Today, a Pennsylvanian, trans ported to Washington, cons the press and listens to the radio each day the is retired from an active busi ness life in which he has amassed a modest fortune) for word of some new benefit that child of his, the Pennsylvania Turnpike, has given to the country. He is Walter Jones. The Turnpike was a peacetime ven ture. He obtained funds from the $29,250,000 federal grant and the Reconstruction Finance corporation purchased bonds amounting to $40,800,000 The first issue was over subscribed by the public by 60 per cent. The Turnpike is a toll road and the first year of operation, the revenue was nearly three million dollars. No wonder. It was an engineer’s dream come true—and a motorist’s, too. As near a curveless, gradeless, intersectionless, straightaway that one could wish. When war came with the overtaxed railways, it was a Godsend for it opened a veritable Volga of trucking from Pittsburgh, its western terminal, to Harrisburg. Dual Purpose “I feel confident.” scys Represen tative Randolph, "twenty years will liquidate the RFC loan.” So much for that highway which may well be the father of many. It has served another purpose. The emergency plane landing merely symbolizes what can be done by the highway for the plane. The answer is the "flight strip" for which congress appropriated ten million dollars as experimentation. What is a "flight strip"? Official ly defined, it is "an area of land with clear approaches located to an adjacent highway for use as an aux iliary landing area for aircraft ” The war advantage of this new institution is obvious We know what to expect in the increased number of planes after the war. We know the limitation in matter of space of the airports. We can guess what the men who have talked “flight strips’’ for years know, what the development of these runways will mean. As Fred Schiepfe, special en gineering consultant to the adminis trator of the Federal Works agency, says: “The congress, the state high way departments, and the contrac tors are pulling together toward the end that the projects will be built in the shortest possible time.” • • * About Poached Eggs— And the Awe of a Kitchen Only recently, when my wife was away for some time, did I learn to poach an egg, and in so doing, at last lost my awe of the kitchen. It was my early training that gave me that awe. Neither my grandmother nor my mother would permit "men in the kitchen” unless they had spe cific masculine business there. "No, you sit down in the corner and read the paper to me. I can dry the dishes quicker without you helping. And there won't be any streaks on the cups.” Of course, there were times when a man’s presence was permitted. Naturally, when he was allowed to eat there or when the kindling had to be brought in or the coal hod filled. But even then, only when Milana, the young Scandinavian giantess who was the hired girl, was otherwise en gaged. When I was quite small, I was al lowed to play in the kitchen when traffic was light. But that was a special privilege. The bare scrubbed floor was excellent for tops. And, of course, was that much nearer the cookies, and if I was present during the early stages of cake-baking, there were the odd pieces of sweet dough that I loved, and sometimes, a chance to “lick the pan” which was not as unsanitary a practice as it sounds. It really meant a chance to scrape out the dish after the frost ing had been mixed. But there were bitter memories of cake-baking time, too, the stimu lant for which added to my respect for the kitchen. Once, coming back from school, I leapt into the room and started to stamp the crisp snow from my rubbers. There was (oh culpa mea!) a cake in the oven. It fell and soon my pride followed for I was placed in a most embarrass ing position — a horizontal position I might add. Other Reasons There were many reasons why my love of the kitchen was mingled with a respect that has not quite gone even though the graceful curves of the range whose covers could glow like a summer sun and whose isin glass eyes beamed so cheerfully, has long since gone. The kitchen table with its white oilcloth, with only a few scars at one end—another why men weren't allowed in these sacred precincts—“Now who has been cut ting bread without the breadboard again?" I am not. of course, describing the spacious room of the farmhouse when I talk about my kitchen mem ories for I lived “in town" although the orchard began just beyond the back fence and fields, an easy walk beyond the place where the side walk became two parallel planks with a space between (perilous to maneuver on a bicycle) and then ended in a pathway. No, mine was not the spacious kitchen where half a dozen could eat at once. But it took care of the family with a little crowding on Sun day nights around the remnants of last night’s baked beans and the oth er delicious leftovers. Souvenir Calendar We had room for the little rag rug under the rocker by the window and the Journal's bright “souvenir” cal endar adorned the wall—that “annu al gift" of the newsboy is about the only thing left in today’s white kitch en where you can’t tell the sink from the gas stove or the cabinet or the ice box. That and the dotted swiss curtains in my kitchen. But you may break, you may shat ter my dream if you will, when you open one shiny door, the scent of the spices oling about it still. I have lost my awe of the kitchen but lov ing memories linger and latterly it has. in a measure, increased my self-respect. At long last, no one to stop me, I have learned to poach an egg. BRIEFS.. by Baukhape Eating out to boat rationing won’t help, says OPA, because restaurant supplies are being cut about in half. • • • American fighting men serving outside the country now can say it with flowers! Three dollars per or der is cabled to the Red Cross and the Red Cross selects and delivers the flowers to Madame. No longer "But of sight, out of mind." About 25,000 books have been sent from Sweden to prisoners of war held in camps in Germany. They are distributed through the Red Cross and the YMCA. • • • Indications are that both hog and cattle slaughter this year will sur pass that of last year, while sup plies of fed lambs this winter and spring will equal the 1942 crop. Farm Curves Aid To Victory Effort New Land Patterns Making Appearance _ Farming on the contour, following the “curve of the land,” is helping to win the war for the United Na tions. A revolutionary method, farming on the contour not only is helping produce bigger yields but also it is saving soil and water to insure a continued longtime productive capacity. Cost of production, too, has been cut as much as 70 cents per acre by contour farming be cause conservation methods save fuel, fertilizer, time, machinery wear and labor—all essential to a wartime production economy. Just as Columbus had faith in his belief that the world was not flat and proved it by discovering the con tinent which now has become the hemisphere of the Americas, men today have proved that the land can be farmed successfully and prof itably on the contour. Just as Wash ington and Jefferson saw in their day a need for soil conservation practices, men of the past half cen tury also have seen the good earth washing and blowing away, and have developed the remedy. Vernie Marshall of Texas is one of the current group of men who has seen the effects of soil erosion Twelve-year-old son of J. C. Tay lor, Coryell county, Texas, helps his father improve the farm. Taylor practices contour cultivation, strip cropping and terracing. Well-vege tated terrace outlets and reseeded pasture complete the farm conser vation program. and who has assumed leadership in helping to solve the problem. Long a pioneer of the idea that farmers must act to check soil erosion, Vernie Marshall was largely respon sible for enactment of the Soil Con servation Districts law in the Lone Star state. As administrator of the Soil Conservation board he is pro moting the cause of conservation farming, and more than 70 districts have been organized in Texas un der supervision of the board. "Straight” farming, with the fence-rows and up and over the hills and slopes, once was com mon practice and resulted in im mense erosion problems. In 1935 and 1930 there were six million acres of land subject to erosion in the Dust Bowl area. During the past few years farmers have worked co-operatively together and have established erosion con trol measures. Chicken Disease Control Cecal coccidiosis, a disease par ticularly destructive to chickens, [ has been effectively prevented ex perimentally and may eventually be controlled by the use of a chemical compound developed for this pur pose. Cecal coccidiosis is caused by microscopic organisms known as protozoa which invade and attack the cell lin ing of the ce cal pouches of poultry, causing stunting. weakness, and eventual death. While several sulphur compounds i have shown some promise, tetra- j ethyl thiuram monosulflde, when fed experimentally in unadulterated form, appears to be the most satis I factory drug yet tested. Decision to concentrate further in vestigation on tetraethyl thiuram monosulflde is based on the results of preliminary experiments conduct ed at the University of Wisconsin. _ Farm Notes To relieve fertilizer manufacturers ' of distress caused by rising labor and other operating costs, permis sion was recently granted them to increase prices of mixed fertilizers l and of superphosphate. • • • Cotton is of such great importance in meeting military and civilian de ; mands that the United States is now consuming more than 45,000 bales |each day. PenetrQ Many users say “first use is CO 10 S' a revelation.” Has a base of COUGHING, old fashioned mutton suet, SNIFFLES' Grandma's favorite. Genera MUSCLE-' ous jar 261, double supply 35^. B.ruc» Demand Btainlesa Penetro. at*ltga— The new steel helmet just adopt ed by the Army is no longer called a “tin hat.” It’s a "head bucket” and when you see one you’ll know why. Our soldiers have changed much of their slang since the last war, but not their preference for Camel Cigarettes. Now—as then —Camels are the favorite. They’re the favorite cigarette with men in the Navy, Marines and Coast Guard as well, according to actual sales records from service men’s stores. If you want to be sure of your gift to friends or relatives in the service being well received, stop in at your local dealer’s and send a carton of Camels.—Adv. MPOTf','S“ • RELIEVE the stinging itch—allay • irritation, and thus quicken healing Begin to use soothing Resinol today. RESINOU Jp-X I I WAS A SLAVE I TO CONSTIPATION Talk about being In bond age ! I felt as If I were walk- j j ing around In chains. Purges only helped me temporarily. Then I learned the cause f of my constipation. It was lack of "bulk” in my diet. So I took a friend's advice and began eating kellogg’s j all-bran. It sure is a grand tasting cereal—and did Just what he said it would do. It got at the cause of. my con stipation and corrected itt f. If your trouble is like I mine, why don’t you try r all-bran? Just eat it regu |k larly, drink plenty of water j and—“Join the Regulars”! fj Made by Kellogg's in Bat ^ tie Creek. >M ' 1 ~ ' ' ~ ■■ ..■■» V JSujnr | CLEARS STUFFY NOSE H When a cold (tarts—spread Mentholatum thoroughly inside ,1 each nostril. Instantly it releases *1 vapor "Mentholations” that start f I 4 vital acticns: 1) They thin out t] thick mucus; 2) Soothe irritated i I membranes; 3) Help reduce swol II len passages; 4) Stimulate nasal || blood supply. Every breath brings K quick, welcome relief! Jars 30c. ^YOU WOMEN WHO SUFFER FROM-v HOT HASHES If you suffer from hot flashes, dizzi ness, distress of "Irregularities”, are weak, nervous. Irritable, blue at times—due to the functional “middle-age” period In a woman’s life—try Lydia E. Plnkham's Vege table Compound—the best-known medicine you can buy today that's made especially for women. Plnkham's Compound has helped thousands upou thousands of wom en to relieve such annoying symp- * toms. Follow label directions. Plnk ham's Compound is worth, tryingI May Warn of Disordered Kidney Aetion Modern life with Its hurry and worry. Irregular habits, improper eating ana drinking—its risk of exposure and infec tion—throwa heavy strain on the work of the kidneys. They are apt to become over-taxed and fail to filter excess acid d and other impurities from the life-giving * blood. You may suffer nagging backache, headache, dizziness, getting up nights, leg pains, swelling—feel constantly tired, nervous, all worn out. Other signs of kidney or bladder uiaorder are some times burning, scanty or too frequent urination. Try Doom’s Pills. Doan's help the kidneys to pass off harmful excess body waste. They have had more than half a century of public approval. Are reeon> aiended by grateful users everywhere. Ask your neighbor! Subscribe for a Bomb For Tojo or Hitler By Buying War Bonds <