Evening Star Newspaper, February 2, 1942, Page 7

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Adjufant General Courses Are Begun At Fort Washington School Is Transferred From Arlington; 375 Officers Enrolled B3 a Btaff Correspondent of The Star. FORT WASHINGTON, Md., Feb. here from Arlington 2.—Brought Cantonment, the Adjutant General School opened its ninth session today after talks by officers in the Adjutant General's department. Those who addressed the 375 stu- dent officers enrolled for the course included Maj. Gen. Emory S. Adams, the adjutant general: Brig. Gen. James A. Ulio, assistant to the ad- jutant general and chief of the per- sonnel bureau of the War Depart- ment; Brig. Gen. William C. Rose. assistant to the adjutant general,| wand Col. H. C. Holdridge, command- ant of the school. Gen. Adams, welcoming the stu- dent officers, announced that Fort EVENING- STAR, WASHINGTON, ADJUTANT GENERALS' SCHOOL OPENS—Speakers at the formal opening of the adjutant gen- erals’ school at Fort Washington, Md., this morning were (left to right)- Maj. Gen. E. S. Adams, Brig. Gen. James A. Ulio, Brig. Gen. William C. Rose and Col. H. C. Holdridge. —Star Staff Photo. Washington will be the permanent ‘base of the school. Army Placing Men Better. Gen. Ulio told the students that| for the first time in the history of the Army the classification system| e putting the “right man in the| right job.” He said that today the, Army is making cooks out of cooks and truck drivers out of truck| drivers. Gen. Rose stressed the necessity of | training administrative personnel of | all units down to tfe company in | order to relieve combat troops of | the burden of administrative detail. | The generals were introduced by | With Dutch Officials On Phases of War Elation Is Expressed Over Raid on Gilbert And Marshall Groups Hull Conlers af Length the Treasury. | Discussing the law which requires the Treasury to buy Silver until it reaches $1.29 an ounce or until the accumulations reach one-fourth of the stock in the country, the Secre- tary said: “Right now tne situation is that there is more and more use of silver for industrial purposes and we can- not sell any of the silver we have, with the result that Canadian and | Mexican silver is going into indus- trial uses and, with our mines pro- ducing it, we buy it and put it |away. * o o ;Subs Sink Destroyer 0ff Canada’s Coast, Germans Declare Tanker Struck by Bombs In Attacks on Convoy, News Agency Reports D. C, Schools Designated |Viereck Loses Plea For Change of Venue Or Delay in Trial MONDAY, FEB For Registrations For Draft Feb. 16 Third Call Takes In All Men, 20 to 44, Inclusivg, Not Previously Signed ‘William E. Leahy, selective service director for the District, today made public & list of schools designated as registration centers for the third selective service registration on February 16. The announcement also included the names of the chief registrars. All men not previously registered, who reached their 20th birthday on or before December 31, 1941, and who have not attained their 45th birth- day before February 16, 1942, will be required to register between 7 a.m. and 9 p.m. on February 16. Registration points for the 25 local draft boards follow: 1. Western High, Thirty-fifth and R streets NW.; *Wormley, Prospect street between Thirty-third and Thirty-fourth streets N.W. 2. Woodrow Wilson High, Nebraska avenue and Chesapeake street N.W.; *Reno, Howard and Fessenden streets N.W. 3. Deal Junior High, Thirty-eighth and Davenport streets N.W. 4. Calvin Coolidge High, Fifth and Tuckerman streets N.-W.; *Military Road, Military road near Bright- wood 5. Paul Junior High, Eighth and Oglethorpe _streets N.W.; *Military Road, Military road near Bright- wood. 6. Macfarland Junior High, Towa avenue and Webster street N.W; RUARY 2, 1942.. Indicted Nazi Agent’s Case to Start Wednesday Before Justice Letts Justice F. Dickinson Letts today ruled that George Sylvester Viereck, indicted as a Nazi agent who failed to register all his activities with the State Department, will have to | be tried in the District. The District Court jurist denied Mr. Viereck’s request to be tried in Baltimore or Virginia or have his | trial delayed. The case is slated %0 | be heard Wednesday before Justice | Letts, In making known his decision | the jurist also found that there was no inflamed state of the public | mind in the Capital, as claimed by | defense counsel, such as would de- | prive Mr. Viereck of a fair and | just trial. Stacks of newspapers, | containing news stories about the defendant, were submitted by De-| fense Council Emil Morosini, jr., of | New York in an effort to convince the jurist that the defendaiit could | | not obtain his constitutional rights | because of this widespread pub-| } licity. . | Today's decision was regarded as a sweeping ruling in favor of the Government and sustaining the position of the prosecutors, William | Power Maloney and Edward J. | Hickey, jr., special assistants to the | Attorney General. Justice Letts | spent the week end studying the newspapers and other information submitted by the defense. | ther assurance— —and that's ex- actly what he says about GIANT Butter when he scores it U. S. 93—his highest butter grading! When your Uncle Sarv says it's §3 “best” — you don’t have to look for any fur- you've reached the top! Col. Holdridge, who described the extent of the course and introduced members of his staff. Other officers attending the cere- mony were Col. Madison Pearson, plans and training officer for the Adjutant General's Department: Lt. Col. Frank M. Smith. director of in- struction for the school; Maj. L. W Stanley. secretary of the school, and Maj. Roy W. Smith, school adjutant. Course to Last Seven Weeks. The students, some of whom come command for the United Nations senting the subsidy to silver pro- from as far away as Hawaii and forces in the Pacific was under dis- | ducers, Mr. Morgenthau said. Alaska, will undergo an intensive seven-week course, after which they Secretary of State Hull conferred at length today with Eelco Nicholaas van Kleffens, Netherlands Foreign Minister, and Dr. A. Loudon, Dutch Minister here. The Secretary said their discussion related to a general interchange of information and ideas in connec- | tion with important phases of the international situation, but did not | disclose details Asked if the question of a United cussion, Mr. Hull said he would have to let other officials speak on | (This dispatch_was sent from an Our domestic users of silver are | | enemy country. whose motive in releas- entirely at the mercy of the foreign | people as to what they charge. but so far they have not abused it.| However, if one of the foreign silver | | countries tomorrow wanted to charge | 50 cents or 60 cents, they could do {it and we could nof do anything casts), , about it.” | marines The world price is 35 cents an |ounce and the domestic price is ‘3;;;3'[’:1‘: 7 s— ren re- | 1.11 cents—the difference rep! German high command an-| nounced today in reporting sev- | eral triumphs over enemy ship- | | ping. o1 ‘American or Allied sources.) Feb. 2.—German sub- | operating in the North | have sunk a destroyer coast of Canada, thi BERLIN (From German Broad- ! ! *Bruce, Kenvon street and Sherman Meanwhile, the pro < avenue N.W. prosecutors ap- ¢ . peared .his morning before the re-| 7. Powell Junior High, Hiatt place | assembled grand jury,” inquiring | and l;\{tns streel N.W.. *Monroe. | ini, foreign propaganda, which in- | Columbia road and Georgia avenue | dicted Mr. Viereck. The grand | jurors heard Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Webber of New York. Mr. Webber s'a writer on national and inter- ‘muoml subjects, | W. 8. Adams. Nineteenth and Califor- fornia streets N.W.; *Francis Junior High, Twenty-fourth and N streets NwW. 9. Gordon Junior High. Thirty- | e S fith and T streets N.w.. “Stevens, | Capt. Wilhelm Spiess, Twenty-first and K streets NNW.; B % “Magruder, Seventeenth and M | Nazi Air Ace, Killed | By the Associated Press. streets N.W. 10. H. D. Cooke, 17th and Euclid | "y nunoN Peb. 2 Reuters said a | | streets N.W.; *Morgan, V street be- will return to their _nits as adjutant that point. generals, adjutants, or assistant adjutants. The school staff took over Fort Washington January 12, and has been busy renovating the plant, which had been abandoned since 1939. For many vears Fort Wash- ington was the home station of the 12th Infantry, but it has been under Tnterior Department jurisdiction for the last two vears. Burma (Continued From First Page.) the maneuvers with artillery at point blank range and “undoubtedly inflicted heavy losses on the enemy,” the communique said It was indicated here that the Salween line would be held with the grimmest determination against the strong Japanese forces driving north | and westward into Burma along the shore of the Gulf of Martaban. | Martaban Seen Objecti | ‘The next Japanese objective on this front is expected to be Marta- ban, an important town lying di- rectly across the Salween estuary from Moulmein. The Salween River | flows into the Gulf of Martaban here, widening sufficiently to provide an effective water barrier to over- land attack | The British withdrawal from Van Kleffens Encourag Mr. Van Kleffens, while avoiding discussion of the question of a unified command in the Pacific, told reporters after the conference with Mr. Hull that he was gratified and encouraged by the general pic- ture of Allied collaboration in that area, | _He spoke enthusiastically of the | United States Navy's successful raids on Japanese bases in the [ Marshall and Gilbert Islands. de- | claring that “offensive action is what we are aiming at.” “As vou know,” the foreign min- ister oontinued, “that is what we have been trying to maintain in our |area of the Pacific. You will have noted that we have been putting to , good use the weapons you have sent us. All we ask is that you just keep them coming along.” Secretary Hull also expressed ela- tion at news of the Navy's offensive action, telling his press conference that news of the attacks on the Jap- anese bases would be very encourag- ing and most inspiring to all the forces fighting the Axis. El Salvador Gets Aid. Just before Mr. Hull received the Netherlands representatives, he and Dr. Don Hector David Castro, Min- ister of El Salvador, signed a lease- lend agreement under which it is understood El Salvador will receive Mouimein, disclosed Saturday. Was more than $1,000.000 worth of mili- necessitated by the nature of the tayy supplies from this country. The territory to the south and southeast | apreement is one of a series being of the city. Here lay a flat plain giving little opportunity for a siege-like defense which the British | must maintain until they gather strength in Burma for an offensive. | The Japanese attempted to bomb | an airdrome north of Rangoon four | times Saturday night, the British ocommunique said yesterday, but neither casualties nor damage were caused. The R. A. F. was active in re- connaissance pied territory. Indian Machine Gunners Repulse Japs' Attack By DANIEL DELUCE Associated Press War Correspondent ‘WITH BRITISH REARGUARD AT MARTABAN. Burma (By Cour- ire—Delayed), Feb. 1.—Indian ma- chinegunners hidden on the lush green banks of the Salween River opposite burning Moulmein are re- pulsing another attempt by Japa- nese in native sampans to cross the river to Martaban. Two boats have been sunk this afternoon by the Indians’ accurate fire and some 80 Japanese shot or drowned in the muddy tidal waters swirling from the sea. Japs Slip Across River. Eight miles upstream, however, Japanese have slipped across the river to raid the railway which runs north from here around the Gulf of Martaban to Rangoon. The Japa- nese were thrown back once from a temporary bridgehead established last night but the infiltration con- tinued. Still farther upstream, although on the east bank, the Japanese have made Paan the base for a thrust evidently intended to strike at Tha- ton, the next major railway station north of Martaban. Both the railway and the Salween lie north of Martaban, the railway forking westward along the gulf shore and the river eastward toward its source in Tibet. Here at ghostlike Martaban, pock- marked by Japanese bombs and ripped spasmodically by artillery fire, Indian infantry is stoutly hold- ing an exposed salient. Not Naturally Impregnable. ‘But the Salween is hot a naturally {mpregnable defense (although it is three miles wide at its mouth). Paan, upstream 27 miles, was oc- cupied by Japanese who arrived in a scout car as nonchalantly as tourists. Among the hills studded with white pagodas lifting gold-capped spires out of tropical thickets, hand- to-hand fighting is now going on. Rushed into action by truck are fresh fighting sons of India—Dogras, Rajputs, Pathans, Punjabi and Gurkhas. Congress in Brief TODAY. Senate: Considers $26,000,000,000 Navy ap- E‘opriluon bill. ouse : Considers Treasury-Post Office appropriation bill, 4 over Japanese-occu- i | | negotiated with the Latin American | republics. The Secretary also conferred dur- |ing the morning with Capt. Colon Eloy Alfaro, Ecuadorian Ambassa- dor. He told reporters later that mat- ters of extended collaboration were under discussion. with a view of de- veloping some phases of relations | with Ecuador which he could not | discuss publicly in detail at present. Appropriations (Continued From First Page.) 000,000 in new taxes which President Roosevelt has requested, but he ap- ! pealed for individuals to set aside all they could for loans to the Gov- ernment. He pledged himself to the “voluntary” rather than to any compulsory method of borrowing money. After Daniel W. Bell, Undersgcre- | tary of the Treasury, told the com- | | mittee that the present $65,000,000,- | 0000 debt limit would have to be raised very soon, Mr. Morgenthau | | testified: “If we win (the war) the wealth | and resources of the country will be | here, ana if we lose, whether the debt is $100,000,000,000 or $500,- 000,000.000 is unimportant. “Savings bond sales have jumped | tremendously since the Japanese | attack in December and, with the | Bureau of Engraving and Printing | running 24 hours a day, we are | unable to keep up with demands,” Mr. Morgenthau added. Harold N. Graves, Assistant to the | Secretary, informed the committee | that the Government hoped evi | person would invest in savings bonds | all the money he does not need for | food, clothing, housing and the other necessities of life and for taxes Urges Silver Law Repeal. Mr. Morgenthau asserted that he would “be gla. to see Congress strike all of the silver legislation off the books” because of the cost to Far East ’ The details of the attack on the destrover or her location were not given in the communique. DNB. reported that German bombers in several attacks on a British convoy and seyeral merchant ships sailing singlr along the Eng- lish east coast scored a direct hit admidships a tanker’ of 5000 tons and damaged a merchantman of 4000 tons so heavily she listed sharply. The | | (Continued From First Page.) | to the combat areas in the far Pa- cific. Since they are also Japan's easternmost possessions they prob- ably served as headquarters for sub- marines operating off the Pacific coast and as the starting points for | attacks on various American islands !'in the mid-Pacific. Any crippiing of them naturally | would limit such activities as well as curtail raids the enemy might otherwise be able to make against convoys of reinforcements from this country to combat areas in the West- ern and Southwestern Pacific. | Despite the disappointing failure to catch large Japanese warships there, the heavy raid carried impli- cations of important tactical ac- complishments. While the communique left the impression that naval aircraft car- ried out most of the destruction, it said Japanese installations had been | hit hard by shellfire. While there was no disposition here to minimize the essentially grave situation of the Allies in the Western Pacific—with Singapore | Island besieged, a strong enemy force at Moulmein seeking to cut China’s Burma Road lifeline, and increasing activity against the Netherlands Indies—it was noted, nonetheless, that the Japanese had found the going increasingly dif- | ficult in the last 10 days. | In three outstandingly victorious Allied-American and American ac- | tions—the battle of Macassar | Strait, the fleet raid on the Mar- | shall and Gilbert Islands and the smashing of the Corregidor invasion | scheme—it appeared that the en- | emy had lost untold thousands of men and dozens of ships sunk or | damaged. | The significant departure in Al- | lied strategy in the raid on Ja-| pan’s mid-Pacific bases was de-‘ | cribed here as the fact that it was| { a strictly offensive action on a large | | scale. It was to prevent just such | | offensive use of the fleet while | they were attacking far and wide | in the Western Pacific that the | Japanese made their treacherous assault on Pearl Harbor. | Mexico-Bound Telefcope i Inspecied at Embassy Here Mexico, soon to have the second largest telescope in Latin America, | placed official approval on the new | star-gazing device as its trip from Boston to Mexico City by truck was | | interrupted this morning with a! brief stop at the Mexican Embassy. | Dr. Francisco Castillo Najera, the | Mexican Ambassador, was suffering | | a slight cold and the inspection of | | the telescope was made by Rafael | | Nieto, First Secretary; Salvador Du- | hart, Second Secretary; A. C. Ama- dor, Counsellor, and Col. Cristobal | Cardenas, Military Attache of the| Embassy. Harvard University, where | the telescope was made, was repre- | | sented by Dr. Watson Davis of | Science Service. | at the new Mexican National Astro- | physical Observatory on top of a/ hill at Tonanzintla in the State of Puebla, is second in size in Latin America only to the 60-inch re-| flector at the Argentine National Observatory. Guns used during the Crimean War are being broken up for scrap in Chatham, England. By the Associated Press. HONOLULU, Feb. 2.—Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, commander in chief of the Pacific Fleet, said of the attack by the United States Navy | on Japanese bases in the Central | Pacific: “It is certain that extensive dam- | slight.” Admiral Nimitz, making a supple- mentary statement on the Central Pacific attack which was announced by the Navy in Washington yester- day, commended the “vigorous ac- tion of the commanders in pushing | the attack home.” { In a surprise action wholly offen- sive in nature, United States surface &nd air craft raided five island bases in the Marshalls and one in the Gilbert group. Extensive Damage to Bases 'Of Japs Certain, Nimitz Says | age was done. Our own losses were Admiral Nimitz said in his state- | ment: | “Task forces of the Pacific Fleet| | consisting of vessels of all combat | | types carried out successful opera-| | tions against important enemy bases | |and tenders in the Marshall and | Gilbert Islands. | “It is certain that extensive dam- | age was done. .Our own losses were | slight. “The operations were carried out in accordance with prearranged plans. I am greatly pleased with the performances of both officers and men in 2l units concerned and particularly with the vigorous action | apparently referring | of the commanders in pushing the | attack home. “T regret further details of the | action cannot now be disclosed.” news agency said another merchant Ship of 3,000 tons was set on fire. ‘The high command’'s communique, to the same ships, merely said that bombers “ob- tained bomb hits on three medium sized merchant ships, one of them an oil tanker.” In action west of the British stronghold of Gibraltar, the high command added, a corvette was sunk The Germans also said an armed ship was sunk off the coast of | Cirenaica and an armed ship was ! sent to the bottom off Murmansky, Far North Russian port. Canadian Ship Rammed Two Subs, Crewman Believes AN EASTERN CANADIAN PORT, "Feb. 2 (#.—A Canadian merchant ship rammed two objects believe® to be enemy submarines in the At- lantic, according to a member of the crew on the vessel which ar- rived here for repairs. The possible destruction of a third submarine by gunfire was reported by crewmen of a British ship which reached Canada with 32 survivors of a torpedoed tanker. They said the keel of their ship brushed an object just at dusk and that in a few minutes the outline of a U-boat appeared 50 yards away. Gunners aboard the British ship opened fire and the submarine dis- appeared. Collisions Close Together. From the Canadian ship came this account: The fourth engineer on the ship said the coliisions came at night | within a few minutes of each other. Shortly afterward, two Canadian corvettes reached the scene and dropped depth charges for an hour. “It was just after 8 o'clock when we felt the first shock,” said the sailor, whose name can not be re- vealed. “The ship kind of faltered and then seemed to plunge ahead.| I think it was about five minutes after when we hit the second. “At first, I thought we were tor- | pedoed but there was no explosion. | Then I thought we hit agother ship. As far as I know, the lookout | didn't see anything. Depth Charges Dropped. “Only a few minutes later, two corvettes started dropping depth charges all around us. I guess they picked up the sound of the motors when the subs turned them on to dive. Altogether, I counted 18 depth charges. “We all thought we were goners and expected to get & tin fish in | The new telescope, to be szt up|Uus any time, but we had no more | trouble. The bow Was smashed in a little, but there wasn’'t any real danger from sinking.” The United States Coast Guard needs men between the ages of 18 and 31 WASHING MACHINES Sale of Discontinved Models Maytag....$55 ABC.......549 Apex...... 347 Crosley-. .. 45 Thor..... $45 Price Includes Filler Hose Pump tween Champlain and Eighteenth Berlin broadcast today announced that Capt. Wilhelm Spiess, “one of streets N.W. X | the best German fighter pilots” and | 11. Central, Thirteenth and Clif- | holder of the Knights Cross of the | ton streets N.W.; *Harrison, Thir- | Iron Cross, had been killed while | teenth and V streets N.W.: *Grimke, | leading a formation in a low-level Vermont avenue and T streets N'W. | attack on the Russian front. | 12. Gage, Second and U streets ' | N.W.. *Banneker Junior High, = = Euclid street between Georgia and | cause thi§ is the time when Japan Sherman avenues N.W. must either rise or fall. 13. Thomson, Twelfth and L I have been told it is a disgrace streets N.W.; Americanization, Tenth | (o be captured and that I can never and H streets N.W. *Garrison, return home. However, after the Twelfth and R streets N.W. war I would like to go back to | 4. Jefterson Junior High, Eighth | Japan, but that depends on you. and d streets SW.. *Ambush. I |If America could fix it so we street between Third and Fourth wouldn't be disgraced, all of us streets S.W. . | would like to go home and stay 15. Hine Junior High, Sevemh‘mcre. We don't want any more and C streets SE.; *Randall Junior | wars. I am happy to find myself High, First and Eye streets S.W. being treated by doctors and as soon | 16. Buchanan, Thirteenth and E as I am able I will do any work you streets S.E.. *Giddings, Third and | want. G streets SE. | " “As to this war, we know Japan | 17. Eliot Junior High, Eighteenth | can never invade the American con- | and B streets NE.. \*Lovejoy, tinentand America can never invade Twelfth and D streets N.E. {Japan. We were told America 18. Stuart Junior High, Fourth |¥ould fight only in the Eastern Pa- and E streets NE: *Logan, Third Cific in naval engagements and that and G streets NE. ‘J‘lflpln orou:d.:)clciup ‘m e entire Pa- N cific as Ta L aw] 1 l,rl" Langley Jur;er E.ghfi_?lrfirn‘nd Suzuki is of medium height and | T streets N.E.: *Dunbar High, First | ;i jar, with -close-cropped black | and N streets N.W.; <John F. CoOk. 1air anq'a scattering of chin whis- First and P streets N'W. - | kers. He was gaunt when captured | 20 Taft Junior High, Eighteenth and said he had not had enough and Perry streets N.E. to eat from the time he landed on 21. McKinley High, Second and T Luzon until he was brought to the streets N.E.; *Crummell, Gallaudet hospital. 198 & AL AVE ME 6514 GA. AVENUE LW, * 1850 WILSOR BLV3. ARLINGTOR, VA U. S. 93 SCORE 15, SWEET CREAM '» BUTTER APPLE SAUCE »ssuavs 2 7 13- DEL No. ‘l- c FRUIT GOGKTAL .= 4 MED. GREEN can I7- TOMATO J“IGE campaees Lo Household Bleach Musselman’s and Kendall streets N.E. | 22 Langdon, Twentieth . and Franklin streets NE.; °*Browne { Junior High. Twenty-fourth and | — Benning road N.E. | 23. Eastern High, Seventeenth and | East Capitol streets; *Deanwood, | ‘Whittingham and Lane places N E. 24. Anacostia Junior-Senior High, Sixteenth and R streets SE.. *Bir- ney, Nichols avenue and Talber! street S.E. 25. Americanization, Tenth and H | streets N.-W.; *Oardozo. Ninth and Rhode Island avenue N.W., ’ *Colored schools. Prisoner (Continued From First Page.) fight we were surrounded by Ameri- can soldiers and pushed into a point with our backs to the sea. “I thought then that T was going | to die, and I am glad to find myself alive. The worst was still to come, when American artillery started shooting at us from three directions. I had never been under fire before and was extremely frightened, as| were all the others, including my companions who had served in the China war. They had never been | shot at by artillery, as the Chinese | have only rifies and machine guns. | “Our water supplies ran out and I was sent-to try and get water. | I found 2 place where it trickled frem a rock drop by drop and was | filling my canteen when a shell ex- | ploded overhead and something hit | | my helmet. I do not remember | anything more until I awakened | here. | “I do not know who will win the war, America or Japan. I am not sure Japan will. I know it is mixed | | up with what happens to Germany. | | Germany has promised us as-| sistance, but Germany has no nlvy.! so it is only moral assistance. | ' "wJapan is fighting America be- | Very Easy Terms Old Washers in Trade | MEL. His story of his understanding of the war tallied with that of other prisoners who were willing to talk. 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