Mediterranean Algiers Stars and Stripes (Newspaper) - June 29, 1943, Algiers, Algiers Page 4 the stars and stripes daily t j i tuesday june 29, 1943inquiring photographer a a what do you think of american soldiers a pictures by stars Anosi ripes stat photographer asked of have French a along Rue Michelett Fiji be Weil blur ryes with a twinkle a american soldiers Arr very men. They Arr very niger. Silent. 1 try Arr and very am Asili. Because Chry Arr and not afraid of but too in genl Irttie ii i like Terni democratic hard work. I work with them so i know Yvette scotto pert Host and Misi biotic eyes a �?�1 think american soldiers Arr very childish. Most All of them however Are kind and sympathetic. There Arr some though who Arr not very polite. Florence tin Iii Shes got that dangerous look a Quot american soldiers Are Verv Independent. They do just what they please and done Tav it a and questions. They drink too much sometimes but we forgive them because we realize what they be been through and that they Arr far from Lucienne Scharrit fresh a a hut pretty a Quot i think your Soldier Are Verv kind and Fine gentlemen. I have Many american friends. We Are very Happy they Are Herr because they have delivered a from the terrible nazis. Soi Sola Sweet and Lovely a a american Soldier Are very kind and respectful arid very Nice to French people. Hut they Are like children rarely Ever serious. They have very High standards and do their Best to please you. I think they Are swell airmen bag eight a Day flyers in Pacific shoot japs dizzy must Trust continued Irum Page it broadcast alerts ant subsidy French trainmen Washington june 2r american air superiority was Cit i in an Allied Headquarters communique asserting that u. S airmen have been shooting Down or damaging japanese planes in the Southwest Pacific at the rate of eight planes daily for the past eight weeks. Between May i and june 26. 455 Jap planes were destroyed or damaged the official Effort stated. The japanese appear to be Quot on he spot Quot in air fighting and if they continue to lore aircraft at the present rate their position is liable to become perilous the Quality of Jap pilots is believed to have deteriorated considerable in recent months indicating that the problem of replacement is becoming increasingly difficult. Spitfire lightning combinations of Allied fighter squadrons As Wrell As the you aug formidable Beau of igniters and Are said to be causing the nip ponese some pretty bad moments. Three widespread raids were reported mending a dash at Ribald in new Britain where 20 tons of High explosive and intend nov bombs were unleashed on Jap aircraft disc it Ersal areas. Other raids were on timor and at Fin Chafen in new Guinea tries and people who believe that Hie interests not of the state hut of Mankind Are Paramount in the control of our lives make Good neighbors i heir cooperation augurs Well Lur a decent postwar world and the Celebration was directed nationally by a special committee consisting of Eleanor Roosevelt Wendell Wilkie. Thomas w. Lamont William Green president of the american federation of labor and Philip Murray president of the Congress of Industrial organizations. Among other speakers who appeared with Davies at the new York rally were Brig. Gen Troup Miller new Yolks mayor Fiorillo h la guard la. Winthrop Aldrich president of the National War fund and Sidney Hillman president of the amalgamated clothing workers of America. New hits continued trom Page ii transportation men of France have been told to be prepared to i sabotage their Railroad locomotives and All other vehicle when the allies give them tile signal. In a message prepared by French underground leaders and broadcast by the United nations Raho station Here Railroad men were told it will be n Pessary for you to destroy the machines which Are your Pride the machines von Admire you will have to create traffic blocks and cause disorganization meanwhile As Allied planes stepped lip attacks on the overburdened Gem an rail system reports of widespread sabotage of an pouring in from All occupied Europe patriots Are continually derailing trains growing up Bridge nod destroying hundreds of locomotives in f1 a Nee. Belgium the Netherlands. Denmark Norway Poland. Yugo Savia. Greece and occupied Russia. Reports in the hands of the allies show continued from i age ii Cago today to consider plans for alleviating the shortage the meat Board said it was especially concerned about Rej ports that service men on furlough complained they had to seen a Steak since putting on a uniform. While butchers shelves Are emptying. The colossal surplus of cattle on ranchers is piling up still More and packers report slaughtering is reduced to 50 percent of Normal. Some livestock men Are said to blame the drop in slaughtering on what they Call Quot restrictive Quot Federal regulations including quotas and the subsidy program. Plans made continued from Page ii Oiler official notices on the Pacific War reported that Mitchells and Venturas escorted by i ight rings were employed in six a tanks in Kiska in the Aleutian islands formations of daunt Lessly and avengers escorted by wildcats attacked new Georgia in the Central Solomons. Youngest murderer Newburyport. Mass a tile youngest person Ever tried for first degree murder is in Massachusetts 13-Vear-Oid Edward Dow. Was convicted by a 12-Man jury for the Hammer slaying of a 72-year-old spinster during a robbery attempt. "01100 commissioner Timilty a trial workers of course will be permitted to leave. Large numbers of people already have voluntarily evacuated the Vicinity. The German press has i by uned these people for spreading1 the accounts of Allied air Pound i my and causing alarm to spread 1 across Hie entire Reich. The German radio meantime warned residents of the ruin against panic in the bombed Industrial regions the population was described As streaming out of the shattered Section in buses and on foot. German claims that they can move their heavy Industry from the Ruhr Valley with relative ease Are described by american Industrial experts As Basic heavy industries such As Iron steel and Oil cannot be moved to Point. Distant from raw materials without Complete disorganization of transportation systems and serious loss of output these experts say it half of Germany a steel plants Ere destroyed by Allied bombings observers state it would require 80.ikm men a minimum of a year and a half to replace them six men warned on army charge India Naro is men. Including it. Col Wayne ii Nick. Of the engineers coms. Were inducted by in Indian i a it Lis grand jury on i charges of conspiracy in Over he the government on rent ii of equipment used in building an ordnance Plant near Charleston hid attorney general Francis Riddle announced that the amount in voiced is k dears b Ridle revealed that the Fri obtained information that total overcharges were about 600 too dollars others in lifted Wro a Groom of Fri a contractors a a Vilian War de or tent employee. Yale professor Dies new Haven Nicholas j sink mail 49 noted Yale professor of International politics who rec n in tics be Eik teaching army officers to tie temporary military governors for liberated foreign lands died Affer a Long illness. Magically ended his addresses by forming a v with arms stretched upward toward the ski. Gen de Gaulle termed Italy and of tier collaborationist countries Quot unfortunates who have been flit Lerus Quot history has taught that there could not be any peace if one of the nations forming the Backbone of Europe was basely reduced to servitude and history has taught us. Too. That violence and tyranny always come from one the general added the cause of democracy will be lost to declared if the crimes of the fascist oppressors go unpunished Gen de Gaulle was reportedly acclaimed w idely by the Populis lion of Tunis As he moored through the streets in an open automobile in contrast to ins usual repetition in Algiers where j lie is More or less taken for granted. Tunis and other towns visited i by the general were decked out in j a prof a Ion of flags. Toe populace i of Tunis was in a festive spirit and made a Holiday of his visit. Huge crowds that lined the boulevards rent the air with rebated cries of Quot Vive de Stalin sees Axis defeat says time s Ripe for joint attack Moscow Victory Over the nazis will be hastened by an Allied Campaign from the West. Soviet Premier Joseph v Stalin said in response to president Roosevelt s congratulations on tile second anniversary of Hie German invasion of Russia. Quot the Victory will come i do not doubt he declared. The sooner we bring Down on the enemy our Mutual United blows from the w est and from the East the sooner it will Stalin lauded the Allied Victory Over the Axis in North Africa. As a result of the two years struggle of the soviet Union against Hitler Ite Germany and is Vavas. And of the serious blows struck by tie allies at the Italio German armies in North Africa. Conditions or tile final rout of our common enemy have been s Alin said. He also expressed his appreciation for file presidents Praise of the determination and courage of a he soviet people and armed forces in their continued resistance against their racist enemies. Hub police chief six aides indicted Roston a police commissioner Joseph f. I i Mil to. And six of his aides. We Ere re indicted by the s of for it a county grand jury on charges of conspiracy to permit the operation of gaming houses for the registering of bets this new ingot Evitea econ v three we eks after the original indictment against them squashed. Naples left it continued from Page i Ltd Abner i r a that monstrosity <1 it grabbed the. Of pc u Chi of girl and ram off Pocuc with her. Roaring i do Quot in beastly rage by Al Capp >-5aay \ is Fps curse. / old thing it one mom Cut. Curse he running up rut i Elk let after fun Cit Quot he s got to Stop at the. Sixtieth floor that rut roof or i by tile coastal air Force and two were destroyed by naval gunfire. In a the Naples and coastal operations. Two of our aircraft Are reported missing. Details of tile 100-mile Chase North from the african coast on the afternoon of june 26 of a p-38 lightning Pilot following a Ju-88 were released today at Allied Force Headquarters. T ii e lightning Pilot it. John a. Urban. Of Pittsfield. Mass., attacked Ju-88 Aud hit one of its propellers with its first burst. He kept following the German plane and after a second burst the Tail Section of the Ju-88 disintegrated. The lightning had approached so closely that the Pilot had to pull away quickly to avoid being Iii by Hie debris
