HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1942-05-14, Page 7GermanPeople
erman
Terribly , 'Tired
The . ":4.itt Man" of Ger-
many le Worn Out
Reports have spread, through
diplomatic circles that ':Adolf
Hitler is planning 'a putege on the
Utoine front to cone with sagging
Morale before' launching his . gu-
preme effort • against Russia, , says
an Ankaa despatch. r -
These reports, partially confirm-
ed by travellers from Germany
said _ 'that a .general •weariness
a.mon'g workers, • , a' shortage of
manpower, restrictions on travel,
a growing -.casualty .list on , the
' ,Eastern Trout and fear of a Ly -
Ales plague, 'all Contributed to
(the strain. Travellers 'said Nazi
inorale. is lower that- at .any time`
since the war 'started.
• ' Most Gerninans; realize accord- .
. tug to reliorts • here, that a failure
•
would • •mean. the 'begi-nning of the
end.) -The sante view was express=
ed to a. promineht. Turkish'.editor
by • members of an Axis. Trade
Mission recently, it was learned.
,,.4•
The German people was said
to feel , bitterly • the so-ealled
"dead period, when most df the
old: harvest is exhausted 'and ',new
harvests • have net yet come in.
-This .feeling • was enhan.ced by 1
• the .absence of early Spring • null-
tary, operations,; which captivated
popular• attention during' :the peat-
. two• years, and by • new ration
strictious.
rve w 1J
__._._,C.erman.•.oia�.rese,.__s._ _
I hausted by, the 'end of this 'year,
sinless Caucasian supplies . are
teaptured while stocks of chrome
and other vital metals • have, reaoh-
ed a- dangerous. ' low; :it .was.' said.
A neutral,; • who reached - • An-
• -kara ' last week • after spendiug•,
inos•t.0f the war in Germany"an•d
• ,Bohemia,, .des.eribed • the Germans
is "terribly tired."' After work-
ing 60 ,or more:. hotirs a. week deur'
ling .the past .nine'. years et• .Nazi
se•gime, the German "little' man"
be . said.
s 'warn out.._ .
. .
"CANADIAN
SOLDIER" 5pees Pf Japan
OFTHE •
P. R E 1
WHEN A TANKER IS LOST
When we • hear
that
anosmic
tanker has fallen . prey
raiders few of us :realize that
something like 52 million gallons
of crude oil has been lost to the'
allied cause, (Tanker capacity'
varies (from 20,000 barrels to,
10b,000, so . 5'2,000,000 gallons.
..ft reasonable avers .e.) Those'
millions of gallons •ip pictures
• might register more. effectively.
One tanker's average load would
supply enough gasoline . to drive
1,000. cars as fttr as the moon and
• back.' That is, enough gasoline .
•.to take, all the cars, in Halifax .
completely around- theve world...
It
is, enougli;;to sulrp y y .'d
lance, .every police Car, every
every, truck; passenger car, and' •
farni•tractor—every riser of gaso
,.line in Canada, for a 'whole. Week.....
lt's. dune ;a' loss. •`_Galt Reporters,'
• • '• ITLER FREEDOM -
Released from an internment
Camp on the 'beneficent orders 'Cif .
Hitler,, a Nor wegian Bishop has
been granted the priceless • privi- •
lege of living in a cottage guard,-
ur
'
ed by' twenty' men andsurrounded
•by barbed wire. In, 'case' there.
,was. any doubt of ' it, this is' a
splendid • example, of what• the,
Fuehrer means by the "freedom"
he is going - to give the -countries
he 'has • :conquered. -
-Windsor Star
FIVE' SHIPS SHOT FROM
UNDER HIM
• CHESTNUTS
-But now- that blacksmith shops
are returning, to . the landscape,
the 'question pops • up:' -Ave there
enough. .spreading chestnut trees
to work under?" Or • should we
have 1e'ft that Old chestnut in the
fire? , , '. .
-Stratford Beacon -Herald'
OH', YEs?
Boston's A.R.P. wardens .. are.
p
•rovided with .lipstitks_for mark-
ing casualties, but it has •yet, to
be established whether suspicion-
ful wives. will believe their' hits,
.bands ,when .they say: "My dear,
•
1 was just Itetirirli,"thc wa-rdens_
in 'a practice blackout."
• --Windsor Star.;,
DOES SH,ir WEAR 'EM?'•
"They took a .rib. frons the
man 'to make a woman; and now
they,, '.take his •vest,. his patch
pockets and'trouser cuffs to make
her a: uniform."—Winn'ipeg,'.Tri-
ou haven't accounted
—Ottawa E itizen•
„ 14EGATIY1E-,:SAVt-N-G
' For, 'each 'automobile we are.
Frank Nuniz . leaves Norfolk,
• V•a.,• rest station to ,go down to
the sea again despite fact that
subs have .torpedoed five ships
from, under -him.
•f.
°oawwmoaa°°°°°°°°oa»e^o3PPP�
ad
as
ar Y.
inCan
For one of a series• of portraits of the. menical .example of. out-
fighting
Torrance Newto.n,-R•C..A., has .chosen typical
The titleou.
•
fighting • forces=young, alert, resolute,. coolly 1 This "hanadian Soldier is as, compo t Qardesiae and ,iit is s being place¢' free.
paint-
ing .lies' been reproduced in Y s
in. canteens to be used by • men. serving the Canadian .army.
•
For Winter. Coal
•
Frank G. Neate, ,De.puty Coal
Administrator .for Canada,, 'urges
all users of c.oa1,•.from' the small
householders' to the big • industry,
to.,place then', orders at onee for'
the :next ..winter's--.' coal supplies.
He said' the Dominion, 01 be:
lucky. if it gets 500,000' ,tons • of
Welsh . coal this .season, compared
with importation of '630,18.9. tons
last year and- added the trans-
. portatien • facilities for coal will ;.
hay.e to meet . the insistent ,corn-
petition for 'space .by..'priority
goods.'.
Bis op „
pEx lairs"
Ov rse
- . as Travel
Wartime Ocean ,Voyages •sn
First 'World War ,and. Now '
t ••h• 11'Bishop has hit upon
Alt• :stats a
the right' way' to talk 'to Canadian
.fighting .men -who. have been balk- .•
ing at the type of'tra.nvsport afford
ed them oil their voyages over se ,
co cements the Ottawa Journal: !Op,
• until now our officials" hive 'been
handling'.them two ways:.' repri-
manding . trent for '.lack of discipt
line • or apologizing for ..the .poor
4r'a cling conditions •
Baily, Bishop 'put it this way in
speaking' to a group of- airmen at
Halifax,: • •
"I 'can only • hope you Will be
completely comfortable, • but I'd
•
like to • tell you •of . my own experi- :
epee.. During the last war I made•
eight cvossiugs of the Atlantic. iMy
-first trip I sailed on the Caledonia
', •out of Mntreal, She was a cattle -
In U. . Schools
Collected -Military Secreta
Says Frederick Lewis, in
Liberty •
•
Japanese • language studentss-
aimost always Jap'ya,rmy •or naval .
officers in • disguise were a vitally
important part of the Jap pian
for' spreading subversive propa-
ganda and collecting military and
naval. secrets. •The task was far
beyond the resources of the staffs.
Hence the idea of "navat "attaches" -
advantageously located and easily
aucessi,ble to the ;individual Japa-
nese. For 'any such ; uniustiliable
distribution of tanking army and
navy officers in a friendly country,
some disguise must be adbpted.
Plrysieal ,disguise, was, of `course,
imliossible; 'Saps carried their ea-.
tipnality ill •their -faces. A soca-
• tionel•'disguise therefore must • be-
fotind. Hence the'• language stn -
• dents. .
T.h- se• young nieri, , usually •lieu-
teuant-chtnmantlers or com,man- .2
ders in-- the imperial "n•evy.,
assigned; to' at least six months'
Fnelim'i.narY tra•iuing in the naval
intelligence service in Tokio,' On
arrival .in the 'United 1e a et , S'
reported to the Japa
in Washington, which was • the
G.H.Q; of Jap activities, and they
.repiained for a -brief tinre on duty
•a:shington under 'the watchful '
ell �
eyes' of eiuba•ssy officials.
Then, as fast as they • acquired ,
a' 'working • knowledge of English,
tliey 'were. told 'off to' take' tech-
nical courses in American' uniyer-
sities,. with instrtctions to travel
• lW.1
hr� ._ u_•t
extensively -I t ug R. _
States, and'• Canada • during all ya-
cation, periods.• • Wlien their edu
•
cation in; American- customs,
• condititers was believed to,be• Com-'
piete, they were • assigned • to resi-,
dente in Aniericail • key. cities like
'Boston, . Philadelphia and New,
York o.i1'.the east coast, and Seattle,
San Francisco and ' Los Angeles on •
the 'west coast. .. '
Once established„ they either -con-
.,tiflued • their "education” by en-
rolling as students' in 'neigh.bering-
universities 'or , accepted, pasts. as
instructors in Japanese :. language
schools, 'of which' there. were.•:a
.great many,, especially on, the Pa-.
cifie coast. These language schools
Coast TO Coast
, Postmaster General Mulock has
announced that,, starting ,May ..1,
regular air •'nail service will op-
erate daily, Stindays excepted, be-
tween Moncton, N.B., Sydney,
N,S., and Gander .and St., John's,
Nfld.
without an escort. There was not
_ail, inch of that ship that did not
Stink •Two huticried 1iorses died
not necking this 'year we • have t
on the way over.
saved enough -tin for .1,000 cans-. ' That ,`s t s our •veliNo.-,i airma a,ucl
But-•:it's-imposs.ible..,for. us. to..not , wartime
Make enough 'autos..,to, get all the that, ' in one, av• oo -a-nether, e. Tele
Make wartime travel
ripe we need. I •
government, should do its utmost
—Food Industries
. to provide good •passage—and the
.HAVE UNFROZEN LEGS.' . troops, in' turn ,shetild be ready to
•
Sale of bicycles' has take 'what's 's coming.'•,
"frozen'in the United •'States•,
• •.and new niachi.nes . of adult size
• are hard to get in. this country.
.Fortunately we still have our legs,
and. "unfrozen.
-Ottawa Journal
THOSE TELLTALE SYMPTOMS.
If -he • looked worried- and
ashamed, and now looks cheerful
again, be. has :decided to • •q
uit
trying to quit smoking.. -
•
—Portland Maine Express
SCOU•'rING .•
.
•'1 he difficulty for maintaining
'suitable leadership for Boy Si o,ut-
Groups'threughout the D'onrinidit.
due til the ' heavy , enlistment of
Scout 'Leitdc•rs anal older Scouts
' in the Active Service forces, Was
onG of the problems reflected in
.the annual report of the Boy-
' •$cot4ts' Association for 1941, just
issued. The resulting drop in
bo:: • membership 'of six pet' cent
was less .than expected. however,
rued. has to a •considerable extent
b'en made up rinse the •Oc+otter
; utr1 ,teen: us on which the report. -
wa base . _, •,Ne`i "-tenderse•fnt- thee
Stout' 'f roops at'e, being • sought
among older men'and Petr Wolf
Cub harks atn , et women.
Membership Analysis
The 194.1 total consisted of
39,552 Wolf Cubs, •1"1,866 Boy
-Scouts, 6,65 tone Stouts, 974 Sea
scouts, 1,:112 Rover Scouts, 168
lioeer Sea :dents and 6,119,6 lead-
ers (not counting''21i Rovers telt-
' istered as • Scolite'r.; 1 .
Number of• Units '
There 'were 2,166 i;rotips,• which
1,601 Pt{ck. , 1,965
inclutirel ;8 4ca
Ti ones 1:1:, Ito'•erSca CUL'
' S' Pat- .
Scout Troops,
roll anti • 11 Rover e.a cont
t'rctcg••
• Badges
An all, 31.071 Cub B ad#;•es were
passed. including 1,8,921 P.ank•
Badges and • 12,117 Proficiency
Badges. Runk Badges to the.
25,520, and '21,81.3
iititrtber lit
1'roficicnc•v Badges made up the
Se,yut, total of 47.133. The Rover
Badge was' issued to 278; and
the
lanthler's Badge to 8, making. the
hover -total 286. ,
Store Eggs Now.
For Winter Use
•
,Canada ,now is producing more
eggs than 'it can consume, or ship.
abroad., and it 'is the ,duty of
every householder to buy' eecess
amounts of eggs i'uring the next
three months and preserve them
for use during next winter, H: R. •
Donovan ' of Toronto, supervising'
director of egg ' production for,
the potiiinion, announced. •
1c -
i
• Mr. Donovan ruled that p t
ing: eggs in. preservative now- for
later Use wau-Id not be ."heardipg"•.
in the unpatriotic souse of
word. ."Any one may do so with
a clearconscic.ncr, he ,arid.
Canadian~ are cutin;: more eggs
than' ever before in the country's
history tifd are exp'o'rting more.
"Canadian hens'are doing a mar-
vellous job, ' ' said Mr. Donovan. .
"They are supplying Ilritaiir, our
own overseas• army; and are pro-
•
s'^'`-.
viding more cng ,g s than ever' to
Canadians at hoop'."
Oil Pipeline Too.
Costly In Steel
A Teras to New 'li'orlc pipeline
would solve the east, cot,ist oil
supply , pr'Ohlettr almost entirely.,
But \Mar P1.0600014 Board
ciais saw lithe hope for its con•
struclion •hecau-sc:,
, It would, requir ono el) steel
to build tweet -five battleships• .
er 1?,500 ttetitdnt irttilcs, and
tank rt WWI hatter shits are • More
Important than gasoline for pleas-
ure (biting , along the Atlanti'e
senhoatd.
'
la u
t e,uev,
tensi-erlr- o-: seinucrr
Newfoundland., . in the' Atlantic,
will be co.i nected_-over 'a, 3;918-
trrile trans=Canada air route, with':
Vancouver Island in' .the Pacific,
in. under twenty-four hours by .
the,•clock for: the, westward. trip,"
'IVlr. Mulock • said in a •„statement,
•
Burglars who break into houses.'' ,
and steal' all the soap are •''be`
coming common in Scotland'.
WAR - WEEK - ,. Commen.tary`o i Curreflt vents
an People Become Restive
er p
t
-
r. era
en
d
baa
rider CC�i�stant tom
Many interpretations have been
made of Hitler's latest speech, to
the Reichstag., ,
If the . 'speech'- cane be taken at
its face value, it is a, very en-
couraging one for . the United Na-
tions, claims the New '..York
Tines. Hitler found it neceSsarY
to repeat once more all his. old
alibis for liis failure to. destroy ,
RiTssiatl resistance. Winter came
tour weeks too early, and.. where
Napoleon had- to combat temper-
atures of only 25. degrees. below
• zero, ' "Hitler's men • and their'
-etauipment •eucountered. ' .temper-
aturos. 53. degrees ' below. He Oa
mats' that neither German soldiers,
• tanks nor locomotives were pr',-,
Pared , for. the •'sudd•en, 'onset of
cold. • He admits.' ' that German
nerves •suappeyl • and -'that disci-
' puna' Tbroke down, at least' at cert.'.
fain points. ".lie admits, ' iu fact,.
Allot his whole, armY was.
trine •threaten'ed with disajiter. He:.
hoes not ,promise ,now to beat
Russia • even this "year, ' and' be
hints • that another winter cam-
paign there may have to be ,faced.
His warning that If Germany
es now it can mean its annihila-
tion is not the statement of a
conqueror to, a nation of people
Who consider themselves con-
leader
e'r
' of
a
yuer•ors; it.is the cry
on the defensive. •
Apology ,To People
What Hitler hoped , to • aaom-
plisit by this -speech it is not easy
to . see., it is a long apology to the
German people for the very ex -
the war; Hitler des-,
is.te'nee..,_asee . _ ;war,: ran -aft -DAV'
pe'atel'y seeks' to .pin 1
ity for it on his enemies .arid Par-
ticularly on "the Jews." The
world has ' now listened to top
many Hitler speeches ',cif this sort' '
to be • influenced greatly merely
by one; more. However much com-
•Fart we may 'take iii his'latest ad-
, missions or''omissions, we cannot
allow Ourselves- ' to be lulled.
Whether -the military forces ..at
Hitler's ,disposal today have some
serious hidden weakness, or:•whefh=
-they Are stronger' than' ,ever,
et y
. the only .policy of the Liiited.�ito'
tions must • be to continue
„fan 1,,Ialal 4. fell n'"'.
Lyyyou can look now. .
You missed it l 1”
REG'LAR FELLERS—Cra
were' o-tele=Uert?n and_-
Italia7i ,and Japanese ,language
schools in South A15erica, which
have made • 'our good ,nrighbOV:
policy there sic) difficltlt, •' ,
B Improves :
-Her Shipbuildiig
ritain
1
Hitler Worried
This 'pulillt. reiteration of the
-dictator's 'powers may have been
rr means., too, f t notifying the
German people that no .grumbling ,
would be :tolerated fol• failure of
•
the Nazis to achieve the elusive
Victory they hove • cal.egoricallY
promised `' every.: year since the
invasion of Poland.
Iii saying' that German eq4 i1-
ment would be'better made to'
staud the rigors of winter in
Russia than was the ease in the
. season just passed; Hitler implied
that `there would be no victory
over It.ussia this' Itring or sun► -
•mer. But it, is 'not the etluipment
so rnueil as the human machine
both • at .the, front and at home
that der. fneltrei: is worrying
•about. '•.
Explaining hies' def,eneive war-
• fare , in�.Russia ore the :grounds b'
that ' 1941.42 ' was "t"he,' worst
Winter.. in 140• years," Hitler drys
claret! "we 'succeeded. •in. mac-
•
' tering' threatening catastrophe."
But another`winter?a',The Ger-
man people remember what
they had to sacrifice to keep
the armies in he field in this
campaign. Can they or • Will, -
they• continue to do it? Access
to supplies is not being in-.
creased. was"'free from
riod.
the 'air threat:during this pe •
It will never be free again.
Critical, 'Period Approaching
'These facts go a long- way to
upset • the promises with which
Hitler, in typical , rhetoric, inter- .
larded his .address.),It is very . fine
n..tar
, the -for Iiitler-to•-tel.1 t na�tt9_� ._ ____..
"the Bolshevist colossus will be •
beaten by .us' so _long •and `until ._
such time•' as it. has bee smash- '
ed completely." , But what about.
,the air raids'? What . about• the
growing threat of a, second front
in western Europe? With. sub=.
jugeted Europe in revolt' •where
will. lie 'obtain the man 'power to
crush Russia -or any •other, en-
emy_completely? l "
The world knows„ today• .that
Germany's might is not invincible.
in 'any' field lyf; :op-e.rations. The,
United Nations' are' going fohr'whtd -
to crush • the nation whet•
repeatedly launched war on Eur-'•
ope. The end, will come sooner . if
the' erm- , ' •pee realize—tl»,
It is the Pear that .they will which •
haunts Hitler.
Some diplomats suspect that
Hitler's speech was, designed \ to
•
blind the United Nations to the"
enormous Power that the. Nazis
'Will- throw 'iaitd the approaching
campaign but officials do no un-
derestimate - Hitler's s t'i• e n g,t'h:
N e seems •to be a general
st�r'rke port- with all the •force at
• theirs command.' '
Retpt Restless
Der fuehre.r's, . words, directed
mainly to •domiestic atteirs,, May.
have" •been ad echo of the '•con-.
,tinuou's performance which'; the
. 'United • Na}'tons• air arm has been•.
staging ower' Europe' . day and
•
night, day after day, says the
Cledeland Plafn Dealer. Germany'
has ' ..been free- from . , military • ac-
tion. on 'its home territory 'for so
t=ote's
Eye TO Peace'
• ('-atgoes can be .handled'. t Wice as.
fast as itt 1939 by the ships , now
leaving yards in a -steady stream
all over the United' Kingdom..
-Scores of new tankers, large
-and fast • refrigerated cargo ves•
sels. an°d general cargo ' carriers •
of several sizes are' already r' in.
service -•-a. triumphant: • vinddcatiou
,of the 'policy of 'the 'British Ad-
inirahi, not to adoptoue standard
type of merchant ship but tense
a }lumber, of . typi?s' de:vt'loped be-
fore the war for differen•t. trades.
• Exact plans a ed, in this colossal
prograrit. hove 'been sent.. to Canada
• and the United States where 'ships
are now being -introduced at the
unprecedented rate of two a day'..
Britain's standard. ships are e
very 'great advance on their Pre-'
decessors .of '25 years''ano: indeed,
in many resriect-s they, -are better
than those launched just. 'before
• the war. Be'eides`•pgssessing twice
the •capacity . of the 1939 vessels
Liu handling: cargo. today's. whether
steam or diesel driven: have 'a
higher speed,,
The new-inerchant• fleet lips
pr.actictlly every .item . which will
he. needed itt peacetime. a useful
indiealion of . the oflieial vices on
the result' of •the Battle of the
Octans. Ac:•onimddation has been
improved beyond belief. • The
fc'c's'$e
has• gone and, the modern
trame has elect: houses for its
petty officers. S:amen, and firemen •
spt ci 11y designed. Ilere they '
R,ic ep in cabins withtwo berths,
wardrobe, and ntirroi s. There are
bathrooms • and they have their
meals„ in separate small messes.
`lh its't1 SD1 wrr.. aecommodatioa
which will be neeitel-when Peace •.
rom,es has not been feirgotten, and
it has been done as artistically
as if there Was not a U-hoat artier
fee ocean.
�_ n 1'�'.�liltaA �•
.0{vv
reople. may be showing signs,o 'tire crucial restlessness under the constantmonths will provide 'tir
`
I
of the war, o '
bombardment • from the air.., Hit point
let's subjects , are udt able . to
•take it with. the salve ,nonchalance'
and indifference that they give it.
They may lose their taste .for war.
quicker 'tlian they "acquired •;
' How otherwise account for the
law, passed by, the 'Reichstag,
empowering Hitler to remove
any man from office without le-
gal proceedings? There is noth-
fn comic in the Reichstag
vot-
ing a law. Hitler alreadyn se•
this :power. The purpose was to
warn .the country •that ,disaffec-
tion would be swiftly. dealt with.
Churchill's Son
Joins . Commandos.
Capt. Randolph. Churchill; son •
of' Britain's Prime ,Minister, has
joined the Commandos in the
Middle East. Capt. Churchill, 30,
'is at camp undergoing the inten? 4
sive graining' required_ of Com-
• mando•s... Member of the Queen's
Own Hussars, he filled a staff
post in Cairo with the temper-
,'
emper-,' ary rank of major 'until recently.,
ADVERTISING AGENCY APPOIN'TMENTS
F x
.,
•,Fr W„ _Grests;.
At the Annual General \leering of
held in -vtontreat, r, W. twoss. ane A.
t acancieS' 011 the nourn Ot ctireetOis.
'agency since 1113t, :fir. let;111 "joining
•
n A. R • McGill
t otkfield, Brown & 'Co:L;:d.,-
it. cictiet were elected to fill
Air, t,;rrcoss has been with the
to 14133.
• • By GENE• .BYRNES
�a.
SUCCESS ,COMES, To TNEj"IAt1 WHO
CREME$ HIS OWN OPPbRTUNITIES /,
' • REMEM[JER THAT, BOYS, AND:. .
KEEP YOUR EYES OPEN-, MAKE
YOUR OWN BREAKS /.
BREAKS / BREAKS
'NAT, GIIVES•- ME
A SWELL ;IDEA
AS MANAf ER OF- .REG,'LAR
FELLERS. BASEBALL TEAM
lb LIKE WITH TO 'MAKEA DEAL•
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