Sunday Post - 17.10.1943, Síða 3

Sunday Post - 17.10.1943, Síða 3
Farmboy Comes Home When Cliff Wherley was 14, he saw a movie about Sergeant York. That was in March 1942. He thought ft over until 4 a. m., then slipped out of his Elwood, Ill. home, caught a bus for Peoria, enlisted. Big for his age (“the best hay baler in the country”), Farmboy Wherley looked 18 to the U. S. Army. Last week, not yet 17, Staff Sergeant Clifford R. Wherley, his chest bright with medal and campaign ribbons, leaned back in War Secretary Stimson’s office chair, sitting before Robert Todd Lincoln’s old desk, and received the press. Still under age, Hero Wherley was being discharged from the Air Forces. But before his uniform and stripes are put away, Cliff will make a nationwide morale four. The story he has to tell is a boy’s dream in Technicolor. The Army believs it will spur a landslide of 17-year-old enlist- ments. Clift Wherley: Won the African ribbon, with Star for action over Italian is- lands:; the American Theater ribbon; the Army Good Con- duct ribbon; the Air Medal with three Oak Leaf Clusters. Trained in England; fought at Kasserine Pass; helped bomb Pantelleria. Can say, without boasting: “While I was on those three bombing raids with Major General Jimmy Doolittle ... . ” or “Officially. I have just one Messerschmitt to my credit, but there were really about 15 more ... . ” Manned the gun turrets of two Martin Marauders, called the “Thunder,” and the “Coughin’ Coffin.” Lived on Ration C; slept on straw in Telegma; shot at Nazis over La Hencha bridge. Cliff’s mother kept his age a secret as long as she could: for 15 months. Then she asked the Army to send Cliff home. But Cliff’s mother will not try to keep him down on the Elm- wood farm, now that he has seen Oran. Until he is old enought to start all over again in the Army, ex-Airman Wher- ry has picked his job: inspector of Marauders in Glenn Martin’s Omaha plant. Anglfsie i Rally Post! b N 1) A V P US A Duce with The Duce who recently re- sumed “power” was a very ; different Duce from the one I who had been so ignominiously | ousted on July 25. For one : thing, he did not appear in | person. His voice was not heard \ over the radio. The Germans themselves admitted that he was kept secret. It was not ■ Rome, nor Milan, where anti- I Fascists were still bitterly l resisting; perhaps he was in | Cremona, maybe in Germany. ! His five pronouncements, ’ separately issued as “Order \ Sheets of the Fascist Regime” Nos. 1 to 5, were broadcast over the radio system of the National Fascist Government by an im- personal announcer. They con- tained a strange mixture of the old and the new. Addressed only to the memb- ers of the Fascist Party, and dated according to the Fascist era, they announced the crea- tion of what was in effect a new Party with a new name: the Republican Fascist Party; pro- claimed the abolition of the Monarchy, and thundered re- venge against those who had been loyal to the King and Badoglio. King Victor Emmanuel they called “Mr. Savoia.” All this did not prevent the Germans from taking quite a different line in their own propaganda. They, heaped ' abuse on Italy generally and | without discrimination. The j Italian had been traitors and cowards; the Italian generals and the Italian soldiers were responsible for every disaster, including Stalingrad. Italian territories were promised to : Balkan vassals as a punishment for the disoyal Italian ally. The discrepancy between the Musso lini statement and the Nazi blurbs were too obvious to leave room for doubt as to their purpose: the Germans had lost hope of ever regaining Italian support; they were now merely out to create confusion in Italy. Behind the veil which cover- ed the north and centre of the country, certain facts began to emerge. Only a few of the main centres and the most important railway lines were held by Ger- man troops. The p rovinces of Tuscany, Marches, Abruzzi and the Lazio province surrounding Rome were either loyal to Bad- a Difference oglio or were at least No-Man’s- Land. Apparently there were no Germans in Venice. Fighting with pro-Allied Italian troops was in progress in the Alps, near Milan, in the extreme north, and on the French frontier, where the Germans claimed to have captured the Mont Cenis tunnel “after heavy fighting.” In Rome Victor Emmanuel’s son in law General Calvi di Bergolo, “Cammander of the Open City,” ordered the surr- ender of all arms by the citiz- ens, and appoointed a number of Civil Servants to take charge of the Ministries, apparently in Badoglio’s name. German troops were planted in St. Peter’s Square to prevent “Communists” (meaning anti- Fascist refugees) from reaching sanctuary in the Vatican. The Pope refused to see Fieldmar- shal Albert Kesselring on the ground that Rome was an open city and the presence of Ger- man troops a violation of inter- national law. News Shorts SEATTLE: — An all-climate garment for soldiers, different from any uniform now worn by Amer- ican servicemen is being sought, by the war Department, Major General Edmund B. Gregory, Quartermaster General, stated. “What we have in mind,” Gen- eral Gregory said, “is a cotton fabric that is both wind resist- ant and water repellant, to be used as an outer garment for all soldiers in all attitudes. The number and character of layers that the soldier will wear und- erneath will be determined by local weather conditions.” Meanwhile, in Philadelphia, the army quartermaster depot ann- ounced the adoption of a new field jacket for soldiers. It is 3 inches longer than the old one and will have no zippers. The lining will be of poplin instead of the wool used in the present garment. » * * WASHINGTON: — The Lend Lease Administration reported 6 billion 579 million 4 hundred thousand tons of food were shipped to fighting fronts in the first 8 months of this year. This tonnage is approximately nine persent of. the- nation’s food supply. * • • BUFFALO: — On the final day of its convention, the CIO United Automobile Workers reaffirmed its “no strike” pledge, but urged the junking of the little steel formula. The anti-strike resolution stipulated that in plants where manage- ment fails to act in good faith, a UAW international executive board shall demand govern- ment operation of the plants. » * » WASHINGTON: — July was the first month in several years to show a decrease in civilians on the government payroll. The listshrank by 29 thousand 2 hundred and 23 names, leaving 3 million 2 hundred 23 thous- and 3 hundred and 75 on the government roster. * * * WASHINGTON: — Ameri- can were warned to expect a 10 or 15 percent cut in their meat rations next year. The War Food Administration fore- cast a sharp reduction in the number of livestock during 1944, and said the government’s requirements would increase by 25 percent. * * • PITTSBURG: — The pro- ductive capacity of the United States steel industry has risen to 90 mill, thousand tons a year. This is enough to supply each day the steel tonnage required for two giant battleships. The U. S. steel output now exceeds that of all the rest of the world. * * * Luxury cars, designed for lounges and cocktail bars, are being converted into air con- ditioned hospital trains for wounded army men. The Pull- man Company of Chicago ann- ounced the completion of 78 cars and work on ten more for a railroad hospital fleet. » * * A new type of low-cost miniature “lighthouse”, that broadcasts ultra-violet health rays to keep U. S. war workers in fit condition has been deve- loped and installed in an east- ern plant. Standing in a circle five feet from the “lighthouse”, 15 men and women can simul- taneously receive ultra-violet applications within a few min- utes.

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