r 1 Dimcdl Tues. Eunsct 7:-13 (Weather on Faga i) PCUND3D mm) -iffl My ft IT I : ' A ?Ai . '.'";""".''". . i "... a-.- ..twv . - ' . - . -.-"'it" 1651 . : ' ,.-'- For over twenty years the men tion of "Russia" has stirred emo tions of . people in '. the United States. To some it excited feelings of rapture Russia was working out , the dream of communism. These people became violent . de fenders of the USSR- They l took their "line direct from Moscow. , To . others the . name .."Russia produced an .opposite emotion. They " became purple with - rage. Russia was the seat of anti-Christ, of evil incarnate. They pointed to the opposite pole whenever Rus- . sian doings' or ideas were referred to. s . -' This - cleavage in emotional at titude persisted to the outbreak of the war; and still does. The red sympathizers In this country were 'anti-war until Hitler attacked Russia, -r Some of - them (couldn't .make the. turn when Russia at tacked Finland; and some others had cancelled their reservations on account of the purge - In -1937. But there were - many : who-took the Moscow line, the treaty with Hitler in 1839; the attack on Fin- - land,' and all. And when - Russia was attacked by Hitler in, 1941 .they' became the . strongest sup porters of all-out war. the country has had. And . from this . element x has come much of. the local , cla mor for, a second, front. Russia asks tor it; .therefore they" should ...have it; '. - . ". . . On the other hand the Russo phobes would hold out on fur nishing Russia with supplies, are whispering anti-Russian talk and going to lengths to build up Rus sia . as a potential enemy of. this country.. Aiding and abetting this line are the; frustrated isolation ists, for whom Pearl Harbor meant a setback, not conversion. It isn't easy to keep a clear head in the midst of all this talk about Russia. But it is important that the great body of American pub lic opinion retain its mental bal ance and come to conclusions not In the light of past prejudices but of present realities. These simple statements seem to be true: K First, the political and econo mic systems of Russia and the the United States are divergent But each country (Continued on Editorial page.) . ', , 1 Butter Scarce For aMonili By J. B. LEWIS NEW YORK, Sept l-PHBut-ter will be hard to get outside of the nation's principal dairy pro duction centers for : another months market experts warned today. ; Hardest hit will be the east and west coast areas. ... f " Civilian stocks in some- sections were completely depleted at the end of August, and it will . take some time to fill overdue' deliv eries, Gordon Urner of the Urner Barry Corp.,' which publishes the daily market report "Producers Price-Current, explained. . ' The , war. .food administration . reduction from 30 to 20 per cent the amount producers must set aside .for ' government purchase in September, will eventually alle viate but not . immediately relieve I the critical shortages, -Urner said. In seven months, according to market estimates, the government has acquired 223,000,000 pounds of butter in storage, of which 47, - 000,000 pounds has been turned over to lend-lease. ' Purchasing agents for the va . rious armed - services have con tinued to buy on the open mar ket and in some, cases have been able to build Up reserves, the market reported. ' : - As a result ' of the operations the civilian supply has fallen off : sharply at the end of each month ' recently as large quantities pf butter were placed in government reserves, t t , 8tK Air Force Downs 631 NazV Plartesl in Month By JUDSON O'QUINN . .LONDON, September 1 -fp-The US Eighth air force, pulver izing German airfields on by one and wrecking vital war factories, set a new monthly record for the destruction ' of nazi aircraft in - combat In August by shooting 631 "tighter out of, the sky, it was an nounced today. - " . Headquarters of the European theater of the US army disclosed also that its Thunderbolt fighters proved by. actual experience that they could break up enemy light er attacks' sufficiently to cut down bomber losses and ' take enough .pressure off the bombers to give them a better chance to destroy their objectives. , ' ", Flying Fortresses, Marauders and Thunderbolts- all figured in taking the toll of 631 nazi planes. The previous high 'was 508 Ger man planes bagged in July. Fort resses set an Individual record by destroying 541 planes, five per cent more than the July total. . - j The bombers lost by enemy ac tion la Acust were slightly more t2-:.n the four jpsr cent announced U Forts- Blat:-Pia Raily ards Two Battleships ; Bombard Italy's Western Toe . : By NOLAND NORGAARD V ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, September l-P)Suddenly fswi telling their hammer assaults - to northern Italyi US Flyiilg Fortresses de livered a mighty blow to vital railroad yards at Pisa of -leaning towar fame yesterday, while 'Bri tain's big battleships Nelson and Rodney led a thunderous shelling of the western Italian toe. :r ( The Fortresses , on .a 1000-mile round trip, poured bombs onto: the. center of freight - yards S at . Pisa and the electrified system .capable of handling at least 96 trains daily between 'Rome.' and Genoa,- -and also bit the neaby San Guisto air field, and Piaggio. -aircraft 'fac tory. - -.. v ; ... ;- - v ' , Pisa lies . 179 miles north efr Rome. The raid gave; northern . Italy 'a dose f the concentrated destruction povred for. days on rail facilities and airdromes of - the, southern part of the penin sula. The famous tower,eom pleted In 1350, and other his toric monoments were spared by the bombers. " . These latter assaults meanwhile continued with medium bombers and fighter-bombers attacking Salerno, , Cosenza, Catanzaro, Sa pri ; and Cetraro, and American Liberators from the middle east smacking Fescara ' on the eastern coast opposite Rome. ' Leading the cruiser Orion and nine - destroyers, the Nelson and Rodney boldly steamed into the southern end of the Messina strait and bombarded Italian C0atI ; def ens" batteries with their 4 i6-ich ' one-ton 4 Shells, meeting only feeble shore resist ance. The warships also shelled the area I near Reggio Calabria and near Cape Pellaro. They knocked out at least one big enemy coastal gun. ' ;The shift in strategy for the Fortresses appeared highly ef fective. The unescorted heavy bombers met only ' 25 enemy fifbtera, and quickly shot down - six of them. Repair, shops with a capacity of '(Turn to Prge 2 Story G) United Nations Council Here Said Useful ; - . - . - . . Establishment of at United Na tions council in Salem, which oc curred in conjunction with the staging of the United Nations fes tival .this summer, may be con sidered an important step forward in : educating the public as to its share in war relief work, Betty Gordon, San Francisco, Pacific coast representative of Russian War Relief, Inc, said Wednesday in Sailem. ' . Such councils have been put in to operation in the larger cities of, the nation and an effort is now under way to oragnize them in other cities and towns. Miss Gor don said, pointing out that 'Salem may nave a unique distinction as the first city of less than 100,000 residents In which such a council "just naturally sprang into being. " for July. One hundred Fortresses, less, than five per cent of the num ber dispatched, failed to return during August, headquarters said. A , total of 16 US fighter planes were lost. - The air-sea service saved 96 crewmen from Flyina Fortresses. including. ,40 picked . -up in the Mediterranean folio win g the bombing of Regensburg., One of toe downed fighter pilots was res cued. .' Operational days for the Fort resses in August were 20 per cent fewer in July, but the tonnage of bombs dropped only 3.8 per cent under the July figure. ' High spot of the month's activ ities was the twin raid Aug. 17 when Flying Fortresses hit Sche winfurt and Regensburg.-The Re gensburg raiders proceeded on to North Africa: to complete the first leg of the initial American shut tle bombing. lost of the Eighth air force's August' raids were directed against objectives In France and the low, countries.- 10 PAGES Still Leans - Vw- Ataswerinr everyone's, first ques tion -J- the : Leaning Tower, r, "that-way" since. 1356 AD, was . spared when American' Flying i Fortresses lombed Pisa. - Danish Envoy : Wants Exile Government STOCKHOLM, September 1 () The Danish minister to - Sweden, Johan C. W. Kruse, severed dip lomatic ties with his homeland to night, declaring that a constitutional- government had ceased to exist there with the advent of a German military dictatorship.. Kruse's announcement was con sidered significant '.by Panes hop ing to form an exiled government affiliated with the United States because the 62-year-old minister is a personal envoy - of the in terned King Christian X. . The Kruse announcement said that the king,' as a prisoner of the Germans, was unable to perform his constitutional functions. Asked by the Danish free press in Stockholm whether the move meant the minister . was joining the free Danish government, ' the minister said: "I can add nothing to this at the moment." f The major political development came as the revolting Danes, in spired in their resistance by. en couraging words from King Chris tian during a brief trip" from his castle under German guardcoor tinued passive resistance -and, ap parently, sabotage. : " - Refugees reaching Sweden said an' 8000-ton barracks ship in Co penhagen harbor was blasted by a magnetic mine today. - I The German-controlled Danish radio said Gen. : Hermann von Hannecken, the nazi commandant, relaxed martial law restrictions slightly. Industrial slow-downs were' re ported in factories in Copenhagen, Aalborg, Aarhus, . Ringsted and Roskilde as limited telephone and mail service was resumed within the country. . The radio ' announcement ' said the curfew which ha4 been in ef fect at 9 o'clock nightly since mar tial law was imposed August - 29, would be effective at 11 "p. m. in the future. : , ' r r . Churchill-FDR' Talks Resume By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL - WASHINGTON, Sept War discussions which President Roosevelt and Winston- Churchill adjourned in Quebec eight days ago were resumed here tonight with the emphasis, apparently, on greater collaboration with Russia. - The British prime minister, ac companied by Mrs. r Churchill, reached Washington late- in the day- on a fourth wartime visit ; Official silence prevailed on the channels into which; he, and Mr. Roosevelt - were directing , their conversations but there was much evidence that they would . center much of their attention 1 ion the means of attaining closer military and political relations with - the soviet union. White House officials said the prime minister's visit would not be entirely on business and that the president hoped It could be partly social, a. " , ' .-. . ' It started with a social ' angle tonight at a small. Informal fam ily dinner at - the White; House In the absence of Mrs. Roose velt, who is in New Zealand, the president's hostess was Mrs. EI (Turn to Page 2 Story Bf) , WW 1 Scdam. Oroyon. 3'5,000 Taganrp; Nazis Die Reds Take 5100 Prisoners in Liquidating City By JAMES M. LONG f , LONDON, Thursday, Septi 2 (JPhThe Red army advancing in the Donets basin has wiped out the German Taganrog ' army, killing or capturing more than 41,000 enemy troops and rout ing or mauling eight divisions to taling 120,000 men, Moscow an nounced today. " ., An additional 6000 Germans fell yesterday trying to stem Soviet armies hacking their way . toward Stalino, ' Poltava, Bryansk and Smolensk, along a 600-mile front, said a communique recorded early today by the Soviet monitor. ' The Taganrog debacle was the - greatest single German defeat -since i ' Stalingrad. More ' than 35.600 Germans were killed and J 5106 captured in' final Uqaida-' - tion of the encircled 1 r p s eanght west of the sea of Asov city, the communique said. ? German troops were withdraw ing In ; the Donets basin Berlin military circles - telling Swedish correspondents that axis fears 'of an allied invasion . in the west prompted, the retreat. . German lines also were sagging east of Smolensk, south of Bryansk, and deep inside the Ukraine. The Germans were .declared In today's Moscow, communique . to have hurriedly shifted some of their inland forces to the south. The ' Russians, then- promptly went over to the offensive south west of Voroshilovgrad, punching out gains of four to six miles to ward Stalino and Debaltsevo, which lie on the network of rail ways feeding the Germans in the central Donets: " Complete erasure of the col lapsing .German : Donets" front apparently was foreshadowed la a Berlin broadcast which said , the Russians were' amassing a tremendous striking force along the stretches of the middle .Do- - nets river. "-'A Russian 'break through 1 probably would result in an even larger encirclement of . German troops than those trapped at Taganrog. (Turn to Page 2 Story A) Dane Saves 9 US Fliers LONDON, Sept 1 -VP)- Henry Frandsen, S3, Danish fishing boat captain saved nine ; American fliers forced down at sea recently and by his act of mercy he es caped the Germans, who estab lished ; a military dictatorship in his homeland Sunday, a Frandsen sighted. " a dinghy bearing the survivors, of the crew of a Flying Fortress about ' 100 miles west of Helgoland.. He took them aboard 'and, instead - of re turning home, headed for England.- ' The i American fliers had been injured when the Fortress crash ed : ami burned after being - bit by anti-aircraft fire over Helgo land. Frandsen said the British whisked : them away so ' fast he never learned their names." - "All I know is that the pilot was a cowboy : from Texas and the navigator : a gardener - from Brooklyn," he said. "They gave me and the three members of my crew American cigarettes, watches and . other things, but . I didn't get their names. However, I am happy to have saved them. If I hadn't, a German patrol boat might have found them. And it turns out I am now safe In England. ' - Staff Shortage In ; Hospitals Grave 1 SEATTLE, September . 1 Dr. Thomas Parran; surgeon gen eral of the US public health ser vice warned today that care of the sick In civilian hospitals "has already reached a dangerously, low level; because of a shortage of nurses, and said Washington state's enlistment quota for the cadet nurse corps Is 11 82. In a talk of hospital ; executives , and nurses here, he' said reports on the na tional recruiting drive were ex tremely favorable. Elliott Roosevelt 'J:'. Back From Africa ; WASHINGTON, Sept 1.-JP)-CoL Elliott Roosevelt son of the president has returned from North Africa for a visit He has been In charge of a photographic reconnaissance group. ThuradaT Morning. Saptembar 2. Seelts Peace Conflict's End Within Year Is Pontif f s Fla V By WILLIAM SMITH WHITE, LONDON, Sept : l--rPope Fius XII appealed to the leaders of the world today to reach "a worthy peace, and he' expressed hope and faith that the fifth year of the . war, beginning today; would end in such a peace. -- The pope, declaring his views in: a 14-minute world broadcast called for "generosity" toward those nations "less favored than others by ; the "- trend of war at any given time," and he admon ished against ; "actions which in stead of encouraging confidence. rather inflame hatreds anew and strengthen the determination to resist The pontiff referred to , ."the powerful and the leaders of peo ples, and continued: ;a' V ' I .'"May their wisdom, their mod eration, their strength of mind and their deep sense of humanity teow'aYayoreomfortiUPon the tear-and-blood-drenched t thresh a (Turn to Page 2 Story B).-. Ickes Says j Gasoline Fast i Running Out j WASHINGTON, Sept 1 -P) Interior Secretary Ickes declared tonight that at the present ' rate of consumption , the entire nation faces the prospect of running out of gasoline and in the east It may be only a matter of days. t Appealing for curtailment of all but essential driving, Ickes as serted In a radio address that the motorists are dipping heavily into inventory stocks .and that heavy military . demands " for fuel lie ahead. He disclosed for the first time that the nation's armed forces are using 600,000 barrels of gasoline daily, said that military .require ments will take, more than 30 H per cent of all gasoline produced east of the Rocky mountains dur ing the last half of 1943 and pre dicted that next year the amount will expand to 37 . per cent Ickes said gasoline supplies on the west . coast are "comfortable now," but "if the people t there could' know of the military ae mands that' lie ahead, when the war in the Pacific really gets un der way, they would know that there - is anything but comfort ahead for them, so far as the suf ficiency of gasoline is concerned." Hie southwest and middle west he said, is "living on borrowed time," as far as gasoline is con cerned, and to the motorists of the east he addressed this "un equivocal warning: : ...V- "If there is any appreciable in crease in gasoline consumption in the eastern states, above the pres ent rate, we will be out of gaso line in a matter of days." . . Statesman I ' -- . -J-'- -. ' Classified . . Advertising Taps an EIGHTY : MILLION 4 j--' DOLLAR- . -' J r.UlRKET Phcrio - ' 0101 f " IJ"-"1- ' ! v- t - --- r-- - . POPE FIUS'XII V .: v - . - .' .'.... . . ....... 1S43 IMandw NMForce Overwhelmed . M. - - PSJungle Fighters-; W Close-in Reports Downing Zeros r : iu Of f Bougainville ,. -i- '-' By C. YATES McDANHSL . ALLIED i HEADQUARTERS in TmJsbtmrwEciitr IC, Thursday, Septemlr 2 Japanese in two strongly dug in positions southland. southeast of the Sajamaua, New Guinea, air drome finally . have been over whelmed, by American and- Aus tralian jungle - fighterr now dos ing in on . the enemy' base. J , Several days : agoallled " J or ces approaching the, airfield from the west and southwest, support ed by artillery, were ' reported within rifle range but today's com munique was the first in more than a week to tell of, an advance along the coast ' (Last previous advices con- . : eerning the right flank Vera that the Japanese were holding te Dot inlet as their bnljr position ' South ' of the Franclaco '. river -which flows below the river Into Bayern bay.) In the Solomons sector, an at tack Monday, .by a small force of Liberators on Santa Isabel - i- lanL site . of 'a Japaaese- aeaptan? base, for the first time drew; no anti-aircraft fire, prompting con jecture that the' Japanese may have evacuated it Such an evacuation would mean the Japanese had decid ed, the Island was untenable because It has been eatflanked by American occupation of New ' Georgia and Vella LaveUa Is- lands te the west On other " recent - attacks on (Turn' to Page 2 Story C) I Casualties Top I 100,000 Mark WASHINGTON, Sept l.-VPy More than' : 100,000 members of United States military forces and the merchant marine have been killed in action,' wounded, report ed missing or taken prisoner. - The . army reported today that its casualty total through last week was 69,358, Navy, casual- ties totaled 21,556. marines 7904 and coast guard 1363. The .latest merchant marine summary showed a total of 4751 dead and missing. . t All these add up to 103,532. , -"However the army - said " that 8748 of its men classed as wound ed - have left the i; hospital or re turned to duty; i ' . . : - vf- A total of 19,531 persons fas . all services are listed . as dead, and 35,395 are listed as missing, the total of those two flgurea being 55,476. , I : Following are the latest cas ualty summaries for the servicesr . Army "(through; the end of last week): killed 892?; wounded 19, 391, of whom- 8743 have left the hospital or returned to duty; miss ing 2L406; prisoners of war 19, 634; total 69,358. j ; Navy (to dateh dead 7840; wounded 2553; missing 8917; pris oners of war 2246 total 21,558. - . Marines ' (to. date): dead 2009; wounded 2501; missing 883; pris oners of war 1525; total 7904. , r Coast ruard (to date): dead 182; wounded 22; missing 158; prison er of war l; total 363. ? - Merchant marine .(from , Sept 27, 1941, to Aug. 1," 1943) ; dead 627; missimjr 4124; -total 4751. Rlrs. Roosevelt V. .. Back in Auldand AUCKLAND,- V New 2ealand, SeDt WS'HMrs. Franklin D, Roosevelt; still not fatigued from her tour for the Red Cross, visited US marines and sailors in the naval hospital today and .told them: . "Victory Is . coming our way. 1 hope wa will be able to help you after the . war to build the kind of world that will make your sac rifices worth while.' -" ': - "It Is not enough to win the war. We must win the peace." Pric Zc , ... - , ... , - . , . . I Super-Bomber Now Building ' NEW- YORK, Sept l-JP-; Enzmes for super-bombers pre dicted by Gen. H. H. Arnold' " yesterday are onder eenstrae iloa - bow - fas a plant of the ' Wright Aeronaatteal - corpora tion,! "the - US - army air (forces . said today ta" a" statement made pvblle by the corporation. -. - Arnold, commanding general' f ; the, air forces, . forecast' that the new bombers,; seen to k go InU r action, tlwonld dwarf the Flying Fortresses v and "would - carry, half a carload of. bomb across the t Atlantic aawl- fly. nomeu withont a stopu . - The Wright corporation" said . the ' air force announcement I contamed information that the new bombers would be power ed by Cyclone 8 engmes,' which I It said were the most powerful' f service engine now built in -rthl country. -' Berlin Left In Flames By Bombers By GLADWIN HILL ' : LONDON, Sept! 1. --Hundreds of RAF heavy bombers tore through a powerful German fighter screen last night to rock Berlin with a 45-minute deluge of block leveling explosives that gut ted new' sections -of the xht mil itary heart and left flames visible 70 miles away. ' - The British -air ministry indi cated that this second concentra ted assault In eight days equalled the 1800-ton Aug. 23 blow which wiped out entire districtasin west ern ana southern Berlin, . par alyzed utility ' services and sped the . evacuation, of thousands haunted , by. the specter ' of the blackened skeleton of Hamburg. Serving notice that the new year of the war probably will be' the bitterest for the axis, allied planes followed Up ' last night's hall of. bombs en Ber lia with daylight attacks on railway yards In .Holland and a big asJ sea-going barge off the Dutch islands. Bostons blasted the freight yards at RoosendaaL Holland, and escorting .Typhoon - pilots report UIU ' rt- Ws laV.bas raU W ed that accurate- hits were ma on the 'junction of four busy rail lines, the air ministry news serv ice said. ' - The escort planes attacked the barge 'on the trip. home. ; - " Forty-seven bombers, eight of them Canadian,' and one' fighter were lost in the latest Berlin at tack . and in auxiliary night as saults on airfields and other' tar- , (Turn to Page; 2 Story E) . ; Weapons Left oh.Kiska Would Take Huge Toll C By NORMAN BELL AN ADVANCED ALEUTIAN BASK -SeDtember 1-WVlf the Japanese had fought at Kiska with the - weapons they abandoned In hasty flight, they undoubtedly would - have killed - many mora Americans than fell In the con quest of Attu. - This became obvious today, after a check of the material left behind at Kiska showed the ' wily war riors of the rising sun got . away with little more than their skins in their ' first non-belligerent re treat of ' the war. . Kiska. . found deserted when United States and Canadian am nhihioua .trooDS swarmed ashore from their landing craft August 15-16. was five times as heavily fortified as was Attu, which was taken after 20 days of bloody fighting in May. The abandoned materials. In cluding machine guns, heavy ar tillery, antiaircraft . gunsi pow er plants, communication lines and rubber tires, were left virtually In tact: The Japanese didn't even destroy their ammunition dumps. . They may have 5 been in . too much of a hurry to get away or they may have .decided against any fires or'explosions that might have revealed their flight plans. ; Both the ; large., guns a and the smaller automatic weapons were clean and In firing condition, ex cept for parts which Jiad been re iro. IZZ US Fleet ' TIira.eii Japan - Shelled Outpost Guards Tokyo, 1200 Mileo Away By; JOHN M. HIGIITOWER : WASHINGTON, September i (Py-ln a direct threat to the se curity of r the . Japanese home land, a powerful task 'force of the . United; States navy has bombed and shelled Marcus is land, outpost guarding the ap proaches to Tokyo. s The audacious raid, in which the Americans virtually 'dared the Japanese home fleet to come out and fight obviously had a .strong phychological impact on the Jap anese, for the Tokyo radio said: "The enemy could have raided the mainland if he wanted to, so the people of Japan must further solidify the defense against the enemy. ' ' First word of the raid , on Marcus, only 1209 miles from ' Tokyo, came from a broadcast Japanese communique, which said the Island was attacked at ' down, September 1 - August 21, Washington time. It declared that "many enemy planes raid ' ed - MInainttoa Shim .(Marcos) at dawn today, and the enemy shelled the land by naval guns." This report was substantially confirmed by a navy statement here a few hours later. It said that a carrier task force raid had been planned against .Marcus for Sep tember 1 and "is presumably in progress. - Whether the phrase "In pro gress meant that the island was still being battered 'today or aim-; ply that maneuvers following th assault were considered a , part of it was hot explained. No de tails were expected from Amer ican sources for many hours since officers said the force would not break radio silence until it was safe to do so. : - . . - Marcus island, which the Jap- anese own, lies 909 miles north- - west of enemy-held Wake Island. It Is an afar and radio base and beeaasa of Its strata- location holds dominance - over-the southeastern ap proaches to the Tokyw area. Marcus was raided once before,, on March 4, 1942. The action then was essentially defensive, an at tempt to find out what the enemy was up to and to destroy in the aftermath of the Pearl Harbor . debacle bases which the Japa v (Turn to Page 2-Story F) moved and hastily hidden. Officers said the broad beach. on the north of Kiska was so high ly organized for defense that the American force which rushed ashore there unopposed might well have been repulsed. , It was estimated the Japanese had as many as 10,000 men on Kiska at one time as against the 2000 on Attu. Material was in the , same proportion. . ; v It was possible that after the fall of Attu the Tokyo war lords decided the Aleutian venture, was too costly and decided to sneak the Kiska garrison away gradual ly under cover of fog and dark ness. The condition of the guns and supplies indicated that at least a .skel eton force remained until probably within half a day of the American - Canadian as sault Much of the seized equipment Is being put to use by the occu pation force in building up a base from which to carry the war to Japan. . This excludes good rubber tires, some of the guns and en air field. a - - The Japanese heavy artillery, up to" 6-inch guns, was . so placed that it could be, turned asaimt any of the landing beaches frc-i observation posts c v Hanger ai.J Rose hills, an officer pointed out In addition to these cur.i rl anti-aircraft weepc-.s jr (Turn to Pzz 2-' L 1