7c2tl:cr Signing vm crora Maximam (tnitr atsra -Wednesday S3 degrees: min Imam., 49; n rtln; river .'-J ft. S In. Partly elandy Than- . day and Friday, with' sett- , iered Utnnderstonns la tha mountains and In Cascades , eastward- Thursday after neon; little change In tem ; pentare. - ' " , C Poundsb : JC31 ilqfe!! ' GrYl fSl-j I-(life n- - lMHMiaBHHHnMI. ,.S1 ." T. B JT 1 1 1 W I I a V. B . I 1 1 -J r - I I t ..." Skepticism is now quite gener al over the story of Adolf Hitler's r "miraculous escape" from a bomb planted close to his Deraon. in his headquarters. A. regular contribu tor to The Nation, writing on Eu ropean affairs under the pen- name of "Argus", out of necessity for concealing his identity, offers l this comment regarding the bomb- . ing Incident:' ' r "What happened was the throw- ; ing of a bomb a metaphorical J bomb, since it is still uncertain I that there was a real one. As this written, all .signs indicate that , there was not that the colossal bomb whose explosion was so re- markably ineffective was one of Dr. Goebbels inventions. : "Even less worthy of .belief is the 'official representation that , a I so-Called clique of generals and officers had attempted to "usurp authority in an open coup d'etat I Every authentic detail that has " come' to light has indicated more clearly that the Nazis, as . is the f way. with dictatorships, made a preventive move against a possible menace that had not taken def- t inite form." - . , This confirms the view ex pressed in The Statesman that the - affair was one of design, to head off a- possible revolution or sur render and to consolidate power , t fuWVia in Kari hands That fit 1 least is (Continued on Editorial page) Siiit Filed to KeepTownsend Plan Off Ballot Charging that at least six con stitutional amendments would be required to put the so-called lit tle Townsend plan to work in Ore- gon, and that the law requires that i voters should be given an oppor l tunity to Bpprove or- reject each ' such amendment' separately, suit! ' was filed Wednesday in Marion county circuit court to enjoin the secretary of state from certifying the initiative measure, to county clerks for a place on the Novem ber ballot. The complaint, made on relation of T. lister Johnson, 'Sherman county district attorney, Js brought against Secretary of .State. Robert , S. Farrcll, jr, Nellie Mabel Grew ell, Henry C Menascd. and Joseph A. Williams, the latter three; aU of Portland, initiators - of the - pro posed amendment who will, foot the' bill for the litigation should the sponsors of the suit be entirely 'Victorious. v .l"- ; Separate amendments' would be needed, the compalint alleges, to put into effect sections of the bill which would: (1) Forbid levying a sales tax; (2) provide that in event of the death of the annuitant the regular, monthly annuity would continue for. another two months; .(3) limit methods of application , o f penalties; (4) provide that em ployers may be required, to deduct tax from employes: pay, and t5) . permit the tax commission to sus pend the tax or restore it accord ing to action of the federal gov ernment in thesame field; all in addition to (6) the plan proper. -W. S. ITRen, Portland, is attor ney for the sponsors of the suit. Americans Kill 1072 More Nips at Aitape GENERAL HEADQUARTERS, Southwest Pacific, Thursday, Aug. - lO-Cay-An additional 1072 Japan ese have been killed in the Aitape sector of British New Guinea, headquarters announced today. This is one of the heaviest battle . tolls yet taken in that area. Americans have encircled Jap anese front lines on the Driniumor river. i Remnants of the Japanese 18th army trapped in the Wewak area who had attempted to break west ward through American lines now are on the -defensive some 20 miles east of Aitape.' ,.. Headquarters - also announced that an Allied Liberator bombed a 2000-ton Japanese freighter off " Davao, Mindanao, in the southern Philippines Monday night; : v ' .. . Other Allied bombers raided llalmahera -island ' between New ; Guinea 'and . Mmdanaob, Yap' la -.land in the western Carolines, and Sorony and Manokwari, weakened Japanese bases in Dutch New Gui - nea west and east of the American beachhead at Sanaa por. ' Fcther of 43 Children ffotv Has Quadruplets . BOGOTA, Colombia, Aug. 9-WP) The 75-year-old father of 43 chil t!ren today became the lather, of csuadruDlets.' the newspaper' El Epectador reported. He is Abjon Jaramillo, Amalfi artisan," who had SO children, by his first wife and 13 besides the riew arrivals, by his second, the rewfcper savi, adding that de- ccr.ccm:2 tha LirUi cf toe r -. . Jrurlets wers lachinj. - NINETY-FOUBTH YEAR Soviets Grind t)uit , Nazis Slow But ; r Don't Stop Red; Summer Offense LONDON, Thursday, - Aug. 10-(-Slowed but not stopped b- desperate German counteratU" all along the eastern front, ful ; Russian armies . f ground but nine to 12 v the battle of Latvia rQ s. a the offensive northea' & orsa, and climbed highex the Car'-, pathians toward Czechoslovakia. In telling of the day's furiqus fighting and hardrwon advances, the Soviet midnight communique and an early-morning supplement over and over again used the phrases "stubborn resistance" and "repeated counterattacks,", . but said that in no case had these Nazi efforts succeeded. ' ' Draft Everyone Thoroughly alarmed, the Ger mans drafted every able-bodied man and woman from 15 to 65 to dig trenches against the imminent entry of the Red army onto the ".holy" soil of East Prussia. It was there, too, that they put in the most " frequent counterat tacks,' east of the border town of Schirwindt and northwest of Mar iampole and on the flank of the widening Latvian corridor that is threatening Memelland. But the Moscow radio, in a spe cial air forces broadcast today, said all the digging would do the Germans little good, for Soviet planes, with a sixfold superiority in numbers, were attacking the Nazi defenses at will. Predict Advance It confidently concluded: "Soviet troops will advance far ther and farther to the west until they, link up with our Allies." . , Vp and down the 1000-mile front the counterattacking Germans lost more than 3800 killed ' yesterday. said the Soviet -war bulletin, while another. 120 enemy tanks were de stroyed or knocked out It was the ninth consecutive day that the Russians . had recorded loss of more than 100 tanks by the Nazis.' Chinese May i- Be Fighting ; IiiHenffvaiiff CHUNGKING, Aug. 9 -(Diehard Chinese forces apparently were making good today their vow to fight to the death in battered Hehgyang, opposing a Japanese assault to the last "' The Chinese high command said broken . radio contact made the situation obscure inside the city, where street fighting last was re ported. Tuesday night five gener als headed by. Hsien-Chueh,-39-year-old commander of the tenth Chinese army, sent' a farewell message to Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek declaring they would stick with their troops and die fighting. " ;:", ' Japanese troops broke into the suburbs of Yiyang, 60 miles north west of Changsha, the Chinese high command said. The enemy was trying to take this town to guard his communications " and ward off flank attacks. -' - Clare Booth Luce Wins Renomination : , GREENWICH, Conn., Aug. 9(JP) US Representative Clare B. Luce was renominated by acclamation for a second term tonight by the fourth district republican con gressional convention and she im mediately hit out at, the admin is tration in a speech which brisUed with criticism of its policies and a condemnation' of communism Vnenivideni Spokesmen for and against uni- form ' federal standards for post-, war unemploymnet pay flatly -re-" jected all talk of a compromise today-as the senate engaged In in creasingly bitter debate on the problem Of reconverting the Amer ican economy , to a : peace-time basis. . . Senator Revercomb (RWVa) said that back of the Murray-Kil-gore mobilization and adjustment bill calling for uniform standards of pay up to $35 a week, was "a philosophy of government entirely foreign to America." "We should be thinking of re storing individual freedoms to the people, rather than of setting up a Advances WASHINGTON, Aug. S-tT)-1 ctv-xor over. ri.-nfainiscorji 12 PAGES Good W6rlu ColoneP iit i Mai. Gen. i Lewis B. Hershey (right), j national director of selective service, congratulates CoL Elmer V.jWooton.! Oreron selective ser vice chieftain,! an Oreron's "forward looklos" j orraniaaUon. The i picture was taken In the press room at t&e state cafitot (The 1 Statesman photo) . v . ' ( ' I . 1 . 1 I . Politics IVIight , PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 9 -UP) Federal Judge George A. Welsh charged a special grand jury of 11 men and 9 "Women today- to seach out any political: motive that may have been involved in the calling of Philadelphia's wildcat transit strike, declaring ;he could not be lieve " that the : strikers were ac tuated solely "by the thought that eight negroes were gbing to be up graded." :'i . I iA "I hope it (racial prejudice) was not the real reason," he said.- : "You have got" to he cognizant of the fact that a national election is ; impending. God forbid that I should bring politics into" this In vestigation but we want you to find out what certain men did and why they did it. -We have to know what was', in .their hearts and minds that made them spring in to action.' Something that happens in Philadelphia today some thing wherein the truth did mot prevail I could have its reper cussions in; the length and breadth of the land and have its effect on the national election." : ,f- :" . "You are; to determine the iden tity of the men. who : engineered Such a strike," he said, "They . . . should have made a declaration of any grievance." f 50Q German U-Bdats Sunk l WASHINGTON, . Aug More than! 500 German submar ines have heens sunk by the allies since the start of the war, it was reported tonight in a Joint Anglo American statement ' -: Issued under authority of Pres ident Roosevelt and Prime Minis ter Churchill, the statement add ed that nazi U-boats were "inef fective during July, a month which has : been so important . for the success of continental operations.".- ; " . V - I The report said that the num ber . of German ; submarines de stroyed In July was "substantially greater than the number of mer- chant (hips sunk." Pl Partisans of 'Our -population,' ' Retotrting, Senator- Murray, (D- Monl) called a rivaL republican supported "states' rights' proposal offered by Senator George (D Ga), the product of a "reactionary philosophy.'' ' : : Murray declared the policy of the George bill, which would leave control of unemployment, compen sation to the states, is similar to the policy of "those who led this country into the; great depression of 1929.M j , . .1 call upon all true democrats, he said, "upon'aU members of the senate who refuse to allow the cre ation of iew 'Iloovervilles' and Deweyvilleji' to "vole S-'nst the pending Lzcr.Z.z.tni." ' - Have Caused Transit Strike Scdem, OrHycm ThxffsdaY 4- r-f r 4 X Stalin Seeks Vatican Aid Over Poland i j F i -1 - ' ! LONDON Aug. 9.-P)-The new Chronicle sid today, that Marsh al Stalin had submitted to the Vat ican "a document which amounts to ! nothing j less than a proposal fq coordinated action- bet Moscow anji the Vatican for .the post-war . solution; of moral and social, problems' which are likely to have immediate effects in lib era;ted Poland.; X :j ; i The article said that Stalin through hi . ambassador to Rome suggested . to the j pope I an ex change of views to facilitate jmy action at the peace conference. 1 .!Stalin assures Ithe pope." the article said "ThatjRussia not only does not seek anywhere to change the existing social order ! by force but would even oppose- it It is the soviet aim to reach its goal by progressive! development only, ac cording to ! democratic and legal principles," f referrlhg,' ta Stalin's adherence In Teheran to the war aims of the western 1 democra cies." - ! !-'.-! ' - Deaf ScHool Employes Will Get PaylRaise1 . Salary increases ranging from $5 to $20 a month for employes at the state school; for' the deaf, aggregat ing $400 a jmontEuwere approved by .the state board bf control Wed nesday. ! J -4 j ; At the same 4 time Warden George Alexander's request "for approval pt a program under which guards j living outside the state penitentiary -would be v al lowed maintenance pay at the maximum fate lot $25 a month was heard andi taken i under advise ment" - ' ' l i Salaries of guards start at $100 a month and are increased $10 an nually to a' maximum. .Those liv ing1 at the Institution get the same pay as .those keeping up homes. Alexander estimates that the total additional butlay would not ex ceed $1000 a 'Tiionthl 1 He said Wednesday; he had a surplus of $14,000, largely saved from ' the salaries appropriation, "h.-- Also; .tainen under advisement AlVmAZodtli DiesiriAction i LEBANON i-Alvin WodUi, 22, on of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wodtli of the Foster ! neighborhood, was killed in action in France accord ing to a rri?snge from the war de partment ; He had been overseas only three r months. ' He had lived his entire life in this vicinity. Sur vivors are; the widow, EJna; his Parents: one sister. Grace: two brothers, Edward and Louis. The announcement tf his death Came to his wife Just a week after her. father It B. Jones, was killed In a lcr2-?2 accident tear cere. I m rs' '"v-f it was the request for authority to Momincj. Aucjuat 10, 1344 Military; Demands Mot Over Hersliey Thinkis y Draft Will Stay For Some Time . Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, national director of selective ser vice, sees little chance of an im mediate material decrease in the manpower demands of the mili tary even when the war in Eu rope is over. "We have the problem of re placementyou jean keep men on battlefronts only so" long . until their, fitness for such work de creases," he. told Interviewers at the capitol Wednesday: The sandy-haired, energetic of ficer, to whom fell the burden of mobilizing .. America for war . in the days of semi-peace many dark months ago, is on a routine in spection trip of northwest states.' Navy Still Needs Men "There is no reason to suppose the navy will lower, its demand for 390,000 more men by next July," he said in an indirect com ment on the Pacific war in rela tion to future draft i quotas. The general brought with him the thanks and congratulations of himself and his national organiza tion or the work of the Oregon selective service and its compon ent boards. 1 , " He said this state's organization "rated with the top" that it was "forward-looking," and - that Jn the preparations ,. for returning service, men Oregon, was , "six months ahead." - ; CoL Wooton Praised' . At a press conference,", .Gen. Hershey had high praise for CoL Elmer V. Wooton," Oregon selec tive, L service director, and said "the colonel has a reputation na tionally, and hot . built solely on his -work in Oregon, 'either; there ther-rmpoant Jobswould bev asked to ful if he wasn't so essential here. i "The general said selective serv ice, faced a hard problem in the demobilization; readjustment and care of service men. He hazarded no guess as to how fast ultimate demobilization would be -effected. . Gen. . Hershey visited Goy. Earl Snell and other station officials, as weU as' selective service, board members,' while 'here. He and Mrs. ' Hershey ' planned to leave for California points: tonight (Another story on General. Herr shey is on page 5) " Pole Premier Happy After Stalin Meet MOSCOW, Thursday, Aug. 10.-yP)-S h o r 1 1 y after his ' second meeting . with Premier Stalin, Stanislaw Mikolajczyk, , premier of the Polish govemment-in-ex-ile, radiating optimism, announ ced ' today he would return - to London with proposals concern ing the rival Polish regimes on which "no definite agreement' was reached here, i "Premier Stalin has assured us of his desire for a strong, Inde pendent democratic i Poland," he told a press conference, adding he had a deep conviction that a dur able; close and friendly coopera tion ; between Poland and soviet Russia, must exist now and in peacetime.' - - As negotiations between the ri val regimes, the government-in-exile and the soviet-sponsored na 1 1 o n a 1 committee of liberation, broke up, Mikolajczyk said, "We have agreed not to make stated ments and counter - statements,1 and declined to make any predic tion about his own prospects. " DoreeyyHall Face Trouble -jr.' LOS ANGELES, Aug.; M Dist Atty. Fred N. . Howser an nounced today thai his office would . investigate . a . pre-dawn fight last Saturday on the balcony of Band Leader Tommy Dorsey's Hollywood apartment in which Actor Jon Hall and two others have declared they were injured. "In view of the fact that Jon Hall has publicly Indicated that he thinks he has been the victim of a criminal assault I feel it my duty to make a thorough investigation in the public interest," ' Howser said in a statement ' He said participants in the al tercation will be asked to attend conferences in his office and that if they fail to respond, they will be cnlled before the county grand jury. - - - - - Yanks Stmemnis ' 'ft in Ei IkkySetsJJp Headquarters In GEN. EISENHOWER'S AD VANCE COMMAND - POST IN NORMANDY, ; Aug; 9PKen. D wight D. Eisenhower, - supreme commander of allied forces, . has established his headquarters on the continent in order to maintain the closest possible contact with the : allies fast rolling offensive against the German army.; . . The', supreme : command head quarter! - unit it . was announced tonight was moved toNonnandy by air during the past few days. Officers and enlisted personnel including WACS are living in tents in a camouflaged' area under constant patrol by heavily armed military police.. .,. The general is situated near an airfield from which he makes speedy strips daily, for personal conferences with Gen. Sir Ber nard Li Montgomery and Lt Geh. Omar N. Bradley. Florence Beset By Civil Strife, Food Shortage ROME," Aug. 9-(JF)- The city of Florence, tightly locked in a deadly vise formed by the British and German armies, was reported facing food . and water shortages and beset by looting and outbursts of civil strife today. f .' ' While military operations In and around Florence werer limited, to patrol forays, machine 'gun posi tions lined both banks of the Arno river-along Its course through the city." " . ,i 4 " The battle lines had cut the city off from food supply from the sur rounding countryside, one of It aly's richest agricultural 'regions, and no food had been distributed on the German . side of ' the - city since last Friday. A . .A . - i German desbmction of the pow er plant had deprived the -city of light and caused an alarming wa ter supply situation, with black marketeers demanding 20 lire (20 cents) for a bottle of water. ' : The Tuscan ; capital has a long history of civil strife and is a hot bed of both fascist and "anti-fascist extremists. Fighting between these elements was known to have broken but in at least one neigh borhood. ' """ ! ' Alliecl Burma ; ' : Drive Gaining SOIJTHEAST ASIA COMMAND HEADQUARTERS, Kandy, Cey lon, Aug. 9-(F,)The allied drive to push the last Japanese invad ers out of northeast India pene trated today' to a point 54 miles south of Imphalin where Japanese rear guards were encountered. It appeared likely that the last of. the .beaten 33rd Japanese di vision would be chased over the Burma - frontier toward Tiddim within ' another - week. These re treating elements of .the enemy still must pass allied ., "shadow" troops - lodged in their rear and harassing Tiddim road traffic. ' In the Mogaung valley campaign in northern Burma allied troops striking down upon the Mogaung Mandalay railway in. the Taung ni area encountered heavy" oppo sition ' at . Tigyaingzu7 five.miles northeast of Gaungni - and about 10 ' miles southwest ' of Mogaung, air -line. -' K ' " "Jrr'--' GOP GmsmSh' SeribusfAfl air 2 No pep rally but a serious meet ing given over to consideration of sound government, the recent con ference of 28. republican t govern nors, called by Governor-Presidential Candidate Thomas E. Dew ey of New York, was held' in. pri vate and no speeches were made. This was the report brought home Wednesday by Gov. Earl Snell, who attended the St Louis gath ering; v ; -'.- - Discussions of reconversion and postwar jobs, agriculture, public lands, water resources, labor and taxes .were of particular concern to Oregon,; Snell d. " The governors were unanimous In their belief that agriculture must be free cf unreliable con trols and restrictions and the irn- Normandy -. .- "", . ' i - JUL - . s Bradley's Men Get te Mans, : Force St. Malos Surrender:' - Canadians Continue Drive SUPREME j HEADQUARTERS " ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY FORCE, Aug. fM-Ltj. Gen. Omar N. Bradley's whirlwind wedg es rushed, without check on the last 100 miles toward Paris ten night after sweeping through Le Mans and forcing the die-hard defenders' of Brittany's sea fortress of St Malo to knuckle under iii surrender. , . : : The capture of St. Malo, whose defenders had been ordered to fight to the last man, was re - ported in field dispatches. Never before had it been taken,' though it was the scene of many sieges in the middle ages. The historic fishing' village and resort on the north coast was perched on an is land connected with the mainland by a defended causeway. Tanks In Nantes . Unconfirmed reports said Amer ican troops had pushed into Nantes on the Ioire and into Angers, just north of the Loire and 50 miles up stream from Nantes, indicating the Americans; were still ' sweeping forward without any stiffening Nazi resistance that would presage a real fight for southern France. On the northern end of the far flung Allied battleline British and Canadian forces continued to ad vance. - . ; The Canadians broadened their wedge into the German lines to six miles at the base and pushed a three-mile-wide spear to " within about five miles of Falaise. j v ; Nazis Counterattack . The Germans launched a coun terattack at Canadian positions north of Falaise tonight but the attack had been anticipated tna ranftniana htam ear ai 1 Mn e sct Maw wvicsusn.o nra'c nut uuq'iu VU' bill positions. Canadian -artillery and mortar fire replied furiously to the German attack. " T'EriUsh- troops defending thelr bridgehead across the prne river beat "off German' counterattacks and advanced' amid indications the Germans were getting ready, "to wtihdraw from their positions be tween' the British ' and Canadian forces. '. -': .The official announcement of the complete occupation of Le Mans automobile manufacturing city 85 miles east of Rennes made it clear that American tanks were well beyond the city and the Ger man ' news: agencies reported the fast spearheads' were only 87 miles from Paris. . ' Bulgaria May Want to Quit . ANKARA, Aug. 9 rW)- Uncon firmed reports circulated here to day that Bulgaria, has asked the allies for peace terms through the medium of the Turkish govern ment 1 w ' , The reports were given some color when Dr. .' Floyd Henson Black,' fori 18 years president of the American college in Bulgaria and now president, of the. Ameri can college in Istanbul, left Istan bul hurriedly for Ankara.' It was believed he had been called into consultation by the US embassy because of his Intimate knowledge of . Bulgaria, his per sonal friendship with the Bulgar ian minister : to Turkey,' Nikola Balabangv,' and the wide respect he commands in Bulgaria. Population Growin , PORTLAND, Aug. Ore gon's population - is on the. up swing, with twice as many births as deaths for the first six months of the year,", .the state board of health said today. There were 12, 393 births iana 6933' deaths. - Megffi - aWas Reports Snell practical and whimsical restraints that now, hamper production and create' confusion, the Oregon gov ernor reported. v "From:, the political viewpoint I was much impressed with the uni form .' enthusiasm ,; and . optimism expressed . by - the , governor in personal conversation," Snell said. "There seems to be a widespread approval of the Dewey-Bricker republican ticket, he added. ' . t The campaign of the republican nominees will not be built around a series of negative 'conclusions, Enell declared. "On the contrary,' he said, "it will be an' affirmative, assressive," positive campaign that will inspire and reflect confidence and enthusiasm. ...--.' . Ho. 122 V - US Completes Guam Conquest Nimitz Reveals US t PACIFIC FLEET HEAD QUARTERS, Pearl Harbor, Aug. Vtffjr5- American forces complet- -ed their conquest of Guam today except for. a small, inland area near Pati point where surviving Japanese were surrounded, Adm. Chester. W. Nimitz announced to day, j.j'- Pati point is at the northeast corner of ; Guam, the first Ameri can insular possession seized by Japan.: - The . campaign to retake Guam began with the invasion of the island on July 20 .by -tht Third and Fourth marine divisions and the 77th infantry division. ' -The assault troops landed at turn rkftintar . 4 Vim utAftarM - Prlca 5c J - 'j -1' ; - aod-i..je: i AWi J.- : I . w the island and pushed north - to virtually ' complete , recon quest "of the Island on thv20th May 'ot the campaign;-; v ',":;. , V,;,.v. ' . ; The remaining pocket' of enemy resistance was expected to be blotted 'out shortly as the Ameri can forces were exerting " heavy pressure on the remnants of the Japanese, garrison, which had no hope of escape. : Any attempt by .the " surviving Nipponese to flee by water was blocked by . American warships that kept up a constant patrol of the Island's, coast line. ' ; Stores. Might Close V -Day - - Salem .stores will close- when hostilities! between the Germans and the United Nations cease If they follow the recommendations of the Salem Retail Trade bureau. . The closure' will be for two rea sons, bureau members said Wed nesday. Merchants 'and their em ployes may Join in the celebration, and locking up of all retail estab lishments possible should prevent destruction of ; considerable prop- : erty. I 1 - ' ; Ban Sale of Alcohol - ' " NEW YORK, Aug9rW-Iok- ing ahead, the Hotel Association of New York City, Inc., has ask ed its! members to declare ' a 24 hour ban on the sale of alcoholic beverages ; immediately upon re ceipt of word 'that fighting has ceased in Europe. . ir Thumbnail ' - By Um AMocUtod PreM ' - Invaalen Frent AH jed forces ' continued their whirlwind rush toward Paris after capturing the Brittany sea fortress of St Malo. : ? , The Pacific.--Americans com- ; . pkted their conquest of Guam; 'except for a small inland area ' near Pati Point where surviving Japanese were 1 surrounded; ah 'additional 1072 Japanese ' have . ; been 'killed uv the Aitape sector of British New. Guinea.' ;l . : i . '.The Aerial Front Successive . . waves of Allied aircraft slashed -in a, day-long assault: south of - Caen at a great concentration of ' vGermin.K tanks! ' Ilalifaxes 'flew . 200 miles . beyond . Caen to ,the Foret. de. Mormal, to bomb fuel depots. : - , . V" ! . Poland Soviet troops ground forward-In the battle of Latvia, and climbed higher into the Cai pathians toward Czechoslovakia; Russians claimed counterattack- ing Germans lost .3800 killed while 120 more Nazi tanks were .destroyed. ''.' " - - ItaJy-7-The dty - of, Florence, . ringed by. British and .German armies, was reported facing food tr.d water shortages and beset by looting and outbursts cf civil war. J