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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1944)
Into 194 .133, y - waxy LONDON, Sept 2i-(-Prim -Minister Winston ' Churchill warned the United Nations , to day that the war against Germany might continue several months in to 1943 and laid "enormous' ad ditional American troops would b thrown into the struggle "unless organised German resistance col lapses In the near future. Appearing before the house of war, the British Jeadef reaffirmed bis country's determination to pur sue the war against Japan "with all her strength and resources to the very end," and declared that Britain, the US and Soviet Russia were more closely and effectively united, than ever before. He said he hoped for another meeting with Premier Stalin and'. President Roosevelt 1 before . the end . of ; the , Despite the fact that Germany already bad lost close to 1,000,- 000 men in northwest Europe, Churchill said he deprecated talk of an early peace. : ::: y. tf 77? "l shall certainly not ' hazard a guess It would be no more .than a guess as to when the end, will band, no one certainly not I can guarantee that several months of 1945 may not bt required." 7 IXare.Tzeeps Dm - - ". After revealing that between 2,000,000 and ; 2,000,000 ; aflied troops already- were engaged on the western. fronts the premier warned Hitler that '"unless organ ized. German resistance collapses in the near future, -enormous ad ditional US forces will be brought to Deaf in the final struggle, Turning to the question of peace, Churchill said there were great difficulties to be overcome.' AsTeement Needed :"' -:; "Everything depends, he said, "upon the agreement of the three leading ,, European powers - and world powers,. I do not thick a satisfactory -agreement will be reached until there has been a further meeting of the 1 three heads of government, assisted as may be necessary by their for- eisn secretaries." - Ad-Jttlr.j fraskly that it t.'ould be affectation to pretend that the US and Britain saw eye-to-eye with the Soviet Union about Po land, Churchill said "I hope that the Soviet government will make it possible for us ts act unitedly with then in this solution cf the Polish problems and that we shall not witness the unhappy spectacle of rival governments la Poland, one recognized by the Soviet Un- ion and the ether firmly adhered Uty e.s v.T:t:ra powers.? Eyes rtla Czes-oa ! 7 . - He said that Britain would do her utmost to citiia for Kussia "the security'she is entitled to have on her west front There would thus have to be changes in the Ppli-h frontier, he said, ad ding that "Russia has a right to our support In this matter." V ' In an hour of mingled pride and sorrow over the stand and fall of the airborne troops at Ambers, Cfcurchill rallied Britain with tLs reminder that the swift surge ef allied arms had brought the "foul enemy to the doorstep or defeat He drew frequently upon elo quence, but talked to a somber house of commons In steady con versational - tones ' of confidence mat the problems ahead would be worked out efficiently and har moniously. ' " come," he said. Many persons oti the highest technical, attainments, knowledge and responsibility .have year, ... ....... Discounts Early Peace good hopes that it will be over by the end of 1944. On the other vumuiuiu ui m long report on we i J - Wealher Mitifflim temperature " degrees, minimina SS de-. grees, M rata, river -4 ft Partly cloady with seaU tered showers ' Friday and 8atarday: eeeler east per tlea Friday. Pcunddd 1051 ..1 Qaurdhill: Warns .-HETiiited 1 Nations .That i :War in -Mm ! - - . . I am inclined to think that many of those who are redrafting our tax laws ' are engaging more in postwar hoping than planning. I fear they are setting their sights too high as far as probable tax reduction goes. ; ; r ; . - ' Chairman Dough ton of - the house ways and means committee . leans on the conservative side, too. He has weathered many tax bills and knows that we are going to have to raise large; amounts of money , to meet government ex penses after the war and the in .terest on the national . debt .He hopes for reduction in government expenses, and says he is anxious to lighten the tax burden on the individual and on business so that private ; industry will have the means for expansion, but says there is no chance of anything so drastic as the elimination of cor poration income taxes, which some are proposing. . -; Of all . the proposals for the frame of anew revenue structure after the war those of the com - mittee on economics" development appear the most practical. ' The committee's report starts out with full recognition of certain funda mentals: 1st, the tax system must impose the least possible restric tion on expansion of production and ' employment; 2nd, taxes should be fair among . persons; 3rd, taxes must be adequate to sustain, the government and pre serve confidence in the soundness of the dollar and of our bonds. , It looks to the personal income tax to provide about one-half of - the revenues, and ; would lighten excise and sales taxes and taxes against . . ' - 7 '. (Continued on Editorial page) U. 5. Elections Gets Ribbing By Churchill r: LONDON,- Sept. 28-(-Prime . Minister Churchill mentioned the United States presidential election once in his address to the house of. commons today, and then with a smile. . He advised members against be ing "startled or carried away by sensational' reports and stories which emanate from the other side of the Atlantic. . , "There is an election " on," he said amid laughter from both aides of the house. "Very vivid accounts of all kinds of matters are given by people who cannot possibly have any knowledge of what has taken place at secret conferences. " . The United States- is a land of free : speech. Nowhere is speech freer, tot even foere where we sedulously cultivate it even in its most repulsive form. - , Dogs Draw Blame for Turkey Loss - ALBANY, Sept 28 Dogs are blamed for the loss of 200 turkeys valued at $1000, killed last Sun day at the J. IL Biegel ranch in north Benton county. -I The dogs are believed to have come from the Camp Adajr area -where there.' are many Uld to have belonged to soldiers who left them when they were transferred to ' Other posts. , The Biegel flock numbered 2178 and the loss was evaluated by C. S. Jackson, Ben ton county agent . "Anwylca'a greatest baek-te-the-farm uevement Is la full wmg.". . .' (The . secretary of , the na tional Farm Loan association will tell about it in The Sun day Statesman, in a story ex clusive in this area. . The tencbest ef all war cor respondent jobs is the Je Bio w f . . . (A behind -tlie-ceres view of the correspondents eternal quest for home-town names also wilL . be given' in The Statesman Sunday.) , - u; j ..... ' . ' -" ,"-V- ' The ; Statesman Is growing, expanding. It la providing the latest news, pictures and fea tures world-wide and local of any newspaper in its ter ritory, both daily and Sunday. And Sunday's Issues, too, will be outstanding with their largest volume of classified ad vertising in,; the Willamette valley. VCr.LD AT Y0U2 NINETY-FOUBTH YEAR t Yankee Tasi4orce Smashes Sbip? 36 1014Nip Aircraft 160 Yessels Lost In Philippines US PACIFIC FLEET H QUARTERS, Pearl Harbor, Sept 28 - ifi) - Planes of an"; American task force sank or damaged Upwards- of 90 Japanese surface craft including six warships, and wiped out 38 planes in the cen tral Philippines Saturday in the seventh day of such powerhouse attacks to scourge the invasion menaced archipelago this month.. Headquarters announced the re sults today, raising the devasta tion wreaked on the enemy in the Philippines in raids September 8 J 11, 12, 13, 20, 21 and 23 to 1014 planes destroyed, at least 160 sur face craft sunk and more than 200 probably sunk or damaged, f US Unchallenged I Prowling Philippine waters un challenged by the Japanese navy and opposed by waning enemy air strength, Adnv William F. Hal sey's Third fleet sent planes Sat urday over islands ringing he Visayan sea, losing 10 raiders, f ; V A destroyer and three destroyer escorts were among 22 ships defi nitely 'sunk. Others were a troop transport, three large cargo ships, three large oil tankers, six me dium cargo ships .and five small cargo ships, r. ri v.l Many Damaged ' " '. if Two destroyer escorts were among 4 J ships damaged, of which more than IS probably sank. j - In addition, 20 to 30 small craft were sunk or- damaged. . . Only seven enemy planes were aloft in' contrasts with the huge umbrella of enemy Sdrcraft en countered over Manila -and all were shot down. The other! 29 were accounted for on the ground. fee' Speaks 1 o Germans LONDON, Sept- 28 den. Dwight D. Eisenhower told the people of Germany today that! his allied armies are -coming "as con querors but not oppressors," with the purpose of eradicating :the nasi . party and German militar ism. - ' Eisenhower's first proclamation to the Germans said the allies -intended to abolish "cruel, oppres sive and discriminatory laws" nd to try all military and party lead ers, gestapo men and others sus pected of war crimes and atroci ties. They will be punished ' as they deserve" if found guilty, Ihe proclamation said. Report Says French Pierce Belfort Line NEW YORK Sept 28 -Wf the British reported tonight "French trpopk have pierced the .first line of German defenses in the Belfort Gap.". the - broadcast beamed to the continent,' was monitored !'by NBC. ' ' " EAD- Br oivnell Calls Gov Dewey's Tour f Brilliantly Successful9 ALBANY, NY, Sept 28-tff)-Gov. Thomas E. Dewey's campaisa di rector tonight heralded thel re publican presidential candidate's transcontinental tour as "brilliant ly successful,", thus indicating con tinuance of a program that was climaxed ' by an Oklahoma City speech severely; scoifog I"ranklin Roosevelt . ,";;" rr:;7' f:. v After a long conference with Dewey, Republican; National Chairman Herbert Brownell term ed the GOP leader's speaking trip, which ended here today, prob ably the." most brilliantly success ful campaign in modern political history." Brownell and j Dewey discussed, plans for the "remain ing 43 'days and nights ; of jthe campaign." 5 : " - " - -r' Brownell I told : newsmen . that "the reaction we have received: at national headquarters shows that the people like the serious and 18 PAGES A J a. i. 90 i aonon Airplanes Churchill Reveals Invasion! Figures LONDON, Sep t . 28 H W3) Prime Minister! Churchill! to day disclosed these figures en the western invasion: ' Germans killed and wounded perhaps" 400,009. f ; V German prisoners take a -"nearly half a million." ' . Germans trapped, along Dutch coast likely te be cap tured r destroyed "may well be" 200,000. . : : Landed: In first 24 hours ef Invasion quarter of million jaen. : t ; ;'.'" . " Ashore by 20th day mil lion mtrC i ' s ' : Now in France between t, 000,000 ; and 3,000,000 allied men. i . t ' ; Proportion ef British troops to American two "British to three American in personnel, fear ito $H in flshtinc divi sions, ) ;. "-;-- . Casualties Americans "over" 145,000 In killed, wounded and missing; British "upwards of 90,000. Churchill said Ameri can and British easualtles closely followed' proportions of numbers employed. Neutrals Told Not to Shelter : WASHINGTON Sept 28 -() Secretary Hull renewed and em phasized today this nation's warn ing against any neutral granting asylum to axis war criminals, but there is little disposition here to believe any country win actually try.it i V j "..;; : The indicated penalties are too tough.! i fe?r"'-rri',i-v';r-The secretary pointed that up in today's statement with the as sertion that relations between this nation ' and any such country "would be adversely affected' for years to come." -,--- - . While mont h s of diplomatic representations have brought direct r commitment against har boring' the wanted men of the axis from only one v true neutral Sweden the co m mo ft belief here is that most; other countries are merely reluctant to take a flat-footed position. ! !. Several hours after Hull's pro nouncement the.; Argentine for eign office in Buenos Aires an nounced that if had informed Great Britain that war criminals would be barred from the South American country and that they would be prohibited from acquir ing property -or depositing'! funds there, i - k - I ':k --.i-v j '4- Nevertheless, new pressure is being put on the effort to map officially the limits of the shrink ing area of safety. . : , '" constractive way! in which Gov. Dewey . presented the issues In seven r : major, broadcasts during me three-week trip- There was no doubt that he brought hundreds of thousands of independent and democratic votes into the Dewey-Bricker column,' the GOP chief declared. ; ' i Brownell ? reported ; wide spread feeling among democratic organization ; officials that the HiUman-Browder i faction of the new deal is exercising a predomi nant influence, end there is much bitterness as a result" .;"".- Discussing Dewey's Oklahoma City report to wtat the republi can r ncrrinee cilled President Roosevelt's "mud ilinsing" speech of last Saturday ni;b.V Erownell said he had "never seen? such rpontaneous er'J,uchm in - re sponse to a si" ;1 3 rpecch."' Salem, Oregon. Friday Morning September 23, 1S14 Yanks Hunt in Ruins it- 3. ' ,3C f v Cpl. C. A. Capasxola, Utlca, NT, (left) and Pfc, Fred Meyers, Fla tonia, Texas, army first aid men search through the wreckage tn the streets ef Brest France, for injured. (AP wirephoto from sianal . corps) ' ' : t -,.:! -i ' i- - . . EdenWouldn'tTalk h(iurcnmon Atlantic Telephone WASHINGTON', Sept 2S 4 ) Representative Mundt (R-SD) said today he had a recent talk In London with Britain's foreign secretary, Anthony Eden, and! the latter told this one on himself: Eden went to bed late after a heavy day, only to be -awakened by his bedside phone about 330 sa. m. The foreign secretary Just grabbed the phone, said "I am not talking to anyone" and hung up.' The phone rang again and! the' procedure was repeated, i -r J The next! morning; Eden re ceived a cable from Prime Minis ter Churchill in Quebec stating: . "Tried! to get you on transat lantic telephone last night, j but unable to reach you.". j ' Train iWreck Kills at Least Ten Persons MISSOURI VALLEY, la. Sept 2SHV-At . least ten persons ! lost their lives and about 100 " were injured in '; a collision ' Thursday nibt ? between a i Chicago and Northwestern : p a s s en g er' and freight train on the outskirts of Missouri Valley. j The bodies of three soldiers were taken to Omaha, Ft Crook, Nebrn officers disclosed early; to day. Their names ' were withheld. Three other bodies were taken to Council Bluffs, la, where one was Identified as Ed Mayer, about 50, Ashland, Nebr. The other dead included another man and a two- year-old girL - j . Editor Willard Dale of the Miss ouri! Valley Times, who gave! the casualty figures after Inspecting the scene, said the wreckage was scattered : half a mile along ! the track after a fast freight . and i passenger train, both of the Chi cago Northwestern line, collided. Christmas GI Mail , --: May Get Througli 1 ; '--i-f .v ... . .. . NEW YORK, Sept 28-(ff)-It began to look today as: though the man overseas Christmas pack ages and other man for service men - would go through after aH. Postmaster j Albert Goldman said 1500 persons, mostly women, had ; responded to an appeal if or temporary workers to , handle a huge, backlog at . the new army post office in Long Island City. !.Iicliiaii Requires . i V Blaeberry; Inspection ; The state of llichigan wi3 not accept shipments of ; blueberry plants or euttinss grown In Ore gon ' or in "any otlier state unless they are accompanied fcy a certiil' cate from the state agricultural deparfciczt U te stats cf cri-ia, state r!:r.t IrJv:'jy clc;c!5 her announced Thursday. Allies Occupy n seven owns ROME, Sept 28-(ff)-Seven strategic Italian towns have been occupied by allied troops advan cing up. both coasts of the penin sula and in. the rugged central sector where Americans were only 12 mues from an important nazi escape route allied headquarters reported today. ; , A? Castel Del Rio, on the central Italian ' front was - captured by mountain-fighting Americana who also seized Monte Carnevaleand important heights nearby which the Germans had paid heavily to regain only two days agoj British and Canadian troops In the Adriatic sector enlarged their bridgehead over the Rubicon to a two-mile depth along a 10-mile front Italian patriots seized the town of BeQaria and held it until Canadian forces cleared out small nazi hests. -- --- Towns seized in addition to Cas tel Del Rio and Bellaria were Cas tigUone, in the highlands about 23 miles south of Bologna and on a main highway: Bruscoli, five miles east of Castiglione, ' where after hard fighting empire troops be came firmly established on Mount Beniandi and Mount Freddir Boe- coni, an inland town ; taken by British troops: Querceta, a west coast point several1 miles below Massa, and nearby Vallecchla Marion Young GOP'stoMeet - ) Reorganization of Marion Coun ty Young Republican club is scheduled for Monday night Oc tober 9, when members of the or ganization meet at republican headquarters in Salem. I Paul Heath, who has headed the club during its period of great est growth, tendered his resigna tion Thursday night to the club's executive board, declaring press of private, business hindered ac complishment of all the work be theniisht the organization's execu tive should undertake during an election : season. .. . iA successorto Georgianne Clarke, secretary, who left Salem When she was married the past summer, also will be elected. Dor othy L. Cornelius, vice chairman of the organization will preside. London Press YZelconies Churchill's Pessimism ! LONDOII, Friday, Cept . Prime ilinister VTinston Church- Hi's dampening of over-optimism for a quick victory was welcomed by the London press today and many of the newspapers found "the great merit" of his speech before commons was -the state ment that Britain's war eflort America's. . - Strategic t ' la . .ran Italian 1 . . ; -r. ' " - I Reds in ... - ..- In - Russians Inside . ; Czechoslovakia; ' PushonHungary LONDON, Friday, Sept 20 -Wi Russian . troops yesterday fought their way nearly three miles in side Czecho-Sfovakla through the Lupkow pass from Poland, and Budapest said that other mobile Russian forces attacking on a 100- mile front had punched out gains in southeastern Hungary. . - , Berlin also 1 said that Russian troops had crossed from Romania into Yugoslavia at a point east of Belgrade,! Yugoslav capital. Vydraa Captured A cxnvnunique broadcast by Moscow , and recorded by the so viet monitor included Vydraiw a Czecho-Slovak rait station, in i list of 30 localities, captured by Cot Gen. Ivan Petrov's Fourth tJkraine armf attacking in the East Beskld mountains. Lupkow, on the Polish side of the pass seven miles southeast of Vydran, also was captured, and a Hungarian communique told of fighting in this area only 43 miles from northern Hungary. ..1". 14 revisions Used . Enemy ' report! said . that Mar shal Rodion Y. Malinovsky, com mander of the the- combined Rus sian and Romanian forces, was using 30 divisions or upwards of 300,000 men in ah offensive which had reached to within 15 miles of Szeged, Hungary's second city and to within 102 ' rniles, of the capital at Budapest One Stockholm dispatch quot ing the German-controlled Scan dinavian telegraph bureau said the Russians were more than 30 miles inside Hungary and were by-passing Szeged in their smash toward Budapest t S WLB Allows Vacation Plea : I N 1 ! The vacation provision in the contract under which Miles Linen company employes have worked here i was re-established unani mously this week by the t2th re gional war labor board as the va cation provision for the new col lective bargaining agreement there. The board denied a wage increase requested by United Tex tile Workers union affecting OS employes. . j Predmpaign For Chest Gains As the red - white - and - blue stickers declaring "We Shared for pur Own For pur AEiest went up on the doors and windows of business establishments in Salem on Thursday so the pre-campalgn solicitation of Salem United War Chest gathered momentum. . Re sponse has beat excellent, Fred S. Anunsen, chairman of the pre campalgn committee, said. ' : Meantime, the window and fob by display committee of the chest set with representatives cf bus iness blocks, ; John Stark, E C (Tim) Undstrand, F. C Moxley, Gus Hewitt, Oscar D. Olson, Paul Alien, , Dick Cooley, Rev. George H. Swift, Richard -Eeveria and W. A. Eeinke to deliver instruc tions and to plan for a chest dis play in every retail store in Salem. ' Girl Reserve timbers End Camp Fire girls from Leslie and Parrish Junior Lih schools have assisted in making up tlxe more than 1CC3 kits t3 be urcl ty sclicittsrs in Lv.s maia cir--Ii which c-ens Cc tober 9. . . i. -. , " ' Balkan Countries Prtcsj 5c. Second Army . 200,000 Nazis Against Sea; Dutch Grridor Firmly Held SUPREME HEADQUARTERS ALLIED EXPEDITION ARY FORCE, Sept. 28( AP) The British Second army lashed out east, west and north tonight in drives to pin per haps 200,000 Germans against the sea in western Holland and menace German 'soil along a 15-mile front little more than 10 miles front the northern end of the Siegfried fine at Kleve. -V,J . '- . ' . ' - -f 1 , ' Powerful elements of LU Gen. Miles C. Dempsey's army at the apex of a 460-mile front where Prime Minister Churchill said 2,000,000 to 3,000,000 allied fighting men were GermansTry To Stem Mass Aerial Attack LONDON, Sept. 28V-Savage sky battles were fought over Ger many again today as the luftwaffe sought to stem the mass allied aer ial assault which carried through its fourth consecutive day and cost the US eighth: air force 49 heavy bombers and 12 fighters. , - v LL .Donald - Dunn, Bellingham, Wash, was credited with shooting down three enemy planes. " Allied planes fcf every sort swept across the continent In; widespread attacks against nazi industrial and supply targets, but the day's prin cipal Blows were struck by more than 1,009 Fortresses and Libera tors and 700 escorting fighters of the Eighth air force against Mag deburg; Kauri and Merseburg in central Germany. i j ., The German air force resisted viciously' and flak was heavy at many points. ' j ; A communique said some of the missing: American-. fighters may have landed in friendly territory, but the fighters announced brought the two day losses of the Eighth air force to sl heavy bombers and 19. fighters. Thirty-six German fighters were shot down today, 28 by American escorts and 10 by-bomber gun ners, bringing the two-day score of the air battles to 7 7 nazi planes lost ; i - i . Saturday Deadline. . 7 7 For Blue Tokens PORTLAND, Sept, 28ff)-Sat-urday is the deadline for blue ra tion . tokens, G. M. I Haf enbrack, Portland district OPA official, re minded housewives today. 1 The tokens may be used as a medium of exchange in war-torn countries, Haf enbrack reported. He said the national OPA had es timated that 61 carloads of tokens would be returned to Cincinnati, where they originated. - Solicitations Momentum The Business Girls' club of the YWCA got out 5000 letters to chest subscribers as their share of pre campaign work. 7 f ; , Frank Doerfler, chairman of the rural campaign has a complete or ganization ready to work the sec ond week in October:' Mrs. Glen Meisner, Auburn; Lucille Haines, Bethel; ' Mrs. Bona Id J ones. Brooks; Mrs. W. R. Massey, Buena Crest; Mrs. Fred E. Way, Central Howell; M. W. Evans, Chemawa; Luther Chapin, Clear Lake'; Stan ley Fagg, Fruitland; D. E. Janzen, HayesviUe;: Kenneth - Bain, Hazel Green; X-Irs. Harvey: McT.ughUn, Kelzer; Mrs. Fred f McClowghy, Labish Center; Mrs. C W. Stacey, Liberty; -Mrs. E. S. Barker, Mid dle Grove; I'rs. Alex LaFoUette, Hissioa Eottoms Mrs. James C Adamv rrinsle; Gus Schlicker, IUcksy; llrs. Eanford Eparks, Ro bert;: Mrs. V7. E. Gardner, Salem and rritt AfrinwaJJ. Waconda. ; Ho. 165 Moves to Pin k Nf massing moved up along the Mass (Meuse) river- , - -.They were distributed .over a meandering from of IS miles from Cuyk, 11 miles southwest of Kleve, , southward to Vierlingsbeek; on the west bank .of the Maas where it winds from three to five miles from the German frontier, Asso- " dated Press Correspondent Roger :; Greene reported. , ' 1 Smash Bacaf Nails . ' . They had smashed back enemy force which had been trying to cut -the Dutch corridofnow .. firmly cemented and widened and the only Germans" still west ot, the Maas to bother them were in- a small pocket near Overloo'n, three miles southwest of Vierlingsbeek. Westward from the Dutch corri- ' dor the Tommies fought forward another five miles to within five miles of the highway center of S Hertogenbosch, which is 23 miles southwest of the main Allied cross ing of the Waal Rhine at Nijmegen annd 18 miles-northwest of the British base at Eindhoven. ' Widen Bold , r On the. north they widened to five miles their hold oa the north branch of the Rhine south and west : of their ill-fated Arnhem foothold,' narrowing to about 25 " miles the dry land route of escape for the big German force walled off south of Ijssel Meer (formerly the Zuider Zee). - Churchill estimated this force of Germans at 200,000 and declared their "destruction or capture may now be deemed highly probable." (Failure of the British to hold thes: mall bridgehead across, the Neder Rhine at Arnhem, however. brightened German prospects of pulling out of this sector.) " - The U. S. First army kept up the pressure by fighting all the way througli the pillbox-studded, gun- bristling, Hurtgen forest south east of Aachen to within 27 miles of the big German Rhineland In dustrial city of Cologne, - - CushingNew Boston Bishop : 1 WASHINGTON Sept 28 -Pl The Most Reverend ishop Rich ard J. Bushing, auxiliary bishop of the Catholic diocese of Boston since 1939, has been appointed by Pope. Pius XII as archbishop of Boston, the J apostolic delegation announced tonight. ,,.,r . ; Bishop Cushing succeeds Wil liam Cardinal CConnell, who died April 22. " ; A native of South Boston, Bish op Cushirig was born Aug.- 24, 1895. He was graduated from Bos ton college and was ordained a priest may 25, 1921, by Cardinal O'CannelL He was consecrated auxiliary bishop of Boston hr 1939 and has served as director of the Society for the Propagation of the Faith, dety. a Catholic . missionary so- Turk Radio Reports 7 Hungary Peace Feeler NEW YORK,- SepC2-ff)-The . American broadcastirig station ts Europe, quoting the Turkish ra dio, said tonight the Hungarian premier was reported to have asked the Turkish ambassador la Budapest to learn allied peace terms and to set a's intermediary ; in preliminary t crotiations .- for Hungary's exit frci t' ? The hrnftriras:! was heard I im monitors. "