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Served By Leased Wire Of The --—, “" /".. ASSOCIATED MESS T°lal Net Pald ASSBCiAim rnESS STAB-MEWS CIRCULATION With Complete Coverage Of Yesterday .18,702 State and National News Same Day Last Year 14,438 ^______ Increase . 4,438 V0jl-i±rNl- 2—_____ WILMINGTON, N. C., THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1941 FINAL EDITION ESTABLISHED 1867 A ^ g±. . _ i i i . . ■ ■ - 1 ■■■ ■ ■■ ... .. ... — — ■ ■' ■ ■ ■ — — ——■— --— — — Vital Leningrad Railway Severed; Lines Tightened CUT SOUTH OF CITY j(azis, Finns Bearing Down on Great Baltic Port From Two Sides BERLIN, Thursday, Aug. 28.—Itf) ^German troops striking east 35 piles from captured Novgorod were reported early today to nave reached the Leningrad-Moscovv railway, cutting off the main sup ply route of the menaced Baltic ^The report was issued by DNB. I(o details were given immediate ^Earlier the high command had announced that the 22nd Russian armv had been annihilated in a tremendous battle in the Nevel area on the northern wing of the jront. The Wehrmacht advanced 40 miles, captured the roundhouse and airport town of Velikie Luki, tilled 40.000 Russians and took JO,000 prisoners, Adolf Hitler’s headquarters announced. The report of this new step to ward the fuehrer’s avowed goal of cashing' the Red army said the Soviet troops were encircled and annihilated in several days of bloody fighting. Velikie Luki is a railroad center of 30,000 population 275 miles west of Moscow and 250 miles south of Leningrad. Before the war, Velikie Luki was the aerial crossroads of northern Europe. Its field served Russia, Germany and the Baltic countries. Capture of the town put German troops on the north central front 40 miles deeper into Russian lines from Nevel, where they had been reported previously. i>o Lushes lucuiiuuca The high command made no ref erence to German losses, which generally have been reported as “comparatively low.” A glimpse into one hospital train, given by German War Correspondent Hans Joachim Volland, indicated the Germans were not escaping un scathed. The chief surgeon aboard the rolling hospital, Volland said, told him that ‘‘except for short rest periods we are always under way -from the front to hospitals in the Rumanian winterland and then back to the front. On the Leningrad front, the high command said, operations “pro ceed successfully.” On the lower Dnieper the Ger mans were said to have captured the town of Berislav after working their way through minefields on the outskirts and fighting hand-to hand in the streets with pistols, grenades and bayonets. A DNB dispatch said 1.500 pris oners were taken and added that "innumerable dead Bolsheviks cov ered the streets.” The date of the fighting was not given but it was presumed to have been before yesterday’s high com mand announcement of the fall of Dnieperopetrovsk, which the com* Jiunique said was the last Russian bridgehead west of the river be low Kiev. German military experts said me Russians lost the southern Uk mme because they had made the mistake of thinking the fuehrer mould do what he had led them to expect. Fell Into Trap «o j expert attached to the prop ganda organization explained that “efore Hoe Ukraine drive the Ger 'Un northern wing made a big », occupying most of the Baltic , and pressing forward os v to contact Finnish troops lag from the north for a joint “■hist on Leningrad. said the Russians probably withdrew troops from the Ukraine Continued on Page Three; Col. 4) ,.N-'Z,S arrest CUBANS ' ■. TV Thursday, Aug. 28.— Several Cuban citizens have a,"'(,stc(l in “occupied terri 0I"‘S’ for committing “hostile ‘‘s directed against the securi of the German Reich,” DNB mounted early today. WEATHER Korn, n F«RECAST [T: ,iv Ti,„ar<?lina: Fa>r to partly tool. ‘ urs('ay and Friday, continued IMetww, F‘ ?• Heather Bureau) feCinr 7-oi.°K,cal 1»ta for the 24 hours' "jU p. m. yesterday). 1:30 a .Temperature fc: T-30 n' 50 > 7:30 *• ni. 79; 1:30 p. m. fcum '■ In’ s-: maximum 92; mini mean S3; normal 76 ,1:30, , . Humidity 0: ~:30 p11 rn^'"4 :30 a' m' 85i 1:30 p. m. Total Precipitation * onni- 21 hours ending 7:30 ",hs m°nthC6.15 Inches! SiDCe the *** C«a«°and‘re Published by U S. an<i Geodetic Survey). ******- Unwa fasonboro Inlet |:tfa ■.^Tipitja 12:16p 6:30p moonsci l0*£.,8:44p': moonrise ^'apf, v..,. .~7 ’’ ’> *< « “ rn"Vi'oX? rayette l(""l"'ueU u“ Cage Five; Col. 5) f OAKLAND, Calif., Aug. 27.— (/P)—Three Douglas DC-3 land planes landed in Honolulu at 7:10 p. m. (PST) tonight, completing the fastest Trans-Pacific flight ever made by commercial air planes, Matson company officials reported. The planes made the flight in 13 hours and 55 minutes, one hour and three minutes under the fastest time previously re ported by Pan American Air ways. The giant ships were ferried to Honolulu for use in the Ha waiian Islands by Inter-Island Airways. BELIEVE SOVIET FIRED OWN BASE Finn Source Says Estonian Capital of Tallinn, Under Siege, Set Ablaze (By The Associated Press) HELSINKI, Finland, Aug. 27.— The reddish glare of a great fire and the thunder of artillery led Finns today to believe that the Estonian capital of Tallinn, 50 miles to the south across the Gulf of Finland, was being destroyed by its Russian garrison under heavy fire of German besiegers. The tremendous glow on the southern horizon, first visible last night, was so intense it still could be seen this morning. The Finnish press reported that the previously Voluble radio sta tion in Sovietized Tallinn had been silent since 5:30 a. m. Tuesday. German accounts said that three Russian merchant ships totaling 9,000 tons had been sunk by air attack in the Gulf of Finland and that four others totaling 14,500 tons, two transports and two destroyers had been damaged. Pounced On Convoy This was taken here to indicate the possibility that the Germans h d pounced on a convoy en route from Leningrad to rescue the Tal linn garrison, which apparently was following literally the pro claimed “scorched earth” policy of the Red army. Tallinn was by-passed early in the war, German forces moving up to the west and then around south and east of the city. The garrison has been supplied by sea, the Rus sians apparently intending to hold the city as long as possible be cause of its desirability to the Ger mans as a bomber base only 200 miles from I.eningrad. Of Finland’s own part in the war against Russia, a Finnish air com munique reported the Russians were being forced out of Viipuri on the Karelian Isthmus by heavy Finnish bombing. Viipuri, largest city on the Isth mus, was lost to Finland in the 1939-40 war with Russia. Red Army Holding Mos^r | nazis m Scores : s of Futile South*. Attack (By The Associated Press) MOSCOW, Thursday, Aug. 28.— Soviet Russian officially indicated today the Red army was holding its ground on all fronts against strong German attacks and front line dispatches said scores of thou sands of Germans were killed when the invaders were routed from the outskirts of the city of “K.” The Soviet communique declared the Red Army was putting up a fierce struggle on the fronts made familiar in the recent communi ques—Kingisepp, 70 miles south west of Leningrad, Smolensk and Gomel, both on the central front, and Dnieperopetrovsk and Odessa in the Ukraine. (A report that the giant hydro electric development on the Dniep er river, the Dnieperostroi dam, had been dynamited by the Rus sians was carried by Reuters, rit ish News agency, from Vichy, un occupied France. Reuters quoted a Vichy news agency dispatch from the Soviet frontier. There was no confirmation. If the dam had been blown up, it would indi cate the Russians have safely moved their Ukraine armies across the Dnieper. A wide stretch of territory in the lower Ukraine thus would be flooded.) Tremendous Toll Russia has acknowledged the fall of both Smolensk and Gomel to the Germans but the communique indicated the Red army still had its lines in those general areas. A tremendous toll was exacted of the Germans in the Gomel fight ing, Maj.-Gen. I. Berezovsky de clared in the first detailed study of the battle. He said the Nazis lost 80,000 killed and wounded men oefore they could take the city, which then was empty of its civil ian and martial population. Both Leningrad, where the Red army commauuei nas appeaicu a civilian army and where re ioubts have been thrown up for street fighting, and Odessa are working continually on defense measures. Front-line Russian dispatches last night said the Germans were iriven far back after standing for more than a month in the out skirts of “K.” The city was not identified ex cept by the initial. (It might be Kiev.) Battle Continues This account was published in Iziestia, the official government newspaper, as the battles for Len ingrad in the north and Odessa in the south continued. The Soviet information bureau reported mere ly that heavy fighting was in prog ress all along the front. At the opposite end of the front, Leningrad reported it was carry ing oh with the slogan: “More production with fewer workers.” As an indication that Russia ex (Continued on Page Three; Col. 3) REDS OCCUPY IRAN CITY I.ONDON, Thursday, Aug. 28. —(/P)—A Reuters dispatch from Moscow today said Soviet troops in Iran had occupied Turkman chai, 50 mlies southeast of Ta briz yesterday. East Seaboard Gasoline Price Virtually Pegged WASHINGTON, Aug. 27.—UR— Leon Henderson, price administra tor, made public tonight a table of what he said was fair maximum retail prices for “regular” gaso line in 40 cities in the Eastern states. Henderson said the prices were designed to serve as a guide to motorists. Officials explained that it was not a mandatory price ceil ing and that vendors were not un der compulsion to observe it. “They are the maximum prices which motorists should pay,” Hen derson said. The retail prices range from 20.1 cents, including tax, in Man chester, N. H., to 16.5 cents a gal lon in Washington. The prices, Henderson’s office said, were based on the tank wagon price now being charged by ma;or oil companies, state and federal taxes, and a uniform dealer margin of four cents a gallon. Henderson said that the list was made because of “ widespread” increases in retail prices. Aug. 1 Prices For most of the cities the prices are those which prevailed August 1, officials said. The prices for Richmond, Philadelphia, New York City, Boston and most other Massa chusettes cities are lower than those being charged by most deal ers. “In those cities motorists may properly expect service station op erators to bring prices down to those listed and should urge the, operators to do so,” Henderson said. The list of “fair maximum re tail” service station prices follows: Portland, Me., 19.1 cents; Man chester, N. H., 20.1; Burlington, Vt., 19.7; Boston, Mass., 17.7; Wor cester, Mass., 18.3; Springfield, Mass., 18.6; Cambridge, Mass., 17.7; Fall River, Mass., 17.8; New Bedford, Mass., 18.2; Somerville, Mass., 17.7; Lowell, Mass., 18.2; Pittsfield, Mass., 18.3. Providence, R. I., 17.8; Hartford, (Continued on Page Five; Col. 6) Government,Surveying Defense-Hit Centers to Relieve Unemployed WASHINGTON, Aug. 27. — (J) — The government, it was announced tonight, has started surveys in 20 cities in an effort to avert serious unemployment because of diversion of materials from civilian goods in dustries to defense needs. Sidney Hillman, associate director of the Office of Production Manage ment, said the aim was to obtain armaments contracts for affected in dustries in the cities. He declined to name the comfftunities but said they were located in 10 states. They are largely one-industry places, In which plants have been making stoves, elec trical appliances, washing machines, slide fasteners, aluminum ware, metal office furniture and refrigera tors. l PHILIP W. KNISKERN LESTER E. FRAILEY CONVENTION HIGHLIGHTERS — Philip W. Kniskern, president, left, and Lester E. Frailey, right sales consultant, respectively of the National Association of Real Estate boards have been chosen to deliver the main addresses to the North Carolina Association of Real Estate Boards which open its 20th annual convention at the Ocean Terrace hotel at Wrightsville Beach today. Mr. Kniskern will deliver the banquet address closing the convention tomorrow night, while Mr. Frailey will address the group on “How to Make More Money Out of the Real Estate Business” at the morn ing session tomorrow. State’s Realty Leaders Open Convention Today With more than 100 delegates already in town and checked into Wilmington and Wrightsville Beach hotels, the 20th annual convention of the North Carolina Association of Real Estate boards was ready to swing into executive sessions today with an anticipated total reg istration of 300 delegates. Expected to climax in attend ance, inerest and importance any convention in the history of the group, the sessionns will get under way at 10:30 o'clock, an hour after registration opens at the Ocean Terrace hotel a t Wrightsville Beach. While the delegates have a full list of business and addresses on the docket, there will nevertheless be time for a number of formal and informal social functions, starting this afternoon with a boat ride at 4 o’clock and winding up this evening with a buffet supper, entertainment and dance at the convention hotel. Meanwhile, wives of delegates will find an entertaining round of events mapped out for this with a number of informal bridge lunch eons and private parties planned. The women will also be taken on the boatride this afternoon and will take part in the evening hotel func tion. Presided over by Lloyd W. Moore, Wilmington realtor and president of the state organization, the group will reach the highlight of the morning session when Ed Mendenhall, vice-president of the Rational Association of Real Estate Board, delivers an address on "de veloping a Property Management Business.” McRae To Speak During the afternoon the conven tion will hear Hugh MacRae, a local man and one of the nation’s authorities on colonization and farm projects as they relate to real estate. He will talk on "Hu man Engineering” a subject which he has presented to real estate men through the eastern part of the nation. Mr. MacRae has been recog nized repeatedly by the govern ment of North Carolina and the United States for his untiring ef forts, in preserving and tilling the soil to the benefit of the little man. He1 has spent his entire lifetime and working for the relief of the sharecroppers and small truck farmers. It is recognized that through his efforts much of the rural develop ment of North Carolina has prog ressed to its present extent. One of Mr. MacRae’s first major ■developments was that of Castle Hayne colony just north of Wil mington which was exploited un (Continued on Page Three; Col. 2) Huge Revenue Increased Reported By Coast Line Atlantic Coast Line railway monthly report issued yester day revealed operating reve nue increase of $10,275,000 for the first seven months of this year as compared to the like period of last year. Total revenue for the period from Jan. 1 through July 31 amount ed to $39,693,058, according to the report issued from the lines’ general office here. Operating revenues from January 1 to July 31 in 1939 totaled $29,045,505. During the period, the report amounted to $26,334,696 in com parison to $23,693,690 for the first seven months in 1940 add $21,647,577 for a like period in 1939. Net operating revenues were $13,358,362 from January 1 to July 31 against 85,733,626 for the corresponding time in 1940 and $7,397,928 for the seven months in 1939. The seven months report also showed: Deduct taxes, $4,325,000; operating income, $9,033,362; equip, and Jt. Fac. rents, de ficit of $1,545,768, and net rail way operating income, $7, 487,594. During July, the operating revenues of the railroad to taled $4,914,244 against $3,140, 984 for the corresponding month in 1940 and $2,926,147 for Jhly of 1939. Operating expenses of the past month amounted to $3, 598,403 in comparison to $3, 014,359 for July of 1940 and $2, 755,295 for the corresponding month in 1939. The. July report also showed: Net operating revenues, $1, 315,841; deduct taxes, $575,000; operating income, $740,841; equip, and junction facility rents deficit of $137,881, and net railway operating income, $602,960. THOUSANDS OF SOLDIERS GRANTED LEAVE ATCAMP Special Trains, Busses Chartered By Men Taking Furlough Over Labor Day Week-End; 15,000 Going Home With three-quarters of the 20,000 officers and men stationed at Camp Davis scheduled for three-day fur lough over the Labor day week-end, the Atlantic Coast Line railroad aqd the Seashore Transportation com pany yesterday announced plans to have special excursion trains run ning out this city to all population centers in the east and midwest to accommodate men who wish to spend the holiday with their fami lies. Six thousand of the Camp Davis personnel have already signified their intention of using this special service so that they may visit home towns during the three days. Special trains and buses are poised for limited service to Wash ington, Philadelphia, New York, Bos ton, Detroit, Chicago and points be ■Veen, in order that the army men > may reach their destinations in the shortest possible time. First of the special trains are due to leave Wilmington tomorrow aft ernoon, with still others ready to make the trips if the rush necessi tates it. . Buses •will be waiting at the gates of the camp tomorrow aft ernoon to rush the men to the local station. Seaboard Air Line railway has announced similar special excursions out of Raleigh for those men sta tioned at Fort Bragg. In order to expedite the mass exo dus of soldier vacationists, a ticket office operated jointly by the Sea shore company and the A.C.L. rail road opened Tuesday In the camp service club. Queues of soldiers waited in line to inquire about (Continued on Page Ten; Col. 4) PERSIANS TALK PEACE; MOLOTO V WARNS JAPAN A GAINST INTERFERENCE SOVIET REPLY TERSE 0. S. Joins Russians in Ad vising Nipponese Against Hindering Oil Shipping (By The Associated Press) MOSCOW, Aug. 27.—The Soviet government has notified Japan to seep hands off all trade between Russia and the United States. Any attempt at hindrance would 0e construed as an unfriendly act, said an unequivocal Russian state ment made on Monday in reply to Japanese complaints against ship ments of American gasoline, oil and other supplies to Vladivostok. The Japanese ambassador, Lieut. Gen. Yoshitsugu Tatekawa, had told Foreign Commissar Vyache slav Molotov the shipments through waters close to Japanese territory were creating an extremely deli cate and difficult situation for Japan. # (In Tokyo it was admitted that the sight of high-octane American aviation fuel “passing under the very noses of the Japanese’’ was especially displeasing because such shipments are refused to Japan). Terse Reply Molotov s reply, delivered in Tokyo by Ambassador Constantin Smetanin, said the Soviet govern ment saw no grounds for Japanese anxiety, and remarked in passing that Russia herself entertained no anxieties over the fact that Japan imported food from abroad. To Japanese inquiry as to routes and methods of the shipments from America, Molotov replied: “The usual trade routes, includ ing Far Eastern Soviet ports.” Since Japan and Russia have a neutrality pact—even though Japan is an ally of Russia’s foe, Germany —Molotov added this reassurance to his warning: “At the same time, the Soviet government confirms that goods purchased by the Soviet Union in the United States are destined in the first place for the satisfaction of the growing needs of the U. S. S. R. in the west in connection with the defensive war imposed upon the Soviet Union, as well as for agricultural needs in the Soviet far East.” JAP REPRESENTATIONS TOKYO, Aug. 27—The Japanese government has made representa tions to both the United States and Russia against shipments of Amer ican aviation fuel to the Soviet “under the very noses of the Japa nese.” (The Soviet government, confirm ing the report, announced that in reply it had warned Japan that any attempt to hinder trade be tween Russia and the United States would be regarded as an unfriend ly act. (U. S. Secretary of State Hull made it clear that this country was standing on a freedom-of-the seas policy regarding Pacific ship ments of war supplies to Russia across the Pacific. Hull had a con (Continued on Page Three; Col. 1) j PIERRE LAVAL He Deserted His People assassinTmls TO KILL LAVAL French Ex-Premier Is Seri ously Wounded; Germans Start Communist Drive By the Associated Press VICHY, Unoccupied France, Aug. 27.—Pierre Laval was shot today by a French assassin who posed as a faithful follower of his collaboration program with Ger many in order to gain entry to a Versailles barracks where a French legion was being recruited to fight Russia, Marcel Deat, of “Why die for Danzig?” fame, and two other col laborationists also were shot, but all four are expected to recover. The shooting occurred under the eyes of German officials and was in reckless defiance of the death decree with which Nazi occupation forces have sought to quell the tide of violence following Marshal Petain’s announcement that France would cooperate with her con queror. The 29-year-old gunman, Paul Co lette, calmly surrendered. (Continued on Page Ten; Col. 6) Sea Freedom Emphasized To Japs By Cordell Hull WASHINGTON, Aug. 27.—GB— The United States, insisting on freedom of the seas in supporting foes of the Axis, indicated today that Japanese protests would fail to halt the movement of American war supplies to Russia’s Pacific port of Vladivostok. Secretary of State Hull, refusing to say whether formal Japanese representations had been received, told his press conference that it could be assumed that the free dom of the seas policy applied in the Pacific until it was revoked. Hull made his statement in re Aged Dublin Farmer Killed in Accident Near Elizabethtown ELIZABETHTOWN, Aug. 27.— Joseph Benton, 70, of Dublin, this county, was fatally injured early today six miles northwest of here when he stepped from behind one car directly in front of another. .The car that struck Benton, and driven by Pvt. James X. Stone, quartermaster detachment, Fort Bragg, carried him sixty feet along the highway and then threw him seventeen feet. Eye witnesses termed the accident unavoidable, but an inquest will be conducted by the coroner. Stone, a native of Shallotte, has been in the army about two years. Benton is survived by his wife, five daughters and six sons. sponse to questions after he had conferred with the Soviet ambas sador, Constantine Oumansky, and just before a meeting with Ad miral Kichisaburo Nomura, the Japanese ambassador. Covered Many Subjects The Secretary of State said his conference with Oumansky covered a number of subjects of mutual interest but both of them declined to say whether the delicate issue with Japan over the shipments to Vladivostok Was among them. Nomura also was reticent on this subject but said his call on Hull was not for the purpose of deliv ering formal representations. The shipments to Russia, he said, were one of the problems disturbing American-Japanese relations which he still hoped would be settled amicably. Hull’s conferences with the Rus sian and Japanese ambassadors followed Tokyo reports that Japan had made formal representations (Continued on Page Five; Col. 3) BRITISH IN COMMAND Iran Believed Prepared to Force Exit of All German Nationals From Country { - i TEHERAN, Iran, Thurs day, Aug. 28.—(AP)—The Shah tonight accepted the resignation of the Iran cabinet. By DANIEL DE LDCE TEHERAN, Iran, Aug. 26.—(De layed!—IIP)—Iran was reliably re ported today to have delivered to the British and Russian ministers a plea that the Iranian war end and a guarantee that all Germans save a few in indispensble tech nical posts would be ousted within a week. Even those allowed to remain, it was said, would be expelled as soon as substitutes could be trained. Reporting to parliament on the invasion, Premier Ali Mansur de clared that “wherever the trans gressing armies encountered the Iranian army there naturally were clashes and fighting.” He accused the Russians of bombing open, undefended towns and said that the Soviet offensive on Tabriz (which the Russians now say is in hand) was loosed “with a great number of troops.” The British, he said, “took our ships by surprise and damaged them” in attacks on the ports of Bandar Shahpur and Khorram shahr on the Persian gulf. Bombed Cities “Their aircraft, he added, “have thrown bombs at the city of Ahwaz (which is in the heart of the oil fields 75 miles northeast of Bandar Shahpur).” As the Allied attack began, the major Iranian force was stationed in • the Abadan district to defend the nearby great British-bperated oil fields. (These fields are now claimed to be in British hands.) The Germans in this country ap pear afraid that their evacuation via Turkey may be prevented. A German diplomat who started Sun day for Turkey was unable to cross the frontier. About 800 men, women and chil dren with German passports gath ered today at the German summer estate of Shemran, outside the cap ital, and raised tents to intern themselves. There was a trial blackout here last night but today there was little excitement, other than ex traordinary business for the bakery shops. The premier’s speech has been the only official war news. Neutral witnesses told of Rus sian bombs smashing buildings in the villages about Tabriz, killing civilians, but it is believed that no such attacks will be made on Te heran. Premier Mansur, in appearing before parliament on Monday to tell of the beginning of the ni vasion, appealed for calm and or der. COUNTRY OVERRUN LONDON, Aug. 27.—W—The Al lied invasion was fast cutting Iran apart tonight, with British troops driving -40 miles north of the Per sian gulf to take Marid, Russian columns reported striking deep southward to within 100 miles of the capital of Teheran, and in formed quarters predicting the im minent 'collapse of all Iranian re sistance. Subsidiary British thrusts east ward, based upon Iraq, were de (Continued on Page Five; Col. 4) *Patrols Not Enough/ Declare America First Group, Want Convoys NEW YORK, Aug. 27.—UPI—In a statement declaring that the battle of the -Atlantic was far from won, the Committee to Defend America declared tonight that Americans were being lulled into a false op timism by “periodic decreases in the sinking of Allied shipping by German raiders.” “A thorough test has demon strated that use of the United States Navy for ‘patrol’ service is not enough,” the committee said. “Our naval vessels must be used for convoys, with all the shooting implications that go with con veys. x x x” Washington Women Reporters And How They Get The News It’s a man’s job, covering Washington. It’s tough, nerve-wracking, never ending. But there is a corps of women writers who hold their own with the men. These women and their jobs are in a class all by themselves. How they do it is the subject of a three-part series, the first article of which appears today on the Editorial Page.
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Aug. 28, 1941, edition 1
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