["served By Leased Wire Of The ^ ^ — ~ - - associated press *1 * 4 rffft * CT 4 REHEHBER 'S umuutfmt Hu inthtQ S’tsr 'ss ■rn] 77—NO. 137. ' :-------------— . ___ ■ —______WILMINGTON, N. C„ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1943_FINAL EDITION_ESTABLISHED 1867 i KNOX MEETS EISENHOWER IN ITALY 1 Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox is greeted by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower at an airport in Italy. Telek, the general’s Scottish ter iB, was also on hand for the meeting, «nox is on a tour of the lulira war front. Signal Corps Radiophcfto. (International Sound phoM',__ Administration Against Federal Sales Tax Plan WASHINGTON, Oct. 7. — (IP) — The Administration; aligned itself solidly today against a federal retail sales tax,} and congressional opposition developed to any compulsory savings program as a part of the new revenue law. Other developments on the swiftly changing tax front included: 1. Economic Stabilization Director Fred M. Vinson ap parently failed to muster Congressional interest in the Ad ministration's $10,500,000,000 new tax program, members 1 oi me iuuj ami means cum-' mittee leaning toward a much lower figure. 2 Rep. Celler fD-N. Y.> de li:.red in a statement that an In crease in the liquor tax from $6 to S10 a gallon, as recommended by the Administration, would cause a return to “bootlegging and hijack l ing." President Philip Murray of I let CIO wrote Ways and Means f Chairman Doughton (D-NC) oppos ■■'■■’■' downward revision of per : exemptions in paving income taxes. 4-. ReP- Fulmer (D-S.C.), who is Ci !'man of lire House Agriculture t_mmittee. mged adoption of the treasury recommendation for re ' the 3 per cent levy on ■.-asportation of property. inson tQld the Ways and Means c a.mrtee a 10 per cent sales tax, ' armed to bring in $6,000,000, anually, would break the gov ernment ? “hold the line,” home “ , i ■ ■ ey and open the way for i ;; J: Nation. Treasury witnesses m' arsly made the same argu ( :'r':'s °f a sales tax express f ' :h»l i1 could pass, in view Administration’s position, developments of the day: ■■■' senate, gathered in an un tiret session, heard five of who have just toured ^ e’.orfp call for a firm foreign especially to assure Amer ; ‘ ’ w of airfields now being “ ground the world, r ■•,,/. IV of AVar Stimson re ; • f mat the first four weeks of :rno fighting cost 8,307 vV- V'”1'1 casualties, including 511 n , m at;ion , c House Immigration commit O ‘ 8 to 4 to repeal the old • exclusion acts. ? allowances for depend servicemen were voted bv |5nminued on Page Three; Col 3) n., -——— CAMP DAVIS HEAD COMMENDS FARMER Col. Potts Says Soldier And Planter Must Work For Peace — “Peace through victory will come by work together between th far : mer and the soldier — two groups j which have worked side by side I since the beginning of time,” stat | ed Col. Adam E. Potts, who spoke ; to a joint meeting of the Farmers’ i and Kiwanis clubs at a dinner meeting held Thursday night at Wrightsboro clubhouse. Col. Potts reviewed the role of the farmer in world history, de claring the farmer-warrior has held high place in military history ever since Cincinnatus left the plow in 519 B. C. to raise the siege of the Romans at Mt. Algidus. Since that time the farmer has played a close role with the sol dier. citing Fitz Lee. George Wash ington. and Ulysses Grant as ex amples. “The farmers of North Caroli na,” continued Col. Potts, “rang true to tradition when they left their crops and herds to organize the first armed resistance to the Crown in protest of the extrava j gance of the Royal Governor Tryon in New Bern. “The farmer is an individualist with a conscience. He is as im portant as the shipbuilder, miner. ■ or the craftsman. Food, produced j by the farmer is a munition of j war — as important as guns. Thus ! the farm is an arsenal of fighting strength. (Continued on Page Five; Col. 6) Vila Seems To Be Clear Of Japanese ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN SOUTHWEST PACIFIC. Friday, Oct. 8.—(tf)—Starving and short of ammunition, the Japanese appar ently have abandoned their prin cipal air base of Vila and, at con siderable cost in lives and ships, have fled the entire southern half of Kolombangara island in the Solomons, General MacArthur an nounced today. Evacuation of the rest of the island is in progress. “Cutting of supply lines support ing Vila, accomplished several weeks ago by our surprise occu pation of Vella Lavella to t he north, thus outflanking all sea sup ply routes, has forced the enemy to attempt to evacuate his troops from Kolombangara,” a communi que said. “Vila and the southern part of the island apparently already have been abandoned by troops moving toward the northern shores. “For several nights by barge and small warship, the attempt at evacuation has been progressing. Many barges have been sunk with great loss of enemy life and some of his troops undoubtedly escaped to safety. The enemy’s struggle to evacuate continues.” vna, vYiuv.11 ia aciuaa me xv.uid gulf from American - won New Georgia and has undergone artil lery shelling from American forces on nearby Arundel, once garrison ed an estimated 10,000 men. Over a wide area, Allied planes struck at enemy shipping. Th e communique reported at. least 27 srqall Japanese boats, ranging from barges to cargo ships, sunk and at least 12 enemy planes de stroyed. The enemy’s Vila garrison Ras been in an untenable position since the Americans drove the Japanese from New Georgia and occupied Vella Lavella, thus putting forces north and south of Kolombangara. Recently the Japanese have been evacuating troops from Vila by targe to Choiseul and Bougainville, many of these self-propelled ves sels falling prey to bombs of Allied planes. The Japanese have paid heavily in lives lost in these bombings, headquarters said today. Off Choiseul. 18 such barges were smashed in the latest air' attack by Airacobras. But some of the Japanese did reach safety, headquarters added. Such an evacuation means vir tual clearance of the enemy from the central Solomons except pos sibly for small groups still con testing the Americans on Vella La vella. (Continued on Page Three; Col. 1) _ County Disease Rate Very Low In View Of Crowded Conditions “Considering Ihe increase in population of New Hanover county during the past year the total number of diseases reported have not been alarm ing _ with the exception of meningitis,’’ stated Dr. A. H. Elliot, county health officer. Fifteen cases of meningitis were reported for the year un til September 1 with four more added that monih. Other dis eases and the number report ed for the year until October 1 are: chickenpox, 293; meas les, 424; scarlet fever, 37; ty phoid, 4; whooping cough, 317; diphtheria, 11. Iberian Bases For Allies Could Save Million American Lives, Says Senator | Thr''\ilINGT0N’ °Ct- 7- — (IF) — I I v. . " n“le' afforded a bomb bay pr ' ‘ the fighting fronts in re r: , ; • :um three globe-girdling r . : heard an estimate from lives pff ,at a rnilfion American VpDe saved in conquering b will open Siberian ,|o Allied bombers. the Lodye (R-Mass', one of ■ P _ who reported behind '■■e locked against i :s; , „ nci thc press for the t - esiiL^";6 June-.1942- gave 1 rgely .. ’ ,n a review dealing f-hhir-mVhV°Ugiiness °f the \Vili ! " the Pacific. ' y rnerM session was secret, - , 1 s tal-u‘d fully about , „0 ;‘ld ;,nd -some said they 1Eas0n f°r the secrecy. I * Before Lodge spoke, the Senate had heard Senator Russell (D-Ga), standing beside a huge global map of the world criticize the British because, he said, they are passing lease-lend materials to other coun tries without giving credit to the United States. He suggested that American re lief and rehabilitation in occupied countries be under military, instead of civilian, direction, and said there was lack of a clear foreign policy to guide American military, economic and diplomatic repre sentatives in their competition with the British. Russell also took the British to task for not launching an offensive in Burma, although the Georgia senator expressed confidence in i ,he ability of the new India-Burma lommander, Lord Louis Mountbat ■en. He told his colleagues Maj. 3en. Claire L. Chennault's Amer can Army Air Force is doing most if present active fighting against he Japanese in China, but Lodge idded that the Chinese armies are lolding off fifteen Jap divisions. Senator Mead urged a ^apportionment of United Nations petroleum supplies, with the British meeting a larger shaie o nee s. President Roosevelt told a press conference last Tuesday that steps toward this end are being taken. He said the British had wanted to furnish a larger share °ffe *sible along, but that it was not feasible (Continued on Page Three; Col. 2) *> | NAZIS HURL ARMORED DIVISIONS A T ALLIED ARMY OmDRIATIC COAST; RUSSIANS OPEN HUGE f/ZW DRIVE AND CROSS DNIEPER RIVER ___ ADVANCE IS SLOW Reds Claim Bridgeheads Being Widened At Heavy Cost To Foe ENEMY IS THREATENED 2,000 Mile Front Ahlaze From Leningrad To Southern Area LONDON, Oct. 7■—(^P)— The Red army in a smashing renewal of its 1943 offensive has cracked the vaunted Ger man middle Dnieper river de fense line, establishing three west bank bridgeheads and extending them “step by step” despite furious German counterattacks which are be ing “repulsed with heavy losses,” Moscow announced tonight. The Russians also have captured a springboard to Latvia and have virtually liquidated German resistance in the Caucasus opposite the Crimea in the resumed offen sive, this time rolling ahead on nearly a 2.000-mile front from Leningrad southward. May Force New Retreat The smashes across the Dnieper threatened to trap hundreds of thousands of Germans in the river loop and force another German withdrawal—this time clear back into Rumania and Poland. Tonight’s communique, recorded by the Soviet monitor, was read twice over the Moscow radio and was followed by patriotic songs— a procedure reserved for great events. It listed these sweeping Russian gains: Soviet forces planted themselves firmly across the middle Dnieper on the west bank north of Kiev, south of Pereyaslav. 50 miles southeast of the kraine capital, and southeast of Kremenchug be tween that city and Dnepropetrovsk on the river bend. The Russian movement suggest ed another great series of anni hilation pincers similar to those (Continued on Page Three; Col. 4) -V NAPLES IS TORN BY GERMAN MINE Scores Of Italians Killed When Time Bomb Rips Postoffice By NOEL MONKS Representing the Combined British Press NAPLES. Oct. 7.—W>)—One of the war’s greatest atrocities was per petrated against the Neapolitans by the Germans today when a de layed action mine containing sev eral hundred tons of high explo sive. planted in the basement of the postoffice building, went off. Scores of Italian civilians, includ ing many women and children, were blown to pieces as the whole pavement in the Via Armondo Diaz was flung into the air. Practically every person on the ground floor of the postoffice was killed as urell as many civilians walking in the street a block away. People also were killed in adjoin ing buildings. The explosion occurred at one of the busiest times of the day when hundreds of Neapolitans (Continued on Page Three; Col. 6) Permits Are Issued For $52,365 In New Building Work Here Permits were issued for an estimated $52,365 in new con struction and alterations here during September, City Build ing Inspector Gilbert C. Mor ton said Thursday. The permits brought the city $254 in fees. The major permits went for three alteration contracts, to be completed by the govern ment under the Homes Con version program, a $8,210 job at 114 Market street, a $7,897 job at 311 North Third street, and a $11,420 job at 110 Orange street. The conversions are be ing made to furnish apart ments for war workers. VICTORIOUS AMERICANS ENTER NAPLES i t..:.: - . .m . is Residents of Naples wave on a truckload of Am erican soldiers as they roll into the city shortly aft er the Nazis had been driven out. Note the arrow on the wall, painted by the Italians remaining in | the city, indicating the direction that should be taken by the Yank troops. Signal Corps Radiophoto. (International). Navy Assault On Wake Island Is New Challenge To Jap Navy WASHINGTON, Oct. 7. — (#) — The Navy assault on Wake island challenges anew Japan's control of the West Central Pacific. If the Japanese fleet won’t come out and fight now, the whole, huge mandated island area on which Tokyo has relied heavily for defense of the empire must be considered vulnerable to early American conquest. The betting among military and naval authorities is that the fleet won’t come out, that key points in the Mar-j shall, Gilbert and Caroline islands will be taken against strictly localized resistance and that before the war is many i more mnntVis nlnncr AllierJ* Pacific strategy will have succeeded in cutting the en emy’s economic jugular vein through the China sea. That is the long-range signifi cance of the Wake attack, regard less of whether it was a raid for destruction of Japanese installa tions or the beginning of a whirl wind campaign to reconquer the! island. The pattern of the Wake action: was established in an American' task force raid on Marcus island: a month ago. Marcus is only about: 1,000 miles from Japan, and al though warships shelled it and planes bombed it for hours on end not a sea-borne enemy gun show ed up to defend it. The explanation seems to lie in the fact that the Japanese have been decisively beaten in naval and air fighting from the Bering sea to the Indian ocean and are unwilling to risk their remaining warships for any except the great-, est stakes—in other words, to try to prevent a direct threat to Japan itself. This ties in directly with indi cated American strategy in the; Pacific: One of the Navy’s jobs presum ably is to reopen a line of island, bases across the Central Pacific, i (Continued on Page Three; Col. 4) I YUGOSLAVS THROW TANKS INTO PUSH Guerrillas Using Modern Weapons Against Ger man Forces LONDON, Oct. 7. — OF) — A Yugoslav Partisan broadcast re ported in London tonight said Yu goslav guerrilla fighters had thrown tanks into the battle for the Istrian peninsula and destroy-: ed 10 German tanks and one Ger man plane. News of the victory, said to have; occurred near Jedreska, was not included in the regular communi- i que of the people’s liberation army, but Yugoslavs here with Partisan1 connections reported hearing the broadcast detailing the tank fight. | Sixty-five German soldiers were said to have been killed while the Yugoslav forces lost four tanks. Yugoslav sources in London were unable to say what type of tanks the Partisans were using or where they were obtained. (Daniel de Luce, Associated (Continued on Page Three; Col 3) j NAZIS SCHEDULE PURGE IN ITALY Hitler Reported Planning To Wipe Jews From All Europe STOCKHOLM, Oct. 7.—UP)—Adolf Hitler was reported today to have ordered all Jews cleared out of Europe before the end of the war, with a purge in Italy scheduled to follow immediately after the cur rent persecution in Denmark. The capitulation of the Badoglio government in Italy already is be ing blamed in Rome on the Jews, according to reports received here, and German papers in Rome de clare that “Fascism demands that Jews should be rendered harmless and must disappear from the na tional life of Italy.” This phrase is similar to that; fused in official German announce ments launching the pogrom in Denmark. The Stockholm newspaper Social Demokraten said it had learned from informed German circles that a Hitlerian decree already had been issued ordering all Jews cleared from Europe. The order was declared being carried out under storm troop lead er E'ichmann, known as the “Jew dictator” of Europe. Eichmann was born in Palestine after his parents went there as German colonists. Another Swedish source was told by a high German elite guard of ficer who visited here recently that “whether we win the war or not, one thing is sure: not a single Jew (Continued on Page Three; Col. 5) \T _ WEATHER FORECAST: NORTH CAROLINA: Continued cool. (Eastern Standard Time) (By U. S. Weather Bureau) Meteorological data for the 24 hours ending 7:30 p. m., yesterday. Temperature 1:30 a. m., -; 7:30 a. m., 54; 1:30 p. m., 74; 7:30 p. m.. 63. Maximum 82; Minimum 66; Mean 74; Normal 68. Humidity 1-30 a. m.. -; 7:30 a. m., 79; 1 ;30 p. m., 29; 7:30 p. m., 69. Precipitation Total for the 24 hours ending 7:30 p. m.. 0.00 inches. Total since the first of the month, 0.00 inches. Tides For Today High Low Wilmington _ 4:35a. 11:59a. 5:21p. p. Masonboro Inlet _ 2:27a. 8:47a. 3 :12p. 9 :37p. Moore’s Inlet_ 2:32a. 8:52p. 3:17p. 9:42p. New Topsail Inlet_ 2:37a. 8:57a. •Elmore’s) _ 3:22p. 9:47p. (All times Eastern Standard) Sunrise, 6:12 a. m.: Sunset, 5:47 p. m.; Mronrise. 2:47 p.: Moonset, 12:32 a. Cape Fear River stage at Fayetteville j on Thursday, at 8 a. m., 9.13 feet. I RETREAT IS ENDED Germans Battling Eighth Army Along 125 Mile Italian Front SEEMS WELL PREPARED Foe Appears Set To Make Invaders Pay Dear Price For Rome allied headquar ters, Algiers, Oct. 7.—(/PI _The Germans have rushed an armored division to the Adriatic coast and have open ed a bitter battle against the British Eighth Army, ending their 300-mile retreat and finally taking a stand against the advancing Allies along a 125-mile front across Italy. After a slow withdrawal since the Allies first invaded the Italian mainland with the landing of Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery’s Eighth Army at Reggio Calabria September 3, the German army apparently has en trenched itself for a strong stand and is determined to make the United Nations pay a dear price for their next major objective, Rome. The Germans were disclcs ed at Allied headquarters to day to be rushing the fortifi cation of the Volturno river line north of Naples against Lt. Gen. Mark W. Clark’s American Fifth Army, which reported continued dogved progress despite extensive Nazi demolitions and a heavv rain which left the battlefield soggy. Germans in Strong Foree A military spokesman at head quarters said that the Germans were believed to be holding the Volturno line “in some strength.” On the Adriatic coast the Ger mans attacked the advancing Brit ish and Canadians of the Eighth Army with tanks and infantry in the Termoli area, and the first (Continued on Page Three; Col. 2) British Admit Loss Of Landing Grounds On The Isle Of Coo CAIRO, Oct. 7.—(A1)—The Brit ish declared today that fierce re sistance against German forces landing on the Dodecanese island of Cos was continuing, but admit ted the Germans had captured a number of landing grounds and now control the town of Cos. A British communique said the small force of Allied defenders on the island, in the Aegean sea, was exacting a heavy toll from the Germans. RAF bombers rained explosives on the nearby islands of Rhodes and Crete Tuesday night, pound ing German airfields. RAF fighters, who attacked Ger man landing parties at Cos Sun day when the Nazis launched their attack to attempt to wrest the is land from the Allies, said they swooped low with cannons blazing, and planted bombs among the Nazi vessels, and that they saw wrecked and smoking landing equipment scattered along the oeach. New Crisis Develops F or Nazi Army As Russians Begin Another Campaign By KIRKE L. SIMPSON A new and grave crisis has de veloped for the Nazis in Russia, threatening their whole northern flank to the Baltic. A major Russian offensive is un der way in the Velikie Luki-Novo sokolniki-Nevel triangle, north of the Dnieper line. Nevel already has been captured. That is the most critical sector of the long eastern front for the Germans. Linked with Russian thrusts converging on the Vitebsk gateway just to the south above the Orsha bend of the Dnieper, the fail of Nevel could crack the Ger man front apart. It could send the whole north flank to Leningrad back in precipitate retreat to avoid being cut off from the rear. The Velikie Luki trap was set] by the Russians long ago. They took that corner of the vital rail triangle last winter, only to allow: that front to lie dormant until now. j At Nevel, Red armies are in close striking distance of Polotsk in rear of the Vitebsk gateway bastion. They have ruptured direct rail and road connections between Nazi forces west of the Dnieper and those in northwestern Russia. A quick Nazi retreat in the north, even Nazi evacuation of Esthonia and much of Latvia, could result. The push to Nevel likely is the actual beginning of another Rus sian winter offensive. It will at least merge into real winter fight ing, always advantageous in the past to the Russians, if it is sus ♦ tamed only for two or three weeks. West of Nevel to the Latvian border the country is studded with big and little lakes through which the railroad to Polotsk winds its way. The main rail route from Leningrad to Odessa down the west bank of the Dnieper passes through Nevel with Vitebsk and Orsha the next major towns south ward. Capture of Nevel by the Rus sians opens the way for a direct drive southward at Vitebsk as well as an encirclement sweep south westward toward Polotsk. A Rus sian surge northward toward the Pskov junction gateway up the Leningrad-Odessa railroad may be (Continued on Page Eight; Col.