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Show J 1 '' -V- 61 x-i -a 7 PAGE:tOTr.SSS7Ti: DAILY HERAtD Arcaiccn To Drive Th eni Off Bo Forces Defeat Jap Attempt All-',.' -. 1, ugainville Isle General Attach Inst Aga Japanese BT BBTDON C. TAVES ' United Press Staff Correspondent ALL IB D HEADQUARTERS, SOUTHWEST PACIFIC, , Nov, 12 OLE) American forces, V defeating av" Japanese attempt to drive them off JBougsinvllle island have i eM etired their Invasion beachhead In their campaign to oust the-enemy from lus last Solomons stronghold, a communique announced today. General Douglas MacArthurs spokesman - added ' that enemy claims of sinking up to 90 warships, war-ships, including aircraft carriers and battleships, in the unsuccessful unsuccess-ful Japanese attempt to stop the invasion of the island's west coast were "without any basis whatso ever." Jap Admiral Killed (A Berlin radio broadcast quoted quot-ed Tokyo dispatches last night as reporting that . the admiral in command of Japanese naval forces which fought at Bougainville had been killed. The report, heard in London by Exchange Telegraph, gave no details.) . (Tokyo radio, quoting a- Domel dispatch said 68 Allied aircraft were snot oown netween Oct. ie and yesterday over Madang, on the New Guinea coast. Twelve of 28 Mitchells were shot down only yesterday by ground fire, the dispatch dis-patch said.) , U. S. army troops were in the battle lines of. Empress Augusta 1 Bay with the original marines landing parties that whipped the Japanese in two pitched battles. The combined forces were preparing pre-paring to drive into the swamps and jungles to win air bases from which to blast the big enemy base at Rabaul, New Britain, 250 miles northwest. Front dispatches relayed through Admiral William F. Hal. Bey's advanced south Pacific head quarters warned against expecting sensational advances despite the fact that six of nine enemy air bases on Bougainville have been knocked out So far, well over 200 Japanese have been killed from -a- force of- about 300 who threatened ' the beachhead earlier in the week, by coming ashore; near the Laruma river, above Torokima Cape on the north end of the bay. But the terrain inland is difficult and a. long, hard struggle was expected. ex-pected. . . The communique reported a new blow by Mitchell bombers at the Japanese lines along the- Laruma and said seven of 40 enemy torpedo tor-pedo planes trying to attack shipping ship-ping off the beachhead were brought down by anti-aircraft fire. Allied; 'aircraft kept Bougainville Bougain-ville ringed with bombs, sank an enemy destroyer, scored a prob able hit on a cruiser and raided the big former Dutch naval base at Sof rabaja, Java. - - - . American .paratroopers landed as seaborne Infantry on. Choiseul Island, south of Bougainville, last Oct. -28 in a diversionary . move three days before the Bougainville Bougain-ville invasion, "were withdrawn Nov. 5 it was revealed. The island was checked off the U. S. list of important objectives. Only a few Japanese stragglers were left on it. The destroyer was sunk 60 miles Southwest of Kavieng Wednesday by a Liberators with 1,000-pound bombs while the cruiser was believed be-lieved struck in Keravia Bay, near Rabaul when Beauforts -bombed the - area, setting fires visible 50 miles. One Allied plane was lost at Rabaul. The hits brought the Japanese warship losses the last two weeks to six sunk and 15 damaged in the New Britain area alone. RICH COPPER MINE TO BE OPENED CAPETOWN, South Africa, Nov. 12 (UP) One of the richest copper . mines in the world, the Ookiep Nanaqualand, will be opened open-ed by the Newmont Mining Corp., of New York, with production expected next year. The exact date and ore reserve figures are a wartime secret. PEARL HARBOR, Nov. 12 d- The time has come to . attack the Japanese throughout the Pacific, Admiral Chester W. Nimltz, Pa cific fleet commander, said last night. dared in a broadcast speech at an American Legion program celebrating cele-brating Armistice day, - "We also know bitter, bloody fighting lies ahead. For two years we have faced the necessity of. containing the enemy while gathering gath-ering the strength necessary to drive -through to to the vitals of nis aexenmve system. "Now we are getting the ships. men and planes . . . henceforth we propose to give him (the enemy) no rest anywhere. has come to attack. TTclIs of Jap Rfbts 1 "J if s - Coo! As A Dally Column of Helpful Gutdciice to All 5 N. a jWilkuIson. above, Tula Lake, Califs rancher, prepares evidence fox the TUle Lake defense council, which Our time wUl be presented to the Calif onaa State Senate committee Investigate W hBva nn llliiatnna &tniit ha ' Ug TCCent dUlOTSl JSD rtOtS at thS nearby segrecation center: Wilkinson ihe losses we must endure We fee wa. of tMJ oxe: This .newspaper Is pleased -to announce that v It '. has i arranged to publish a series) of articles, by Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick, -one of America's greatest churchmen. These- articles are taken from his book, On Beinr a Real (Person.' one of the very beat-sellers 4n-rpr cent, months. The first appears Monday, November 15. - " " with the greatest war m his tory raging, and millions' trou bled in mind and spirit as never tterore, tt seems a most appropri ate time for a series such as this. which Is full of , : inspirational guidance. This newspaper believes the articles will prove very, helpful help-ful to its readers. . ' .. Counselor fer to Years Dr. Fosdlck, pastor of River side Church, New York, stands out in the popular mind as a great preacher, but it is not,. generally known that for 20 years, he has been consulted by thousands of persons with problems, many know our ships and planes' alone aIily Imprisoned with other! ligion Thousands more wrote to cannot destroy the enemy. The Jap has dug himself in. We must land and dig him out." He warned that time and again security will require that secrecy surround American actions until they are carried out. Murdoch to Hold in Denver Hearing Caucasians during an demonstration. WASHINGTON. Uov. 12 CE A senate judiciary subcommittee investigating: the use of federal ly-owned automobiles by federal employes, will hold hearings- in Denver on Nov. 15-16. Chairman Abe Murdock, D., Utah, and Sen. Pat McCarran, D., Navada. will conduct the hear ings. They left for Denver last nirht Murdock said that when he re turns he will ask Donald C. Stone, administrative manager for . the hudret bureau, to exDlain whv a federally owned garage in Wash-! ington is only used to one-half capacity. Murdock U not satisfied that federal employes are using the 90,000.' government-owned automobiles automo-biles Assigned to them strictly for business purposes. He says he knows" of instances of violation of me itsnn xeoerai law regarding use of cars by employes of the forest, service, who use federal cars jp make week-end trips. evacuee! him for help during his 15 years of radio broadcasts. Out-of this vast experience came his book, "On Being a Real Person." Dr. Fosdlck explains- -that - 20 years ago when he first announced definite conference hours for people peo-ple to talk over their individual problems, he soon found he had undertaken more than he bargained bar-gained for. "Having received my education in pre-psychiatrlc days when the academic study of psychology was a very dry and formal discipline, and such matters as mental ther- yr -Ui-i'j-y- Dr. Fosdlck spy, so far as I recall, were never even mentioned in college or semi-inary, semi-inary, I was utterly untrained for personal counseling," Dr. Fosdlck writes in 'an introduction to the book. "Some cases, of course, or dinary good sense .could deal with, and some were concerned with familiar problems of religious faith, but there were many others, oth-ers, the like of which I had not even known existed, whose genesis and diagnosis I could not guess. and before which 5 stood helpless, ' at fearing rightly that I might do more harm than good." Noted Doctor Aided Him -"Realizing ha must have help, Dr. Fosdlck consulted his friend, Dr. Thomas W. Salmon, then the leading pioneer in the field of mental hygiene. He tells how Dr. Salmon aided him in case after case, with . his diagnoses and therapies, adding, that Dr. Salmon "opened a new worlu to him. "When I undertook the pastorate pastor-ate at the Riverside Church, Dr. Salmon and I hoped to. have a ainlothere. where," he writes, "the resources of medical science and Christian 'ministry would be combined In the help of troubled minds,; but his untimely death pre vented that plan's fruition. Since men a nave constantly uuiizea the 1 increasing resources of, psychiatric psy-chiatric service in New York. "I have never been able to give myself to this work 3m 3fS'nes dreamed I might. but-; ft steady stream of troubled '. minds'' and disturbed emotions ' seeking help has willy-nilly kept met it, and nothing in my mInJstryg!ves' me more satisfaction now" than the. memory of some of the results." Why Book Was Written More than once in writlnar the book. Dr. Foadick said, he asked himself tor whom the book was being written. He gives this reply in the Introduction: "I have pictured Its- readers in terms of the many, diverse individuals indi-viduals who have come to me for help. Here X have tried to. set down what I have seen going on inside real people, have, endeav- ' Utah County Lags In Fat Salvage " Utahu county Is lagging 'to its used household fats program, ae- cording to Mrs. Lotue Worthen of the salvage committee. ' Mrs. : Worthen emphasized the need for each household to save one tablespoonful of kitchen fats a day and turn the collection into the-butcher shop before the end of each month. While- no exact, figures were available for Utah county, Mrs. Worthen said the state ft whole dropped to 75 per cent of its quota in September after going over -the top in August. The October collection collec-tion was also believed under the quota;" - The state's quota is 80,500 pounds of used household fats in November. The fats are used in manufacture of explosives. - ored to describe , their . familiar mental and emotional maladies, their alibis nd rationalisations. their ingenious, unconscious tricks of evasion and escape; their han dling of fear, anxiety, guilt, ana , humiliation, their compensations and sublimations also, and the positive faiths and resources from which 2 have seen help come. As 1 look over my manuscript, I see that I havo gone on trying to be a personal counselor in this book, habitually thinking, as I wrote. Of typical individuals who have consulted me. They make up a fascinating company, and this book is altogether for them. "So, for what it may be worth, here is the story of what one minister has found out about people's peo-ple's Insfdes' and what can be done about them." f 1 1 ' II Ladies. Buy That New Winter Coat Saturday Stay r? n Finr.1 AGE'S DIG o o via 1 OPEHS TOMORROW AT 10 A. M. De Here, Boys and Girls . . . and Bring Mother and Dad Along!! 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