Show --- -- -- Hungry Crook BIRMINGHAM A13 Oct 2 (41 pot of bean a was on the stove when the J W Nance') 1eft horre for a while Monday Upon their return' they found that a th:ef had broken in finished cooking the beans devoured them and departed Nothing else A' R ---A half-cook- Tuesdays' Weather ed Salt Lake City and vicinity— Clear and warmer Idaho—Clear smith cloudy north Wyoming— Fair and warmer Nevada—Clear warmer east portion Details on page Tr i7k i rnimng N'ol 172 119- - No KIUPMMEEIr'1 Price—Five 'Genii Salt Lake City Utah Tuesday Morning October 3 1941 0 1 4 T- -1 - nowt t I -- Yanks Down iDetrey Sets Radio Talk !IFor Tonight Assoelated Press 27000 Axis Planes 2-- 1 Pearl Harbor By rnitpd Prefts WASHINGTON Oct 2 — The army ar forces hare recorded 1 combat speriority since Pearl liarbor by destroying more than 27000 enemy planes at a cost of 116o4) but noncombat casualties have increasel total army plane losses to 42000 Gen 11 H Arnold A A F commander revealed Monday He also dsclosed in a survey that the A A F has rended enemy positions with 1000000 tons of bombs and promised that the second million would be dropped only a fraction of the time required for the first" The increasing tempo of bombing opera:ions is underscored by the fact that almost half the total tonnage has been dumped since he added Milo° Gallons of Gas In almost three ye3rs of war le reported the A A - has flown 119moot) hours consumed more than 2000000000 gallons of 100- octane gasoline overseas and has used 238000000 rounds of ammurtion to destroy more than 27000 enemy planes probably destroy 6000 and damage an additional 2-- D-D- - 20000 The A A F has lost 14600 planes on combat Mall01111 and 9900 in overseas missions whilst operational losses In the con- ' tinental LlnitA States total 17500 bringing overall losses to 42000 he reporte(t Losses in this country resulted from training transportt arid patrol accidents Used on Vital Targets —The million tons of bombs have would hurtt been used where the enemy most" he said "Ap- ' proximately 175000 tons concen- I trated on aircraft factories and airfields destroyed the effective- r e sa of his air power Another 140000 tons have been dropped ini oil plants bail bearing works andi other industrial targets - non-comb- at th-z- y —The rernaLnder haw been used 1 Sieg-frie- the British lines near Nijmegen Along the coast the Canadians made new crossings into Oct 2 mobile 2 Oct WASHrNGTON Under Secy Daniel W Bell of the treasury said Monday that rush business in cashing of Ivar bonds at some banks probably resulted from a "backlog" of persons who normally would have cashed their bonds last week but waited for simplified procedure put into effect Monday Ile said the treasury had received -- no harming re- Vs'orkers - 5- - nel have been known to tire plants within a matter of !days and if the council carries out its threat at 12:01 a m 'Wednes- da y an estimated 1000000 Jiro- duction workers could be affected Six representatives of the main-i"-- - IS I ALAODNY -- 11 SICTOR IN THIS ARIA ) 4 g 4 r hfni """ - 8ouq i ropoidt P ' -- - xr421 ' ' --'''t ' Ilaiselt7-----14- St Trond Arnhem A 'eh he ‘1 64 - Art I Aorff - H 1 it "Ale ) 7s Du i sbur L - r '? i I i ' 4 N (1 c k1 '' -- ' ' ':‘ —V1 )) - INDUSTRIAL 1ff--ii- VALLEY '1' -7 ' JeiVen - '' !'::: t ' ''7 lv: '' 'wow ' 'L : 1- ' - --t-- : - iertat- HuriChe s '-- il - Ccilogne ' United Press Allies (Official)--2-B- y ALLIED SUPREME HEADQUARTERS London Tuesday front Monday for Oct 3—American forces struck on a since the Noroffensive in the Duesseldorf and biggest Cologne into the two miles man breakthrough and drove Siegfried line supported by guns and planes that sent German survivors fleeing from their flaming forts to foxholes in the fields beyond Yanks ' of the United States I ref First arrny packed the main it REGION - p' Wu-- ' 'Z ' 1 g A I - :4 - ' V-- 4' - 60-mi- le ' 1 f7: SECOND MAJOR 1 INDUSTRIAL :-- R EG 4 ON 44hvrg S Isr ARMY LAUNCHES BIG tf N2t' 241"" PUSH TOWARD RHINE VALLEY 71c' U mile-wid- e - —11es- e I A" '''''": 4 44'rfren V rwierl --- SIEGFRIED LINE Y- - M s —r - T 17e I 1 -- " Ma latedy ' 4 - ' - : Oct 3 (UP)- -Radio Moscow Tuesday quoted the Polish press agency of the as saying Lublin committee that the ineurrectionist Kralova army in Warsaw had surren- dered to the Germans and that other Polish patriot' forces were i their Wit at ou t of the fightng in city an attempt to escape (UP) —In ' had received "lavish American help" a spokesman for the Chinese military council charged Monday that U S aid to Generalissimo armies had been Chiang pitifully inadequate and described the strength of the 14th U S air force in China as "so small it would hardly he credited if it could be ' Kai-shek- 's 14— j 0 l'a D 0N front might have beget) regrouping for a late autumn and winter drive The Moscow newspaper Pravda said that fierce fighting was in progress before the Latvian capi- tal of Riga self-propell- Russia (Official) B y United Pre ss Tuesday Oct 3 offensive which had eoviet great rolled across eight frontiers in the in past four months apparently came: to a temporary halt Monday with LONDON Moscow in first of- ion of resentment : i under fire of soviet the artillery only seven miles tobullesouth The soviet midnight tin said German infantry support- ed by tanks and he reporting no important east- changes s along the 1300-mil- e ern front although Yugoslav parti- sans rnd Bulgarian troops scored ' seine in the battle of the Balkans With Russian forces striking Ri' standing in th e east- ern outskirts of Warsaw and mov- ing across Yugoslavia and Cz e eho- slovakia Moscow for the first time since the red army launched its great summer offensive on June 23 failed to report any gains Monday There wets no positive informa- tion that the drive had halted but experts believed that the military 11 soviet army groups on the len ?ts i i ' ed guns launched several counterattacks along the highway to Pskov from Riga but relining eastward that they were turned back with 100 nazis killed In the Jelgava area 27 miles southwest of Riga the Russians wiped out two German detachments trying to cross the Lielupe river Soviet naval planes prowling the Baltic sea sank a German self- propelled landing barge a motor boat a 5000-to- n transport and a fourth unidentified vessel On the Balkan front Marshal Tito reported that th e Germans were "facing an extremely diffi cult situation" in Yugoslavia and had increased their forces in that country to 27 division with the addition of troops withdrawn from Greece and Bulgaria Tito reported that his men had '19 captured the town of Sopotwere miles south of Belgrade and marching on Ayala 13 miles to the north The Yugoslays derailed a - ' Overloon is 19 miles southeast of British-hel- d Nijmegen three miles west of the Meuse and seven miles from the German frontier Thus it appeared from Gorrell's l secon train the military rail- dispatch that American tanks may tion of the Belgrade-Athen- s passed through the British road main German escape route have as the United States from the Balkans southward be- lines just changed tween Belgrade and Mladenovac Third and First armies the French Other partisans killed 350 Ger- places twice during c campaign the Third taking over mans along the in the Avranches stretch of the line Les- the vanguard h and the First movkovac is 25 miles south of Nis ing forward following the fall of' and Aleksinec is 18 miles )rth On the northern sector of the Paris Balkan front unconfirmed reports Meet Stiff Opposition to the British Broadcasting Corp said the Russians had seiied Headquarters announced that opposition was encountered in Szeged second city of Hungary stiff Overloon sector and also just and were driving toward Budapest the north of Aachen where Lt Gen 90 miles to the northwest Courtney H Hodges' troops wentover the top at 11 a rn and quickly smashed across the tiny' Wurm river as well as the Geilenkirchen- k Aachen railroad breaking a stalemate on the front in- side Germany It was too early to indicate the full scope of the attack despite LONDON Oct 3 UP—Strong allied forces have landed on the some front line broadcasts to the northwest part of Crete the effect that the Yanks wereinpourthe Morocco radio asserted Tuesdaying through great gaps Siegfried line a picture of the situation that found no confirmation Allies (Official) here The fact that only two miles By United Press had been gained and that the LONDON Oct 2 Allied am- Germans still were fighting back phibious land and air forces Mon- savagely although dislodged at po- day tightened their strangulation some points from their fixed blockade around an estimated 200- - sitions proved that no ' major 000 Germans in the Balkans and break-throughad yet been Aegean 'islands and the enemy's achieved plight was described officially as yards Vanguards drove on 400 the Geilenkirchen-Aache- n "extremely difficult" with all es- east oft Continued on Page Two cape efforts proving "increasingly (Column Three) 25-mi- Leskovac-NisAleksine- break-throug- Allies Tighten two-wee- Baikal' Hold I expensive" Hastening the twilight of the three-yea- r German occupation of Balkan strong allied forces 1 broadcast the following up the invasion of Al- i ' as i t sup-slight- - ly pONDON Oct 2 (17P)— The Berlin radio Monday announced the death in action of five important German generals all holders of the knight's cross in one of the biggest single high command losses reported in this war They included: Gen Friedrich Mieth commander of an army corps killed in action on the eastern front Maj Gen Friedrich Bluemke commander of art infantry division killed in action on the eastern front Mail Gen Wilhelm Crisolli commander of a luftwaffe divisicrn killed in action in Italy LL Gen Friedrich Zeick commander of an infantry division died of wounds received on the eastern front and Maj Gen Duerktng commander of a grenadier division died of wounds received on the ern front loon h ' -------- ' 711) Russ Offensive Pauses Alter 'Rollintt6 Over Eitrht Frontiers I Five op Nazi Generals on W ar Death List weight of the drive into a three-11penetration eight to miles north of Aachen and dis- patches indicated that on the north flank American armor may have wheeled through central Hollandthe British Secand "leapfrogged" ' on d armys lines Yanks 'Storm Meuse United Press Corresralndent Henry T Correll reported that American tanks had stormed the Germans' Meuse (Maas) line in i the Oveiloon sector 54 miles north of Aachen and allied headquarters announced late Sunday night that "allied' armor had captureckOver- --- -- ' 'lakes tecordett In Japan Zone 1 - - Iti RHINE : 4444:'-'7: 1) t LlitiVtaastrichir:-7ifte "A G--- il AND BOMBING FROM HUNDREDS OF MEDIUM BOMBERS 1 7e -a — Dusseldorf A Tokyo domestic !One Liberator was shot down and several others damaged also reported by F C C said the Corsairs met ntaireraft i Another American aerial smash fire over Jaluit heavy atoll In the Mar- - Jtoapanese people were Warned not alci bg the invasion road to the shells se the y unloaded 33 ton s of divunlge the extent of damages Philippines was reported by Adm bombs One Corsair was damaged resulting from American air raids Truk atoll also was raided A recapitulation of allied corn-pleChester ay Nimitz late Monday a Radio broadcast in for September showed Tokyo munlques ' as Yank forces continued to mop heard -- 20 by F C C Monday Indicated surface craft sunk Japanese up defending Japanese survivors the Japanese were pinched for vital or damaged including 303 ocean in the southern Palau islands oil supplies with which to keep going ships definitely destroyed Corsair fighter planes piloted by their military machine rolling Most of these craft were barges marine corps airmen swept over The Nippon news agency Domei and other small ships main island in the said the Japanese government will On China's Salween front where Babelthuap Palaus last Saturday and blasted crente a single synthetic oil con- - the allies seek to open a land the airfield They flew through trol combine for Japan Korea and ply line into China several small intense antiaircraft fire to' reach Manchuria "to boost production" Japanese attacks were repulsed In the target Japan's oil life line from the the Lungling sector The admiral reported marines Dutch East Indies and Borneo has In western Burma Japanese re- and soldiers continued to wipe out been hit heavily by ellied planes sistance wits stiffening on the road the few rmeir sing Japike (le- - and Yank su bmerines ' — north of t he Nippon Tiddim base — Britieh on lendera holed iti caves Peleliu Indian troops pressed their tip tome south of outflanking operations northeast A telegram from W L B Vice and Angaur islands I and east of Tiddim Chairman George Taylor asking Babelthuap A military government has been Gen Douglas MacArthur re- more information about the main- A on set up ngaur tenance workers' demands was ported Tuesday that his southwest Pacific air force destroyed or demThrough Sept 30 counted Jap- s greeted with boos and noisy dem- - anese dead on Peleliu totaled 9076 PASADENA Cal Oct 2 (Jess aged nine small Japanese freight-o- f onstration from the floor in spite A mere the fact that Taylor as a pub- - and on Angaur 1075 Seismologists at California Insti- - era off Zamboanga southwestern to be tute lie member had sympathized with handful of prisoners-1- 87 and in the waters of Philippines reported Mon- - west exact—have been taken on the two day two Technology New Guinea Celebes Dutch of their demands about strong earthquakes The maintenance workers whose islands 5400 miles distant and said "they and Moluccas airdromes were hit The admiral noted a sudden in- - might have been in Japan" recent strikes closed plants of the by heavy bombers with 134 tons of Packard Motor Car and Briggs crease in Japanese aerial defenses The quakes recorded et 1:11:20 explosives other and jerinola p ne tea ale T) seis— The Japanese raided shipping off Manufacturing Cos have demand as American airmen struck ' ed R V L 11 committee to sub- - Pacific island's Morotai island in mologists said were strong enough American-hel- d stantiate statements of fact on Army Liberators hit the sir- - to cause heavy damage if they the Halmaheras One raider was inequities between maintenance drome at Iwo Jima 750 miles south occurred in a populated region shot down Three of five Nippon and production workers in this in- - :of Tokyo Eight "aggressive" They were unable fie yet to specify intereeptors were blasted out of dustrial area the air over Kendari Celebes iJapanese fighters took to the air the exact direction i Mwlhtfg-"Vr'-'r4- ?Is A114 - 141AViLY CONCENTRATED ARTILLERY BARRAGE ' - o' tohketei "- Bm Esen yllt C I e-o- e Dortmund Four-Mont- h bitter retort to Prime Minist er NS inston Churchill s statement to parliament last week that China U S (Official) By Associated Pres tenance te Kect !X otgI ierne il i 1 1 i L ' I "N Amur China Council Cans U S lel Scanty elp CHUNGKING Oct 2 t oe- -- r If mon t '7 -—- -- l''''"r1 ' I r 14teAlmfAAIRItow w 1 N E- - Yanks Strike Alöntr 6031ile Front Rhine: In Drive for Colon-DBritish Line North Units Leap-Fro- : ftrhf t IP 114' ' '7-- wr ' f te 441 a ef '—as il ialw - - NEWISH CRUSH IWO NAZI COUNTER ATTACKS AIMED AT NIJMEGEN CORRIDOR fif)17tr3 "' Eindhoven ' '" - '' ' 11 4161" ' 7 7 F Pi r:-- id vtiem 117 I Irv ri GAN3CoiNm10 t" ' s couneit departed imme- by plane for Washington distely to meet once more with W L B !officials in an effort to sway the i votes or industry and A F I hoard members whose veto to C I 0 for the panel resu:ted in the strike action Sentiment at the meeting of more than 1000 delegates repre- senting the U A W-- I Os main- tenance workers overwheimingt in favor of strikes immediately in all Detroit plants was swayed by council officials who advocated giving the W L B "just !one more chance: -The war labor board created t khesee wage inequities: 'et them 'dew tn rectify them" wool ' heard threit g flout the troubled rica- i - -- - anturigri IN - amcagrr nen! eta 06 arcs ter 1Coelleld orsairs Lash 3Ili ii Palau Island Airfield S 1101)4 1) of Aiigaur Peleliu Continues ' close en- - I new procedure - 7- itht11 CANADIANS THIS AREA — I t Iiiburg TO 1 1ktongeo-‘' strike within 21 to that country war la bor i'mei rd sets up a fact- Th e e pokesman stated that the fmding panel to study wage rates only real help given Chinese armies of all maintenance workers provided by the If in east China was frt Pnze Four (Conte1 carried out the strike could affect (column Teo war workers in more than 300 planta Strikes by maintenance person- - ! k4 A ' GEN EISENHOWER WARNS DUTCH RESIDENTS OF SEVERE AND AERIAL B otersre':ik r alks 11 fte russels Vtetikpcit twoen'o C le e s i i N ijmege-r74- k! S'14410:"" ---- - - 41 1PROLONGED ' "101 — stait -- t4'rre counterattacks the area of ficial ) d-:- kg Sr' yAA wti (UP)—De- ' - 71 7 mr '4- e appointing and vexatious" in view 0) voted to of American military e seistance hours unless the (C I L" ott 1 In one MS -- idir i 0 4a n iska Ai amm-- !Rolland a is he 4 L:)T t Lntwrre aqiif '1 1 -1- d north of Oss while British troops smashed fierce nazi Aof dt t 2 141 Zylphen H---E-- '4 nfizerrd! 6psivp Ethils 1) 0:1:77:577 Orli pe 1 -'- : I AMP lJef- or NAZIS REPORTED STARTING FIGHTING RETREAT FROM DUTCH COASTAL LOOP WHERE 200000 ENEMY SOLDIERS FACE ENTRAPMENT LtOL Co77t vonie 47 - their major objective Other units were reported to have northwest of Turnhout and Oc Goud5 d six-mi- le leap-frogge- - - :1:?04105 rSz" 11 17:4 t ks ---:- R9I terd north of Aachen and are reported to have driven the nazis back two miles along a front A mass air and ground barragew opened the ay for this week They appeared to have Cologne and the Rhine as "to- - produc fT1 — I quiet by launching a mass attack into the been smoldering in gram w a s threatened Monday Chungking since Churchill told the night when the maintenance work- - house of commons that Chinese ers' council of the United Auto- - military reverses were "most dis- - ' holders of serials A B C D and F sayings bonds may cash them directly at banks without Wikiting a week or two to get their money from the treasury by mail The reports of heavy bond cashing came from Missouri where one bank in Kanoss City opened with 150 bondholders in line and found it necessary on account of interference with to restrict regular business bond cashing to regular customers and bondholders perMo sonaly known Sedalia esthbsnits reported heavy ing of bonds and St Louis banks said they were busy bonds but there was with -no rush" Other cities in the state reported normal activity cr only a slight increase Bell said there probably will be a slight increase in redemptions for a week or two and then thev WIN level off to the usual rate Secy Morgenthau In announcing the new procedure urged the people rot to redeem their bonds except for real emergency the Republican presidential nominee indicated he would deliver a "one shot" reply at Charleston Saturday night to anything in Mr Roosevelt's Thursday speech that he might regard as warranting a reply He will de f er writing the Charleston broadcast until he has heard what his Democratic opponent has to say Personal Debate Seen Thus there appears to be a strong possibility the rest of the campaign will be fought out on a personal debate basia between the two major candidates Adding to this likelihood was the fact that no announcement has been made yet of the itinerary Dewey will follow after CharlesH I a executive Secretary ton James O Haggerty said the governor would return to New York over the week end in order to register for the November elecHe maintains a voting tions i residence in a midtown hotel (Roosevelt) DETROIT t ports" Under the Earlier "I !Bond Cashing !Rush Laid To New Plan L portant" c k of I : ALBANY N Y Oct 2—Gov Thomas E Dewey has arranged a 15 - minute broadcast 0 V e r the Mutual network for Tuesday night after letting it be known he would he ready with a quick reply to Prep RoosevelCs next campaign talk The governor after once abandoning plans to' go on the air before traveling to Charleston W Va Saturday for a Republican presidential rally announced through his secretary Paul E Lockwood that Tuesday night's broadcast would deal with 'taxes" Lista Speech Timea It was scheduled for 6:15 p m eastern war time (Dewey's address will he broadcast at 6:43 p m Salt Lake time over the Mutual network In New York City Republican National Ch airman Herbert Brownell Jr said the broadcast would be carried over 160 stations and would be rebroadcast over west coast stations from 9:45 to 10 p m Pacific war time Brownell declared the speech would "be new and most im- two-wee- Strike T hreat di)d" The total tonnage American supplies to the Chinese army Faces Detroit eastern China 'from Pearl Harbor to the present" would not suffice single British or VV— t American division combat for Industry week" asserted statement was the against shipping submarine works many types of military installations transportation facilties and support of ground troops Liii-ec- their : 01 - gains on west front The American First army broke By Chalk Up Edge Since Amster a Map shows major allied 50 Miles 40 30 10 10 a War Fronts bania and the landings-- on the Greek island of Cythera were said By United Press to have landed in northwestern WESTERN FRONT—American First army St Tikes on '2 Crete according to a Palls broadm Ile front north and east of cast quoting Cairo adviers Aachen and knifes two miles In the first confirmation-othe allied occupation of Cythera on Into Siegfried line Sept 16 United Press War CorPACIFIC—Widespread air atrespondent Clinton B Conger retacks rake Japanese positions ported from there in a delayed dis10151 enemy in the Pacific had gone ashore soldiers killed and 187 captured patch that he there with British commandos In battle for Peleliu and Angassr landed by the Canadian and royal navies and that the operation was EASTERN FRONT—Russian and Bulgarian troops push unopposed There was no confirmation of the ward on a front toward 'railroad reported invasion of Crete which Belgrade-Athen- s the nazis conquered in the spring BALKANS—Allied a surp h I e of 1911 in the first major land and stir forces tighten hious operation in military history and around 200000 tier-mawhich the Germans recently had stranglehold in and Aegean Balkans been reported aba'ndoning in the face of spreading Greek partisan islands operations and an intensified allied ITALY—Americans repulse sea and air blockade Such a move fierce German counterattack for would be logical however in view fourth day at Mount Battaglia of the landing on Cythera five capture Monte Cappello two and a half miles south of the miles east Greek mainland and 50 miles to CHINA—Twin Japanese colthe northwest or Crete where inumns within 100 miles of Juncformed quarters said theGermans province in had evacuated one Of their two ture iii Kwang-s- i drive to split China from north garrisoning divisions to south Throwing a net across Yugoslavia along the southern Adriatic Allies SOUTHEAST ASIA coast and around the tip of to attack Japanese east swing Greece Yugoslav and Greek parti(flank positions in thrust aimed Conumteri an Page Three) at isolating Tiddim (Column It a) - f 160-'mi- le air-born- ns Industry Spur In Americas Set for Nelson ‘VA'SHINGTON Oct 2 panded industrialization of Mexico and certain South American countries reportedly is among the major projects to be placed in the hands of Donald M Nelson in his future role as presidential emis- sary for "postwar economic coop- eratian with other nations" Nelson will work outside the state department and foreig-- economic administration it was reliably stated and will perform his economic liaison job mainly by moving between Pres Roosevelt and the heads of foreign governments He probably will be a member of Pres Roosevelt's personal staff n Start To in Mexico The former war production board chairman is expected to turn his attention to Mexico when his present White House assignment —that of spurring China's war industry and planningChinese pest-windustrial expansion—is farther advanced Subsequently It Is understood he has hopes of helping broaden the base of Industry in the more ar - n counsoutherly tries with the same ultimate aim —the stimulation of trade between this country and others W P B Associates pointed out that Latin-America- while it was under Nelson's leadership that agency already has taken steps to help both Mexico and Brazil with industrial - - - Not Interested in Agencies Nelson is no longer interested in running a government agency According to fiends' and therefore can be' ruled out as a possible choice for leadership of any present agency or any new one set up to handle reconversion or demobilization The former Sears Roebuck vice chairman is said to enjoy the confidence of Secy of State Cordell Hull 'a fortunate cirumstance ir view of the fact that the 7'businessman ambassador" role would require him to cut across the agency lines of state and corn- merce departments F E A the ofn fice of coordinator of affairs and other units concerned 'with foreign policy and foreign trade inter-America- - - |