Show - W V - - I 4— Zhe 5alt 4 ikc Zeibunt 0 Tuesday Morning July 20 1943 Jap Subs Renew Attacks On Allied Shipping - ABOARD A U S WARSHIP IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC (Delayed 1—Two Ihundred and sixteen sur- vivors of t wo American merchant ships torpedoed and sunk have ar rived at their base port with the first eyewitness reports made here on new Japanese submarine offensive efforts against south Pacific shipping Ilames Ship officers reported a total of 14 men are missing and believed dead and 24 men wounded in two submarine encounters South Pacific headquarters has acknowledged a shift by the Japanese in use of undersea boats The enemy previously concentrated his submarines almost entirely against warships and Pacific shipping had been notably free from sub at- ' tacks 1 1 Broaden Scope of Subs This week the Japanese broadcast the second report in a month on south IPacific submarine sink trig claims indicating the Nippo- nese pow are attempting to start submarine cama' German-styl- e paign against the long allied supply line A south Pacific headquarters spokesman declared the newest Japanese claim to having sunk 13 allied ships including five transports from May 5 to May 24 was exaggeration and a typical fishing expedition for information The Japanese boast of sinking five transports is a flat lie the spokesman asserted Claytone Riddle 35 Connellys Springs N C the first officer of one of the lost merchant ships re' ported that a torpedo hit his yes-awithout warning at 2 a m when she was less than a day from her destination The ship 'was helpless but the submarine eidn't fire another torpedo Riddle said Twelve merchant seamen and eight navy men were wounded by the torpedo explosion Most of the 12 men misming from the ship probably were killed by the torpedo blast Riddle said Sight Periscope Part of tthe crew and passengers Immediately took to the lifeboats but the ship did not sink until eight hours later Men in the lifeboats said they saw a periscope pass back and forth in the moonthem Near dawn the light near crew fired at what they navy gun to be a submarine but believed the-- results were not observed It was a hell of a thing to lose our ship !so close to port" said Riddle who spent five days in an open boat after another ship in which he had sailed was torpedoed off Newfoundland last January Asked how he felt about being torpedoed Ridd:e replied cryptically "War is war If you were skipper of an American submarine and a Jap ship showed up like ours you'd do the same thing wouldn1 you?" Shell Second Ship A destroyer arrived on the scene shortly and took most of the survivors into port Captain Gustav Adolf Johnson t7 of Albany Cal (808 Kaina avenue) skipper of the second ship said his ship was hit by two torpedoes and shelled by a big Japanese submarine in the early Morning moonlight Johnson said Second Officer John Kirken of Richmond Cal and eight men were on lookout but didn1 see the first torpedo The ship was settling slowJohnson hoped to save her but 'iry tbefore the second torpedo hit 40 minutes later - 7 ' Johnson then ordered the ship l ' y'ltbandonecl and 10 minutes later :the bow was standing upright in the water But the ship wouldn't prl$ sink ' The submarine then surfaced fame to a dead stop and shelled : i'i 'I:the ship's bow with deck guns submarine circled the ship 41 I I : 1t ' - - task force successfully completed the most daring naval bombardment of the war in the south Pacific a venture involving a "dash for death" from Guadalcanal to Bougainville and on which depended in part the simultaneous U S invasion of the central Solomons It was the deepest penetration yet by American warships into what the Japs have styled "Mare Monday 500-mi- By Lief Erickson 4econt1nuing the shelling and then AN ADVANCED SOUTH PA- - t stopped dead again within 100 of a lifeboat The Japanese CIFIC BASE May 29 (Delayed) yards fired the last of 25 rounds from - le this position into the ship and the Nostrum" Amid a howling squall during ship went down which naval gunners looked like wraiths under the flashes of lightning and their guns the task force's batteries poured some 260 tons of shells into five enemy strongholds in the Shortland-Faizi areas and Munda-Vil- a The action involved a diversion within a diversion An "incidental" attack on Vila was carried out by light units to mask a concentrated assault on the pri(Continued from rage One) mary objectives on the Jap-hel- d ger torpedo bombers which have Islands of Shortland Ballale Faisi been plastering the Japanese de- and Peporang At the same time genetal attack was designed fenses almost daily since the start the to screen the landings on Rendova of the offensive attacked enemy Island together with other movepositions "in direct support of our ments in the Solomons Despite tbe extreme danger the ground units" bombardment was carried In the Bairoko area along the general out like clock work and without northwest shore of the island and incident a little more than eight miles north No hostile warships were sighted of Munda Dauntless and Avenger during the approximate bombers dropped 28 tons of high raiding period covering the approach and departure from the explosives on the Japanese Mon- scene of the attack although the day morning also in support of crews spent 17 sours at battle our ground forces while during stations Would-b- e aerial avengers were the afternoon Mitchell bombers strafed the beach positions there within detection range of the task force several times during the Strike Elsewhere course of the return journey but Other allied planes struck at they were given the slip by freJapanese positions in the east cen- quent changes in courses and the tral and northern Solomons Early continuous squalls The audacity of the bold AmeriMonday morning Flying Fortresses attacked enemy airdromes can stab is emphasized by the fact area off the that the task force had to traverse in the Buin-Faisouthern tip of Bougainville island the entire length of the "slot" for the third day in a row at- commencing at Guadalcanal and tacking both the Kahl li and Balla le winding up at Bougainville It is airfields equally noteworthy that the bomLater a force of Flying For- barded Shortland area is within tresses and Mitchell bombers at- 20 miles of Kahili on Bougainville tacked again Fire were started the most important Jap bomber by these attacks aid one allied base south of Rabaul aircraft was listed as rnissing The communique also raised the total of Japanese planes shot down in Sunday's raid on the Buin-Faianchorage area where in two days allied planes sank eight vessels forced one to beach and damaged three others Monday's bulletin SAN FRANCISCO July 19 (UP) said the Japanese lost 13 fighters In the second raid while we lost —Industry representatives of the four Revised reports lifted the Pacific coast shipyard stabilizaenemy total to 21 and ours to 10 tion committee Monday supported Total enemy aircraft lost in the a labor request for reclassification two engagements over Buin-Faiof stage riggers as to now stand at 70 against 16 of our give them a 12 centsshipwrights an hour pay own increase Joseph K Keenan Chicago labor Hit Seaplane Base leader and vice chairman of the Flying Fortresses also raided the war production board announced Japanese seaplane base at Rekata at the conference that the Boeing bay on Santa Isabel island 100 Aircraft plant in Seattle will miles northeast of Munda from three eight-hou- r Near the western end ot the change shifts to two shifts in a d Japanese-helisland line north of move to increase production Australia American Liberator Keenan said management and bombers made their second at- labor agreed to the change as an tack of the war on enemy shipping "experiment" to determine which and air Installations at Macassar work shift will achieve maximum on Clebes island representing a He arrived Sunday production 2000-mil- e round trip for the big from Seattle night American planes Reclassification of the stage The raid began Sunday night riggers was asked by George Hayand lasted five hours until early ward business agent of CarpenMonday morning Bombs left big ters' Union 2116 representing 3500 fires visible for 80 miles along the waterfront and factory area riggers in San Francisco bay area and among airdrome installations shipyards There was no indication whether the proposed reclassification would require approval of the war labor board rain-drench- ed Allies Smash Nearer Jap Munda Base seven-minu- te 0 0P si 10-ho- ur four-motor- ed Ceylon Foils First Bombing in Year NEW DELHI July 19 (UP) —A lone enemy plane presumably Japanese early Monday approached the east coast of Ceylon Britain's strategic island in the Bay of Bengal causing antiaircraft guns to open fire a British announced There communique were no reports of bombs having been dropped It was the first report of enemy air activity around Ceylon in more than a year when the Japanese made a determined attempt to gain control of the entire Bay of Bengal Tablets WEAK or ' M culprits eight of the tenced to death by hanging Italy Must Face War's Blows Argentine Says BUENOS AIRES July 19 SeArgentine Foreign Minister (— gundo Storni said when informed of the bombing of Rome Monday that Italy ''being a nation cannot escape belligerent the war's contingencies which are extending to many nations of the world in the fullest sense" Storni said he had not yet received any report from the Argentine embassy the only South American diplomatic mission remaining in Rome I e eK 10c On GASTRIC I TOO SLOW I I ATTACKS I DIGESTION I -- so-call- ed tlF474"4ricilftolot' '- f toj r - !:- '1i4:- - r A C f (- 7 43: tf ' 1" fr- -- '7--17-''--'i 1 ('i 1: Ag- ' !' i -- r - ("c p'"' 4 sil' '' t 0 41 ptp4' if' "tP fit Ili : I 4 : 't 0' - 110 4 4 : I ir - ' 3 t - ' i 1 'r:t i ' ''f' 14 i 4 i A ' - - 4- ” I - ''''' ''1 ' t'"f lit : :' f:fk If ' It 55-- 1 t 1fr 4 '!t! it: Fl2 fei'" - 4 f j 7i ? : z ) ' - " ?Z-- : : A1r 4: ' ' fo 4 ' :r :: A : - ' - ' t - A z7:- ' 'vtwor ck :ft'l- Q k -- - ci A ti: :: :: 01i L ''4---tI- :::Ds -- 4 t' samN C:$ka0 4: ) A : 0 --4 A 71 ‘ Q) sii L1 v ”" kla ---- "st e r '4- -1 ao ' THE e' PIECE GOODS - ' —Street I DEPENDABLE Floor a-c- k A 1 I I R MIS (Adv) - o toefir irmitA ‘1Z1 44404---- White Eggshell Beige Red - : 9 Ar" 1:''' 4 00 Royal i (1 00 — - i - s Cji31 o- -s ) - -4- ng Ifik im 0015 i l' NC 171q 14) ‘ Nik7 1r 9 Aqua Blue Green 44 14L'41114:1 C21 - Rose -- :) l'i 1- ” 011 - ittAt 1 h srztt ' 1- eye-catchi- 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opinion cast extravagant claims seemed agreed that the time had Not until late afternoon did the come when the bombing of the fascist capital was necessary to German propaganda machine get shorten the battle of Italy and into gear putting out a broadcast to save axis as well as allied lives under a "Vatican city" date line on the fighting front asserted It "Vatican and fa that Hours after the raid the Rome radio asserted that a church had clerical circles are greatly astoundbeen damaged ed at and disgusted with the eneIt said Pope Pius had visited my's attack on Rome Monday the Basilica of St Lorenzo Fuori which contrary to all assurances Le !Aura (outside the wall) which given by the United States and had been "devastated this morning Britain has destroyed many residential houses in Rome" by bombs dropped by Anglo-Saxo- n aviators" The pope made a private It said the church had sent offivisit to the basilica at 6 p m cials to investigate the damage returning to the Vatican an hour and that "the pope felt considerlater said the broadcast recorded able disappointment iii the attitude of the allies when he obby the Associated Press This church lies about 1000 served the fires in the city" There yards northeast of the San Lorenzo was no independent confirmation railway marshalIng yards one of of this version the main targets of the attack The allied pamphlets warning There was no report from other of the coming raid and sources that the church had been Romans to check the accuracy damaged Rome a little earlier had of allied bomb aim apparently reported that many homes were caught the axis propagandists set afire 7 ci- '' or representing the war department and out to make a name for himself" He termed methods used in hotel negotiations "far f r om ethical" and charged Goldsborough with "hiding behind leases obtained by false oral commitments" ('' ?"--dP0- 0-3- - owner-operat- 4t ' 5 g' John C Woulfe of the Kkights of Columbus hotel scored Goldaborough as "a civilian Grim Lolidon Sees Rome Raids Until Italy Falls 4 ' yr 0-1- cases" t' SPELLS M - ffi it-- i i r' '- ? i:' lt At' t4 I1 4G 1)( 0-3- a 17 ii-- ' iA! j' -- f $( ! r tt g5- 4 '' ot 41 Al 4-- e fr Nfr 4 Ii'''7etcrLV'''!'1" 1i 0 r i tt Ae Ar - A ' xi"' qt t -ve il - 0'' 4 ' 10' !à -- 4 46 f-- VI- At 04 At 4” Alf 4P- AAI s 4 t"41$ o F 'S 41''''Oi ":1'' - c1 1 - Af AO f l T :?' p :ei k - -- '1:"1-"t4P- '':t'4'''' ' !' - i ''t rtf l'' '' 00- - ili:'o7 r I '''' -- i- k --- - it L:44 '''c''''t fir 'pi'1- L' - 40 At Al '' b qt apero7 f 4---- t 45 3 : c -- T-- i - '4:-4- : tsi4 t ' - ct ' ' II: i4 i 21 1' z Ar - t ' - 0- At : i SI - 11' w1 r - ' 1- -ik i c- ! me- - t -- e 441 Iv I1 i141: I: '74 - I‘-- -- 1 TO PROVE THEIR REAL WORTH TRY TABLETS ONE WEEK A costive or recurring constipated disorder weakens the stomach—the liver and kidneys are often affected—the blood cells and system cannot assimilate or make use of 0464 TABLETS undigested food REMEMBER—if food remains undigested longer 0-TABLETS act directly to relieve distressthan four to six hours due to recurring costiveness ing gastric attacks dizziness ill effects of too slow or spells of constipation it may result in sourness attacks headaches dizziness and heart irdgestion weak stomach or stomach soreness due to gastric For real stomach-comforti- n g relief regularities and costive stagnation with its resultant kidney from these conditions try 1 TABLETS Our system poisoning If you want something Genuine Week's Trial is more than enough to prove their value in all of these troubles try 1 TABLETS Or if your spells of feeling bad are due to Too 1 on the gastreiTABLETS also act directly intestinal system This is essential for best results Slow Digestion or delayed stomach action caused in these recurring costive complaints A headache by a costive or recurring constipated disorder try 1 TABLETS for this cause You can often rellevel a backache a tired weak feeling a failing appetite a gastric stomach may now be quickly relieved with the cause of these stomach complaints with even TABLETS and you are not asked these Old Mission tablets TRY THEM IN ANY ato sample of 0-diet when you take them SEND FOR A OF THESE TROUBLES THEY ARE THOROUGH ‘VEEK'S TRIAL AND TRY THEM Or if you have intermittent lumpy or sore feelings in the stomach dizziness bilious headaches WEEK'S TRIAL 10c weak appetite tiredness or the many other weak ICfc Mi881011 notice Send with this Old to Tablet Comspells due to a costive system try these direct-actinpany Pasadena Calitoma and they will send you a good tablets TABLETS relieve constipation week's is trial This trial often sufficient to relieve every trace of palpitation due to gas pressure caused by TOO by aiding the digestive system This effect on the SLOW or a costive constipated condition stomach is monderful—GIVES SEEDED REST TO This DIGESTION sample will prove their value in all of these comTHE 8TONLACIL TRY THEM Two Sizes at druggists plaints Golds-boroug- "I U ' Atr--- DIZZY Wiles You Hav Gastric Attacks indigestion or Dizzy Spells Due to Recurring Constipation or Costiveness You Want a Tablet Especially Pre— pared for These Conditions GENUINE Herbs in sen gray-painte- : STOMACH the "gestapo" trial J July N 19—Atlantic City hotelmen who have not yet surrendered quit claims for army use of their boardwalk and other choice hotels Mon"army day refuted the side" of the controversy The criticism4 was directed against the published statement h Saturday by Joseph C project manager north Atlantic division corps of engineers who termed the returned hotels "in better condition in many respects than when they were taken over" Bennett E Tousley manager of the Hotel Ambassador charged with "not having Goldsborough his facts straight" He said "walls and floors were scrubbed beyond reason until all paint was removed" and "hotel furniture just completely disappeared in some This death which is niore every Russian paper have made shameful than shooting was re- a deep impression everywhere The Krasnodar trial has estabserved for wretches such as this lished that 6000 people including basehandful of Russans who by ness and cowardice associated many children have been killed themselves with some of the most by the gestapo in different ways hideous acts of the Krasnodar ges- of the 623 bodies exhumed many tapo particularly with the exter- of which were children from the mination of patients of a chil- hospital 100 had been shot the dren's hospital and many other rest had been poisoned by carpeople by means of the lethal van bon monoxide The press in its editorial comd the horrible "dusheMonday stressed that there gubka" which might be translated mentsbeen no fifth column in Rus"life buster" and the sight of has which used to be one of the ter- sia where the war has created a rors of the German occupation of monolithic unity of all classes and Krasnodar Children and others nationalities with only a few traiused to be forcibly crowded into tors But it stresses also that these this van and poisoned by the are small fry and that the Russian people will not rest until all gesfumes of carbon monoxide The gruesome details of this tapo chiefs officers hangmen scientific gestapo work were pro- and also the German generals who duced at the trial with countless like the commanding general at pathetic scenes wherein mothers Krasnodar are directly responsible and fathers described the ghastly for the gestapo activities as well fate of their children relatives as all nazi leaders have been punand friends who had perished in- ished as severely as the Russian side the "life buster" Reports of Krasnodar traitors the trial which were published in Copyright)ay N Y Times Ship Workers Seek Raise si I rev By New York Times ATLANTIC CITY MOSCOW July 19—Hanging has been reintroduced for the 21-ho- ur I i' illotchnen-Ra- first time since the revolution by a Krasnodar verdict Sunday by Cersor) (UP)—An American were main when in Arrive to Give First Eyewitness Reports of Sinkings 141Men Missing in Two Encounters ' Navy Executes Russ Restore Hanging Daring Raid For Baser Violations On Jap Bases Exclusive New York Lake Tribune 0 p Times-Sa- lt 216 Survivors - 0 o Se -- - ' - -- I f : t :- AIERCHANDISEONLY 1 |