Show Okommow4vftwtwAqcma?tn'mIi-&iiiWaF4i- r 4:1 t — 2 Ube 611111:uke Saturday Morning October Berlin Prepares Populace For Italy Retreat News Far Beyond Germany Broadcasts Allied Drive Ahead of All Other Reports Nazi VolturnoBiferno Line Breaks i Volturno Sector I i i 1 ' t I i t 1 '1 1 ' - 1 i ' planes Terni which has been bombed heavily before is important as a junction on the electrified Folignoa Orte and routes Through its yards also runs the steam route On the Adriatic coast above Liberators pounded coastal trackage While other fortrestem struck Giulianova tnd the vicinity of Piano Romano and Antrodoio Car sheds and tracks were torn up or shattered The Liberators also hit bridges between Porto San Giorgio and Giulianova Mitchell medium bombers resumed the Aegean offensive with an attack on an airfield at Argos In Greece Their bomb fragments ripped through 27 parked aircraft These bombers met no resistance but their escorting Lightnings ran into about 15 Messerschmitt 109s out of which they shot down two with no losses The Mitchells also tore the runways and dispersal areas On the tactical side Warhawks attacked trains north of Pescera thus aiding the Eighth army Three trains drawing flat cars loaded with motor trucks were destroyed Kitty bombers strafed other targets in the same area Copyright by New York Times Stream! 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(k GO ItItt‘:641 " 11k L" lb e-- balloon i ' - coev' te'0 NIA do IIotti P ") LI vy 't L— - - ' - ''' - r---1 -- the nuana ad-gain- - 7--- i oEIS - - I be-whi- ch irI'l f) t I s' ks' - I Henry J Kaiser's statement in the United States that an order for 22 liners had been placed with British shipyards by foreign interests as cited in the local press caused much eyebrow lifting in London where it is generally understood that government restrictions outlaw postwar planning of such a magnitude and detail It is true that some yards have been soliciting business on a moderate scale in small freighters for delivery after the war according to a reliable source but how a major deal could be transacted remains a puzzle There is interest in what "forThe eign" power was involved Dutch are giving serious consideration to a proposition of this kind even going so far as to discuss the matter with British builders Nothing approaching an order has been produced yet however It was said in well Informed quarters The Norwegians who are reported to have closed a deal with Swedish shipping men also are keeping in close touch with the situation here A spokesman for the general council of British shipping explained this afternoon that British owners have a number of good — "- -' orders at F''''6 this time It was implied they are not even thinking hard about what they will do next And for the following reasons: 1 Price instability making investments In a grand style too hazardous 2 Uncertainty on the part to be played by air transport after the vessels and replacements are handed over to them 3 Possible nationalization of the shipping industry (this is not taken too seriously) 4 Existing government controls designed to keep their mind on their presentirjob of winning the war by ruling out building programs On the building side of the industry it was asserted "who in their right senses would plan on the shifting sands of today ?" Mr Kaiser's information was said to be "better than that of men in London who ought to know" and belief was expressed that the American "manufacturer of ships" merely sending up a trial ts -- ' (Continued from rage One) sky for a daylong total of 42 In electric plant operating from th !massive dam of the city that sector D NB Street fighting raged for the said German trocrs third straight day at Melitopol 70 abandoned Zaporozhe Thursday miles south of Zaporozhe where !evening after repulsing several the Germans had entrenched them- soviet Attacks After the nazi's selvea in factories and even a main forces had withdrawn to the church in the center of the town west DN B said nazi sappers up the great dam" A sizeable sea-ai- r battle was ptiew The concrete dam ie 2f00 feet Moscow in Barents the reported by sea north of the Kola peninsula liong 200 feet high and 115 feet Two German transports aggregat- 'thicke at its deepest point Of the type as the Boulder dam ing 18000 tons and a patrol boat Isam were sunk two other transports it directed the waters of the Dniswere damaged and 15 enemy air- !per through sluices near the tr9 craft ahot down by soviet planes tot the structure In 1911 pursuing In an apparent raid on a German 'their scorched earth policy the sluice Russians destroyed Arctic convoy a to structures about fifth afourth fall the Germany acknowledging of Zaporozhe the last great nazi of the way across the darn There that the Germans stronghold on the Dnieper's east were indications bank reported that her engineers had tried to rebuild were militarists and DnieEngineers had blown up the massive proges dam the soviet union's reserved in their opinion as to the Germans had been mightiest hydroelectric source as whether the troops withdrew from the city able to destrOy the structure by night Front dispatches reaching Mos5a1t Cake U'ribunt cow said the bloodiest battles of tIje Isaue4 every morntrair TnteroI at the 4 met office at Sat Lae' Ctty aa the campaign were raging on the rass or blares I 1872 matter under act Dnieper's west bank with the Kiev rata: Utah !dab Pubocript and Kremenchug area as their Vadt 141y4minty daiiy and SInday mnnni :414alii14 In 112i focal points Both Germany and $105: yeri montirs- - $I 06 Russia were throwing fresh masses in C I daily and Bandar e asnA of tanks infantry --h Into the "1"" T11- ch t eaircraft soviets YOUNG MAN: LEARN RAILROADsteadily widened their bridgeheads ING WITH WESTERN PACIFIC General Konstantin K Rokoesovwhich warts inosporiancad mon to had forces smashed sky's already FIREMEN' train a s LOCOMOTIVE Into the Ukraine capital's suburbs nd SWITCHMEN wid IRAKEMEN Radio Moscow reporting that WILL PAY YOU $io day WHILE the final assault was under way i LEARNING said the Germans had been disYOUR lodged from a chain of hills that YOU will be SERVINS had barred the red army's adwcoarro44 vance The Germans made eight it rtianng sassrstroli futile counterattacks the broadunlim anaiwar is mployati Apply cast said war l'aciusfry to W P Agency 41 Soviet troops entering Zaporozhe South Man St Sait lalt CIfy found no trace of the eity's great Essen IA) war wnritort Prune ti a ot re:iffiest ittlikoffity metallurgical works or the substations of the Dnieprogres hydro S el yes nUSDealing i T - m Briton Urges Good Will 4 Oct 15 (A'— STOCKHOLM (A London dispatch to the ofSwedish saildrs who watched ficial Polish telegraph agency underground 4 American heavy bombers attack quoted the Polish t:5 radio SWIT as saying that the the Polish corridor port of Gdynia five German ships sunk at 4 t Gdynia last Saturday said Friday that the Included a 10000-to- n VICTOR IRECORDS '140" pocket batCome In and see our big line of pianos harbor area and part of the naval tleship) Which we have checked over or rebuilt dockyards were wrecked by the (The broadcast said the bombers All are in factory condition rain of explosives wrecked Gdynia harbor and did in the city Flying Fortresses and Libera- considerable ' '" t tors swept over the port for 20 itself scoringdamage direct hits on the '''' : - : minutes and were opposed by only gestapo headquarters building and two German fighter planes they' the railroad station It added that - tr " ' AP'' 411 said after the raid the Germans iso:::144'-ii ' -- ' i Eyewitnesses said five of the lated Gdynia and put a smoke in order to ao:ships sunk in the harbor screen' over the ' :' i eight 704 were German and that 15 or 18 hide the extent city of the damage I 1111 damaged ships included warships from American reconnaissance Z1a- - r 4L'a-s- a 95 well as freighters planes) 2 '' ni Swedish Sailors Describe Bomb Damage at Gdynia 4' : Terni-Perugi- Sulmona-Rieti-Ter- V Exclusive New York Times Salt Lake Tribune By David Anderson LONDON Oct 15 — Foreign governments conducting their affairs in this capital appear to be making more headway in the recovery of merchant fleets after the war than are the British themJ- OWI Approves Count Of Rat Total When coming out from their bomb run the "forts" ran into 35 Messerschmitt 109s and FockeWulf 190s but the luftwaffe broke off the combat after losing two 4 - can-fro- area' ls 10-mi- le Times-Sa- lt ALGIERS Oct 15—With the ground forces safely "on their own" across the Volturno the northwest African air force Thursday concentrated on strategic bombing of communications centers far beyond the battle front The situation thus paralleled the bombing of rail and road junctions around Naples when the battle of Italy was in its early stages below that now captured metropolis The primary target Thursday was Tern! where Flying Fortresses swept over railroad yards 45 miles north of Rome to hit the factory and gas works and fire the entire northwest corner of that beC- :l New York Lake Tribune Milton Bracker By ll o Fall of Gomel Appears Imminent As Russians Penetrate City Other Units Press for Melitopol Kaiser's Comment On Postwar Plans Stir Inquiry ' (Continued from Page One) allied landings Ostia is at the of warfare and embodying many mouth of the Tiber river 10 miles devices and methods which not yet be revealed Rome) Patrols of General Sir Bernard The keynote of amphibious warMontgomery'm army fare is precise collaboration of Eighth stabbed forward steadily in the land sea and air forces mountainous center of the fighting line that extends across Italy to a point just north of Termoll on the Adriatic Montgomery's forces were not meeting heavy and mu- -tained resistance at any point but NaAyi the Germans were fighting numer- ous sharp delaying actions Thursday the Eighth army cap- tured the town of Casacalenda five miles northwest of Monefro and 20 miles southwest of Termoli By United Press A spokesman said British and Ca- The Berlin correspondent nadian patrols were approaching of the Stockholm newspaper the communications centers of Allehanda and Vinchiaturo has reported to his Camposbasso Other villages engulfed by this office that Germany is infest-phas- e of the allied drive were ed by 80000 000 rats the Monatilioni Santa Ella and Toro W I said Friday (The Berlin radio reported German forces had evacuated Campo- The population of Germany basso) Austria and the Sudetenland An official dispatch from Lieu- as given in the 79364408 was tenant General Mark W Clark's Fifth army headquarters told of German census of May 17 the continued and substantial sue- - 1939 ceas of his drive through the vaunted Volturno line "The Fifth army continued its strong drive which is rolling the enemy slowly " back" it said "Numerous pockets of resistance are being wiped out" Allied engineers who were among the principal heroes of the Initial assault early Wednesday 1 continued to throw bridges "of every sort" across the river dispatches said The bridges all built By New York Times under direct German fire averaged LONDON Oct 15—British busiabout 100 yards in length Al- - ness and professional men were though the infantry was able to Friday against the "strong wade the Volturno at numerous warned sentiment" that is it would have been im- - nationalist in the United States fostered ing possible to move heavy equipment by American business interests across without bridges was voiced in Liver-Som- e This of the heaviest fighting pool opinion G M Garro-Jone- s parby niace around the town of secretary for the minCaiazzo a mile north of the river liamentary of production where it makes a northern bend Wry Garro-Jonewas to nine miles east of Capua There recommend thatpurpose cherish a they German and allied forces con- - spirit of good will no matter how verged to join in a great battle exasperated they may become may decide whether the cause he said "I have great faith nazis are to be routed from the that America will ultimately adopt entire Volturno area or whether politics worthy of her greatness" they can hold on for a slow with- This speaker disputed the sounddrawing movement ness of the theory of private enter-Man- y men on both sides had prise as expounded by Eric John-bee- n in action and under fire al- - ston of the United most continuously since the start States president chamber of commerce of the offensive nearly three days Garro-Jone- s who spoke on "The ago of Peace" began by conChallenge Volturno line was dented demning those who were creating It was disclosed by employing a of bitterness on either side once more one of the most sue- - of spirit the Atlantic cessful means developed by the "When we reflect that blood of allies in this war—the amphibious men of all nations and the silent tears of their operation Amphibious warfare has proved the belief and consolation of a betso effective that it has now become ter future we must feel contempt virtually a major arm at which for any whether American senathe allies have become adept and tors or British critics who by which the enemy so far has not pettiness falsehood or selfishness sow new seeds and weeds of bittersuccessfully developed amphibious warfare tech- - ness" he said "The men are fighting to nique is the result of experience vance I believe that not only the by the British commandos orand other combined operations demobilized armies and the toiling ganizations and of experiments millions in factories but also the carried on over a long period by economic and commercial brains the American army navy and ma- - of the world will see that the postwar decade holds out the greatest rine& ment s Out of these ex have even chalexPeriences have or beckoned the many this craft especially Reds Kill 3000 Germans Guarding Kiev Outskirts - Exclusive By Kirke L Simpson Associated Press 'War Analyst Outflanked at both ends and dangerously dented in the center the nazi Volturno-Bitern- o front across Italy evidently Is crumbling The battle above Naples appears to be degenerating into another allied race on both sides of the mountainous spine of the peninsula to keep contact with main nazi forces falling back northward under cover of stubborn rearguard protection road demolitions and mine traps That conclusion la heightened by the fact that word of the most strong rear guard stand there important new allied gains in the seems called for to permit the nazi center came' from Berlin A nazi left wing facing the Eighth army broadcast reported allied capture make good its retirement from of Campobasso and Vinchiaturo the Biferno It seems significant that Gen-Th- e junction significance of nazi dis- - eral Montgomery's veterans on the closure of new allied successes be- - allied right flank are reported fore an allied announcement must meeting with relatively meager be to prepare German home front resistance as they enlarge their on the n ortThheeaystenronws laopppeeaorf opinion for another retreat in griep peninsula Italy A Berlin announcement of to have cleared the whole length a successful withdrawal" from of the Vinchiaturo-Termoroad the whole Volturno-Bifernfront as well as having forced the Bi d ferno IIs to be expected It Its sea flank by leapfrog turned stand long in any case with the landings north of its mouth commu- - tween Termoll and Vast° ampobasso-Vinchiaturo nications pivot broken Allies Beat Schedule Mopped Up There is no intimation from It seems clear that the Vo- any official allied source that the lturno delta has been virtually campaign in Italy is being delayed mopped up by the Fifth army all seriously by nazi rear guard acthe way to hills that rim it to the Ron On the contrary much sugnorth They would form a diffi- gests that it is well ahead of the cult obstacle to further Fifth army expected schedule despite the fight advancement up the west coast for the Salerno beaches the time flank if it were not for the wedge necessary to pry the enemy loose driven into the center of the enemy from Naples and the work across sine farther east of Vinchiaturo the Volturno The primary military objectives Another surge junction road beyond of that campaign obviously are to up the Foggia-Rom- e bases in Italy for Vinchiaturo would bring allied secure close-u- p forces to the valley crossroads future air action against Germany Greek leading westward where a break- or against the nazi-hel- d through could put them In the rear peninsula and the Balkans That has been done and the cost to the of the nazi coastal flank The battle of the Volturno ap- nazis of that allied success will apparent as the parently was fought by the Ger- be cumulatively mans primarily as a delaying ac- bombs begin to fall in Rumania tion and the hill positions north and on nazi war plants in southof the Volturno delta which com- eastern Germany mand all roads and railroads leading from Naples to Rome likely will be similarly defended A 1 British Probe Latino of Ship Orders In Fiercest Fighting Yanks British For Foe Back Toward Home Yanks Repulse All Counterattacks Mission Travels tt 4 Allied Airmen ' Allied Assaults Rout Bomb Areas Nazis on Volturno North of Rome — 1943 16 - 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