America at war! (1941--) -- Part 2

Editorial: Equity in taxes?

Thrasher: Republicans go after war food administration

By James Thrasher

Ferguson: Husband hunting

By Mrs. Walter Ferguson

Background of news –
Left-wing planner

By Jay G. Hayden, North American Newspaper Alliance

Millett: The wife of an employer should run own errands

By Ruth Millett

Victorious Yanks to be happy to be home

New York (UP) –
It was a jubilant group of World Champion New York Yankees that arrived home last night to receive the cheers of several hundred fans who greeted them as they piled off a train at Grand Central Station.

Details of police were on hand to hold back the crowd and the victorious Yankees jostled their way out of the station. They seemed eager to get home, glad that the 1943 season was over, and apparently concerned over 1944.

The principal topic of discussion yesterday while coming from St. Louis was whether there would be baseball next year.

Conversation was exhausted regarding the Series – in which they blasted the Cardinals, four games to one, to gain revenge for last year’s duplicate defeat at the hands of the Redbirds.

Cards’ pitching good

There was much praise for the Cardinals, especially their pitching, although the Yankees did not think that the kids from Missouri were as tough as they had been last year. But with true Yankee confidence, they still believed that even in 1942 they had the better ball club despite their loss to the Redbirds.

Husky Charlie Keller, the hard-hitting leftfielder, was particularly outspoken concerning the effective of the Cardinals pitchers. Keller said:

Mort Cooper and Max Lanier showed me as good pitching as I’ve seen all year. They all were tough, but this Cooper is as rough as they come. There’s no question, though, that this Cardinal team was not as good as the one we played last year – but then neither were we.

Keller said his future was uncertain, although he is married and has three children, and that he expected a call from his draft board “very soon.” He pointed out that there were a number of Yankees and Cardinals – pre-Pearl Harbor fathers – who were in the same boat.

Marius Russo, the Yankees southpaw who won the fourth game, revealed that he had been ordered to appear before his Brooklyn draft board next week for his preliminary physical. Russo, too, is a pre-war father.

Landis urges ‘carry on’

Strengthening the belief of those who thought baseball would have trouble continuing because of the manpower drain, two of the Cardinals team received notices as the Series ended. They were centerfielder Harry “Little” Dixie Walker and rookie southpaw Alpha Brazle. Both reported yesterday for physicals.

There appeared to be a determination among club owners and officials to carry on in accordance with the expressed desire of Commissioner Kenesaw M. Landis. The white-haired czar of baseball urged continuation “as long as we have men to put in the field and it does not run counter to the war effort.”

The ultimate answer appeared to hinge upon how many fathers would be needed to bring the Army up to required strength and whether physical standards would be lowered to admit some players now classified in 4-F.

Civilian goods output faces little change

Prospects for increased production held unlikely

Durable goods sales decline $5 billion

New index traces drop to war curtailment of civilian economy

First wireless ‘tower’ is Marconi memorial

Scene of pioneer ‘news’ report preserved
By Si Steinhauser

Völkischer Beobachter (October 14, 1943)

Englisch-amerikanisches Gangstertum tobt sich aus –
Terror der ‚Befreier‘ in Süditalien

U.S. Navy Department (October 14, 1943)

Communiqué No. 474

North Pacific.
On October 13, ten Japanese bombers flew over Massacre Bay, Attu Island, at great height and dropped bombs without causing damage. There was no damage to the U.S. intercepting fighters or to enemy planes.

Mediterranean Area.
The USS BUCK (DD-420) was sunk off Salerno on October 9, as the result of an underwater explosion.

The USS BRISTOL (DD-453) was sunk in the Mediterranean on October 13, as the result of an underwater explosion.

The next of kin of all casualties aboard the USS BUCK and the USS BRISTOL will be notified by telegram immediately upon receipt of casualty reports.

The Pittsburgh Press (October 14, 1943)

5TH ARMY CROSSES VOLTURNO
Allied tanks, troops held bridgeheads

Full dress push toward Rome begun; Nazis battle fiercely
By Richard D. McMillan, United Press staff writer

Rabaul base smashed by MacArthur’s fliers

Greatest Southwest Pacific raid wrecks 123 ships and 177 planes
By Don Caswell, United Press staff writer

Odds swing to sales tax in the House

Purchase levy leads substitutes for plan of Morgenthau

U.S. warships sunk off Italy

Two destroyers go down from explosions

New film: Uncertain Glory –
‘Woe is me,’ Flynn moans as young woman sues him

Ex-sailor’s wife wants movie star to pay her $1,750 monthly for daughter’s support

….

Saved by trapped foot –
Blown half out of bomber, flier lives to tell tale

Impact imbeds pockets’ contents in hip; subzero air stems bleeding in wounds

I DARE SAY —
Thunder on the Left

By Florence Fisher Parry

Movies and arms industry pay top salaries for year

Louis B. Mayer draws top pay; Ginger Rogers in ninth

4,000 Alabama miners quit as strikes spread

Large captive mines closed as men protest return of pits to operators