America at war! (1941–) – Part 4

The Pittsburgh Press (September 16, 1944)

JAP CIVILIANS FLEEING PHILIPPINES
Leathernecks advance toward key airdrome in invasion of Palaus

Army troops march almost unopposed through Morotai Island, south of Philippines
By Frank Tremaine, United Press staff writer

Bulletin

Tokyo radio reported today that civilians are being evacuated from Davao on Mindanao Island in the Philippines. The Tokyo broadcast said evacuation started in “good order” Sept. 9 after a U.S. carrier task group began a series of air attacks against Mindanao. Tokyo indicated the civilians were fleeing from the city into the northern part of the island.

Pearl Harbor, Hawaii –
U.S. Marines, supported by heavy fire from warships and planes, battled their way through strong Jap tank and artillery fire today to expand their Palau Island beachhead.

On the other end of the American offensive arc around the Philippines, Army infantrymen attacking the Halmaheras made an almost unopposed march through Morotai Island.

The Marines on Peleliu Island hammered out a beachhead of nearly 1½ miles and closed in on the principal Jap airdrome in the Palau group, 560 miles east of the Philippines.

Despite heavy fighting, in which the Japs brought up tanks, artillery and mortars and attempted several counterattacks, a communique by Adm. Chester W. Nimitz said U.S. casualties on Peleliu Island were “light.”

The Marines found the going tough on Peleliu, which is less than six miles long and two miles wide, but Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s infantrymen, who landed simultaneously in the Halmaheras, found no organized resistance on Morotai, 250 miles south of the Philippines.

300,000 Japs bypassed

Gen. MacArthur said his invasion forces had taken “all objectives” and engineers already had begun construction work at Pitu Airfield at the southwestern tip of the 700-square-mile island.

United Press writer Ralph C. Teatsorth, who went ashore with U.S. troops at Morotai, said the landing was made without opposition, on two beaches less than a mile apart. Pitu Airstrip, only 1,000 yards from the beachhead, fell quickly.

The twin invasions, only 500 miles apart, under the closely-coordinated leadership of Adm. Nimitz and Gen. MacArthur, were believed to have bypassed 300,000 Jap troops in the Central and Southwest Pacific.

Thirty to forty thousand of them were in the Palau Islands, and observers said Japan may attempt to move some of these onto Peleliu, although such an operation would involve the use of barges within range of warships.

Aims for airfield

Big ships’ guns and carrier planes maintained a steady bombardment of the enemy defenses, but Maj. Gen. William S. Rupertus, commander of the Marine forces, seemed to be getting field artillery ashore to speed up the operation.

Gen, Rupertus’ immediate objective was the Peleliu Airfield, which has two runways, each 4,200 feet long. It is only large enough for fighters and medium bombers but could be lengthened to accommodate heavy bombers.

The Japs were fighting desperately with mortars and artillery in an effort to hold off the Marines, members of the 1st Division, veterans of Guadalcanal.

Adm. Nimitz said the Japs made several counterattacks supported by tanks shortly after the landing but were thrown back. The Japs threw sporadic mortar and artillery fire onto the landing beaches in a futile attempt to stop the invasion.

Carrier-based aircraft from VAdm. Marc A. Mitcher’s fast task force supported the immediate landing by bombing, strafing and firing rockets into installations behind the beaches, and also hit gun positions at the northern end of the island. One plane and four flight personnel were lost.

Adm. William F. Halsey’s Third Fleet, of battleships, cruisers, destroyers and carriers, patrolled the waters off the Palaus to frustrate any attempt to bring. in reinforcements.

The missing Japanese Navy, however, was not expected to make an appearance because of the potent array of American fighting power.

Gen. MacArthur, whose planes have long been raiding the Palaus in conjunction with Central Pacific bombers, disclosed in his communiqué that Far Eastern Air Force patrols had again hit the island group. The time and the extent of the attack were not given.

Of the Morotai campaign, Gen. MacArthur said it “has progressed according to plan,” with land and carrier-based aircraft continuing to support the ground forces.

His statement that “all objectives” had been achieved, indicated a rapid extension of control over the coastal areas held by scattered Jap troops. Beside the unfinished Pitu Airstrip, the soldiers also seized Gila Peninsula, on the southwest corner of Morotai, and the communiqué added that no organized Jap ground reaction had developed so far.

Adm. Nimitz, meanwhile, announced that Army and Navy bombers from the Aleutians raided Shumushu and Paramushiru in the Kuril Islands Tuesday and Wednesday night. while Army Liberators hit Iwo Jima, in the Volcanos, with 52 tons of bombs Wednesday.

Japs reinforce Philippines

By the United Press

The Japs acknowledged for the first time today that U.S. forces had made successful landings on Peleliu and on Morotai Islands.

An Imperial Headquarters communiqué, broadcast by Tokyo radio, said “fierce fighting” was taking place on both islands.

Another Tokyo broadcast indicated that the Japs were rushing preparations against an invasion of the Philippines. The dispatch said the city of Davao, on southeastern Mindanao less than 300 miles from Morotai, had been elaborately fortified.

Tokyo radio said Prime Minister Gen. Kuniaki Koiso had announced that Japan will launch a great offensive in the “near future” and Adm. Naokuni Nomura, former Navy Minister, had been installed in a “certain important post.”

Koiso’s announcement did not say where or how the offensive would be made, although he claimed it would show Japan’s determination “to crush Britain and America.”

In connection with Nomura’s new job, Tokyo radio announced that VAdm. Nichitara Tezuka had been named Chief of the Navy Aviation Headquarters.

Yanks pour through gap blasted in Siegfried Line

500-mile Allied front surges eastward from Holland to Switzerland
By Virgil Pinkley, United Press staff writer

Siegfried forts captured almost without struggle

Defenses overrun in combined assault by infantrymen and dynamiting engineers
By Henry T. Gorrell, United Press staff writer

British advance on Adriatic Front

Battle for airfield near Rimini, Italy

Hurricane deaths reach 27; damage exceeds $40 million

Crops hit hardest but thousands of buildings are destroyed along coast

americavotes1944

Democrats told ‘we could lose’

Hannegan warns against complacency

Baltimore, Maryland (UP) –
Democratic National Chairman Robert E. Hannegan admitted last night that complacency on the part of party members might result in the defeat of President Roosevelt at the polls in November.

Mr. Hannegan told the Democratic Clubs of Maryland that “in spite of all the help our cause is getting from the public utterances” of the Republican candidates, “I am still ready to point out to you candidly that we could lose in November.”

Asserting that the name of President Roosevelt “already ranks with the names of Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and Wilson.” Mr. Hannegan blasted Republican presidential candidate Thomas E. Dewey as the GOP’s “high man in the making of accusations that blow up in his face.”

A ‘natural’ procedure

Mr. Hannegan said:

In view of the Republican presidential candidate’s past training and experience, this is to be expected. It is quite natural that he should follow the principle: When in doubt, prosecute.

The Democratic chairman charged that the Republican platform was “a museum piece straight out of the collection of Herbert Hoover” and that Mr. Dewey’s plan for dealing with national problems, especially that of unemployment, was “the way of Herbert Hoover.”

Answer Dewey’s charge

Mr. Hannegan asserted that Mr. Dewey’s charge that the Roosevelt administration planned to hold men in the Army after the war to prevent another depression “could scarcely have been calculated to add to the morale of the men now in uniform and fighting their country’s battles.”

He said:

The purpose of that [the administration’s] plan is not only to get all the unneeded fighting men out of the Army at the earliest possible time, but to do something that Mr. Dewey may not have thought of – that is, to go about it in the fairest and most democratic way. To decide on the order of this mustering out, the Army consulted the men themselves.

Labor and industry muster forces for wage shutdown

Battle lines drawn on reconversion issue; WLB arranges hearings

In Washington –
Three-man board to supervise war surplus

House and Senate group reaches truce

Pope may visit U.S. after war

Editorial: The vet and his old job

Editorial: Thanks for the kind words

Editorial: Another great achievement

Editorial: Sad example

Edson: Wage raise issue barges into the election contest

By Peter Edson

Ferguson: Toddling infants

By Mrs. Walter Ferguson

americavotes1944

Background of news –
Labor in politics

By Bertram Benedict

Sidney Hillman and his CIO Political Action Committee, working ardently for the reelection of President Roosevelt, have become major issues in the 1944 election campaign.

On Wednesday, Senator Brewster (R-ME), mixing his metaphors a little, said:

Mr. Hillman is an albatross hung about the neck of the Democratic Party. He gave the Democratic Party in Maine the kiss of death.

At the annual convention of the United Mine Workers at Cincinnati on Tuesday, President John L. Lewis came out vehemently for the defeat of President Roosevelt. It remains to be seen whether the Democrats will be able to set off Mr. Lewis’ indirect support of Governor Dewey against Mr. Hillman’s support of President Roosevelt.

While Mr. Lewis was attacking Mr. Roosevelt at Cincinnati, the convention of the CIO United Auto Workers at Grand Rapids was evincing much enthusiasm for the President’s reelection.

All this contrasting pro-Dewey and pro-Roosevelt activity in the ranks of organized labor in the United States would seem strange in any industrial nation of Europe, for European labor normally tries to achieve its ends in the political field through a labor or socialist party of its own, instead of through a “capitalist” party.

The Workingmen’s Party

However, it was the United States which produced the earliest attempt at a labor party on something of a national scale. In 1828, the Workingmen’s Party was organized in most of the large Eastern cities. In some states, it formed political alliances with agrarian political groups. The new party won some minor political victories, but soon disintegrated.

After the Civil War came the National Labor Union, then the National Labor and Reform Party. These got tied up with the agitation for cheaper currency, and amalgamated with the Greenback Party. In 1878, Greenback-Labor parties polled about a million votes in the elections for Congress.

The 1880s were the powerful era of the Knights of Labor, which in the ‘90s was eclipsed by the newly-formed American Federation of Labor. The Knights in their period of decline had pinned their faith to political action, and that was incessantly pointed to by Samuel Gompers, presiding genius of the AFL, as one reason why the Knights were displaced by the AFL.

The Gompers policy

Mr. Gompers insisted that in the political field American labor should follow a policy of rewarding its friends and punishing its foes, instead of dissipating its strength by running candidates of its own.

In 1924, the AFL did join with the railroad brotherhoods, the Socialist Party, the Farmer-Labor Party, and certain agrarian and liberal groups to sponsor the presidential candidacy of the late Senator Robert M. La Follette. Although Mr. La Follette polled more than one-half as many votes as John W. Davis, the Democratic candidate, he carried only his own state, Wisconsin.

The La Follette defeat is always adduced by labor leaders who oppose a separate labor party with a separate labor ticket. They also adduce the failure of the Socialist Party to get anywhere in American politics. And, finally, they are adducing the growing political ineffectiveness of the British Labor Party, which today seems much weaker than when it took office (as the plurality, not a majority party) in 1924 and again in 1929.

Rosh Hashanah should create new kinship

Québec’s plan to speed war to be revealed

Roosevelt, Churchill to continue sessions

Québec, Canada (UP) –
President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill today will reveal some of the decisions made in their momentous Second Quebec Conference on Pacific war plans and the Allied program for a Europe entirely freed of Nazi influences.

After announcing as much as military security and fluctuating international politics will permit, the President and the Prime Minister – according to hints by official spokesmen – will go to an undisclosed place to continue their discussions on a more intimate basis.

The new talks were certain to involve questions of a world peace organization, the future of Germany, and Anglo-American dealings with Russia.

In between military planning for the destruction of Japan, these other topics were touched upon during the week’s conference here.

Evidence of these political angles was found in the hasty trips here of British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, and his No. 1 assistant, Sit Alexander Cadogan, who has been heading the British delegation at the Dumbarton Oaks world security conference in Washington.

It seemed equally evident that Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Churchill had not finished their business although the Québec phase of their conferences ended today.

Poll: Oregon switches to Roosevelt

Governor Dewey now trails by 2 percent
By George Gallup, Director, American Institute of Public Opinion

UNRRA studies 6-point program

Council meets in Montréal