Two Balkan nations get Allied terms
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WLB hands district disputes to President
By Robert Taylor, Press Washington correspondent
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Lamar, Missouri (UP) –
The Democratic Party launches its active campaign for a fourth term tonight when its vice-presidential candidate, Senator Harry S. Truman, broadcasts to the nation from this little town of his birth.
All of Pittsburgh’s radio stations will carry the address at 10:30 p.m. ET.
Senator Truman said his address would be filled with “facts – which include plenty of reasons why the Democrats should be reelected.”
The occasion was Senator Truman’s official acceptance of his nomination as President Roosevelt’s running mate.
Brothers of bandleader read parent letters ‘from son;’ $398 a month keeps coming in
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Late July’s heavy fighting in northern France caused a sharp increase in U.S. Army casualties, Acting Secretary of War Robert P. Patterson disclosed today, swelling the total for all theaters to 283,838 through Aug. 13.
This represented an increase of 23,249 over the total reported a week ago, and Mr. Patterson said the increase was “largely reflected in the period of heaviest fighting in northern France near the end of July.”
Secretary Patterson’s announcement brought to 349,523 the number of casualties thus far announced for all services since Pearl Harbor, as tabulated below.
Army | Navy | |
---|---|---|
Killed | 53,101 | 23,544 |
Wounded | 142,686 | 20,701 |
Prisoners | 44,408 | 4,466 |
Missing | 44,643 | 9,642 |
— | — | — |
TOTAL | 284,838 | 58,353 |
Mr. Patterson also disclosed that the fighting in southern France, from the landings Aug. 15 through Aug. 24, had cost the Americans 1,242 killed or missing and 5,090 wounded – relatively light losses.
In Southeast Asia operations since January, more than 50,000 Japs have been killed, Mr. Patterson said. Jap dead counted in Central and South Pacific operations now total more than 115,000, he said.
London, England –
Fred Astaire, movie star, arrived here yesterday “to do a little hoofing and sing a few songs” for U.S. troops in the European Theater.
Eisenhower reveals change in command
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Polish troops take Pesaro on Adriatic coast; Nazis begin withdrawal to defense positions
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Fire flying bombs from Belgium
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Bad weather cuts Allied air attacks
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Golden to devote full time to union here
By Fred W. Perkins
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Sentiment will reign after war
By Ernest Foster
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All hands on movie set join in handing him a ribbing
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Long Beach, California (UP) –
Marine Sgt. Lee Powell, the red-masked Long Ranger of the movies who galloped through rip-roaring serials on a white stallion named “Silver,” has been killed in action in the South Pacific, the Navy announced yesterday.
The 35-year-old cowboy had been stationed in the South Pacific since November 1942 and had fought his way ashore with the Marines at Tarawa and Saipan.
His widow, Mrs. Norma Powell of Long Beach, said she had not been informed where her husband was killed.
Britain-France-Russia union to guard peace
By William Philip Simms, Scripps-Howard foreign editor
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Washington (UP) –
The closed nature of the Dumbarton Oaks world security conference drew new Republican fire today as Senatore Styles Bridges (R-NH) denounced the policy of “Oriental secrecy” and said he may discuss it next week with Governor Thomas E. Dewey, GOP presidential nominee.
In his second blast of the week against the confidential character of the American, British and Russian conversations, Mr. Bridges belittled the press conference held at Dumbarton Oaks Tuesday to report, in general terms, the progress made toward outlining a new world peace organization.
Styling it “a so-called press conference,” Senator Bridges said that reporters came away “shaking their heads despairingly,” and that “one reported voiced the true sentiment when he said they got ‘a diplomatic brushoff.’”
Another Republican, Rep. Edith Nourse Rogers (R-MA), a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said she would confer with Secretary of State Cordell Hull today on the progress of the conference because “I believe Congress should be better informed on our foreign relations.”
5,000 packages weighing 300 tons shipped to France to modernize ancient institution
By Rosette Hargrove
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Top GOP leaders to be visited
Pawling, New York (UP) –
Governor Thomas E. Dewey plans to devote a major portion of his 6,700-mile transcontinental trip to uniting Republican leaders behind his campaign for the Presidency, it was disclosed today.
The Republican presidential nominee believes that one of the most important tasks of the cross-country trip is to obtain the active support of GOP leaders and impress on them the necessity of linking the national campaign with drives for local offices, his associates said. They pointed out that only seven major political speeches have been scheduled for the 22 days he will be out of the states.
The campaign conferences have been going on almost since the day he was renominated at the Chicago National Convention in June and when he returns to Albany on Sept. 28, he will have met leaders from virtually every section of the country except the “deep South.”
Upon his return, Mr. Dewey will prepare to make a campaign trip either through New England states or return to the Midwest.