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Daily Post - 09.04.1943, Qupperneq 4

Daily Post - 09.04.1943, Qupperneq 4
DAILY POST ''A Russians Show Small fiains London. — Except for the -good news that our Allies have strengthened their grip on the western bank of the Donetz, there is little to report from the Russian front today. Today’s Moscow communique states that Soviet troops have enlarged their bridgeheads on the Donetz river, below Izyum, after smashing several German attacks. The Russians captured several favourable positions on the west bank during the night, \ and the situation, which some days ago was described as tense, has been improved. In two other sectors of the vast front, at Sievsk and at Volkhov, German attacks have been beaten back, and the posi- tion in both places remains un- changed. Elsewhere all has been quiet. More and more is coming to light of what the Germans have done to the towns and terri- tories they have occupied, as they are recovered by the Rus- sians. In Gshatsk, for example, about half of the population, which numbered 32,000, have simply disappeared, and only 300 out of 1,600 houses are left. Herds of cattle had been driven away, and most of the agricul- tural machinery had been wrecked. Bolivia Joins War Against tbe Axis The Bolivian Defense Council has announced that a state of war exists between Bolivia and the Axis Powers,—Germany, Japan and Italy, and with those nations associated with them. Bolivia is the 33rd nation to join the ranks of the United Nations against the Axis. The principal industries are mining and agriculture, and its value to the United Nations’ cause lies chiefly in its production of valu- able minerals, first and fore- most, of which ’s tin, but also copper and silver. Besides this, it is a producer of rubber and quinine. An agreement with the Un- ited States provides for a deve- lopement of the country’s na- tural products. Jap PlaneLosses London.—It was revealed in Washington that the Japanese yesterday lost 37 planes in an attack on American shipping in the Solomons area, out of a force consisting of 50 bombers and 48 escorting Zero fighters. The Americans lost only seven planes. Build Hospitals For War Workers Shipbuilding czar Henry Kaiser disclosed that he has three war worker hospitals under construction where medi- cal care could be obtained for only a few cents a day. The shipbuilder declared that with fifty percent of the labor market now subject to call in- dustrialists would be forced to fi'nd workers among the people left behind. Kaiser said that this meant taking women, old people and the sick. He stated that such a situation required that proper medical care be made available. Latvian Terror Stockholm:— Reports from German-held Latvia said that the Nazi Gestapo had razed two villages after executing all male inhabitants as well as some women. At Audrini, in the Re- zekne district of Latvia, thirty men were executed in public Forty-seven men and women were exécuted at Morduki in the Ludzewh district. Careless Talk Costs Lives Jap Pacific Bases Again Hit Hard London. — Allied aircraft in the South-West Pacific have kept up widespread attacks against Japanese bases in New G’ .ea, New Britain, and New Ireland. Flying Fortresses yesterday strafed a small Japanese con- voy off Kavieng, where the ene- my so recently suffered heavy losses. This convoy consisted of two supply ships and an escort- ing destroyer. Gordon Williams of the Aust- ralian Broadcasting Commission in his dispatch today says that notwithstanding all their losses in this area, the Japanese ap- parently intend using Kavieng as a supply base for their Wi- wack basé on the north coast of New Guinea. There are unmis- takeable signs, that the Japan- ese are building large airfields* for the protection of this convoy route. The Japs are also hurriedly constructing buildings obvious- ly intended as barracks. Re- porters point out that it is pretty difficult to stop this ac- tion, as the flying line for our heavy bombers is as long as that to Rabaul. Þórsgötu 16 A. Easter Cards easter Fors”Mother — Ðad — Wife — Sweetheart — Friends Bókaverzlan fsafoldarprentsmiðjn Austurstræti 8 og I-augavegi 12. No Change in Borma London. — News of the land fighting in Burma is that there has beén no change in the situa- tion during the last twenty-four hours. The Japanese suffered heavi- ly from our artillery, when they attempted to advance on our positions in the Arakan district, where fighting continues. Blen- heims and fighters continued their sweeps yesterday over the entire battle area, not one of them failing to return. Plane Accidents Low t U.S. Army air force safety record reveals that one thous- and seven hundred seventy seven person were^killed during the first nine months of last year. Army planes have flown a total of a billion and a half miles with one fatal accident for every million seven hundred fifty thousand miles flown. Can take WASHING for some men. Kristín Pétursdóttir,

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