Daily Post - 02.10.1943, Síða 3

Daily Post - 02.10.1943, Síða 3
uAlLYPOST » Round The Press Washington.—The Norwegian Information Service reported that practically all 1,200 Nor- wegian officers the Nazis ro- unded up in their arrests dur- ing August have now been de- ported to Germany where it is believed they are in the Schoc ken concentration camp in Po- sen. With them is Chaplain As- le Enger, pastor of the Piper- viken congregation in Oslo. The officers were first assembled at Hvalsmoen where they were heavily guarded. Some officers were informed on Septmber 3, that they would be released if they pledged under death pen- alty not to undertake any poli- í tical, social or military activity in opposition to the Wehrmacht or German officials. Not a sin- gle one of them signed the pled- ge- * ❖ ❖ Washington.—U.S. Under Se- cretai'y of War Robert B. Patt- erson and Under Secretary of Navy James Forrestal announ- ced recently that 1,910 U. S. plants and projects have won the Army-Navy E award for excellence in production of war materials. $ * Jk Los Angeles. — Senators Rralph O. Brewster of Maine, i James M. Mead of New ork, A. I B. Chandler of Kentucky and Richard B. Russel of Georgia have returned to the United States after a world tour of U. S. Army nstallations. “We were amazed at the trmendous scope of war operations” Russ- el declared. * * * New York.—The Institute of Jewish Affairs has recently published a survey entitled “Hitler’s Ten-Year War on the Jews.” The statistics embodied in this volume give in imper- sonal tones one of the grimmest pictures of the meaning of naz- ism to all the world that has yet appeared. Before the war it is estimated, there were 8,- 300,000 Jews in Europe. To- day there are at most 3,300- 000. Over 3,000,000 people of Jewish blood have been destro yed by murder, forced labor, deportation, and planned star- vation. From the U. S. and Britain have come an official warning that “the instigators and actual perpetrators” of these crimes will be punished, that the atro- America At War United States Ships Factories to Russia As part of its program of lend-lease aid to Russia, the U. S. is sending vital war factor- ies to its Soviet ally. Factories now being dismantled for ship ment include Henry Ford’s $5,- 560,000 tire factory — “most advanced tire factory in the United States Spends 46 Billion an shipyards. Twenty-four we- re merchant vessels, and 27 of them were naval craft and aux- iliaries. The warships included three destroyers, one cruiser, two aircraft carriers (the Bel- leau Wood and the Bunker Hill) and the 45,000-ton battleship New Jersey, heaviest dread know,” declared U. S. Secretary of Treasury Henry Morgen- thau. “Father Time” Aids U. S. War Effort After a layoff of 20 years, 80 year-old Haydn H. Tracy, San Francisco engineer, is back at work. Nicknamed “Little Fath- A Russian officer gives his instructions to his men before a convoy sets out towards the U. S. S. R. across Iran. Tthe trucks are all American built. world;” a new $1,900,000 Dou- glas Oil and Refinery Company plant in California which will be turning out high-octane gas in the U. S. S. R. within the year; and a 35,000-ton kilowatt generator from Southern Cali- fornia Edison’s Long Beach plant. jA- SP’*?....* " ~r ' ’ ' r Americans Donate Life-Saving Blood Americans have contributed 1,126,000 pints of blood to the Red Cross in 1942, providing plasma to save the lives of tho- usands of soldiers, the Sur- geons-General of the U. S. Ar- my and Navy have reported. 51 Ships Launched in United States In One Week During one week recently, 51 ships xkrere launched in Americ- cities will be taken into acco- unt against the time of the fin- al settlement with Germany. nought ever built. Dollars in First Year of War The U. S. has shown its det- ermination to win the war by spending $46,393,890,525 on war activities during the first year of participation. This is more than the entire cost of U. S. participation in the world conflict of twenty-five years ago. Treasury statistics show that the net cost of American participation in 1917 and 1918 was $40,583,062,000. Americans Over-Subscribe Re- cord-Breaking Victory Loan Americans on the some front broke all financial records in history by subscribing for more than $10,000,000,000 of govern- ment securities in the Decemb- er “Victory Fund Drive.” The goal was $9,000,000,000, and it has now been raised to $11,- 000,000,000. “This is the sort of news that Axis leaders dread to hear and that they will not per- mit their misguided peoples to er Time,” by his associates at a U. S. shipyard on the West Coast, he works eight hours a day, six days a week, listing materials required for the con struction of 10,000-ton Liberty cargo ships. To get the job, Mr. Tracy grinned and swore that he could not remember his age. But his qualifications were so obvious the company winked at his evasion and put him to work in the blue-print department of the hull engineering divisi- on. Women Train For Aviation En- gineering Jobs Beginning February 1, one of the largest American airplane manufacturing firms, the Cur- tiss-Wright Corporation, will pay for the training of 800 col- lege women in eigth of Ameri- ca’s leading engineering schools. The girls, who will be called “Engineering Cadettes,” must have taken elementary (Continued on page 4.)

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