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Page 6 text:
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I! ll - W...---e, , USS ITTLE ROC Launched on Z7 August 1944, USS LITTLE ROCK began service as a Light Cruiser QCL-921, mounting twelve 63' 47 caliber and twelve 5 38 caliber guns. After a period of inactivation from 1949 until 1957, LITTLE ROCK was converted and re-commissioned on 4 June 1960 as a Guided Missile Light Crusier lCLG-41. She was fitted as a fleet flagship and armed with the TALOS long range surface to air missile system, retaining only three of her six inch and two of her five inch guns. She has served as flagship for Commander Cruiser Division Four, Commander Second Fleet and Commander Sixth Fleet. 1 , le V M K Arla ansa VOL. 125-NO. 278. f V Loss OF LARGE 1 AZI FORCES 1 l ROMA T Germans Trapped As Ex-Allies Block Passes. London. Aug. 28 1Mondayl Urn, -An avalanche of Russian tanks and motorized infaniry poured into the Ploesll oil region in the hvart of capitulatcd Romania yes- terday. ovcrrunning the Galatl gap defenses hr-tween the Danube and thr- Carnathians as thousands nf Germans tried to escape to Hungary. ln a disaster nf Stalimzrad pro portions. tho Germans were over-. whclmcd at Focsani and Galati, anchors on the defense line, and the Russians rolled on through the petroleum fields of Ramnicul- Sarat, 22 miles beyond Focsani and 75 miles northeast of Buch- arr-sb llamnicul-Sarat is on the edge nfjho Plocsti oil belt whose cen- ter in the town of that name lic-s only 57 milvs southwest of thc :-rliiiancinz Russian-. Romanian troops going over to the Allied banner struck the Ger- mans at Ploesti, a Bucharest com- munique said, and blocked the mountain passes leading through the Carpathians to Hungary via Translyvania. Bcrlin frankly ad- mitted the German position was precarious, The Russians were expected to reach Ploesti shortly, moving over highways littered with German dead and abandoned equipment. The Germans were even throwing away their Zuns in their flight, Moscow said. Two Russian orders of tho day and a ccmmunique announced the German debacle which in its stra- fr-gic portent even surpasses the Nazi Stalinnrad disaster. Besides the sweep toward Buch- arest and Ploesti, the Russians climbing westward into the Car- pathians 'above Se Gal ti gap seized a number 'localities on a railway leading to the Transyl- vanian plateau, including Coman- csti. 60 miles northwest of Foc- sani, and Targuocna, Romania's largest salt-mining center. Russians Report 18,000 Nazis Taken in One Day. Eighteen thousand more Ger- mans wore seized yesterday by the twn Soviet armies moving to- ward the heart of the Balkans, and the bulletin said two Ro- manian divisions of 12.000 men surrendered with all their equip- ment. The remnants of two other Romanian divisions also gave up. The bulletin said the remnants of 12 Nazi divisions pocketed southwest of Chisinau, 140 miles behind thc Russians svilling through the Galabi gap, had been compressed into a small wooded area and were being annihilatcd. This trapped force has been esti- mated at bctween 40.000 and 80,- 000 mc-n. and the bulletin said three more Nazi generals had been killcd and four captured. On thc basis of Moscow an- nouncements, the Russians in cight days have killed or captured more than 300.000 Germans and Romanians. That would make an overall total of 1.081.886 Axis troops killed or captured slncc the gigantic Soviet summer offensive began June 23. Russian and Romanian Forces Near Junclion. A Bucharest communique an- nounced lhat Romanian troops had captured more than 12,000 Germans. It said the Germans had been thrown out of Buchar- ost. and were being engaged hotly along the Ploesti-Buzau highway. Buzau ls 42 miles northeast of Ploz-sti and only 18 miles from tho Russians who seized Ram- nicul-Sarat. The Germans wr-re said to be tryin: to marshal their troops in thc Plocsti area at the foot of the Prcdeal pass in an effort to escape through the mountains into Transylvania. Bucharest said Romanian troops at the other end of the pass, at Brasov, had disarmcd the enemy in that arm and secured the town. Tarxzovisu-, 28 miles west af Plorsti, along with its airfield, was captured by Romanian troops speeding lhe advance of the Rus- sians. the Bucharest announce- ment said. Relatively Little Activity At North End of Line. On the Estonian front, Moscow announced capture of 50 localities hy General Maslennikov's Third Baltic Army. including Tslrgulilna nnd Ignsle, seven miles northeast nf the Latvian-Estonian border city nl Valgn, n big rail jnnriion. Ka' ruin, eight miles west of Valga, and Hargln. 16 miles southeast, also were seized. North of Vnlgn the Russians. driving su-aight. weszward toward lhf Gul! of Riga in an effort to sph! Germany! two imperillcd Bal- lif- armies. captured Piknsllln on lhv smnh shore nf Lake Varta-Jaru. bi' miles from the lex T i 5 1 1 i I 1 l E I 1 l i i 1 7 v i I ,TA SEENQ U. S. Cruiser Little Rock Launched Philadelphia. Pn., Au -, , The S. S. lsitlle Rociaza :Ken light cruiser. slid downlugg ,ram ' - - CUBTPHNSY yards herxe. hmbundmg rs. arnuel M. W ' a Little Rock cnuncilgiirijlbrmgiexf ed the Vesnl- Congressman Brook: Hays. Arkansas, told the crowd oi' 8PPl'0XimBl6lY 5.000 workers and 81125651 thag cruisers were the hot. test. item of naval combat, The people or Little Rock ar, Eroud to haife such a ship as this ear their clLy's name, said Mr HHYS- Even those of us who know little about the classification of naval vessels know that the cruis. ers have distinguished themselves! ln the Pacific war and uni, thi, is the outstanding type of combat ves- sel for that area. The navy men tell us that the cruiser is the 'work horse of the navy,' big enough La X0 'MU BUY battle, fast enough to lead anygtask force. CQYFYIUE as it has the heaviest.: load in the Pacific where the grenl.-' est-battles have taken place lhei cruisers have added lustre to naval, h1Sl0l'y: We hope that in the time remaining before our enemies are Put down the Little Rock will lake her PIECE along side the Boise. the San Francisco, the Helena and the Chicago: preserving the prestige of the cruisers. I We are glad to honor the work-I men and the fgr which they work. I impressed with work which we observe the keel was materials for from everywh for il will be and sources to end tory lies remaining lo worl: c er yet Lorg . minder Weather Fall coffee week's ma ke terday sub-normal The green e The mercury ped lo 61 and a hi! 63 and climbed 65, Memphis had a L1rT ' lk. l J a high of sz. while rezlftfglozf isltered a low of 69 0 dune! as usend North Georgians experienced the d gvnethilgg coldest August day in 10 YOU! 55 'L : their the temperature hovered around 59' Wd' red ,, degrees. Augusta sud that read- 01' :he ing was the lowest for August 27 IOTMN as since 1904. At Atlanta the mini- h S mum was 58 and the maximum 59. wid :U len degrees under the normal lhyv' he ' e for the day. ln 501101 GOOFKIH salem ad' ln the high 80's. 9 rc mg. wuz Louisiana had ll Mississippi nd ' most normal aug:-1-Sl lggathsgtwgih Plff of dl i I OW ' . - f ' 331:25 sm? 1 sold rrorisrenterinl DIVISWH m ' 2 ln the Midwest. Wi'-h rrlson ,lin the extreme northern Diff of e HQNU,-Q stale registering a law of 61 and the Qin action Rome AUX high of 61. Little Rock hid ' 68 gig., 1-'ami Army. low. zu muh- I-TXRIS vlcronv PARADE TURNS INTO BATTLE PRO-NAZNS OPEN IB.- P rls. Aux. 26 tDelayedl Geniral de Gaulle 5:05:31 ,gash Z: 1 today U' lssigllssiana were thrown IHIOBFQQQ as the French chvlm' 'rf wud eration parade broliy UPU: mul.. llurries of flufxgg 'on' mgixlerrzlipencators were klllleiggq dozens were wounded as K 0 b K re ing spread. A Kewmouaeg'-56:51, these peonh had cheere uns as he ith ihunderoue UVB YM Pr'-d',,:0:':::..2 0- ile-an-hour c ID- LE: bi :.5i0'::'. .:z F::::'a'ifli an - . fxxlzs and heavily armed scoutngzlse French Pl'-fiflu ln me lp from began lirlnl 'L HTG! 'Hun had which Fun? Fughza ncrackle of ' d at lem, h nuifkly -pw-er gggpg,,j,: ' route from the de rhalll-and the Hotel diziiille Cathedrals . fl i 0 r. lthe fnmeh uundx of men' of the , Soon 1 0 , lFronch Forces at the lnunor WC' d
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Page 5 text:
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5 l,,,f :ix in-1-t.----s.-.3 vu W ' f Weather t-It 'N ltlvvltr-tv ' t i 2 Q Arkansas: Partly clout.,- f 'l1lI and Tuesday. Q. ' I A-Q Q August 27: High 84. Low 68. M . 5 ivan 'V ug - N .xL't:L1ST. zs. 1944.-TEN PAGES. PRICE: :'.2'L?,.,'a.l,2 '.7I-rr. ..'2E.i .'s1'., 37. .:XJ,.'2 XIQHE GOOD SHIP LITTLE ROCK HITS THE WATER ' A ,s .,,. A, . N .Q 4 Q xx Q 1 -. ,s NQW-Q B 1 .1 e 5 . tt ,. X . , xx x A ,, O7 if W. , 'R ft' K,-ki, X , - -, o - MK' X .4 N . xs, t A A - K ' :fs 5 X- of-si., IQ' ' . -'rp . 'Q , , - jg-. - Q g fr, ' . ' - 53-N rw-75 'a 9 .. L Atifffiixii ' . . . ' '-. -1 4:1 iii A . 5 -al . ' , . xi N4 Y ' ... Nah... . - x A 5, . -- '- Q . 'LE ':l' l' ' vu n 5 J r , 3 ' ' .1 N? . A , K at 3:6 ' ..-.at . I .51- , 71 . 'px ' J .rf yards EPETAIN. CAPTIVE t IN REIGH. URGES 1 FRENCH T0 UNITE lHerri0t Reported : Nazi Prisoner. 1 l R5 DUN XYHITEHEAD. Paris. Aug. 27 I.-Pt.-Marshal Henri Petam. Pierrn Laval and flidouard Hcrriol. former premirr inf the republic. were arrested hy 1 the Gestapo and taken to Germany a few days before American and French forces entered Paris. Be- fore he left. Petain sent a clandes- tine message to the people of France urging them to unite and saying that all he had submitted to had been for their welfarl. The 88-year-old chief of state said in his message he knew he would be arrested, and on August 20. five days before Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley'a troops entered Paris he was taken to Belfort near the Swiss frontier and then on Lo Ger- many. Herriot was brought to Paris from Nancy by Laval expressly to attend and join a meeting of the Senate and the Chamber of Depu- ties to discuss problems arising: from the Allied advance on Paris and the possibility of moving the French government from Vichy to Bclfort. But the meeting never was held. Many Parisi:-ins are whispering that Laval arranged the arrests of Petain and Herriot and than his ou-n arrest in A deal with his Ger- man masters which would prevent the Allies from getting the custody of Petain and Herriot. Al the same time. he was said to have tried to make it appear to his vountryincn that he did not leave Paris volun- tarxly aa the Allied troops drew DCFIY. Whether these rumors have any t basis cannot he determined, Copirs 'of lcltors reliably reported tn hav, : ht-rn exchanged between Laval and , Olin Abetz. Gorman ambassador 1 lo Vichy. make it appear as ,though Ixwal opposcd the German :vicar ,:.ew irgfble Y ,. 'f Agri ' '25 WQHHA. pf in W 5 'out' :Zami 1 .W 1 'ii r u,inf l u f 'uve I Rqjzed I 1' 1 rt: 1' - 5 f , iol l,!1f 'd pfdly :I 1? 'ide ei- lat- 'ten 'iw 415,25 as 'ny 6 dl of ' 7 f hzi 3.33 v1 u'df UC I. ff,'Ly.3' v' yin ff he rf - , ' ill!! 'Z Z ia. 'Z 1' 'A i . existance forcc was onlv 118 miles from gGerman border The Algiers said United States spearhv:-ids i-rossed the Marne at Vitry. miles southwest of Verdun, Between Paris and Troyes ground troops moppcd up sm:-ili German pockets by-passcd in the armored advance. Tank fnrres also reached Pecy, Nangis and Provins-all southeast of Paris between the Seine and the Marne-and farther east drove to Romilly. Between Paris and the mouth of the Seine there was activity of. three types-the British building up' a bridgehead at Vernon to strike out probably in the direction of, Beauvais. the Canadians, Bclgians and Dutch engaging in what one observer called a 'fair-sized slaugh- ter of Nazi Seventh Army rom- nants and the Americana cleaning out German :tragglcrs between Mantes'and Parts, 4 iBritixh and Canadians tCrouing Lower Seine. Q i i I r t 1 i i 5 i 1 i i i In Paris itself, where General Eisenhower was a. Sunday visltbr the Germans have been eliminated from all but a few Isolated strong rioints. As Eisenhower arrived in Paris, his armlea on the northwest and southeast streamed across the Scine in great strength, driving the Germans from below the rocket coast toward Germany. The British Second Army and Canadian First Army poured into four bridgeheads over the lower Seine, where Nazi resistance evap- orated under A tremendous artil- lery barrage, and :truck out in a millhty pursuit aimed at the rocket -COHSL. Rouen -md Le 'Havre were in danger of being enveloped, and the Germans already were reported evacuating the great. port of Le Havre cxverit for ri lpw rearguards and demolition troops, vR,obI'rl C. VViIso:i, -with th? Cana- dian First Army, reported A pitrhcd battle on the approaches to Roucn He said Canadians. who harkrd their wav through Lhr Forest tl e Londe, collided with a grim Grr- i t r i .man l-Land on thft nnrlli mi:-' of i the woods. The enemy was trying: ldenpcmtrrly to keep Rourn npr-it as tan 1-sosipw rrpulr but was bring pmindvd reazr-lvssly from Lhr air, Crfrr.-.an rffqgranfp -.W hrokt-ri tCont.inued on Page R, Grd lfftlil wa r rm mn Arkansas Gazette an w as Agent Resignsi before by Bela l mcnt. Fayetteville. Aux, 21 rspii.-Cnr-I ford Smith. Washington county farm agent, announced today thati he had resigned effective Septem-i her 1 to become manager of theQ Farm Bureau Co-npcrative here. His resignation followed by one day the dismissal of G. M. Mca-X seles. stamp Agricultural Extension Service agent in the Northwestl District of Arkansas. by the Uni-T versity of Arkansas Board of TrusA , tees. Mr. Mcasolcs had been sup-i ported strongly by the Washinilton County Farm Bureau, I Mr. Smith's resignation indif-at-i ed he had sided with Mr. Mcaselcsw who tolrl tht' University Board in Little Rock yesterday that there! had he:-n objections among cer-5 tain people in Northwest Arkansas. to the Extension Service through its rounty agents taking up any' problems except those of produc-i tion. He said a group of Springdale business men had sulifleated re- moval of Mr. Smith because the, rnunty agent had worked with' farmrrs nn farm prices. market-' ing and other economic problcms. 1 Food Supplies Sped To Paris by Air. i Allied Supremo Hcadqua rlcrs,' Aug. 27 'IPL - Allied air forces started rushinl emergency food supplies to Paris by air with hun- idrods of transport planes hauling 500 tons today from Britain to a point near the French capital to be moved the rest of the way by tfuck. The air move was the first of a series whirh will be continued to expedite the work of rcvictualling: and supplementing the move -If many hundreds of tons now on the way to Paris on the ground from Aliic-d storkpiles in Normandy, an official announcement said, rnnnr-ri meat. dried peas and beans. sugar. carmcd H0up.maI'larinr-, roi- frr- vitaminizcd chocolate and drird milk The French thc-rnsrlwvs will hnndlr tho distribution of tho sup' .pilcs on their arrival at Paris. very idctr-rminauon to move the French gm-crnmcnt to Bclfnrt and was ar- I rested hm-muse of his determination I -md his desire to stay in Paris. Acted Only for France's Good, Petain insists. X Pctain was taken into rustody hy an officzal of the German embasy, but he sent this message befora leaving: wt R I-'rcnchmen: When this message rearhcs you 1 shall no longer be frrr. In the extreme Condition that I now find myself I have nothing to From reveal to you except the simple . confirmation of what has motivated my conduct for thc past four years. Having derided tn rc-main :mionrzst you I have tried dny by day to find the hast way to serve' the permanent interests of France Ioyally and without compromise. I had but one objectfto protect you from the worst. All that I have done and all that I have accepted. ronsentcd to, or submitted to. whether willingly or by force, has becn solely for your welfarel because if I could not be 'I your sword I wanted to be your shield. Under certain cirrumslancea my words and my acts must have sur- prised you. You must realize that they have hurt me more than you can possibly imagine. , t d t ' , ggrmxrsa 'I have suffered for you and with mdk, as you. and I have msrshallcd all of my forces against what is menacing you. I have shielded you from some certain perils. However, there were d some. alas,tha1 I rould not prevent. My conscience is my wilnoss that no one from any party can Contra- dict mc on this point. What the enemy wants today is to take mn away from you. I rlon't have to justify myself in thrir eyes. I r-are only for the people of Franrc. For you as fnr me there is onlv , one F'r:ence-the France of our A Vfoscov. dis atch said the Gerf' ancestors. . ' p . mans had rushed workers to Hun-l Again onre more I advise you gary's borders. particularly i rl: to unlu-, TFBUSYIVBHIH. Whefe lhey aff PHY It is not difficult to do ones ticularly vulnerable becausc of ROA duty. even thoush it sometimes in mania's sudden ca itulation Nan P declaration of war against Ger- many. King Mihafa new pro-All government in Bucharest has an-I nounccd its intention of regainin Transylvania. ceded to Hungary i 1940 under Nazi dictation. 'Ferocious' Fighling ln 1 Ploexti Area Reported. d hard to recognize it. Yours is simple. Unite with those who will give you a guarantee to lend you along the road of honor and order. Fl Order must reign. And hc-cause ng! represent order legitimately. l remain your chief, Obey mr and ohcy those that will bring you words of social peace without which order ,cannot be re-established, yi In Bucharest the Romanian gov-I Those who will tell you to fallow ernment issued a manifesto callin g,a policy of reconciliation and on troops and civilians to chase the, renaissance of France through rc- Germans out of that country an dgciproc-al forgiveness and love of PNWUC lhem fl'0m d1'SU'0YinS lhli your fellow I-ountrymen-those ara wealth of our country. ' L the real French leaders, They con- Gen. Iosif Teodorescu, Bucharest' Linug my wgrk, Br m, thf-ir gurls, military commander, ordvred A Ili For myself. I have bran soparatrd Germans between 16 and 60. troops' fmm 3-ou' but I do ,ml le,-we you 01' Civilians- L0 rerwrt 19 malice H-Url and I hope um al: of you will give V-h0l'U95 by 7 P' nfl, Y-Offlghl 0' fluff. your utmost loyalty to France treatment HS SWCS, In H d2Cl'0Ql which. God willing, will be restored broadcast by Bucharest radio, Nazig to hcl. grandeur' Elite SS troops or others changin into civilian clothes will be trcate as spies. and anyone committing H ians will be shot on sight, the broad:-ast said. gl Destiny is taking me away. I undergo the greatest constraint that A man mn suffer. It is with Joy that I ao:-ent this suffering, should it br a condition of your deliver- n dt act of snbotagc against the Roman-Q 4 l Berhn radio reported ununualIv tl oil region north of Buchan-st, The Nazi commentator, Col. Ernst von Hammer, also said German troops wc e in t 'ou. . r an CX namely precan ge of sacred union for the renalssancl fcrociousi' fighting in the Plor-s position. and retreating toward t Carpathian mountain passes. anre. if hefora foreigners. even -,should thry be allies. you remain ffailhful to the true patriotism lwhirh thinks only of the true inter- ests of France. and if my sacrifica 1-nahlr-s you to find again the way of your fatherlandf' Moscow already has announced I that Romanian troops, turning Chlnese General against their fnrmer partners. had plulkcd those rscapv passes whit load to Hungary via Transylvan provincv. Anglo-U. S. Terms On Way lo Bulgaria. IL was learn:-rl that Anglo-Ame -h For Losing Changsha. ra Phungking, Aug, 28 tMondnyi 1,11 , It was nnnouncrd today thnt Grn. Chang Teh -Seng. commander of 1China's Fourth Army, was cxccutvd r. August 5 for dereliction of duty to during the defense of Changsha. h h' ta i l d d biscuits' iran armistire terms are en route T 0 3 mmm neu e Bulgarimand that Moscow has been 0l'd9l'Pd to hflld Chilnilfhi M all fully informed of them. costs, the general was convicted DY Radio Ankara in R h,-Mdmsl re. a court-martial of havinc allowed ,.,,,d,,,.i by C33 Mid that German n commanding hill to fali into rnv- troops in Bulgnria are now cox plctcly disarmed. n- my hands. thus Causing JAPBDESU .capture of the city. 1944 AS CL-92 25 YEARS LATER AS CLG-4
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