by Del a j near-1 in were Larsen Danish Jews Flee To Sweden Despite Nazi Vigilance Stockholm, Oct. 3. IP Hundreds of Jews who preferred to risk being s'not to death by Germaij patrols along the Danish coast rather than -be '-deported to nazi labor camps .poured Into Sweden today as Adolf Hitler's anti-Semitic purge n Denmark fanned Swedish feeling. Skirmishes and ' bloodshed were reported when a few. Jews resisted, . , arrest In Copenhagen, and others were pursued through Jutland by at to the The Ans- Mr. to by the gh squads of gestapo 'men. - The deportation of Danish Jews to Germany i and Poland started Showdown Fight Between FDR and Farm Bloc Seen Washington. Oct. 3. A new howdown fight between . Pres. Roosevelt and the congressional farm bloc over the administration's lold-the-line program gathered intensity today, with a veto predict 1 ed for any legislation prohibiting subsidy .payments to keep retail food prices 'do\vn ; The,veto prediction came- from an' influential congressional leader, one.of .the chief executive's legislative advisers, while Mr. Roosevelt worked on a message, outlining the idministratfon's 1944 food program, fq/ presentation to congress this week. The lawmaker, who fas unwilling to permit use of his name, .declared that the presidential message would support the .program of War Food Administrator Marvin Jones and, presumably, re-emphasize from Copenhagen yesterday as the nazis "ignored, at least temporarily, a S is "ign wedish government offer to pro- ide haven for 8000 of the 10.0UO Jews whom the Germans blamed for the militant opposition to -German-occupation of what once was Hitler's "model .protectorate." Carrying omy small bundles o* personal belongings, many Jews arrived in Sweden In rowboats nnd fishin^ smacks after eluding the reinforced German patrols .which were ordered to' shoot -anyone. Ing to escape: They, came so. fast and at_so many scattered .places along "the southwestern Swedish coast, which at its closest -point Is only two n. half, milcn- across. ihe -sound, Denmark, that no accurate count was yet "available. Unofficially, however, it was estimated that at least 1100 haVe reached 'Sweden since rumors of .the pur/je- swept through Denmark a week ago. The Swedish ' government predicted in a formal note to the German foreign office In Berlin bat "serious repercussions" would )e felt In Sweden, and feeline-. ran ilgh, especially in southern Swe- len which once was a 'pert of Denmark. · " The Swedish government offer i accept the deportees did not nclude 2000 Jews who fled Germany, Austria and other countries and obtained refuge in Denmark early in the war. Germany's reply was to send loatloads of Jews from Copenhagen apparently to Baltic ports Sweden, now strongly mobilized .nd in a better position than at any time in its history to back vords with force if necessary already had officially expressed sym- Turn to Page 2. See FIVE 45 in ·