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Show 3K THE WEATHER ' UTAH Partly cloudy Son day ex-' cept cloudy north portion vttk snow flurries; not much change ' In temperature. Temperature: High 45 Low 16 . -T CALL THE HERALD If you don't receive your Herald before 6:30. call 495' before 8 o'clock and a copy will be sent to you. VOL. 21, NO. 43 PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, MARCH 26, 1944 COMPLETE UNITED PRESS TELEGRAPH NEWS SERVICE PRICE FIVE CENTSj Special Session On Soldier Vote Convenes Monday SALT LAKE CITY, March 25 U Two bills designed to permit Utah servicemen and women to vote in the November No-vember General Elections today were ready for action by the special session of the Utah Legislature that will convene con-vene Monday. The first of the twt bills, drafted by a specially ap-pointedl)L-man committee, would provide for a "Utah election elec-tion war ballot" that could be supplemented by the Federal Soldier Vote ballot now await- I J. Lll ii Draff Law May Be Necessary By PAUL, HARRISON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, March 25 Utah General Gets Citation; Med:! WASHINGTON. March 25 CCT.) The war Gepartment tonight an nounced award of the distinguished distinguish-ed service medal to four generals and a colonel of the army air forces for "Exceptional meritorious Among tlie ; generals were Maj. GenXJohn K. Cannon, Salt (U.n)Rep. John M. Costello, I Citv- hosc erts as deputy ., Cal., said tonight that , force from b.uiirv throueh re- Reds 8 Miles From Border Of Rumania Ranilhliranc rail ling President Roosevelt's sig- llV.puuilWUUJ villi nature. Unless extended, this fVtimitf rtnuAniiAn "ill would expire Dec. 31 VUUIIIV ItVIIYCIIIIUII The second would perma n A ! "f A manentiy amena existing Utah 111 I rOVO ADril 14 Unction laws to advance date of II I IWIW """ 11 , the primary elections. The advance l wo ma permit war Dallots to be This year's presidential elec-,spnf the unHmen vnt.r. tion race will receive its initial .be returned in time for election Utah county Republican kickoffj tabulation. The primary would April 14 at 8 p m. in the Provo! be on A 15 the runoff Qn high school, when county del- Sept 12. egates will hold their convention ? . ' , . to select representatives to the .. Af Propo,fal, ,y e governor coming state and district conven- the special sess on also : con- tions Rulon Morgan, county chairman, chair-man, announced Saturday. Besides electing state and second sec-ond congressional district convention con-vention delegates, Mr. Morgan aid, the Utah county meeting w4D select a county chairman, vice-chairman, secretary, treasurer, treas-urer, and county central committee com-mittee to serve during the next two years. The state convention has been called to convene at the New-house New-house hotel in Salt Lake City on May 20 in order to elect a state central committee, a Republican state chairman, state vice-chairman, a national committeeman and committeewomen, and four delegates and four alternates to the Republican national convention, conven-tion, in Chicago on June 26. The congressional district con by war industry workers employed out of the state was vetoed by the drafting committee, which decided de-cided present absentee ballots would suffice. Although the drafting committee commit-tee agreed, with little argument, on most points of the two tenta-ive tenta-ive bills, both house and senate leaders were dubious about a short session. some sort of limited service legislation' may be necessary to offset loss of war plant personnel resulting from the government's new policy of drafting the bulk of physically qualified men under 26. Meanwhile, selective service and newly created committees headed by War Manpower Chief l'aul V. McNutt acted to speed induction of young men to meet urgent army and navy needs, while at the same time taking precautions not to cripple vital war production. Selective service ordered im mediate pre-induetion physical! ferred men under 26, with a view to getting this first step out of tho way by the time McNut's commitce which includes representatives repre-sentatives of 10 go'vernment claimant agencies has decided what percentage of these deferments defer-ments shall not be ronevcd. Action Possible LONDON, March 25 Russia's three Ukrainian armies, hurling the Germans back on opposite ends of the long southern front, today smashed to within eight miles of the Rumanian border, operation Wtwecn ground ar.a F.ir hammered out a 50-mile forces' In Che Sicily and Italian bridgehead on the north bank of landings. the upper Dniester river, and ad- Brig. Gcii. Kenneth B. Wolfe, ! vanced to within less than two Riverside, jCjtl., for "exceptionally i miles of the Black Sea port of cember. 1943, the citation said, were ' in l$rge measure respon sible for the high degree of co 1000. Drop IBoiifiilbs om R.AJ 2000 '. Flames' -I O Toms of Bedim End of q Hitler Dream meritorious -and distinguished service" as Chief of the production engineering ; section and produc Nikolayev The daily Moscow war bullet in and an order of the day from Fresh German Troops Moving Up To Cassino ALLIED HEADQUARTERS NAPLES, Mrch 25 l'.P Fresh Costello. chairman nf a hnnao ! German reinforcements were re- military affairs subcommittee in-f ported moving .up to join the bat-vestigating bat-vestigating draft deferments, feltit,e for Cassino tonight and front congressional action mieht be re-! dispatches Indicated the Nazi quired to help straighten out what is generally, conceded to be one of tho worst manpower crises c.t. t u 4 r 4 w-- (since the war's start. Apropos of tt..i r ci t .. I the projected induction of pres- he-'beTevel thTsesZn would laTt 1 ?. L fE?r;oW at least a week, while house speaker W. R. White of Ogden said the business could hardly be completed in less than three days. All were agreed that If the question of abolishing the run-off primary were raised, the session Police, Firemen Exams Slated trial workers, and the loss of war plant personnel which would result. re-sult. Costello said: "If 4-Fs do not volunteer their services in essential war activities it may be necessary to pass some! town sort of limited service legislation." legisla-tion." Rep. Clare Boothe Luce, R., Conn., has Introduced a bill to service in army and navy hos pitals. Costello -said Mrs. Luce was" "very much interested'' in getting action on the bill, now before the house military affairs committee. (Con II nurd on I nter 'l eu 3 Hurt In Crash leading to the measure like the Abbey. vention will follow the state con-i 1,keIv would last from three weeks ventlon on May 20 at Salt Lake to month. City, to choose two delegates and If legislation can be limited two alternates to the national Primarily to the soldier vote and man, Vice-chairman, and campaign cam-paign committee ,orthe . district The delegates to the county i convention will be chosen at GOPj mass meetings to be held In eachj voting district in the county oni or before April 7. Mr. Morean' said. These meeting will also seei On opportunity to obtain per the elections of district chair- manent civil service positions with men. vice-chairmen of the op-!secu'"e tenure and good pay is af-posite af-posite sex. secretaries, treasurers. forded Provo men who file appli- 1 Ik ;,.; Ptltinn. tn t.V. m.,M damiI '. T . D"u .r.:r . .I'ri ..." ."""r" :"- : ::z. .;:lo ,at l enact an overall Jia uuw wj ce posieu anu puo- ""u"ouu" iujjwcnien anu, tional service Iisnea nave oeen sent by the l"cl"c" inursuay ana riaay or county committee to all precinct this week. and district chairmen throughout The examinations will be giv-the giv-the county, he said. The number en at the Provo high school. Ap-Of Ap-Of deleeates to the countv con- plication blanks may be secured vention that each district shall at the office of Grant Bench, city j il InlimfclSjk-- be entitled to i3 being published recorder, at the police station, or AT ImCrScCTIOii in the Provo Herald. the fire station. Dean H. V. Hoytl ""wiivii There will be a meeting of all of the civil service commission,! A ,Mfj ... . j ,..hi ,u. i i An intersection collision be chairmen of Provo city Monday Positions of this kind will be- S?rrf th t , ?nd 1 evening at 8 p. m. in the south come more valuable after the war J in0r rHf y ,KatUri courtroom of the city and countv when returning service men willj yv "1 ln "r"u"ed thc in building. Dr. Veen R. Greenwood have first chance at available "7 1? C ontlnoed on l'nKr Ten JODS. ulli" . -,11 V. U ' hides. With hnth rtriTOrc n.r v na ' " v . .j ,vv.vi,i6 citations for failure to keep cars under proper control, Provo police reported. The cars were driven by Ralph Lee Goodrich of Springville and draft 4-Fs, men discharged by the! mated and. tfeat additional Nazo services and non-fathers between1 reinforcementj were believed pil- os and 45 for war plant work and ing into Cassino through a rabbit ;;V ":l"'?, Inier:ai cenr. ; Premier Josef Stalin announced "If.1 VoT, WC1, A4 that the Russians drove the Nazis 1039, to March 29, 1943. from more 240 iovma on al, fronts as the following triumphs were scored by the onrushing Ukrainian forces: First army, commanded by Marshal Gregory K. Zukov; cap- ! tured the German stronghold of Proskurov after a bitter street battle and expanded its wedge punched down the western Bide of the front to Uu Dniester river border of Bukov(a and Bessarabia. The first army took a firm grip ox. 50-mile stretch of the Dnfester and also battled Its way into tlie streets of Kamenets- Podolsk, Pod-olsk, large railroad junction at the end of a line running down from Proskurov. The first array captured more than 150 towns in its newst surge. Second army, commanded by Marshal Ivan S. Konev: broke across Bessarabia on a wide front to menace the Prut river border of Rumania at several points. Capture of Stolnychany put the second army eight miles from the river while by taking Brat-ushany, Brat-ushany, 12 miles from tha Prut on the northern end of the Bes-sarabian Bes-sarabian sector, Marshal Konev's men moved to within 62 miles of a junction with the first army slashing down toward Rumania from the north. Third army, commanded by Gen. Rodion Y Malinovsky's drove the Germans from several strongholds strong-holds on the approaches to Nikolayev Nik-olayev and by capturing the railroad rail-road station of Vodopol moved to within 1 7-8 miles southeast of. the partially surrounded Black Sea port. Berlin said that above garrison had ;succeeded in regain ing a major foothold In the shattered shat-tered town after 11 days of the fierce street fighting. Battle-wearied New Zealand infantrymen (charged again and again in a vain effort to dislodge the German' Green-Devil paratroopers para-troopers frorrt the row of gutted stone houses they held along the southern and-western end of the United Press War Correspond ent James E.;floper reported from the front, however, that the fight ing appeared, fo have become stale warren of underground passages connecting t6 their stronrpoints outside thttwrft In the approximately one-quar ter of Cassirip now held by the mmmmmm russia WARSAW-;:.:; CURZON OREL GOMEL ' Korostenl (IEA Telmphoto) Russian troops pour Into Bessarabia, driving deeper Into old Poland a: Germany admits evacuation of Vinnitsa, giving Red Army control of another an-other strong point and an additional lever to pry Nazis out of thc small corner of southwest Russia they still occupy. I Hprmana wpi nix t rone'-nollit.H ar Production Chief Donald M. ,tvi r-ontinenr.ni nrf Dm rtos S.t:,,; .v. r..-i i. . jiPantnnnir a town onlv 58 . . . . . - - iinuintcv lilt: ivusami o 11 a u ' r- n " (kelson said on Friday he felt hotels, the Ducal palace, the Coli-1 smashed across the Bug river inimiles from the rail and SUD- ,., u ociv.c j.ropw- scum, i.ne ampuneaier ana a pomi an apparent swing southward to n1v rPntpr of Mvitkvina sai would cro a lone wav" t ward solving the manpower ini-j terconnectr-d by a deep tunnel!and Odessa. kk. .uisun sam ne ien u was , system, withian arterial tunnel Moscow front dispatches said that on many sectors of the Jap Invasion Force Drives Into India NEW DELHI, March 25 c Japanese invasion forces have driven deeper in.to India, Admiral JLord Louis Moun.t-batten's Moun.t-batten's headquarters announced today, but in northern Burma, American and Chinese troops outflanked the enemy oi Berlin opened last Nov. 18 in the upper Mogaung valley, jBy PHIL AtJLT L nlted Press Staff Correspondent LONDON, March 25 - Striking the greatest blow of the war at Berlin, 1,000 RAF. bombers unleashed more than 2,000 tons of destruction on the doomed German capi-jtal capi-jtal last night, against fierce ground and aerial opposition that shot down 73 of the big British Brit-ish planes. j It may have been the season's ' last obliteration attack by ti : RAF's night-flying four-engined fleet before the German capital is entirely turned over to American , daylight bombers for final destruction. de-struction. ' Otner British night raiders struck at Germany's largest naval base at Kiel in a subsidiary at tack. I Losses on the Berlin raid, which ! included 13 RCAF bombers, rep resented the. highest price Britain's Brit-ain's night-flying fleets ever have paid to raid Berlin. The greatest toll was exacted Feb. 19, when 79 planes were shot down in a night attack on Leipzig. The previous record loss over Berlin was 58 planes on the night of Aug. 23. 1 ' Despite their losses, the recoitt British armada heaped on Berlin in one night more than one fourth of the entire bomb tonnage the) Germans have been able to drop on London since the war started almost five years ago. Authorita tive estimates place at 10,000 tona the grand total of German bombs that have struck London la this, war. The air ministry said that Germany Ger-many brought Into play every searchlight and fighter plane thai could be mustered against to. British attack, which brought ".to 30,000 long tons (37,200 American. tons) the total day and nlgtlt bomb weight rained on the citadel of Nazism since the aerial battle Monte Cassino The tunnel date back to the crumbling western side of the front the Germans were using for- 16th century. When thoy reportedly ; mations no larger than regiments A southeast Asia command communique disclosed that a "strong" Japanese column had pushed more than 15 miles across German Spy Ring Gets Long-Term Prison Sentences .'.cc:o- V uiiq 0.1.LV4 oval uuiHM I opened up on us from the moment I we crossed the enemy coast," said one Lancaster pilot. "Fighter flares were floating down, some-tinr-s singly and sometimes in ! twos and threes, j "There was no question of fox- ing. We were going right into i the den. We knew it and they knew it' The Sth air force's great fleets the Manipud state border in the Somra hills tract area, and that; DETROIT. March 25 U.r Fed- were dug by treasure-seekers and of 3.000 or 4.000 men to oppose: neavy iipniing was in progrcss erai judge Edward J. Moinet to- of four-engined bombers stayed oy the tsenetctine monks for , the powerful Soviet advance. The -iuirui, mum nwui d ordered lone prison terms for home today after two successive Ing, Russians were moving so fasti or impnai. apparent oDjecuve . c,i,,n.n.i days of hammerinir Germany and of the multi-pronged Japanese ! occupied Europe, but Marauders unvf , HIV . 1 1 dllU U'Ul U lllMllutlo storage of th?ir wine, r ollowmg, Russians were moving the fall of Orvaro to thc east,1 they were capturing huge quan-large quan-large units of ikilled German con-jities of German war materials instruction in-struction corp, the Todt organ!- tact, at one point taking two I footloura an I'rnci- Imi 1 IC nollnnrd on I'mm Tea l Red Cross War Fund Only Half Atta in e d Chaplin 'Attorneys Forced to Revise Their Defense Strategy Over Yeek-End By FREDERICK C. OTTOMAN United Press Hollywood Corres pondent HOLLYWOOD, March 25 U. Jess Edward Marcum of Prove. I arH 1,11. i. ;both of whom apparently failed ' fnnitrht tonU aLt u Joan Barry that he took her to New York for immoral purposes and returned her to Hollywood for more of the same. Chief defense attorney Jerry Giesler apparently had hoped to tt enn thn nthn. ...... 1 . 1.... . . IT. . r. " V '" " weekend to revise their strateev tii th iVv of Iw-riv nrf With only six active days re-, day's pay from every working l;?.. ,of :.fi"f . 'cleOf defense against charges of women in federal court hearintr d,i -. ! . . , . x. - . "i""" jo uumuii- aim xuar- . : . . . -. ice said. Max Leetham and Dale Allred J " ' " ' ic- us) a pay irora every worKing , reeei vprf $T9L H maining in this year s Red Cross ; person throughout the country, is'cum's S200 noli war fund drive, Utah county chap-(making a special appeal this year, MaVu'thZ ter officials nnnm.nH Sol. ;., . --j. .J. I MaX LceUiam ... .jui ucij in ,1Cw ui uic ucuitinua iur ser- nasencerq in thf Tm-fnm ..- that the campaign in this area vices that the war has placed on I ere Crushed to the Utah Vallev has finally soared over the half-, the organization. This year's quo- hospitl" Sethan .uVfeJne leaving $24,923 of the county s , armed forces or their families, Allred suf ferine a b-ick an.l rib ,5?rKaer?idbe aiUinef- C6nt 8lated to-- ivi TtoW- uish rth rAlS f hV,P be allocated for civilian emergen nose and was treated at the ..tleS1n, lal, districts gencies. 'scene of the accident. ui riuu, ouu ouuoik, drive chairman said, "and from all information in-formation available the county is doing equally well." He stressed that in spite of the relatively low figure collected to date high hopes are still held for the attainment of the county goal, in view of the fact that most of the outside I Orem Woman Named District President Of Utah Federation of Women's Clubs Trustees' Approve New Student Hall At T University the Mann act case against the white-haired comedian that Miss Barry was no innocent child; that, in fact, she had boy friends from one coast to the other. He managed to get in evidence of the 9th air force, escorted bv One Japanese raiding un'i in of a German spy ring who pleaded Thunderbolt fighters, roared into that area drove even closer to the guilty to violating the espionage! northern France to smash the Manipur capital on Thusrday butjjaws j rail center of Hirson. near ther withdrew after an unsuccessful j The 34.vear.olu Beif-styled coun-! f13" border, 170 miles north-attack, north-attack, while another small enemy ;u - became a cunter.spy cast of Paris. Explosions heard detachment northeast of Imphal n h activlties were uncover-: a,cKross . channel indicated was mopped up by British lmper- ed was sentenced to 12 years im-ither air formations were aweep-ial aweep-ial troops. prisonment iin the French coast. In the Kabaw valley sector' . . .,, u uj Decreasing hours of darkness southeast of Imphal, the Japanese! Jude Moinet said he had gn en, and increa8ing destruction in Bcr-advanced Bcr-advanced from the south on the n,8ldf"t10" Tamu-Palel road, the main route given the government calcu-,are wasted by exploding harmless-from harmless-from the east into the Manipur! n8fs'ste valley, but other enemy troops I J"nr w Thoma, 2n! dicat?s that the weight of the north of the road were dislodged tpnced t 16 years ,m ri8onmenti stuck logically can be expected from a newly-won position. Theiafter nis conv'ictlon to a federal,10 hft to daylight precision as- iiuauio auavj tai I ivu uub Ailri-, prt.-f iurV The Japanese apparently were', "c '"" "c""'gets of value with Norden boinb-iTnD, boinb-iTnD, to Mrs. Theresa Behrens, former. "iKf . ...(.'tJlfi. w -V.Clkl311 O. DllV IK . . , . , ""(S " Cl.UiavT .j k v..- .u.v.uuwv,.-. An RAF nri saults by American planes that can pinpoint the remaining tar- An RAF spokesman said that out of 103 high priority industrial targets In Berlin, 60 remain untouched un-touched and 15 are only damaged. The remaining 75 factories, scat- who got the receipt. Judge J. F. Plans for the erection of a new j-tuUent haU pr the Brlgham iuu,is uimcismrjf ..t-auiun irvnvcu ; i. u Connor snenceu mm approval at uje annual budget meeting of the board of trustees SPRINGVILLE Mrs. J. Erval r- towns surrounding Provo have m lslmsen m. rem, was elect-iv-js not reported in their collections asi? pJe , 016 .irat distrlct- , ' yet Rumors nave been circulating jelubs at the tri-ennial convention! Giesler also sought to go into ! minent. ) of the institution, rlday it was; - Beverlv i rATRIOT CLEARED rnr"?a,,rent rWlKUn HiHs. but the judge finally an- ''frSgJAf&fl't? ' ' . nounccd that nothing about Miss y-XMi . ine new Duuamg win nouse student activities, such as student-, student-, body and class officers, publica- ! tions, tlie University Press, book in order to cut off the Manipur: ' " valley from the Kabaw valley and She was sentenced to 20 years, deDrive British forces on the ren- and fainted as Judge Moinet pro- that fact that her bill at the Va.l-jtral border front of their only nounced sentence. dorr-Astoria hotel in New iork ,8UpDiy une except by air. Mrs. Emma (Mama) Leonhardt, j tered among the ruins of Berlin, had been paid in October. 1942, i (Axis broadcast claimed that!motherin-law of a high Nazi of- are considered perfect targets for before Chaplin had arrived, but the Japs had reached Tamu, just ficial, received a sentence of five! daylight bombers. wnen Giesler inea 10 aiscover. inside the Burma border. nrt that years. thc fall of the town. 46 miles' Carl Wilhelm Leonhardt, 65, southeast of Imphal, was im- husband of Mrs. Leonhardt, and i Walter Joseph Abt, oG, Romeo, i Mich., described in the original in- tn nast few davs that mnnv r.,t conduclcd in Springville Satur- panies are making payroll deduc- day' Shc succeeds Mrs. Harold tions in order to show a 100 per Uhn,tfl"m' Springville, who was cent donation from every employe, 1 in charSC of the convention ses-local ses-local headquarters revealed ves-Slons" terday. However, a checkup' of! Other officers of the district in-Utah in-Utah county businesses showed no! Called at the afternoon meeting auch case, in line with Red Cross 'were Mrs. Wendell Erlandson of I policy of having all donations 'Payson, vice president; Mrs. Ar-voluntary. Ar-voluntary. iihus Finley of Springville, re-J Because of the voluntary na- lording secretary; Mrs. E. B. Ter-j ture of the drive. Mr. Bullock ry of Orem. corresponding secre-i aid, "it is imperative that 'every ! tary; Mrs. P. L. Jones of Nephi, I home be contacted in order that auditor; Mrs. iiutn crocKDank or the goal may be reached. Utah Spanish' Fork, historian; Mrs. Vic-county," Vic-county," he said, "has never fail-1 tor J. Bird of Provo, treasurer; ed to reach a quota given. This ! Mrs. Preston G. Hughes of Span-quota Span-quota is really a challenge for a!ih Fork, nominated state direct-county direct-county record." I or, to be ratified at the state con-He con-He urged that all those who vention. All officers were elected have not as yet made a contribu- by acclamation, tion "try to have their money j Governor Speaks ready so that workers won't have j Governor Herbert B. Maw to make too many unnecessary gave principal address at the calls." The workers are now con- :afternoon meeting, on the subject, centraung uieir enoris in a -'Women and Peace." He describ- P. house-to-house canvass, follow ing the March 1-12 busines distract dis-tract solicitation. The annual drive for funds. which is asking at least one full ed the industrial development of Utah since the war began and the problems arising from this development de-velopment and outlined women's iCoaUaued on I's Threc i - " dictment as a personal friend of KNOXVILLE, Tenn., March 25 Paul Joseph Goebbels, Nazi propa-a.P) propa-a.P) Judge Charles Kelly today ganda minister .each received 10 Barry, except her transcontment- dismissed murder charges against p ear terms. al relations with the multi-mil- j an army paratrooper, declaring lionaire Chaplin, was germane. i r,;.r: ;S .7.;:ily afternoon, caused Giesler to n 1 -fa i 1 i t i a a ' . i the beaming Miss Barry, and sent J. William Knight of Provo jhim talking glumly out of the gave the campaign for funds a!courtroom wltn hia cient when thumping start with a $1000 cashthe triaI waa reCessed until Tues- contriDuuon. btuoents, alumni:dav rnornjnp' M-t . 41 in1 '""illll'S Churchill To Give World Broadcast LONDON, March 25 (CLE) Prime Minister Churchill probably prob-ably will rally Britain close" to fever pitch for the invasion ht MRS. J. E. CHRISTENS EN Charles H. Carr, the flaming- ( ontlnnr) on Pmm Trn and friends of the university will be solicited for funds. The trustees approved the budget, bud-get, also the following promotions in rank: From associate professor to professor, Russel Swensont E-ogar m. uenson. Ariel s. Bailir, yoRK. March 25 (CJ!) Alonzo J. Morley. From assistant Th voung naval pilots are under professor to associa te professor, arrest ..awitlng- disciplinary ac- v Bynrr, El8iC tC' CaI" tion ' for stunting in fighter planes roll Hugh Jeterson. Irene S. over New york City, the third iauY-., Elnio Coffman, John,naval district announced today. R. Halliday and C. Lynn Hayward. Tne men were Ensigns Robert From instructor, to assistant pro-! v Elshire 20, Omaha; Ensign fessor, Harold W. Lee, Orea B. Donald Vitrous. 22, Pueblo. Colo.; Tanner, Ralph A. Brltsch, John Ensign Norman D. Satterthwaite, H. Wing, A. John Clarke. 22t Tacoma. Wash. Appointment of H. Wayne! Flying sparkling new Wild Cat fighters, the young pilots uiruiea thousands of New York city office workers and pedestrians Friday with a series of low altitude ca- from the bench that "any red-! ADRIATIC PORTS HIT blooded American who wouldn't LONDON. March 25 (C.r.) Am-1 western Europe in a world-wide become aroused when statements erican Flying Fortresses have broadcast at 8 P.M. (4 P.M. EWT) cut short his cross-examination of iare maae against our government. DomDea me lugosiav yvariauc ( aunday. is not patriotic. ports oi apm ana aiDeniK, giving (Churchill's speech will be cr- The paratrooper, George E. In- strong air support to an Allied jried in the United States by tho zer, 20, had been accused of kill- amphibious force which earlier jfour radio networks.) ing Robert Ricker in a fight here this weak wiped out the Nazi He already has told American, after the latter allegedly express-j garrison on Solta island, at the invasion forces that they will ed a desire that Japan would win i sea approach to Split, it was an- strike "soon" and only yesterday i the war. 'nounced today. Three Naval Pilots Arrested for Stunting Over New York Driggs as associate professor of English was also; announced. Prof. Driggs is professor of English and head of th English department depart-ment st State Teachers college in iCoatlnaed on Pag Ten One pilot, dropped out of the 'Trenton, N. J., "prior to return to lover New York at all. formation of three as it moved .their squadrons." They were along the east river, swooped un- charged with violating the civil der four bridges, and soared up . aeronautictl regulation which pro-to pro-to join the others. hibits flights under 1,000 feet over Workers in the Empire State congested areas. building, the world's highest sky-! The three had been assigned scraper, said all three circled said Allied commanders were In i the midst of "most anxious and inspiring weens wnen an unougnia are turned to striking the great blow which may bring peace and freedom nearer to the men of all the United Nations and indeed to all the world." l He will carry with him to tha microphone vivid impressions of Allied strength as emphasized in his-two day tour of American, lit- around it. Some said it was the 30th floor level; others, the 45tli floor. Their flight was strictly unauthorized, un-authorized, the third naval district dis-trict made, clear in publishing their names and the fact that they were confined to the limits the na val aircraft facility. Mercer Field. com5Sd.,ytlS official annoS Pa"y.wi DiPj nun ri , Duptciuc wiiuuouwi J western front forces. 1: ment said, and Friday were sent to Mercer Field, Trenton, for duty. There they were sent to Linden division di-vision of General Motors corporation, corpora-tion, linden, N. J., to fly back three new Hellcats. The announce ment pointed out that it had not been necessary for them to fly Churchill completed hia ins pec tion tour yesterday at an infant ry base, where he told the American Ameri-can soldiers that they could pV proach the impending struggle "with feelings of the utmost eoa fidence and resolution." |