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Show Wairt-.ili .1 ' W. 5.1- 1 Allied Armies lri Europe To Bi s RearouDed Their Banner Flies In Freedom BY ETUEL . MOORE United Frets Staff Correspondent V. WASHINGTON, April 21 OJJD r Military observer! here ioday saw -Allied' armlesv4n western Europe oeing regrouped, wun jut. wen. George S. Patton's wide-ranging 3rd U. S. army aiming southward to help In the mop-up In the : mountains and the 1st army moving mov-ing to meet the Russians. " Heretofore the 3rd was favored to tie the first to link upvwith the Russians near Dresden. Today the. 1st army seemed destined to play this role as the weight of the 3rd army's attack shifted south ward. : The 3rd Is now fighting on a fairly wide front from Chemnitz to near Grafenwohr, with heavy spearheads pointing towards Re-censburc. These' dispositions suggested the 3rd army mignt join me 7tn army driving south toward Munichand the southern German border, or might be commencing a double envelopment through the mountains moun-tains aimed at Prague. Either of these thrusts would lead into the area where the Germans Ger-mans probably will wage their stubbornest defense. The Germans are probably cap able of making a firm stand In Czechoslovakia behind the little Masrinot line the Czechs built back in the 1930's when they planned to defend their country against the Nazis. That was before the Sudeten encroachment in 1938. At the heart of these defenses are the famous 'Skoda armament works, or what is left of them. If Patten's army turns south toward Regensburg and Munich, it will be striking at the supposed German last-stand redoubt in the rnoMTi3'" of Germany and Austria, Aus-tria, stretching about 200 miles eastward from Switzerland. Eisenhower Asks Americans Visit Atrocity Camps PARIS, April 21 (U.R) General Dwight P. Eisenhower has cabled President Truman asking that American congressmen and editors edi-tors visit German concentration camps where Nazi atrocities were committeed, it was disclosed today. to-day. .Eisenhower asked that 12 congressmen con-gressmen and 12 newspaper editors edi-tors leave for Germany immediately immedi-ately to follow members of the British parliament in a tour of the camps. r. : . -,,,, . -tr ' -' ,-?' - .-' ""' r ., J ; J ' ' ! . r- i ' ' ' - i , 4 . t v : .4 A' (5H&Y Official Photo from NA) Proudly carrying the Red flag, Russians freed from Nazi slave labor march to a rear area on the Western front while their lib-i lib-i era tors press onward toward Berlin. 1800 Allied Airmen Beaten, Bayonetted By German Guards Hollywood Pastor Appeals Verdict r In Paternity Case HOLLYWOOD, April 21 (OR) The Rev. Cecil L, King, pastor of ) the Sunland Wayside cnapei, sata today that he would appeal a jury verdict naming him father of a choir singer's nine-month-old son.: Throughout the entire trial, the husky preacher insisted his relations rela-tions with Mrs. Bonnie Allen, wife of a serviceman overseas, were only "those proper between a minister and one oz nis hock. A jury of nine women and three men took lust 59 minutes yester day' to decide it believed Mrs. Al len's story that she became a mother as a result of moonlight trysts with the pastor after prayer meetings. Most imnortant fishery on the Atlantic coast is the menhaden industry, centered in North Carolina. Caro-lina. Over a billion fish are taken annually and are processed for their oil, for animal feed and fertilizer. Hitler Gang Hideaway? -T- i in ii i ll ' 'iiil''-ffw in.i nn-irif T in ii ii i 1 1 ii The quaint-looking town, of Eichstatt, above, which nestles in the Bavarian Alps not far from Hitler's aerie at Berchtesgaden, is reported re-ported to be the new center of German government activities, following flight of Nazi bigwigs .from Berlin. SUNDAY HERAID FROVO. tTTAR COTJUTT, C3TAB Nevvspqper Frowns Oniottery, Plan for Delegate PARIS, April 2i dim The army newspaper Stars and Stripes frowned today on suggestions sug-gestions to pick by lottery a GI delegate to thV San Francisco conference. The publication's attitude was contained in an editorial "thanks anyway" in answer to a proposal by Sen. Warren G. Magnuson, Et, Wash. "A 'typical GI' -hurriedly drawn from, a combat theater and with little time for serious study would find himself bewildered and confused con-fused by the complexity of the problems," the editorial said. "He would arrive in the states with pomp and ceremony. He would be exploited as the eighth wonder of the world. He would be wined, dined, cheered iand flattered. . "He would have words placed PAGE 5 ' Germgiii Transfer Son of Winant . LONDON, fipm 21 OUO A liberated lib-erated London! Times correspond ent said today that John Winant, son of the American ambassador to Britain, was transferred from a German prison camp three days before Jt wasj captured by American Amer-ican armoredj forces. He said Lieutenant Lord Las-celles, Las-celles, nephew of British King George VI, and General Bor Komorowski, Polish leader of the Warsaw uprising, were among other prominent prisoners removed re-moved by the! Germans. American forces reached the camp April 12. in his .mouth by every demagogue with an axe to grind and would be a two-headed calf at the world conference set up for a dignified study of a confusing situation. , "He would have a wonderful time, but it is doubtful If he could contribute much to the epochal meeting." i BY RONALD CLARK United Press War Correspondent 21ST ARMY GROUP HQ "April 21 (U.R) Eighteen hundred Allied airmen were beaten and bayon etted by Nazi guards on a torture march they dubbed "the Stettin jaunt," a Canadian survivor said today. The Canadian, Warrant Ofifcer Armand Joseph Pambrun, Boni- No. 10 Downing Street Damaged By German Bomb LONDON, April 21 (U.R) The office of censorship revealed today to-day that No. 10 Downing street, residence of the prime minister, kn1 kaati 11 Kv O VAmK CAmO timA XUIVI lGVll 111b J J t WVlltW ago and was propped up with wooden supports. Photographs showing German air raid damage were revealed, but no date for the damage was given. It was announced, however, that an entire stick of bombs fell in Whitehall in February, 1943. Great Britain has contracted for a minimum oi nz.uuu.uuu pounoa of beef and 105,000,000 dozen eses. powdered and wnoie, tms year. Master File May Reveal Fate Of All Missing Allied Airmen By ELEANOR PACKARD United Press War Correspondent NUREMBERG, April 21 (U.PJ The fate of thousands of American' Ameri-can' and British airmen listed as "missing" will 'be known soon. Documents recording all Allied fliers downed in German territory terri-tory during the war were cap tured today. A master file, containing the histories of more than 45,000 British and American airmen, was found in the nearby town of Buchenbuhl. Officers consider it one of the most important finds in Germany to date. The last enry, dated April 7, Hold Everything "He says the walls are dull, so he's wallpapering his tank!" WORRIED? About Payroll Records? Withholding Tax Records? Social Security Records? Un-Employment Tax Records? Sales Tax Records? Estimated Tax, or Income Tax Records? Why not pass the above worries wor-ries over to me? Very reasonable reason-able monthly rates. Are You WORRIED about . . Advertising? Finances? Are you worried about ANYTHING? ANY-THING? Perhaps I can help you. Almo B. Simmons Books Kept. Systems Installed B. Sc. Public Accountant SPECIALIZING in Taxes! Notary Public Office: 45 N. University Ave. Room 3-t-Pbone 860 Residence: 418 No. Sth West Phone: 1298 But Why WORRY ABOUT ANYTHING? JUST REACH FOR YOUR NEAREST PHONE! Attention Veterans Do you need any Government papers filled out, and notorized? notor-ized? Let me do that for you. , . . Absolutely No Charge! . . . It Will, Indeed, be a PLEASURE! was of an American pilot who, it said, was found dead. The records revealed that more than $1,000,' 000 in various kinds of currency, had been taken from captive airmen. air-men. Of this amount, only $4,000 was recovered. Bushels of rings, watches, flying orders, love letters, photo graphs and other items taken from fallen airmen whether alive or dead were on file. Some 400 displaced persons, including Russians, Dutchmen, Yugoslavs, Poles, Frenchmen and Italians, worked in the center. When Ger man authorities fled they took many valuables. Slave clerks 350 men and 50 women lived in the same camp. Most of the women either had borne children or werepregnant. When Lt. Col. D. T. Fuller of North Tarrytown, N. Y., heard that women slave workers were wearing American fraternity pins, he assigned Capt. Carl Luetke of San Antonio, Tex., to investigate. Leutke soon discovered the file and the stored valuables. Individual Indivi-dual cards listed the place where the airman had been broueht down, whether he had been alive or dead when found. Those who died after capture were recorded with the cause of death and the burial site. Capt. Charles Richard Satteast. president of Minnesota State Teachers college, was put in charge of the file. He ordered the workers to return all rifled pos sessions, xney claimed German authorities had invited them to help themselves when American artiilery began shelling the town. 30-DAY LEAVE SOUGHT IN BILL WASHINGTON, April 21 (U.PJ Sen. Pat McCarran, D., Nev.. has introduced a bill to give enlisted men 30 days' leave before being honorably dicharged. The measure meas-ure would provide that the leave be terminated 30 days after arrival ar-rival at home. f ice, Manitoba, an airforce navi gator, said the victims included 1,000 Americans. Pambrun said that during the two mile march, which took place last July, German marines clubbed and jabbed the fliers to tempt them to escape. If they tried, they were mowed down with machine guns by other ma rines. The prisoners originally were held in Stalag Luft VII in East Prussia, but because of the Rus sian advance they were sent by train to Memel, thence by boat to Swinemunde. Enroute they passed through Stettin, giving the trip the title "the Stettin jaunt." 'The trouble began when wei left the boat," said Pambrun. "The guards were husky German ma rines, young fellows about 18. Our lads were half-starved and soft from years in prison camp. 'The guards fixed bayonets and an officer yelled in German 'quick march.' As we started running and stumbling the marines closed in. They slashed our backs, shoulders, shoul-ders, and groins. If a man stumbled and fell, he would get the bayonet and be clubbed with rifle butts. "Germn civilians stood along j the road and laughed at us. "The marines had police dogs which would rush in on the fallen men," biting their arms and legs. Everything began swimming be fore my eyes. I stumbled and fell. A marine clubbed me with a rifle butt. I passed out and when I came to, he was standing over met with a bayonet. I asked why he was doine this, and he said: " 'You fliers bombed our wives and children.' " Italy Princess Dies In Camp LONDON. Aoril 21 (U.R) A cor respondent of the Daily Tele-eranh Tele-eranh reported today that Prin cess Mafalda. 42. daughter of King Victor Emmanuel of Italy, died at the infamous prison camp at Buchenwald, Germany, of gan- erene resulting from an arm wound suffered in a bomb raid last Ausust. An inquiry conducted April 17, according to the correspondent, showed that the princess' hus band. Prince Phillip of Hesse, had been arrested by the Germans first and that she was not arrested until after the faU of Italy, on pretext of her family's treacher ous attitude toward the Nazis. NOVEL BANNER MIDDLESBORO, Ky., April 21 (U.R) This is the way the Middels- boro Daily News felt about the death of War Correspondent Ernie Pvle. 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