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Show SUNDAY HERALD PROVO. UTAH COTJHTT. UTAH SUNDAY. APCUST 13. 148 Five U: S: Airmen Buried In Mass Grave, Americans Find PAGE9Ynnlcc in Eurnne, Incensed at Yliaoslavs I klnrmnl AII.Ahifo RranA hlniir i - w - - J - -1 J I f it ww I I, W W I M U W M I Back to Stores BELGRAbE, Yugoslavia, Aug. 23 (U.PJ The burned and mangled bodies of five American airmen hot down by two Yugoslav fighter planes last Monday were found buried in a mass grave to day at the mountain vilege of Koprivnik. northwest of Marshal Tito's vacation resort at Bled. Local Yugoslav militiamen who buried the bodies so surreptitiously surreptiti-ously Marshal Tito declared they had not been found, led U. 5 Ambassador Richard C. Patter- Eyewitnesses Say Weather Yas Foul; Contradict Tito son, Jr., and members of an Amer ican graves registration team to the grave All five, bodies were so mangled identification may be difficult They bad been put into a com mon grave in the village ceme tery. two hours' walk from the place where the unarmed American Ameri-can transport crashed in flames under Yugoslavs' aerial guns. Harold Stantz. secretary of the American embassy, here, said Patterson reported that the wreckage of the. plane was partly consumed by fire and the bodies had been sered. The militia men didn't know whether they had buried five or six bodies that badly were they mangled. i St mm - Patterson was accomDanied to h mv hv hie militnrv attache I . 1 " w J - - J ti- V Col. Richard C. Partridge. Ttz TRIESTE, Aug. 24 Oi-PJ-TW to lk .bout the crsh or the Americans who saw Yugoslav: r k ,,,.. k rw!f ugmer pjanes apparently iena- of ciothinjz or other means ofU leased P-5l s shoot a defenseless identification had been found at army transport out of the sky onthe place where the plane crashed August 19 said today that the'in mountain country near weather was foul, directly con- a gmau jap tradicting Marshal Titos state-1 p-ttrson and Partridge after ment that it was fair and the pilot viewing the disinterred bodies. American lis in Paris?erowd before entrance of Yugoslav legation in demonstration protesting -xugoaiaYa murewun out stands by to avert auoraer. should have known where he was going. The Americans, Richard S. Go-lick Go-lick of Sheboygan, Wis., and Paula S. Filipus of Detroit, Mich., both UNRRA employees, saw the riddled rid-dled plane roll over on its side and plunge smoking into the mountains. J They witnessed the attack at Bled, the Yugoslav summer capital capi-tal where Marshal Tito saw it. "It was completely overcast; there wasn't a break in the clouds," they said. It was so unpleasant, they added, add-ed, that nobody at the resort of Bled had gone swimming that day. Golick. a former infantryman in the U. S. army, and Miss Fipius were vacationing, at Bled. They work for UNRRA at Belgrade. Their version of the attack was given to military authorities here to be forwarded to the state department de-partment in Washington. Tito notified Ambassador Rich ard C. Patterson yesterday that all aboard that plane must have perished. Miss Filipus, who saw the at tack from the porch, as Golick did. told the same story. They both denied reports that "two parachutes" had been seen drifting from the stricken plane. When they drove to mountains afterwards in an attempt to find the plane, they heard many natives na-tives say they had seen parachutes, para-chutes, however. were scheduled to talk to a wounded Turkish officer who is under treatment in a hospital for bullet wounds in the chest received re-ceived when Yugoslav fighter planes shot up another transport on Aug. 9. OnTheir Way Utah to Have Air Unit In National Guard SALT LAKE CITY, Aug. 24 (U.PJ The air unit of the Utah National Guard should be activated acti-vated within the next two weeks, Maj. Gen. William H. Hale, commanding com-manding general of the fourth air force, announced today, after inspecting the air base. Hale, whose headquarters are at Hamilton Field. Calif., conferred con-ferred here with Brig. Gen. J. Wallace West, commander of the Utah National Guard. 8TOWE RELATIVE DIES LOS ANGELES, Aug. 24 (U.R) Funeral services will be held Monday for Miss Mary Beecher Howe, 80, retired music teacher and distant relative of Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of "Uncle Tom's Cabin," and her father, the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. Miss Howe, formerly on the Government To Sell Arms Plant SALT LAKE CITY. Aug. 24 (U.R) The Remington Arms plant in southwest Salt Lake City has been declared surplus by the war department and will be sold to the highest bidder by the warj assets administration, it was announced an-nounced here today. The plant was built in 1941 and was formerly a part of the Utah ordnance depot. It was turned over to . the Remington Arms Co.. which used it for manufacturing small arms ammunition. am-munition. The plant covers an area of 5,000 acres and has approximately 175 buildings ranging from storage stor-age sheds to large manufacturing buildings. Two of the larger buildings at present are being used by the WAA for the storage of surplus materials to be sold at auction by the George A. Fuller Co., of Salt Lake City. By GRANT DILLMAN United Presa Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Aug. 24 uR- Normal all-white bread and flour were on their way back to the nation's retail stores today along with" more whiskey and beer. . Americans were warned, how ever, that Because oi ine woria grain shortage they must continue to get along at least for while with less wheat ana xiour man during normal times Secretary of Agriculture Clin ton P, Anderson, in a broad over hauling of the department's grain conservation program, said that: 1. An order issued last March, requiring millers to manufacture 80 per cent extraction flour instead in-stead of 72 per ceril flour, will be rescinded Sept. 1. The order resulted in the so-called "beige' bread 2. This country will earmark ud to 400.000.000 bushels of grain and grain products from the 1946 crop for . export to deficit - areas overseas Instead of the 250,000,000 bushels originally promised 3. Because world grain reserves are low, Americans must do their share by continuing to limit the amount of wheat and flour used Arkansas contains every kind I by food processors to 87 per cent of tree that grows in the temper- of last year s consumption Lumbermen to GetExtra Sugar - WASHINGTON, Aug. 24 (U.R made t his request to help 4 ate zone. cent more grain for beverage alcohol in September than in August Brewers will get about 21.5 per cent more grain. This is 85 per cent of last year's base instead of 70 per cent. 5. Wet and dry processors such as syrup makers and food and feed manufacturers will re ceive five per cent more corn than their current quota. Officials said elimination of flour extraction order may be the first step toward a reduction in bread and pastry prices. OPA said previously it would cut bakery bak-ery prices when flour restrictions restric-tions were lifted, ' The principal reason for the bread price increase, the 87 per cent .flour restriction order, still is in effect Another order reduc ing the size of bread loaves 10 per cent also will remain in effect Anderson said the department had been anxious to relax its grain restrictions. He said this now is possible because of the prospect of record crops and re control of livestock which will limit the use of feed grains. "The time has not come, however, how-ever, when all restrictions can be removed," he said. "The use of our grain supplies must still be The OPA is allowing lumbermen six extra 'pounds'7 of' sugar a month. Housing Expediter Wilson W. Wyatt announced today. Wyatt said the .increase was needed timber for home building. He said the lumbermen clalmeM the heavy nature of their work required more sugar. AT LAST . . THEY HAVE ARRIVED- THE NEW VITALITONE HEALTH MACHINES Come in and see them MONDAY afternoon, af-ternoon, Aug. 26th. Or CALL for an early appointment. We specialize in Reducing . . . Rejuvi nation . . . Rebuilding ... and RELAXATION. Remember NEW 4. Distillers will get 20 per managed with care." Vitalitone Health Machines At the TREU METHOD. OF REDUCING SALON KOVO BLDG. Room 6 Phone 2218 STEPPED-UP PROGRAM FOR OCCUPATION TROOPS SEATTLE. Aug. 24 (U.R) Officials Of-ficials of the Seattle port of embarkation em-barkation said today a stepped- it Bring your flower pots and vases in and let us re-plant them in new soil. We specialise la Corsages and Party Arrangements PROVO GREENHOUSE PHONE 8-0 Where The Flowers Grow up training program nad been Oberlin college factulty. died yes- instituted for soldiers being sent terday in a local hospital after to Japan and Korea and that suffering a stroke four hours I under the plan 5.000 GI's would earlier. be turned out daily. 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