OCR Text |
Show Buy War Bonds THE WEATHER UTAH: Clear tonight aad Friday, except Increasing clondlnee Friday Fri-day afternoon; little change la teroperator. and gfy fht chanfr to light INFANTILE PARALYSIS FIFTY-EIGHTH YEAR, NO. 162 5VIrpa PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1944 COMPLETE UNITED PRESS DPTiT FTUF rTXTTC TELEGRAPH NEWS SERVICE rilC f 1 V L, ls,IN 1 0 rr A f 1 UVJ 11 ran n n tn 0 u u War Bond Sale In Provo Hits S17711flMarfr Utah County Towns to Make Stiff Assault 1 On $4,000,000 Goal Fourth war loan bond sales in the Provo area as of last night, amount to $177,- lt8. it was announced today by Frank J. Earl, city chairman, chair-man, although the drive has barely pot under way. This sum. compared with Trovo's tentative quota of $1,425,-OOO $1,425,-OOO chows there is still a long ways to go to reach the goal. The Utah county quota, most of it in E bond?. is cloee to $4,000,- oOo. The total was reported this morning from the bond issuing centers in the area which Includes In-cludes the -payroll-deducting offices of-fices at Geneva, Ironton, and U. P. shops, credited to Provo from the company headquarters Eiaht Die When Army PI ane Hits Oakland Home 1 fi . I! r - LJicL-iL ? in-- J' v V- , - . t British Take Minturno On Italian Front Anchor of Nazi line Captured in Spite Of Heavy Fighting ALLIED HEADQUAR TERS, Algiers, Jan. 20 British units of the Allied 5th army drove forward through savage German resistance re-sistance on a 10-mile front north of the Garigliano river and fought their way into the enemy stronghold of Mintur no, western anchor of the Nazi line in Italy, it was disclosed today. to-day. ( Th German D N B news agency revealed today that Nazi forces had abandoned Mintum Russians I tireaten to Trap 300,000 Germans Secure of German Stronghold Is Hailed by Stalin in Special Order of the Day and 20 Salvos of Moscow's Victory Cannon LONDON, Jan. 20 u The Red army has captured the ancient citadel of Novgorod, key German defense bastion bas-tion 100 miles south of Leningrad, in a powerful offensive, threatening to trap 300,000 Nazi troops, Moscow announced officially today. Premier Josef Stalin announced the seizure of Novgorod, Nov-gorod, greatest German stronghold between Lake Ilmen and Leningrad, soon after the Nazi high command acknowl edged the loss of the town jin what it called a shortening shorten-ing of the lines. Gen. Kyril A. Mcretskov's Casualties In Italy, 19,210 Stimson Says British Coastal Guns Sink German Ship in Channel Rescue workers and firemen sift through ".till smoldering wreckage of Army plane in which eight crimen j after hea fighting opening the Uah -neBB a laree perished when ship crashed into Oakland. Calif, home. Although home and plane were completely ae- troyed, occupants of home miraculously escaped unlnlurea. CIO Urges Support For Legislation On Soldier Vote PATSUN An enthusiastic rally ral-ly for all workers for the Payson urea who are to j put over the fourth war loan drive Was held Wednesday night in the junior high school with McKay Chris-tensen, Chris-tensen, general chairman, hi charge. 7ta.rrnce Bamberger of Salt Lake Ot;. representing the state committee, Mark Anderson, Utah WASHINGTON. Jan. 20 t-R1 county chairman and John Bees-j The CIO committee for political ley, district chairman were the(action today pressed a last-min-gucst speakers and gave the ute drive, to mobolize support for corkers some valuable inst rue-federal soldier-vote legislation a t.jons. arious co-chairrhen ipoKe;the controversial issue came a brifly. ietep cloeetwBhowdown in the Roy Broadbent. O. D. Robin-, house, on and Mrs. Owen Dixon are local Sidney Hillman, chairman of assistants to Mr. Christensen. !,he CTO comrnitte". appealed for tele- Eight Jap Ships Blasted in Rabaul Attack; 12 American Planes Shot Down urn v t r a Mr"ltiIi rlVA nn )Iip Applan waf, the main coastal !German ofS French coast highway to Rome.) near Sap Gris Nez today and Ger- ADVANCED ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, HEAD-QUARTERS, New Guinea, Jan. 20 l'.P American planes, intensifying inten-sifying attempts to strange transportation supplying Rabaul, New Britain; pounded that southern south-ern hub oi Japanese southwest Pacific defenses with, one of its most deva?tattng raids, but U.S Klhmff thmTh norrnn.-, mn .!" S" uc OLrilLB OI ...g, ... Dover replied with a bombard- r n inb o-n ti neefs anH hrno ti till nrs' r,T !urr r ;ment of the southeast HtTlUOi liifl Ifl 1 untunes JJieDJJ it ever received over the area, was aruiounced today. More than 100 torpedo planes, ed their offensive forward two miles or more from their three main bridgeheads on the north bank of the Gargliano. Slash Deep Sallen ta By nightfall yesterday, 48 hours after starting their big English ! coast. j The trans-channel exchange of I gunfire was one of the heaviest of the war. It was touched off by an attempt of German ships to steal through the straits. U. S. Casualties Include 2,985 Killed; Raid On Nazis Success WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 0J.R American casualties in Italy from the original landing there in Sep- Red army crashed through a j tember total 19.210 to date Sec-powerful Sec-powerful German defense system jxetary of War Henry L, Stimson and after a serfes of skillful ! sa today flanking maneuvers stormed and , . . . c. , , . ,- -.. . . These included 2985 killed, 12,- captured Novgorod, one of the! 1 B ' " . . ' oldest of Russian cities above 504 wounded, and 3,21 missing. Stimson pointed out particularly particular-ly the casualties of the 100th in fantry battalion, composed of Quota for the Pavson area js.fuppo". ?or ieaerai pian m iu-! jivebomberp, and fighters from 1200,000 not to include bank pur- grams to V. enneu wuiKie and R0iomon3 bases blasted eight Jap- chasea and is divided in the vari-! wvcrnor lnomBfl UI a.ncse ships at Simpson Harbor ty," he added, citing strong antiaircraft anti-aircraft f're over the base 4nd adding that "the Japanese have nhtlllv" ' f hi ye .lananBK mm 1 rm m T rvl on pel i ,M ' ' ' ' 1 " -. - " . , t. j . , .nV unk t nih7 wwTft salients into the Nazi net!"1 " penman nea and sank, two others were lert i v forttfiratinn trnnrHinp Suns on the French coat replied burning and probably sinking, and JkA' , 'or";15atin"f ( wltliln five mtnutea. the other three were damage BnbAp0?n" For nearly three hours shells harfiv ji tK " Amprimn nin hp , flank ' their Cassino defenses I ' ... , . losses were among Wgnlfistf direcUons. Brititili officials said mum aratuae under neavy cioutis. ""A. .rV.rr VJTi Uieir batteries fired 80 rounds he-limn!,.- !., A navy spokesman at Gud-! u" ",f l , ' I " ,c twen 5 and 8 a. m. fenYive t nr,i? tir, th m ih,ieast flank of their attack, Tufo. . I rensn es . 81 Lake Ilmen, Stalin announced. Stalin Hails Victory- Hailing the victory In a special ; Americans of Japanese ancestry. order of the day. Stalin called largely from Hawaii. They per-Novgorod per-Novgorod a.n "important eco- formed Verv creditably in heavy nomic enter of our country, a action ln lt'alVi he gaid large corrununications center, and josses to date have bjn' P6 a strong German defense base." j killed, 221 wounded and 17 miss- The fall of Novgorod, In Ger-jing. man hands since Aug. 2f 1941,' A battalion ordinarily number fog-covered i tr out the anchor of the enemy slightly more than 1000 men so defenses on the 100-mile front the Japanese-American oatuuion British long-range coastal guns ! northward to Leningrad and open-' probably suffered casualties to British had slashed Pened fire a" soon the ships d thp way for a Soviet surge about one-third of ita men. iw nines westward io J-aKe reip-j ai nis preo tunierciiuc ou.iv us, which would trap the mas-ison also said that In the South sive invasion forces holding the Pacific, in the Cape Gloucester staggered salient reaching up to area Ln New Britain 3,100 dead the old czarist capital. i Japanese have been counted Th I'irtnrv alert trav nft-H'iii ! whileAmerican losses there in- 228 killed and 694 wouad- th laHn Russian nt . l T t. T,, - - ed . alcanali terming the raid the lf "A J' "A.,: . w.l The ships were believed to have ! in th tnincrH nM vt. Stimson said "most aevasUting yet made by ! . or",ea l "1 comprised an enemy convoy which ! h sVr hp7 IU1"11' BJ1U 'USC1,IU' JU"ro 'nailed from either RoiiWn nr ;"r . i wsv nir ralH Jan 11 nn German - - ------ - ua nr 1 ennntr i Ant on BAifrc - - Uvs Sauth Pacific air against Rabaul," said 17 reports from 'Great Britain indicated the three- force direct ous communities a follows: Pay- 'New York and John W. Bricker of Mon,iay pnooting down 18 en-! hits aJld 13 damaging near-misses don, .$152.7!0: Genola, $3500; piuojjt, up iui loshPin .tlO.OOO- Pantaauin. S20.-;lc 1'""" i"1""'" OOO; Spring Lake $2500; ElbertaJ 1 1250; Dividend, $10,000. SPANISH FORK Showing ination. Hillman drew almost immed-tat immed-tat response from Wtllkie, who said he favored federal-soldier- vote legislation. 1, : - ii i. . : yar eagt-risB uu Far Ljuipaue in: ..j do not behev, that it IS DOS ine lourin war loan, suuaems oijh,- in nrartical manner under cmy pianrs and prooaDiy io otn-om otn-om of th.1 intercentlne' force of more than 100 planes thrown into the air by the enemy, a communique com-munique said. Twelve American planes were shot down, and the loss brought a warning against overconfidence were scored. Wealthy Chicago Woman Shot; Probe To Seek Slayer I Calais for the North Sea. Rome Raided By south of Minturno. All three spearheads drove beyond those enemy e'rong-iraints, e'rong-iraints, although front reports indicated in-dicated that German suicide inch of the way, fighting from ' A lAr RnmnApr trenches and machine gun nests MIIIVU lVllliwl d hidden in caves on the 3,000-foot heights of Mount Auruncl. Enemy resistance appeared to be heaviest in the Mintum sector sec-tor and north of Suio, where the British were driving against the strongly-fortified town of Castel-forte. Castel-forte. German tanks and shock troops were thrown into the battle for the Spanish Fork junior high 8tate Btautes for everv member of I spokrnan at Oen. uoug- rchool, .numbering 420. Wednesday tne armed services to b gjven i lafl MacAnnur s neaaquaners. rirr-ha!orl I7.r,n in unr hnnH jnH'v, .. K i "Our losses Were anion the stamps. During the past several jclared. "I would not wish to be heaviest i-r sustained In a! CHICAGO. Jan 20 IJ!-De-weeks thev have been eagerly' elected president of the United ! raid on baul. he satd. Jap-j Actives investigating . the ehopt-purchasing ehopt-purchasing war stamps and bonds! States without every member ofnese interception was etrongpng of wealthy Mrs. Adele Born In raise thp amount neressArv for i thf armeri nerMres havin? an.! and aggressive. W llliarOS, 54. wnfe of a. State de- buving a jeep, which they com-J opportunity to vote to decide! "'The enemy action at Rabaul partment attache, found the gun, Minturno in great strength, but pleted before the opening of the: whether I should be.- leaves no room for false securi-, today, but they were left with- the British veterans were report- present bond drive. The amount; Hous action on the controver-raised controver-raised bv the students was $1260. soldier-vote issue appeared Bcc-ording to E. E. Knudsen, prin-! 1,kel-V ncxt WPek Meanwhile, there cipal of the school. i werP rhargea- that the. adminis- elecions fommitee's "state , rights'' bill, and threats of pos sible "civil war' should returning! HEADQUARTERS, 14th servicemen nnd their ("freedoms' abridged. seige I guns no longer menaced Lenin -j grad, and the din of battle now I was scarcely audible in the long-j long-j beleaguered city. The Rprl armv nf !ho Vnllrhnv j front mounting its offensive aim- at Oeschersleben, the Junkers !ed at Novgorod, forced the Volk- factory at Haberstadt, and the Ihov river and the marshes skirt- Messerschmitt factory at Bruna- fighter aircraft factories was even more successful than previously previ-ously reported. Latest reports, he said, indicated that production produc-tion at the Focke-Wulf factory wick, had been eliminated for triumphant assault! m""r. or monms. combat, plus 53 additional probables, while , the Americans lost 60 bombers and five fighters out of a force of 1,200 planes. Stimson said that in order to understand the magnitude of such Delay Advised in Extra Session Call Air Medal Won By " Spanish Fork Man the enemy al Two desperate uut a uaie or me assunam, wnoj efi overwhelming was described as a woman in a ' along the front. t-ersian iamD coar. wun a rea Kazj counterattacks in the Min-rose Min-rose in her grey hair. turno sector were beating back Mrs. Williams, a distinguished! yesterday and the Tommies push-figure push-figure from Washington's dipjo-ed on into the southern out-matic out-matic set, was near death with a1 skirts of the town Air ! bullet in her brain. She was shot Allied fighter-bombers awarm- polKlcal ; Force, Jan. 20 P MaJ. Gen. last night in her room at the! ed all oVu'r the battle area, bomb- Claire Chennault has awarded the fashionable Drake hotel in the ing and machine-gunning enemy Eisenhower Meets With King George SALT LAKE CITY. Jan. 20 (U.P - Utah State Rep. Val H. Cowles, 1, Carbon county, today had urged Gov. Herbert B. Maw to de-'iy de-'iy calling a special session of the state legislature to consider the poldier vote problem until after t-- n c"V aeif irf d nn tVia i c : 1 1 o " , , . , i D, Eisenhower, eupreme com- Maw previously had announced majlflpr f he would postpone calling the Be-:front forceJ, m audlence at Buck- the 14th Air Force: Silver star: Col. Morris F. Taber, 602 Virginia Vir-ginia St.) Lewiston, Mont. Air medal: Lt. Col. Norvalle T. Gomawitz. tONDON. Jan. 20 UE King ; (510 Front st) Missoula, Mont.; Georee, VI received Gen. Dwieht ! -n m , , tan N. Main St., Spanish Fork, Ltah.) following decorations to members ! Gold Coast section overlooking! troops and of the famed "Flying Tigers" of I the Shore Line drive. i lines. the German rea Police, who were without a cjue. North of the British offensive! to the Bhoting which also scented i line, American and French 5th to be. Without a motive, summoned summon-ed Mrs. Williams' husband, Frank Star Williams, and her daughter, ion until it was determined what ingr.am palace today. FIRE EAZES BCU4INO ATLANTA, .&., Jan. 20 (UJ') Fire of undetermined origin destroyed de-stroyed two buildings at the army ordnance depot near here today, and caused damage officially estimated esti-mated at between $2,000,000 and $2,500,000. The depot public relations of tion was immediately begun on orders of Col. R. L. Gaugler, com manding officer. congress piannea io uo out Eujennower the king chat- tnen ne na ti,ru iruurr.., i.uu, te(J alone for nearly 20 minutes, several state Republican legislat-. during wnk.n presumably ors urging him to call the session , discussed preparations for the immediately. ! Allied invasion of northwestern Cowles told the governor that Europe. If it was' necessary to call a spe-; ,,e American general's car cial session it certainly should be drove through the palace gates called, but he urged the chief shortly before noon as sentries executive not to be stampeded into' presented arms. Only a few pass-Buch pass-Buch action ! crsby saw Eisenhower return the "Congress is in session end salute. could very well handle this situation situa-tion without requiring , most of the 45 states unnecessarily to go to the expense of holding special ersslons of their legislatures for that purpose,1' Cowles said. "If those who are so potent in their attempts to promote a spe-j CHICAGO. Jan. 20 VT5 House j governors, county cial session of the legislature m .m,m n Tmc.. nd agricultural would exert some of their 'anxiety r ... . steam' to influencing members of warning against possible post-war congress to take necessary action Faacirn in America, today called the special session requirement! on public officials, business men, could very well be eliminated," labor, and agriculture to aid con-he con-he added. jgrcss in planning a "peace of I plenty." n U i Addressing the United States KGllrOaCl fVlOn rlGr conference of mayors, Raybum announced the formation of a Mrs. Patricia Goodbody, to the state's attorney's office for further furth-er questioning. Williams, former commercial attache at the Amer ican legation in Tokyo, arrived. from Vashington by p'ane a few hours softer the shooting. Detectives fished, the gun used in the hooting out of a service j elevator shaft, but it bore no fingerprints. German DNB news agency re- arc against the town once called ln f11 fttack the Ger- norterl that Allied r,lan.. ra iHoH ' "Novporort the Great ." whirh wa q ' mans had 153 Planes destroyed in ,.. . , i i founded bv Vikines in the earlv! t-n wine in u:c raiiy luurinug noursi o- - - c today and many persons werelda-V5 of the Christian era killed j Crushing Defeat An Allied communique from: Moscow dispatches supple-Algiers supple-Algiers had reported raids by' menting Stalin's order of the American heavy and medium' day described the forests around; an operation It must be rernem- bombers on seven air bases in the! Novgorod as a graveyard of Ger-'bered that t.OOO crewmen par-outskirts par-outskirts of Rome and north of; nian troops and armor. tic I pa ted in it while U. S. ground capital. The crushing defeat to picked forces at bases Involved number- Previous enemy reports of at-' Prussian divisions hati minister-1 ed around 100.000. Counting Ger- tacks on Rome were proved subse-1 fl in bloody hand-to-hand fight -i man air forces, antiaircraft quently to refer to the bombing of ,nS on the ire of both the Volk - troops and air raid defense per-targets per-targets near or on the outskirts : hov river end Lake Ilmen, rem-' sonnel possibly a million Ger- 'of the city. miscent of the tamous 13th cen-,mans were aierrea Dy ine airacK, j J I fury battle on Lake Peipus in he said which Prince Alexander Nevskyj In assessing the result Stimson routed the Teutonic knights. ! said it was more important to Stalin ordered the captors of destroy a factory producing 200 Novgorod saluated with 20 salvoa! Cotl-ned on raf Two) of Moscow's 224 victory cannon. Occupation of Novgorod will give the Russians their most im-' ...-. t . .i . . C . 1 1. i I em front since the lighting of I nnVAFITIAn the seize of Leningrad 3one vear Vt UI I VUIIT VIIIIUII and two days ago and may cave! in the whole German defense SALT LAKE CITY. Jan. 20 0JJ3) In Don Clyde. Heber, president of Roosevelt Confers With President .A. m army units maintained their VCneZUClG steady pressure on the German' defenses around Cassino. Several! . . American patrols crossed the1 ASHINGTON. Jan. 20 ll.)-Rapido ll.)-Rapido river again yesterday tolprcEident Roosevelt conferred at scout out the enemy dispositions length today with President Isaias j ii.., i 4, j I Medina of Venezuela H had SeTuona" tbnra f,T.8T aUiven a sUte dinner in honor of! -ne-most heavily fortified sault in C.anino v-as imminent. Woolgrowers in The Rapido river was not expected ex-pected to prove a difficult obstacle ob-stacle for the Allied assault troops. The stream is only 15 to 20 feet wide above Cassino The. bullet, fired from the ?.5Slfna ?nl' aDout ou Ieel wac Del" calibert pistol, entered the right101?.1" : , B , side of Mrs. Williams' forehead On the British 8th army's Adri- fice announced that an investiga- and pised throueh her brain.5 It? atlc front Skirmishers from both Speaker Rayburn Warns Nation Against Possible Post-Var Fascism in America L. P. Bergman, general man-(special house committee on post-eger post-eger of tlie midwestern division I war fact finding to accumulate in-of in-of the Railway Express com- formation, recommended policy, pany. witli headquarters in Kan- and propose, legislation. as City, Mo., J. C. Hadley, di-l As "consultante," he said, the vision superintendent, from Den-committee would call in officials ver. Colo., and L. E. Gehan, as- of the federal government, and istant suoerlntendent. Salt Lake 'for "acent in the field" it would ntv urrn in Pmvn today In in. HenenrI "mHrnaril V on VOU. the epect the company officex 'mayor of this nation's cities, on , government, agents, labor organizations, and business groups." Rayburn said the committee would serve as a people's planning board by drawing into a common com-mon pool vital facts on conver sion, re-employment, allocation of materials, public works, foreign trade, release of surplus war com-odities, com-odities, and the postwar value of existing laws. Urging all groups to "get into one harness and pull together, the 62-year-old Texan spoke in terms both of warning and of hope. He said if the nation bungled the postwar job "if we allow the spectre of depression to rise once more" the people would event ually turn to a strong centralized sides were active, and the Brit ish and German artillery con- move it because of the gravity of , J ' r" 4;V T i lodged -against the rear of her skull, hut surgeons feared to re Mina in! nitrht c,urope a car, ana souui oi uen Although this was the third' "1KU anniversary of his third term in auguration, Mr. Roosevelt planned Moscow dispatches said Gen. the Utah Wool Growers association, associa-tion, opened the organization's 37th annual convention here to- no observance of the day. He usually attends church on the an- n versary of his first inaugur- 120 mjles tQ he southwP8t. most KTil A. Meretskov's forces al-ida.v with a discussion of pric ready were pouring through wide control, extension of the federal gaps in the German lines on bothlwl purchase program and preda- sides of Novgorod toward Pskov.lLory animai coniroi ation on March 4 ( f ontinard on Pw Twol her condition. Tiile still conscious a few minutes min-utes after the shooting, Mrs. Williams Wil-liams calmly told police a "Well dressed woman stepped from he- hind a bathroom door of her eighth-floor hotel room and opened open-ed fire pn her and her daughter. change in the battle lines. War in Brief RUSSIA: Fall of Novgorod admitted ad-mitted by Germans, Russians push 20 miles routhwest of Leningrad, capture SO localities; Ukraine forces menace Rovno. TTALY: Germans admit evacu ation of Minturno, western an SALT LAKE CITY, , Jan. 20chor of German line; Americans OLE) Rumors that men under 22 and French mass for assault on who have been released from the; Cassino; U. S. planes attack air Utah Miners Will Not Be Recalled armed Services to work in non-ferrous non-ferrous metal mines would be . re- fields near Rome. AVESTERN EUROPE: British rallH tn service was branded and German coastal guns in false tobav bv Mai. Gen. David heaviest duel, touched off by Ger- McCoacfi, Jr., commanding gen-.man convoy attempting to run eral of the ninth service command. Dover Straits; separate peace "These men are contributinsr to rumors die down the war effort," said McCoach, "and it is not the intention of the army to withdraw them from; this highly Important war industry." PACIFIC: Navy planes bomb Caroline islands for first time; U. S. bombers smash Rabaul but suf fer heaviest losses, Joan Barry Tells Grand Jury Her Rights Violated in Chaplain Suit These three problems are ex pected to be the main topic of discussion during the entire three day conferences, attended by more than 500 Utah wool growers. J. Reuben Clark Jr., first counselor coun-selor to the president of the Latter Lat-ter Cay Saints church and former for-mer U. S. ambassador to Mexico, will address the group tomorrow nnn vn-nnn t vn r-, tt- , Cmnirhm t,rvm Red-haired Joan Barry eased into Carr stopped her from reveal- 0"iJ,Je20' Je5i!.rpr a leather-upholstered chair today j ing details of her expected testi Problems discussed during the and calmly told a federal grand jury how she believe her civil rights were violated after she Miss Barry talked ! . ' i " t . rVL I T J UU, WT U1DU UPBCU 1 U 1 Uilf I d.L me mony, but freely about her baby girl. Carol Ann, who was born last October had accused Charlie Chaplin of i and who will submit to a blood being the father of her baby. Dressed in a pert black suit with a ruffled white blouse. Miss Barry entered the luxurious grand jury room of the new federal fed-eral courthouse with a poise that test next month to determine if Chaplain might possibly have been the father. "Carol Ann is getting along fantastically fine." she commented. comment-ed. "She now weiehs 11 pounds was in contrast to hysterical out-; and 8 ounces, and you know how bursts of sobbing that markd mothers certainly watch those her previous brushes with lecal i ounces. annual convention of the National Wool Growers' association Monday, Mon-day, Tuesday andj Wednesday in Denver. authorities U. S. District Attorney Charles Carr said Miss Barry's secret testimony would last several hours and predicted it would be next week before the jurors took any definite action in their in- She appeared much more matronly ma-tronly and possessed than a year ago when she caused nationwide headlines with her charges that she became pregnant by Chaplin while he was giving her drama lessons in his hilltop home in Bev vestigation whether Miss Barry's erly Hills. She was arrested on civil rights - had been abridged vagrancy charges when she re-when re-when a vagrancy sentence was peatedly tried to gain entrance to suspended on condition she return I the estate of the film comedian, Argentina Seen As Troublemaker NEW YORK, Jan. 20 0TJ2) The New York World-Telegram In a Washington dispatch said today that a report has been laid before the state department predicting-" that Argentina, "blown up by her own importance and egged on by Nazi trouble makers." will become' tha future Balkans of the world and the greatest menace to world peace. j |