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Show 5th Army Infantry Mass for Assault On Mount Cassino tCoatlaaesl Prom Pas Oae) the village of Sessano on the Cis-terna-Littorla road, six miles south of Clsterna. Nazis Regain Aprila Headquarters spokesmen a e Jcnowledged that the Germans had regained possession of Aprilia,' a ! Key strongpojlnt on the northern Sank of the 5th army beachhead. Allied warships, including an unidentified un-identified American cruiser, Joined Join-ed in the attack on the German coastal positions, adding their fire to the carpet of bombs laid down by the Anglo-American air forces. The communique also revealed that British destroyers again attacked at-tacked German installations on the Adriatic island of Korcula, off the Jugoslav coast, Saturday night. Active patrol fighting flared up all along the British 8th army front in Eastern Italy. The Germans Ger-mans launched one small-scale at tack behind a spearhead of tanks yesterday, but were dispersed by British artillery fire. The communique revealed that the Allied air forces flew more than 1.100 sorties yesterday and last night to give the Germans one of their worst poundings of the Italian campaign. While American Flying Fortresses. Fort-resses. Mitchells .and Marauders battered at the Monte Cassino monastery, American dive-bombers save Rome its third raid of the war. Inspect Monastery. The speedy A-36 attack planes Hammered the nmirtina ana osti ense railway yards on two separ ate missions, strewing 500-pound bombs among some 200 railroad cars lined up in the big Marshalling Mar-shalling yards. (Rome radib said Allied four-motored four-motored bombers raided the city yesterday morning, dropping "numerous "nu-merous bombs" on residential sections sec-tions and machine-gunning street crowds. 'The Axf - controlled station aid several high Vatician authorities author-ities went to the scene of the bombing but were forced to take Bhelter to avoid being strafed. It admitted "serious damage" had been caused and said at least 19 persons were killed and 50 in-: in-: jured.) Simulaneously, swarms of Allied fighters and fighter - bombers swooped low over enemy targets In the Anzlo beachhead sector, while a force of American heavies dumped tons of explosives on Nazi troops massed at Campoleone. Allied night bombers picked up the offensive after dark, hammering hammer-ing Nazi communications lines south of Rome. Only minor enemy aerial activity activ-ity was reported on all fronts, most of the Luftwaffe's planes again concentrating on the beachhead beach-head area. Nine German aircraft were destroyed de-stroyed at a cost of one Allied plane. W. W. Jackson Dies at Hospital William Walley Jackson, 67, died Monday at the American Fork hospital following a major operation. He was brn In American Fork. March 25. 1876, a son of Mahonri M. and Sarah Elizabeth Robinson Robin-son Jackson. He received his education ed-ucation in the American Fork public schools and throughout his life, he followed the occupation of a steam enginer mechanic Also, he spent some time farming Some of his early years were spent in Salt Lake City and Sanpete San-pete county, but he had lived in the vicinity of Provo most of his Lfe. tie married Marv Esther Martin Mart-in Feb. 13. 1901, "in Manti. and she died at the home in CI and-view, and-view, Sept. 9, 1939. On August 17, 1940. he married Emma Phillips ljee in Heber City, and moved back to American Fork. Surviving, besides his wife at the home in American Fork, are two sons and three daughters: William LeRay Jackson, Salt Lake; Martin Jackson, stationed at the army air base at Deridder, Louisiana; Mrs. John Zeda Myr-alda) Myr-alda) Emmons, Grand View; Mrs. Charles L. (Mary Elizabeth) Wat-erlyn, Wat-erlyn, Salt Lake City, and Mrs Ezra (Lillian Iona) King, Provoi one brothrr, Joseph M. Jackson. Salt Lake City; five sisters, Mrs Aeter Tonge and Mrs. Eleanor Gurr, Salt Lake City; Mrs Sadie Houser, Oregon; Mrs. Edith Spears, San Pedro. Calif., and Mrs, William Cams, Nevada; and 20 grandchildren. Funeral services are pending the arrival of the son, Martin Jackson, and will be announced by the Hatch-Quist Funeral home. PAGE 10 nfiTO. trrxH cowrt, tjtah WEDNESDAY, fEBnUART H, 14 DAILY HERALD Tired Marines Grab Quick Nap MacArthur 7arns Against 0verconfiden.ee In Va r Against Japs; Jap Army Must Be Defeated First zA - MrJ,-r M. . V'1' ; i 22Wr - .t 4 --J By BALPH TEATSORTII United Frets War Correspondent ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. SOUTH PACIFIC; Feb. 16 (HE) Gen. Douglas MacArthur, In an apparent attempt to discourage over-confidence, said today that conquest of Japan's outlying Pa-cific Pa-cific islands no longer could be considered "decisive," and warned warn-ed that the Allies must defeat the Japanese army before victory WAYNE I BOMNEY AT MARITIME CENTER Wayne L. Romney, H East Third North street, is enrolled in the United States Maritime service training center at St. Petersburg, Pet-ersburg, Florida, according to word received here today from public relations officers at the base. His parents are now resid ing at Chihuahua. can be assured. "It's useless and misleading to talk of short cuts." MacArthur said In a formal statement releas ed by his Southwest Pacific head quarters. "They do not exist." tie -assertea that the old con cept that Japan was a predominantly predomin-antly maritime nation based upon up-on her island empire "Is no long er xactuai." "With her Immense holdings on the Asiatic continent, Manchuria, Korea, and Northern China, to say notnmg or ner southern mainland main-land conquests, she has become Intrinsically a continental power with her greatest potential island," is-land," MacArthur said. "Her outlying islands of the Pacific represent an outpost po sition important, it Is true, but no longer decisive." MacArtnur'a statement was re leased to the press without com- Two Coal Miners Accident Victims PRICE, UTAH, Feb. 16 (UTS- Two Carbon County coal miners were killed late Monday in separate sep-arate mine accidents. The victims were Benjamin Walter. Hull, 69, switch tendeH for the Utah Fuel Co., mine at Castle Gate, and E. H. Cullum, 60, employed at the U. S. Fuel Co., mine at Hiawatha. Hull was killed when he was struck by a train of cars loaded with ties. Cullum was killed by a fall of top coal while he was timbering in the mine. ment or explanation. However,' it followed the occupation by his forces against negligible resistance resist-ance of Rooke Island, between New Guina and New Britain, and the Green Islands in the northern Solomons, as well as the speedy conquest by other American units of Kwajaleln atoll In the Mar-shalls. The statement recalled a recent Washington .utterance, precipitated precipitat-ed by disclosure of Japanese atrocities atro-cities against American war prisoners, pris-oners, the "we ought to stream straight Tnto Hokyo and blast the place off the face "of the earth." (Chairman Andrew J. Maw of the house military affairs com mlttee made the assertion that American warships ought to blast Tokyo off the mao immediately. Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On Creomulslon relieves promptly be cause It goes right to the seat of the to trouble loosen and expel neiD laden Dhiesm. and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed in-flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the understanding un-derstanding you must like the way it quickly allays the co".gh or you are to nave your moner back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis 1$ WW i (NEA Telephoto) Sprawled In utter exhaustion, these Marines, "Mac" MacFarland of Tennessee Ten-nessee (left), and Arthur Maycock of New York City, sleep after they had done their part in Invasion of Roi Island in Kwajaleln Atoll. Bougainville Natives Get First Aid if -J Jfi i I tV vfTVv V"' , J ? M ft Xs, i X - - tfsS (NEA Telephoto) Captain A. J. Moyer of Sydney, Australia., treats a native girl with a skin Infection, after she and a group of natives made their way through the Jap lines on Bougainville. The girl looks on as she complacently smoke a pipe. Marine Corps photo. RATION CALENDAR 1M4 JANUARY I t 1 t t B 10 It I II 14 15 18 17 IS 19 20 21 22 fi gj? 25 26 27 28 29 ii iw m im m . I 2 3 4 5 I f i 10 II 12 13 14 15 1 17 IS 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 2 Meats, Fats, Etc. Stamps V, W, X book three Expire February 28; stamps Y and Z expire March eo. Processed Foods Stamps G, H. f. Book Four expire February 20: Btamps K, L, M, Book Four expire ex-pire March 20. Sugar Stamp No. 30 (5 lbs.) Book Four expires March 31; Btamp'No. 40 (Canning) expires Tebruary 28, 1945. Shoes Stamp No. 18, Book One) good indefinitely; Airplane Btamp No. 1 (Book Three) good indefinitely. Gasoline Stamp No. 10 ("A" Book) expires March 21. Meats, Fats, Stamps Z, valid n February 13. Meats, Fats, Stamps ZZ, valid n February 20. Remember two red points plus Tour cents for every pound of us-id us-id fats. See your butcher. KILL THE BLACK MARKET ENDORSE YOUR GAS COUPONS! Stoves, Washing Machines Likely to Remain Scarce By ANN STEVICK lience, these devices also require NEA Staff Correspondent J fractional horsepower motors and WASHINGTON. Feb. 16 ou ball-bearings, which Just can't be don't buy a stove, a mechanical had now- vacuum cleaners, too, refrigerator, or a washing ma-;wi!1 have to wait for these two .chine every day or every month, j items which play such an import-o import-o the government's recent Con- ant Part in a mechanized war. !sumer Requirements Survey in'1"0 out of three People looking J 120 typical counties found out howfor vacuum cleaners did not find many people had been looking!0"6' and almost "alf of them f fill n ll Ulin oVmvnrVA n 1 Ihaav. for these items in the year pre-j venience. ceding, and how many had . been About three-fourths of the peo-able peo-able to find them. pie looking for mattresses and Only a small percentage of the ! bedsprings found new or used 1935 families surveyed had been!one, while only slightly more in the market, but not being able i than a third wanting a studio to find a stove when you need S ouch or sofa bed could find a one is apt to be serious. Two-, suitable one. Steel springs have thirds of the shoppers for gas 'been allowed to come back for -ooking stoves found a new or j upholstered wood furniture, and used one; only half of a smaller ! before long there may be an al ii umber of people looking forjlowance made for bedsprings. 'lectnc steves found them; and less than half the seekers of other types of stoves managed to get them. The resumption of stove production pro-duction has been started with a small-scale program to make three - burner electric stoves. About 88,000 is the most hopeful estimate of the number to be produced, pro-duced, and that depends on whether manufacturers can take on the program without interfering interfer-ing with war work. If the full nrogram goes through, it won't take care of more than the demand de-mand for federal housing projects and the most essential civilian needs. The ceramics cooking stoves, passed on by the Bureau of Standard Stand-ard last October, should be seen in various markets soon. Less than one-fourth of the 3.5 per cent of the people in the market mar-ket for mechanical refrigerators could buy one, and over half of them pronounced lack of a refrigerator refrig-erator as a real inconvenience. Production of more mechanical refrigerators, however, depends Supreme Court Orders New Trial SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 16 (CJ?) The Utah supreme court today ordered a new trial for Angus Dewey Russell, convicted in the third district court of first degree de-gree murder in the knife slaying death early in 1943 of his wife, Anna. The supreme court ruled that Instructions given the jury that convicted Russell were faulty. The nation's 80,000 school buses ire transporting 4,000,000 chil-Iren chil-Iren daily. LANG AGENT KILLED IN BUS COLLISION MOUNTAIN HOME, Ida.. Feb. IS L.Pt A scheduled inquest into the death of W. E. Talboy, 62, land agent with the State Land department, who was killed when the car he was driving and a Greyhound Grey-hound bus collided head-on on the Mountain Home highway 20 mlies on fractional horsepower motors ! roIlthwest of here was canceHed and ball-bearings, both tied up in war production. So, although most of the people looking for ice boxes found them, it will be iceboxes ice-boxes that are made. They are simple structures, and their pro- last night by Coroner Phil Green. WARNING! BEWARE Or GOUJELI'JGRlIS duction has been raisd for the Roundworms In tide you or yoor child can first quarter of 191 1 to three times c3.usf .re1 trou'?- A?a ro may not know f,, , ,,f, vmito hat is wrong. Warning eiens are: "picky" the pre-war production. ', appetite, nervousness uneany stomach. jtchinK parts. Get Jayne'a VermlfiiM rieht away! JAYNE'S la America's leading pro- lng machines Was ninth on the! Acta ccntly yet expels roundworms. list as a hardship or inconven- j-tm get JAYNE'S yRHIFUGl V' " START FRESH FOR SPRING! SMART WAYS TO PLAN AHEAD good basic outfit will do duty far beyond be-yond its season: this fashion wisdom is true at any time, but even more when wartime demands smart economy. Now, start every member of your family out with new spring clothes that will be smart and useful for many a long month ! No Vacuum Cleaners Although the shortage of wash I trt If' V "-tU yiv TO TAKE YOU v'P EVERYWHERE JZnfa h. f . 1-1 L'.' i - p-fcii o& FLOWER BRIGHT ; 'H; i 319.75 Lively Prints on Rayon Jersey! F rosty Lingerie on Black Crepe! Charmingly feminine frocks as light-hearted light-hearted as spring itself, to wear now and through summer! Figure-moulding rayon jerseys that pack like a dream and defy wrinkles In gay paisleys and brilliant-hued florals with softly shirred shirr-ed bodies, gracefully gored or multi-stitched multi-stitched skirts. Crisp, serenely simple black and navy rayon crepe frocks daintily etched with sheer white lingerie dickeys, collars and jabots. 12-20. Colorful Cardigan Women's SWEATERS Keep snug and comfortable th smart way. Practical and pretty. Popular for Campus wear, grand with slacks for casual wear. All wool sporty coarse knit. FLOWER BRIGHT COATS and SUITS Dressmaker-soft all wool suits in leading lead-ing styles for spring. Smoothly man-tailored man-tailored models in wool twills, hairline stripes and plains. All wool coats in perenially popular chesterfields, easy-to-wear boy coats. Built of sturdy fleece fabrics and soft cuedes. Tailored Spring DRESS COATS Smooth-fitting, coats expertly ex-pertly tailored of hard-wearing bright toned fabrics. Popular boxey types and broad-shouldered reefers to wear over suits or dresses. Luxuriously Fur Trimmed Coats 2&7S All wool coats efficiently tailored yet softly feminine with large beautiful fur collars. Shetland weaves and fleeces. 2 Styled to Flatter You! MILLINERY The Foundation of Your Wardrobe! SPRING COATS ALL WOOL COVERTS LATEST POPULAR SHADES Charmers for misses and matrons in off-face and forward-tilting designs bedeck-ed bedeck-ed with filmy veiling, flowers or bright feathers. Springtime Spring-time straws and wool felts. 29.75 Coverts of all wool are leading th style parade this spring. A firm yet soft weave in the newest spring shades of military blue, rich brown, and olive green. Select your coat today. |