OCR Text |
Show . . . k a. THE WEATHER UTAH Fair with alowljf rising temperature this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow. CAJX THE HERALD If you donl receive your Herald before 6:30. call 493 before 8 o'clock and a copy will be sent to you. . 84 U VkSX V . S yLlXJJ m mmr EK? ' . TZ rr-rz " complete united press PRICE FIVE CENTS r- rmrwrrs tttau ccs TTJTY UTAH TUESDAY MARCH 28, 1944 telegraph news service r-nioc nvt FIFTY-EIGHTH YEAR, NO. 210 PROVO. UTAH COUNTY. UTAH, xutbUAi. mmuh mmm twm mi mm m mmm . 4 1 : i War Job Draff Seen for 4-F, Men Over 38 WASHINGTON, March 28 cujj A vast new war manpower man-power pool the 7,000,000 present and potential 4-F draft registrants and discharged dis-charged servicemen emerged emer-ged today as a probable solution solu-tion to the nation's critical manpower shortage. With the problem intensified by the decision to draft most able-bodied able-bodied men under 26 now deferred defer-red in war Jobs, officials of the army, navy and selective service and many prominent congressmen congress-men looked upon men now classified classi-fied aa unfit for military service Mysterious Hotel Blaze Kills 22 In San Francisco Resolution To Assure Geneva Future Drawn Navy's Ace SALT AKE CITY, March 28 cp A; committee recom- By rodney gutlfoil mendatioii that the Utah run- United Press Staff Correspondent I ff .;m;,Lv pWfion be held SAN FRANCISCO, March 28 A pyromamac was j ' Novem-blamed Novem-blamed officially today for a flash fire that reduced the n-t nU terior of the new Amsterdam hotel to a heap of ashes, kill- jber general election and a of iOQCf oo norenns nnH iniiirinir 27 trarmed bv flames report that one group would ,-r. tV,q h.Hmnmc onri Vmiiwavs. seek to abolish all Ltan pn- It was San Francisco's deadliest fire since the great mary Xn nominlS ava-earthquake-and-fire in 1906. Hours after the blaze burned i KJlS2i!gtSy itself out, firemen still dug through the embers in searcn i of the sec0a meeUng of the Utah special soldier vote cgisauure : : : of more bodies. The dead were burned beyond recognition, recog-nition, and the process of identification was slow and A few lucky occupants eluded the flames that roared through the three-story frame building. Jump From Window Screaming men and women a the nnc whn must keen essen tial production going while others uncertain go to war. May Use Compulsion Whether the government Is ready to use legal compulsion to may be discussed late today when J" frora nfowi lede mff vv. xranm, fhif pni v I life nets manned by firemen, sail- McNutt testifies before a special and coast guardsmen. Others house military affairs subcom-, w brought down rescue lad-mltte lad-mltte on draft matters. Je snatched UteraUy from Chairman John M. Costello, D..'?" as puffs of fire drove them Calif., said the proposal to induct' to windows. 4-F'e, armed forces dischargees . The . new Amsterdam, located in ...iti.A o. i.r- o- nWr tt,,: the Skidrow district south of present top draft age of 38. would! Market street. bu"t m to flames be preferable to any new man power legislation because "passing) a new bill would require a couple of months, and we want to solve this problem within another month." He said another plan would be to bring all draft deferments within with-in the purview of the government interagency committee now study ing industrial deferments for men shortly after five other hotel fires had been reported In the same area within a four-hour period. Police began a hunt for an arsonist believed responsible for not only the San Francisco fires last night, but also for a series of 11 blazes that broke out in Oakland hotels last week-end. Authorities noted an odor of kero sene or gasoline about last night's ,it OA - . atuHiHnff ffoforwonf, ' fireS. fZ- OA fv, ,nH The first of three alarms was 30. and ultimately for all regis-1 d v ,bv "a"01- wh trants. he said, the committee i ,or hi8 r0m nd would free form induction nil men ; taken off his shoes when the fire not truly essential to the war ef- Crash Injuries Fatal to Deputy Attorney-General SALT LAKE CITY. March 28 (CLE) George Ross, 38, an assistant Utah attorney general, died early today in a Salt Lake City hospital as the result of injuries suffered in an automobile accident in Farmington, Utah, eight days ago. Ross was en route to Ogden, where he and another assistant attorney general. Clifton N. Otto-sen, Otto-sen, were to investigate the recent resignation of Ogden'a mayor, Kent S. Bramwell. Ottosen also was severely injured in-jured in the head-on collision but was reported improving rapidly at his home today. The accident was atributed to ice and snow on the road. Ross took over his post ten weeks ago. Previously, he had been supervisor of plant protec tion for the Remington atoi plant in Salt Lake City, The special committee on soldier vote legislation suggested that Utah laws be permanently amrjid-ed amrjid-ed to hold the first primary elec tion on th third Tuesday in July and the funoff election on the fourth Tuesday in August. Pres-I cnt laws iit the primary early! In September and the runoff early in October. ; If the proposal Is adopted, Utah's primary would be on July 18 thia year, while the runoff would be oh Aug. 22 which is 77 davs before the Nov. 7 general election. The long time interval is desired to give adequate time for, ballots containing the names oi successful nominees to be sent to soldiers overseas. Suggested Amendment The committee recommendation came in the form of a suggested amendment to the group's own oreviouslv-drawn date changing. hill, which" would have allowed less time between elections The house advanced to second reading the date changing bill and a senate bill setting up a Utah wax ballot to be sent to Utah voters overseas who request them. i Air ' , v c vs WiH 1 1 "JZ-tJL Fortresses Hit Air Bases In Nazi France By PIHL AULT War in Brief RUSSIA Russians advance in force to Prut River line op posite Cema.uti and Iasi, twin, gateways to Balkans: Soviet artil-j llery shells German troops fleeing i into Rumania. AIR WAR RAF Mosquito bombers said Rurh valley after 1.900-Dlane American dayHrht at tack on France; German night Reds Capture Black Sea Port Of Nikolaev ,'i (Navy photo from NEA) Top flyer of "Blackburn's Irregulars," Irreg-ulars," called Navy's fightingest aerial squadron, and leading Navy ace, Lieut (jg Ira C. Kepford of Muskegon, Mich, has 15 Jap planes to bis credi. He Is on way home with the squadron, which holds Southwest South-west Pacific record of 154 enemy planes destroyed, 77 "probables." BULLETIN LONDON, March 28 0).R The Red Army captured th big Black Sea port of Nikolaev Niko-laev today, unhinging the last German salient In the Ukraine, Uk-raine, and Berlin said the Russians tried to ta"ke the Rumanian stronghold of Ial by storm in an apparent drive Into Rumania proper. 'Myitkytna. j Bv ROBERT MUSEL V w 'gtroy 13 to 17 Japanese planes nVDOV ATarrh 8 U.P- tected by a like number of.in 1000 mile sweep over enemy' LU7SLU, iuarcii -o United SUtcs fighter planes fan- bases from Caroline islands to;The Berlin radio said t00a7 ned out over northern, central New Guinea. I that Russian troops had tnUxf Piu Staff Corresoondent , , . ... , nM.r!n,r At jAJi ujii , no ilied invasion armie? in wiuBspurou: Hundreds of American Fly- forays over England and Wales, j incr Fortresses struck at Ger-1 BURMA Heavy fighting, i,CT ir. Wano for 'along Indo-Burmese frontier a?i man air bases in r ranee ior s ; roilimn crosses; the Second Straight day to- Somra Hnis to ikrul area; Brit-! day, bombing four big fields isn acknowledeincreasing enemy, j t ri x Tin.lc inraosnrp' r"hiiis pain in drive on! 4o vO loo nines aiuiu imu i"""' - ; in three directions. ITALY Allied guns bombard crossed the upper Prut rivef Cassino; ground fighting Drewar Poland an appar- ens as army newspapers concede l f , "u 7 , FAL. fort. But for the time being, the approximately 7,000,000 present and potential 4-F's and 1-C registrants regis-trants were being studied most closely. Costello said the army and navy would start "tomorrow" in takincr these men and then either furloughing them or giving them in active status on the promise prom-ise to go into essential industry. Col. Francis V. Keesling of selective se-lective service revealed yesterday that the armed forces were dis- and eastern France to attack Nazi airdromes at Chartres, Cha-teaudun, Cha-teaudun, Rheims, and Dojon. The new attacks carried forward for-ward Lt. Gen. Carl A. Spaatz's campaign of attrition against the German air force a day after firvst a . -.1 . n h Vl a at orl I . - . a. a.wv Aiueniu f'vi "'"Tp naval forces, capvure nar to- enj German army group nine yerman case land, 25 miles trom paimawn . Hamme. Nazl failure of offensive in central ent aCKnow leagenient uwt wi Italy. I Red army had cut the Lwo Jugoslav Jugoslav Part-' Bucharest railroad, the lasfc isans, aiaea vy Ainea a-ir a riirrrt link between the spUt souUi Japanese Battle British Forces In Eastern India NEW DELHI, March 28 (HE) Jananese invasion forces have broken across the Somra hills tract into the Ukhrul area ' of eastern India and ere battling strong Brit ish units defending the frontier, a communique disclosed today. Striking southwestward toward the MahlQr valKy highway and the provincial capital of Imphal, the Japanese apparently had driv- en a aozen mucs or mvie viuo broke out Asked for his name, he shouted "Hell no. man! I've eot another i sect guy's liberty card." I The other hotel fires last night were extinguished before serious damage was done. The district in which the New Amsterdam is situated is one of pawn shops, oi uim m it": 1 th), house spent most of today's f rSS. morC e.ion discussing the bill. Fifth Army Guns Pound Germans Inside Cassino practicing fundamentalist religious saloons and cheap rooming hous es, nearly all of wood construction construc-tion and ready tinder for a blaze. The Amsterdam fire broke out In all four floors of the building at the same time, and spread with YLB Approval Of Portal-to-Portal Contract Awaited In the senate, worK coniinuea Ikhrul area, Japanese pressure has increas ed," the communique said, tieavy in wnicn action6 III action' 'of ithe Japanese are making deter- mZ frtmBrftiS units farther south were S,itt. in thn senate re- reported making satisfactory ported favorably on three jotnt! progress in clearing Japanese raid- ... i i : ,nit(aa frnm t nA Tiflaim- oiia iitinna ami T no v uprp aavanu : lilt yai uto ed to second reading. the Tiddim imDhal highway and it was indi- Ji,,nr, oi1m memorial- rated that the main enemy force ize congress to guarantee com-, in that area had been stalled, at nletion of the big, new steel plant; least temporarily, about 25 miles WASHINGTON, March 28 CCJ!) j at Geneva, near Provo, and as-! south of the mao-tfurmese iron-Th iron-Th TTnitAH XTiriA Workers todav i sure operation of the gigantic in-;tier. cussing a plan for taking 4-F'S; lightning rapidity to all parts of, . . , T w r idustrial works after the war. Thel a third Japanese force moving and men over 38 lor work in mili-j the building. For the tw,o hours Preait-ieu "ttt 'resolution said that full production westward into India from Tamu tary hospitals, seasonal harvests i flames were at their height, proval of its "portal to portal Qf plant ia needed for western waa repulsed after a brief clash and other non-combatant jobs,! the downtown area of the city wage contract on the basis of a , industry during the war. It recom-in which the enemy brought some provided uiey were noi inciuaecijwas overcast by a rosy glow, rc-.sur.reme court decision that un- in the 11,300.000 or 11,400,000, fleeted back by nearby skyscrap-, . A ,im, from the regions of Farts to uie of split, establishing pos- Appenlncs. !sible base for Invasion of Jugo The bombardment extended over 8iavia. hundreds of Bquare mues or France. The deepest penetration by the Fortresses carried to Dijon, Di-jon, 165 miles southeast of Parts and only 65 miles from the Swiss border. The other targets were Chartres, Char-tres, 45 mUes southwest of Paris, one of the German fields attacked yesterday; Chateaudun, 28 miles to the south; and Rheims, SO miles northeast of Paris. United States headquarters in announcing- the daylight bombardment, bombard-ment, descrbled both the Fortress force ajid Its escort of Thunderbolts Thunder-bolts and Mustangs, as "medium sized," eUgorxuayjmrily used for formations tip to 500 stronsr. Another announcement said photographs confirmed that the American heavy bombers severe ly damaged seven of the Nazi fields attacked yesterday, and did considerable damage at the other two. At least 41 buildings were destroyed, de-stroyed, including eight or more hangars, more than a dozen other hangars were practically wiped out, and additional buildings damaged, dam-aged, the announcement said. Aircraft Air-craft repair plants avt Tours and Bordeaux also were hard hit. radio commentator, reported the Soviet crossing of the Prut in the area of Kolomyja, 48 miles north west of Cernauti and 100 milei southeast of Lwow, where the rail road paralels the river, crossing road parallels the river, crosslnj Von Hammer dropped a veiled hint that the Russians may hav smashed across the middle Prut from Bessarabia into Rumania proper. He said a Soviet attempt to take Isasl by storm nan ?.l!DA.ntUiled, suggesting that Russian MAVLI?arc?E2 -The bfgi the 'JinSAroSlBeven miles west of it at th sruns of the Allied 5th Army con inn..-! to rxjuna uerman b""6- points Inside Cassino today while Mmd flsrkting aU along - rthefearlier that the fvobd;,, Italian Datuerronv hudbiucu closest point. Moscow dispatches had reportc the Ukraine had swept down thm mk'Ji prime munary sircngin. ers. This corps of non-combatants j Shipyard Workers would relieve the fighting forces j The hotel contained about 50ing time. of "emergency calls" for manpow- rooms, according to police rec- Travel time has been the prin-er prin-er such as those which sent sol-iords, most of which were occu-' , , settled issue in the bitum-diers bitum-diers and sailors onto farms and Pied by sleeping shipyard work- p v into canneries in recent seasons.! ers. Many of them fled to the inous coal wage dispute since Uie They would also help make up for! nearest windows and attempted War I-abor Board denie,d VMV deficiencies in WAC, WAVE and:to land in nets held beneath them demand for a general wage in- SPAR recruiting programs, and by firemen. One woman was be- crease lasl "f .i,L. , provide manpower for domestic i (Continued on lne Three mended that en early determina- fieia artillery into action. tion of post-war policy relating to; ,.,3 was no word on the V. .ola nr Iaas of thf nliillt to v, ... , . m.fVi lrvn4on . . . 1 . v. - - - . wjlclcauuuio jl a ivi m ' - - ore mines n . nrivt ndustrv be made so uie (CoDtlUDtd on I'nite Three) derground travel time in iron Youth of Leland Killed In South Pacific Accident SPANISH FORK Seaman military jobs. Keesling believed the move would go a long way to provide! replacements in war plants and; curtaU labor turnover. He ex-! plained that men in the 38-45 age group, 4-F's and 1-C's, should he' given advance notice of intentions! to call up such registrants. ; April Order Puts Camp Kearns On New Officials to Be Sustained at L D S Conference cited lower court decisions lnvolv ing iron mines in support of its claim that the wage-hour law required inclusion of travel time in their work day. Those decisions were upheld yesterday by the supreme court in a 7 to 2 ruling. Soutnern ad- pachian operators have argued . . . . . 1 . U, Ait. persistency. nuCvt4. ,oir uie ewa , lt.ooiori .1tlosia,Ha. ferences between coal and iron Guinea, raising their toll of enemy " --0 - .(vived by V communique 1 1 uni iuom",. TUoVi inannliohln to th roa 1 in-l . it !, rovpaled lodav. 'JosiD (Tito) BroZOVlcn S A communique cescnoea a series of small-Bcale patrol ac- east bank of the Prut to the Isasl tlons crossing, and had secured thej A terse communique made no( crossing's east side, mention of the week's old cam- The Berlin broadcast claimed paign to reduce Cassino, which that the Soviet troops who forced American and Canadian army! the upper Pruit in the KolomyJ newspapers said yesterday had! area had been "annihilated by t ended in failure, but headquar-j counterattack" a customary Nazi ters spokesmen Indicated that ; propaganda claim incident to tha street fighting in the town had: acknowledgement of a major So halted momentarily while Allied' viet gain artillerymen took over the job of j - irrt-rv h.tt.rinir the enemy's defenses, i By HAIUUSOIV SAUbBLKi AlHed shellfire was concen- United Press Staff Correspondent. JVed ,J , Tth ConUnenUl MOSCOW, March 28 UHRus- hotel and the hotel Des Roses, sian troops swept in force today the two main German fortifica-j to the Prut river opposite Cernau-tions Cernau-tions in Cassino. ! f"d Iasi twin gateways to the v07i mins countered with a Balkans, and Red army artillery heavv and sustained bombardment i raked the Rumanian plain on i of Allied positions lnsiue me wwiimui uie iuui vjcxnia.ua muou and in the surrounding hills. defend or yield the invasion path The communique reveaiea inai(to tne carpauuans. German units north of Cassino J Soviet mobile forces raced launched a minor attack against ! southward along the east bank of French troops along the Cairo- the Prut within easy gunshot ol! Terlle road but were driven backjiasi, key German stronghold of .. - v,riof hattltv nil Rparahla killinf OrmanH I First Class Edwin Earl Wilkin-j traced a.rtillerv fireihv th thnmunHn nn thev nlune-ed frrerteci I etrikTne norttw of, h V l' 80n' along - the Tower Garigliano valley panic-stricken into the river only wlrH t Z Jue the nIm Site to- :of ?T 1", : southwest of Cassino, and com- jf0 drowned or cut down when ward through the iNaga mils 10 ; f was accidentally killed;""" 0v,.h rpnentedlv ',-.. -,v,i tv, ,o 4(1 miles'. .. .. . ai . Dai uauuia ai.ov- i . uicv oviamuicu wiitw w a. iv.- w. w.. . -- tftroujrnout uiai secior, oui "'"cy west snore. partment has advised the parenta iwepe Q important changes ln the To tiie northwest, other Red Seaman VUlensen enlisted in forw.ard lines. !army unlta massed along the the navy seven days after his sev-, German shock troops were re-upper pt acro8s from Cernauti, teenth birthday. He was a sopho-! . d belatediy to have attemp- bieeest citv of Bucovina province. more at Spanish Fork hign scnooi,. . attacks in platoon aftpr SDeCtaCUlar advance of 24, . ii l.l 1..1. Af strengtn against tne ieit nan ui miies at a speed of one mile an, th fstn armv Deacnneaa dcjuw ward Kohlma, some above Ikhrul. Partisans Seize Base for Invasion at the time. The telegram his parents re- 'Stand-By' Basis SALT LAKE CITY, March 28 mining made the iron ore decls-: shipping in the past two weeks Allies Blast Two More Jap Supply Ships Off Yewak KteTnwkJ S5J.J2Sent' Jugoslav Partisans aided by Al-j ALLVED hIaDQUARTERS. Hed air ground and val ;rce..; ;..,..t r-Tr- i, caDtured the island of Hvar, 25 tX- his p.U, hour. south Pacific with the seebeas Mnmh captured the island of Hvar, r " ceivea irom uie navy ueuBruuaiv;Pn. .cnHav on v to be beaten r t; i - Informed them he was killed ac- Qff b Alhed una troops and' d entire bank of tha .jcidenUlly while working in the artillery. , Contind o. p.. Tree a orotner, ttooeri vn- Police Run Down Colorado Youth SALT LAKE CITY, March 28 '(U.P Camp Kearns, Army air force training center, dustry whether or not they were will be placed on a standby nnheld bv the hirh court. The i basis durinsr April, the War De-i southern operators position was ! partment announced from Wash-, sustained Jan. 25 by a decision of 1. - t,..n tsri Mrs Htn head- ,, orirl :, Trne Wilken-i a'P) Brvan Harless, Jr., IS. the , nuarters said the :;,s-i:iie 'Ti,i . . j j .vr, mndnar- i T..nn folo was nos- ships as a 1,000-ton fretgnter ana isiana a5 Btlu u? ents. Mr. and Mrs. Li. r. i nomas, . . that his skUlful . i . v. : .-i . , 1 a roanLai vessel, wiuui vic- stroyed or seriously damaged to- and a ugosiav partisan !Spanjsh Fork, detachment of commandos, i Northern Kuriles Blasted Again By American Fliers By RUSSELL ANNABEL SALT LAKE CITY. March 28; . . . a. j m - ... . m-. A inas-i tiiaa rnni nrpii n i ir-1 . m. e. iiu ington today. ia Virginia federal district court,gether with seven Darges near xuC GOKJM vuuiuamj , ! Although Kearns officers would. in the only court ruling specific-iMuschu island Sunday afternoon, three days of fighting. iFOU UNEXPIRED TERM " r,, t Vc ....uL.b. o fommpnt todnv. th' .. .i iy.ins Thn shinninir raid followed an .announced, adouu PORTLAND. Ore., Marcn """ '"6 w.... ...oo ,4ratooril" J . . . v k. "..avv nd mediunimcn and oincers anu general authorities including ai w.u-UJ J.7T I Champton Harris, Birmingnam, ..T ' ,r1 m,.n were tak new member to succeed Apostle jw mean uiat i.Ala.. attorney who has represent- .Domoers .Ti of- The victorious Allied WcharnttedymseveraT "mons ' and that only a mntenace , f both iron and coal miner. ,:-... - may h bee led b, Ald no unced his candidacy communicated seeral onthi travel time litigation, told Uie i h onv base, iean officer, who was reported on j' , . f i.voiinn fartics would have been r . ' . ; . , . .v,or! tmwo rrrss duui rreonuBucuii AN ADVANCED ALEUTIAN 'successful except for the sheer ' 'weight of numbers. (U.E) Guy Gordon, recently RASR Marrh 2R tllB Armv and 2S No less than six police patroilnavy bomr-, dropped tons of ex- ap-!cars last nigm cnaseu plosives on the northern KUrtiea ago will highlight the Further expansion of the church order welfare program will also be an Important consideration of the conference. Presiding at the conference will be Heber J. Grant, 87-year-old church president. However, it is expected that Grant will delegate' one of his counselors to conduct the sessions. lions at tne camp wouiq ceaae - roal miners in i -Curtailed rate of training" wafa ven bv the War Depar' as the reason for the stand-by UMW yesterday that he believed n gun O I - nl on a TO I IT I r I II I II tf - .. . r I or 1 11 rr CI Y semi-annual conference or Uie LDS ' .i,.. hv th wr Dfturtraent ! 8 iron ore decision "will apply , - -'d damaKO, thl. Jugoslav radio chrnvh to (w nem nere Anni b. b " "j " .. r . . . ,v. i.r nf i land eovern nc "v"",'o . r. . ,, roa.n fnr the. Rtana-DV ; aTT . w !the work week in coal mines." Chaplin's Attorney Fails In Effort To Question Barry About Other Men that the only aiarii'Tcra aUorne Voday Kg th.tm.tt.red was whether nese forces from tyl m hi, aeeond attempt to Chaplin transported her to New group at the north But and Dagua were taken prisoner. 'pointed to succeed U. 8. Senator through downtown Salt Lane iy. agAin iast night, hitting for the """" i unv.n, o rirxrn n to-nut iianess. urnuiK "e' f r int Hm ih snail ir nnn or l inp- "" - wt ' : . c 1, m v.,,,,. .-. : " ior erea auiomoune, onwn. Kotarii 29 miles south of faramu- Mc- ters, one after another, until he Bniro jwaa finally trapped in an alley. Afl"ln prevoua raids this month. the Japanese sent up no aerial resistance. They waited out the raid while bombs crashing Into earrisons on Paramushiro and positions ond.the island recently by the free 14vor BmtptrlrllV lOCateQ H i off the Dall Ttiiu on .u- tol nl. ww.k Rrea since March 11, dur- in tne nuaoie "":'y ,Z Plant Worker Held for Oklahoma r-ori n. Renfroe. allegedly an Oklahoma State reiormatory es- or ruled out " an dui iour or iie capee, was picked up by Geneva questions from a 14-page list sub-steel sub-steel plant guards yesterday andmittied by Chaplin's attorney, Jer-turned Jer-turned over to Provo authorities ry oiesler, designed to bring out awaiting further action. policeUfjga Barry's character and back- IttlltU 111 Jim otvvv - r - question red-haired Joan Barry York and oacK m tne iau w about her background and associ- for immoral purposes, atlons with men other than the U. S. Attorney Charles Carr multi-millionaire comic being said that Miss Barry would take tried on white slavery charges. the stand again after the luncn- , . tj. t tt t n'ronn. eon recess to u truoo c.....-Federal c.....-Federal Judge J. F. T. O Conn- remain only "about 10 minutes the 14th concentrated 'raid on Alliprl bombers mauan lsianas, ia DCFr he nearly ,100 tons only by Bralslana 0t ' Admiralty inlands, sw'the-.terr i Adriatic to the Big miles to the north, American de-,Dalatian eeaport. . in t H r Mmnnimi to clear the remnants of the Japa- 'Model iViarriage rom the st ratecicl " " 1 w w em end of the' f- l nSwArrn CIIU3 III iivwiw Bismarck Archipelago. While ground troops were mop- - , T . -K . Nary's unexpired term. German Planes Make Most Yidespread Raid Over England In 3-Year Period Onekotan illuminated tne DieaK, snowy islands with 6,000,00 candle can-dle power flashes. Bv ROBERT DOWSON i Bristol, dropping a large number. Valuable reconnaissance pho-. United Press Staff Correspondent1 of heavy explosives and thous- tographs were obtained. LONDON March 28 (U.E)-Ger- ands of a new type of fire bomb Among the pilota participating maesmadrtheir most wide- The attack lasted over a half ,ln the mission were Lts. N . .j. xrnn.i.nH onrf hour and caused larse fires, DNB Rradshaw. Mesa. Arizo; Elliot night in wliat appeared Wales in nearly three years last . said. Some damage was reported Wolf on. Hartford, Cel.; and Jos-niht Jos-niht in wliat appeared to be an from a west country town, but the epn wolferman, Spokane, Wash. n t-t4L.T . rH homh al- German report appeared to naie The bombers' course on Kuriie ping up on Manus and Los Negros, holli rZZZl i. i t Brianeiiied trons and armor massing foribeen as exaggerated as were!raids uken them from ene,hem; islands, the destroyers ea; n e. .tlii invasion of western Europe, jthose of recent -heavy a,i enemy positions on Bv,- ... ...,,,,... ijr si""" r . . . " j . ,.t, , announce- ern coast oi aiiu o u V'"'. fuJ" hn seoa-oonepntrated their main weight ot At least n Rambutyo. a large island 30 miles ment ml ht as wellibombs on western England, with were shot down red to have raids on London. ... . . . , . . , t-i . - least XX ucnuaii hjidauarters revealed today The reformatory was contacted by telegraph in order to find out what course of action the Oklahoma Okla-homa authorities will take, police laid. ground. The action reinforced Judge O'Connor's O'-Connor's stand of last Friday in which he ruled that Miss Barry's past life was not germane to the othPst of Manus. rated so mucn uitj ""o X8e o Rambutyo. ,ted Academy American oomrjers maintameai sister ui " " rarr refused to say how many questions Judge O'Connor allowed allow-ed from the lengthy list but sug gested that reporters compare ws. Qn Rab& iso.e would fUe for divorce as soon own jubilant expression . New Britain base, dropping as her lawyer gets ck m that of Giesler, anythmg but hap- 7Q ton8 q 'ex love -Regrettable m i e u n d erstend-Py- . . emitted Saturday in their 51st attack since lings" and constant separations The defense attorney admitted J were blamed. tContlnueil o. IW TfereO 'eD' isphere to another. In the latest ottaif thev took off from their planes AJeutian base on Saturday, drop-I drop-I tvinir homhs on Rnndav after.' in western uiikmuiu, . - - ... . , u.v. . ? , slirht activity being reporteui aiucu i crossing me iiurniBuvuu from south, southwest, southeast. German's chief mission was anu and returned to their base and east England and South armed reconnaissance tour of the, Saturday. Wales, though no sizeable force j English coasts and some one army plane making a. 8pe- of planes appeared over any, areas in an tteP' ;wa-'lcial flight westward yesterday single target! 'concentration of hips, troopa. , tQ wtwn no Um & The German DNB agency ithd "fl1'1 0bfinaff iSSSllt has been found, it waa report-Nazi report-Nazi bombers strongly attacked! for the opening of a western i nere the western England port of i front, t |