OCR Text |
Show THE WEATHER UTAH Cloudy tola afternoon and tonight, becoming doady west portion Friday, with lighf rain or snow northwest portion, late Friday afternoon. Cooler today to-day and tonight . Temperatures High it Low ....24 Precipitation WOMAN'S NERVE SOMERVXLLE, Mask, Dec. 21 JJJ When a woman loudly be-rated be-rated a tobacco store clerk who told her he had bo clgarets, state Tax Inspector Joseph Cacclatiore topped forward to explain the vhortace and discovered she already al-ready had 112 packages In a shopping shop-ping has. FIFTY-NINTH YEAR, NO. 143 hsotd3 PROVO. "UTAH COUNTY, UTAH. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1944 COMPLETE UNITED PRESS TELEGRAPH NEWS SERVICE PRICE FIVE CENTS S3 M UUVJ (SI? am Lee Backers File Petition For Recount Recount To Be Limited To Six Major Counties According To Reports Attorneys for J. Bracken Lee, defeated Republican candidate for governor, today filed a petition for a court recount of ballots in Utah county, charging in the information in-formation that a total of 240 ballots bal-lots In seven districts should have been counted for him instead of Gov. Herbert B. Maw. The petition was signed by Shirley Jones and George M. Cannon, Can-non, attorneys for Mr. Lee. The petition also named 11. J. Cor-leissen, Cor-leissen, campaign manager for Mr. Lee in Utah county. In the petition peti-tion for a recount. The petition also lists five other counties where Mr. Lee charges alleged irregularities. Thcv include: in-clude: Salt Lake. Wcbcr, Cache, Pa vis and Carbon. In the breakdown of the seven districts in Utah county the Republican Re-publican candidate claims the following fol-lowing votes that were cast for Maw, but are allegedly claimed by Lee: Orem, 40; Lehi, No. 1. 45; Lehl No. 2, 40; American Fork, 32 Lee votes not counted and 50; Pleasant Grove. 40: Provo No. 15, 11; Provo No. 22. 28. The petition also claims that In the six counties named 2.151 additional votes should be counted for Mr. Lee which he did not get, nd that 4.118 votes should be deducted de-ducted from the Maw count which the governor was not entitled en-titled to. The Lee backers claim that he should have a total of 125,002 votes while Governor Maw should have 5,213 votes less than that number. County Clerk C. A. Grant said that the court must set a hearing on the petition in not less than ten days not more than 3U days. SALT LAKE CITY. Dec. 21 lU.PJ -Representatives o Mayor J. Bracken Lee of Price, today were filing petitions for -court recounts of ballots in Weber, Cache, Salt Lake, Davis. Utah and Carbon counties, sources close to Lcc revealed. re-vealed. The petitions, sponsored by a Committee of Lee supporters, charged widespread irregularity in the counting, which gave Gov. Herbert B. Maw an official 1,056-vote 1,056-vote lead in his fight for reelection. re-election. Maw trailed his ticket by almost al-most 50,000 votes. The Lee backers back-ers said that many more voters had "clearly indicated-' their intentions in-tentions to scratch Maw. but that their ballots had been voided on technicalities, or counted for Maw. Sources said the Lee party, Including In-cluding his campaign manager, John Boggs, and his attorney, Shirley P. Jones, had left Salt Lake City this morning to tour the county seats of Weber, Cache, then Salt Lake and Utah, Cache 'and Carbon counties in that order. No mention was made of filing in any other counties, and it was believed be-lieved that the recount would be limited to these. Open Hearth No. 8 At Geneva Steel Nov in Production Jib. 8 open hearth furnace at the Geneva Steel plant was in production today, and only one more furnace remains out of production pro-duction now out of the battery of nine. All three blast furnaces are in production, as are the four batteries of coke ovens. The plant is nearer to full production pro-duction than ever before. The plant is hiring workers daily in order to bring the manpower at the plant to a point where demands de-mands from the shipyards for steel plate can be met. So far, the production has fallen short of the demands. Former Senator Dies In Concord CONCORD, N. H., Dec. 21 U.R Former U. S. Senator George M. Moses, 75, old line Republican Republi-can who served 15 years in the Senate until his retirement in 1933, died at his home last night of heart disease. Apparently recovered from an Attack last April 21, Moses suffered suf-fered a relapse about a month ago and had been confined to bed since. A member of the senate foreign fore-ign relations committee that led the fight to keep the United States out of the League of Nation, Na-tion, Moses retired from public life when the new deal rose to power in 1933. Brother, Sister Reunited On Duty In Australia So, you're a WAC and your request for overseas has been granted and you sail from San Francisco-destination Francisco-destination unknown and you 'sail' right in to your lieutenant brother's office in Brisbane, Australia, the country "down under." Yes It did happen to Pfc. Virginia Booth and First Lt Thornton Booth, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Booth of Provo. who declare de-clare that with word that Virginia and Thornton are together after four and a half Tears "this is going to be our best Christmas in that long a time." Pfc. Virginia trained In Georgia and left from San Francisco Oct. 15. Lt Booth is in army intelligence, and left for overseas in July, 1941. Pfc. Booth has been assigned as-signed to the same building as her brother. Ickes Boasts Of Executive Branch Beating the Court WASHINGTON, Dec. 21 (U.K-Secretary (U.K-Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes boasted today that the executive branch "beat the supreme su-preme court by approximately 24 hours" in revoking blanket orders excluding persons of Japanese Jap-anese ancestry from the west coast Asked at a press conference why the ban was lifted at this time, he rplcied: "It was time to issue the order; the Japanese had demonstrated that they were entitled to their full rights as citizens." Then he laughed and said "We wanted to beat the supreme court to the punch." The court had before it two cases of the exclusion issue, and on Monday ruled that loyal citizens citi-zens of Japanese descent could not be further detained after their loyalty had been established. establish-ed. The revocation order, however, how-ever, had been announced the day before. Ickes said the situation resulting result-ing from the revocation "is much better than anyone had reason to expect." "Wo aren't very much concerned con-cerned about il," he said. Asked whether he contemplated contemplat-ed any action to force Pacific coast residents to accept eligible Japanese who wished to go back there, Ickes replied that the evacuees could carry and cases of interference into court 'wtih the full force of the government behind them." Woman Kills Benefactress LOS ANGELES, Dec. 21 (U.R) Mrs. Louise Peete, plump, middle-aged housekeeper convicted of burying a wealthy mining executive in a cellar crypt, admitted ad-mitted today she buried the body of her benefactress 24 years to the day later, but refused to make any further admission. She was booked on suspicion of murder a few hours after the decomposed body of a woman identified as Mrs. Margaret Lagan, La-gan, 60, was found in an 18-lnch grave in a flowerbed in the back yard of the Logan home. Deputy District Attorney John Barnes quoted Mrs. Peete as saying, say-ing, "I admit burying the body . . . that's all I have to say now." Navigator Reported Missing First Lt. Fred D. Johnson, navigator nav-igator on a B-17, is reported missing miss-ing over Germany since Nov. 30, ,i ft " i according to Wkl "'Si word from the f Hjr I government re ceived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs John A. Johnson of 105 West Fifth Fif-th North street The well known Provo youth, who joined the air force May 29, 1943, has made quite -a record for himself and It is presumed that he was on f Lt. Johnson one of the last missions before leaving for home. A letter, dated November 27, 1 JapTargefs Blasted By Superforts Manchuricm Arsenal At Mukden Blasted In Superfortress Redds WASHINGTON, Dec. 21 vsv Superfortresses destroyed destroy-ed 15 enemy planes, probably destroyed seven, and damaged damag-ed 11 during a raid on the Japanese arsenal city of Mukden, Muk-den, Manchuria, the war department de-partment announced today. Two Superforts were lost due to enemy action. The raiders reported "good results" at the target, which was the Manchuria Airplane Co. plant The attack was carried out shortly before noon Dec. 21 Japanese time. The target was struck by visual bombing iu clear weather, though haze and smoke partially obscured ob-scured results. Enemy fighter opposition was described as "moderate to strong", though antiaircraft fire was meager. The war department here revealed that a substantial force of Superfortresses blasted the Manchurlan arsenal of Mukden, while Tokyo radio reported attacks at-tacks on such widely-scattered outposts as I wo Jima in the Pa cific, Hongkong. Davao in the Philippines, and Sabang, Sumatra, Suma-tra, in the Dutch East Indies. The enemy broadcasts said Iwo Jima was raided by a formation of 15' Superfortresses accompanied accompan-ied by P-38 Lightning fighters; 40 China-based P-Sl Mustang fighters hit Hongkong; Superfortresses Superfor-tresses and B-23 Mitchell medium bombers hit Davao, important port of Mindanao island; and British carrier-based planes raided raid-ed Sabang, one of the world's best natural harbors. The Japanese also said that Dairen in southern Manchuria was attacked and that two pairs of B-29's flew over Honshu last night and early today. A Tokyo broadcast recorded by the FCC said one of the braces of Saipan-based Superforts dropped drop-ped bombs on Shizuoka and AichI Prefertures in south central Hon-( Hon-( Continued on pace two) Vets' Dependents May File Claims WASHINGTON. Dec. 21 ftl PI Dependents of veterans of World War I entitled to widows and orphans' pensions under the law passed Dec. 14 should file claims with the nearest veterans administration admin-istration field office, it was announced an-nounced today. They should not write or come to Washington, the veterans administration ad-ministration said. The act extends pensions to widows and children of all World War I veterans who served BO days or more and were honor ably discharged. Heretofore only widows and children of veterans with service-connected disabilities were entitled to pensions. Roosevelts Hold Christmas Party WASHINGTON. Dec. 21 (U.R) The president and Mrs. Roosevelt held their annual Christmas par ties for the White House staff to day, with executive employes and employes of the White House proper receiving holiday gifts. The president's Christmas gift to each of the 300 executive office of-fice employes was a scroll bearing the president's D-day prayer which was read to the world last June 6 as Allied forces began their Invasion In-vasion of France. At the bottom of the scroll were the words: "Christmas 1944 from FDR." indicated that he expected to be leaving for the United States shortly after Christrdas, and that he had completed most of his missions. mis-sions. LL Johnson trained at Kearns, Utah; Missoula, Mont.; Santa Ana, Calif.; Ellington field. Texas; San Marcos, Texas; Lincoln, Neb., and Rapid City, South Dakota He left for overseas June 29. He Is a graduate of the B.Y.U. and took one year of post-graduate work, specializing in chemistry. He was employed as a chemist at Columbia Co-lumbia steel's Ironton plant, and later, at Geneva Steel, before entering en-tering the service. Also awaiting word of Lt. Johson are his sisters and brothers: broth-ers: Alma L. Johnson of Provo, W. Taylor Johnson of Spanish Fork, Mrs. Ova Hunt of Clearfield, Clear-field, Reta Johnson of Provo and Mrs. Alia GUlis of California. Nazi IN 4 Radm-TtUpKoio) American Ninth Army soldiers examine dead Oerman paratroopers and the wreckage of their Ju-52 transporl shot down by American sck ac): on the western front. Plane wts part of ths Nazi eounter-ort cnsi e that smashed 20 miles into Allied lines with paratroopers, rocket-bombs and tanl;s. Signal Corps radio-telcphuto. Red Army Resumes Offensive 'British 8th Army In Western Hungary Campaign j Forces Capture LONDON. Dec. 21 (U.R) Berlin slaught which breached the Ger- Italian VlllsflOC reported today that the Red army man lines. jllUllUll I IIIUiV J had resumed its offensive in Nazi broadcasts said the main, western Hungary between Lake weight of the new Soviet drive! ROME, Dec. 21 (U.R) British Balaton and the Danube, throw- was centered in the area of Eighth army forces have captured ing at least 10 divisions of more Szekefehervar, 32 miles south- i tne villages of San Silvestro and than 100,000 troops into an on- west of Budapest and midway be- Pietro, northwest of Faenza, Germans Pay Big Price for Gains By JOHN MCDERMOTT United Press War Correspondent WITH AMERICAN FIRST ARMY, Eupen, Belgium. Dec. 20 Correct)) (U.R) Screaming Ger man infantry men charged head-on head-on into the American machine guns and went down like ducks in a shooting gallery until the street was littered with squirming, squirm-ing, bloody heaps of flesh. The Germans paid a terrible price but they took their losses and went on to overwhelm the American gurihers defending town near Monschau. Sgt Elmer Kenner, 26, Sange, Calif., told the story of that fanatical fan-atical Nazi charge as we huddled in a corner room of a Belgian chateau today with German shells whistling overhead. Before the American pulled out. he said, the streets of that town were piled with layer upon layer of German dead, old men, kids, trained soldiers, all part of Adolf Hitler's conscripted "Volksgrena-dlers" "Volksgrena-dlers" the people's army. "The Jerries came up riding on tanks, yelling their heads off." jveener sam. -wnen tney were vu yards from our machine gun, I saw them jump off and start running run-ning around like wild Indians, yelling, blowing whistles and shooting guns into the air just like cowboys at a rodeo." Then the massacre began. Keener said the Germans exhausted ex-hausted all' their ammunition and then ran directly' into the blazing blaz-ing American machine guns. Body fell upon body until they formed a great pile of twisted humans, with here and there a man twitching twitch-ing in his death agony. Navy To Require Many More Planes WASHINGTON, Dec. 21 (U.R) Rear Admiral Dewitt C. Ramsey, chief of the navy's bureau of aeronautics, said today that a 30 to 40 per cent increase in navy fighter plane production might be necessary in the coming year be cause of American progress to ward the Japanese homeland. We are approaching a new phase In the Pacific war," Ramsey Ram-sey said in an interview with the United Press. "Because of the change in geography, change in enemy tactics and because we are getting closer to Japan proper and the centers of enemy shore-based shore-based aircraft, we will need more fighters to cope with the new situations." During the last half of this year, the navy placed in effect a 20 per cent cutback in the fighter program. This was due largely to the fact that attrition of naval fighter planes was one third less than had been estimated when the 1944 production schedules were; piannea. "Fighter production will have to be increased in the coming year on the basis of our present outlook," Ramsey continued. There are many uncertainties in this same of war. We must have cushions and margins of strength to cope with, the unexpected. Paratroopers Shot Down Vr-vl2:M N- - Z!ZZ Xt- 9 fa .ft tween Lake Balaton and the Danube "The German defense reacted immediately," a DNB dispatch said. "Several local breacbes."were sealed off, and strong counterattacks counter-attacks hit the enemy's flank. It musi oe expeciea mai me Daiua 0f the main Rimini - Bologna will mount in fury. highway and captured 100 pris- Stiffened resistance along the oners. 43-mile line between Budapest j Canadian troops north of Bag-and Bag-and Lake Balaton had stalled. the racavallo have beaten off a tank-Soviet tank-Soviet push in western Hungary supported counterattack after which now appeared to be re- heavv fiehtine. a communion. newed in full force The Hungarian capital already was flanked to the southwest by the drive which constituted the lower arm of a pincers whose pays were reported less than 20 miles a oa i t. bringing the last rail 8 j line out of the city under Soviet artillery fire. To the northeast the Russians battered through stiff opposition in the southern Slovak moun - tains. At the same time, Stockholm reports credited the anti-Nazi German sources said the German high command was preparing a gigantic "Christmas offensive" on the eastern front to coincide with the new drive in the west. These reports, which thus far were not supported by Moscow j dispatches or the latest German propaganda outpourings, said perhaps 250,000 Nazi reserves would be thrown into the new offensive on an undisclosed sector sec-tor of the eastern front. Stockholm said fresh troops were being released for the action ac-tion through the mobilization of additional Volkstrum, or people's army, units in the Reich. Both Russian and German ac- counts of the east front fighting vance on the Cologne plain and today, however, centered on the the Saar basin, fierce struggle raging along the! The hazards of the counterof-mountainous counterof-mountainous Hungarian-Slovak pensive are heightened by the fact border jthat the German high command Berlin" said the Soviets wereust lso be prepared to meet the throwing increasingly - strong ! Russian winter offensive where- fnrros into the battle In a full - scale attempt to break through eastern Slovakia to link up their first and second Ukrainian armies in southern Poland for a winter! offensive against German Silesia. Krakov and SOLDIER FOUND DEAD TEXARKANA, Tex., Dec. 21 (U.R) TS Clarence W. Martin, 30, Billings, Mont., was found dead today on the porch of his home here where he had appar ently hanged himself. A note left for his motner-m- law said he was committing suicide. sui-cide. Martin was stationed at the Ordnance Unit training center here. British Forces Clear On e-Third By JAMES E. ROPER United Press War Correspondent ATHENS, Dec. 21 (U.R) British forces cleared one-third of Athens today, permitting the distribution of food and other relief supplies on large scale for the first time since hostilities began two and a half weeks ago. (The dispatch did not make clear whether the British had launched the all-out offensive against ELAS gun positions which Lt Gen. Ronald Scobie, j the British commander, had said I would be undertaken at 9 a. m. ' uicr puuening uirougn ucrrnan i I . . . 1 v resistance to cross the Lamone river three miles northeast of the city, and anvancing two and a half miles toward the Senlo river. Farther west, ""TJew Zealand troops cleared the east bank of the Senior for three miles north saia loaay. Except for patrol clashes and harassing artillery and mortar j fire, the Fifth army front below ; Bologna remained quiet Planes of the Mediterranean Allied air force flew 1,400 sorties yesterday. Nineteen aircraft were reported missing. Heavy bombers of the U. S. 15th air force bombed targets in ; Germany, Czechoslovakia and Austria, and RAF medium bomb' ers hit road targets in Yugoslavia. Yugo-slavia. Weather restricted tactical tacti-cal air force operations. Germans Accept Big Hazard In Ail-Out Effort WASHINGTON, Dec. 21 (U.R) The Germans, in their current counter-offensive, have accepted the hazard of an all-out effort which, if it fails may hasten the end of the war, Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson said today. He told a news conference the German drive was designed pri- marily to halt the American ad ,cv" " "laJ ue, uc om. Hmes Announces 1 I MMM D Wl S.WMII iMICa WASHINGTON, Dec. (U.R) Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, veterans veter-ans administrator, today announced an-nounced regulations for guaranteeing guaran-teeing loans up to $2,000 for World War II veterans who want to set up their own small businesses. busi-nesses. No loan will be guaranteed under un-der the G. I. Bill of Rights. Hines said at a press conference, unless un-less the projected business has "a reasonable likelihoood of success. suc-cess. today with "field and naval artillery, ar-tillery, strafing, rockets and bombs.") Left-wing ELAS units were routed from new areas In both central and southwestern Athens, including one district northeast of the Acropolis and another northwest of the Athens-Faliron-Piraeus road... The Athens-Faliron road itself remained impassable except for armored . vehicles, though bitter troops began an offensive to clear It three days ago. Nazis Sever Main Lateral Highway Liege To Arlon Both Flanks of 60-Mile German Offensive Becoming Stable; Center Pointed For Ardennes Gap, Sedan "Still Most Fluid" By J. EDWAKD MURRAY United Press War Correspondent PARIS, Dec. 21 UJ9 German armored spearheads have driven 30 miles inside Belgium, supreme Allied headquarters headquart-ers reported today, severing the main lateral Lieg-e-Arkra highway in a drive which had knocked a hole of 25 miles or more in American First army lines in south Belgium and the northern half of Luxembourg:. The SHAEF report was based on operations up to noon Tuesday 48 hours ago. Front reports and German dis-patches dis-patches indicated that Nazi pro-, 1 gress has continued since tnat( time although the northern shoul der of the First army flank, protecting pro-tecting Liege, has stiffened and Malmedy, Stavelot. and Butgen-bach Butgen-bach art in American hands. Center SUU Fluid SHAEF reported that both, flanks of the 60-mile Nazi of-1 fensive front are becoming at- 1.1. . f..,n.,K1. hrinr ,.lt rhimiriKriTMi th nntfr which i pointed for the Ardennes gap and Sedan as "still most fluid " The deepest German penetration penetra-tion reported up to noon Tuesday Tues-day was at Habiemont, 14 miles west of the Malmedy and three miles west of the important Liege Li-ege - Bastogne - Arlon highway which is the principal lateral communications route back to the central First army front The German high command communique said that this highway high-way was crossed on "a broad front" and that 20,000 American prisoners had been taken. Nazi tanks were said to have overrun American supply columns falling back to the Meuse. SHAEF reported that Field Marshall Karl Von Rundsted't attack was beinsr directed alone six main directions within the 60- mile front. The capture of Habiemont, SH AEF revealed, was preceded by a new night attack by German paratroops who were dropped southwest of the city during the night of the 18th-19th,presumab-ly with the objective of setting up roadblocks and harassing American efforts to move up reinforcements. re-inforcements. Along the east-west line just north of Habiemont the First army was erecting a fairly stable sta-ble front. It had recaptured Stu-velot, Stu-velot, held the Nazis outside St. Vith. while, according to SHAEF SHA-EF accounts, the First was fighting fight-ing hard to recapture Malmedy, fresh front reports asserted Malmedy Ma-lmedy never had fallen to the Nazis. The situation to the south, In the southern corner of Belgium, and in Luxemberg itself was more obscure SHAEF reported that Germans had made gains of unspecified nature na-ture west of Gonsdorf which is 13 miles from the city of Luxembourg. Luxem-bourg. There have been strong in dications for 48 hours that the Germans may have seized the Luxembourg capital in their sur ging panzer rush. SHAEF reported that the Nazi column which crossed the Lux embourg frontier at Vianden had penetrated to a point just east of Diltz, a gain of about 13 miles, and seven miles to the northeast north-east had reached Clerf, five miles v.'Cbt o? the frontier. At the southern end of the Nazi drive American forces still held the Luxembourg border town of Echternach under severe Nazi pressure. The American forces at Echternach, Echter-nach, SHAEF reported, have been reached by relief columns after fighting a desperate battle against German panzers which surrounded surround-ed them. A second American group is surrounded in the vicinity of St Vith but there was no fresh information in-formation on their position. For the third straight day Allied Al-lied air forces were virtually grounded by bad weather which held them Impotent to join the battle against the Nazi panzers. The German high command (Continued oh page two) of Athens With the extension of the British' Brit-ish' "island" in the center of Athens, Anglo - American relief agencies began distributing 60 tons of canned meat to 79,000 Inhabitants In-habitants in the cleared area with an average of 36 ounces going to each recipient at a cost of about five cents,. Free soup was distributed to 5,000 persons in Athens yesterday, yester-day, but another 1000 planned servings had to be cancelled in the late afternoon because of sniping. . il Ilf-. rranco on me way Out in Spain Says Correspondent BSltSB i United Press War Correspondent LONDON, Dec. 21 (U.R) Possibility Pos-sibility of a resulting civil war in Spain was regarded by some sources today as the last impor tant barrier to the unseating of Generalissimo Francisco Franc by elements of a growing opposi tion. While informed sources described de-scribed Franco's position as "fairly "fair-ly stable" for the time being, the belief prevailed that there will be a change in the Spanish regime re-gime sooner or later. The question ques-tion of whether the change cat be affected without danger of civil war, they said, is one of the dominent considerations. Informants said Franco has been' losing strength gradually since the fortunes of war turned against the axis and republican sources claim that the opposition within Spain now embraces between be-tween 70 and 90 per cent of the people. Anti-Franco elements, whose outside activities have been intensified in-tensified since the liberation of France, are divided broadly into two main groups, namely those who favor restoration of a monarchy mon-archy and those who advocate the re-establishment of a repub lican government. The monarchists support the pretender to the throne, Don Juan, Count of Barcelona. The two republican groups arc the Spanish National Union organized or-ganized in France last year and backed primarily by Communistic Commun-istic elements, and the Spanish liberation committee organized in Mexico by refugees who wero active in the late republican re gime. The latter group has spurned spurn-ed collaboration with the communists. com-munists. Informants believed the combined com-bined opposition to Franco was strong enough to overthrow the leader but their failure to present a united front deprived them 2f the necessary power. Thus, one faction threatened Franco er attempted a coup there was dan ger of precipitating a civil war unless the revolutionary group was able to bring the country quickly under complete controL War In Brief By United Press western FRONT Rein forced American troops rally to stem German break-through on west flank of Belgian salient but Km-ri'm main armored forces an reported rolling forward through the Ardennes forest. pacific B-29 SuDerforts blast Mukden. Manchurlan ar senal city, as American campaign on Leyte island reaches mop-up stage. eastern FRONT Red arm forces battle German and Hun garian resistance in southern Slovak Slo-vak mountains, splintering entire. A via front and threatening en circlement of thousands of enemy troops. ITALY British Ehrhth armv troops capture two villages north-wMt north-wMt of Htv In advance west after crossing Lamone river three miles northeast of city. How Far To Berlin? The distance to Berlin from ad vanced Allies lines today: WESTERN FRONT Zvo mueg (from noint southeast of NiJme- I gen, unchanged). EA8TER2V FRONT 919 mUCS (from Warsaw. Unchanged.) ITALY S2S mil (from rjolnt north of Barexma. U&cbasgel,. |