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Show t THE DESERET NEWS Salt Lake City, Utah Grand Jury Tokyo Continues Threats Impaneled To To Punish U. S. Fliers Hear 24Members Of Bund To Go To Prison NEW YORK, Oct. 21. (AP) The Tokyo radio, continuing to broadcast threats of severe punishment for United State fliers taken after raids on Japanese territory, named today four airmen it said had fallen into Japanese hands after the April 18 raid on Tokyo led by Brig. Gen. James H. Doolittle. The names were given ss Sec- ond Lieut William J. Farrow, 23, of Darlington, S. O, Secofld Lieut Dean E. Hollmark, 27, 80 Sentenced Oct. 21. (AP) German American Bund leadera, Including Gerhard Wilhelm Kunze, national leader, were sentenced today to five years in prison each for conspiring to counsel bund members to evade the draft law. Federal Judge Alfred D. Barksdale said that in his opinion all ' of the defendants were guilty of YORK.1 Twenty-fou- r former "far worse than any tactical vioservice lation of the selective law and said that he would not impose fines because that might have the effect of causing their families to lose their homes. Under the conviction, each dehave been subfendant could ject to a $10,000 fine. It was the first mass sentencing imposed in the southern district of New York. The court directed that Kunze and Dr. Otto Willumeit, former Chicago Bund leader, sentenced in Hartford, Conn , in August to terms of 15 years and five years each for conspiracy to send U. S. military information to the Axis, serve consecutively the sentences impose in the present 20 case, boosting the total to years for Kunze and 10 years for Willumeit. Kunze pleaded guilty to the charge in Hartford and Willumeit was convicted "It is the sentence of this court that you and each of you bs sentenced to serve a term in such penal institutions as the attorney general may direct, a the period of five years each, court told the convicted men as they stood at the bench ManPower- (Ctontinued From Page One) government must plan for the care of children whose mothers take industrial jobs, he said, and there must be extensive transfers from less essential to more essential industries, with seniority rights protected and travel expenses paid in some Instances. WOULD FORCE TRANSFER Where refusal of key work- i ers to transfer Impedes war production we must be prepared to require transwer, he added. By next summer, McNutt predicted, there will be about 160 areas of acute labor shortage. As a sample of existing problems, he cited Mobile, Alabama, where he said war production exployment now stood at about 45,000 in a city with a normal population of about 80,000 The repercussions of this situation on war production are Workers severe, he Continued come into the area in response to high wages, and leave within two or three weeks because housing conditions are intoler-abl- e or because higher earnings are possible elsewhere. "One concern estimates that it must hire about 6,000 workers during the next few months in order to increase its work force by 2,500. Many workers hired aa helpers at unskilled wage rates move on to other areas aa soon as they have acquired work experience. "Voluntary arrangements to restrict this practice simply have not worked FARMS LACK HELP Turning to the acute labor shortage on' the nation's farms, McNutt declared food production goals can and must be met. The fundamental solution, he, said, was the establishment of fair rates of pay for farm work. Other aids would be more careful routing of seasonal agricultural workers from job to Job, more efficient utilization of existing farm labor, and a vigorous farm worker recruiting program. The witness said each of four pending bills designed to apportion manpower lacked one or more basic requirements of national service legislation. Senators Austin and who have bills to Hill that effect before the committee, declared compulsory mahpower mobilization offered tjie only solution. a x Charges Nantes Of Captive Americans Are Broadcast By Japs National Leader Kunze Among NEW IPtdnzCc. y, October 21, 1942 Chinese Council Begins Sessions CHUNGKINK, Oct. 21 (AP) Delegates from all parts of China 24 including provinces under Japanese occupation were gathering in Chungking today for opening tomorrow of the third session of the Peoples Political Council Chinas nearest approach to a Parliament. The 214 delegates are drawn from all major political parties, including the Communists ss well as the dominant Kuomintang, from the army, labor, cultural and other public bodies and the universities. There are 14 wo- Guilty Bundists Go To Prison Some of the 24 leaders of the German-AmericaBand, foand guilty in federal court in New York of conspiracy to counsel evasion of the Selective Service Act, are pictured above as they were taken to police vans for transfer to jail Jo await sentence. Wilhelm Among those convicted was Gerhard Kunze, former national Bond leader. n - Kai-she- runiform, Smuts- - London Honors Anniversary Of Trafalgar Victory r 21 Oct LONDON, (AP) Copies of new spapers dated 1805 reporting Nelsons victory st on Trafalgar were displayed Trafalgar Square today beside the latest editions chronicling the addition of the two mighty battleships, the Anson and Howe, to the British fleet. Nelsons last signal fluttered from the column on which stands a statute of the admiral, and at its foot were banked wreaths, floral Vs and anchoi s. tributes to the Royal Navy s heroes of all wars Todav is Trafalgar Day, the 137th anniversary of the great and victory oer the French Spanish fleets Workers Threatened Oct. 21 ((AP) A Reuters dispatch datellned from the French frontier said today h rl the Vichy government threatened to shO'-- Cp" c airplane engine factory workers if thev refused to go to u . many and had taken away their food ration cards. LONDON, men. An address by Generalissimo is expected to Chiang be the high point of the session which is to be devoted largely to wartime economic problems, f Continued From Page 1 was no broadcast to listeners in Britain by the BBC, however. Smuts said the appalling blood letting which is necessary for Hitlers ultimate defeat is beby tha Rusing administered sians Although he said They alone ean do it, he urged whatever help . .we can give to Russia. . . measure and in the fullest with the utmost speed. secret society, Like a huge nearly 1,000 members of both houses assembled to hear Smuts. MEET IN SECRET Neither the time nor the place nor even the date of the meeting which brought together one of the most distinguished British assemblages of the war was disclosed to the public Prime Minister Churchill was among the members present and who as David Lloyd George, in the First prime minister World War appointed Smuts to his war cabinet, introduced the South African leader. So strictly were the Arrangements held In secret that writers were not allowed even to describe the chairs in the hall lest the enemy be given a clue to parliament- s- wartime meeting place. Smuts was given a tremendous ovation as he arrived in field marshal's attended by an honor guard of the parliamentary home guard, and ascended a, specially-buil- t dais covered with a rich, broad, red carpet Russia, Smuts said, is bear- ing more than her share of the common burden" and he urged that "whatever help in whatever form we can give to Russia to sustain her in her colossal effort should be given in fullest measure and with utmost speed. DEFENSE HELD ENDED In reference to Xhe second front. Smuts said the defense phase of the war for the United Nations had ended. The final alignments both of the Allies and of our enemies have been made, he said. Resources have been developed and mobolized on a very large scale Ours are still on the increase, those of the enemy are on the decline. Our manpower is still growing, that of the enemy is getting depleted, while he makes ever heavier drafts on his suffering vassal peoples. Thd spectre of want hunger and starvation are beginning to stalk '.through the subject countries and the spirit of unrest is heaving and rising. The explosive limits of endurance are nearing. We are approaching the point when both on tha war fronts and on the home fronts in the enemy countries, the situation is ripening for developments Way Avenue, Dallas, Tex., Cor- poral Jacob D. Deshazer, 29, of Oregon, and Sergeant Mechanic Harold A. Spatz, 20, of Kansas. The Tokyo radio on Monday said that U. S. airmen captured after the raid had been convicted Of inhuman acts because, it was charged, they bombed civilians and machinegunned school children. It was said they "would be severely punished in accordance with International law. Four U. S. airmen whose names closely resembled those given in the Tokyo broadcast, as heard in London, were in the list of 80 officers and officers awarded decorations for the raid in Washington on May 19 They were Lieutenant W. D. Farrow and D. E. Hallmark and Deshazer and C, Corporals Spatz. The list gave no addresses Federal Judge Holds Few Excused From Court Duty, Federal Judge Tillman today instructed and impaneled a grand jury of 18 men and wemeq who Immediately began a secret investigation of some 60 persons accused of felonies under tha United States laws. The Judge reminded the members that they were serving on the body set up under the Constitution for the protection of the people of the country. "The government Officer can not cause a person to be tried for an alleged offense. The grand jury must investigate and it alone may indict. The persons accused of crimes are entitled to that protection, he declared. Chester. W. Wilcox of Ogden, army supply depot yard foreman, was appointed foreman of the grand jury. Armed witn a letter from the contending Officer atating that he is badly needed, Mr. Wilcox asked to be excused. However, Judge Johnson refused all requests to be excused except those made on' statutory grounds. One man said he la not a taxpayer. "You are a taxpayer In Utah If you ate breakfast this morning," remarked the court Argentine Fliers Hunt U. S. Plane Oct. 21. BUENOS ' AIRES, (AP) The Argentine Army Air Corps ordered all available aircraft today to Join a search for a plane unrtported since yesterday when It was being 'flown from Buenos Aires to Mendoza Bay by Col. Charles Deerweeter, chief of a United States air mission here. War ministry officials said the plane might have been forced down at tome point remote from communications. It had not been reported for 24 hours after it took off on a flight which should have taken about three hour. P) Oct. Large German air reinforcement recently have been shifted from the Russian front to bases In Sicily and Crete, tha Rom correspondent of the Stockholm newspaper, Dagerts Nyheter, reported todey. The correspondent linked this with what he Mid were reported Italian plan for heavy stuck against Malta, BrlUtns Island aircraft carrier athwart the Axis Mediterranean lines about 60 miles supply south of Sicily. BERN, Switzerland, 21.-(A- have the goods have the. prices give friendly, service -- lit. !: lib .HM!. -- (!)). Todays Domei broadcast said other names would be announced later Although a German broadcast of Japanese dispatches today quoted Tomokazu Hori, Japanese foreign .office spokesman, as saying that the American pilota seized after the raid already had been sentenced by a Japanese military court, the broadcast also suggested that the sentences might not he carried out im mediately. He was quoted as denying that the action was a reprisal and saying that punishments . only were for the future In order to protect the Japanese civilian pop ulation against enemy Here's more proof of our policy of "the moslesl in clothes for the leastest money" . . . made possible only because we manufacture and sell direct to you. Extra costs are eliminated and you get the savings. Come in and see these FIRM BlJltT Furm-bi- YOUB Personal Christmas Card While the awaits yea here. ehelee U rich and vaited. come in and make year selection. Greeting Cards Gifts Books lt DESERET Clothes! BOOK COMPANY Street Salt lake City, Utah 44 Eaet South Temple sea victory ema Waste no foods! Attack On Malta Near All-O- ut nLL.WOOE. XV OnSJEEB Conserve vitamins and minerals CHEVIOT 5 by wise use of your Electric Range! Join the Victory Cook brigade by not wasting food and by conserving vitamins and minerals through wise use of your Electric Range. 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