Show Britisn used the wounded the other Make General Air "The Hun allowed our jeeps to Reports 'Yanks Strike Front Yanks IFashions Army 1944 Tuesday Morning October tun back and forth to well which was their hands 9 Miles Into get water Timid Bow !Factors in Arnhem Debacle for the wounded" he added force larded When his LONDON his hours 2200 U S 'Heavies' Blast 'Siegfried Line Discourage In Paris Show antiaircraft headquarters for said they expected to Urquhart fire bad weather hours at best relieved within leading to erroneous reports that Talk and within three days at worst: were he Germans the Nas that fact the captured Victory From PARIS Oct rage One) (Continued (UP)—Some ' than the divn were Nazi Tank Munition Plants railroad "The enemy was damned sight The remnants "a damned sight stronger Robert Vermillion women and silk furs evacuated after stockings days and n!ghts were the and were the approaching than Zile Zan Cake Zfribune while end 1 3 i a to I in e air-born- Oct 2 (UP)--Hea- own vy 36 and- - -- 21 be ! 2 Allies (Official) By United Press ir--- fr i HEAD- ALLIED SUPREME 2 Oct Lonion QUARTERS About 2209 United tates heavy bombers and fighters sighted but aroided by German fighters which fled from combat attacked three main rail and industrial centers western Germany through broken cloud Monday with a loss of thfr estArnated cf less trk:nz force ‘veather had protected Germany from F4z!th air forte Pnd RAF heavy bomber assaults Sunday 2‘1znlay 1200 Fortresses and Liberators escorted by up to b‘arnbed an ordnance 011'0 e e 7otfighters a tank factory and other targets at Kassel: the railroad yar:1 at Hamm 62 miles north- west of Kassel and unspecified targets at Co:ogne 120 miles west cf Kassel arid 40 mi:es east of Aachen tar support of American First army troops near Aachen until 3 p rnt while hundreds of others ranged t h ro u g h the Ruhr valley and strafed trains in the vicinity of Saarbrucken and Strasbourg Incomplete reports of damage listed 26 locomotives and 100 freight cars destroyed and an equal number damaged rail lines severed in 12 places and ware-o- f houses roundhouses and junction points shot up Flying Fortresses bombed both Colorme and Hassel but pilots porte clouds too thick to permit observation of results Liberators later attacked the great freight yards at Hamm partly through clouds and partly by visual obser1I ration 1000 Fighters Protect Bombers Up to 1000 American fighters rode herd on the big bombers Reports from Eighth air force headquarters said there was no German air opposition and that only light antiaircraft fire was enEnemy lanes licke at SOITI C points countered A United States strategic air Kassel rail lines from Through force communique said 12 bomb- central Germany run northwest to Cr! and seven fighters were miss- - Hamm and west to Cologne From some were of the fighters ing but Hamm they radiate as far north sighted to have landed in friendly as the extreme end of the Dutch-territoA few enemy plants German border from Cologne east-wer- e sighted -- but did not attack- ward toward Aachen southward the bombers nor were our fight- towards Luxembourg and French ers ah:e to engage them the corn- - borders inunique said E c English coastal watchers alsore a rn e d down on Explosives many formations of tworeported site of the Henschel tank motored medium Colo' bombers Avorks ani Eettenhausen ordnance the straits toward Francecrossing during as as rail Treat yell yards Monday morning some heading toplant American infantry preceded ward - - - d where a German n7 la s f- e'n-by 500 United States Ninth air s ns t force medium and fighter-bomber- s French channel port in enemy &mashed into Gerznan 'defenses hands north of Aachen Monday morning A broadcast from supreme allied Ninth air force headquartera headquarters warned Dutchmen P a 4 some 250 Thunderbolt and living in the Schrede estuary -bombers contin- islands that a severe and pro-tie- d Mustang fighter strafing IL n ci bombing of Ger- - longed" aerial bombardment would I ry e - - -1 7- s- cl- e-- I man troop concentrations in close t3:0EsAruc6 soon hit enemy troops and installation in that neighborhood and for them to leave their homes if possible Holland Area Blasted A small number of R A F bomber e o M PI a n d Mosquitoes - "' flying :'through low clouds and rain Sun- day night as far as Brunswick --" 14 destroyed four trains and damaged 1122 and destroyed or damaged a number of barges over Holland and I IV ‘ the Munster area ‘ ' ‘ a A F Typhoons bored through i the clouds to attack troops and ''''''' guns in the Nijmegen area and made five attacks on key railway lines in Holland Four of them were completely successful and in ste""ii-ilthe fifth the Typhoons' missiles barely missed a rail line—and hit Oft sauce for meat fish an engine shed West of Arnhem and east of fowl eggs beans and salads p:eases 0111 Rotterdam barges were attacked that —the taste -Typhoons also hurled rockets on ASK FOR 11'1 7 Gemlan concrete dugouts and fortifications at Dunkerque and iefai f e 0I moks Ar Awl knocked enemy radar ' r 5 stations inoutthe three Walcheren district FOg Alt- rE1 gl 11 I AJ UCE a -- 7ce E L3 k I A YOUNG FOR MEN AND STAY YOUNG n110 MEN towns of Merkstein and Herzogenrrath five and SC Veil miles north of Aachen on the roads to Duesseldorf and Cologne in the Rhineland (A C B S correspondent reported from the front that the preassault bombardment tore a hole in the Siegfried line through which the troops were pouring and "I doubt if they will stop before they reach the Rhine" N B C said that 30000 shells were fired in the barrage) had been Smaller a t tack launched at an earlier hour along Ft- front reaching north through Gellenkirchen to Havert just inside the German border northeast of Dutch Sittard and the German town of Palenburg three miles a was south of Geilenkirchen Throw Mass Barrage Two hours before the infantry pushed off hundreds of massed guns including " and giant began the preassault barrage and were joined by 400 American Marauders and 100 er er "long-Toms- 13-2- dive-bombe- 6 rs The tons of shells and thousands of pounds of bombs quickly burned to death or smothered the Germans in the first-lin- e defenses which included walls six feet thick front dispatches said Doughboys tore into the smoking shambles and cleared out others with bayonets while enemy troops near the rear of the line abandoned their pillboxes for the Until this last "human line" had been hurled it could not be said the Siegfried line had been breached at this point but the Yanks appeared well through its main defense belt The line already had been breached east of Aachen in the Stolberg area as well as at points farther south in the initial invasion of Germany and the new thrust increased the isolation of Aachen which has been all but encircled for two weeks Determined to hold the important city at all costs however the Germans had erected barricades across its streets and sunk tanks in its cellars reinforcing their turrets with concrete The attacks to the north included an armored thrust from the west bank of the Maas in Holland where the tanks struck along a 3000 yard front around Overloon to Wipe oij t a hent that had hcen detoured in the preliminary drive on the Reich fox-hol- es Fair Weather Returns The first fair weather in many days attended the opening of the push enabling the air forces to provide maximum support Planes also smashed at German concentrations in the Rhine valley n at the frontier northeast of Aachen after teaming with artillery to break up a big enemy eounterattack Sunday against the British Second arrny'a Nijmegen Mbilent Sharp and bitter fighting WRM reported along the north end of the Dutch salient but the Germans now were reported resorting to infiltration thrusts rather than Dutch-Germa- frontal one The - concerted smash against the spearhead Two of these attacks launched with the aid of tanks and wtre thrown back Sunday night o r e German counterattacks are expected in the area between the two main branches of the !Thine front dispatches said for although only a few square miles are involved their popsession is vital to both sides Extend Counterattacks The Germans were also counterattacking at many points along A line extending south from Aachen to the Belfort gap maneuvering desperately in an effort to disrupt allied offensive plans but failing to prevent limited allied gains in key sectors Two strong German attacks cam 2 in the Schnee Eifel sector north of Prum and in one S S troops captured a vital height near the town of Wischeid but were driven off after a two-hobattle In the Luxembourg sector U S troops captured Grevenmacher 15 miles northeast of Luxembourg on the German border driving its garrison in retreat to its own soil after a brief street battle The American Third army a counterattack at smashing Jallaucourt northeast of Nancy cleared the forest of Gremecey 14 mile n north of Nancy and the near-blocalitia of FresnesEnsaunola and Coutorea Lt Gen George S Patton's troops also took Chambirey 15 miles northeast of Nancy but were discloid to have lost for the second time the near-b- y town of Chateau-SalinStill farther south the Germans were counterattacking in the mouth of the Belfort gap and at Ramlxirvillers guarding the Vosges passes above the gap but American and French troops carved out hard won gains near Le ThIllot 30 miles northwest of Belfort city and near Lure due west of it flame-throwe- STAUNCHLEY WORSTED tcfcletY Otzmd rs 300-mil- il '4 'f -- f of marvelously woven tor Itifook and woolens - i unexcelled tailoring ur y 1007e wool Choose fine yarns loom them into a tough duraLle fabric add superb styling anti faultless tailoring such as 'Society Brand is famous for— and you have the longwearing g Staunchley Worsted—the kind of suit that te lozip tn ettytt ar time wardrobe 500 we in By United Press NVar Correspondent WITH TIlE AMERICAN France SEVENTH A R M Y on Seventh the 28—Here Sept army front where Anirican soldiers are on intimate terms with the Germans and with death the men who command and the men who fight nearly all believe that the war in Europe will continue through this winter and into spring of 1911 Most of the colmorintlerm especially believe that the Getman army is still to be beaten The conviction that the war will be over soon—as reflected in letters now arriving from the families and friends of the doughboys—seems confined to more peaceful areas than this one See Tough Fight Hardheaded military men including those whose job it is to assess information for any clues of a- German intention to surrender soon are convinced that the enemy intends to fight in Germany from town to town until it is physically impossible for them to continue In the 'opinion of many to whom I have talked the recent discussion in the United States of quick surrender is based on the wishful thinking of a few downhearted German prisoners quoted in war correspondents' defeatist dispatches as taking attitude and on map strategy by which a crossing of the German border is taken as a knife thrust to Germany's heart Limit Front Forces These men say that the allied forces in this theater must not be regarded as armies in the mass yet but as spearheads of limited capabilities They say also that the Germans with shortened lines and for the first time defending soil which to them is sacred are In position to do most effective fghting But beyond cold military reasoning is the human equation It is a fact that all this talk about the war ending soon has had a bad effect on the troops who now are meeting the most stubborn resistance the Germans have offered since the beachhead days in NorMandy The weather Is cold and wet the terrain is thickly wooded and mountain-of ous The ordinary hardships combat are multiplied - jammed the Blue and Gold salon of Designer Maggy Rouff Monday for the first showing of Paris fall which turned out to be compared surnrisingly restrair-with the defiant styles of the occupation Although more conservative the lavish costumes of the audience the new fashions still were glamorous enough to stagg2r the few uniformed Americans present The handful of NV A C S army nurses and two sheepish men cm-- reAnondent9 stared gog11e-ev- RA d French blondes paraded before them in the first showinsc of a openings of the grand fort-night- 's couturiers "It seems terrible to these huge velvet skirts snangled with semiins when the world is at War" said one W A C That's what many Frenchmen think too and the government has formed a purge commission for fashions — Franm's fourth largest industry But it must be remembered that during the occunation France was not officially at war and that the fashion workers would have been sent as forced labor to Germany if the industry had closed down More stagzering than the show itself were the costumes of many of the women who attended With their towering electric blue silk or mustard yellow felt hats gold and diamond elins wedcre sandals furs and silk stockings tfo2y seemed untouched by the war The collection was beautiful but simple Subdued colors — brown black grey and beige—nredominated Many coats were trimmed in velvet instead of fur which is fabulously expmsive here ilee Shaw Congratulates Gandhi on BirthdayLoNboN Oct 2 (INS)--Geor- ge Bernard Shaw famed Irish wright Monday sent congratulations to Mahatma Gandhi on his 75th birthday saying: "I can only wish this were Gandhi's 35th birthday instead of his 75th" The message was sent through' play-- - the committee of India congressmen who celebrated the mahatma's birthday with a luncheon in London fac- - i principal anticipated" tors which prevented the British division from corn- First pleting its specific assignment at Maj Gen Robert Elliot Urquhart its commander said Monday in telling the inside story of the epic battle Field Hospital Isolated He also disclosed that as the British were forced back by enemy attacks their field hospital was isolated outside their lines- but the Germans permitted its continued use by the British The Germans also permitted the British to get water from a well in their hands Urquhart said "There was a good deal of flak around Arnhem so the R A F could not land us nearer than some eight miles from the city" Urquhart said "Our flight was first class Parachutists were carried by British planes and half the gliders by British and half by American planea No Excuses on Flight Side "We have no excuses whatever on the flight side Everybody got smacked by the enemy fairly early but by the ehd of the first day we had one battalion on the bridge at Arnhem and the rest on the outskirts of town N'Ve succeded in removing (demolition) charges at the north end of the bridge- and had a force at the south end and it looked as if we were ready- for Arnhem 1 Sat c 15 6 Use Your Charge 'Account 4 r )4Ni:'ss4 '''' ' ' "-- ''''- 14 1i STIMULATES would include the pooling of methods and pattmts and general commercial information kand the creation of common marketing and purchasing agencies trin ! '414' wie t: N neve Acts Promptly to lie lp Congestion in Upper Breathing Passages Coughing Spasms Sore Throat Muscular Soreness tured above) starts to work and kerpot on working for hours to brmg vand relief It invites restful sleep Oftes by morning most of the misery of the cold is gone! Remember this Ntoth Every young mother here should know about this modern way of relieving distress of children's colds You just rub Vicks VapoRub on chest throat and back (No internal dosing to upset child's stomach) Right away VapoRub's wonderful action g penetrating-stimulatin- ONLY VAPORUB Gives YC3 special double action It is the best known borne remedy for relies-‘- 9 tirne-test- home-prov- children's Is 171 311ILLIANT BEAUTIFUL o I sET i $3750 smart ' :'--' 04: mand 4N TIERFROM FOIL S12500 unn i ri fli I diam n n 3- - 1 n- ei hand-crafte- - 11111 ( $6250 ond Iron diamAnd M 174 0- - "lie Lvi416r340411 40 - 11 : vr 1 kin"( po r " ' priced I - :' s s 4 :4 r IP 6- - - I - 1 44- 0 AND SPORTING GOODS 224 So Main ) -- 4 $7500 I ?artily matched MAGNIFICENT Others moonted In 0950 ' 41 'w- A ":" 11114 t : --17 -- 1i11 t NI t c )1' - : 1 I t:: P I c t - Of A (r' t 11 1- - ) g - J 7 ')k4 as litho as $125 a wook As long as year to Po Y 11 -- - ' Solt Lak Ogdota T 2449 263 C'170 So Main I n CI COMPANY JEWELRY OXYGEN A NORWICH PRODUCT Ali DRUG STORES 1111 W Woe trY Pt Pot OWL --'--- PI -- "- - ()1?$ a' t Wash PRICES INCLUDE 20 $175 61 brie al aUlt110 mnrefuni brtdat duo From gold to $1000 1 p - heitque t I tl f cpritv $100 ra 01102 Terms 'v :2 ios '441411t4 - I 4 or yellow v- 1 1 d's 4 e --s - 04 I white tot" e-N it f ti I n a Per- - - Minor burns cuts scrapes and obrasions—the little skiniuries of daily life—don't seem A 4 r 6 6SatitiltPuata e A I i United Hardware — rs'sl)eiprdr A THEM": Chosen by us from hundreds of unmounted stones because of their fine quality pure radiant lustre Set in d mountings selectexquisite ed by us because of their distinguished her rings should be design among these --t 1 a $5000 Streem lined 141( solnaire gold ring gagement ring For Solo by In unique sietlins 'EXTRA COST - dm- A COLLECTION AT 'S 1MT N(171C 11 at ICE VA PO R Li a colds st372271IILY PAYMENT P UnentA SE ivrtIvILE GE IV I T 11 0 LI T iSuel vry lialt itnteryi at Ins inventing Laa ottie at City aa ertm1 1879 :leas matter tinder SC& or March Sunseription rates Utah Idaho Nevada month and Wyoming daily and Sunday advance 313 60: Caewhere $130 year in and SI 50 month Sunday dewy rti Trtbon ts a member Of the Associated Press The loqcisted Press la es: the who for reproduc Clueive'y solltled to t ton of all news et tgpatrhes credited to It nr nnt othrwts credited tn this miner and news herein the local also published UNGUENTINE ed ed ing miseries of (pic EXTENDED i gloat I I Nad 'Tribune C-retct --C70- f f- A WI LLLili LI7 ) CHEST AND BACK SURFACES LIKE A WARMING POULTICE - o' ' a N )X" i es Apply 744--i :N4141 tkov t BAwt5ffiTwIN N ''' FAST TO RELIEVE MISERIES WAY WORKS ---- 1 4-) pro-shi- 4 NEW-BOR- Llz2- b -' ' "1 a a a 'I 1 -- 1 rarnb ' Ermovi Anderson's val It relieves the pain 2 It fights infection 3 It promotes healing elk I - dangerous but they are el J :) 14t morning of the second day—because the American 101st and 82nd divisions which landed elsewhere had priority—did not get down until 5 p m because of bad weather Bridge Unit Breaks The force at the bridge held out until Wednesday evening when 10 men unwounded out of a force of 50 made a break for it They were captured and taken across the Rhine to Germany from where two of them later escaped Meanwhile Urquhart while out looking for one of his brigadiers on the first day was marponed by German mortar fire in a house in Arnhem He was out of touch with l 7 MAIN ST - 1 was announced officially several days ago JOE' CIO TO UPPER BRONCHIAL TLBES WITH ITS SPECIAL MEDICINAL VAPORS : '4-- air-bor- )3111 ailliliilli11110'PENETRATES - rather a pity" Of 8000 British troops landed in the Arnhem area 2)04) were evacuated when they no er could hold their position it This MODERN HOW Grate The Chewing Dentifrice 1011 'LIME air-born- a shape-retainin- rose the Hun got in on both banks with machine guns and that was wounded was left some 200 yards outside "The Hun walked into thebuild- ing but allowed us to evacuate our wounded to that building until the very end" Urquhart said "He was extremely good about that4 He said the Germans used one end of the building for their ti ' r the-rive- a crossing" However the general explained e the British division's second flight scheduled to land the rpndent members appointed and paid by the governnient The function or such board'' the report said would be the concenp tration and specialization of duction for each industry stand- ardization of equipment a n d products and creation of a corn-trimon research organization It also 10 we anticipated" stronger desperate fighting quhart said adding that when he Could Not IL---e Lasted could not gethis forces into Jr don't think we could have hem he formed them in a perimlasted another 24 hours the --rz-h- t eter on the north bank of the we left" Urquhart said TheyH river He said the Germans "for- had no cooked food for three or tunately" did not make a concert-tha- n four days The troops were ferried to the south bank ed attack but "kept nudging their across p rn until dawn when way in" while laying-dowheavy from 10 there were still several hundred mortar and shell fire left on the north bank The men NVounded Allow Care for waited their turn on the bank In As the perimeter was cortract-- 1 extremely good fashion considerin ed the British dressing station for their anxiety but when the sun Ur- - - British Labor Group Requests Public Ownership of Industry LONDON Oct 2 LID—Public ownership or public cor trot of all British industry including the fin- mediate transfer to public owner- of the transport fuel and Indus power and iron and s:e-2was advocated Monday by the general council of the trades union congress In a report on postwar recon struction prepared for submission Oct 16 to the annual convention of this British labor union group the general council said its imrn—diate recommend4tion4 could bp considered "part of the gradual transition of the economic ayatem from unregulated private enterprise to public ownership and public control" Public opinion is prepared for of British coal natWnalization minea and railways thereport declatrd It urged that these be taken over at once if political opposition or legislative difficulties should slow public ownership of other industries named the report Public ownership said should take the form of a public corporation under a minister responsible to parliamert It asked provision for representation of the "viewpoint of the wcrk people engaged in the industry" Short of complete public ownership the general council suggested pubhc control through state acquisition of key sections of an industry financial control of important companies governmental wholesaling or creation of industrial boards within industries Industrial boards would be made up in equal proportion of wage earners and employer4 with an impartial chairman and other inde i air-bor- Lord StrRholgt addresming ()lei luncheon urged the British govern-- 1 inent to take additional steps toward Indian unity so they could throw their full weight into the -coming great campaign" in Asia and the Pacific of a FEDERAL TAX - 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